Vincennes Gazette, Volume 3, Number 44, Vincennes, Knox County, 5 April 1834 — Page 1
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Udo 1834. NUMBER 44
THE VINCENNES GA2ETTS Published every Saturday,
Tonus $2 50, if paid tluritii the year. 'i 00, if paid in advance. $'-t Oi), if not paid (hiring the year. , for si month. Fa;uT3 di'oontinued only at th option of the piidi-h'-r while arrearages are due. '"'y Vlvcrti-senient makin: o'nc square orie's fill ))frtrs! three times for ono dollar, and tu t-titv .five ct-i- f cvprv suhj .(insertion ; uiger advertise-ncid in the sr 1 ratio. vt-rt i-piiiMits sent wit !toM nrWs, will in all r:iss, In; inserted until fordid, and charged accordingly . Such nrtKh's of r.rmhice, a are used in a family, will be received in payment for 'ib scri; .tion.-!, at the market price, delivered in inceiiiMS. CULTIVATION OF PEA II TREES. tfaskinstoa City, Aov. 26, lbV. Teach tree may he preserved, by trood management, twenty, and probably forty or fifty years. They are destroyed from north latitude forty to thirtv-aiX degrees, by a wrm which feeds on the inner bark of the tree, at its mot This worm is said fo be the offspring- of a fly of the wasp kind, which deposites it? eggs in the bark of the root of the tree, w hile it is young and tender. The remedy consists in eearchmg for the openings in the bark at the roof, and taking them ut. If this operation is repeated three or four sprint s. the worm never after ran m-:ke a lodge merit there. The bark of the tree by thi ti'iie becomes so hard, that the fly cannot make the puncture, in order to deposite the eeg. or if deposited it perislir es. After the worm is cut cut in the spring, draw the earth up around the bo dy ix or eight inches, above the other ground. Cf all the fruit trees produced in this climate, none bears pruning go freely as the peach; i-tdeed, it should be treated j very much as the vine is. All tho-e j braii' hes which have borne fruit, should j be rut out, if there is young woo. i to sup-1 ply their places. Proof take a linit , which bus borne two or three crops of , fruit, and notice its produce; take anothen on the same tree, which has never borne at ali, and the fiuit on thi lat will be twice the size of the former, fairer andi less liable to rot. In pruning, the branch J es should, be taken or cut out of the middie of the tiee: thus giving mre air and sun to the fruit on the outer limbs. The peach tree produces best fruit when the ground is not stirred about it while the fruit is on When it has no fruit, it should be cultivated as caretully as a cabbage, or any other plant. The above comprises the mist impor tant points in the rearing of peach trees, and good fruit; if attended to, 1 have never known them to fail, and my experience ha not hen very limited. 1 repeat what may, perhaps, le doubted, thut the peach tree, if the worm is kept out of the root, will live, at least, , ,mrc. .nl iKi iKia miv rprtainlv i L i .u .i ii,. . IT "loot: 01 ouitniiit ukui m v. uiv . of its grovth, and continuing to extractj them for three or tour yeats in succession, not forgel'tng to draw the earth up as directed Straw, chips, or trih of any kind, serve the purpose just as well. rSEIXL INSTIiLCTIONS REGARDING THE MILKING OF COWS.
The operation of milking is performed j uab,e in ruUing the exposed articles in differently in var ious parts of the country iim)l,er repair, not speaking of the cost ot la eome, the dairy maid dips her hand ( lhe mafer:ljs ant the interruption of buinto a little milk, and by -uccesiveiy ; tvnI,i,i dpimv thp evi.ensp of erect
stripping the teat between her finger and) thumb, unload the udder The plan, however, is attended with the distdvantage of irritating more or lees the teat, and rendering it liable to cracks and chaps, which are followed by infl t mm itiou, ex fpndin" to the rest of the quarter This
accounts for the disease occuning mre BV an old citizen of ohio-free from frequently among the cows under thei party. charge of" one milker than it does in those j From the President Message, the Se which a:e under the charge of another ; ; cretary of the Treasury's Report, Mr. and, as this practice is more common in; Duane's Address to the Public, and a Regome parts ot the country than in others,' port of a Committee of the Bank of the tt aho accounts for the disease being more United States, there appears a very great common in these parts This plan of derangement of the currency ; and divermilkm where the irritation is not suffi-sity o opinion as to the safety of the puhcient to excite the extent of inflammation i lie deposite. I think there can be no to which 1 have alluded, frequently pro-j doubt that the deposites are in an unsafe duces a homy thickening of the teat, a situation; and it is equally certain, that consequence of the cracks and chaps, ! without the immediate interference of which renders it more diflHilt to milk j Congress, the Government must su-tain i.,, tihoo In itc natural la?e and. at thfiirrreat loss. notOhlv of money, but of n i-
fame time, predisposes to mil imoiation, when any cau-e occurs to set it up. Thee effects may be, and are almost entirely avoided, by the more scientific plan of milking adopted in other parts of the couutiy where, uistead of drawing down or stripping the teat between the thumb and fingers, the dairy maid follows more closely the princip!es which intinc has iii'tn "ii' H iii i w .i...4i n. j - taught the call, i i tie can jorus us nose into the udder and forces down the milk.) She first takes a slight hold of the teat with her hand, by which she merely encircles it, then lifts her ban I up, so as to press the body of the udder upward, by which the milk escapes into the teal, or if (as is generally the case when some hour have elapsed between milkiug-tirne-) the teat is tuH, she graP4 the le.it clo-e to its origin with her thumb and f re finder, so as to prevent the milk which is in the teat liom e-capin upwards the.i
rcuk'iag the ret oi
ririTj T'-9
r3 to cloe
'from above downwards
forces out what milk may in the teat, through the The hand is ajrain pressec as before, and thus, by repeating .hi ar. tion, the ud Ider is comp'eiely emptied, j ?e tuorging and tearing of the is apt to produce disease without coarse teat, which TYKAXNY A3IOr. HORNED CATTLE. It is a faet of some consequence to be borne in mind by every person who has anv thing to do with a barnhold economy, that neat stock do not pay regard to the rights of cattle, hut every animal is a ty rant to the extent of its power, and a slave to the amount of its weakness :ind i fears. The right of the strongest is apt to be exercised by the higher orders. over the more puny and pusillanimous w ithout measure or mercy ; and some ari tocratic animals appear to take as great delight in worrying and tormenting their inferiors, as if they belonged to the classes of bipeds, called emperors, kings, con-: querors, &c On this and other accounts it is important to give your stock plenty of ronm for feeding ground, racks, troughs, &c The size of a barn-yard should be large in proportion to the stock kept in it. A small yard gives the strongest animals a greater chance to gore and harass the weaker than if there was room for the latter to escape from the assailants The spirit of domination," ay9 an E'lghsh writer "is so remarkably preva lent among homed cattle that 1 have a hundred times observed the master beasts running from crib to crib, and absolutely neglecting their own provender for the sake of driving the inferior from theirs This is. much ofiem-r than is suspected, the chief reason of that difference in a lot of hearts after a winter's keep h is likewise a verv common and very shameful ight, in a dairy of cows to see several of them gored and wounded in a dozen places , from inattention ol "the owner and neglect of clipping the horns of those that
butt The weaker animals should beipurchase of which, the stockholders of
kept apart; and in crib feeding in the j yard, it is a good method to tie up the master beasts at their meals. I)r Deane observes, "there should be more van's than one to a barn, where di- ! vers sorts of cattle are kept. The sheepj should have a yard by themselves at least ; j and the young stock another that they i may be wholly confined to such fodder a the farmer can afford them." Care of Farming Utensils. A topic not yet sufficiently enforced on the attention
of farmers, is the wasteful ueghgencw ! t he debtors or the commt i ial coui.uunievinced in the exposure o' agricultural j ty In any event, it wumd produce much implements to the injuries of the seasons ! less distress than the present state 01 af The sled cut ling and cracking by the side ' lairs threatens. Then Congress Mould
of the wall in summer, and the cart half buried in snow and seasoning in the winter . storms, are symptoms of waste and extra vagance, which ripens into a consumption, to be hastened to premature termination by visits of Ihe sheriffs. The whole se
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, e ,, ... . , ji uu eill Lillt: oi tliusc siii'iii mm? "iin.il ( without great igtlancc, are slipping thro'; the chinks of the best woven purse; and it may be considered quite as safe to pre diet that none of these slovenly gentlemen fill be prosperous, a? to write in the style of the calendar soothsayers, through the printed pages of the month of January, 'expect enow about these days"'' The nncp of the time b.st when it is most valt rl ejlpa., nPd3 Us would cover them from the storm-, protect them from decay, and keep them ready for immediate use --.Yaiionat JEgis. COMMENTS ON A NATIONAL HANK. r - - i j lional character, both at home and abroad. In a short time the couatiy will be flooded with depreciated Bank Notes, as it was from 1817 to 1820 That the deposites will not be safe in State Banks, over which the Government has no control, experience has most satisfactorily proved to every jnan of business. From the Report of the Committee of the Bank of the Uoit ed States, it is clear the present Bank ought not to be re-chartered. It is shown by the Repoit, that the Board have expended too much money of the Stockholders, and have badly accounted for it. A NV.w Bank ought to be made. A NA TIONAL BANK i9 necessary in this coiintrv for the fiscal operation of lhe Government, the protection of the public leposites; am: to regulate ine currency hi I ex.di inge of the country. Perhaps a new Ch i ter might be made, similai. in s ime iH-pects, to the present one, wuii such amendments aud cUecks, experi . . .i
in succession, ence may have proved to be necessary. to equalize the exchange, to give facili-turn away from you towards tBe nose, and tho be contained It appears from the late triennal exposi- ties to the operations of government and sound eye will fix its gaze on jou. This .imple opening of it tion of the affair of the Bank made in ; for education, i experiment, however repeated with P0 ' nnH npriMnnrp will nf frncrfh pnflh Ptr L1 PtT
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much tocreased notwithstanding the em-; barrassed s'ate of the currency when the j Bank went into operation Before the j President's veto, tho stock was selling for 2S per cmt. above par. ScerosE a law he made immediately, creating new Bank, with a capital of titty uvllionisof dollars, fr a term of twen ty years ; to go into operation 'when the charter of the present Bank expires. Let there be a clause in the charter, that it shall not be re-chartered at the expira tion of the twent ears: but shall fie 'closed, and -etile up its business; giving ! time befi- it expiration ("ay two or three ; v earr-) fV;r another charter t be ..made, and go into operation, to succeed the torroe: In making this Bank, give up all iuea oi a noiiu-s; ror maov lesuus m;iv i , :, - . ' be given. I Will mention only one I hl8 ; nation ha an ovei flowing T refill i , and no immediate u?e for the money Let the fund pa (i 'or, and belonging to, the people of the United States, created by, and growing out of his new charier. Let that sum , (or the dividends upon it, if it should be advisable to make it a part of the Cap ital of the Bank.) be apportioned to each State, in proportion of their Congiessioti al Representation, for the sole purpose of a school fund for the support ct Common Schools. This will be one step towards uniting the interest of the different S'ates; and be a means of bringing education, to a certain extent, to the door of every man in the nation, who would thereby become acquainted with the use and advantage of a Bank of the United States, which is now known to many only by its title. Let the law be passed immediately, and booka opened tor the sale of the ttock; in the the present Bank shall have no preference over their fellow citizens; and though much has been said about exclud ing foreigners, my idea is, to place all upon the same footing The obi Bank, no doubt, would proceed to wind up it business; an;; during the two years allowed by its chat ter, the new " W ml Bank might go into full operation; and the debtors to the old might transfer their accounts to the new Bank; and by proper regulation and management, ah ibis might) be done, without much embar russment to have a place of safety-, tor the public de-j posit es, which at present ti.ey have oot,j as appears hy the debates in noth tlous- . r m fiS 1 HERE is no good reaon why the present Ba.k should be re chartered On ,, , . ", . mil r'Kiuii'ii n uiuf i 3iiuiiiv iici.oirni A bank of the United btates never snouai be re cfiartered, for reasons mo-t obvioti-, drawn from political considerations Le' a new Bank be made to taiie up the mi-i ness of the old The-e periodic ii m-i fo ments will futnish the siiongest Government and people Banking establishments Let the Secretary . :r ,.''( ft l iit: hri'. on ai-.;rv , in . ! : '. I i ck, and nehau or me tjovernaj;', -u'; either 7 or 10,000,000 or tbr stand in a proper relation to the new Bank If, at the expiration ot the con templated charter, It shall be found expe dient. as I have no donht it will, r o charter . . . . ... , . . . . .,ao.. um ouuuo, i uuu iin.j lM - increased in the same, or greaier ratio. betthng and closing the Bank accounts at the end of each charter, will prevent error, imposition and speculation, andi
btock at the new bank he s- hi , requiring j .,;1ant
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t he- ol.vsaice on the rapital ol ssoU,UUU, - Qme
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check political influence: and as I have j r sie . nhen websil(denly on ! A traveller crossing the Green Mounalready said, will be the most ethtent ; thcin or remain awake a ground glass shade' tains, in Vermont, in the month of August, check on bank, which can be desired for j should be plated over the lamp. discovered a bare-headed and bare-footed the safety of the country and its citizens, j Those who work by candle licht cannot have " w wjth a ,a tjn burkef b hl8 9i(c arranircmDiii t;il i iU i.oo. ' too much ot it ; and it should tal; on the book .. . . . " . ... J . Mich arrangement will leave to the peo. ; ,,.,.,1 .hi,.... digeinsr into a deep snow drift; and very
pie a fund in Bank, or Bank Stock paid up in fall, fo be divided among the Slate, for the benefit of Common Schools; and would be a most valuable fund forever. We should then have a Bank, in which ; the General Government, each State, and every individual, would possess a united interest; and this School Fund, it is pre - sumed, would so preponderate as to preold ' i;.....i :.n Ci.iuii.a..jinu.c ruwi iiiuueucr, rami with proper checks in the detail, it would assume a new charter, and become the Peopled Bank, not be a monster or an over grown monopoly. January 18th, 1C34. The Parent Bank may be located at the City of Washington, Philadelphia or New York, and branches may be established in the several states by the consent of their legislatures, and it it should be deemed expedient to tax those, branch es, require the proceeds to be applied for the use of schools and for no other pur pose. Probably it would be advisable to sell the stock at a less advance than twenty per cent., and to give the states the privileges of taxing those branches at the same rate they tax State Banks. But I think that tax ought to be levied until the Bank has been in operation lor a certain i . ri - . i : . . . k.. . tune. i ne grai oojet i noi ttveuuc uui o secure to thti c.onairy a sound, currency,
doubt, that in the details of the charteridirect
there may he such checks as to prevent all improper influence or speculation Frct.i the London Monthly Magazine. CONN UBIALJTIES. Love is the epitome of our whole duty ; and all the endearments of society, so j long as they are lawful and honest, are not only consistent with, but parts and expression of it . """"nSr """'K SCeiie OI OUT (ii . . i .i i ;
happme- or mht ry : the marriape of love j Di(1 von evpr frp, pity townnIsa fenowbein is pleasant, me marriage . interest easy, in distress ? Did you ever see an object of surand a mariiage where both meet, happy . jrow tht bm't tears to your eyes'? Chii you Women go further in love than men !wpeP ,,,r the niiserable, and yniinthizc v.itti lmi tnon , t..;r. u : r i ' the distressed ? Listen a monient to nif. tht B, nut men outstrip them in friendship. 1 1 n . n i u u e r i . , i land 1 will tell you a tale which, if you can feel
... uuicn men "epuiauou ,l. r.. irtuin ior waur oi virtue, so others pieiUtt- . ,,-rn,- r Women are pleased with courtship, and .i . . ... . , , the mo-t disdainful cannot but be comto those that tell them of their ittractions. men say that it is hard to deter
. 1 . . , , I vuultTfl II. Ul UtTKIIVt'U HIT III 1)1111, .1110 Jill" llfiu mme which is the more troublesome, a:to fnke sneer ,im1(r the first roof shp rouid maid s reserve or a wife 9 forwardness. find, scarcely knowing what would hefal her A woman that has bat one lover thinks 'children? On the evcuing of which we epeak, herself to be no coquet; she that has geve- 'st,R sat in hcr lonely abode, while the heart rendral, concludes heiself to be no more thani'nCries wf " c,1,,,,ren l'rTe, he ",n'ost ' ! madness, and her innocent beloved babe, una coquet. j sheltered from th- cold, lay trembling in her Reciprocal love i? justice ; constant love I arms, when the door of her aparttnent opened, is foiti'ude; secret love is prudeDCe 'a"d her landlady entered, and inquired if !-he Ir i the hardest thing in love to feign coukt "l l,cr - boUfpw eek stand- . t j 1 inc. I he poor distresFe.d woman, scarcely it where it 1- not, or hide it where it 19; f'Ut jknowii,- what answer to make, turned her ryes if h racier counterfeited than concealed upon the four weeping children, and sobbed Women tell us they would not sin if we ; h'd -did not temt(t them. We answer. wc ! 'Canyon piye me my rent ?I ask," repeated
should not tempt them if they did not invite 11 1 The face of her we love is the fail est
of sights, and her voice the sweetest har- ""pit.v me,'' sobbed the distressed woman, monv in the world I'W m,' be;tr v'ltn ie fl ,i,tle lonKer, end I mony in the WOH 1. will try to pay you all Look here ; my chilA man is more reserved on hi friend surpn nTC crying for bread, and 1 have none to concerns than his own; 1 woman, on the ' give them ; they are freezing, and l ha-no fire;
contrary, keeps her own siets better than another's. A woman will think herself slighted if she i not courted, yet pretends to know herself too well to believe your flattery Absence is to love what lasting is to the body; a bttle btimulates it, but a long abstinence i fatal . The greatest pleasure of life, is love; the greatest trearure, con'entment; the greatest possession, health; the greatest I P:i9 14 d.pn nn.t tho rrri. i ri i v.-rno . f a true friend. Alcibiades, being astonished at Socrates1 patience, asked hsrn now he could en dure the perpetual scolding of his wife? 4 Why," said he, "as they do who are ic customed to the ordinary mode of wheelto draw water " I . . " " IfiXTS T() PEOii,E WITH EYES. j On firit awakening in the morning, do not expose y our-, it to a sudden l ire ot hht i'o noi run your eyes with sour tinger-or any i t 111 1 1 - "1 -e--i cxcst- s intlaiu inatioii- If the lids ; adhere, genth pas yourlincer over ihein with r SH,llVH When obliged to rjuard the eye from the flare of light, let the shade be of simple green lk, -o suspended as not to press upon the T, e Hrdbe the ey es morning and evening in pure co! ! -;rins water Puuip water is not good. A fine linen handkerchief should be used to wipe tht -ni dry Never wash tbein when y ou are perijir.iug, or very warm 1 t ups or glasses are worse than nothI'erons engaged on white articles or minute woik, should chose rooms in which there is a oaz perspective, on which their eyes may rest for occasional relief. All brilliant linincrs for hat9 should be avoid- ; fd, as the rays reflected from them are more 1 nf?erous man me uiieci rays oi me sun rin (lie I'l milUUt t7TlUIIIil a tuniu-cu Utl-I i dulntm? motion, pernicious to the siht." I Fan, highly ornamented with gold, silver, or ivory, are objectionable, light lacing is injuj r,ous A night lamp bould be kept burning in the j . 1 1 Ul'p Vyt TlJIvlI till l. VILM UUIIUIllj y. No one should read or write in dark places,; j or by moonlight Children should never he carried suddenly from a light room to a dark one. Writintr ie lpte iriiiirintia thfir rpn ,t;nr nt night s j If any thing gets into the eye avoid rubbing 1 iU but raise the upper eyelid and lean the head f"rw.ard- .P sti j ti,isf io" a few mo" ments, and a flow of tears starts forth, carrying th , . - -t( ,to fhe corner of the eye, whence hy a piece of linen folded to a point it is easily removed
It this w.d notwc.ee ea, ana iner wn , ep : - tow , Massachusetts, thus adthe hd elevated, turn the eye-ball towards the1" ...
...... ... " l -.1 Ml Tnose, and then insert a tamers nair nencn, ,ert a Camel's hair pencil,
dipped in cream, between the eyelids and cor- have been paying your distresses to me tiers of the eye, beginning at the exterior and 1 onaP enough, I want to know what your ending at the interior corner of the ey e. The lons ;ire dort meHn to ,je kept irt person suhniittiKg to this operation, must sd 1 down near the l.ht. terpense any longer. -host. Post. Should the substance be iron or glas, and . adhere to the eye, an oculist rnut be called in. jot complimentary, ivt just. The edit If it is quick lime, vitriol, or Miuff, the hair pen- Qr of ;n ()hjo :nurna (the Masillor, Gacil most be dipped in fresh butter. Ihe eyel . . J , . Ifn iviimast not bo bathed in cold water. jZette) expresses himself in the fodowinr? Those persons whoe sight is not aided by the'terms, not too severe tor the occasion, tho use of concave or convex glasses, may try coni-j the mode of punishment he indicates, ia cal tubes, whose bases are of the diameter of a Lnmiinihat nut of the common wavr
spectacle rim. Let the insides be blackened, and they will find tht-y can read and see tolera bly well hy their aid Soninting may be cured Place the person
hefore you who squints. Direct him to close the Serves to be nibbled to death b young iindistortcdeyv, and look at you with the other. ' tH(Jp(,PS, n a stagnant frog-pond, in preWhen you perceive the axis of the eye fixed; ' ... . , ' , r directly on to... .ell bin, b, keep it and then, '.ce ol h.s mistre,-, without benefit of opn the ether n?. Ti' distorted eye will clergy or consolatton ol ti iends-Ainer,r'
aumtinsr Julie ov iitue to comniy nn uu
ions, and :n a short time he win De amei i to irect the RX of botn ees nt plens,irt.' an( his cure is effected. If it isonlj a east in tiro i'hV Sd C " night Those of tnv reader's who will remember these directions, will find the advantage in doing SO. From the New York Messenger. A PATHETIC SCENE. a fact -"I mut weep, Or pUp thihnnv K,nn illKnr.l") w,u nmke yoUr very heart burst IUva winter: The north winds ramesweerl! 'er ,hc y-x th cold pierced ihrouglx tne human d wellins: of one w bo had no tirp no 0,1 .... k-..i mo...,f r,,..rinr .them! She was surrounded nv fur little chilIdren one a babe but a fi w week" old. bhe jfd lost her husband some months befo.e-tho the landlady. d 1 lave no money 01 Then you must quit my house imincdiatcIbV we Mian perisn it you turn us away. isear with me I beseech you " "I'll not bear with you another moment, leav my house instantly!" The sufferer tried to speak. "I will have yoa here no more go you shall! The miserable being arose, her babe in hef arms,her little children, without shoes upon their feet, to defend them from the cold pavt ment, followed her, and they walked into the street it was night! .' ! The Ru-'ian journal Severnaga Pirhetd t;ive a collection of instances ot extraordinary fecundity in thp human species, of which the following Hie thp most remailcablp: In 1755. Jac di Kirilo, a Ru-sian, was the father of 57 children by one wife, ill of whom were living The wite had Itiu children at a birth four times, three children at a birth seven time", arid !wm9 t n times, He married a second wife, who bad mce three children at a birth. Hid six times wa delivered of twin".Fenot Wassillew itz. of Selhja, had a first wite who lay in 27 times; tour times the bad four children, seven times three, and sixteen times twins It is verified by flj ri l documents that on the 27th of February, 1762, this Wag-illewitz had had 87 children, of whom 83 were then Ii vinfj. Bait Gar. The first Masonic Lode, instituted in this country, was formed in Savannah, Georgia. A. L 5630, by a grant from Lord Weymouth cf England. From JVardzt'elPs Illustration ofJlmeri can Characteristics Jonathan, wbero was you going to yesterday when I saw you going to mill? Why 1 was going to mill to be sure. Well I wish I'd seen you Fd got yc" to carry a grist for me . Why you didee me, didn't yon? Yes, but not till you had got clean ocl of sight. i ct r-f - " j innocently put the question "My young lad, what do you intend lo I do with that snow I "Why, sir, mother wants; io thaw it to fit water to wash with 1 "Then why not take it from the top of tne drift, instead of digging so deep?' vhy' sir that on the top atnt ood fee aPV th...athe warm weather has dried pv mm,, me i ' all the water out on i. jiverpooi JiiCTCiiTyt Progress of Improvement. A young wo ; n ressed a young man; "John , yoa " tocv. H uuiiiv. 't iw "The fellow who could basely (hsert. and, after deserting, basely attempt to ex.I pose, an artless and confiding female, de-
