Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 2, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 September 1858 — Page 1

CJje ilntsscliuv ©arctic IS I’UBEISKED AT RENSSELAER Every Wednesday Morning,! tIV I». F. DAVIES. <)/Jicc in Foicler «$- Venn's Building, on Main Sircet, up stairs A TERMS. Single subscription, per year, in advance, $1 j>o ’ Within six months * - Within the- year - paper discontinued until all arrears jure paid, except at the optiou of liie Publisher.

BUSINESS CARDS. I*t 111)I E, ISStO" > A CO., WllOl.fcS AI.K , DF.A I.ERS j IN Dry Goods, Fancy Goods, NOTIONS, HATH, BONNETS, &.C\. ; No. 10 Pnrdiiejs Block, \ j. Eat'aycite, Indiana. Invite atticntiout to their New Stock. J. V. PAKKISON, JUSTICE OF TII E 1* KAC E , Barkley Township, Jasper Co., Ind. tj Will act as age lit in collecting debts in Barkley | ami adjoint ngTcnvjnships. ;>_, f j iiAiumt; a i*j;A(’«i'tt, DEALERS IN ,/.) ' Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, DYESTUFFS, PERFUMERIES, j POTIMEDICINES, BOOKS, PAPER,! And nil kinds of Stationery, Arc. ' DAVID SMDM!£, Attorney at Law,: 52 RidNSSfICLAER, IND. WML. S. JIOPKIXSj - A TTO it ijv E Y A T LA IV, tint. Will promptlyattend to collections, payment i of tafses, «-tle of real estate, and other business, entrusted to his care, with promptness and dispatch. o 2 ' .IOSKJ'iI G, tnSANL, Attorney at Law, RENSSELAER, «LR- i j Jasper -Comity-, Ind si hoot, Notary Public, WHITE'S GROVE, Jasper Countv, Ind. I*. (). address, Iroquois. 111. 10-ly , W. t>. LF.F.. '■ - a. W. SfITLER. ■, “ 5.1:'.1t A SRiTI.Lft, .. i Attorneys at Law. ojtmCK, NEXT DOOR TO I.A RITF.'s STONK RjbTLDING, KKNS.SKJ.AKit, IND. 'Will practice in the Circuit and inferior Courts of the. Twelfth Judicial District. Also, in the Supreme and District Courts of Indiana. ap29 It. n. Mlr.nov. 1.. A. COLE. A 3 lI.ISOV A COLi;, Attorneys at Law, A r o7 i ribs Public, And Agents for the Salt of Real Estate, Payment’ of Taxes, <Ac., \ apsl) KKNS.SET..VKK, INI). lls> \V [X s». iS ATI t! ON 55, Attorney at Law, AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Will practice in the Courts of Jasper and ad-, joiniujr counties. * Particular attention givejn 1o the securing and collecting of debts, to the sajje of real estate, and to all oth.-r business intrusted to his care. Office in the 'robiii in the north-west corner of » file Court House, Rensselaer, Ind. N. B. Hi. wall he assisted during the terms of the Courts by A. A Hammond, of Indianapolis. " ty _ _ [. Titos. M'eov. AI.FItKI) m'cov. seo.ji’cov. THOS. tlct’Oy A: SONS, Bankers and Exchange Brokers, BUY AND SKt.rAcOlN AND KXCHANGE. Collections Itlnslo on all Available . Moinls, 1:A 1 , \ WILL TAX INTERFST ON* SPECIFIED TIME • D^l’pSITS. Negotiate Loans, (kidl/Io a Ceneral Banking' Business. Office liours, from 9 A. M. to 1 P. M. up 29 5? W. H. MARTIN, «JYT. D„ IT.*Vk®. T G remove<l*to residendh - adjoining . L* of U/Jiiss-dAer, offers his professional services to the citizens thereof and vicinity- Dr. Martin lias been actively engaged in the practice of <d^ ftlEHIt INI', AND Sl'Util'.ltY For 'twenty-three years ill Rushville, Rush Co., Lid.; and as there are. many residents in Jasper who were formerly citizens of that,county, ho weald refer those interested in so doing to them. « ty «*SI. XV. \V. KIOkFORD, Eclectic Physician wild Uroscopian, L> ETURNS his sincere thanks to the citizens 4-Y of Reifcselaer and the surrounding country for theirs pagt liberal patronage, and \»y prompt to his profession, to fnerit. and receive a continuation of the same. He will lie. found at the old office, ready to attend to all calls, in the practice of Medicine; Obstetrics, &c., at all hoars, whey not actually' absent professionally. Chronic clsonses of all grades especially attended to. MMteincs prepared and constantly, kept on hand the cure of Coughs, Colds and ! Diseases bt Ague., Liver Complaint, Diarrhea, Rheitfcdism, &c. ' 44-ly Removal. N. it. I*o tv XI AN, T A ILO R AN I) CU T T ER, BEGS to inform his old friends and eus-yla tonjiors that he hits removed his place of tRI : business to the building next door east of .IT* Laßtiej Roys At I.nßue’s store,' where he hopes to rocoive a continuance of that support lie Jins oijjoyed for the last seven years, and which it jvill be his constant study to deserve. 7-i y ItOtTOIC 1. !H«NS, QJjica on IVaakt ngtun Street, one dour east vj Laßuc's • 43 RENKSKLARR, IND

The Rensselaer Gazette.

I*. F. DAVIES, Editor «Se Proprietor.

% gtltottk to foreign itttit ilonustic tltfos, Jittrahtrt, politics anb gUnciillurt.

VOL. 2.

JI, i- IcrU "- [From the Providence Journal. W*ljEN TISE BAOV BY NORA PERRY. WJicyi the Laby died we said, With a sudden, secret diead, “pjeath, be merciful and pass— Leave the other;’* but* alas! * While we watched, he vraite.d there— One.foot «>n the golden stair, Onje hand beconing at the gate, > Tilll the home was desolate. Friends say. “It is better so, Clot bed in innocence to go;” Say, to ease the parting pain. That “your loss is but their gain.” Ah! the parents think of this; But remember more—the kiss Fro nr the little rose-red lips, Anil the print of linger-tips, Left upon a broken toy, Will remind them how the boy And his sister charmed the days Witjh their pretty, winsome ways. Onljy time can give relief To the weary, lonesome grief; God's sweet minister of pain Then shall sing of loss and gain.

.11 r. Everett o:« (lie Atlantic Tele. P 2 *. The following is from the .oration delivered by--M-rJ Everett, on the occasion of the inauguration"-of the Dudley Observatory, at Albany, mojre than a year ago. In enumerating the achievements of science, lie said: ‘“Such is language, the representation of thought.. Dwell upon it, I pray you, a moment longer: it is a great mystery of our being!, By the use of a few written or printed lines on paper, so like each other that, in languages with which we are unfamiliar—witness a Malay or a Japanese manuscript—there seems scarce any difference between them; this unseen, intangible, mysterious mental essence, compared with which a perfume, a sound, a lunar rainbow is gross and material, expresses itself to the eye; by the gentle impulse, the soft vibrations which the lips impart Bo the elastic air, it expresses itself to the ear. To give the spoken word duration, I translate it. into written character; to give the written sign a vita! emphasis, I translate it into vocal speech. By one divine art. the dead letter, charged with a living meaning; sounds through echoing halls, and wins or storms its way to sympathetic hearts; by another, the Heeling wavelets of the .air are cfystalized into a most marvelous permanence, and become imperishable gems of thought,whose luster no lapse of time, lean obscure; while, by the union of both, this incomprehensible being, the- mind, gently wooed from tjhc vestal chambers of our inmost nature, comes forth like a bride attorned for her lordly, spouse, the word; clad in the rich vesture of conversation, of argument, .of eloquence J of poetry, of song; to walk ’with hiin in the busy or the secluded paths of life; to Instruct and delight the living generations; ethereal essences as they arc, to outlive columns of brass and pyramids of granite; and to descend in eternal youth the unending highways'of the ages. “Does it seem much that the skill of men has in these la|tter days contrived the means of communicaiting intelligence almost with the rapidity of thought, across the expanse of continents and beneath the depth of oceans, by the electric wire! That a message dispatched from Boston at midday will so far out travel the sun as to reach St. Louis ah hour before he arrives at that meridian! It is much—and we contemplate with much arrjaz.ement the wonderful apparatus which, when laid down—-as sooner or later perhaps it will he, so as to connect the three continents—-may, by possibility., send the beginning of such a sentence as I tun now pronouncing around the terraqueous globe and return it to the lips of the speaker before lie has! completed its utterance. this aina'/.ing apparatus is but another of language; it transmits intelligence onlv as it transmits words. It is like speech 1 like the pen, like the press, another piece qf machinery by which languago is conveyed from place to place. The really wonderful L-tl ting is language itself, by which thought is made sensible and communicated from mind *to mind, not only, in the great living congregation of the civilized world for the time bdUtg, hut through the past general assenti_l)ly of the ages, by which vre are able at thife moment not only to listen to all the gr»at utterances which express the thoughts and emotions of the present day throughout the world, hut to soar with Milton to the green fields of Baradis®; in the morning of I creation; to descend with Dante to the depths i of penal woe; tio listen to the thunders of Tally and Demffsthei es, umf, by the golden I-chain of etymology, tracs the affinity and

RENSSELAER, JASPER COUNTY. IND., WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 15, 1858.

descent of nations back, throu jh the labyrinth of the past, almost to the cradle of the | race. “I hold in my hand a portion of the identical electric cable, given me ljy my friend, Mr. Peabody, which is now in progress of manufacture, jto connect America with Europe. I read; upon it the following worths: ‘A part of th-b submarine electric telegraph cable, manufactured by Messrs. Glass &, Co., of Londotf. for the Atlantic Telegraph Company to connect St. John’s, Newfoundland, with Valentia, Ireland, a distance of sixteen hundred and for ty, nautical, or nineteen hundred \st Ante miles.’ Docs it seem all but incredible to you that intelligence should travel for two thousand miles, along those slender copper wires, far down in all but faihonilcis Atlam tic, never before penetrated by nuglit pertaining to humanity, save when some foundering vessel has plunged with hapless company to the eternal silence and darkness of the abyss'! Does it seem, I but a miracle of art, that the thong its of living men—thoughts that we think up here on the earth’s surface in the cheerful light of day—about the markets, and the exchanges, seasons, and the elections, and the treaties, and the wars, and all the fond nothings of daily life, should clothe themselves with, elemental sparks, and shoot with fiery speed in a moment, in a twinkling of an ovb, from hemisphere to hemisphere, far down among the uncouth monsters that wallow in the nether seas, along the wreck-payed flpor,- through the oozy dungeons of the rayless deep; that the last intellige'nce of the c|-ops, whose dancing tassels will in a few months be co- ! queuing with the west wind on these bound- , less prairies, should go flashing along, the slimy decks of old sunken galleons, which have been rotting for ages; that messages of friendship and love, from warm living bosoms, should burn over the coldjgrecn hones of'men and women, whose hearts, once ns warm ns_ours, burst as the external gulfs closed and roared over them, centuries ago! Behold another phenomenon, of u surety no less surprising—ail intellectual electrical telegraph—if I may so call it—not less marvelous! The little volume which I hold in my hand contains the two immortal poems of Homer, those world-renowned strains, which one of the imperial minds df our race, not far from thirty -centuries ago, while the delighted ears of heroic Greece, while the ! softest down ol youth wars upon the cheek of its young nationality—those growing, ! golden legends—that sovereign wrath of i Achil leg, which : • “ —shall burn unquenchably. Until the eteriiM doom shall he—” the parting of Hector and Andromache—a scene to which the s*d experience of three thousnnd years could not add one image of tenderness and sorrow; the threats of Jupiter to the awe-struck gods, while every peak of Olympus was ablaze with his leaping : thunders; the piteous supplications of aged j Priam, kissing the hand and bathing with j his t«srs the feet of the cruel chieftain who had dragged the torn body of his noble son \ three times round the Ilianwall; the weary I and sorrowful wanderings of Ulysses, which j every subsequent age of mankind has retraced with delight—these all, like the cunningly imprisoned airs of a music box, breathe to us in one perennial strain of mel- | ody from within the covers of this small volume. By the simple agency of twenty- ! four little marks, stumped on the written or | printed page,'the immortal legend has flashed ! down to us through the vicissitudes.*of empires and eras; across the vast expanse of j enlightened and benighted periods of histo- \ ry; from region to region, from his, own i rocky islet in the Hdgean to shores unknown, 1 undreamed of, by him; beneath than overwhelming billows of three thousand years, where people whole have sunk; and it now binds together, by the golded wires of intellect and taste, the mind of Europe and America, at this meridian of their refinement., with the mind of every intervening age of literary culture, back to the cradle of infant Greece; and while, at'our place's of education, we dilligently investigafb, the wonderful properties of matter developed in the phenomena of the physical world, shall we not, my friends, deem a portion of our time and. attention well bestowed upon the miracle:/of the word, written and spoken—the phenomena ol language, which lie at the fojfndation of all our intellectual improvement, of all our literature and science-, in a Word, of all rational communication between man and man!

Speaking of corporal punishment j in school,” said a fair lady, “What pupil is the | most to he pitied!” “The pupil of the eye,Because it is nl- i ways under the lash,”

“FREEDOM NATIONAL— SLMIERY SECTIONAL."

Employments Makc People Happy.

i One of the most important lessons ol life is to learn to work. Parents can do something for the establishment of the principle, of industry; but it its only by our own mental and bodily efforts that we make that principle a habit,; and not only learn to work, but learn to work cheerfully. Laziness is one of the worst diseases. It grows i by what it feeds oi|, until it enervates the I whole man, and makes him but a sickly | specimen of humanity. Its earliest symptoms should be checked by parents; but all I external appliances will prove but little j available, unless our own efforts coincide to j break the chains of the habit which is coiling around us. Laziness generates a inoral atmosphere for the soul that is more deleterious to its existence than the vapors of the famed Upas valley. No mephitic glasses can more quickly chjoke the vital principle of the soul than tjhis destructive habit. Rouse yourself, then; from the lethargy it creates. It is worse than a serpent’s fascination. It steals away not only time, but eternity. Hear what Daniel Webster says j on the topic: “I say it is employment that makes people happy. This grdat truth ought never to he forgotten; it ought to be placed on the title page of every b<xok on political economy intended for America, and such countries as America; it ought to head the columns of every farmerfs magazine; it should be proclaimed everywhere—notwithstanding what we hear of the usefulness, and I admit the usefulness of cheap food—notwithstanding that the great truth should he proclaimed everywhere; should he made into a proverb, if it could, that where there is work for the hands of men there wiill be work for their teeth; where there is employment there will be bread; and in a country like our own, above all others, will this truth hold good: in a country like ours, where with a great deal of spirit and activity among the masses, if they can fitad employment, there is a great willingness for labor, they will have good houses, good clothing, gb od food, and the means of educating their children; that labor will be cheerful, and they will be a contented and happy people.” Profitable labor is, iof course, a duty—a Yankee duty. But even a labor about trifles is better for a man’s energies, and for the health of mind than laziness. —New Haven Register.

Look Before You Kick.

A minister recently, while on his way to preach a funeral sermon in the country, [ called to see one of his members, an old widow lady who lived near the road he was traveling. The old lady had been making sausages, and she felt proud of them, they were so plump, round anti sweet. 6 Of course she insisted on her minister taking-some of the links home to his family. He objected on account of not having his portmanteau along. This objection was soon overruled; and the old lady, after wraping them in a rag carefully, put a bundle of them into either pocket of the minister’s capacious coat. Thus equipped, he started for the funeral. While attending to the solemn ceremonies df the grave, some hungry dogs scented the sausages, and were not long in tracking them to the pockets of the good man’s overcoat. Of course this was a great annoyance; and he was several timers under, the necessity of kicking those whelps away. Having completed, the minister and the congregation repaired to the church, where the funeral discourse wap to be preached. After the sermon was preached, the minister halted tq-.make seine remarks to his congregation, when a brother who wished tq have an appointment given out, ascended the steps of the pulpit, anti gave the minister’s coat a hitch to get hjis attention. The divine, thinking it a dog having a design i upon his pocket, raising his foot, gave a sud- j den kick, and sent the gobd brother sprawl- : ing down the steps. “You will excuse me, brethren arid sisters,” said the minister confusedly, and without looking at the work lie had just done, “for I could not help it. il have sausages in my pocket,wind that dog has been trying to grab them ever since I came upon the premises.” Our readers may judge of the effect such an announcement would Have at a funeral. (ies mantown Emporium. oi7”Tde Grpen River Barrens, in Kentucky, that fifty years ago were covered with grass and strawberries, marning-glorids and other flowers, and were tHie resort of im- 1 mense flocks of quails and a multitude of’ rabbits, are now a great forest of oak, Lick- ! ory and chesnujt trees. This great chnngo from field to forest has boten made in less ; than half a century.

TEIIAIS: «1 50 per Year, 111 Advance.

[From the Springfield Eagle and-Flag.

Energy.

That is’ wlvat is needed. Be energetic, i in whatever you undertake—go at it with a will, lay hold as if you wasn’t afraid, and when once fairly at it, never relinquish your | hold or relax your efforts until you have accomplished something. This silly hnm-drum | moqe of crawling through the world, a monotonous routine from year to year, living only “from hand to mouth,” and in fear of : any new enterprise, betokens a man of very little spirit; our age is a pogressive one and all who desire to succeed must push foward in everything they undertake —their niotto should be “Excelsior,” and they will be bound to succeed; they will surmount barriers that were before apparently insurmountable, while the bugbears that frighten the timid into a panic will be found to be, met;® | will-o’-the-wisps that will flee away at your ! approach. We like to see a young man humane, bc- ’ nevolent, obliging, and clever; but of ajlltho ! passions, give us a man that has a propensity to push his way through the world ’at all hazaruds and in spite of all opposition; we would rather call or.e such a man our friend, than have the professed friendship of all the drones that invest the swarming hive of humanity. Young men! you to whom our country looks for future greatness and grandeur, are you preparing yourselves for the arduous task that is before you; are you schooling yourselvs to become heirs of American liberty —the iuturc law-givers of our country—its sovereigns! If you are not, then indeed you are unworthy the room you occupy. Were you made to tipple in rum-shops—-to pore over yellow-covered literature, or court an amorous looking-glass! If these are your favorite pastimes, then you are only fit to adorn a rum-shop as a sign, to tickle the pockets of the periodical dealer with your loose change or to be a plaything for the women—a mere automata to be moved about at the will of the rulers of your favorite passions. 1 f such is your deplorable codition, we advise you to shake off’ the spell’i.hat binds you, and enter the arena of life with energy sufficient to.convince the world that you are a man; let not the syren voice of pleasure call you off from your duty—nor the allurements of vice entice you from the path of virtue. The man that has Do ambition, no aspirations, has just soul enough to elevate him above the brute. But not content with dragging out a mere animal existence, but show bv your energy and decision of character that you are what God intended you to be—a man. ‘■Act—act in the living present! Heart within, and God o’erhead!”

Democratic Candidate and Rcpublcan Farmer.

Candidate —l have lived a Democrat, and I expect to die a Democrat. Farmer —What, is Democracy! Can. —The same yesterday, to-day and forever; Democracy is always Democracy’, Ear. —Well, I bought a knife a year or two ago-. It had two blades in it; by and by 1 lost one of the blades and had another one-put in. Was that the same knife! Can. —Yes. 1 Far. —Well, after a wljile I broke the other blade and put in another one. Was it the same knife stiljl Can. —Certainly. Far.—' The next thing I lost was the handle and then I got a new handle for my two blades. Was it the same knife still 1 Can. —Of course it was! “Well,” coolly continued the farmer “after awhile I found the old handle and the two old blades, I put them together, and now will you tell me what knife that, was!” The Candidate thought best to withdraw, and the farmer concluded to adhere to the old true Democracy, although now called Republicanism.

True.

Patriotism, in our day, is made to bo an argument for all public wrong, and all private meanness. For the sake of country a man is told to yield everything that makes the land honorable. For the sqke of country a man must submit to every ignominy that will lead to the ruin of the State through disgrace oi the citizen. There never was a inan so unpatriotic as Christ was.. Old Jerusalem ought to have been everything to him. The laws and institutions of his country ought to have boon more to him than aßthe men iri the country. They were not, and the Jews hated him; but the common people, like the ocean wates, moved in titles toward his heavenly attraction wherever he went.— ll. W. Beecher. nays, “Woman’s imagination is to dream of heaven, and her soul to love the earth.”

HATES OF ADVEKTKSING. One square, one to three insertions $1 00 Each subsequent insertion 25 One square three months 3 00 One square six inontlis 5 0(1 One square one year.. 8 00 Business cards,five lines or less, ono year. . 5 00 Quarter of a column one year !X) 00 Half a column one year 30 0® One column one year ; . . 50 00 Legal and transient advertisements must b» paid for in advance, or twenty-five per cent, will be added to the above terms. Yearly advertisers are limited to their *w» business’. Advertisements, unless the number of Insertions deeir.xt is marked on the copy, will be enntinj^cd"until ordered out, and charged accordingly

NO. 20.

A Romantic Reality-A White Woman Escapes From Slavery!

Wc copy the following interesting case from the Alaysville (Ky.) Eagle of Thursday* afternoon: ' “One of the most remarkable aid intensely interesting cases ever brought bofore a court of justice, waA tried and disposed of in our Circuit Court last week. The plaintiff’, Ann Goddard, was a handsome young white woman, about twenty years of age—perfectly white, with- long, luxuriant and straight hair, graceful and easy in manners, and having all the appearances of a wellraised lady. Her features bore the highest marks of European perfection; and tliero was not the slightest indication of African blood in her veins. She brought suit here for freedom, alleging that she had been forcibly arrested by the officers and Ibdged in the negro jail of the late James McMillan, under the claim of the defendant, Mary Godda d, that she was a slave, ‘when, in truth, she was a-free white woman.’ “The suit was brought nearly two years ago by Hon. R. H. Stanton; and was prosecuted by him, with the assistance of Hon. YV. 11. Wadsworth and Judge J. D. Taylor; and was defended by Hon. H. Taylor and T. C. Canifibell, Esq. When the Jury was sworn, the only testimony relied on by the plaintiff’ was the exhibition of her own person for inspection, her counsel claiming that her appearance was prima facie evidence of her freedom; and the presumption thua being raised, of course, the burden of proof rested upon the defendant to prove her a slave. An attempt was then made by the defendant to prove her the daughter of a mulattg named Matilda, by whom plaintiff’ had been reared from infancy; but in this they did not succeed, as no witneea was introduced who was present at the birth es the ehild. ! “The case was ably argued on both sides; , and much feeling was manifested in the community on behalf of the plaintiff. Whea the Jury brought in their verdict to The effect that she was ‘a free white woman,’ the Judge was compelled to address the audience upon the impropriety of any demonstration of applause in a court of justice, in order to keep down a universal impulse to show the satisfaction given by the result.”

Combat Between a Tragedian and an Eagle.

A Cincinnati paper gives an amusing account of a combat between Murdoch, the tragedian now living on his furm near Loreland, on the Mirmi river, and a monstrous eagle, in which the“heavy tragedy man” had to Beat a hasty and inglorious retreat. It appears that on Sunday morning last, Murdoch, hearing a terrible noise in his barn yard, sallied out and found an enormous eagle had fastened his talons on a very young calf, had plucked out its eyes, and was endeavoring to raise will its struggling victim. Murdoch made charge on the imperial bird, but was finally compelled to beat a hasty retreat to secure his gun. The eagle’s triu.mph was of short duration; for James Murdoch, the tragedian’s son, an intrepid little boy, o.nly nine'anda half years old, appeared upon the scene with a double barreled gun, and at the first disbarge brought his imperial majesty to the ground. He measured six feet two inches from tip to tip of his wings, and will be preserved as a momen to of Master James’ prowess.

A Diabolical Outrage by Kidnappers.

The lllCnoisian at Shawneetownrlllinoia, relates the case of u likely negro boy of eighteen, Who was arrested as a fugitive slave near that town. The boy was born and raised in Indiana; and was free. He was known to the best citizens of Terre Haute as u free boy; and yet the kidnappera hurried him across the Ohio to Kentucky in shackles, without process, and by brute force; and this, too. in the face of the crowd o’n free soil. The boy escaped from his captors after getting on the Kentucky side, and his captors pursued him to the river, where they lost sight of him. The lllinoisian says: “The 'unfortunate negro was found dead oil the next day; and is now (at the writing of this) lying off' the Kentucky beach, opposite to this town, where he was drifted by the waves'. As he is out of the jurisdiction of this State, no means have yet been taken to ascertain the mode of his death.” o^7”Among the muneroui causunlities recently detailed, the followinng is very melancholy : The young man who recently went on a'bridal tour with an angel inbookniuslin, has returned with a termagant in hosps. OCyYVhy is the tire and faggot better than the guillotine! Because a hot stake (steak) is better than a colH chop.