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Prairie city, kamas, Thursday, june 24, issa
Terms $2 Per Annum'
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PRAIRIE OITY, KANZAS,
By 8, S. PROUTY.
tTERMS OF SUBSCAlPTIoX:
One copy otio year, , . $2 00
Three copies one year, . ; 5 00
Tea. " " " 15 00.
Paymcnt required in all cases in nl
fance. All papers discontinued at the
time for which payment is received. . , v
TERMS OF ADVERTISlM :
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Each subsequent insertion, per lino, 5 'f
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Advertisements from a distance. ,
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masters, may bo forwarded by mail at our
riski' .'
" LIBERTY OR DEATH."
PRAIRIE CITY, K, T., JUNE 24, 1858.
Capt. Montgomery.
Tho following ddscriptiori of Capt.
Montgomery, who lias of late obtained
nnunduo notorioty in Kanzas matters,
'is from the pen of a former resident
of Lawrence a correspondent of the
New York Evening Post :
.; " In conversation he talks mildly,
in a calm, even voice, using tue lan
'guage of a cultivated, educated gen
tleman. His antecedents are unex
ceptionable ; ho was always a Free
'State man, although coming from a
Slave Stato, where he was noted as a
good citizen, and for his mild,, even
teniporamout.. In his daily conduct,
lie maintains the satno character now;
bat when in action and under lire, ho
'displays a daring fearlessness, unti-
rtnjj porsoveianco, and an indomita
ble energy, that has givon hint the
"leadership in this border warfaro.
His discretion, courago and acknbwl
'edgod''a'bimy,havo gained him what
lie will continue lo recoive the con
iidenco nnd support of the people in
the southern tiors of counties. Mont
'gomory's enrolled company numbers
from four to fivo hundrod men, all of
whom are old rosidonts of the Terri
tory, and are, consequently, familiar
with the peculiar nlddo of fighting
pursuod by Border Ruffians. Some
are desperate men, arid could tlioir
histories be told, you would not won
'der that they followed thejr Bdrder
Ruffian persecutors td tho bitter end.
Inhere are two boys id that company
whose dying fathor charged them to
' revenge his cowardly murder. Five
bullets entered his bddy as ho stopped
frbra the door-sill td extend the hos
pitalities of his cabin to his murder
eri. Others havo been robbod at thoir
"homeg and on tho highway, aiid not
ono of thorn but has suffered some
outrage or indignity from those Vil
lains hoadod by Brock ott; Hamilton
"and, Titus. Notwithstanding ovory
incentive to retaliate actuates thostj
men to demand blood for blood, yet
"Montgomery is able to control and
'direct thorn. Ho truly tempers jus
tice with meroy, and he Has always
protected womon and children from
haim, and has never shod blood ex
cept in conflict or self-defence'. On
tha-worning of last Thursday I saw
a man who had just loft Montgome
ry's party, and who had booti with
him sinco, the alfair with thq U. S.
..dragoons. Ho gave mo a recital of
'their doings from that time up1 to tho
'day whon they took dossussion of
West Point, which town was searched
'for the Monokft assassins. No inno
cent men had boon robbod, no womon
outraged, They had, however, olodr
'ed Lyon and Bourbon counties of ev
ery pro-slavery man who had boon
'directly of indireoly concornod in any
persecution of Froo State settlors.
' ) "It will be askod, Is not this, to
p certain extont, following tho tao
.tics.of the ensiiiy, and is it right?
i To eithpr of thoso iriuirios I answer:
'.or twb years past, Fort Bcott has
. .boon the ueadquartorii of a desperate
'gang of wrotuhes, who, undor the
, " lead of this Broekott, Clark and Ham
, ilton, and acting in conoort with tho
, pio-sjavery BetUers arid kindred spir
its in the titate of Mibso ri. hove oar-
rind out a persistent couise of out
rage and crime npon Free , State
...... . ti.- MM.:. ui i.ut.- r
uUst suramerr and it was the , history
'of last spring, irp to the tinie when
' Broekott killed an Innocent man in
- Tiis own bod, before hii wil'o and
'children, . i. ' ,, .-. , '
, " Then the poodle, rose up and said,
We will nit endure lull , any longer
ono or the o'ther party must leave
the country. (.
" Few, if anVk of the people of tho
Territory outside of these two coun
ties have taken part in the quarrel;, it
. n A.- i ' u
is wen Known i,nac uiey can ana win
take care of themselves, and that they
havo done this Is pretty evident.
" Last Thursday I spent in Kanzas
City. At the public tablo at the ho
tel, a mai) was giving what ho intend
ed should be an aniusing account pf
the ' last words ' of tho men shot in
tboTavitie.' had the effect intend
ed, fdr as each one's case was re
peated; there was i rear of laughter,
led off by Titus arid hii crew. This
may be put down as another ' Kanzas
exaggeration,' but it is tho simple
truth.'J j
Correspondence or the Evening Posti
Platform of the Washington City
. , Eepublicans.
Washinoton, May 17, 1808.
Tho Republicans of this city held
a meeting on Saturday evening and
formed themselves into an association,
with a view td Action at tho approach
ing municipal election, and for the
distribution of political documents
dutingtho comingyear. They adopt
ed tlio lolls wing declaration of prin
ciples ;
t. Tho Federal Government has no
power over tho system of slavery
within the States J but within its own
exclutive jurisdiction it has the pow
er and ought to exert it, to secure
life, liberty and tho pursuit of happi
ness to all men.
2. There Blio'uld bo neither elavery
nor irivoluntary servitude, except for
the punishment of crime, in liny of
the territories of the United States.
3. The people are the rightful
source of all political prjwer; and all
officers should; so fur as practicable,
be clioscn by a direct vote of the
people.
4. Candidates for political olfices
should ba.raQri,of undoubted integri
ty and sobriety, and pledged to sup
port tho principles of this platform
by all lawful and constitutidnal means.
Mr. Seward was present; and made
an elaborate Anti-Slavery speech,
whicli was very well received by the
association, many of whom are South
ern men.
Sketch of the Late Gen; Smith.
Qcrl. Pcrsifor F. Smith wrs a na
tive of Chester county, Pa., and was
fifty-i.ine yoars of age. Whon. a
young man he Emigrated to Louisiana,
and studied law in New Orleans. Ho
sorvod in tho Florida war from 1830
to 1842, having command of the Lou
isiana volunteers. In '46owas ap
poirited Colonel of tho rifto regiment
thori raised. He had command of a
brigade during the Mexican" war, and
won noted distinction at tho battles
of Alonteroy, Vera Cruz and Corro
Gordo. At Oontroras ho command
ed a brigado bf Gen. Twiggs' divis
ioit, and finding himself the senior
olficor on tho Hold, ho dssumod the
chief command, and won that cele
brated victdry, displaying throughout
the cdntcst tho highest qualities of a
military loador. Subsequently he
was present at Chornbusco, Molina
l)ol Roy, Chapultapeo and City of
Mexico,' adding now wreaths in each
engagement to his Contreras laurals.
miring uio luoxican campaign uo
contracted that diseaso (diarrhoea)
which at length proved fatal to him.
Gen'. Smith was an ablo and popular
officer, and ho dlod as a soldier should
die in harnossi It is to bo hoped
that Congress .will not neglect to
show its appreciation of his charac
ter and services, by making suitable
provision for his family. Mo. DM.
Kanzas against tho World.
T. D. TiiACiiicn, Esq., of the Law
ronce Republican, writing Juno 1st,
from Hornollsvillo, N. Y., where ke is
it present sojourning, says :
" There is no ooiktry between New
York and Kariza 'that I have ever
soon, which can for a moment com
pare for beauty Vith our own rriost
lovely Territory,. Noither did I iny
where see the crops looking as well
an thoy do in Kanzas this Boaso'h.
Illinois stands number one for wftoat
usually, but khe must yiold tho palm
to Kanzas. Indiana is not tou be
mentioned during the same day with
Kanzas. , , tt ;,. ' .-
" I find. everything in this Stifle at
least four weeks bohind Kanzas as to
forwardness of season. Fruit rees
are now just in full bloom. Farmers
have boen trying for the last two
weeks to plant corn, but have nardiy
been able to,, for thajuvcessant rains."
XSrStriVo to cutivate harmony.
From the Journal of Commerce,' May 32.
Mounta and Prairie Trains and
Commerce. is
It is estimated by our warehouse
and commission merchants, that in
cluding the wagons loading' for tho
Utaht Expedion, destined for Salt
Lako, and the various Forts in the
mountains, there will be ten thousrnd
full loaded and fully equipped wag1;
ons leave Jianzas City this season I
cross the plains none of these L
make a shorter trip than six" hundred
miles, arid many of them to go full
eleven hundred miles.
A wagon that takes merchandise
over tho plains and into the moun
tains, is by no means, such iJ wagon
as people unaccustomed to prairie
countries are in tho habit of seeing.
They are not " double wagons," or
"lumber Wagons'," or "farm wag
ons," or "Chicago wagons," or
Concord wagons" they are "prai
rie wagon's," or " schooners," as the
boys cull them, and as novel a sight
to an Eastern man, as any Yankee in
stitution is to a frontiersman, or as
tho railroad will bo to moBt of tho
Jackson co'ifnty people whefi it gets
here. A wagon weighs about lour
thousand pouuds, the pole, or tongue,
is thirteen leet long, and with all the
"fixings" about it is as heavy as a
light buggy. Ono of the hind wheels
weighs three hundred pounds, and is
bixty-four inches in diameter the
tire is four inches wide, tlio hub
twelve inches through and eighteen
inches deep, and the spokes are as
large as a middle sized bed post.
tVny ono can conceive what an axle-
tree for such a wheel must bo. Tlie
body is three feet eight inches wide,
thirteen feet long at tho botto'rii and
eighteen feet long at the top, with'
bows extending above tho bed three
feet high, arid also extending fore arid
aft of tho bed two leet and a half, so
that the top of tho wagons, measur
ing1 over the bows, is eighteen feet
long height of wagon from bottom"
of wheels to top of bows is ten feet.
These bows aro covered with three
wagon sheets, made of the best qual
ity of duck, and cost about SiiO.
These details will give ono an idea
of a prairie wagon, which always car
iioa from fifty-hve to sixty hundred
pouuds of frieght, and transports it
never less than six hundred mile's.
Now for tho team; Tho team or the
motive power of thoso cumbrous tthd
ugly wagons, consltss of six yoke of
oxon, or "steors," as they are called
by ow lrojgntcrs; or hve span ol
mules. A driver with a ratftred Ann-
nol shirt, a pair of buckskin, "jeans"
or " store" pants, with pockets made
or breaking out almost any where,
a pair of brijganp, , an old hat and
whip, thestvck of whicli is generally
a hickory sapling ten or fifteen teet
long, tho lasll dbo'ut the same length
rfiade out of undressed raw hide, an
inch and a half thick in the " belly,"
tlio wholo weighirig five pounds and
a half, and when brought upon tile
aforesaid sicker, crack. crack, crack, it
goes with reports loud as a navy
pistol.
Such are, in brief, tho details of
ono of theso mountain wagons, ten
thousand of which will loavo Kanzas
City for tho forts and trading posts
in the mountains this season. A
wagon and toarrf hitched up and ready
for travel is about one hundred feet
long, and they travel on the average
about ono hundred feet apart. Now
it all those wagons were to leave in
one train, they would stretch out over
the prairie Ihret hundred and seventy'
nine miles Some team, that. When
" corralod," or encamped, they would
make an encamptaent of over one
hundred and fifty thousand head of
Rtock, about twenty theusand and
five hundred mehno women and
if in tho mountains they would prob
ably be surrounded by ten thousand
" Ingins." The wagons would con
tain sixty-fHo million pounds of mer
chandise, wefrth in Kanzas City twerf
ty million dollars, and in tho moun
tains, twoiity-four trillions and a half.
Here, then, are the figures of the
groat comtmerce of the prairies, which
is centered in Karizas City, as we
compute it whon gathored together
in ono grand encampment :
Men, i ; . , . 20,500 '
Wagons, . . ; . 10,000
Cattle afid mules; . ' , ' 150,000
' Lbs of merchandise, 05,000,000
' ' Value of merchandise
' in tho mountains, 924,500,000
JCyOpposition is sometimes more
the result of envy than a Bottled con
viction of propriety. , ' '
i j, , i
t JdrWhen the young laugh at the
old tney laugn at inomscives colore
hand. . '
Tlie land Sales1;
Washington, D. C.,)
May 19, 1858.
To the Editor ok the Herald of
Fiieedom : The undersigned, who
were appointed by the Top'eka" Set
tlers' Mass Convention to' visit the
East for the purpose of procuring a
postponement of the Land Sales, or
the means of enabling tho settlers to
pay for their claims previous to said
sales.1 beg leave to give, thrcligh your
journal, a synopsis of what action
they have thus fur taken.
On' arriving at Washington, they
ascertained from the President and
Secretary of tho Interior, that prom
ises of temporary postponement had
already been made to Mr. Parrott, and
that the arrival of the Committee was
awaited with some interest. After a
courteous hearing of theso officers,
the Committee waa informed that tho
policy of tho Administration' requirod
theso sales to be made during the pres
ent ye'ir, but that some months' de
lay would be granted if desired. Tho
Committee requested a postponement
of ono year, but without success ; and
finally received the promise' of the
Secretary that the Bales should be
delayed til! tho 1st and 15lh days of
November next. Ihis promise may
undoubtedly be relied upon.
The Committee have now turned
their attention entirely to tho work
of procuring a sufficient loan fund at
reasonable rates of interest, to enable
tho settlers to sccuro their lauds with
out tod great a sacrifice, and will re
port as soon as any definite rvbtilt has
been reached ; only saying, in the
meantime, that the omens are full of
hope.
All ourn'encft-Republiedns and
Domociats expect tho people of
Kanzas to bury Lecompton Uoimtitu
tiou so deep with their ballots, that
no traces shall romdiri but its memory.
Wo acknowledge many obligations
to Mr Parrott for his ready and pa
tient assistance, without which we
should have labored undor serious
disadvantages.
ROBERT MORROW.
C. H. BRANSCOMB.
J. M. WINOHHLL.
Kansas Adapted to Wheat.
Issac M. Roberts, Esq., who resides
two miles west of Big Springs, states
that a year ago last autumn ho sowed
a field Of some forty acres of wheat.
In July last ho harvested a sniall
crop, owing to tho dry season, and to
its being sowed upon the sod.
About the first of October last, ho
plowed under tho stubble of near fif
teen Acres, leaving the furrows as
made by the plow. A heavy crop of
wheat made its appearance, loth on
the stubble and Jalloib ground, thongh
no seed was sown upon either, Save
such as fell in the hdrvest of last year.
During the year the cattle had free
access1 to' tho field; and grazed upon
it until sometime' in the last of
March, when the field gave such pos
itive indications of, a good harvest,
that tho catllo wqre turnod from it.
No attention was paid to the soil, but
now Mr. R. assures us, that tho stalk
is from three to four feet high bn tho
stubble ground, and somo five foot
high on the fallow) is thick set, and
covers tho entiro ground, and gives
promise ef an early harvest with fit
least thirty bushols to the acre'.
vorable accounts of the wheat crop.
The fact is established, that this Ter
ritory is pre-eminently adapted to the
growing of wheat, and to that our
agriculturists should turn their im
mediate attention. -Herald of f ree
dom. ...
SHT Ethan Allen has boon stolen.
Perhaps his skeleton even now graces
the dissecting room of some surgical
vandal. At all events, it. is not in
his grave. A thdrough search to the
dopth of some six or eight font has
boen mido in all parts of the family
lot at Burlington, Vt., where his
tombstone stood, and not tho least
sign of Human retrains can bo found:
In consfiquonce of this remarkable'
discovery,or rather failure to dis
oover th& laying of tho corner stono
6'f the oodieiuplated monument t6 his
honor has been indefinitely postponed,
and there is groat excitement id Bur
lington. .' J ' ,'. .'
. S3t The Harpers prbfess td 'steer
cioar oi politics in meirt very excel
lent weokly, but wo (tee that they
have nul iri thoir last number th'o dIo-
t'ure of Williitm II; English. We
cannot doubt but thdt their object in
to create prejudice against the bill.
However, we havo no right te com
plain. Zotti'fi7 Journal. ',
Native Amei,
A party of Potawat..ioB, consist
ing of braves, squaira pappooses,
eVc, appeared in' our Vispts yester
day, docked in all thiv iinery tnd
fihli, beating upon a drain' made out
of a keg, with parchment 6tretched
oven the end, a'nd trimmed off with
inri'umera'blo littfS hot.) They were
followed aroVirid by theinsul number
intention to give a scries of war dan
ces, and other interesting ceremonies.
We obserVed two of those red men
of the forest two chiefs, around on
Second street; Ono was mountod in
all of his savage and rtido spondor on
a bare-baekod steed,' Knd the other
was on foot. Th'ey wofe going around
on a mission of shopping, begging,
and probably stealing, tb'.ough ol
course they wore making' great pro
fessions ot honesty ; but of this latter
quality we fear they possess but lit
tle, us their race have degenerated to
that extent that they will make any
promise to suit tho occasion', or to get
a drink of whisky. At all events;
their presence forcibly brought to
mind tho following anocdote, which
is said to have occurred in our sister
State, Illinois, and is fold of a rela
tioil of theirs. It is said that soma
j ears ago a noted warrior of the Pot-
awdtoiiiie tribe presented himself to
tho Indian uLrunt at Chicago, as
ono of tho chief men of his village,
observing, with tho customary sim
plicity of the Indian, that he was h
very good man, and a good American,
and coiicliided with a request lor a
dram of whisky, lho agent rophei
that it was not his practice to give
whiskey to good men that good then
never drank whisky, not even if it
were voluntarily dllered J that it was
bad Indiaiis who demanded whisky.
"Then,' replied the Indian, quickly,
ill broken English, ' mo d d ras
cal I" St, Joseph Journal.
, Home Newspapeis.
Stick, then, ye sturdy yeomanry
and tillers of tho soil, to your news
papers. No matter if you are poor ;
remember that there are notio so poor
as tho ignorant, except it be the de
praved und they too often go to
gether. Stick to ourowuforci j0tTw,
though it may nut be so large or im
posing as tlio New York wooklios.
but remember that it is tho advertiser
of your neighborhood and daily busi
ness, and tells you what is going on
around you, instead of a theusand
miles away. If . it is not on nice
paper, and as goo'd as you wish to
have, pay up your subscriptions well
and get your neighbors to do the
samo, and redy on it) the natural pride
of tho publisher will prompt hi id to
improve it as fast as possible'. In
hard tihics like trlcuo, that call Air
rigid economy, looft carefully aro'und
you before you utop you Jpapers,and
see if you cannot find so.io othlObx
penditiire or waste of lime, to the
amourit of a few dollars, (hut you had
better lop oil hrst; look closo and
careful, and if it becomes inevitable
to shut up the windows of intelli
gence bctweon yourself, your family
and the world, why then do it, and
retire into voluntary exile, porhaps
upon your hundrods ol aores, poor
only in spirit and iirtligination. Rely
upon it, by supporting your homo
paper, both yourself and your'child
ren will be ttiscr and happier. Wit-
consin Farmer.
Iowa Immigration to Missouri.
At least fifty wagons from Iowa,
all accompanied with their families,
and not' only their household eH'octa,
but also their farming implements,
have crossed at our ferru this week,
on their way to tho Neosiu und Osage
Valleys, and also to the pwtlth-Western
counties of the Statoy We loam
from those immigrants that the roads
from here to Iowa are crowded with
a similar immigration ; that a lreavy
tide of immigration from that fcnato
is on tho move to1 the above localities,
and that all wagonp are obliged to
make As great speed as possible, in
order to keep away front tho crowd,
and to 6btain good grass and wator
at tho Stopping places. i'drta City
(Mo.,) Journal of Commerce'.
jtlT Henry Ward Bencher, in hrs
" Lile Thoughts," says : "The" Bible
Society is sending its Bibles ill over
tho world to Ureodland artd the
Morea. ttf Arabia and Egypt ; but it
dares not send them to our tfwri. peo
ple. The colportor who should ltuve
a Bible in a slave's cabin, would go
to Heaven from the loivest limb iff the
ot idlers,' and appeared; ;" very much
prOud" to1 attract siichlmarNd atten
tion; We iCreinforniaci tnat A is their
Stficide ot love.
Iri i'ne of trffl morn in' o innrnitlfi. r.'
centl,' there was a painful descript
ion ofti snfetcte committed by a young
German' husband arid fathor, upon lh.
grave' of his newly-buried wife, who
i i jJ-tt 1 1.. itJ U -
nuu uieu in giving uiruio a son.
He had inclosed the grave-lot with a
tastoTul fence, and b'rnaifveHted it pro
fusely with' flowers ; and h'o was iu
the habt of visiting it every day.
At length he visited, it for the last
time and shot himself through the"""' ;
htad, falling lengthwise upon his "
wife's grave., Among lie inscript- "
ions which lie lia'd written with a pen
cil in Germdn upon tlie white marbbi
of the graVe-stono, were these sen:
tences :
" How soon are the ties of Love
sundered I
" M heart is all too sad ; there
fore, 0 Deatli 1 fulfill my fate, and
soon utiito me to her, and to Love's
eternal rest I
" It is tit the grave alono that man
lbarns the irub value of Love!
"I depart from the sweet habit of ex
istence!" As we read tli!s last touching and
beautiful sentence, we bethought us
of th'o following passage from tho
diary o'f a lonely arid gifted lady,
now nq logger of the world. How
well she appreciated " the sweet hab
it of existence," may be inferred from
tho following J
" lliofe is never a day upon which
I do riot open my eyes at irforriing,
with un instant thankfulness that 1
utii alive upon God's editli; that 1
sliall behold tlio blessed faces of my
familiar direction that my full heart
is beating f that these veins are wand
arid glowing with tho cheerful tide of
life 1 I looked out this morriiilft up
on trees stripped of their foliage
their surarrlfcr dew and song I updii
sere places amidst the grass, and sul-
Icnness over the waters, und the brood
ing sdrrow of a wot November day
pervading earth and air. Yet my
spirit, nowise hindered, spread hei
untouched pinions, and I blessed tliH
hour that saw and scos me liviug "
How to Stop tho Western Tornadoes'.
Scarcely a vear nasses in which
J A
sorifo portions of tho Western States!
a t w
especially the prairio States, do not
suffer from the disastrous effects of
whirlwinds or tornadoes. Tho great
torrtado of tho last week is tha most.
Bevere one which has visited the
Weut in many years, Its whole track
is niarked with ruins. Half a dozen
considerable towtis and villagos have
suiiored severely, and the total loss
will not full far nrlnrtof Half milling
' ' - ----- - . H-V.VVB M UltVII
dollars. Saddest df all, it caused
tho loss of more than dsooro of lives.
Tho best mearis of stonninir thnaa
tornadoes, and cdiifining their de
structive course td the limits of a mile
or two in width arid length, is to
Dlant ndmordus irro'ves of for. at tmnn
4 v ..WW
all ovor the level prairie lands, near
tho thickly settled towns or soctions
of Western States! HilU
created, bdt forests may be, to an in
definite extent, and with compara
tively little trouble or expense. This
id tUa lAAt lei. ll M U A k u ! u! . Ck
in uo ichii in wiu piBlllO omios,
and for many other considerations
besides that of securing rjreteo.tion
froni high winds, the Legislatures
ana town authorities would do well
to Drive this subicct more attontinn
than tlrey have hitherto. JV. K Post.
Two in Heaven.
" You have two children," said t.
"I have four. was the ronlv-1
two on earth1, tm in Heaven."
Thore spoke the mother I Still
hors, only gdne boftfro 1 Still ronioni
bared, loved arid cherished, by tue
I.I Ih.tl . . . . ' t
hoartn ana at the board ; their places
nutyot filled; oven though thoir suo
censors draw life from the same breast
wliore thoir dying heads were pil
lowed; ' -
"Two ittlieavetaP'
Safely Housed from storm and terri-
pest.1 No sickness there, nor droop
ing hfftd, nor fading eye, nor weary
foot. Bv croon Dasturus. tant!vl Kv
tho good Sheplrord, lirtgor (he 1'ittW
Iambi of tho heavenly Told.
"Two iff Hoitvon r',;
Earth less attraotive.- Eternity
nearer. Invisiblo chord drawing the"
material soirl tfpwardsv , u Still small
voices" ever whisper "Como I" to
the1 worid-weKry spirit ' ,
" x wo in lleffven 1"
MotlW of anirole Walfc r.ftAr !
Holy oyes watch thy footstep CRor'-'
uo loinrs ionu to listen. Keep thy
spirit free from earth-taint so shall
tllOll (TO to thWlh. ihn'iV.rh lfiW Wiv
L ' -O " ""V ,
nl return to thee.
.tf Don't slandef y tir i rl J Vt
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