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x crew, thoe blights and blats of all that is human in man and child.'

There mut, however, be many parents till living who remember the delight that the little tory gave them in their younger days, and they will, no doubt, be pleaed to ee it once more in the form which was then o familiar to them. The children of to-day, too, will look on it with ome curioity, on account of the fact that it is one of the oldet of our nurery tales, and amued and edified their grand-parents and great grand-parents when they were children, while they cannot fail to be attracted by its imple, pretty, and intereting tory.