Beaufort Republican. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1871-1873, June 27, 1872, Image 4
The Woodland Princes?.
What if we met in an old log road. ?
Where the leaf-mold clung to her email bare
heels,
And in$ead of wbodland flowers, "her load
Was a string of trout and silver eels ?
Her go*h was ragged^rod limp with dew,
But it^roaaded-a pair?f-spiendid hips ;
A rich red torrent was flashing through
#fartled pn'seeto cheeks and lips.
The wholesomeIbronze'ofhe? ruddy face
Was like ripe fruit-in a bowej of green,
And She walked tbe world with the easy grace
And firm, free stbp of a woodland qufeen.
The dew had moistened the jetty hair
That waved and floated aoont her head ;
I caught a ghmpse of the shonlders bare,
The sparkling byes and the lips of red.
OjIv a ghmpse of the tattered gown,
As ene uiramea irom view in me itaiy way ,
A glance of the shoulders, plump and brown,
And a leg as plump and brown as they.
And I wandered on by tho yeasty stream
To try for the trout that would not rise ;
For I walked all day in a misty dream
Of lips and shoulders and curls and eyes.
And I thought of a damsel, city bred,
Of narrow should- rs and doubtful spine ;
With "false hair frizzled about her head,
And false life teveled by rule and lino.
Unskill^ and heedless in wifely cares,
Expensive, vapory, worthless. When
Lbe mother half hates the child she bears,
Where shall we go for the nation's men ?
I take the lot that the Fates decree,
And my fancies fail me one by one;
But the woodland maid In her benuty free,
Is the dream I'll dream till my life is done.
*
AFTER MANY DAYS.
" Nathan, T have bad a letter from New
York. Mrs* Grimsby wntes tbat sbe will
spend ihe season in the White Mountains.''
"Ah!" Nathan ejaculated, in his most
far awav manner, handling bis knite and
fork clumsily, as if they were weapons of
defence, and gazing with a very un-Na
tban-like expression away from the comfortable
tea table, with its delicate blue
rimmed service, and the placid, good na
tared lady* behind the monstrous tea urn.
who sat with a carious air of puzzled ex*
pcctation.
" Are you not well, Nathan ? Is that
all you have to say V
Down fell war implement No. 1, the
knife, at which a Utile color mounted to
the brown, handsome face, and then a
grave, sweet smile that midc one forgot
in an instant the awkwardness of his cverv
movement.
"Good gracious, Aunt Roval. what
would you hive m ? say ? That Mr?.
Grimsby should havo a^ked ou. consents
about the visit to the White Mountains.
Soe generally spends the season somewhere.
Its just as w?li White Mountains
as Gape May. It's all right, I suppose"
"Nithan, 1 hope you don't mean to be
funny," said Aunt Royal, ptteously. " You
know I am not.in the least appreciative.
Mrs. Grimsby's design oh the White Mountains
has nothing to do with the subject
about which I wish to speak. Helen.
after a long winter with those children
must teel the need of re?t and relaxation.
She must be teriiblv tired ot the city and
her hard, unvarying life of dependence. 1
wish it were possible to ask her down for
a month or two."
Not knowing iust how this might be
received. Aunt Rival hastily made another
cup of tea, mistaking the salt spoon
lot the sugar tongs, in her efforts to loot
composed, eyeing the broad shouldered
Nathan opposite.
" I suppose you have written to Mrs.
Kavne, saying that the doors of Carlingsford
are ever o|>en to her. Always, so
long as it would be pleasant for her to
remain here."
Nathan's smile was gone, and a feverish
light gleamed down low in the depths of
his grey ryes. lie stcoped, replaced the
knife that bad fallen, with a slight tremor
scarcely noticeable.
Aunt R >jal lelt the cup of tea she had
in no wi-c wanted, it being the third cup
newly drawn, and came around the table
to lay her hand on the dark, stiaight hair
and to tell Nathan how good of him to
grant her this.
" Helen has not been out of town but
orire, 1 think, since her husband's death ;
wuar a treat it wm be?UarlingstorU .s at
its l>rst, now, too. I sfca'l write and ask
bor to come at once; I could not, certainlr,
before naming it to you. Nathan. Poor
girl, what a surpiisc it will be."
Aunt Royal, as Nathan Carlingsford
called her, was a dear, good soul, full of
am.able schemes and surprises, which,
oddly enough, never seemed to turn out
satisfactorily in the end, more to her surprise
than any cue's of her acquaintance.
Carbng-ford Willows, one of the most
beautiful faimhouses in the Hudson river
country, had been left solely to Nathan
Carhngsford, when a lad of sixteen, ten
years beloic this summer evening, when
we find him taking tea with his housekeeper.
filter mother, friend and adviser.
Mrs. North, a distant relative of his father's
second wile, who had not survived him a
year. Aunt Royal b?J grown to look on
the cheery old house, with its Knickerbocker
gables and ponderous stone llaggincs.
as her home dining the life time of
the last Mrs. Carlingsford. After her
decease, the place, without a mistress fell
into ruin-, and }Oting Nathan, woefully
f elir.g the need of a woman about tlie
hou-e to keep Inm from sharing the common
fate when he returned Irom his studies,
humanely otli rcd her the position, and it
waseiateiuliy accepted. She had remained
all those ronmnL'innr ,
- ? K'^vv
of going luck 10 Veimont every vear.
though rho pood Nathan lmd never failed
to Hlectmllv discoutage this project.
Aunt Royal went away with licr bed
room candle, and sat *br a lon^ while over
a letter to her n:ecc. Helen K\vne anx
jous that, it might be couched in just the
words that would bring her down to the
pleasant old house lor a few weeks. '"81101)
a dear girl as Helen, earning the bread she
eats by a life ol drudgery and serfdom to
three over-fed, lustv tvranis. I daresay
those Gii'"sbv children have worn her to
a mere shadow."
The delicate affair was at length des
patched, the letter closing with a few
affec'ionate renimks, lay enveloped and
sraled with the gieat pretentious seal of
the Royals, which had remained in the
good lady's possession an untold number
of ytars. Aunt Roval extinguished the
caudle, in which verv many fojlisb moths
had scorched themselves and crossing the
worn crimson carpet, checked with great
bars of light from a summer moon climbing
above the laurel tree t' at grew against
her window, she gazed down on a still
figure below with b-awnv arms folded,
and finely pois-d head thrown back, a
gocd natured bon at rest.
<l Nathan is a good fellow. I think he
0 once fancied Helen, at least admired her
bright tare and companionable wayR. To
be sure there has been a great change in
her. noor dear, but she would make an
admirable mistress for Carlingsford? r\?
one better. 1 wish I might bring this
about; it's quite time Nathan thought i
about taking a wile."
The hext morning, to Aunt Royal's
utter surprise and utter consternation
Xat-hfli Catlmpford appeared at the
bieafcnfsV fflmF in a gray traveling
with a linen Raglan thrown ovec.his arm,
amktflAT ^tirst of inquiry declared that
beli&a suddenTy conceived the idea of tak^
ing a jaunt for a month or six weeks. She
might have the Willows to herself, or to
any company she choose to invite down.
She was at all times to have just what
companions she desired, and for as long a
time as she or her guest liked.
Aunt R yal's prim cap frill had not in i
the knowledge of any one ever see'med '
awry and out of order; the soft gray hair, '
uniformly as smooth as silk, was actually
falling down in wispy little curls about,
the sweet motherly face, and Aunt Royal
presented a disagreeable contrast to ijer
usually placid seif.
Nathan, you mean that you are not I
uoing to stay at home to welcome the
company you have invited down to Carlingsitrd.
The fishing and fowling comlades
you spoke of, you can't mean for
them to arrive and find the place without'
a host, Nathan ?"
Nathan smiled a little, and began a vigorous
onslaught on the tea and muffins, ,
but with an air of not relishing the repast.
"The fishing and,fowling can wait, Aunt;
Royal, for a montii at least. I surrender
Carlingsford to you until I return. Have
vou not often vowed it would be a good
thing to get rid of a great, loutish fel'ow
who tramps in and out at unseasonable
hours, keeping the house in a sa# $tate of
tumble .and uncleanness, with no end of
whims and fancies to reconcile ? You
don't mean to say you have not sa'd all
this, and more, Mrs. North /"
As if it were not your own house
Nathan, to turn completely round, if you
chose;" said the good lady with an ag- i
grieved tone, and the very nearest approach j
to dissatisfaction that was possible to her. j
She saw her well intentioncd designs j
upon the master of Carlingsford Willows I
disappear in a whirl of vapor, not unlike !
the steam ftom the nozzle of the diminutive
hot water kettle, which, during the
progress of the important tea making,
occupied a stand at ber elbew.
tl I believe Nathan Carlingsford means
?o go on until the end of the chapter, ea:- i
ig bread like a visitor in his ou n house, :
without on" care as to what is to become
of him during all the years to come, and I
treating with downright injustice seme |
good woman who ought to be mistress 1
ber\"
This was when the wrong-headed young |
man bad quite gone ?not a vestige of him
lemaininp, save a room dismantled ol a j
few familiar things to see which was to j
see Nathan, and a perfect ocean cf paper,
-crap* of olo letter* and a vast number of
articles almo*t. without name or character,
which had resulted liom a strange
mode of clearing drawers and packing
portmanteaus (peculiar to men like Cat 1
mgsford) with all things on top that should
be at the bottom, and such confusion and
utter desolation behind as no woman,with !
a well regulated, orderly housekeeping >
turn of mind couid be calm under.
Mrs. North was a model of propriety
end neatness, from the snowy lace cap to
the hem of the gray stuff dress on which
no speck or spot had ever been seen.
Nathan in his mannish disregard of the
eternal fitness of things, had. during a long
and intimate acquaintance, been a great
trial to her. She hud persistently followed
up ber early teachings with scarcely the
good effect she bad hoped and expected,
and at last had submerged all other desires
about Nathan in the grand scheme of marrying
htm off to some orderly little woman,
who, beginning with neat and fresh prin- j
ciples, and a young energy, might in time
accomplish something in the redemption!
of this castaway.
The cleaning of debris from Nathan's
deserted chamber, and the restoring of it
to its wonted wholesome aspect, with the
stir and bustle consequent ii|>on preparing j
apartment^ for her m-ice Helen, who was
expected daily, brought back the even I
temper and calm spirits for which Aunt
Royal North was so well noted far and ;
wide.
We will not dwell on her surprise and
chagrin after the receipt oi the letter from
niece Helen, begging to decline her kind
invitation.
" Not for anything, dear Aunt North,,
would I spend any t'.me at Carlingsfotd as
a visitor, although if you were very ill I
think I should <lo what I could, f atn
deeply sensible of your good motive in
this, but am com|K.'l)ed to decline. I think
1 shall remain in my present employ, and
1 ....r,\frc ririmvliv to cnri'
pi'I'Ilit; f? a*."*, uui pa'
for the children," etc.
"Not for anything spend anv time at
Carlinesford as a viuitor."
Aunt Royal sat down in lier cane-seat
rocker with a very blank face, and held off
the mysterious and offensive epistle as one
would some refreshing entomological speci- !
men, and re-read the lines quoted, from a
-ale distance, with jiositively a faint angry
Hush in liei cheek.
'And why not? indeed, very many
young worn n would be happy at the bare
mention of such a chance to catch a husband,
to speak nothing of such a one as
Xithan Carlingsford could be in spite of
uis ill-at ease n"Miner. I really would not
have believed -ueh perversity of Helen
Kavw?care for the children, indeed !"
Tinea* ted in her amiable plans and machinations
at every turn, Aunt Royal gave
way to the*distemper cau-ed bv so many
disappointments, and went straightway to
bed in a cool west euamber, with its white
limit\* trimmings and great pink va-es
full of double red ro-e- and feathery asparagus
sprays; had her head bound up,
Hid lici little handmaiden Hannah to .-ir
iMr orT; quite at the toot ol the white curtains,
and just within range oi her eye.
and waft up and down?with the lazv
undulation of a great willow bougb?a
preat, gorgeously lined fan.
' To think that I can have no influence
with either of them, alter all these years,"
Aunt Royal muttered, watching with a
dream v sense ot comfort the approach and
wavering retreat of the peacock leathers.
"Ma'am H innocent llannah queried,
leaning to-ward on her hrown, dimpled
elbow, opening her gray eyes m constir |
nation at this new evidence that her iui?tress
wandered in her mind.
' Hannah Hurst, never care for any-j
body's welfare, and d-.n'r ever lay up anv
plans and hopes so long as you live." ^
The peacock feathers went quite out of
sight and hv on the cool, checkered nutting,
and Hannah's gray eves blinked at j
Aunt Royals sudden cnergv.
" Do you hear, child ; no hopes, no plans
?live on. and let things come about as
they will."
" Yes. ma am,' said Hannah beginning
] again to set t!ic air in motion wim me
green and purplish gold fan.
Aunt Ro\al"s sense of her wrong? and
her surroundings grew fainter and fainter,
and understanding her release from these 1
symptoms, Hannah went softly ut of the
room, closing it up with a delicious sigh of
i gladness that she was neither a rose or
an asparagus spray, to stay day and night
j within lour white walls, with only a
drowsy blue bottle buzzing against the
highest pane in the window, aud Aunt
Royal lying very still behind the spotless
i bed diapery.
; Freedom was what Hannah loDged for,
and petting clear of the white garden gate,
with its yellow honeysuckle drooping over,
she rushed on over clover pinks and purple
b^mteea^e, down through a meadow green
as velvet, quite at the further side of
which a narrow stream ran gurgling over
its pebbles, and in which was reflected
the Wtui fiatch of pure sky, nodding plumes
of white alder flowers; and ifannalrs
brown, gypsyisfr face" and refunded arms,
etasped about a wealth of monstrous red ,
and gold flag lilies and wild sweet pea.
And now for this incorrigible Nathan. '
Ignoring a certain horror to be had of
such flauntings up and down, at the very !
time when he considered the whole world
had far better stay at home and keep quiet,
Nathan determined for once to spend his
summer as other me? did, in eatin/, dr.nk- i
ing and idling over sultry beaches, knocking
about shells and sea rocks with bis
boot heels, and wishing himself, we did not
doubt, fifty times a day, in the wide, cool
avenues of Carlingsford Willows.
Nathan bad also a great dislike to noise
and dress, and the confusion attending a
fashionable resort. His awkward movements
and reticent manners be knew he
would find it hard to counterbalance, even
with so much money, and prepared to see
the poor result in his favor, by the side of
other men. He was not one to desire the
fine opinion of many ; the only one in all
the world he cared ro think well of him
quite hated him he knew for some unknown
reason, and it was nothing now that other
women disiegarded hun.
Walkins? on alone, over the hard, yellow
beach, the third day after bisariival at the
seiside, he caught on the end of his slender
walking-stick a blue veil belongingtosime
one below on the rocks, and strolling on
began to look lor a possible owner.
He found, look.ng about everywhere foi
the missing article, a slender little figure
in gray, with-straving locks of damp, darkhair,
and checks like dripping water lilies
?as stainless and pure.
Nathan knew that figure and the sweet,
childishly beautiful face too well. What
should he do I Go away unobserved if he
could / No, it was too late ; she wised
two wistful brown eyes, and flushed painfully.
* I beg your pardon?this is yours, I
believe," and the veil was awkwardly presented.
Taken in silence, a great pause 'ensuing,
till a big wave had rollei up in white
fringes and subsided, and the brown e ves
looked up earnestly in the disturbed fice
of the man whose heart just then beat hard
again*t his bosom wi.b the recollection of
o!d pa?-gs.
Nathan Cirlingsfurd. seven years before
that, had yielded up his good and generous
heart wholly to this woman, who stood
before him for the first time since their
parting, loved her with the only love ol
his lile, beheld in her all the virtues and I
graces be deemed any good woman should i
possess, and fancied bis passion not wholly i
without return. All these filings?his
love. Ins hopes anfl anpreliension ?lm had
confided to his bosom friend, John Kay lie.
who sympathized with his position and
volunteered his services as embassador, as!
Nathan felt himself unequal to asking any |
woman to marry him. He falc his very i
way of putting it would go against hi*
and acc rdingly, as Kayne advised, lie
wrote with trembling hand all that he
could have urged, and sent it by bis friend.
The letter hno not been notice 1 or answer
ed, and, hurt beyond expression, Nathan |
had gone away from home for a.year or
two, and on returning found that hi* iove '
lleleri North had become the wife of John !
Kayno, who bad been drowned within the |
year. lie longed to take her in bis arms, J
feeling that?hcie could be no other woman ;
in all the world for him. Ife had never j
crossed her since, a id heard through Aunt |
Royal, in a casual way, that Mrs. Kayne 1
was living in New York as a nursery governess.
" Helen?Mrs. Kayne , this is a meeting
I had not expected. I thought you were?"
Going headlong to a grand committal,
Nathan stopped, and colored painfully.
ll I came down a week ago with Mrs.
Grimsby. There she is now; shall we
join her ?"
" No; at least not just now." Something
must c >me, if he died for it, his heart was i
full to ovetflowing with a tenderness he I
fancied had heen quenched.
w Mrs. Kavne, if .v?u could have taken
notice of my declaration made some years j
ago, answered it ?n some way, I think 1
should have ft it more content than f have. |
I thirk I could have borne a plain' no,' |
hard as i*. would have been, better than? i
ju?t nothing at all."
" Answer to what? what do you mean?
Mr. Cailingford? 1 never received a dec-!
Isration of anv description from you in my
life."
The brown eyes wore staring in grand
surprise full at poor Nathan, and the pretty
cheek growing paler and paler.
"0, the villain," said Nathan, in a ter i
rific iage, which lasfed but a moment.
" Helen, think. Did not John Kayne
deliver a letter to you confessing my love, |
and asking you to be my wife, seven yeats
a :o ?"
' I never bad one word from you after
we parted,".the woman said, in gieat agitation,
thinking how much pain and heartburning
would have been spared her had
she received that letter.
" Hel n," the man's voice trembled and J
grew husky as lie was about to ask a ques
tion which had been down deep in his |
heart uncovered for years," could you have !
returned my love then I What would
have been tour answer to me?'
" I should have said 'yes,' and accepted
your love as the one thing which seemed
good in my sight."
" My own love ! My darling!"
Nathan Carlingsfonl took her in his j
arms, his long lost Helen, with frequent ;
thanks, and telt tint out of the stoif
house of the gods he had received the most
iiftoolocc froficnpf) tliAV n*wl tn nuPi- hirn
J/. ...v V..VJ ......
Aunt Roval remains at the Willows, j
sometimes threatening the voung peonh- to j
leave them to themselves, out of ill-will
that they should at last tall in love and I
mairy without aid from her.
Sometimes as Hannah sits with her peacock
leathers stiiring the dull air and
white bed cm tains, leaning on her dunt led
e!b ?w as of old. Aunt Royal rcmen.bired I
her caution to her little li ndn aid and
endeavors to reconcile the past and pres-1
ent.
"Things do come around, flannah, in
their own way, only let them be."
Deaths from Ai.conoi..?In Maine, the
proportion of suicides is one in 25,000;!
dea'lis from the use of alcohol ^>ne in
70,000; while in Missouri, the proportion
of the first is one in 39,000, that of the last
one in 23,000. In Massachusetts the
proportion of suicidal deaths is one in
17,000; of alcohol, one in 24.000; while
in \f:ir\l>in<l the nronor1.ion of the first is i
one in 78,000, of the last, one in 41,000.
It appears further, that taking the two
modes of self-destruction together, the
ratio is higher in the prohibitory than in
the non-prohibitorv States. In Maine it
is one in 18,500; in Maryland one in
27,000; in Massachusetts, one in 11,500;
and in Missouri, one in 14,000.
An Iowa paper says the grasshoppers
and potato bugs met in Joint convention
at Council Bluffs the other day. They
decided to reject the one term principle.
Items of General Interest.
The Pope is eighty years of age.
In Switzerland all the voting is done
upon Sundays.
Reading, Penn., manufactures 100,000
bricks pier day.
Fred. D. Gram1, while in Moscow,
was presented to the Czar Alexander. j
The continuous dry weather in Cuba |
has increased the sugar crop eight per
cent.
Thirteen children were born on a single
steamer during the voyage from1
Liverpool to Quebec.
Four sisters are to be married at their
home in New London, Conn., on the
same day, this month.
A powder magazine exploded at Oswestry,
in Shropshire, England. Six
persons were instantly kiiled.
It is stated that Dan Shumwav, a
notorious Western desperado, was buTied
face downwards with a pack of cards in
his hands.
A brilliant week's racing was brought
to a close at Epsom, England, by the
French bred filly Reine winning the
Oaks, a race for three-year-old fillies.
The Newfoundland steamer Toronto
brings the intelligence of the loss of the
schooner Velocipede, engaged in the seal
fisheries, which was wrecked. Twelve
persons were drowned.
The Tribune says New York drinks
1,800 gallons of swill milk daily, and
that the total receipts of 74,800 gallons
of milk are swelled to 93,500 gallous by
the addition of water.
TheU. S. public debt statement shows
a reduction during May of about $8,000,000.
The reduction is less than during
the previous month, owing to the advanced
payments on account of pensions.
The monument to Miles Standish, at
Duxbury, Mass., is to be a granite
tower, 100 feet high, surmounted by a
statue of Standish, fourteen feet in
height. The estimated cost is ?30,000
exclusive of the statue.
.A ring has been formed in California,
where this year's grain crop is very
large. Knowiug this fact, some wily
gentlemen have bought up the entiie
stocK oi grain shcks, so mat mo umu^io
are at their wits' end to know how to bestow
tlreir grain. %
The Pennsylvania Democracy have
nominated Ex-Senator Buckalew for
Governor; Win. Hartley for AuditorGeneral
and Richard M. Vaux, of Philadelphi
i, James H. Hopkins, of Washington.
Hendrick B. Wright, ot Luzerne,
as Congressmen at Lrge.
New Yokk physicians say that pneumonia
lms beeu almost an epidemic since
the beginning of last December, and
that mol-e persons have died from that
disease in that city and its vicinity during
the past winter and the present
spring than during the like period for
twenty years past.
A dispatgh from Bilboa, Spain, says
the action of Marshal Serrano, in granting
fine pardon to all the insurgents in
Biscay w ho voluntarily surrender, causes
great indignation among the residents of
that city. There is much excitement, and
the inhabitants are manifesting thiirdisapproval
of Serrano's leniency.
Two mines of the Delaware and Hudson
Company?one at Carbondale and
the other at Olypb'ant, Fa.?have suspended
operations, in order to reduce
the production of coal. The two miuea
throw out of employment about 700 men
and bovs, and decrease tin1 production of
the Company 3,000 tons per day.
0
The Bennett Family.?James Gordon
Rennett, the founder and proprietor of the
%t i " ? ? 1 j..al 1 1
iNew lorK neraui, wnose ueaiu nas ueen
announced, was born about tbe year 1800
at New Mill, near Keith, Banft>hire, in the
Highlands of Scotland. He was one of a
family of four children. His parents
lived in the vicinity of Duff House, one of
the residences of the Earl of Fife, and
there the earlier years of the future journalist
were passed. The Bennetts of
Keith trace their ancestry, as Mr. Bennett
himself was at the pains to show in the
columns of the Herald in later years, from
a French family named Benoit (Anglice
"Benedict"), which crossed the channel
with William the Conqueror. From one
branch of this family the English Bennetts,
Earls of Tankerville, are undoubtedly
descended, and the editor of the
Herald maintained That another branch,
going to Scotland with an ances
-e .i - r* i rv.i?
Kir U1 MIC VJTKI UUI1S, i/uivtra in uvi uun,
laid the foundation of the family from
which he himself descendent. The parents
of the journalist were of respectable
standing in the not very large community
in which they lived, and, as the manner
of their race is, cared well for the education
of their children. At the usual age
he was sent to school at Keith, his native
town. When he had attained his fourteenth
year he was sent to a Catholic seminary
at Aberdeen, where he remained
for two years studying for the priesthood
in the Catholic Church, of which his par
ents were members.
?
Fight Between a Man and a Hyena.
?The Indian papers publish the following
account: "A party of six natives coming
toward Deyra through Mohun Pass were
attacked by a hyena; it made straight at
one of them, and flew at his throat. The
poor fellow stretched out his hands to
keep off his assailant, on which the hyena
bit them severely; his companions,
instead of coming to his aid, took refuge
in some adjoining trees. The man, finding
himself thus deserted, and his hands in a
mutilated state, pluckily turned on his enemy,
and seized ids nose with his teeth,
roaring out in the best way he could for
assistance. By this means he secured the
animal, and Ins companions, Taking courage,
came down from tlieir secure position,
and belabored the brute to death with
sticks. I saw the unfortunate man at the
dispensary, where lie had gone to have
his wounds dressed, and was shown the
head of his enemy having his teeth.marks
on the nose. I believe this is almost nnprecedent
instance in the annals of natural
history, as a hyena is well known as a |
most cowardly brute, never venturing to j
attack man, but preying chiefly on dogs,
carrion, and young children."
A young man at a wedding in Brand
ford, Coh.n., recently, while promenading
with a lady, chanced to ajipronch
the officiating clergyman, who, happening
to be deaf, and supposing tneni to
be the couple be came to unite, immediately
married them in spite of their remonstances.
They accepted ti e situation
and commenced housekeeping.
Cure fob Felon.?Many persons are
liable to extreme suffering from felons en
the finger. The following prescription is
recommended as a cure for tha distressing
ailment: Take common rock salt, snch as
is used for -salting down pork or beef, dry
it in an oven, then- pound it fine and mix
with spirits of turpentine in equal parts.
Put it on a rag and rap it around the
part affected, and as it gets dry put on
more, and in twenty-four hours you are
cured?the felon is dead.
^RAILROAD BONDS.?Whether
you wish to buy or sell, write to Charles
W. Hassler, No. 7 Wall St., New York.
Intoxicating Nostrums.?The persons
who have scruples of conscience against
"perpendicular drinking" at tavern bars,
can become blind drunk on almost any of
the advertised "tonics" or " mvigornn's"
in half an hour. There is however one ex-1
ception to this rule; Nobody can "get
over the bay" on Vinegar Bitters, for'
the simple reason that this famous renovating
and reirulating medicine contains 1.0
diffusive stimulants of any kind. Yet its
strength-reserving properties are marvei
ous. It restores the relish for food when all !
other appitizers fail; imparts unwonted
vigor to the digestive functions; regulates I
the flow of bile; soothes the nervous sys- |
tem ; promotes healthful sleep; and tend*
to'} produce that condition of body and
brain, which is supposed to be most con- I
ducive to longevity and the enjoyment of j
life. Its specific effects in acute and chronic
disorders effecting the stomach, the bowels,
the spine, the kidneys, the fleshy fibre, the
muscles and ihe lungs, arc considered by
competent judges the most extraordinary
medical phenomena of the age. Vinegar
Citters has now a larger sale than any of
the spirituous astringents, and its immense
popularity in a land where the people
observe closely, test thoroughly, and act
independently, is in itself a sufficient
guarantee oft he excellence of the medicine
We recommend it to all.?Com
Buffalo, N. Y., Dec. 13, 1870.
Dr. R. V. Fierce:?For the past six
d onths I have used your Golden Medical
Di?covery in my practice and in that
time I have tested its meats in severe
coughs, both acute and chronic, in
chronical diseases of the throat, severe
cases of bronchitis, general derangement
of the system, constipated condition
of the bowels, and wherever a thorough
Alterative, or blood purifier, lias
been indicted. In all cases I have found
it to act gently yet thoroughly and efi
fectually 111 removing the various disI
eased conditions, and bringing about a
i healthy action throughout, the system.
; Yours fraternally, H. L. HILL, M. D.
A Wash fok thf. Head?Burnett's
Kalliston is cooling, cleansing and re*
! freshing. It is lriglily recommended after
shaving, softening the heard and rendering
the skin smooth.?Com.
Ruptube can be cured without sutfer!
mcr. Elastic Trusses are superseding all
others. Before buying Metal Trusses or
Supporters, send for a diseriptive circular
to the Elastic Truss Co., 683 Broad
way, N. Y. ? Com.
Ci> atped Hands, face, rough skin, pimples,
ring-worm, salt-rheum, and other cutaneous
affections, cured, and the pkin made soft and
smooth, by usinc the Juniper Tar Soap made
by Caswell, Hazard <V Co., New York. It i?more
convenient and easily applied than other
remedies, avoiding the trouble of the greasy
compounds now in use.?Com.
Whether for use on mm or beast, tho Merchant's
Gargling Oil v* i 1 be found an invaluable
Liniment, and worthy of use by every resident
in the land. We know of no proprietary medic-ne
or article now used in the United St ites
which shares the good will of the people to a
greater degree than this.?N. Y. Independent.
Habitual constipation leads to the following
results : Inflammation of the kidneys, sick and
nervous In adacho. biliousness, dyspepsia, indigestion.
piles, lo,*s of appetite anil strength ;
a 1 of which may be avoided by being regular
in your habit,*, and taking say one of Parson's
Purgative Pills nightly, for four or six weeks.
? Com.
Johnson's \nodtne Liniment mav he used to
? tt:II
advantage v.ncreany ran wnrr in uugnamr.
In rasoH of severe cramps and pams in the
stomach, it is undoubtedly the best article that
can be use h?Com.
9
Talk at the Toilet.?Every lady's maid knows
that the bew tch ng beings who pave their triumphant
way with conquered heart* regard ^ splendid
heid of hair the mo-1 effective of all womanly tas:inatioDs.
They believe, and th-y are right, that iliey
can las?o as many beaux with the luxuriant ringlets
and glossy braid* as they on 'kill at sight' with
their beaming eyes. Hence in tl.eir "toil>t talk"
among themselves and wi h their attendants, the
m-rits of pr< parations for the hair are freely ranvassed,
and the latest res t of this discussion seems
to be the almost unive-sal adoption of Lyon's K vthaiiion
as an article better adapted to promote the
crow th and beauty of the _ ( hief Glory of Woman"
than any ot' e? at pre-ent before the world. They
say th t without i rititing the skin of the head it
eradicates dandruff, and ihat it pen- trates below the
surface to the roots of th, hair, endowing them with
new life and vigor.?[Com.]
Dyspepsia l? a Hydra-If ended Monster,
from wtiicti n?"-ly 'II "tun ill* the human flesh is h ir
lo" originate. The Peruvian Syrup. n protected solution
of th" protoxide of Ir?n. is a long-triPd and we l-established
remedy for this distrps-ing complaint ; it has
cured thousand' when other rem"dies have failed.? Com.
FLAGG'S INSTANT RELIEF has stood twenty
years'test. Is warranted to give immertint' rrlirf to all
Rheumatic, Nenralvic, H"?d. Etraod Back aches,
OR MONEY REFUNDED. ~o,m.
CRISTKDORO'S EXCELSIOR HAIR DTE stands
tui'iv led and It merits have Ueen so umvetsa lv
acknowledged tha' it would be a supererogation to descant
on them any further.
Nothing can beat it ?f'?m.
Special Notices.
Lost Health Regained.
Self-neglect lays the foundation of mti h bodily suffering.
As a rule men are more solicitous to repair and
preserve their houses, stock in tr de and oth-w perishable
property than to repair and preserve themselves.
They can see when a wall requires a prop, or a weak
structure a girder, but appear to ho unconscious of. or
indiffere it to, the cracks and flaws and evidence* of
decay in their own fra 1 and sensitive organizations.
The con-equenee of this want of common prudence is
that thousands fall by th" wiy ide in the prime of life
every year who might have lived to enjoy a hale and
tiear'y old age, if they had resorted to the prop-r mean:
of recruiting their failing vigor it the proper time.
Seeing what that famou- vitalizing and invigorating
elixir, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, has done for countless
multitudes of the envervatcd and I roken down, and
wi'h the long, unbroken record of its cures before h in,
it seems amazing that any sufferer (msi premature
decay, nervous weakness, dyspepsia, bi'iousnes*. chronic
| con tipation. or disease of a r mittent or nt> rnnttent
character, should delay, evpn for an hour, to seek the
.aid wh eh its ton ng. regulating and invigoratingproperties
have never failed to aff ord.
" ' AX..A It
It is n'> cxaggi ration 10 say mai iiu ic?ti ? .?vui?
Bitters is the most faithful al y of nature, in tier struggles
wit'" w. akne?s ind disease, that medical botany and
hrne?t ovrm;*try h-.ye yet eiven to the world.
Through the length end breadth of t- e land the celebrated
SILVER TIPPED Boots and Shoes are 'old by
the milli >n. for parents know they last twice as long as
without Tjp?. Trytnem
TO COXSI MPTIVFS.
TO lOXSl'MPTIVEH.
The advertiser. having b^en permanently cured of that
dread di-case. Consumption, by a riuiple remedy, is
anxious to make known to his fellow sufferers the means
of cure. To all who desire it. he will rend a copy of the
prescription used, (free of charge), with the directions
for prepaiingand using the same which they will tind a
SCRK t;?TRK tor COMOKPnOK. ASTHMA. BRONCHITIS,
and all Throat or Lung Difficulties.
Parties wishing the prescription wiM plesse sddress
R T.EDWARD A WILSON.
194 Penn. Street. Wiliiamshargh N. V
Isabella, although she lost b<>r crown, is said to be very
particular what kind of shoe she wears. So are all who
have worn the CABLE SCREW WIRE Boots A Shoes ;
1 they want no other. Pliable dry and durable.
. A Note.?The Danbury Nctcs says:
"The following note, picked op on the
street Mon^aj afternoon, is a manly exposition
of what narrowly escaped . being a
grievous wrong: 'Dear Jane : I hope yon
aint mad because f didn't laff at you
when you lafft at me last evening at the
post-offis. 1 aint prowd, dear Jane, but I
have got a bile under my arm, and I can't
laff as I used to as Eleaven is my judge.
Yours truly, "Henry."
A PPLR Parer and Slicer at $2 k $1 : "Union" Apple
Parer, $1 Peach Parer, $1.50 ; Peach Stoner,
and Halver. 75c.: Nut Crocker. 25c 8old by Dealer*.
Mannfact'd by D. H. WhriTEMOitE. Worcester. Mass.
HONENT, energetic, God-fearing men and women,
can have plea'snt, profitable work; no risk or cnpital.
Write H. L. Hastinva. 19 Lindall St.. Bos'on. Mm
422 fcfcdAdA tor first-class Pianos. No discount. Nc
*9Agents. Address U- S PlAiNt. CO. 8?f
Broadway, X. Y.
"POULTRY WORLD."
A Monthly. $1.00 a year. Splendidly illustrated.
Tells all about Poultry. Send 10 cts. for a sample copy.
Address Bo* 09". Hirtford. Conn.
'PA WEEK guaranteed to Avents. A new
book that. everybody want* and will have.
P ofits doable "-oney Outfit free. Write at once to
K. M. RKED. 139 F.ighth *1. Ww Yo k.
Mf EADYILI.E, Pa. Theo'og cal School educate#
1"JL i. inisters. No dogmatic te-t. Board, tuition, t*rt
t ook",free. Term begins Sjp. 16. Write Prew't Liverm'-re
BENT, GOODNOW <tCO., Uoiton, Man.
Publish "The Patent Stab, ' sell patents, and
give profitable agencies ro canva?.ser*.^
Horace greelf.T's .joken.?Ten
cents ; 64 page-. Mail ten cents to GEORGE
GILLULY. Office of the Journeyman Printers' Cooperative
Association, 30 Beekman St.. New York.
DEBTS Considered WORTHLESS
have tieeo collected in ail nsrt- of Europe through the
iinJ^wintr nnnrotv nf .T- F FRUEAUFF.
Att??rney at Law. Columbia. Pa.
BURNHAM'S 9
r-r1 Jfew Turbine in in genera) *^Wr
I use throughout the U. ti. A six JH
Hinch, i* us <1 by the Government
in thi-Patent Utficc.Wrt-hington.
^ D. (7. Its Mmphcity of construelinn
and the power it tranrmite^^^^bfSfl
rend rait the best water whea.MWRJ
ever invented. Pamphlet free,
^ N. F. BURNHAM York. Pa.^^gyW^gThe
New Popular Song.
"Itlsty Brown," bv the author of "Be le Mahoue"
"AH at Home." et . mailed on leceipt ol price, 40cts.
MeNn"*htnn'< be-1 -o"" and ' h rus.
"Belle M .shone March," easv and effective, for
piano, .iielo leon or c i.Oin ft or-ow, 30 cte.
WM. A. fOVO k O .5 7 Broidwiv. N'w York
Ajrenta Wanted for the AUT0310GRAPIIY of
HORACE GREELEY
or Recollections of a Busy l.ife. Illu trated. The Life
and Times (f so great a Philanthr >pist and R'former.
cannot faii to inlere-t eve y trur Amer'ctn. Send #3.SC
for-amplecpr. E.B.TRFAT. P"b..80*> ''road?rev N.Y
Gettysburg Katalysine Water,
I" sold at the Spring and out on the cars at Gettysburg
at the following rates : Three vallon demijohns, $3.0ti
eich ; six gallon demijohns, $5.00 each ; ca-es of two
doz>-n quart bottle-, $*.00 each. Repayment must be
ma^c b' monev order*. Address
OETTYSRURG SPKIXfi CO.,
Gettysburg, Pa
Thea-Nectar
b 'at Tea Imported. for ate rce> y'
And for -ale who'e-ale onlj
AnflruHn Jk b th? Great Atlantic and
as JqK^\J&| Pacific Tea Co., No. 191 Fnltot
St Si., N wYoik
Iron in the Blood I
djF^k,
?miON!C
i iic i r.ui \ i.\.> ^ 1IVlI maKesiiii* wi'hn Mnnijf,
aud expels disease by supplying the blocd w.th
Nature's Own Vitalizing Aoent?IRON.
Caution.?He sure von (ret Pemvinn Si/rnp.
Pamphlets free. J. P. DINSMORE. Proprietor,
No. 86 Pov St., New York.
Sold by Druggists generally.
THE NEW BOOKS."
EDNA BROWNING.?A new no*el by Mrs. Mary J
Holme^. author of "Tempest A Sunshine," "Leni
Rive*," "Ethelyn's Mistake," etc. Price tl.SC
TRUE AS STEEL.?A n*w novel by Marion Hirland
author of "Alone," 'Hidden Paih." Price $1.5C
THE DEBATABLE LAND, between this world ant
tli* next ?Bv Robert Dale Owen, author of ' Footfalls
on til* Boundary of Another World." &2.0C
HEART HUNGRY?A new novel by Mrs. Maria ,J
Westmoreland, of Atlanta, Georgia. $1.7.1
BEVERLY.?A new novel by Mansefield Tracy Wat
wor'h, au hor of "Warwick," etc. $1 7!
GUST AVE ADOLF.?A new historical novel by Tope
liu*. t andafed by Selma Borg $1.50
MORNING GLORIES.?A charming book by Mi" Al
cott. author of "Little Women," etc. $1 50
INEZ.?A novel by Augu-ta Evans, author of "Beulah,'
"St. Elmo," "Vashti." ".Marana," etc. $1.75
WHAT I KNOW ARtiUT FARMING -An interests
and valuable book bv Horace Greeley $1.50
A LOST LIFE.?A new and interesting novel by Em I;
H. Moore. (Mgnonette.) $1.5t
MRS. HILL'S NEW COOK BOOK ?The best work o
the sort ev-r publish d. $'.(0
THE HA KITS OF GOOD SOCIETY.-A band-bool
for Ladies' and Gentl. men. $1.7!
THE ART OF i ON VERSATION.?Teaching everw.n
how to converse with ease anil propriety. $1 50
ARTS OF WRITING. READING A SPEAKI^G.One
of the mo-t valuable of books. $1 50
LOVE iL'A WIOUR .?Translated trom the French o
the famous Michelet, author "La Ferame. $1.50
?'These boo's are all beaut ifully printed and bound ii
hand ome gilt covers, are sold everywhere, and will bi
sent by mail, pwtngr. fret, on receipt of the price, by
C. W.CARLETON &Co.,
PUBLISHERS,
Madison Square, N. Y
MOTHERS! MOTHERS!!
MOTHERS!!!
Don't fall to procure MRS. WI\?LOW"
! SOftTHIXG SYRUP FOR CIIILDRKK
l TEKTHIKO.
] T1'!"5 valnab'e pr?nar.-it<on h*.* been nsrd w th NEVEF
FAll.INC SU?:? ESS FN THOUSANDS OK ( ANE .
It not only rel.eve- time ilil from p:un. bnt invigor
ties the stomaci and howe's, c rreets acidity, mid (jive
tone and energy to the whol ey-tetn. It will a'eo iti
stunt ly relieve
Griping In the Bowel* and Wind c'ollc.
W-> he'iove if the BE -T and SUREST REMEDY I>
THE WORLD, in I <a*"s nt DYSENTERY ANt
DIARRHEA IN t'FIILDREN, whether arising tioir
teetuin. or any other cause
Depend upon it tnothem, it will give rest to yourselrei
and
Relief and Health to Your Infants.
Be su'e and cal for
44 Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup,"
Having the foe-s'tnile of ' CURTIS A PERKINS'
on the o it ide wrapper.
Sold by Druggists throughout the World
Cheap Farms ! Free Homes !
ON THE LINE OF THE
UNION PAHIFin RAILROAD
w ii v ? ?v - ..... v. sv,
a land grant of
12,000,000 ACRES
of the
Best Farming ami Mineral I,and* in Amerira.
3,000,000 Acres in Nebraska,
is the
CREAT PLATTE VALLEY,
the
GARDEN OF" THE1 WE8T.
Uow for Sale!
The** lard-1 .'re 1 the centril portion of (he United
St 1 ten. on the Cat learee of N'ortti laititn 'e. th* central
line of (he greui T mperate Zone of the American Codtine>
t. and for gr in gr -wing and stock raising, unsurpassed
hi Miy in the United States.
CHEAPER IN PRI' E. more avorable terns given,
and inure convenient to market than can be tound elsewhere.
FREE Homesteads for Actual Settlers,
THE BEST LOCATIONS FOB COLONIES.
Soldier* Entitled to* Homestead of 160 Arre*.
FREE PASSES TO PURCHASERS OF LAND.
Send for the new deacnptire pamphlet, with new
maps, published in English. German, hwedi.b and Danish,
mailed free everywhere. Address,
O. X*. DAVIS.
Laad CeaaladOBcr, TJJP, If. K. Co
Vinegar Bitters are not a vile Fancy liriuk,
made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirit# and Refuse
Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to plea>c the
taste, called 'Tonics," "Appetizers," "Restorers,"
&c., that lead the tippler 011 to drunkenness and ruin,
but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots,
and herbs of California, free from al'Alcoholic Stimulants.
They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving
Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the
System, carrying oil all poisonous matter and restoring
the blood to a healthv condition, enriching it, refreshing
and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy
of administration, prompt in their action, certain in theil
results, safe and reliable in all forms of disease.
No Person can take these Bitters according
to directions, and remain long unwell, provided
their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and the vital organs wasted beyond tilt point
of repair.
Dyspepsia or Indlsrestlon. Headache, Pain
in the Shoulders. Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness,
Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the
Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of
the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, ?
are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. In these complaints
it has 110 equal, and one bottle will prove a better guarantee
of its merits than a lengthy advertisement.
For Female Complaints, in young or old,
married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the v ^
? * ? * -
turn of life, these Tonic Bitters aispiav so acnucu ?n
influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible.
For Inflammatory and Chronjc Rheumatism
and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious,
Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the
Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have >
been most successful. Such Diseases are caused by
Vitiated Blood, wh:ch is generally produced by derangement
of the Digestive Organs.
They are a Gentle Purgative ni well as
e Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acting
as a powerful agent in relieving Longest iot. or Inflammation
of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Bilious
Diseases. ^
For Skin Di*eases, Eruptions, Tetter, SaltRheum,
Blotches, Spots. Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles,
Ring worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Ery- .
sipela*. Itch, Scurfs, Decolorations of the Skin, Humors
and Diseases of the Sk n, of whatever name or nature, a
are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a '
short time bv the use of these Bitters. One bottle in
such cases will convince the most incredulous of their
curative rfTocts.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you
lind its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples,
I Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed
and sluggish in the veins ; cleanse it when it is
foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the bioxi
pure, and the health of the system will follow.
Grateful thousands proclaim VimtCA* Fitters
the mo<t wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained
j the sinking system.
Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in
i the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed
and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist:
There is scarcely an individual upon the face ofthe
earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms.
It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that
worms exist, but u;>on the diseased humors and slimy
deposits that breed these living monsters ef disease.
No system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics,
will free the system from worms like these Bit'
ters.
Mechanical Diseases. Persons engaged in
I Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Typesetters,
i Gold-beaters, and Miners, as tliey advance in life, will
!>e siibiect to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against
this take a dose of Walker's Vinegar Bitters once
or twice a week, as a Preventive.
Dllloua, Remittent, and Intermittent
Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our
great rivers throughout the United States, especially
those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee,
Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Braros,
Rio Grande, Pearl, A'abama, Mobile. St&annah, Roanoke,
James, and many others, with their vast tributaries,
throughout our entire country during the Sutnr' * *
and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons e,
unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied
by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, a-d
other abdominal viscera-. There are always more or lest
obstructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable scale
of the stomach, and great torpor of the bowels, beifig
clogged up with vitiated accumulations. In their treatment,
a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon
these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is
no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr J Walker's
Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove the
dark colored viscid matter with which the bowels are
loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of
the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions
of the digestive organs.
Scrofula, or Kind's Evil, White Swellings,
Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrofulous
Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections,
O'd Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Es-es,
etc., etc. In these, as tn all other constitutional Diseases,
Walker's Vinegar Bitters have shown their
great curative powers in the most obstinate and iutractable
cases. *
n- W?llr?ii'4 rnllfnrnlfl Vine ffiir Bit fern
act on all these cases in a similar manner. By purifying
n the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away
I the ejects of the inflammation (the tubercular depositj
the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cur
I* is effected.
_ The properties of Dr. Walker's Vine cm
l" Bitters are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Canninativij
Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irri.
i. tant. Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious.
The Aperient and mild Laxative properties ol
Dr Walker's Vinkgar Bitters are the oest safe"
guard in all cases of eruptions and malignant fevers, ,
1 their balsamic, healing, and soothing properties protect
I. the humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties
" allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, and bowels,
either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc.
z Their Counter-irritant influence extends throughout
' the system. Their Diuretic pro|>erties act on the Kidl
neys, correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their
f Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secreI.
tion of bile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts,
k and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure ot
' Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc.
,e _ Fortify the body against disrate bv puri_
fving all ks fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epi. 1
I. nemtc can'take hold of a system thus forearmed. The A
f live., the stomach, the bowels, the k'dneys, and the
' nerves are rendered 'disease-proof by this great invig- V
I orant. # aj
t Directions.?Take of the Bitters on going to bed a
e at night from a half to one and one-half wine-glassful!. '
Eat good nourishing food, such as beef steak, mutton
chop, venison, roast beef, and vegetables, and take
out-door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetf
able ingredients, and contain no spirit.
J WALKER, Prop'r. R. II. McDONAI.Ddt CO.,
Druggists and Gen Agts.,San Francisco and New York.
SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS
X. Y N U. No. 24
rTTIVr1 I.\T? BUNINEMS.
VN" I J 1 1. lil TC How to do it. sent |K)-tp/nd
for 25 cents, bv GREGORY A CO., Philadelphia. Ha.
A GEXTS Wanted. -Agents make more money at
work fur us than at anything else. Particulars free.
(}. Sttvson A Co., fin' A t fnhh-hrr>, Portland. Maine.
Free to Book Agents.
. \V > -v.l! > oid a hundsomi* Pro-pectus ofour AV* Illuth.ueii
Family IWJr containing over 4fttt fin- Scripture
I (l)u-t' ations to any Book Acent, fre of charge
Adores.*. National Pibu?hi.no Co., Chicago, III.,
1 Philadelphia, Pa.. oSi Loni-. M ?
TRUE TIME FOR $1.
MAGNETIC TIME-KEEPER, K!K3 fiSi
a 9KM f"* * 'I trailer. trader. fc?7. fa. ?er. a*4 I*
I fL \ 0 EVERYBODY deeinag a rrheilr tiese-keeper, a*4 aieo a aepedeV
r ?? tJkJ " eo^peea. L'aaal ewheisA werka. fUae eryvul. ail ia a aeai
I mi OftOlDI aeaa. W ARlANTFD ? 4eaa?a rev^t l,m? aed i? k?aa
J bl *H?t-iffkiil| aial-At Irs tsart. JY*4?e# 1*1# t# / The per
UMrmm. Ue ?\f ftl; I fcr fc!. CireaUn ? ?? froo. Te* * . <H4m
? ^ fro? UM Soto AiMti'M A|M*^ tl^UCU.. B*??t.^oro. VW
/4v 4 a ^ R E W A R O 1
llj For any ca?e of H'ind,
" I li /I lileedinrjtching.or IJ'ce|
m /1 rated Pil ?that DF I iNO't
^ I'n.E Rkmei?v fails to
I* I cure. It is prepared ex!
| 1 I pr^ly t" euro the Piles
v IJI I I a- d n.'thin* *! *. S Id ?>y
I T ** V ^ V all pru?i_st?. Price $1.00.
KCOCOAINE >
TRAPE^MARKThe
Best
Hair Dressing and Restorer.
Millions say
BURNETT'S COCOAINE."
i Your Drueeist has it.
A GREAT OFFER!'
Horace Waters, 4M1 Broadway, X. Y.
will dispose of 0>E Ml SDHF.D Pianw, Meu>T)EOK8; an
Okoans of ?ix hrst-elasi* makers, including W iter* s, at
*rtremrly hrn jrrice* n*r irirh, 'turim/ tiii* month, or will tak?
from $4 to $20 monthly until paid ; the same to let. ant
rent annlied if purchased. A new kinil of PAKI.OH Oroa!?
th?j mo?t beautiful i-tvle and perf ct tone ever made, nos
on exhibition at 181 Hroid'? >?. V*}* York. _
The Hand of Heavea medicated the Settees BH
Spring Man discovered it* priceless virtue*. Cbemis* H
try analysed it, and now reonduoet it in the twinkling H
ot an eye fmm Tarrant s erfehvehcrst ^kltzu 1w
Aperient. The moment the powder is liquified, every VI
curative and refreening element of the original Spa
foam* and dances in the goblet, and indigeei ion. bilioua- W
neas, constipation, fever and headache take flight under _H
the operation of the delightful dr?tytbt.
sold by 111 druggists.
^