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The American Citizen from Canton, Mississippi • 2

Location:
Canton, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE MISSISSIPPI CREOLE. CANTON: S1TCIIOAV, AUGUST 3, 150. (tj-l'lia commnnicitioa of "A Gleaner" should have a month ago, hut having been addressed to the lormnr ediior, who wa absent, it lay in Ihe Post Office until bia rctnrn, a few daya lines. We hope the subject has luBt but little of its'interest from the delay, and that be-wtll-cmtftiue'lt ss promised. O-VVe understand-that there-is "report in "circulation, in the upper part of this county, that the publication of 'the 'Creole will be dis-'continned at theend df the present volume.

We assure our "friends that there is nctt 'the slightest foundatidn for any such report, which 'wat evidently put in circulation to injure us, 'pecuniarily. The Jtlisiisiiflti Creole will be Vubliehed until 'the'last day in the 'the maehinstidirsiand fnUe rrports of its ene-4hi to the 'Contrary. notwithstanding. Our friends may fend in their subscriptions, and test assured they shall have a quid prg quo. Tri Weather, for the past week, has been oppressively warm, the thermometer ranging from 88 to 91, in the shade, every day.

The nights, however, are generally cool and pleas ant, We understand that the present weather is quite favorable to the cropa, and they ore thriving, but are not as promising ss could be wished. The beahh of Madison county, as fir ss we learn, is good. There will be a at the Artesian Springs on Wednesday, the 7th inst, and on every see-ond Wednesday thereafter, during the season. The ladies of litis and surrounding counties, -are generally invited, ae no tickets or further notice will be given i A TEMPEST IN A TEAPOT. THE MADlSONrAN AND THE KINGDOM, AGAIN.

In the last number of ihe Madisonian, the editor, or Bome of his aids from the, 'chioalry, attempts a reply to our no'ice of hie comments upon the little sorap that, in the Kingdom of South CaroH-' na, no man is entitled to a sctft'tn the' House of fiepresentatives, pnless he owns 500 acres of1 m3 and ten negroes." Ono object we had in view, in throw-' ing out that bait was, that the Madiso-na should bite at it. He did so. Another was, that he should expose his he noticed it. He did that, too and we had our laugh, W-c well knew thirt -if we said any thing' about SouthCarolina, other than to laud her.amdsay that she had all the intelligence and patriotism of the "Union, (save what she had sent out here,) the sapient editor of the Madisonian would "pitch into it like a wild ox a', a red cloth. Seo what he says in his replv: In a careless manner remarked that it was a pretty fair specimen of thecortectrwss of the political scraps usually f.iund in the Creole, nd dismissed it as a matter of little practical importance and with which we had at present (rut little concern." This is the careless way the editor says lie disposed of it.

Let us refer to his first notice: The above four. scrap' is a pretty fair specimen, of the correctness of the political scraps usually found in the Creole. Though a Tistyve, and for Several years a resident of the aforesaid Kingdom we never before heard of the existence of such a teat." Here he asserts boldly, without the fear of contradiction, that he "never. heard of such a test? That remark was intended to be a settler, and he, the mighty and puissant editor or the issued his fiat contradicted it, and that was enough. He dis rnwei it in a careless manner, indeed Why did he not acknowledge that he pronounced it untrue, because Ae never had heard of such a test When South Carolina is in question, the editor of the Madisonian assumes to know all about her, and what he does not recognize as (rue, must be false of course.

The editor says: It hae long been settled that to suppress the truth is aa bad in morals as to fabricate the false. To shew if there is any fine spun dii' which to afford the writer a resting place when italics oars. to ilielttr his rec nancy to truth, we publish the entire ayicle." Here a despefato effort is made, by slating that we did all, to prove that he was not ignorant of the Constitution of his native State; but he can't come it it is apparent to every one who read the couuuonts of the editor upon our VvTen it was thrown out to catch him, that he did not know any thing about that clause ol the on-f stitution of South Carolina. If he did, why did ho not at first, instead of denying that a'ny such test existed, publish the whole clause, including the part we omitted, to-wit" or real estate of one Attn- dred and fifty pounds sterling, free of am I But if we had published the whole requis.tion in the first instance, the reply of the Madisonian would have been the same showing to his readers hia lamentable ignorance of the Require- meats of the Constitution of his naio State, lie is tryin to eet out of th dilemma by attempting to show that if we had puWmhed all of the clause, he would have acknowledged it to be true or said nothinn- about it. This 'is the legitimate inference to be drawn from his defence or reply.

But it will not do. We referred him to article and section, and we have no doubt but lhai the editor then read them for the first time in his life. If we had made the reference in the first lace, we would not have caught the editor in the trap we fixed for him! Now, we cannot help the editor of the Madisonian exposing his ignorance, but he should not fly into -n pet, and use harsh epithets, when he is corneTed. It is in bad tasto. Our remarks rnteply to (he editor's Bing at oue little scrapjj we tnitiK were Kinr ana parnui, auu fraught with good (.

The editor says that'thie clause of the constitution haa'become superannuated fallen into disuse." Well, it may be all right lor Sou td Carolina to nullify any portion of her constitution at pleas ure that does not suit them, but this is the first time we have heard it avowed. We suppose this is practical abstrac which proves her to be sure enough we had almost said a tits potism. We thank the editor for this morceau ol information. We are under the impression, in spite of the lofty ground the editor assumes in the conclusion of his reply, that whenever we wish to call him out, or get a notice from all the intellect of the Madisonian, we can do so' as easy as we did before, by throwing out another 'scrap about South Carolina, and have from him as fine a specimen of his genius, talents and information, as distinguished his 'first notice of our little hit nt that State. This expose has afforded us fun enough for a month or so.

'We are satisfied for the present. The Cotillon Pasty. We had not the plensuro of attending the cotillon party, on Monday evening; indeed, our dancing Says nre over, and we do not participate in such gay scenes now, save on special 'occasions. 'But our amanuensis was there "a chiol amarrg 'em takin' notes "--and ho gives a glowing description of the affair. The ladies were there in their beauty, their faces wreathed in smiles, and their tieads wreathed with flowers looking like queens, as they threaded the giddy mazes of the dance, tripping the Hght fantastic toe" to tho 'spirit-bounding notes of the violin.

There were fair women and Tirave men- Eyes that looked love to eyes that spoke again; A nd all went merry as a marriage bell until "the we small hours beyan' the twal.ft Then the eallant beaux and my belles hied them home, to find that re-' pose so necessary after a night ry and "Sleep, exhausted nature's sweet restorer," was sweeter than all the honied words that fell from the lips of gay, deceitful man (or woman). Ah 1 there was a head-ache next day, and an additional corn, but theyll go again, at the sound ol the violin, and 'promenade allV, Mor "Certificates." We find in the last Washington Union, a very long and able letter from tho Hon. Absalom H. Cbappkll, of Georgia, in reply to a committee of seven Democrats, (all in favor of the compromise themselves, we presume,) who addressed him a commu nication asking his views on the Adjust ment Bill, introduced by Mr. Clay.

Mr Chappell takes strong ground in favor of the compromise. He is a distinguished Democrat, and formerly a member of Congress from Georgia. The Union also contains a fetter from the Hon. Waddy Thompson, of South Carolina, in favor of the same scheme. Verily, "Old Dr.

JacobV' certificates are increasing in numbers and respecta bility! Some of the leading politiciansof the South contend that the admission -of California as a non-elaveholdintr Slate, ia a cause on the pari ol the South for a dissolution of the Union Why is this a sufficient cause in their estimation Only because slavery is excluded from the tor ritory. To carry slavery there is much to desired but does the dissolution carry it there If it does not why retort to this means to estdb lish it! In the evnt of dissolution, to whom does th territories of the United States belong To those alone who httve-possession. If force is to be resorted to to take slavery there, why not to without resorting to a dissolution. Now we would have to contend against the United States, but the Whole south would be Ss likely (o act tngether now as after dissolution, sgninst the North. So it would, in all probability, re- quire a civil war to abolish it in that State.

I the play worth the candle 7 We must, with due deference, join issue with our cotemporary around the rrirnfir. as to the correctness ot his position, in assuming thai Senator Foote has violated instructions given by the lasl Legislature of Mississippi to our Senators and Representatives in Congress. We do not so understand it. The Legislature, as such, had no right to instruct Senator Foote, or any one else, as to theotme he should pursue upan any tjuestion that did not enter into the canvass. not full dis cussed before thepeople, whose servants- Ihey are, cs well as he.

In assuming this position, the Madisonian claims for the Legislature the right at any time to instruct a Senator out of his seat, if he cannot conscientiously comply with their mandate, upou question that was not contemplated at tha time of his election or theirs. This position we hold to be erroneous. The people, in their sovereign-capacity, and tho people alone, have this power. When they have declared their will through the ballot-box, or in my -other unmistakeable -manner, it be- tomes the duty of the pre'sentafiYO to conform thereto if he cannot do so consistently with the dictates of his own judgment, the alternative is easy and plain. i What evidence have "we that the 3th resolution, quoted by the Madisonian, does, in all its bearings, and in any and every aspect which the slavery-question might assume, reflect the will of a ma jority of the people of Mississippi That it reflects the Legislative toill" or did at that time, and under tho circumstances then existing no one will deny.

Dut tho face of n.H'airs has materially changed since then, and with it, public sentiment may have changed also. Tempora mulanlur, sic nos mulamur in illis. We believe that is the Lutin. It is a. political maxim, as well as an axiom in law, that every man has a right to be heard in his own defence, and to bo tried by his peers, before he is condemned.

When the resolution referred to by our cotemporary wns passed, the present plan of adjustment, as reported by the Committee of 13 the South having a majority on that committee was' not before the country; nor was it even srjpposed that such a committee would be raised, or that a bill so favorable to the South, and disposing of the slavery uestion in a manner so f.iir and equita ble to all parties, could be securd. It was then the opinion, among democrats, at Jackson, that the Wilmol Protish would pass Congress, in som Shape or1 ther, and that was the great contingent cy -contempltted in the resolution. We do not belieVe that the mere passage of bill inhibiting the slate trade ieilhin the District of Columbia, (not abolishing slavery in the District, mind vou.l would av warranted even the Democratic egislature of Mississippi, in taking the extreme ground recommended in the 9th resolution of the series reported by the Comrtiittee on Federal Relations. We hold, then, that the acts of the last Legislature are not at all binding on Senator Foote, as relates to this question. When the-Compromise of which is the advocate shall have been' fully and fairly discussod before the people, and their ibill cleaily and satisfactorily ascertained, it will be Iho duty of Gen.

no doubt it will be his pleasure, to aotae oy tneir aecision. ne says so the conclusion Of his speech, which wo publish to-day, and We believe ho ie sincere. Let us abide, then, Ihe will of tlte people. THE NEW cABWEi. The following gentlemen constitute Prcsi dent Fillmore's Cabinet, and have entered upon the duties of their respective Departments: Secretary of State, Daniel Webster ol Massa chusetts.

fc-There has been another awful conflagra tion in San Franciaco making the third in so many months. The city ie said to be bank rupted by this last one but we opine that th energies of theCalif'ornians cannot be burnt up. and thai they wilt rise Plicenii-like, from last ruins, and go ahead! It ia thus every where with American enterprise except i Cuba! Tub S. Bailey, has been regularly appointed to take the census of this county, and will enter upon that duty in a few dan. The loHowitig schedules embrace the information required, and which it is the duty of every citizen to give promptly and cheerfully i FAMILY SCHEDULE.

1. The name, age and sex of each person who was a member of, or resident in the family on the Ut of June, 850. 6. The value of the real estate owned by each member of the family. 3., The p1ce of rjfrth iff each, naming the State, territory or county, 4.

The name of each free white ihembtfrof the family married within the year. 5. The name of each Who attended school within the year. 6. The name of each over 20 years who cannot read or 7.

The name of each person insane, (leaf arid dumb, blind or idiotic. 0 Name, age, sex and color of all persons who have died in the family during the year, Whether deceased was bond or free State in which 'deceased was born and of what disease he tfrshe died. SLAVE SCHEDULE 1. Namo of each owner ol, slaves, with the number of laves belonging lo each, and and color of each slave. Q.

Names ol sjuvcs whp are fugitives from. State, 'with owners nathe. 3. Names of deaf and dumb, blind or idiotic slaves. Then follow the agricultural schedules, which embrace separate inquiries intotheown-erslrip of the land number of acres improved and unimproved cash value value of fanning ''impletueifts and machiAery-numbcr of horsep.

mules, asses, working oxen, milch cows, other cattle, Sheep, oxen, hogs value of live stock bushels cT'cbrn of oats num-, berrff bales of cotton, ol "400 pounds pounds of wool and 'hutriber of bushels of Irish and' swDet potatoesnumber of pounds of butter of honey and beeswax Value of any linsey, jesng, or other woolen or cotttfn goods manu. facturcj nt home. Secretary of the Treasury Thomas Corwin. uaiesoi Missour Secretory of the Navy, YVm. A.

Grahurm of North Carolina. Secretary of the Interior, James A. Paaren. ui maryiana. Postmaster General, Nathan K.

Hall, of xorK. Attorney General, John J. Crittenden. Kentucky. of ftS-A cotemporary, under the hJ Spirit of Mimmppi Prctt" gives us the important intormatlon Robert Peel 7B botlal Wh(lt that casualty in England has to do with the Sniril nf fill "ppi rrees, is than we vuuipieuunu, in A village cotemporarys hot far off, announcing that there will be a ball at a certain watering place, on a Wednes day, says, the ladies are generally in vited, as no ticks or lurther notice will be given." For the sake of the ladies, we hope the information is true, as! doubtless, they can very well dispense wun me ticks.

For the Creole. A DISSERTATION On Hawk-moth, or Cotton ffy, in connection tcitMlie cultivation of Uie crop, as a preventive for boll-caterpiUai As several of my friends 1h thi's '(Madison) county have expressed a wish to tee a dissertation on the cotton fly, and as 'it fnfry be acceptable to other readers of the Creole, (for 1 need hardly add, on thisqueetion of cui bonot we are' all more or less concerned,) I shall attempt to furnish briefly, the most important information which I possess respecting these interesting subjects. And for the contribution I now offer, I ask the favor of a place in the Creole, The disastrous ravages of this insect, for a series of years, throughout the entire cotton region of the South-west, and the false notions entertained, and circulated over the country, of the habits of this fly, giving currency to the most futile remedies remedies that have origi nated in error, from an entire ignorance of the habits of this insect, fund fur several years ublishfd, and yet publishing, to the planting community in the Southern Cultivator, and also many others to the same I am led to Her a few remarks npon this, the most impor tant question that is, or perhaps ever has been, before the agricultural community of the cot ton region a preventive for the ravages of the boll-caterpillar. Amidst these 'conflicting opinions, it will be' mpossible for me to pursue the even tenor of my and i'f 1 turn ei'ther to the right or the1 left-, my Object Will be to detect error, to ascertain fa'cts, and plain trains deduced from them, tliroogh the knowledge of which these1 false noiions May gradually appear, and soon1 be removed from among us. This insect belongs to the oVdcr, Lepidop- tero, and to the genus (phin) hnwkmoth; nd in common with all 'the lepidWrera order, passes through four stages of existence: the ova, or egg; 2, the larva, caterpillar', or feedintr state; 3, pupa, or dormant state.

All modern writers on natural history use the terms, chrys alis, nytriph, setrtt-nymptr, and cased nymph', as pointing out the particular sort of pupa meant; as in Botany, the common term peni-carp to all seed vessels, the several kinds being designated by the names of capsule, silicic; 4, imazo as'it is now a true repre-T senlative or image of its species. Before I proceed', perhaps it would "be Well for me to notice a late writer in the Southern Cultivator, who remarks, "How or in what manner the worm or is produced, is all conjecture." Is it not a'range that the wiiter should have so far diverged froni the beaten track of common observation? Strange as it may appearj bowevsrj many others have done so before him, Some of them have gone still farther, and Contended that the worm is either generated in the growing cotton plant, or by some peculiar state of Ihe atmosphere, Even philosophers, allured by a love of the rharvel-lous, have not only rejected the Mosaic account qf this earth and all things upon it, but they have actually supposed that motion was, so ir regular at one time in Asia, as td form out of two vegetables a man and oman. They grew up with their, fates towards each other, like two plant, and when ihey were fully developed some favorable iephyrs wafted them into each other's arms. Of course they mutually em braced, and love began his blissful reign. Sic transit gloria philosophies.

These writers re mind me very much of an anecdote I heard a lew evenings since, and as it falls in so exactly with the subject I ant discussing, I cartnot re sist the temptation to give it here. Mr. M. was from Germany, very lond of talking, and had to use his own lannuage Seen aa much of de world aa most mens." When asked, did yon ever see the man who butted the bull oft" the he replied, No, I never didten see dat man whit butted the bull off de brtdgo; nor 1 dont believe dat man ever did live what did butt de bull off.de brittle; but I have seen dat bridge what the devil bulled lico Iwlei through, wid mint own cyei." Comment is unnecessary. Nothing S3 fantastic as the vagaties of imagin ation, and yet nothing is more circumscribed than the law which governs the animal and vegetable kingdoms It is a general law of noture, obtaining in both these kingdoms, that, in order to perpetuate the species, each individual or pair of individuals are so constituted, by.

union of -their powers, respectively, progeny is produced Pactpn's Journal. But rw'fctutn to ihe pointy from which I digressed: The butterfly Is infallible. Led by an instinct unerring, she recognizes a fit plant for a nidus, the moment she approaches it, and upon this she makes her deposit; yet not without til? further precau ion of ascertaining that it is not pre-occupied by the eggs of some other fly. Having fulfilled this, her last dutj'he affectionate mother dies. The eggs are hatched in three or four days after they are laid, and the boll-caterpillars (worm is a misnomer, and altogether a different animal,) produced from them attain their full size, according to tho ben of my observation, in some fifteen or twenty dhysj'qtiit the plartfiis'nppoin'ted work being dlirte, (for it fs now a fbll grown balerpillar); passes into the pupa, or into oh intermediate state of teeming death, encased in a chrysalis buried under the earth, and after it has remained its destined time, whieh is from f5 to 18 days, (in midsummer) in this death-like state, it at length assumes the imago they burst from their with new powers and beauty, atid come forth as a bride frorti her chamber: i 0 "The butterfly, on pinions bright, Launched in full splendor on the day.

Her slender fon, ethereal light, Her velvet-teTPtured wings enfold, With all ihe rainbow's oolots bright, And dropt with spots of burnished gold." Butterflies, indeed, appear to have been nature's favorite productions-; (of course I except her whoso name is love,) ih which to manifest her greatest Skill, and to which she lias given by far the most delicate touch and highest finish of her pencil. We view them arrayed in their 'nuptial glory, and as their fond is the nectar of flowers, they may be teen in their aerial excursions in the evening twilight, traversing the fields of cotton'; and as it is 'in this last state that it perforifis the'functiohs necessary for the continuation of its species, they may be Been bne while hovering over t'-e plant just long enough to make a deposit of two or three fcggs, and then, the very personification of fickleness, flying lo another, With its, it passes through two generations, if no more much, however, Will depend oil the season. It hybernates in tho pupa state, buried beneath the earth, without receiving any injury from the frost, howeVer told rt may be; and in the spring, or as soon as "the weather becomes hot enough, it is transformed into a fly. The larva of many of the lepidoptera order arc pilyphn-gous, and amongst others, the boll-caterpillar. Consequently, those numerous and respectable planters who contend that it feeds alone upon the cotton plant, are mistaken.

This explana-. tion'strips of everything miraculous See, however, Dr. Harris, Kirby and Spene, or any other writer on the transformations of insects. Notwithstanding the transformations of, in sects have lost much ol the marvellous, and heeii stripped ol every thinj mysterious, which might once have furnibhed arguments for the Egyptian fable of Cupid and Psvche-; yet by no means reduces it to an uninteretting study. To use the beautilul lang'inge of the poor: Phall the poor worm that shocks thy eighty The humblest form in nature's train, Thin rise in new-born lustre And yet the emblem touch in vain? Kirby and Snence, speaking of the metamor phosis of insec's, us'S these eloquent words: 'Who that witnesses this interesting scene can help seeing in it a lively representation of man in his threefold state of existence, and nore especially of that hnppy day, when, at the call of the great Son of Righteousness, all that are in the grave shall come forth, the sea shall give no her dead, and death being swoj-lowAl tip of life, the nations of the' blessed shall live and love to the ages of eternity." ours, A be Coi CANTON FE WALE The undersigned committee sppoinfpd by the trustees ol tins institution to superintend the lute public examination of the students, would beg leave to teport, that ihey have dis charged the duties assigned to them-, and take pleasure in bearing testimony to the gratifying progress of the pupils in their several studies, and Ihe suporior qualifications and efficiency of the teachers, evinced by that examination.

They would add, that from personalcbservAtion for the last yearVr two, as well ae the several examinations they have attended during that time, they are satisfied, that this school yields to none in the south-west in superior disci; pline, skilful management, and a well matured system of instructions; by which the teachers secure at once obedience without tyranny, and affection without familiarity; and that it is destined under the management of its very able president and his-accomplished daughters, at a very early day, to occupy, as it deserves, a distinguished place in the confidence of the people of Mississippi. They Would say to aU who wish to bestow upon their daughters the best advantages of a liberal and polite educa. tion, the) will find no school in the State bet ter adapted to the accomplishments of their wishes. J. B.

HQWCOTTi A. P. HILL, T. C.TOPPEt, GEO. CALHOUN, JOSEPH K.

DAVISi Committee, hit tna sesiion. in. I I a single emotion t0 roflw. Ky, 'If-oped in that he.d. i united with 1 sljIa 6 Ji worse.

But this. Styles in Dress. is said that in 1607, a clergyman by the name of Wilkinson wrote a sermon on the following text: Prnv. xxxi, 14: She is like a merchant's ship, that bringeth her food Iromafar." It contains the following passage 1 "But, of all qualities) i woman must hot have one quality of a ship, that is, too much rigging. Oh, what a wonder it is to see a ship under sail with her upper decks and her lower decks, and so bedecked with her streamers, flans and ensigns, and Unow not what vea but a world of wonders, is to see a woman) created in God's image, so in scream okti nes and delormed with her French, her Spanish, and her foolish that He who made -tier shall hardly know her when He looksjipon her, with her lacklinga, masts, and her tops and ner top gallants plumes, her lannes, ana a silken vizard, with a ruffle like a' rainbow, with a leather In her cappe like a flag in her top, to tell.

1 think, which way the Wind will 010W." "I'lttf to the Senate bet.er go entv '-ereuPuntipt0Hv of hearing ut eats; and whil.t... business a th. Vice Porly.nd re8pcllW, have ever been a waol-piek all mean, the fiae.t I Whatacalm. UI fTIllini I i the case ttrtth the Vice fau look will convineo ono ot exoresesnmn ii. iuA toi i phered at a glance.

sciousness in it that nossessinn. Tf i. ucb mat ueam oehmd would aooa tnese windows of tiie sjoul. Immediately in front of iK. see Foote, of Miss.

Fillmoie in every respect. small in stature Berfneih h.M i -7 wstiMjim shabbily dressea ttian in in 1 you are disappointed, if yoa before. Howitnhte hiB 'thoughts in the finest jniierui thl language afford, should b- VI Mr. Ins personal appearance! Well, It ij more of tha numberless '-cirrioi in, His back is toiwdi ut. io satisfied with on eiaitfinstion of naked cratrium.

Thf'reVre fimm, What large benevolence, llraitioM, tiousness and 1oVe '6f iftpntbiiin. ration is perhaps rather-deficient, (here is less dreg upon bn ready and dunt expression ot opinion. If is wfthnnn aomKtimiu wnumli hi, fiiaidi ns lHH ehnmiita. Hut Hun Iia ln.il.1 heai and wise men respect him for a rare Virtue, by the way, or, indeed any-'-where ibii IkI ficial age. 1 A.

little ftir'lherto the Ml 'Mi derj you may ses Clemens ouroata are no stranger to bia brilliant larga Koman nose and y'oiitbliil Mf countenance, fon't you tmni ineie sleek, well brushed hair, and lite i which he smoothes it oBwuhto white hand-, at least a va'tie eoiwi" good looks If i km not grenly IV i Pit lin me A a lilt eves will from ihe grave senators anidignifiiil to 'the fair faces and sparliling eyeaioj lorv. But See, the remarkasla Ked lucky i on his serai of the dnv. which iilheco-siderationf amendment to ills so called'Ow We'-s'er now gathers himself ap lis chair. The unkihdly hand ot infi it. uoon bit eountenuc stands as erect as cedar; Heiif i 1 Vink'll even to Ihe casual i of a man.

I have often heard WM ii iaiU: gly, but 1 never win He now commences his speech in I sa.ional tone. He lM asleep. He rubs ey with his fingers. He about tn reply to utionalq uestion, and is thik itwtah hil toep task aneasybnelsndKMH" you will think so.oo.'1 approaches-tooo. no display of stream I tiki'l carerutlyand beftol dltt- a card-built casne.

wn. or.eari lerlyasiflhetnilderwr. evident that he inciliate is tnat.ne may be able to enooM" worthy to called out of UA evidece ofnoo2.c You can He.toop.inh.khCIJ.''J';ci HeU intensely int'r d- "hil rubbing the hands. yousrefjeitingimP'; hungry and (f (ki, postpdne he furtr b8(), ousbook until permission', w. i once more, in lh.g.7..wt Directly i ireeuj ih.

Senate, old aquaintances, he is wiiib lge; but becomes so' scarce bean eg(l if ii largo enough, into hisehoulder the say gua 4 nothing to da, ae((y(iB iticS of Senator. I iht puoil6.

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