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Fltulntaci Rusm, iv a travelling Agent for this paper, and is authorized to raceive subscriptions and receipt for tne saune. 7Ulsan n . Labor-Saving washing Fluid. 'Quails,' the queer corresponlent vof the Boston Museum, who is dodg. ing about the country, picking uip and inventing all sorts of good things, relates the following laughable story. 'whichl he pretcnds to get from a Vermonter in a stage coach: IWel, gentlemen, I live in the State of Vermont, and in the village of --: 'taint no matter, where I live- the story is just as good without beintg located: so,4as I once before stated, I live in the State of Veranomt -in one of the largest and most flourishing villages in the State have a wire and one child, and have for the last year boarded a young physician, who. will probably one day or another be Iaster of his profession, :Wil is i' . for ani-'ht I know; buti hc I et here nor there, at this part of mly Story: s), as I was going to say, about a year ago, my wife did'nt enjoy very good health, and it came very hard for her to do Atho washain. although our family of' r course, wasni't very large, inasmuch as I at that time, didn't have the pleasure, nor honor of being a father; -but a, I was saying, it camne mighty hard fir wife to do the washing, and it aleays made her sick for a day or ti afterwards; and as I was trying 2 find a girl, one day, I dropped in a store to talk the matter over, and says the merchant to me, says he 'There aint no necessity for having a washerwoman, now,' says lie, 'for1 I have got a dozen bottles of a patent labor-saving washing fluid, that'll make your clothes just as clean as new, by just stirring them up in a tub with a stick, and letting 'em hang on a line to dry.' 'What do you charge for a bottle of it?' says I. 'Well, seein' it's you, (says h.) you may have a bottle of' it fort seventy-five cents, though I calcuate to sell 'em generally, for a dollar a bottle.' 'If sixty-twvo and a half cents will pay for a bottle. (says I,) I'll take it home and say no more about it.' 'W~ell, seemn' it's you,' says he, take it along, but don't tell nobody what you patidi for it, or it would ruin say business with the neighbhorB,' and then, says he-'A fter you have used it once or t wice, anid find that it star'ts the dirt as I tell you 'twill, l'd like for you to give me a recommiendhationi to put in the newspapers, and I. will make it all right at the end of the quarter.' 'Certainly,' says I, 'if the fluid comes up to the scratch, i'll do the handsome thing by you.' 'Well, gentlemen, this wvas on a Saturday afternoon, about font' o'clock, and I took my big black bottle of fluid, put it in my overcoat pocket and started for home. Now, thiniks I to myself', wifWe always picks up her clothes Sunday night and does up the washing Monday mr'ning, after breakfast; arid so 'twould be a good joke for me not to lot her know anything about this blessed fluid, but get up Monday morning, while site is asleep, piut the clothes in a tub pour' on the fluid, stir 'em up with a stick, and then hang them up to dry. 'Lord!' says I to myself', right in the street, its loud as I anm talking nzow, '.I'll do it, by dager. if' 1 have to get up at two .Mock!' So when I gets home I ja taikes th: bottle of' $tid out in thu wood-shed, and pokes it up on a high shelf among a lot of old iecer bottles and blacking boxes, and went whistling around the house just as it' nothing had'nt happened. 'Saturday night I went to narket just as usual; and Sunday we both wcnt to church in the Firenoon, and stayed at home and talked about our future prospects in the afterinoonz; bit I kept a keeping still about the fluid, and I did'it let on but what I expceted le woul do the washing the next morning just the same as ever. l.ut I did'nlt sleep much that night. I kept a thinking about stir-rilng up that till) of ciothes, and getting 'ei out to dry before daylight -Once I got into a short dese, and dreamed I was swimming acrIss a deep river of washing-fluid. ail the rocks at the bottom and both sides, were all petrified shirt bosol.s and pillow cases, and there was an oll washerwonanu on the banks of the river, who kept a stinin ug on us up with a long pole. I reck n I woke up about five o'cluek; Ftr 'tv as about half between davlighdlt ani dai k , and I coul just, see the leastest streak of light in thie wo.b, amon_ the clouds around the toj *s (A* th green imoun tainsi*. I turns _-ver m1. looks at my wife, and sih was sleepinl:: as soid as a dad sahmon: s 1 carefullv slides out o'bed, hurries on my clothes. and ini less thmn ten minutes had the cldi wash-tu fliedl clear to tho top with all of* wif's white clothes, and aIl II eub find. i I' 111' own. 1 pours ill aio t a aiiiful. and-a-half of clean rain-noter. .:nd then goes out in tihe woodI-shed, t aLes (own the bottle of fluid, walks bnack I to the tub, al pour11s her all in.' L-red! but 'twoull have done you gorl to heardl it sis! 'Well,' says I, to niyself, 'if th t's the dirt eC ill-, out. it maks a bIo in ly.' so a'ter le-tting it toa about a ininute, I takes up ai 0 d broom-lalidle that was stahi kl nar, awt wallops the thing :b ut, like .a lamb's tail in fly-time, fir al 'ut three uinutes, anid tlhen takes hol I 4f c': with my hatds to st.:-in 'LI on on tle fenice. But, getclem .yo'd believe 1 droppe 4 that et i e &Iuds mighty sudden!-biin' wa ter was:t a circumstance to 'em. a:d :f re / could get iy h anids ill a 1a 1f flb watet! I thought '11v s oil I -ind lose 'eel both I'ur alb'.lt a w'. I was as m:d as a serate! but I finally thohmit!t I 1p Il/y wifo with my e hang out the bilin' dus u tle l brooin-liandle awl h-t 'em da :aial dry on tile fencei lut the plau;yiv tins never i-e tI i.e last Ilite, andi' every 6:; a drop1 of the pest.y luid spattM-ed i Illy hands cr fae, it burint ise than a half a bushl. basket full of live coa's. I s gt tired of that sport, however. adI. b fore I had got out on the fence half If w-hat wams ini the tubE, I just wa he it 1f my hands and fauce in s 'me cool rinII wvater, andi streaked it 4 4t tI bed. Itt I couldn't sleep a w~ik; myimil palinedme soI 5 that I had to kepa blewing- onj 'emi to keep~ Ifromi he~erin so says I to toy wife, says I. SusanI, hadhi' t youl het Ier !et u andI hut y-our clothes to maEI' 'lIlo, hu l-u-im,' saySsI she, rubbn Ein o'winaking, as if she washa.lfsh-4p. lon g have you beeni awake' 'Oh, somleti ime,' says I , biI my hands and digginlgmlec u~ithl my toe-nails all the timue to keep, 1211 groaing!~ 'but tge .t iup no~w Susan,2 Io dear, oir you'll he late woith Ii ur breakflast, and~ I've got to gio out 4f town this miornlinlg onl limor tanit b)us ies. 'If that's thi' case,' says she, 1Ih certainly hiurrv.' 'You miay depd1)t~ upon0 it, geli tlemnen, I wais in a miigh ty uncomf r table fix about that timie! I wane to groani like a dy inig horeE and41I have so:nethiin g cooling wrappedl arnE'ill may finigers; and4 thon again. I didn'i t wvant to mlake nlo nioise, till wife had seen howv nice I hadl Iix\ed thlints Weell, wife she hiurieid and dre~ XS(4 lherself and went out ini thle kiteni to fill upl the tube. and~u in a few iniltes .1 overheard her say to herself, sa ;s she - '( ood heavens and earthI! What does all this meanui I ne2ver lput these things to soa1k! John'.~ Johll! Get up and comc hiere, ele! am uti.d..... ~ t - . o r~iu Virg We lay before o retaders the res olutions adopted in t e House of Del egates of the state Virginia, upon tle sulJect of its relations with the federal Gove: ent, and the remaining states of o South. The resolutions toll tlie ountry a fact mournfully and disast usly apparent, 'that diversity of ol.in' o exists among the people of' that e anonwealth in regard to the wisdo I, justice and i conistitutionality f e mensures of the late Corigresi of e U. States, known as the 'compemise measures.' Inl this, anud the furber fact that the I elections of' Virginia ire. approaching. and that ieither pa r seems willing I to introduce new cap al into the par- I ty contest-are we t( rea-l the riddle of these unin . !igibk :id unmeaning resolutions. ( Virginia 'sympat) -es with South t Carolina,' and we >uppose the re- i niaining Southern Stos,' in the feel- s igs excited by tLe iunwarrantable f interference of the in-slaveholing a states, with their ontmmon institti tionis,' hut will have :o .our;sel, Co tiperation, nor c'ta imication with them on the subjt of a remedy. f 'She eherislh t Uhpe,' which all I men beside - :t;andoned, that I hiese measur. )nomise will be C the end and te.ann1imon of the anti- I silvery agitation. Under this falla- t Cions, and at this umr, fatuous antic- 2 ip atioln, the old e " monwealth -no, not the old conune' jalth, but about ' one hundred cf her oliticians--send S Earth ail W .t So the Federal j Motnarch. al:nd -dvi South Car-olinla s to go Aod 1do lh ' Shie Bous' !f D1 "'ates is unfit to a act. Its ener 'es 0 palsied by di- ' vsion, and its spiti wed down un der the nalign uil e -r 8614ns Virg'iiar -. it lw their spirit to die low leveT' ut CI- . acknowl: edd'ijuiistict. ;I , f 'e ing secu r'ity in the deu e -:us that they :rc now inivollve iu no danger. This view of her position will he fraught with misclief- -ieurale mis chief-to the Union and to the South. The Soitheri States would all have cotcurredil in a result which would have afIorded full, complete. aml aduate seemities for the future. A uim of the Sith, uider the guid. a 0e of Vir-inia, in the adoption of a 'roud, high- toned and magnanimous Ilicy, comprehemtling a full view of tle past am le ' futin e, might-for ,ven t his ii d ubtful-have ensm'red the stability of the confederation. 1101r pet procedilgs deniote self Tlesertin. T'hev will le regarded in Sjiuth Caroina and't throughout the Smith a smlarked by pusillanimity- -- :m i~mlifferenee to :id f6-rgetfulness of thme hi gh hooir i aiisi noble principles fi d eferson, \Misn, 'Tavlor of Car 'dline , Tazewell , it.:midelph, anmd their We have ch~aracterised this vote as ant act of submiisiitn.as the senidini of eairt h atnd water: hiv V ireinmia to tha' impiiial depatnwnm't ef this govern Omne cann:ot hut :viver'tt to the con dlitionm of G reeei aid (of A thens at the ui' ctnsbler' thiw pisititn il thme Smuth tius are the~ sa j 'et if inmcessantt and: unmua:irru add at mens thrtouli thu Nirthen Sta tes. Viriia is nmot afraid ti 'uay t'at. Th'le' are attackeid frt~ abm'' ,n a thaus lheeag.ueredl, The firs:t p:'rparatin of' the P'er Ir du the 'i' it v'hieb migh.lt have tte. a -'ar froim :uniting~ amgmmnst the et'no fi': oe, ther still cheished' a fi Iou ani ii unrmas ingm jealhousy' of' eac i br S-veraul rea bml senmt th'e sa wols t earth anm I water') of' thmeir :dh-lince ti the P'ersian', inludaing~ TI i i u, n 'I lt:e-ums. 'The ititre safe~ friom thm' venm.ieance& of' the lamr hai~n th - tl .r-e es'idatti were over whehna l ith d'isiimay. - The renmowni ofi the \ Merlian amsm wams untmive.sa am--LinowlIedged. Ev>enm t uited , the iwholei navy if (Greice seimied insumfli inmt toi contendi mamist such a foe; aw l iid'ml amm-:m thmetmsel s, sov eralI of the S so we- ihnnruc.t rath er to succumb than resist: cAnd here says the father, 'I feel compelled t assert an opinion, however invi') it may be to many. If the Atheni ans, terrified by the danger, had for saken their codntry, or submitted to the Persian King, there would hav4 been no resistico by 8cA. The Spar tans, desered by. hcir allies, wouk 'ave died with honor or yielded fron ecessity, and all Greece have beer -educed to the Persian voke. The kthenians were thus the (lliverers ol ireece. They animated the ardo >f those States, which yet. were hithiful to thernselves: and 'next tn lie gods, they were the true repel ers of the invader. Even the Del. ibic oracles, dark and ominous as hey were, did not shake their pur >ose, nor induce them to abandon ireece.' The Delphic oracles, in he darkened counsels of the Virgin i resolutions, have core; we shall ee with what effect upon the unterri ed and heroic people to whoin they re addressed.-Mbile Tribune. CAPITAL PUMISIUMEXT IX Mon1occo. --A late l.etter from Tangier has the )llowing account of a case of capital unishment:---In my last I believe I ,ave you an account of a Moorish ex cution. Another instance of capital unishment here was attended with lie followivg singular circumstances. L Moor o: the village of Sharf had hot with- a pistol, in the market at angier, afellow villager whom lhe Lspeeed of intimacy with his wire. 'he rother of the murdered ian tarted immediately for Meyuinez, rhoe the Sultan was then residing, neelaimed the life of the murderer. .e Sultan heard the complaint, ac. iowledged the jistice of tho demand lain if into his U o idwg 6b Jrotlle', ",iii,8 'soMe In'M a a ut C1 Icath with whhih fit! n as m inated ind on the same spot. mil at rite sam, bour or the dtag. '8ut.' added ti4 Sultan, 'why sekest thou also to 1) 1 manslayer? Accept the price o blood which is lawful unto true be ievers, and we will guarantee yor ts nayment from our Sharfiarn lamd md two hundred mitzakel shall b .he sum.' To this the plaintiff replied: Ca: that sum puchase me a brother?' 'Go thy way,' said the Sultan; 'wI iave heard and understood, a lettei will be given you by the vizier, it which our mandate shall bo written. Futished with the sentence o leath the man returned to) Tangier in'l presented it to the Governor On the same day of-the week and a tie same hour, the nuuderer wai brought out of prison and seated ot the very spot wher he had taken hi. Fellow villager's life, while crowds o people attended to witness his death rhe pistol was now given to th< brother of the murdered man, wI Loaded it, wnent up to, the criminal walked slowly rounid him, anid said 'fIn the presenice of' God and mant, call upon you to answer me truly D~idst thou slay my brother?' TIo thi the crimiinal replied, 'I did.' O o) the multitude ntow stepping f'orward adIdressed the brother ot the tmturder ed man: 'Act opt the price of blood; said lie, 'and I promise you one hmi dred ductats in addition, which this, will gladly give' 'WVorthless words,' said the vilhi ger; anti again he walked r'ound bi victim. Again be asked bhilt same quecstioni, atid againi the sam~l reply was giveni. A second ollfer wa nw nmade of two hunidred ducats: ani again the villager walking aruntd th criitmnal , re~peated his qutestiaon ,o din1g, ' Say what thou heievest ; I am about to take thy life.' 'Thait God is God, and Mahomet is the Prophtet of God,' responded th~ crimnald. Scarcely were theo words utterer wvhen thme pist->I was discharged. TI muzzle bed'' bien placedl at the s:ta of the back. being the same spi whetre lie bad shot the nmn for whit lie was now about to die; but th wrte tched cr imnal , alrtough tiortall wnounided, did not expire f'or SJnI ho urms. - - TImi: C'avsrwrn P'1,~m: ny Mo: m.nar mr. -1lThe clear nuightts anid tl full bright moon, says L eigh Hunt Journal, have enabled us to see i C2rysfal Palae in a new light -th; of nmoonligiht, and certainly, like M. rose- vou must scc- it by moonmli4l if you would see-it rightly. -Under c the blue cloudless azure of th .heay 8 One, studded with its glistening :star eyes, the traveller wostwatd sees its elegant proportions dailloi itoi *ex quisito relief above, tie long linq of Knightbridge Bairracks, like, a. deli. cate caprice of an evenihg frobt, l gracefully disclosing its cllasO :be.au ties to its own chaste moon. p proach: nearer and a hundred! moons sparkle in the tail arched transopt, and the 'broken light of stars'Csi& at you through the web ot iron' nt work, and a silver glitter, chequered by the arms of intervening trees, floats outward till it loses itself in the' dark distancoof tbe park. Mi Wo extract the follomin glit tie story from Miss Bremer's "North ern Loves and Legends: "Certainly you have obsorved how strangely, sometimes, the eloudsi a' morning aid" evening, group them selves round the sun, and are. lighted up by it, and you have thought, sonetinms, 'if this should be repre sented in painting, people would say it is unnatural; it is not DTue !' So, even, is human life. We often find events, looking when related or des cribed in books, even, unnatural, and yet are perfectly true to reality, to nature, though not to every day na ture. For example, if any one should tell that, once, a first kiss was given by a young, modest lady, publicly, and in a public square, to a young man that she saw for the first time, certainly all young ladies and old la dies, and ycung gentlemen and old gentlemen, would, with one voice. call out,'it is not true; it is impossible.' Well, I ontreat your ttention to the following litt'atory, for whose ttath Itd re- t i al . pe yyouth, wtve for tA si diesrILut witho tit 19f, pursuing them. Ie was poor hmd without connections. Still he studied on liv ing im great poverty, but keeping up p a cheerful heart, and trying not to look at the future, which looked so grinly at him. Ilis good bumcr and good qualities made him beloved by his young comrades. Once he was standing with some of them in the grent square of Upsala, prating away in hour of leisure, when the attention of the young men became arrested by a very young and elegant lady, who, at the side of an elderly one, walked slowly over the place. It was the daughter of tlie governor of Upsala, residing in the city, and the lady with her was her governess., She was generally known for her beautyllond for her goodness and gentledess of character, and was looked npon with great admiration by the students. As the young men now stood silently gazing at her as she passed on like a graceful vision, one of them exclaimed :'Well, it would he worth something to have a kiss fromi such a pretty mouth!' The poor student, the hero of our story, who w'as looking intently at that pure mid angelic face, exclaimed, -as if hiv inspiration, "'Well, I think I could have it.'' "What!" cried his friends in a chorus, "are you crazy ? Do you know ner? etc. "Not at all," he answ ered; "but I think she would kiss mec. just now, if I asked her.".' "What: ini this place, before all our eyes?" "~In this place, biefore y'our ieyes." "Freely.?" "Freely." 'Well, ifsewill give you a kiss in that manner, I will give you a thousand d (ollatrs" '"And I?"' ''And I!"' cried three or four others, for it so happen e ed that several rich young men were .in the group, mnd bets ran high onl se e imnprobtable an event, and the chal lenge was made and received in lest itime thani we take to relate it. eOur heiro--my authority tells no whether lhe was handsome or plain-) have moy peculiar reasons for believ luig that he was rather plain, but sin li gularly good looking at the sam<t >t time -our hero walked off to wee a the young lady. Ie bowed to he: eand said, My lady (min froleen,) m: vfortunew is in your hand.'' She look e il at himit in astonishmnent, but arrest ed lier steps. ie proceeded to stat, his noneui and conditioni, his aspira -* tins, andi related simp~ly and trul; a what had just passedl between 'hin 's and liis companions. TVhe young In te dhy listeneud attentively, anid when hi it h, ld ased to speak, she said,1;lueli I. ing, but with great sweetiess y 1( t, so little a thinai 8o much, good coub be effected, it wou-d betb1o to refuse yonr- requstfi kissed the yodng man ep xn,day, theoqur" sent for by. e'overnn od to'sed, the youn n d that: Way, apdwahom she h -ed to kiss soe received i .a severe aid scrutinizing b after nd i ours -coinveFni- , . 0 pleased with hiin that i to dine at his table during t 1ed ,rse of hisistudies'in Upsala. Our youngk fiend nd d a studies in a marner w him regarded. as the mot pfom g scholar at the :Universityqdhree years were n16t passbd aftn thelay of thd first kiss, when ,he yoingidan was allowed to give a secorid to the lovely daughter of- the governof 1a his betrothed bride: He became iter Oine eitile est scholars In Sweden, as res pected for his lIearning a3 for bis character. - is works will epdriro for ever among the A& ofcice, and from his happy union s-sprang a family well known in Sweden in--the present day, and whose wealth of for tune and high position in society' Aro regardod as small things, Copared with its wealth and goodness of love. FoM CLun.- The New Origans Picayune mention.s rumors of a, out break in Cuba. One report, bad it that negroes on some of the plantg tions in the interior bad risen upon their masters; another story was to the effect that a revolution against the authdities had becn stdrteddaid was making ha1 .way. T6e Del gives an .na It says that the iuwvns4 tfHiv th ir Vuelta ba noWIthz iewV of jolfdil the revolutionary movements 'as.oo as it breaks out. This inovement has been hastened by tho.-orders 'hleh have been issued for the arrest otiho leading patriots in Havana, and oth er parts of the Island. -A consider able number of them have rtired~to the mountains, carrying with them an entire company of Spanish soldiers which was stationed at San Criatobal, at the foot of the Cuzco rnountials* and many deserters from the -urfiy. These mountains altford retreats'inac cessible to the Spafiih authorities. As a proof of the secrecy ith which the tyrants of Cubit maketheir arrestk, says the Delta, we maystate the fact that the arrests referred -to were made during the festivities~on the occasion of the visit of several distinguished members of our Con* gress to the Captain Gene-al; aaid yet were not known to thosesge'pfite men before they left Ulavana.' NOVEL INTERRETATIo$,-- 0 heard the other day of an-original and highly ingenious interpretation of a scriptural paissage, which throu-a'the acuteness of Clirke and Ihenrg, q te into the shade. A school-boy -don east, who was noted among hisply fellows for his froliks ug the giris, was reading aloud, in the~Olda ipent, whcn coniug to thep~e imaking the WastE places1dL.) was asked by the -pedagu what it meant ?' 'The yoiingstir pauseda. scratched lisa head- but coud i-o. answer, when up jumpen 6 cocious urchin and cried 'I know what it means, M* means huggriny, the girls ; f it Ross is allers hsugging 'eu roq the waist, and it mnakes 'em as gl as can be.' Oti rigevoeMORT ANCE CF A SriM ~ ~ . to the LngPrl~aiaent, Charle-i to the ao 1fbI1 andl revoluion1e* land. 'obr vote.4, in the Lt York, madlo Thiomas Jtif rsob ~ i. dent of tiho Unitya4 $tate. ( to ~ave usilihg tar , r] to t made tI'e tariff omf Q'i o Qto gave us Texas,,mpide war ualth~ccoo Ssleif thmouin of our Opple, iig pur. chosed Calf'orniNt tun od ithihor tho tide of oemigkition, ond will elielh destiny or the wo~rld.. SE4Ur1UL..E4Pnon.-''~ *I non of the journey of lifes to a trasiuagdes .adeterte is very feictouslyiypprisued -i *he followirg lineos fromnadri.b9: H/'tereb-thernde ~~ni 4 - ottnighitly piomio in * A day'8 imarch nenlogQ genitlemten that this customeir wasn't very slow in his movements about that time, for in less than forty sceclods I was there, and says I 'What's tho matter, Susan? What's the matter?' 'Why. do look here,' says she, 'soinehiody has put all of my best elothes in this tub, and then put sumething on thein, which has entirely ruined them!" '11a ha, ha!' says 1, 'well, Susan, I Suppose I might as well own up to the joke at once, for my hands ache ;o that I can't hold in anv longer. It's nothing but washing fluid :1i it leanls the clothes w ithout anyV rul biig, and it's well it does, for n'o iair of hands in this world could 3t:111 to (10 the rubbing. I got up .hig imorning.r while yon were asleep, 1ul dune up the whole washinag, anl " itg I'art of 'Cim out on the feice to 'Whtile I was saying this, mife she ook a little Stick, :and in ryig to ilt out of the tub 4nc of' her-or that S "ie of her garietits. hv ginger'! lie taral .ii thinuig h u rst in two' righit brauch the lmile'; one haul1' hiohling 'il to the stick, and t'otler halt ailhici a'k ito the tiu.! Although was sufl'ering, from mv burnt hands, unl was :is mail as a Gree.\l oitaini -a Tun t. at whiat the infernal fluid id dotne, I coulin't a kept firoi anghing that mIIoment. if i'd a died ijr it. 'Wife tiok a leehp at the clo.thcs Il the fenc-called up the voing lct'l'r to dress Iny i an ds, and then 1-t dwn :ti mid hal :I goodil crying spell. le doletor iurried into the rooma. : fl afte'r seeiing wife a sitting in the ein-chrair a crvin, and Tile MPdinil the room ItAl grning .e a. hii iml in a graveyard, says he hl tie nime of calomell a1.d t 9 'ti g t e n --s 'o y ft L r ai (lie cloth I th Iul oif tli.-odering wa ishinig id ha I've icen ext'er'imenting wit T.l-~ docttri looked at may hI. . i s he-. X\\here.e's the bottle?' 4 ut (in the d": -ep,' says I. -Th docto "' -.: _mI lo ed a bet hottie, m. . --a e t out in the Ia p-ep at the old -erI ho is a blackin. ha~ oxes, mal, I r I :i 1 ; a lit tle to hiIs'lf, I.:::e into the kitchen. amtl 1'''l y u a.v i Ilmortal ized 'I.h'la.' :1tl nao mistAke, and von :Ill lie kniiwni hereal . If ter as tle iaS1ing id F.xjrlitiriter.' '\V'hmt inl the .hunde vrou 'Xhy,' sis ie. 'vour bottle el msinIi Sh n ":,is Wit On the shla ' Jba-o - .(Iu p.ut it, I supp-se; :1114 you(;I :ve uisI uIp a qiuat amd a 1half1' Mf hlk best Epitv of, .il lit vitriul, that 've 11:11 n ho : l th1e1 e six moithsq. 'iidlezat , I 'l a 11:11 that d n i't ae fr'ifa::,I ho'rna*e '.nly ini extreme: es noni ent s, then 'twals heeause I I.:ahmi u i el ncsed bttle ofa a~hn .if the ie ia~tc ie'i XXhI a uin-hedllurielitheilin the ahi b .ne wi ayc; ever ah 1 e:at if a :i aan var - i l i i n ie lettilea'of that t niii ii. s, sni t~ha: hiegoit t . .n t .irh umth u a .t e thel 'ah a ii liii ii I rib~' lii Ia ates ithat cm 'ld iu etui g line lwhiebiih'ii a :':n shn all'g the inater lif mi an ':uned d'a -ntuied ton a valve.