MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: AN AGRICULTURAL AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
t .:.:.:.t3.TO£ gw 
dittcatiflital. 
ADDRESS TO SCHOOL BOYS. 
CHAPTER III. 
There is another thing, boys, I wish you es¬ 
pecially to remember; and that is, to remain 
steadfast in principles of honesty and virtue.— 
Wisdom may make you eminent, but it cannot 
alone make you respectable and happy. An 
educated villain is more to be dreaded in soci¬ 
ety than pestilence or war! JU3t as much more 
knowledge as a bad man has, just so much nearer 
and nearer does he become a devil! Just as 
much more as education helps to elevate a 
man in society, and give him capacity to do 
good if he turns it to the right account, just 
so much it is injurious in a bad man’s hands. 
Wrongly directed, it wall tend to sink you lower 
iu the scale of moral being, and render you 
doubly guilty in the sight of God. It will sink 
you deeper in the end, than a nether mill-stone 
hung around his neck would sink a struggling 
drowning wretch in the bottom of the sea! 
Besides all that, it costs as much time and 
study to become an accomplished scoundrel 
as-it does to become a philosopher. It requires 
as much labor to become a first rate counter¬ 
feiter, as it does to become a first rate banker. 
It requires as much study to commit a felony 
and escape a felon’s doom, as it does to preside 
in a criminal court and administer the laws.— 
The accomplished thief or robber, with the 
same mental acumen, might have become, if he 
had chosen it, a governor of a State, or a Judge 
of the Supreme Court An eminent rogue la¬ 
bors as hard to establish a claim to the peni¬ 
tentiary, as an eminent statesman does to es¬ 
tablish a claim to a seat in a Legislative Hall. 
When we reflect, that the latter of these is 
followed by honor, respect and love, and the 
former by curses, disgrace and punishment, is 
there anything short of madness would tempt 
a man to take the former path? In the State 
of New York, alone, there are fifteen hundred 
men confined in State prisons, to sav nothing 
of those shut up in county jails, houses of cor¬ 
rection, and houses of refuge. Are the Auburn 
and Sing-Sing prisons to be shut up and unoc¬ 
cupied after the present tenants have gone 
to their long home? I would to God they 
were, but I have no such hope! The millenni¬ 
um is not so near at hand as that. The cells of 
the present race of convicts will be occupied 
by their successors in crime and guilt;—many 
of them fallen from a high estate; who forgot the 
lessons of their youth, the admonitions of pa¬ 
rents—the instructions of the school-master— 
the warnings of their minister, and the lessons 
of their sabbath-school teacher; who cast aside 
the chances of being virtuous and happy, and 
chose to be vicious and wretched. 
But a virtuous boy very seldom makes a 
wicked man. If he live to the age of twenty- 
one, with the good seed of upright principles 
sown in his heart, it is not often choked out 
by the tares of vice. “Train up a child in the 
way in he should go, and when he is old he 
he will not depart from it.” Remember this, 
young men, and be warned in time! Go on 
as you have begun, and swear upon the altar 
of your hearts, that you wih be law-abiding, 
industrious and sober citizens—that you will 
use your best efforts to cultivate your intellec¬ 
tual powers—that you will let no opportuni¬ 
ties slip to gain a new idea or carry an old one 
into effect, and you will go on rising higher 
and higher. Some of you may become legis¬ 
lators, some of you clergymen, some of you 
teachers, some of you merchant princes—some 
intelligent farmers, prosperous mechanics, suc¬ 
cessful tradesmen: all of you, each according to 
his talents and industry, sober, respectable, and 
upright men. If any of you should possess, in 
the language of Mark Anthony, “ neither wit 
nor worth, nor words, action nor utterance, nor 
power of speech to stir men’s blood,” you have at 
least, plain, common sense minds, susceptible of 
cultivation, abilities to place yourselves iu a fair 
position in society, and be useful in the world. 
If you do not do it, it will “ be a grievous fault 
and grievously will you have to answer for it.” 
You cannot all be rich or great neither is it 
desirable that you should be so; but you need 
not be so poor as to come to want. All men 
are not born with silver spoons in their mouths, 
but all men ought to be provided with a respect- 
a ; le livelihood, and if they are willing to work 
they rarely will be without it. Your parents can¬ 
not always support you, and give you the chan¬ 
ces of education which you have now; and the 
time set apart for school purposes will not stay 
with you long. It Is a wise man wdio makes 
use of the passing hour, and lays up intellectu¬ 
al treasures. He who squanders his time is a 
worse prodigal than lie who squanders his in¬ 
heritance. The latter may be recovered by 
industry and prudence; the former, once gone, 
is gone beyond redemption. The poverty of 
an ill-spent life is poverty indeed. The wretch 
who is poor in spirit, is poor for eternity as 
well as time. 
When an extravagant friend wishes to bor¬ 
row money, consider which of the two you had 
rather lose. 
ABOUT THE LETTER J. 
Many people in writing the capital J make 
no distinction in form from that of I, or if they 
do, it is so slight that most people would be 
at a loss to distinguish the two unless the letter 
is accompanied by the ivliole word. Such in¬ 
distinctness often occasions mistakes; mistakes 
that might at times result in something serious, 
always, in that which is unpleasant. Every 
letter should have a characteristic form that 
will distinguish it from all others at a glance.— 
And why J has come to be written so much 
like I, is hard to be told. The fault must lie in 
the teacher, or him who leads the hand to use 
of the pen. 
J should always, when designed as a capital, 
be made with its lower half below, while I 
should only come to the line; then there can be 
no mistake, and if the renowned “John Doe” , 
should take the notion to write his first name 
with only its initial, the printer would never 
transform him into I. Doe. Every one who 
instructs in penmanship, should bear this in ' 
mind, and teach the pupil the difference in con¬ 
structing these two letters; and those who have 
acquired the habit, should at once break it, and 
so write their J’s that they may be “ known of 
all men.” t. f.. w. 
YOUNG FOLKS AT SCHOOL. 
We have a word of advice for parents who 
have children at school. 
Your little ones are dear to you—about as 
dear- as the apple of your eye. Their success 
at school is near your heart. Of course you’ll 
do nothing to interfere with it You are anx- : 
ious to help them along, provided helping them 
will not seriously tax you. Pardon us for re¬ 
freshing your knowledge on the subject with 
a few hints. 
Keep them regularly at' school. —Absence 
of a day is bad. They lose one day’s lessons. 
They drop a stitch by the means. It deranges 
the teacher’s plans, and makes it easier for the 
absence to occur again. Better sutler a great 
inconvenience than to keep them home a day. 
Better spend several shillings and some hours, 
and do errands yourself, than keep them home 
to run them. 
Be sure they are punctual. —Ten minutes 
in the morning does you no good, and them 
much harm. Arrived at the school-room ten 
minutes too late, they disturb the punctual, 
lose an exercise, provoke the teacher and cul¬ 
tivate a miserable habit of procrastination.— 
The matter of habit is the great objection, 
though, in after years it sticks to a body like 
a boy to a bare-backed horse, and the harder 
one runs to be clear of it, the closer it hugs 
him. 
They have lessons to learn out of school.— 
Let it be held a religious duty that they learn 
them, ivell. By this the teacher judges of 
your interest in their progress. If they always 
go prepared on these home lessons, he is care- 
Tul that they get well on with their school les¬ 
sons. He feels that he is watched; he is inter¬ 
ested for your children; and whether he means 
it or not, knows it or not, he labors more faith¬ 
fully for their advancement If the evidences 
are that you pay no attention to them at home, 
he does his duty mechanically, and only hopes 
for the best. 
Sometimes you are a little at leisure. Once 
in a great while you don’t know what to do 
with yourself. Then, we pray you, bestir your¬ 
self, aad give up an hour to visit the school — 
Make suddenly your appearance in the room 
where they are reciting. You will see wheth¬ 
er the room is an ill-ventilated, close,stifled pen, 
or a room fit for a half fledged immortal to 
grow in; by whose side they sit; whether they 
look tired, weary and languid, or as if they 
were careful to learn, and doing well; whether 
they are associating u r ith lads or lasses fit for 
their company, or breathing impurities, and 
contracting evil habits, unawares, daily. 
Try it a month, if you are not now doing it, 
and accept our pledge that before the thirtieth 
day is up, you will see a most marked improve¬ 
ment in your little folks’ scholarly habits and 
attainments, and that you will come lo the 
conclusion that their teacher is one of the best 
in the world. If you have never paid much 
attention to such things, you will be surprised 
to see how much the teachers are doing for 
you; and still further, you will wonder how- 
much more they will do if their efforts are 
RECOGNIZED AND APPRECIATED. - JY. Y. Times. 
Educational Bequest. — By the death of 
Mrs. Bird, of So. Boston, the sum of §20,000 
has fallen to South Boston for school purposes, 
according to the will of her son, John K. Bird, 
who died in 1835, leaving his property to his 
mother during her lifetime, and at her death 
to be equally divided between certain relatives 
and South Boston — the portion of the latter 
to be appropriated “ to the support of a semi¬ 
nary of the first order for the education of 
females,” to be established in that section. 
The property lying in Dorchester and South 
Boston, as stated by the Traveler, is worth 
$40,000, but the real estate yields but little 
direct income as at present situated, and to be 
made immediately available must of necessity 
be sold and converted into other property. 
Pleasures. —I see that when I follow my 
shadow, it flies me; when I fly my shadow, it 
follows me. I know pleasures are but shadows 
which hold no longer than the sunshine of my 
fortunes. Lest, then, my pleasures should for¬ 
sake me, I will forsake them. Pleasure most 
flies me when I most follow it— Warwick. 
There are three classes of readers; some 
enjoy without judgment; others judge without 
enjoyment; and some there are who judge while 
they ecyoy, and enjoy while they judge. The 
latter class reproduces the work of art on 
which it is engaged. Its number’s are very 
small. 
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EARN SWALLOW. [Hirrnido Americana.] 
SlTrfnT^Frr A ™ ICA ” 1H> 
ViViJvlilA Vii/ ALU + American history presents many remarka- 
wf>.r^n/ww'.AA ( ->ble instances of young men taking prominent 
mi, p tm i) iu sum i niff and commanding stations at an age that would 
THE BARN SWALLOAV. be ihou?hfc vcry a young in other countries.- 
We subjoin a few striking examples, from the 
Our readers will recognize in a glance, at the [jyt of those who have passed off the stage of 
above engraving, the portrait of a very diminu- human action. 
tive, but familiar friend; one whose cheerful At the age of 29, Mr. JeffersSn wasaninflu- 
’ , , . . ,. ,, OMno ential member of the Legislature of Virginia. 
note and glancing wing enliven the rural scene- 
At 30 he was a member of the Virginia Con- 
ry of all our country dwellings, and of the vent j on; a t 32 a member of the Continental 
few wild birds which delight to build their Congress; and at 33 he wrote the Declaration 
nests and rear their young under the roof built of Independence. 
for the comfort and convenience of civilized Alexander Hamilton was only 20 years of 
age when he was appointed a Lieut. Colonel 
humanity. ... in the army of the Revolution, and Aid-de- 
The swallow, for that is the tiny bird repre- (jamp to Washington. At 25 he was a mem- 
sented by the cut, comes among us about the ber of the Continental Congress; at 30 he was 
middle of April from his far-off winter home one of the ablest members of the Convention 
in a more genial clime. These birds tenant wMcb framed the Constitution of’the United 
, 8 i T „ States; at 32 he was Secretary of the Ireas- 
our barns and out-buildings by thousands, in ury , and orgai) j zed that branch of government 
a single day, the comparative stillness is broken U p 011 s0 complete and comprehensive a plan 
in upon by the little noisy but welcome intrud- that no great change or improvement has since 
ers, whose airy circuits and sportive gyrations been made upon it 
, , . , i _ii i John Jay, at 29 years old, was a member oi 
seem to speak, as plainly as words could do ^ Conti J ntal C J gresg , and wrote an address 
their joy at greeting once more their rural tQ people of Great Britain, which was just- 
summer homes. ly regarded as one of the most eloquent produc- 
Eave and rafter, gable end and cornice, very tions ot ihe times. At 32 he prepared the 
. ° , 1 Constitution of the State of New York, and ill 
aoonpvc support and diet er to their mud- appointed Chief Justice of 
1_Mi ._A ^ C .,.1, hiwt/1 intnvmro ... " * 1 
built nests, out of whose feather-lined interiors, 
curious little heads will be seen watching sus- 
the State. 
W ashington was 27 years of age when he cov- 
piciously the passer-by. If an adventurous or ered the retreat of the British troops at Brad- 
mischievous school-boy should climb to one of dock’s defeat; and the same year was honored 
, . . . , ,,. by an appointment as Commander-m-Chiei ot 
their nests, what an outcry is raised around his ^ [ llia f orces . 
head! The whole republic of swallows is on Joseph Warren was 29 years of age when 
the wing, and recruits from the neighboring he delivered the memorable address on the 5th 
colonies are seen coming in from all directions, ol March, which aroused the spirit of patriotism 
to increase the -noise end confusion.” and liberty in that section of the count™ and 
at 34 gloriously lell m the cause ot freedom on 
The swallow, as are all the other feathered ^ un p er Hill, 
songsters of the field and forest, is a welcome Fisher Ames, at the age of 27, had excited 
summer visitor to our homes; and the man public attention by the ability he displayed in 
who does not greet its coming with a smile, the discussion of questions of public interest— 
f , , ° .... At the age of 30, his masterly speeches m de- 
and afford it shelter and protection while le f euce 0 f the Constitution of the United States, 
has a roof to cover his own head, is a wretch had exerted very great influence, so that the 
by nature and a brute at heat; and the boy youthful orator of 31 was elected to Congress 
who would deliberately tear down its dwelling, from the Suffolk District over the revolutionary 
or destroy its callow young, must be looked af- he j^Jph Sto£ entered public life at the age 
ter and reformed by his mother and the parson, of 2 {j ; he was elected to Congress from the Es- 
or he will be certain to come to some bad end. j se x District, when he was 29; was Speaker of 
Let the swallow, then, everywhere, as he gen-1 the Massachusetts House ol Representatives 
erally is, be voted the freedom of the barn ; at *>“> aml tlie same year was appointed by 
and out-buildings, and he will lend his humble j Court ofthe United Statas b 
but best efforts to make the home of the far- j p>e Witt Clinton entered public life at 28; 
mer both cheerful and attractive. j Henry Clay, at 26. The most youthful signer 
__ . ^- I ofthe Declaration of Independence was Wil- 
i CHAPTER OF CURIOUS FACTS. 
ilUabkg. 
[For Moore’8 Rural New-Yorker.] 
SUNSET MUSINGS AT MOUNT HOPE. 
Tjie following lines, suggested by the tender and affec¬ 
tionate expressions always used, when speaking of their 
deceased mother, are respectfully dedicated to the Misses 
B-, by the author. 
How slowly fades the dying day! 
As loth to leave a world so bright; 
How gleams the sun’s departing ray, 
O’er city spire and forest height 1 
The fragrance of earth’s brightest flowers. 
Is wafted on the twilight breeze, 
And zephyr tones are whispering soft, 
Like angel voices ’mid the trees. 
Mount Hope ! within thy calm retreat. 
When earth-born passions sink to rest; 
We heeded not the sun’s decline, 
Toward yonder bright and glowing west. 
We’ve lingered long among thy hills, 
Where giant trees their branches wave; 
And once again, with saddened hearts, 
We’ve knelt beside our mother's grave. 
Our mother! Oh, those tender words 
Awake sweet memories of the past I 
Of scenes o’er which the hand of time, 
Obliyion's dark’ning shade lias cast. 
They waft us back, on fancy’s wing, 
To childhood’s bright and sunny bowers; 
They tell of pure and holy love, 
Which strewed life’s morning way with flowers. 
Once more our mother's gentle smile 
Seems beaming o’er our childish play; 
And now, we kneel beside her chair, 
With infant hands upraised, to pray. 
The scene is changed, and childhood’s years 
Have vanished like a summer’s day : 
And youtli, with all its hopes and fears, 
And blissful dreams, has passed away. 
And we have wept full many a tear, 
O’er fairest prospects blighted now, 
And often have our hearts been chilled, 
By friendship's cold and altered brow. 
But 'mid these varied, changing scenes, 
One star has o’er our pathway shone; 
And ever, in life’s darkest hours, 
A cheering radiance o’er us thrown. 
Our mother’s pure, unchanging lovo, 
Has cheered us ’mid the storms of life; 
And nerved our spirits to endure, 
When fainting in the world's rude strife. 
But now ’tis past; and we have laid 
“ Our darling mother” down to rest: 
Life’s dream is ended, and she Bleeps, 
Mount Hope 1 upon thy peaceful breast. 
Our home is sad and cheerless now; 
Life's dearest, holiest charm has flown; 
But though ave miss her tender love, 
We feel that we are not alone. 
Her Rpirit ransomed from earth’s chains, 
Is ever hovering round our way; 
Her angel voice will lead us back, 
If e’er from virtue’s path we stray. 
And when life’s “silver cord is loosed,” 
And slowly falls its latest sand; 
Her harp will ring a heavenly song, 
Of welcome to the better land. 
Love cannot die : for God is Love— 
And He its holy light hath given; 
It tunes the Seraplijs golden lyre, 
And all is lovo and joy in licavon. 
Mount Hope, farewell! thou’ltever be. 
To us the holiest spot on earth; 
And doarer far thy silent gloom, 
Than gilded halls of boisterous mirth. 
The sun’s last ray lias faded now, 
And twilight falls o’er hill and dell; 
With hearts subdued we turn away, 
And bid thee, once again—farewell! 
Rochester, N. Y., 1854. A. M. N. 
[ For the Rural New-Yorker.] 
CITARITY THE BEST OF ALL GIFTS. 
VjUUH Ul LliC VJIiAUJU . ... 
De Witt Clinton entered public life at 28; G Corinthum8 > Chap ‘ XU1 > 
Henry Clay, at 26. The most youthful signer Charity is a gift more to be coveted than 
ofthe Declaration of Independence was Wil- human or angelic eloquence, music, or melody, 
liam Hooper ot North Carolina, whose age The gifts of prophecy, of a mystery-solving wis- 
was but 24. Of the other signers of the•Dec- doin and 0 f a miracle-working faith, are not 
. laration, Thomas Haywood, ol houth Garoh- , ... , ' , Al , 
A lead wire, the thirteenth of an inch, sus- i na> was 30 ; Eldridge Gerry, Benjamin Rush, to be compared with love. For love outlasts 
tains 281 pounds. ( James Wilson and Matthew Thornton were the gifts of prophecy and of tongues: it still 
A tin wire, the thirteenth of an inch sus- 3 ^. Arthur Middleton and Thomas Stone will live, when, in the immediate and perfect 
tains 341 pounds. , were 33. light of the presence of the l ather of spirits; 
n G nknfc m,ler P ° It will be observed that we have confined our and in th eriod of thc soul > s manhood, the 
pounds 01 copper. our illustrations to persons under 3» years of 1 
Ihe emerald is ranked among the gems, but agG) and j iave 0I1 iy alluded to those with na- darkness ot our present, partial, childlike 
i snow found only in Peru. It is green, harder tional reputations. knowledge will have vanished away, 
than quartz, and always in crystal. Oriental -- Charity is better than alms-giving; better 
em Th a e CopeSmlmE’ consist of primi- nlt^ar^^“Seluwo^vealoKok thaU a martyr ’ S s P irit: for il alone U rotiteth thc 
U,ca»dtra,LiU 0 „..c,d<, . ^Sgly “ 2k , flve Charity»long-suffering and kindness- 
Ihe surface of the earth w 196 862 256 w0 , 8 k j loueor two of them, lame the rest, the opposite ol an envious, a vaunting, or a 
square miles: and its solidity is 250,926,935,- ^ S))road t j ie teiTor 0 f ij s nam e throughout puffed-up spirit. It manifests itself in seernli- 
locu m nncs. i millirma nf the country. The wild horse strikes with his ness of behavior: in the absence of all self-seek- 
0 0 4(1 dTl *» loot, like the stag, and oot wi.h his Mad ta It is , 8pirit uot easily provok<; d ; 
The narrowest part ot the Atlantic B more J ( ; ^ . t , ]is slow to think evil. It is a spirit that weeps 
than two miles deep. In other parts, about p0Un J g him buneM h his murderous pestles, when iniquity abounds, and rejoices when the 
one and a Lai mi es. , 1 , A „ ,, then seizes him between the shoulders with his truth prevails. It is a .spirit, of meekness, con¬ 
tains 341 pounds. 
Gun metal is 12 pounds of tin and 100 
pounds of copper. 
light of the presence of the lather of spirits; 
and in the period of the soul’s manhood, the 
Eou£d"s m^Sn Exit'd” 1 st x h r w r* „ Abovc r 
to make sport for themselves and their oil- 
spring .—Household Words. 
and the Gul f L 'Toi "V ^ work It will think that itcoststhirty-fivemillionsof dol 
, . , , ,, . fi J be sooner heard of, and applauded, and re- pay the salaries ot American lawyers; 
About thirty fresh water springs are discov- wurded 011 J. h « olher sid « of th « S lobe > than b ? f vebc niillions °f d f ars ar f P aid ° ut an! 
ered under the sea, on the south ofthe Persian ? our immediate acquaintances. to keep our criminals and ten millions o 
al ascribes them to steam and the force of gases , cU ' u ;‘. bUU Vl ; K . ’ 
formed by water and metallic oxydes. able good chance foi tin 
Fourteen earthquakes, in different parts of uimes are forthcoming. 
the globe, were recorded in 1827, and perhaps 1 -• • ♦ 1 • It was a good answer that was once given 
this is an average number. Quintillian mentions the fact of a rich man, by a poor woman t o a minister, who asked her 
The Sandwich Islands are volcanic. his contemporary, who poisoned the flowers —“ \\ hat is faith?’ Shereplied,“lamigfto- 
Owyhec is in the cone of a volcano higher and herbs in his garden, that his neighbor’s rant; I cuunot answer well; but I think faith is 
an Mount Blanc. bees might not gather honey from them. taking God at his word.” 
able good chance for the potter’s field before the lta ministers. 
Quintillian mentions the fact of a rich man, 
his contemporary, who poisoned the flowers 
ing. It is a spirit not easily provoked; and 
slow to think evil. It is a spirit that weeps 
when iniquity abounds, and rejoices when the 
his truth prevails. It is a .spirit, of meekness, can- 
rocks, rendered smooth by mutual attritions in t0 .maso sport Vf , hope —charity is a spiritual gift earnestly to be 
a long time, by water and tides. spnn 0 . ouse w oi s. desired and followed after, the best and great- 
The Amazon falls but a foot in fifty miles; ~ ”7,7* * 77 7 , . . est irift of God e. 
the Rhine one foot in a quarter of a mile; the -A- Nutshell of 1 rutii. Here is a brief " __ 
Loire a foot in one and a half miles. paragraph into which a big heap of truth is 
Ninety species of bones of quadrupeds have squeezed:—“ Did you ever scratch thc end of a Clergymen.— Some people talk a great deal 
been found which are now unknown piece»of timber slightly elevated, with a pin?— about ministers, and the cost of keeping them, 
The waters ofthe Red Sea appear to be Though scarcely heard at one end, it was dis- paying their house rent table expenses, and 
thirty-two feet higher than the Mediterranean, tinctly heard at the oilier. J ust so it is with other items of salary. Did such croakers ever 
and the Gulf of Mexico is twenty-two feet uuy "lent, excellence, or good work, it will think that.tcoststhirty-liveu.,II,onsofdoUajuto 
, . , , ,, . fi J be sooner heard of, and applauded, and re- pay the salaries ot American lawyers; Unit 
1 About^irty frith water springs are discov- "unled on Ihe other side of the globe, than by twelve millions of dollars are paid out annually 
Droll ,m,w thp-W nn th«, south of the Persian y our immediate acquaintances. to keep our criminals, and ten millions of dol- 
Gulf _. - ♦ i , _ lars annually to keep the dogs in the midst of 
The Mediterranean makes a tide of only one A Dollar.— If you want to know precisely us ullve > whl,e ™ ! y 81X mdl ‘ ons of doflars are 
or two feet. how much a dollar is worth, just try to borrow spent annually to keep six thousand ministers 
The Caspian is 300 feet lower than the Bal- that amount from your most intimate friends. 111 r tbe United States? 
tic, and 345 lower than the Euxine. Perhaps you won’t If you have occasion to I hese are facts, and statistics will show them 
Nn cprMin thenrv is formed of the cause of ask, you can easily obtain it; but if the world to . be Lo one thing exerts such a 
No certain theory is loimed ot the cause ol •' believes von need a dollar to savevou mighty influence in keeping this mighty Re¬ 
earthquakes; but the most general and ration- (mostly dura us ) OU nee o ai to s .y , .. , falline- to nieces as the Bible and 
al ascribes them to steam and the force of muses from actual starvation, you will stand a remark- P “ic 'rom tailing to pmces, as the iMDit ami 
