The Beaufort tribune and Port Royal commercial. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1877-1879, December 20, 1877, Image 4
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* OTIJIED HOMES.
I'iktyPT X?rriB<M kb4 Their Effects Descrlbedr>*Wky
UarrUlci Will Beceidk
I'nfreqaent. ?
It is related of a certain old cynic that
when (me of his juniors was introduced
to him he would ask, " Are you married
?" If the answer was in the affirmative,
his comment was: " Lucky dog 1"
If he received a negative replj, he ejaculated:
" Happy aog!" It is needless
to 8ay that the old cynic was himself a
married man. An old English poet has
compared matrimony to a lighted lantern.
Thp inRnrts nntaiifo bntt thfiir IirajIh
against the pane to get in, while those
inside butt their heads to get out again.
How much cynicism there is in the old
poet's figure, we caunot undertake to
say. It is certain that unless things
speedily mend, there will be a general and
justifiable belief among young people in
the infelicity of the marriage state.
Now and then, as if by a flash of lightning,
the public is shown the frightful
skeleton which some unhappy couple
have kept m their closet. Or a lawsuit
takes the roof of a man's house and reveals
a state off things inside which the
shudderihg observer likens to the place
of the damned. Scarcely a day passes
in which it is not the duty of the newspaper
chronicle to reodril some event
Vtv vrVtinli a iornna AAnnla
TV4AAVU ? VVU|/AV UUTVA ViOU VUV-U
misery to the world.
It is a dreadful ending to a drama
which opened with so nrach happy
promise. There was a lovely young
bride, for ail young brides are lovely,
crowned with the delicate flowers which
were emblems of her sweetness and
purity. -She gave her trembling hand to
the proud and happy bridegroom. Long,
perhaps, had he pressed his ardent suit.
And now he was like a young king just
come to his majority. She was trusting,
and he*was so sincerely devoted that he
knew that no wind of heaven should
visit her cheek too roughly while he
lived. What a charming picture they
made as ikpv stood at the altar?a rare
combination ol beauty and strength?
joyfully entering upon the holiest covenant
which humanity makes with humanity.
How many good wishes follow
them, what ripples of delight spread
outward from the joyous event that
makes them one. Wherever they gothey
carry their happiness with them, so
impossible of concealment that even the
most indifferent stranger takes a share in
their benediction. Hard-featured old
people look on with an unconscious relaxation
of visage. The machine-like
servants, railway people, and hotel
clerks met on the wedding journey surrender
a trifle of their official coldness,
and look kindly on the gay, innocent
pair. Not only is earth to these new beginners
a rosy place to live ir, but each
has found the perfect companion for
life.
In the nature of things, this cannot
always be. No more is it possible that
one should always bear the weight of
which hoirs on? nt th? Ride nf a
J death-bed. The load of sorrow wears
awav before we are satisfied that we
ought ever to be happy again. And the
rtfined joy of the bridal time is tempered
by the cares and responsibilities of
married life. Bnt when it happens, as
it often does, that the drama that began
with music, flowers, smiles, and sunshine,
speedily ends in darkness and
misery, the mournful conclusion is that
there has been a terrible mistake. It is
better, perhaps, that the world should
never know just where the error lay.
Perhaps it was in the beginning. Perhaps
some fault of temper, some long
concealed vice, some unsuspected weakness,
came to the surface when all else
was smooth and fair. Possibly, each of
the partner* was in fault, and, instead of
bearing with each other, they were
f petulant, suspicious, exacting, or simply
oold and indifferent. Whatever was the
_ original cause of estrangement, things
went on froiil "bad to woise until the
domestic trouble is bruited far and wide.
The man and woman who tasted together
the sweetness of love's young dream are
h^mf each other. The husband who
intofd to love and charisb, (and meant
it, too,) is trying to break his lawful
wedlock. The wife ^ho vowed to love
9ud honor finds life a blank. She has
lost her happiness forever.
Tins is all very miserable. It seems
more miserable because we involuntarily
contrast the conclusion with the lovely
picture of the beginning. In all the
wide world there is no place so horrible
as a home in which husband and wife
are at odds. It is no home. The woman
is an alien under the roof of him who
* if as to defend aod protect her. The
man, who should find rest and comfort
* mshome, shuts his door behind him
. with a sense of relief, and goes out into
' the streets to escape the horror that
bj+dJh' io his house. Is it any wonder
that murder, suicide, drunkenness, and
ifcfckid often hurry to drop the curtain
Op all this misery ? And is it any wonder
ihAt young peoDle who see this wretched
end of a promising life are afraid to try
the experiment? For it is an experiment^
and, unfortunately, the failures
aremore conspicuous than the successful
issues. No man can tell whether a
majority of marriages are happy or un-f
happy; to* many skeletons are kept securely
locked in domestic secrecy. But
there are so many woeful chapters of
wedded misery unfolded to the public
gaze that men say, "I may be singly
unblest; but I may also be cursed
double."
It is evident that many marriages are
not founded on love and respect. Some
are contracted like business partnerships;
some are entered upon out of
pique; and not a few marr^ without any
adequate notion of the binding nature
of the obligations so lightly assumed.
We have gone far away from the oldfashioned
homely idea of home. Unless
we have more wholesome views of life
and society, happy manftges will become
more unfrequent.?New York
Timet. .
Reminiscence of Nellie Grant's Wedding.'
When Mrs. Sartoris, radiant with happiness,
had gone from home and kindred
to cross the ocean and find new ties with
strangers, her wedding robe and veil
were the last articles to be put away in
one of those zinc packing-boxes that
- ?^ was used to preserve her silks from the
effects of a jsdh voyage. An attache of
the White House took a porter up stairs :
to bring down this last packing-box?it
was in Nellie's room. He knocked; re- j
,-a'wincr anawor hft PTltprftd. MrS. I
Giant confronted him, and.by a sign
motioned him not to permit the porter to
enter, and laid her finger npon her
mouth to invoke silence. The man
glanced about the apartment to divine
the cause of this imposed quiet. Upon
his daughter's bed, his face bnr.'ed in her
pillows, convulsed with suppressed emotiou,
lay prone and prostrate the griefstricken
father, who had gone through
all the oeremonies'o? tliat marriage day:';
with dry eyes and an umnofeefc afra u ten - j
an *e, bnt parent love for a favorite child [
!?u 1 conquered the *' belted sphinx " \
only in the privacy of his daughter's \
ohaujbtr.?Detroit Frre Prets.
I
4
Charity Green's Gifts.
" Double fold, and only five cents a
yard. It was the cheapest piece o' plaid
worsted I ever laid my eves on!" exclaimed'
to herself Miss Charity Green,
the old maid tailoress of Allantown, and
she unfolded the three-dollar bank-note
which she had received the day before
for a week and a half's sewing at the
Squire's, and smoothed the ragged corners,
and looked at it affectionately.
"Six yards 'U make me a full dress,
' and I must have it to wear at cousin
Nathan's, as they've sent me their usual
invitation to Christmas dinner. I
guess I'll step over and get the stuff at
j once and. run up the Dreaatns tins
evenin', as I've got all them button I
holes ou Joseph Blake's new coat to
! make to-morrow, and I've no time to let
J grass grow under my feet."
Mies Charity Green was a very poor
! woman who lived by her needle, and
rented the "middle room "in widow
Blake's small one-story house. She had
a thin, faded face, with nothing pretty
or attractive about it, except when she
smiled, and then little children would
be sure to forget all about the wriukles
and the homeliness, and tangle her
spools of thread and play with the scissors,
which always hung around her
neck, fastened with black ribbon, and
I never dream of stopping or beiqg in the
least alarmed by her frequent, "There,
there; children ! Dear me! I do believe
little hands are the busiest in the world?
Who ever did see !"
Poor Miss Charity Green ! She was
that very sad spectacle, a lonely, almost
1 - - ? ?i
| friendless woman, wunoui miuer ur
I mother, brother or sister, husband or
children in the world. Her life was
turning its face toward half a century of
years ; her health, never vigorous, was
gradually failing her; and a cold, lonely
old age rose up sometimes and appalled
her with its chill and gloom. She had
to work early and late, for the ropf that
sheltered and the bread that nourished
her. Poor Miss Charity Green 1
But as she tied on her straw bonnet
that evening; there was a quick knock at
the door, and the next moment a little
brown curly head, with a pair of eager,
| bright, dancing eyes was thrhst inside.
"Come in, Johnnie; what do you
! want ?" said Miss Ctarity Green. And
I if you had heard her VO^e just then you
would have understood something of the
1 -*i "' ^on irannml ft fftrnri.fi
| BtXJICt U1 iRU uuusg ov ^vuvim* ? v... w
with children.
" Mother wants to know, Miss Green,
if you'll lend her a drawin' o' tea. She'll
pay you to-morrow."
" 0 she needn't* bo in the least bit o'
hurry about that are," answered Miss
Green, as she took the little blue cup
from the boy's hand. " Do sit down,
Johnnie, and warm yourself by the
are."
And the boy sat down in the great
arm-chair, while the woman measured
the tea in Che cover of her tin canister. |
" Mother and sisters pretty well to- i
day, Johnnie ?"
"Yes, ma'am, only mother said she
felt a little o' rhenmatiz in her right
shoulder this mormn'."
Dear me, suz I It won't do for her
to let the rheumatiz get hold on her this
time o' year. Ill jest step out into the
shed and get'her-'a little boneset I
al'ays lay up some every fall, for there's
nothin' like it for rheumatiz,- as my
grandfather used to say."
And as the woman tied up the dried
herbs in a piece of brown paper, it
struck her that her little neighbor wis
unusually grave add silent; so half with
nf <4vaun'nrr rtTlt. ftnV (Ytn. >
UIC VI wv.. J ___
coaled trouble which might possess him, .j
Miss Green continued the conversa- j
tion.
" Well, Johnnie, you allgoin' to hate
a merry Christmas at your house ?"
" I don't know," said the boy in a dis- j
consolate tone of voice, twisting Ins!
brown fingers in and out of each other. {
" What! you and sisters not going to
hang up your stockings ?"
" No, ma'am ; mc^hersaid she couldn't
afford to give us any presents this year. 1
Ellen and Jane cried all the afternoon!
about it"
"Wall, now, I declare 1 That is too
bad," answered the sympathising voice
of Miss Green, and she silently tied the
paper and snapped the thread with her
scissors, and as she placed it in the bo^'s
hands she said to him, " Never mind.
Johnnie, dear. Pluck up good heart.
May be somethin' '11 turu up about them
Christmas presents after alt"
" Tf I was ouly a little better off now," j
3 "i- oka 1
ranrmureu aUisb v/unrmv uiccu dVO
rocked herself back and forth in her
great arm-chair, "them are children
shouldn't go without hangin' up their
stockings. I'd willingly sell my dinner
to buy 'em some presents, for I know
jest how much store children set by 'em.
I shan't take a minute's comfort thmkin' ;
o' the children's disappointment, and
yet I don't see how in the world I can
prevent it. If I didn't need that pladd
dress now "?here the woman unclasped
her bead purse and drew out the banknote
and looked at it wistfully.
"Them children must hang up their
stockings; but if they do I must go
without my dress, for it's just come to
that. One thing's sartin, I couldn't
take a minute's comfort there in a new
one thinking on Miss Russell's children ;
no, not if it was the finest satin that
ever stood alone," and here Miss Charity
Green brought down her foot with
solemn emphasis. " I must wear my
shabby old silk, and those that don't
like the looks must turn their heads
t'other way; for as long as I hold three
dollars in my hands them children
sha'n't go without a merry Christmas."
"Oh I is that you ? Do come in, Miss
Green," and the little pale, sorrowfulfaced,
care-worn Mrs. Russell lifted her
head from the child's stocking she was
?
darning as ner neiguuur oukicu mo
room.
44 Little folks all abei?" whispered
Miss Green in a low, mysterious tone of
voice, as she came into the room with
something carefully concealed under her
shawl.
" Yes, I sent 'em off an hour ago?
poor things!" and a deep sigh -heaved
the heart of widow Russell?a sigh that
was born of wearying cares, and baffled
hopes, and fainting spirits.
"Wall, you see, Miss Russell," still
preserving her low, mysterious tones,
- ? ? ? v?
ftua SlOWiy uncovering net xuvx uumu
shawl, revealing several packages in
brown paper. "I thought as it was
about Christmas time when little folks
would want some firms?you know children
ain't like grown folks anyhow ; so
I kinder thought I'd slip somethin' into
their stockings, for I s'pose you'd ways
enough for every penny."
"Oh, Miss Green, you are too good
now !"
What a light it was that broke over
the pale, worn face of the mother as her
eyes fell on the bundles !
"S'pose you jest take a squint at
.lent," said the old maid, breaking the
sipall cords aad tearing away the wrappers.
|
Fjr#tt, tb$re waaa blue drum with red
stripes for Johnnie, which his mother
knew would fairly throw him into
ecstasies ; then in a round piuk box was
| a white china tea-set for Ellen, with the
1 most diminutive cups and saucers, and
i the daintiest sugar-bowl, and creammug,
and water-pitcher; and for little
i Jane there was a wax doll, with black
eyes, and ruby bps, and small dainty
j rings of real brown hair; and a red-bird
! in a cage picking seeds out of a yellow
1 trough; and added to all these was a
purple liorn-of-plenty tied with golden
ribbons, and filled with sugar plums for
! each of the children,
Mrs. Russell's faded eyes gleamed
with new light as she gazed at the gifts.
She tried to speak, but the words
I choked themselves back in her throat,
and she broke down in a sob of tears.
" Wall, I do say now, Miss Russell,"
said her neighbor, attempting in awkI
ward but sincere fashion to comfort her.
: "Don't give up so. It ain't much, I
{ know, but then we all had to be chil|
dren once."
" Yes, Miss Green, and it's jest the
thought o' that and the good times we
used to have when I was a wild, careless
gal at father's that's e'en a-most broke
my heart ever since I told the children
thev mustn't expect to hang up their
stockings this Christmas. You never
did seen children so pat down in your
' life; they ain't hardly smiled since, and
: it's seemed as though we'd had a funeral
i in the house when I put 'em to bed to
night."
" Well, s'pose now you jest get their
i stockings and we'll slip them in, and you
: can pin 'em up to the bod-post, you
| know."
i Mrs. Russell went to her chest of
| cherry drawers and brought forth three
small blue and white woolen stockings,
j and the hearts of the two women were
full of a tune of gladness, as they crowded
the playthings inside.
" The house won't hold 'em to-morrow
I mornin'," exclaimed Mrs. Russell,
j "Xhey's be as proud as kings and
i queeDS."
" Bless their hearts!" said Miss Green.
: " There ain't no use o' tryin' to get this
drum inside."
"No, I'll jest set it on the mantle.
Umi- toa f T #vxr>Act I sha'n't know
whether my head's off or on to-morrow
mornin' about seven o'clock."
And so Mrs. Russell's mother heart
dwelt on the delight of her children, and
j Miss Green drank in her words greedily,
with frequent ejaculations of wonder
"9^*!*tfeow the wind does blow!"
said thaold maid as she gathered her
shawl eftMr about her head and hastened
down the load to her home, while a raw
blast struck her in the faoe. The night
was foil of the moan of winds and the
anger of black > winter^ clonds; but
Charity Green did not mind this, for her
heart was full of the last words of Mrs.
Bussell:
"I don't know how to thank you,
Miss Green, but- yon have remembered
the widow an4 the fatherless, and be
sure God will remember it of yon."
" Merry Christmas?merry Christmas,
! Miss Green !" The voioes, the bright,
! eager, children's voices, were outside the
I door and inside the room all in a breath.
There was Johnnie with his drum,
and Ellen whose blue eyes danced with
i joy over her tea-set, and little flaxenj
haired Jane, who looked " cunning as a
I witch," Miss Green averred, as she
hogged op in troe motherly fashion ner
precious doll to her heart.
Then soch a confusion of voices and
ronning of feet, drowned freqnently in
the sound of Johnnie's drum, as went
on for the next hoor in Miss Green's
solitary room.
"We're goin' to play company this
afternoon," said Ellen, "and I'm goin'
to set oot my tea-set and "?
[ " And I'm goin' to be mother," broke
in the sweet child-voice of little Jane.
" And I shall bring dolly and the canary
and act jnst like a big woman goin' a'
visitin'."
> " And I'm goin' to be a soldier jest
come home from the wars," said Johnnie;
and here he struck on his drum so loud
that Miss Green put her hands to her
ears, exclaiming : "Oh, children, for
all the world! What a clash yon do
' ? i 1 t ??
mase ; oui xiei ioc? *i? iuu vi diuuod
all the time. .
Miss Charity Green wore her old black
silk dress to her cousin's Christmas
dinner. It looked gray and shabby, it
is true ; but she would not have felt half
so happy in the richest velvet that ever
adorned the figure of an empress.
A Simple Method of Ventilating fiooiyg.
Dr. H. N. Dodge informs us that he
lias found the following plan very satisfactory
for the ventilation of rooms that
are much used during oold weather:
Nail or screw a neat strip of wood, from
one to two inches high, upon the window
sill, just inside of the sash and extending
entirely across from one side of* the
window frame to the other. Upon the
top of this strip fasten a piece of ordinary
"weather strip," so that there
will be formed an air-tight joint between
the " weather strip " and the lower sash
tka vnn^nir wVtAf.VtAr thA lat.tftr 1H
V1 V*4V nAMMVnl ?
shut down tight or raised an inch or two,
the lower cross-piece of the sash sliding
on the rubber of the "weather strip "
as the sash rises. With this simple fixture
in plaoe, the lower sash may be
raised enough to admit a stream of air
between the lower and upper sashes,
where they lap over each other at the
middle of the window, without ad;
mitting the least air at the window sill.
I The air admitted between the sashes is
! thrown directly up toward the ceiling,
' and there mixes with the heated air at
the upper part of the room. The room
is thereby ventilated in a thorough and
i agreeable manner without drafts of cold
; air upon the persons in the room. The
; amount of ventilation may be regulated
: by the distance that the lower sash is
raised. This arrangement is cheap,
simple and effective.?Scientific American,
On a railway line, recently, a passenger
stopped the conductor and asked :
" Why does not the train run faster ?"
" It goes fast enough to suit us. If you
don't like the rate of speed, get off and
walk," was the rejoinder. " I would,"
replied the passenger, settling back in
his seat, " bufrmy friends wouldn't come
for me until the train comes in, and I
/irm'f want tn waiting aronnd the sta
tion two or three hours."
The heroic attack upon Fort St. Nicholas
in the Shipka Pass, was led by
an Englishman, Major Campbell. At
the head of a battalion of 800 men he
took the fort and held it for six hours,
and then had to retreat. Of the 800
men only five, beside the major himself,
returned to the Turkish lines. It is the
pluckiest exploit of the present war.
Millions of bottles of Burnett's Coooaine
have been sold during the last twenty years,
in every civilized oountry, and the public have
rendered the verdict that it is the cheapest and
best HWr*Dressing in the world.
Ayer & Son's manual contains information
of greafc-valne to advertisers. Send free by N.
W. Aver & Son, Adv. Agta., Philadelphia.
Effects of Breathing Foul Air.
The air we breathe, which a groat
English physician calls gaseous food,
; may become impure to the degree of
being indigestible to our lungs and utterly
unfit for the performance of funcI
tions which are quite as important as
those of our solid and fluid victuals.
Dull*headaches, nausea, loss of appetite
and of the eense of smell, and the
sadness produced by the unsatisfied
hunger after exygen, are only incidental
and secondary evils ; the great principal
curse of the troglodyte habit is its influence
on the respiratory organs. In
1853, when Hanover and other parts of
northern Germany were visited by a
vflrv malignant kind of small-pox, the
great anatomist Langenbeck tried to
discover "the pe<ailiaiitv of organic
stnieture which disposes one man to
catch the disease while his neighbor
: escapes. I have cnt up more human
bodies than the Old Man of the MounI
tain with all his accomplices," he writes
from Gottingen in his semi-annual report,
"and, speakiDg only of my pri|
mory object, I must confess that I am
1 no wiser than before. But, though the
j mystery of small-pox has eluded my
! search, my labors have not been in vain;
! they have revealed to me something
else?the origin of consumption. I am
sure now of what I suspected long ago,
viz., that pulmonary diseases have verv
little to do with intemperance or witn
j erotic excesses, and much*less with cold
weather, but are nearly exclusively (if
we except tuberculous tendencies inher!
ited from both parents, I say quite ex;
clusively) produced by the breathing of
I foul air. The lungs of all persons, mi'
nors included, who had worked for some
I rears in close workshops and dusty fac
! tories, showed the germs of the fatal
disease, while confirmed inebriates,
j who had passed their days in open air,
had preserved their respiratory organs
intact, whatever inroads their excesses
had made on the rest of their system.
If I should go into, practice and undertake
the cure of a consumptive, I should
I begin by driving him into the Deister (a
densely wooded mountain range of Hanover)
and prevent him from entering a
house for a year or two."?Popular
Science Monthly.
Mua'i 3I?onn.
When the telegraph announced the disoorery
of PrQf. Hall that our neighboring planet
had two satellites, and the dispatch was read
the next morning at ten thousand JSnerican
breakfast tables, what think yon was the affect
upon the hearers ? Some colloquy similar
to the following was sure to occur: " Mars
has two moons, hey ? Pass me the milk, Kitty.
Strange, isn't it, that astronomers never
saw them before. Another chop, please. I
wonder what they'll discover nexir mese
corn cakes arc exoellent. What's the latest
from Europe?" We have become so accustomed
to startling discoveries and announcements,
that we take them as a matter of coarse.
Even truth must appear in flaming colors to
make itself seen. The virtues of Dr. Pierce's
; Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Purgative
Pellets have been testod in ten thousand
i households, whose inmates will tell you that
j they consider the discovery and introduction of
! these remedies of far more importance to the
world than the moons of Mars.
Sbipxax, III., June 13,1877.
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. :
Dear Sir? Last fall our daughter?aged 18?
I was fast sinking with oons adaption. Different
fhysicians had pronounced her case incurable,
obtained half a dozen bottles of your Golden
j Medical Discovery. She commenced iroprovI
ing at once, and is now as hardy as a pine knot.
Yours respectively,
Rev. I8SAC N. AUGU8TINE.
The Influence of Malarlo Counteracted.
That the harmful induenoe upon the human
system of malaria may be effectually counteracted
has been demonstrated for years past by
the protection afforded the inhabitants of vast
miasma-breeding districts in North and South
| America, Guetamala, Mexico and the West
Indies by Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Used
htva invnriahlv been
cms a piocuurf) I>UVJ u?tv ??
fonnd to be a most reliable safeguard against
chills and fever, bilious remittents, ana still
more malignant types of malarious disease,
and when employed as a remedy have always
graved their adequacy to the task of eradicatlg
such maladiqg from the system. For disorders
of the stomach, liver and bowels, which
in hot climates and miasmatic localities are
particularly rife, the Bitters are a prompt and
thorough remedy. They also strengthen the
system, tranquilize the nerves, promote digestion
and sonnd sleep, and impart unwonted
relish for food. .
Mrs. General Kheraaa,
wife of the general of the United States army,
says: " I have frequently purchased Dur&ng's
Rheumatic Remedy for fnends suffering with
rheumatism, and in every instanoe it worked
like magio." Send for circular to Helphenstine
A Bentley, druggists, Washington, D. C.
CHEW
The Celebrated
4 41 Matchless"
Wood Tag Plug
Tnn a. rum
The Pionreb Tobaooo Cohpakt,
New York, Boston, and Ohioago
The elegant oompany from Duff's Broad!
way Theater, New York city, are playing to
a succession of crowded houses in New York
State and Oanad*. In the hands of this
talented organization the play of Pink Dominoes
has made a decided hit, and is spoken
of as a masterly performance.
Rheumatism Qnlckly Cared.
"Durang's Rheumatic Remedy," the great
) internal medicine, will positively cure any case
I cf rheumatism on the faoe of the earth. Price
1 #1 per bottle, six bottles, $5. Sold by all
druggists. Send for circular to Helphenkiue
& Bentley, Druggists, Washington, D. C.
To Djripfptiri and Invalids.
Biscuits, rolls, cake or pastry, made with
Dooley's Yeast Powder, can be eaten with imi
punity and relished by th? most sensitive
dyspeptics as bealtbv aud nutritious.
Ireland to the Front!
| if you are bilious take Quirk's Irish Tea. Sold
( by druggists at 25 cents a package.
TKTaII can *> made in one d#y with
UOOQ. W 011 onr 4-foot Well Attoeb. Senh
for onr anger book. U. S. Acor.R Co., St. Louis. Mo. d
f ^ ^ 1 "? isu r>.orm \***t ?* already weak
deavt h#cuta6ik ASh beard. fc?*w
^ kp -9 fiwi ) t? 2 Park* fa. K. ^j.17 e*?W d.Crrtesa
1 YcP J ,a ParAn#? ?rtk limtil ??* W?< 23 rl?.l fWr
_ k Jk tMITB 4 CO. fak A?~u. P.ktrw. Jtt.
1 Tk^jpiaparaU? TW > w?| *M ?MUM ??4 AMIM M !?*
I TAI/F?KS
B g M |B BB selling suilunery Pack.
M/^k ? o In tl>? world. It con
? ^ talns 18 sheets of Paper,
18 Envelope*. rr-ficil. renbnlder, Golden Pen, and a p.ece
Of valuable Jewelry. Complete sample package. with ?legant
gold stone Sleeve Buttons. Set Gold-plated Studs, Engraved
Gold plated Ring, and a I-adles" fashionable Fane*
Bet, Pin and Drops, postpaid 35 cents. 6 PACKAGES with
Assorted Jewelry ?i. a Splendid Watch and
Chain free with every S60 worth of Goods
| jfou buy. Extraordinary Inducements to Agents.
BRIDE & CO. 11 Clinton Place* New Yom
TkT4,ATG?/"kTVTC?1Soldiers suffering from
X JjJ 131 ? J. * f 131 ? wounds, in juries, or disease
can procure pension. ana those who are pensioned car
have their pensions terrsaeed, where their present retina
is too low, as is the case [in thousands of instance*
Widtws and children of soldiers who died in end out ol
the army of disease oontracted in aervioe, ere entitled t<
pension. Fall bounty is dae all soldiers discharged fot
wounds, rapture, or injury other then disease. Soldier i
who were prisoners ofwar oan secure pay for rations, fot
the time bo held. For fnll information, aaarew wiu
?t?mp. MfNEIL & BUtlH,
. ^ Washington, D. C.
f+* t'H ''iim allow*1
ifuiBir
JUST OUT?A new comie bo>l
entitled
"Our Artmt is Cuba, Pkbu,
Spais, and Algixbs,"
with numerous new caricature* ant
ketches of trarel in thoa* tropica
countries. By ft. W. Carleton
price?AO ota. Eleg antlr printed
CARLKTON A CO.. Publiahers, Hew York.
HENS LAY|*4'ffif"
I 1 W PRODUCER
scrape cot needed: 1 lb. is enough for lQChens a month
Grocers sell if, 4 lb?. 81; 1 lb. 35 ct*. 4W, Hi; i
Manufacturer. 143 B-dford St.. Boston. Circulars free
One pound sent, postage paid, for 60 eta.
Agents waited to every town in the UnltedJi'atteS.
_ Agent*, Jobber* and Itetnilers supplied b;
D.R. NOBLE 101 Wall St.. N. Y.
WEIKELA SMITH SPICE CO.. Philadelphia Peru.
JVE. KING WIU. 1 BKO.. l? So. Water St. Chicago
F.DWO. L. MUELLER. Its N. Main St.. St. Ixmia. Mo
ADAMS. BUTTRRFIKLO A (X) . Indianspolia, Irid
JOHN T. HANCOCK A CO.. Dobuque. la.
CHAR. H TFXLKR. u Joy St.. Detroit. Mi. h.
ALBERT FRIES. St.. Nloholas, Fix
OHAS. BULLOCK. Trenton, N. J.
MESSRS. TIFFANY & CO., UNION
SQUARE, NEW YORK CITY, the
leading Jewelers and Silversmiths in
the United States, have Just prepared for
complimentary distribution, a pamphlet
of sixty-four pages, containing a condensed
account of each of their several
departments, practical suggestions relative
to the selection of presents for
Ladies, Gentlemen or Children, and lists
of appropriate articles, that cannot fail
to be of service to persons having gifts
to select for Wedding, Holiday or otner
occasions. They will send it by nail,
postage paid, on request.
ADDRE 8SASABOVE.
Books Old & New wanted and (told. Immense Catalogue.
American Book fUekange, 55 Beekmsn St.. N.Y.
T) A fMMernl for Wood-Splint fancy tcark; 40 designs.
XT A A 1 <o post-paid. J. JaT GoiJLDjBoston.Masa.
-" Turtle Sleeve Buttons
~ ; A wrest cifriosity and novelty, made of White MetsJ
[jj I and plated with either silver or nickel. Rsch button
A oontaim* a perfect imitation of a Lite Turtle with
moveable head, tail, and leas and no sensitive to the
, touch that no one can hold them still. Sample pair
r sent to any address, by mail, post-paid, on receipt of
? 50 cents in currency or postage stamps. Illustrated
I circulars of four other splendid novelties, mailed
free to any address, on application. Rare obanoe
Arias agents to make money. Refer by permission
^ to Indian Head National Bank of this city.
T, Address, A. A. DAV1K. Nnsbow, M. H.
POUND AT LAST 1
?A Itemedy for Catarrh,
Aethnin, and all Lsdk
Disease*.
The wonderful healing qualities
of Dr. Jndgr'e OxyHydroxenated
Air ! has
made it a family remedy all over
the country. It is inhaled into
the lungs, passing the tissues
into the circulation of the blood.
The process of inhaling is as
simple as the act of breathing
itself, and may be performed by
the moat delicate and feeble
without exertion and fatigue.
Mr. Murray of the Ooldm Rule writes of it:
146 Treosont Street, Boston, August !., 1877
Dr. Jcdoe?Pear Sir: I was troubled last winter with
an obstinate Catarrh, which invaded my throat and
lungs, and nsnnsd a most trying cough. I have used
your medicine with perfect ~*eZ*. every trace of cough
and catarrh having been removed by your truly wonderful
treatment.
Patients at a distance succesafaljr treated.
Send for Pamphlet.
Dr. JDIN1E dc CO.? Physician*
79 Beach St.) Baeion. .Haw.
CANCER.
ritUE treatment of Canoer has become so interwoven
X with quackery that the progressive physician has
appeared unwilling to enter into the arena against the
"eoeption; consequently tnn din oi um uiwnw k??
feesion ere almost totally ignorant of this fearfol and
most prevalent disease. Tbey regard Cancer as incurable
becaase they do not understand its origin or pathology,
consequently thev merely try to alleviate Uis excruciating
pain which this disease entails upon its
victims. We regard Cancer As curable in both forms
medullary and scirrhns We have used our remedies
in this country and Rnrope for the laat twenty yean
with marvelous success, especially in cases of the womb,
breast.and nice. We earnestly solicit s call from those
who have given up hope. One of the physicians of the
institute will vi?it those in sny part of the oountry who
are unable to call. We use neither knife, plaster nor*
caustic, and cause no pain, depending entirely upon our
specific. Patients on beginning treatment only pay for
the medicines they receire until they are satisfied they
are improving, tee for examination snd oonsoltition
*3. 00 in all csaee. AII letters of inquiry must oootain
SI.00,as our time ie Taloab'e and cannot be
given for nothing Addre?sall letters to t^e Superintendent,
Db. ROBKRTSON. at office of Institute.
, 04 Tremont .Street. Boston.
"The Best Polish in the World."
^BBim'o^El'sOAR
m ' , mm m i m|D?HnllYl Sjt thj
| lllll|lToU(tuiu.BM.
,1^ M Rll Sis No itlljcltt and
I J&gfc w N nVbUS docoptiro odon to
liim:?~l HSjL III VbNM oorir commoa nod
!BA5$=5e^5Si I' <ul#un<?? *??*fiSeSSnil
HKol nU' ilUr^UIti
nBdSnPi' mLSSklM oclontlfie erpcfcnooi
UilBvl .tffyygB Um monoh 'c* o'
n. r B-i. j - -j--* I
uHW|Di^SS0Q|H^^^Er ^* j-rtjctod
Sr io? ontj to the
pohlU TkoTUTIIT TOILET WAP hi the Wtwli
OmJa lit Mtratf oip*olf> oiit uh i? ill w/tiOft.
Sample box, eeotolatof S cakee of t oak aoob, eent fro* to any ad
droM M Mootot of It onto. Adfrot
Cough, Cold, or Sore Throat,
Require* immediate attention, a* neglect
oftentimes result* in some incurable Lang
disease. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHtS
"* .twmio MmMiv. nnd will almost in*
variably five immediate relief.
SOLD BT ALL CHEMISTS and dealers
in medicines.
IF Yt)U WANT
i First-Class Magazine,
Snbaeribe for 1her ATLANTIC^
MONTHLY for 1H*H notv.and von
will receive, the. November and J>e
w-% va wi WN
'em'ter hum ers r n jv i>t j ncc
$4.O0. For One Dollar extia you
ran obtain a splendid Ufc-sixe portrait
of either of the world-famous
poetsy lVhittler, Mlryantf and Longfellow.
fry mail, postage free.
Mark Twain ia a constant contributor
to the ATLAXTiCand the. best
authors, poetm, and story-tellers in
the country write for t(* pages.
Address it. O. HOI GHTOX * < 0.,
Rirersidr Press. t'oMbrtdae. tins*.
BURNETTS
KALLISTON
FOll KEMOVINO
lant Sunburn, Freckles, Eedness and Eruptions
of tiie Skin, and for Bendering the
Complexion Clear and Beautiful.
Of all the effect* that expcanre of the akin to
the air or aim produce*, the moct disagreeable I*
called freckles, or tan. If apread over the entire
I surface of the part* exposed, It ia called tan; if
. TV* UnMtiklni
| icMwrea umwniu,ii?vM>
,-iro roost subject to them. The KALLISTON,
I prepared by Joseph Burnett A Co., Boston, eon
;.litis a peculiar eraaive property which will r?:
move these disagreeable itaina. It ia at the same
lme perfectly harmless, allays all tendency to
inflammation, and renders the complexion clear
M beautiful.
'
[ ? T1UE^~MMK?
| FOR ASTHMA, ROSE COLO, HAY FEVER, Etc.
1 ThJsiuaaadj has been ssed la theomad* of lbs vent
saw, with MtonUhlnr and uniform success, ud it
offered to the public with fall confidence in its merit*. It
contain* no poiaosoea or Injurious properties whatever,
sad an infant may take it with perfect safety.
i |
t E.vtmst from the " Life of Washington Irving," by hie
nephew, Pierre M. Irving. Vol.Tvi, pace tn.
a The doctor nreecribedLaa an experiment,?what had
been eqereeted oy Dr. (O. w J Holmes on hi* late viait.?
' Jonoa WhiicomVa Remedy^* Asthma,' a teaepooaful
ha a wine elate of watar, to be taken every four bonis.
. A good night waa the result"
44I have had the apormedlr aathma fifteen year*. I
commenced taking 'Jonas WhMecoab'a Remedy tor the
Asthma' eighteen month* ago. and hare not had aaevere
paroxysm ainee." SARAH SEELT, Kddytown, YMas
Co., N. V., to Editor* Sural 2iev Yorker.
"Have cold ' Whitcomb'a Remedy' for nearly twenty
( ' rear*. I know of nothing ao uniformly successful."
! THEODORE METCALJ? fianw, Tmut street
Boston.
"T ? I I ?- Mat benefit ftom ' Jonas Whit
1 tomb * Aithro* Htmedj.J' Q. T. OA BORNE, Proidtnt
! Ixeptunc lacunae* Co., Boitoa, Him,
kept it off lor tt? whoU mmoo, to Qm gw*t J?f o>1 the
i Prtpartd only by JOSEPH BURNETT ft ''A
Boston. For Arte by til Droggitta.
ROYAL
Absolute
All aroo* thorized to rnsreataw tt foil wojefat mad
To try it, rend 00 oonta for 1-pound com to K0YA1
portofo. .
Send for Reduced Price Lit! of
Mason * Hamlin
CABINET 0R8ANS.
NRW and 8PI.KNDID STYLUS; PHIC?S RF.DCCtD
010 w w.rO KACH. THIS MONTH (NOV. 1K7).
Address MASON A HA.tlLIN ORGAN CO.,
Boston. New York, T t'hiftiga.
KELP'S HHIRT8.
KEEP'S Patent Partly-mHdn Dre^sShirta, boot qoali
iy, only uiain hubs uj nmin. o iur *<
KFKPH Custom Shirts to measure, beet quality, 6 for
$9. delivered free. Guaranteed perfectIv natis/actory.
HE I) FLANNEL UNDERWEAR. ,
Undershirts and Drawer*, bSt quality, 11.60 each.
White Flannel UiklecveeU, beat quality, SLSO eaeb.
Canton Flannel Vests A Drawer*, ex. heavy, 76c. each.
Twilled Silk Umbrella#, paraxon frame* $3 each.
Beat Gingham, patent protected rib#, tl eacb.
Circular# and sample# mailed free, on application
Shirteonly. delivered free KF.KPMANUFACTURING
COMPANY, 105 and 107 Mercer Street, New York.
, For Consumption
And all dise&ies that lead to it; anon aa Cong ha, Neglected
Golds, Bronchitis. Pain In the Cheat, and all dieeases
of the Langs, Allen's Lung HhIsiim is the
Great Modern Remedy.
ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM
Has proved itaelf to be the greatest Medical Remedy for
heeling the Lunjrs, purifying the Blood, and metering
the tone of the Liver. It exeitee the phlegm, which is
raised from the Longs, thereby paring the way for a
speedy cure. Joat try it once.
BOLD BY All MEDICINE DEALERS.
The Beet Trwws without
A STis^Bh Metal Springs ever invented.
P .nTiiDt S tHKo hunW claim ef a oertain
radical cure, but a guarantes
ot a comfortable, se
cure ami aa'tafaoCory apphV^r
anoe. We will taka back and
pay Tall price for all that do net salt.
Prioe, single, like out, 14; far both sides, M. Sent by
mall, poet-paid, on receipt of pries. N. B.?This Tram
will cubic more Ruptures than any of those for whiah
extravagant claims are made. Circulars free.
POMEROY TRU88 COA ?
746 Brosulway* New Yerh.
Dr. Warner's Health Corset,
With Skirt Supporter and SelfjgpTy
Adjusting Pads.
K f Uoeqaaled for Beauty, Htylr
M < and Comfort.
Xfjrv/N APPROVED BT ALL PHYSICIANS.
^7 - i Pne Ail# hu f.+nAina *f#rcAnnff
Kfji * Samples, any sise, by mail. InSatteen.
rrAi^r^M Contil. 1.76: Naming Const.
I /Wfjf V \ **'C0 Mi89e6' CorMt, 11.00.
I Lffiirn*/ I AGENTS WANTED.
I *W|ljTT / EARNER BRO'S.
WrSMWBaA m Brtiulwyt N. .
A POSITIVE * CURE FOR
CATARRH, BRONCHITIS,
AND ASTHMA.
Thousands bare been cared by l>r. Oeldraben'i
(nhalat*en, who were pronoanced Incurable by ph?si
cau? and friends. Patients living at a dhrtanoe desiring
to avail themselves of the dvioeof Dr. Owldcnberg,
can write their name and poet-oflee address, and forward
to Or. Goltrakerf. 916 Arch Street, Philadelphia,
when he will retnrn them a list of printed questions,
the answers to wnich will enable hiss to determine
the natnre of their diseases and the probability of care.
He will forward to any addiem, hia paper or DooLgmac
foil description* of the diseases ho mate, etc.
flip JK. Verio* St., PMUuUlphi,a, CM. S, 1877.
I bare need Dr. GoMeoberg's Inhalation for Catarrh,
Bronchitis, and Asthma, and am entirely cored.
AWN DC VEAL.
KIDNEY add LITER
SPECIFIC
A RADICAL CURB FOR ALL JUIBA8M
or m
KIDNEYS, BLADDER,
AND URINARY ORCAN8.
Persona coffering from tbeee direaaea abonld send for
the list of qoeetiooa, that the Doctor may giro them an
opinion concerning the nature and curability of their
cases.
Consuhst'T./ and examinations free, 'Send for
Descriptive Paper to
Dr. UOLDENBERU'S Principal (Ifflce,
918 Arch Ktreef, Philadelphia.
wiQTiD'fi nlTsiF"
TV lilt nun vnuiraiu
WISTAR'S BALSAM
OF
OF
WILD CHERRY
WILD CHERRY
CURES
I'oufki, C?ldi, Ialieazai HoirKifH,
BraaehltlaiWkaairfai Conch, Croup* Hare
Throat* Aithna, Difficulty of Breath~
" J ?- - ?- ik. HU, mmd
li(i rauinri nu? >? >_v . ._
Br?Mt,Qaiu7) Bpltdac afBlMd.
Lher Caaplalalt BlredUf of
Ike LiiHf and all Diseases
f the Throat, Lugi
aad Cheat, tnrlndlng
em
CONSUMPTION.
PROM ELDER H. L. OILMAN, A MINISTER 01
THE GOSPEL IN GLOVER, VT.
" I hare bean troubled for eereral year* with a diffi
cultj of the Heart and longs; hare applied to aeeers!
phyrieian# for help, and hare tried a] moat every rented;
reoommended, without receiving any assistance, but
bad been groinng weaker aad weaker, unUL hearing ?!
WISTAR'S BALSAM OP WILD OHERRT about i
rear tinea, I commenced using it, with immediate relief
It haa not only reetored my lungs to a eouad state, but ]
am entirely reliered ofthe diMculty or djeeeee of th?
heart. I hare no hesitation in saying that it is the heel
long medicine before the public, and I chest fully ant
conscientiously reoommeod it to all psfsons suffcrini
with pulmonary complaint*."
Wi star's Balsam
of Wild Cherry.
FROM MRS. ISAAC MOORE OF RICHMOND, VT
M Soma three yeare sinoe I was attacksd with a ?ran
cough, ?rww aad irritation of the longs, to whtal
waa added asthma in a aerere form. During the firs
year I tried peroral of the most popular medicines o
the day, bat rsosfrsd no real relief, and I had sheer
despaired of erer regaining my health, when I was in
duced to try DR. WI8TaB*8 BALSAM OF WILI
CHERRY, which rery soon reliered me. My ooogl
became loose, the soreness and irritation disappeared
and my general health began to mend. I con meed hi
use, and a few bottles reetored me to better health thai
1 erer hoped to enjoy again. I believe the Balsam tt
be the most reliable remedy that can be found."
I
Wistar's Balsam
of Wild Cherry.
FROM BENJAMIN WHEELER, STATION AGKJC1
ajurrriT ?nv ALSTON. MASS.
" IVU moat severely afflicted with a hiru. dry cough
with its nsaaT acoamphniment of night sweats, oom
ptMaly prostrating my narvous system, and Drodaein<
saoto s debilitated ststo of health that, after trjitH
medical aid to no porpoee, I had given op all hopes o
ever reoovering, aa bad also my friends. At tois it r
of matten I was prevailed upon? through <the infineno
of a neighbor, to toy WISTAR.^8 BAXBAM, tbookl
with do belief whatever in its truly wonderful curette
properties, and before oaing two bottles the effect wa
almost magioal. Mr ooogh entirely left me, the nigh
rweata deterted me. nope onoe more elevated my degrees
ad sptrtta, and soon I had attained my wonted strengtl
and vigor. Thai has this Balsum. as-has often beai
remarked by pereona conversant with the above facta ii
this vicinity. HterdUy snatched me nom the grave
Yon are at liberty to ase this far the benefit of thi
afflicted."
Wi star's Balsam
of Wild Cherry.
Prepared by SETH W. FOWL* A SO58, 86Harri
| sou Avenue, Boston, Maes. 5
! 50 rU< and |la bottle.
| 50 eta. and 91 a bottle.
Sold by all Drsuhla
I Sold by all Pnurclets
BAKING
- POWDER.
>ly Pure.
ebeotatelr pare.
> BAKING POWDER CO.. N. Y., mo( by nail, free of
> " * e
flTTTfi KEYOLVEKS. Price Lietftrea AMreer
U U H P Qteet Weggt Gun Worke. PltUbnrg. Pa.
K 4a tOA per dn et bogg 8eoplni eorx m
V ^ Vtree. grmsox * W.. fastland. Maine
3 new rootl ud 3 new instrument*] piece* Bluet
Mnsic.lOc. Globe Music Oo.. Middleboro. Mas*.
TITAVPKR box, conteina 07 useful article*; six t*
W UX1 tump*. Mjg Et* Grant. MMdleboco. Mass,
wo g*^^am!7?ShTm.!5jas^ai'
<f A GOLD PLATED "WATCHES. (Viyu
<iu ih? koowa world. Sauna Watch Fass ro Aesna
UlllkDOMM. A. COCLTKK A CO.. Cmcaoo. lau
$400ji5SS]^iS?
taraffiasgBBsas
iARA A Wwft. I dentil wanted. 36 beat set
VjKKII in* article* in the woctl On* aampla free.
6VW Address JAY BRQ1MOW, DetmSClfloh.
BEATTY
-/xiXgn, Cir. Free. Daniel F. Beatty, Washington, It. J.
HOME AND ABROAD. A paper for everybody
Only 31.10 * year with spend id Premium
A*ents wanted. B. B. BU8SKIL A CO., V
&5 OocmhUl. Boston.
CONSUMPTION!
ft* Cnwar, Trent went nnd Corn blllty. A Shor
Treatise sent free to any address by
Da SMITn, 145 K. 15th Stree', New York.
?ly info'-? SoldS.^AcSKas Co
nfzolu:. '.u, p. s. oto auv. wShi^t*B. p. c.
CLOCK iiist
STORIES. ?iSS
P"P% P? prn Choice Standard BOOKS m all"
? kr pa pa depat tmenta of literal or??Poetry,
IV ha %m piatioo. Hiatory. Biography, tbo
Classics, etc , the beat and cheapest hooka in the world.
Catatoceefteo. THK*Bf.ADE. TclMw, Okie.
BEFORE-?OU
or a speKmed eopy of The ToTrrte Blade. It is a
Mammoth RMt Pace Weekly' Paier, of Sizty-fcor
Columns, filled with caret ally prepared reading matter
jf intereet and raloe to people in ell pert# of the United
Ststea. Specimen# free. . .
>ASBY t>! .i. B4S?5?
Two of the richest, raciectpampbleta ever ifwoed. Foil
>f the rare Humor and profound Philosophy of Ike Jan
>f Cenfedrit X Roads. JO oenta each; tbreo for z5
enta Addresa. lUllSt W?de>OMs.
nr hook AamtTH* take notice.
JOSUH ALLUfS WIFE
Hmm " Wrote Another Book" wad Hiaready.
Samantha at the Centennial
At a p. A, and p. l Ontdoea herself and Widow
OooBUL learea KXTSXT BobbST far behind. Don't
?ait and loae your chanca, tend for territory circnlarr,
^iiiifuakn FUBL&HHIG CO, Hartford, Conn..
or F. C. BLISS A bo.. Newark. J. J.
WORK FOR; ALL
In their own localities, oawraaatea tor thf Fireside
sio t> ta
flHHUHHHIHIHHHI *P^^j
aftg aa^"Sh!fflfiRjya8?''wMary
J. Holmes.
rtM m* ami, MTLOKED.by ttfo Hbf J. Hetaw,
-Mthnrof tfcoaaaptendid book*? Edith L*l? H ?t Lawn
?Tempi* and Sunekime?Lmea JHeea$ utm^ M now IMd;,
*ad for ante by nil bookaaller*. Pnco (l.^O. Itiiona
H th* finast norab evar written, qpd ararybody shoaJd
tTwrnmummMM
WANTED.
Ladies of Ability
Ta mwn tad astabliah A mate or oao of tbo
wllinc Pataute in tba United States and Canada*.
Addraas. SI Baal 18th Btmad, If aw York Oity.
. $UOO - i
Osgood's Heliotype Engravings.
The choicest household orna Pries
One Dollar each. Send fSr catalogue.
JAMES B. OSGOOD & CO. '
^ BOSTON, MASS. _ '
$1J00 , $1M0
Bryant's Opera House, NewYork,
Hoe. 788 h 780 Broadway, Opp. Maw York Hotel.
BRYANT'S NIN8TIUUJt
Under the Management of NEIL BEY A NT. '
.iQa Wilson. Micw toa w iison, oiiij uijini, tool
A Seperk Orchestra
will appear in A GnuM Allautre. RatrilalnMcat
Er?y EtciIrc at 8, and Manny Jfatlnee
at 2. Popular Prices?85, 6(1 and 73 eta. MatineeM
and AO cents.
If HAW A new Medical Treaties "Tn
AI1U OV 8ci**c* or-Lire, as Iblt
_ PaiMavA-no*," e book tor
TIIVCCI E> 9T*ym*D- Prto??i,MBtbr
TNTSELr
ten limes thepriceof the book. Gold MedsJ awarded
be anther. The Boetoo Rem Id says Tf<# ^rrience Of
lit* ia beyond ell eoiapariaon IfPAl
the is oat extraordinary work
OB Physiology ever published." UfcRIi
Mas. Pamphletaent free. Ad's eaaaiaMMew mm
Da. W. H. PAPKKR, No. 4 TilTSpI W
Bwlfiscb Street. Boston, Man. ? || | OCmsl
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
ZCTORXAL
DISTORT of1 U.S.?
The treat interest is the thrilling hhtory of oar country
makee this the faeteet selling book ever pobU> bed.
It contains over MXI fine historical eagravii gs andr
1190 peeve. It sells at sigbt. Send for ? t extra
terms to Agents, dbd see why it-sells faster- an any
other book. Address.
NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Philadelylm, Pa
! gfcjEIERETT HOUSE
S Fronting Union Square1
I new YOWK. ; '
Finest Location in the City.
Enrepeai ?Isb?Ifstsonurt lunniisRi
KBMNBB St WBA VBM, Priori** 0T0.
THE
8000 OLD!
i a SUED-BY".
! KZllCil HUSTAX6 ldhot.
FOR MAR ARO RKART
. IIWTABumz> 36' Tula Aha eye earn. Always
reedy. Always bandy. Has never yet failed. TUtr,
efllkw base tested A The whole world appro? the
? glorious old Mutant?the Beet and Cheapest Liniment
| ' j existence. 36 oents a bottle. The MasUng Lmimen
r enras whan nothing else will.
| BOLD BY AM. MFfliriN* vTWprna.
SANDAL-WOOD
t
[ i pisltlis remedy for all dissssss of the Kidneys.
wmnmmmmmt mlma ?Md En Dvee.
?feai'Oca^ltlali' Kjwwr poodoooo: sUfeaoos,'
eortaia sad ?oodr fas tto Mtfea. Bis fast tnponodiog
41 otter imhAm. fllxty oopooJoo otmlte six or oi?h
duo. Vo otter aodMaosta do Urio. .
Bswsrs sf laltsdsn, 'ftr, owing' to* its groo
oos, oMfling pOsti otd.
BUND A 8 DICK fclCO.'H SmoUU. Soft Cop
mJm, (XI #/ dkedeteood, .- ?!<* ex oii Jr?
ttorm. Atk for circular, or tomd for oho to X and Sf
yfoootor dtr?t, Xws Tort.
. I KYH.9 49 y