Beaufort Republican. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1871-1873, August 22, 1872, Image 4
Rti
To a Lady.
I think of thoe when morning springe
From sleep with plumage bathed in dew,
And, like a young bird, lifts her wings
Of gladness on the welkin blue.
And wben, at noon, the breath of love
I
O'er flower and stream is wandering free,
And sent in music from the grove,
I think of thee?I think of thee.
I think of thee when soft and wide
The evening spreads her robes of light,
And, Lke a young and timid bride,
Sits blushing in the arms of night.
And when the moon's sweet crescent springs
In light o'er heaven's deep, wavelets sea,
And stars are forth, like blessed things,
I think of thee?I think of thee.
I think of thee;?that eye of flame,
Thoee tresees falling bright and free,
That brow where " Beauty writes her name,'
On fancy rush I think of thee,
Farmhouse Notes.
Baked Tomatoes.?Peel and mince
enough to fill a quart dish , s~ason them
with sugar, mace, pepper, salt and a
little miuced onion. Put a layer of
crumbs upon the l^ttom of the dish,
then a layer of tomatoes, a little butter ;
another o2 bread crumbs, until the d?sli
is full. Bread crumbs must be strewn
thickly over the top; lay over bits of
butter. Bake in a moderately hot oven
two hours.
A Famous Scotch Dish.?Cut up
fresh cod fish in pieces four inches
square ; lay them on the bottom of the
pau, then a layer of cut potatoes, and
so continue alternate layers, cooking
enough for the fanily. An ordinary
sized onion sliced and a lump of fresh
butter, ought to be placed between each
layer. Finish with a layer of butter
crackers, or toasted staie bread ; cover
wkh water, and stew about 20 minutes ;
season-with salt.
Fx>a.&ed ddribkru^lflu with af.ta.es.Take
a half pouod of flour and the whites
oi two eggs, half a teaspoonful of baling
powder,aod ODe teaspoonful of salt. Rub
the powder till smooth, mix it well with
the fl mr, addiDg the salt, und as much
milk as will make it a stiff batter, beat it
until quite smooth, then add the remainder
of the milk aud the eggs, well bea'en.
Put some apples, cut as for a pie, into a
buttered dish, pour the batter over, and
bake it in a moderately hot oven. Damsons,
currants, gooseberries or rhubarb,
may be used in the same way.^
To Dbive Out Rats.?Put fresh
chloride of lime iuto their hcles or finely
powdered carbonate of potash. They
may make new holes, which should be
treated in the same manner. By persisting
a few days, the p*.sts will disappear.
The remedy for the disease in
the head of fowls is not so apparent. If
it is roup?which i3 indicated by swollen
eyes and throat and the discharge of a
yellowish matter?is may be cured by
washing with a weak solution of chloride
of zinc,and injecting it iuto the nostrils.
The inside of the mouth should be
washed out with a small swab made of a
piece of sponge fa3te led to a stick.
Fowls as Aids.?A gentleman in
Providence, R. I., raises perfect fruit ir?
a one acre orchard, but he keeps thirty
assistants. They are clothed in feathers
and are of the Dominique persuasion.
A correspondent of the New England
Farmer calls attention to this suggestive
fact, and in further proof of the advantage
of the practice he cites the case of,
n f?rmrr?Alpnf P'.nolit.li rror.lpnpv wlin wlipn
he took charge of certain ornamental
ground*, astonished the natives by introducing
a nen and her brood. In explanation
of this innovation, he stated
that in first-class gardens abroad chickens
and ducks are constantly kept, and
prove very beneficial as destroyers of
slugs, worms, and bugs. Fowls .;6ually
resort to one place to dust themselves,
and their scratching depends upon the
supply of food obtained without scratching.
They do not work long in a place
withont a reward. They should be fed
some gram, and uot be made to entirely
depend upon insects.
! j
The Turf.?The following is a list of
the fast trotters wh'ch bavc appeared upon
the turf, and their record thus far this season
:
flnMftmfth Maul 2.18?
American GTrl 2 19}
Huntrea* 2.22*
W. A. Allen 2.23$
6u-ie 2.25
Red Dan (on the ice) 2.25
Judge FuUerton 2.25|
Mormsey 2.26
Sea ^oam 2.26
Pilot Temple 2.261
HonestDutchmau 2.261
Charley Green 2.26$
Lucille* 2.26|
GrayEddio 2.27
James H. Burke 2.271
Western Bov.. 2.271
Red Cloud. 2.271
Dauntless 2.28 i
Pat Ring (dead heat with Ri on Boy) 2.28 !
Kipon Boy (dead heat with Pat Ring).... 2.28 !
Tom Keher 2.28
Grand Duchess 2 28$ !
Pb'l Sh"ri an 2.284
George Wilkes 2.29 i
Ajax .* 2.29 !
St. Elmo 2 294
Lady Robs 2.294
George 2.294 ;
Grace Bertram 2.30
Castle Boy 2 3) j
Another i*oy (on the ice).. .X 2.30
American Girl has a record of 2.19 ; Judge
Full rtou. 2 254 1 Pll?l Temple, 2.24$ ; George
Wilkes, 2.22. _ _
Gon.?It is singular that the name of
God should be spelled in four letter* in
almost every known language. It is in ,
Latin, Den*; in Greek, Zeus; Hebrew,
Adon ; Syrian, Adad ; Arabian, Alia ; 1
Persian. Syrs: Tartarian, Igad; !
Egyptian, Aumn; or Zeut; East India,
Esgi or Zeul; Japanese, Zain; Turkish, |
Addk; Scandinavian, Odiii; Walhuhian,!
Sene; Marxian, Eese; Swedish, Oodd;
Irish, Dich: German, Gott; French, |
Dieu; Spanish, Dios; and Peruvian,
Llan. The name of God is the Anglo |
Saxon ooneeption of the Divine Being. I
He is goodness itself, and the author ol
11 goodness. Yet the idea of denoting 1
he Deity by a term equivalent to abstract i
and absolute perfection, striking as it may j
appear, is. perhaps, less remarkable than
the fact that the word man, nsed to designate
a human being, formerly signified
wickedness.
Gapes in Chickens.?Gapes are not
canced by lice, but by parasitic worms
which exist in the windpipe. They may
be removed by inserting a loop of horsehair
in the tbroat, and drawing it with a j
twisting motion, w bich detaches the worms
and brings tbem out. Gapes may be prevented
by changing the location of the
yards and ranges and especially by securing
a supply of pure water.
Michael Hickey and Joseph Carlett,
employed in making an excavation for a
gas tank at Cleveland, Ohio, were buried
by the caving of the earth, and smothered
before they could be rescued.
Something About Rattlesnakes.
A Nashville, Tear, paper says that aboul
the 10th of May last Drs. Cardwell anc
Westmoreland captured at Prospect, in the
lower edge ol Giles Ccunty, near the Ala
bama line, a rattlesnake four feet thre<
inches long and five inches in circumfer
ence. When captured it had eight rattle!
and a button. Since that time it Las beer
confined in a glass case: it has not par
taken of one particle of food, though it has
been tempted with mice and other small
arnimals on which the reptile is accustom
ed to feed. The snake manifested no in
convenience from its confinement, nor die
it lose any m size or bodily vitality. Its
eyes continued to glisten like magneti<
6teel, and its lancinating fangs to protrude
at the appearance of auy one near tbe case
Dr. Cjtton thought all the while it was ?
male. Though small mice and rats have
been confined in the case with the snake
until their own hunger urged them to bite
at its scaly hide, the serpent refused U
give them notice or to partake of food. Oe
two or three occasions it has taken small
quantities of water. On going into the
back room one day recently, where the
case is kept, it was discovered that the
snake had given birth to four young snakes,
and two hours later gave birth to three
more, making seven in all. The young
snakes make their appearance one at a
time and in a coiled or striking position,
their eyes glistening and their envenomed
tongues continually darting out. The
young ones are each irom nine to fifteen
inches in length, and in a state of perfect
development. They are quick cf motion
and possess no ordinary spinal vitality, as
they crawl readily to the top of the case
and move with celerity across and around
it from cud to end. What is most singular
and contrary to all the received notions
concerning thv reptile, each of these young
snakes has a full buttou on the tail, which
clearly refutes the idea that they have to
be six mouths old before the formation of
the button. The old snake was lying in
her caire in a lethargic state, with some indications,
as the doctor thought, ofincrcasing
the coiling family. The young snakes
coil around her, and under and over her,
and she seems to have for them the maternal
affection of instinct. This snake has
been in captivity near four months, yet
dating all that period she has partaken of
not a morsel of food, and has brooded her
seven young. As to exactly how long from
inception the process of gestation or inca
bation has been going on, tuere is no
means of ascertaining, as we can only date
from her captivity. Dr. Cotton informs
us that be once before kept in th^ same
case a large-sized rattlesnake lor three
years and nine months, and that he studied
closely its vaiious moods and changes.
This snake, he says, did not partake of a
particle of food for the first nine months,
and but little water. He then gave it
mice, rats, &c., putting the same into the
case alive, and it commenced devouring
voraciously. It never would touch a tame
mouse, or a dead one, iresh as it might be.
When a young rat was put into the case it
would plant its unening fang in some part
of the limb or body, and then wait until it
died from the thorough inoculation of the
poison. When quite dead it would turn it
over, take it head foremost and swallow it,
evidently drawing nutriment fitm the
poison its own fangs had infused. It shed
its *kin twice a year?each spring and
autumn?a new rattle appearing at each
sbecdine, which explodes the popular notion
that but one rattle comes a year.
The docter took the case and placed it in
the sun. From the effects of the sun three
young ones died. Two others became
stupefied, but recovered their vitality on
being removed to the shade.
Orange Riot in Scotland.?The celebration
of the 12th of July in Scotland has
unhappily attended with fatal and seriou*
consequences. Two lodges of Orange men
returning from a demonstration in the
District of Wishaw. were attacked by a
number of Catholics, and a serious riot
took place. Pick shafts and staves wert
employed by the assailants, and some
women threw stones and other missiles
Two ot the Orangemen had their heads
opened by blows dealt with the shalts, and
three wer? severely injured. The riot was
quelled in less than half an hour. Threr
Catholics named McQinlay, Hughes, and
Ferns, all miners, were apprehended foi
assault, a collier named McUuire for molesting
the police, and a women named
Fechan for throwing stones. The prisonen
were brought before the magistrates at th<
W?shaw B trough Court. The three met
charged with assault were fined 4fi sliil
hng?, with the alternative ofthiity day'i
hnpiisomnent, and were bound over tc
ke.p the peace for six months. McGuirt
was fined ?2, and the women ?l. About
.1 ? ,i... ...1.,... .u.
iiill'tr iiuui* aitci in? nui, duu v\ utii iui
town seemed perfectly quiet, the police
received information that one at the leadin?
members of the Orange party in
Wishaw, had been biutally assaulted in a
back street. The man, was a collier named
Skellion, was found 1) ing on the roadside
insensible, and seemed to have been dreadfully
kicked and struck about the head,
ami only survived an hour. The police
after a long search came upon three men,
who were all Irshmen and known Ribbonmen,
ollered resistance; ultimately they
were secuied and taken to the police-office.
Kaii.roaps.?There are more than 1,100
railroads iu running order in the United
States. At the close of 1870 there were
in operation 53,399 miles. In 1871,6.145
miles were added; and it is estimated
that at the close of 1872 the length ol
roads will amount to 69,500 miles. The
total earnings of these railroads is now
about 8450,000,000 per annum; and the
annual increase of earnings about 820,000.000.
The cost of the roads has bee
not less than ?0,000,000,000
A gentleman in Syracuse took a nap
upon his parlor sofa. A little daughter,
who was eating cherries, playfully snapped
a cherry-pit at him, and it lodged in
his ear, The only way to get it out was
to bore a hole in the centre of it, and
pick it out with a fine wire.
A New York Theft.
t A New York paper tells how a theft in
I that city was inaugurated and carried out
i successfully:
- It appears that am the agent of a ferry
? i company with a bag containing $95 walked
- aboard the ferryboat he observed a man,
s dressed iu the garb of a boatman, close
) behind him. His suspicions were not
* aroused, however, until he observed the
s supposed boatman pull out a handkerchiei
I and, swinging it, strike the bridgeman
- across the eyes as he passed on to the
-1 boat from the bridge. He, however, dis1
missed hirn from his thoughts for the
> nonce, and walking forward deposited his
< bag of money in the room of Engineer
' Rasche, leho was standing by his engine.
, As the vessel moved out from the dock
1 the occupants of a small boat that was un*
der the stem of the Barney threw a line
J to another man, dressed as a boatman,
* and asked him to fasten it in the riDg
) hook. The obliging boatman complied,
1 and as it is a common practice for boat'
men, when the current is rapid, to hitch
! on to the ferryboats, this manoeuvre did
( not excite the suspicion of the ferry-mas
ter in the least. A moment latter the
' three occupants of the boat again called
1 to the boatman and requested him to pass
I the end of the rope under and over the
1 center of the guard chain to them, that
' they could drop away when they desired.
Again the obliging passenger complied.
About this time the other confederate
1 moved forward to the engine room, near
the outside of which Coffie was standing,
little susDecting any foul play. Step
ping up to the door, the fellow reached
into the engine room, and, while lighting
his cigar, took in with a glance the location
of the bag, which lay on the seat in
rear of the engineer. Retiring he walked
up and down the deck smoking until the
boat was within a hundred yards of the
Williamsburg shore. Calling again to the
door of the engine room, and standing
three feet in the rear ol Collie, he intently
bent his view upon the machinery until
the signal was given to slow down. The
moment Rasche's hands and eyes were
employed directing his engine the daring
pirate snatched the bag, and rapidly running
to the rear of the ferryboat, threw it
into the small boat. Coffie and Ra*che
quickly detected the movement, and ran
to the rear of the boat in pursuit, but as
they neared the thief he leaped into the
water from the deck, and just as Coffie
jumped to catch the line of the small boat
it slipped over the chain and the boat
dropped astern. One of the occupants of
it cried out, " Take him up quick,and
within a minute the boatman had been
rescued from the water, and before the
ferryboat could be put about the thieves
' and their booty disappeared out of sight
under some of the piers. Subsequently the
fellow who had struck the bridgeman with
his handkerchief, but who had taken no
part in the robbery beyond securing the
boat's hawser and handing the end ot it
back to its occupants, was arrested by an
officer of the Brooklyn force as he left the
ferrvboat, as an accomplice. He inos
positively denied the charge. He gave
his name as Willian Tracy and was held
for further examination.
The Landmakk of* Jerusalem.?The
"Dome of the Rock," which marks Jerusalem
as that of the Capitol marks Washington,
has no rival for beauty, hardly for
sanctity. Believers in three great relii
gions revere the spot where Solomon's
' Temple once stood; the Mohammedan,
' who only exalts Mecca a little higher;
i the Jew, who has 110 omer actual sanctuary,
and who expects to meet a reconciled
Jehovah at that accepted shrine; and the
Christian, who held it awhile through the
. Crusaders' valor, and is quietly coming
into possession of it again. The blue-andwhite
Temple seems as a cloud resting for
, a moment over the altar of so many thousand
years' sacrifice, by-and-by to melt
away in the serene heavens. No struc,
ture that ever stood there could have
. been more graceful, none more sublime.
It is strange tlmt so charming a mode
, has never been followed. Far inferior
I patterns have been servilely copied, but
. none has been attempted of this, whose
. perfection is said to have cost the artist
I his head, the sultan being determined the
. experiment should not be repeated. The
. recent explorations of English engiueers,
I besides mapping out the whole area be.
longing to the ancient Court of the Gen,
tiles?an area of one thousand by fifteen
, hundred feet?have proved all that was
conjectured about the antiquity of the
s bevelled stones forming the outer wall.
, They certainly go back to Solomon, and
? are remarkable stone work for that early
t day, though far inferior to the Egyptian
. masterpieces, where thousands of artisans
> spent their lives in decoration of a single
. tomb.
1 That's a Max. -A fanner in Illinois had
1 a neighbor across the Wabash in Indiana
who was keeping a pauper on contract at
bis house. In the corn-hoeing season the
Illinois man sometimes borrowed his
neighbor's pauper to help in the corn field.
Bill Turner had a pauper working for him,
and as no one in the neighborhood had
ever seen a pitujiei, mej v?ei*r m i aiiAinu.^
to get a peep at biro. Consequently soma
twenty of them joined together one day,
aimed with their s.hot-guns and rifleq and
went over to Turner's to see the strange
creature. They got cautiously over the
fence, and came up to where the men were
working. " Bill," said colas Brown, their
spokesman, " we've hear ! that you've got
a pauper working tor you, and we'd like to
s? e it " Bill thereupon pointed out the
object of their curiosity. The visitors
! walked around the astonished pauper and
silently surveyed him from every point of
view. At last Silas spoke. " Look here,
Bill Turner," said he, *' you can't fool us .
that's a man!" We wish all those in
charge of charitable institutions had the
same idea about paupers as Silas had.
i It cost ibe workingmen of Berlin last
year, 31,750,000 for the fun of their
little etrike.
/
i????h?TM
African Market Women.
The Manyema women, especially far
down the Lualaba, says Dr. Livingstone,
are very pretty and very industrious. The
market with them is a great institution,
and they work hard and carry far in order
to have something to sell. Markets are established
about 10 or 15 miles apart.
' There those who raise cassava, muiza,
; grain, and sweet potatoes exchange them
for oil, salt, pepper, fish, and other relishes.
Fowls, also pigs, goats, grasscloth,
mats, and other articles change
hands. All dressed in their best candycolored,
many folded kilts, that reach
from waist to knee, when 2,000 or 3,000
are together form an interesting sight.
They enforce justice, though chiefly wo
men, and they are such eager traders that
they set off in companies by night and
begin to rnu as soon as they come within
the hum ari6iug from hundreds of voices.
To haggle and joke and laugh and chat
seein the dearest enjoyments of life. They
confer great benefit on each other. The
Bagenys women are expert divers tor
oysters, which they sell with fish in exchange
for farinaceous food from the women
from the East, the Lualaba, who perfer
cultivating the soil to fishing. The
Manyemas have always told us that women
going to market are never molested.
When the men of two districts were engaged
in actual open hostilities the women
passed through from one market to another
unharmed. To take her goods, even
in war, was a thing not to be done; but
at these market women the half castes
directed their guns. Two cases that
came under my own observation were so
sickening that I cannot allow my mind
to dwell upon or write about thein.
Many of both sexes were killed, but the
women and children chiefly made captives.
No matter how much ivory they obtained
these Moslems must have slaves, and they
assnlted market people and villages an<P
made captives chiefly of women and children,
as it appeared to me, and because,
as men ran off at the report of guns, they
could do it without danger. I had no idea
before how blood thirsty men can be when
they can pour out the blood of their fel
low men in satety. And all tms carnage
is going on in Manyema at the very time I
write. It is the Banians, onr protected
Indian fellow subjects, that indirectly do
it.
Relic of a Famous Temple.?Dr. D. P.
Livermore of HalloweU, Me., has in bis
possession a very interesting curiosity. It
is a piece of the famous Chinese Porcelain
Tower, built at Nanking, by the Emperor
Yunglob, to reward the kindness of his
mother. It was begun in the year 1411
and completed in 1430. The board of
works was ordered, according to the plan
of the emperor, to build a tower nine
stories high, the bricks and tiles to be
glazed, and of fine colors, and it was to be
superior to all others, in order to make
widely known the virtues of his mother.
Its height was to be 332 feet; it was of an
octagonal form, each side being 15 feet
wide. Its base was upon a solid foundation
of brick-work, 10 feet high, up which
a flight of 12 steps led into the tower,
where a spiral staircase led to the top.
The body of the edifice was composed of
brick, the outer face of which was covered
with slabs of glazed porcelain of various
colors. It is a piece of this glazed porcelain
that Mr. Livermore has. The lowest
of the nine stories was 120 feet in circumference,
but the tower decreased in size to
the top, and at each story was a projecting
roof, with a ball suspended at each corner
?144 in all. On the outer face of each
story were sixteen lanterns, the light of
which "illuminated the thirty-three
heavens, shiniDg into the hearts of all men,
good and bad, eternally removing human
misery." Each story formed a saloon,
which was finely painted and adorned with
| numerous gilded images. On the tip of
the highest roof were two brazen vessels,
weighing together 1,200 pounds, and a
brazen bowl besides weighing 500 pounds.
Encircling the spire, which was 30 feet
high, were 9 iron ring-*, the largest being
63 feet in circumference, and the smallest
2-t tcet, weighing 5,00O pounds. Surmount'
in? the spire was a ball filled with pearls
and precious stones. The brilliancy of
the edifice, according to the Chinese annalist,
would endure to hundreds of generations,
a monument of recompensing kind1
ness to myriads of years. Therefore, it \?ns
named Paugansz, or Recompensing Pagoda.
For two or three centuties it has had the
1 appearance of having suffered of a jjtroke of
' lightning, which the Chireseattributed to
' a conflict of the god of thunder with
demons; in pursuing them to the pagoda.
' they said, he injured the building. In
1856 the Taiping rebels blew this magnifi1
cent monument of the gratitude of a son
for his mother's love, to pieces with gun
powder, and its very site will in time be
forgotten.
An Oli> Structure.?A man who has
i lately visited the grand pyramid of Cheops?
; wading in the sand fourteen hundred feet
I before be had passed one of its sides, and
' between five aud six thousand teet before
j be bad made the eircnit. says, that taking
one hundred city churches of the ordin
arv, width, and arranging them in a hollow
square, twenty-five ou a side, you
would have scarcely the basement of the
pyramid. Take another hundred and
i throw the material in the hollow square
and it would not be full; pile on all the
bricks and mortar in the city of New
V/kflr on/1 tlift ctrnotnrfl wnnlrl nnt
M. V/* rv? vnv ?-"v* uwui v n v/mu u*/v wv u\'
high and solid as the great work of man.
One layer of bricks was long since re|
moved to Cairo for building purposes, and
; enough remains to supply the demands
i of a city of half a million of people for a
. century to come, if permitted to use it
I with perfect freedom. Cheops was built
; 2,123 years before the Christain era.
The Miss Tomlinson who was stabbed
by her father, in Brooklyn, in a fit of inebriate
rage, because she kept company
with a young doctor, saved from drowning,
when she was bnt eleven years old,
a grandson of the late President Van
Buren. I
Iron in the Blood.?Probably no fact J
in medical or chemical science is more
widely understood than that there is " iron
in the blood." As a fact it is no more remarkable
than that this fluid holds potassium
or sodium, or that the brain is permeated
with phosphorus. The popular
curiosity and interest regarding iron as it
exists in the circulation have been excited
by the venders of quack remedies alleged
to contain some combination of the element.
While there is much that is very
absurd in the statements popularly presented,
it is impossible to overlook the
importance to the well-being of the individual
of the few grains of iron found in
the blood. 11 the quantity is diminished
from any cause, the whole economy suffers
serious derangement. We have reason to
believe that when the normal quantity
(about 100 grains) is reduced ton per cent,
the system is sensibly affected, and the
health suflers. How sensitive to all the
chemical reactions going on within and
around is this complex machine we call the
body! But iron, among the mineral con
stituents ol the body, does not stand alone
in its important relationship. The metals
exist combined with other bodies, or they
arc locked up in the form of salts, which
are vital to the economy. There are five
pounds of phosphate of lime, one of carbonate
of lime, three ounces of fluoride of
calcium, three and a half ounces of common
salt, all of which have important offices to
fill. Not one of them must be allowed to
fall in quantity below the normal standard.
If the lime fails, the bones give way; if salt
is withheld, the blood suffers, and digestion
is impaired ; if phosphorus is sparingly
furnished, the mind is weakened, and the
tendency is towards idiocy.?Dr. Nichols's
Fireside Science.
An Incident.?On one of the recent
New York excursions for poor children a
little pale-faced, batless boy was noticed,
who carried his ticket tightly clasped in
his hand all the day. He found in the
grove a small fruit basket,which he quietly
filled with earth, and then planted in it
one of the wild weeds which there abounded.
Many times during the day he carried
his Ifttle basket to the spring, and filling
his hand with water, dashed it upon the
plant. Poor child! he longed to carry
back to his miserable home a bit of the
freshness he had scarcely tasted himself.
Among our national post officpsare the
following: Ti ti, Toto, Why Not, Pipe
Stem, Stony Man, Sal Soda, Shickshiny,
Overalls, Lookout, Last Chance, Backhone,
Marrowbones, Sorrel Horse, Tally
ho, und Tired Creek.
Yon should write to Mr. Charles W.
Hassler, No 7 Wall St., N. Y., if you
wish to buy or sell any Railroad Bonds.
A desrkuenve Fire.?The shops of
the Erie railroad in Jersey City were
destroyed by fire inflicting a loss of
500,000. Thirty - three locomotives
were burned and over five hundred men
are thrown out of employment.
Si,000 Reward will be paid by the
proprietor of I)r. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery, for a medicine that will equal
it curing severe and lingering Coughs,
Bronchitas and all diseases of the lungs.
?607.
The man who never told an editor
how he could better his paper, has gone
out West tomarrv the woman who never
looked into a looking glass.
Remedy for Asthma.?We think we
are benefiting our r aders when we inform
them that a reliei for the Asthma can be
found in using Jonas Whitcomb's Remedy.?Coin.
Wonderful Statements.?Unless
hundreds of our most responsible citihave
conspired to delude the commu
nity, a medicine has at last been
introduced which Is a specific for almost
every human ailment, not
involving the entire paralyzation or
partial destruction of the organ or
nri'sinw in which it exists. These wit
nesses testify (in some instances from
their own personal experience, in
others on behalf of others,) that dyspepsia,
liver complaint, remittent and
intermittent fever, nervous debility,
and numberless other diseases, are
rapidly an 1 radically cured bv this
new remedy. It hails from California
and has in two years overleaped all
competitors anpotig advertized tonics,
and become par excellence the medicine
of the people. California is an
exceptional region. Its vegetable products,
especially those of a medicinal
nature, have no equivalent elsewhere,
and it is from the choicest of these
that Dr. J. Walker prepares his famous
alcoholless Vineoak Bitters, the in
valuable invigorant, nutrient, laxative
and alterative to which we re/er.
Those who have tested the curative
properties of this marvelous preparation
pronounce it the most comprehensive
remedy ever offered to
<>?/! ii-tort I lint Uioru w nn !
man rv i iiw, mm u-ovi u ? ???? vi?v v ... ....
inorganic disease whioh it will not
subdue. As n family medicine, we
can recommend it without reserve.
[Corn.]
Chapped Hands, face, rough skin, pimples,
ring-worm, salt-rheum, and other outariooas
affections. cured, and the skin made soft and
smooth, by using the Jpniper Tar S'oap made
by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. If is
liore convenient and easily applied than other
remedies, avoiding the trouble of the greasy
compounds now in use.? Com.
A gentleman from Bethel Hill, Me., says that
Meters. Allen Bros., proprietors of Philip Allen's
Print Works, it. t., were down to Bryant's
Pond, recently, trouting, when one of "them
was attacked with sciatic rheumatism so suddenly
that lie had to be cirried from the pond
to his hotel; a bottle of Johnson's Anodtne
Liniment was resorted to. and he was out next
day.?Com.
If von want to lie well dressed wear the Etiiwood
collar. If you want to be economical
wear the Elmwood collar. If you want to feel
comfortable wear the Elmwood collar. For sale
at all Gents' Furnishing Stores. ?Com.
How are yon to-day ? I'm not feeling well,
bilious and sick headache, have been lookirg
around for a box of Parson's Ptrgative Pili.8,
i>?i nnr traders are all sold out.?Com.
Triumphant for Twentv Years.?More than
twenty years ago the Mustang Liniment made its
debut in the West. Its cures of the various external
diseases of horses and cattle, astonished the planters
and farmers of the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys,
and a demand for it sprung up which necessitated
its manufacture on an extensive scale. Soon the
discovery was made that it was a grand specific for
rheumatism, gout neuralgia, earache, toothache,
and other external ailments of mankind. TheD it
was tried as a healing, pain killing application, in
cases ot outward injury such as cuts, bruises, burns,
spasms, Ac., and was found equally serviceable.
The farae of the new remedy for some of the most
painful ills that afflict mankind and the lower ani- i
rasls, spread rapidly, and Mcstano Liniment soon
took rank in every 8tate and Territory ef the Union !
as a standahd cub*.?[Com. J
" Their Ufaase la L*|rt<m," may be applied to
those who die annually of Consumption, although science
has of lata years sensibly diminished their number,
ft i* gratifying to know that the general ose of Dr. Wl?mr'i
Baltam of Wild Chtrry is largely instrumental in
attaining this end.?Cm.
t V
__
lt jmbuauvu^ j 1 1 1
Vinegar Bitten are not a vile Fancy Drink,
made of Poor Rum, Whisky, Proof Spirits and
>t Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened
to please the taste, called " Tonics," " Appetizers,
m ? Rp?fnrer?L" Ac., that lead the tlDDler on to drunk
'
The BROWNS and BLACKS prodaoed by that ste
ling preparation, Onstadoro's Excslsior Hair Dye, eai
not b? excelled by Nature ; iti tints challenge com par
on with Natnro'e moat favored productions, aad da
detection.?Ctm.
FLAGG'S INSTANT RELIEF.-Warranted to r
lieve all Rheumatic Afflictions. Sprains, Neuralgia, et
The beet, the urest, and the quickest remedy for a
Bowel Comolaints. Relief guaranteed or the inen<
refunded?0>m.
peoial .Notices.
The Tltaal Drain.
It is necessary to the health of the body that its e:
bausted and refused particles should be carried off I
the excretory organs, and it is equally necessary that tl
waste matter thus expelled should be replaced by ne
elements derived from digested and assimilated tow
It is evident, therefore, that good digestion and perfei
assimilation are essential to bodily vigor : and it is tx
cause Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters powerfully assu
these processes, that it is regarded by the intelligei
classes, whose opinions are founded on observation, i
the only absolute specific for dyspepsia and its attendai
ills, at present known. When the system, either froi
constitutional causes, overwork, excess, anxiety, or ac
ual disease, is in an unnaturally relaxed conditio)
something more than its exhausted particles passe
through the pores. Vitality leaks through these venU
get. Elements which should remain in the blood an
enrich it are evolved, and that fluid becomes then wa<
ery and incapable of removing the solids of the body i
fast as they decay. The consequences are emsoistioi
debility, nervousness, loss of spirits, and a general, <
perhaps a rapid, decline of all powers of life. It is i
cases like this that the restorative properties of Hoste
ter's Bitters are most conspicuous. The first two <
three doses sometimes produce a change in the feelinj
and aspect ot tne invaiia mat is penecny asionismui
and by a persevering use of this superlative vegetab
tonic and (.Iterative, the vital drain is sure to be arres
ed. the strength reinstated, the flesh restored, the coi
stitution reinforced, and the brain relieved of ths clou
that obscured it
TO CONSUMPTIVES.
TO CONSUMPTIVES.
The advertiser, having been permanently cured of thi
dread disease, Consumption, by a simple remedy,
anxious to make known to his fellow sofferers the meat
of cure. To all who desire it, be will send a copy of tl
prescription used, (free of charge), with the directioi
for preparing and using the same, which they will And
sure (injur tor consumption. Asthma. Bbonchiti
and a '1 Throat or Lung Difficulties.
T ? niv'shing the prescription will please address
Rev. EDWARD A WILSON.
194 Penn. Street. Wiluamsburgh. N.
Imported Animals and Fowls. L. B. SlLVTB, Salem. <
F~ K. PHOENIX, Bloomi"gton Nnr<?ery, HI.; ?
e acres; 21st year; 12 Green-Hon?es; Trees, Bulb
Hedge Plants Nursery Stock ; 4 Catalogues, 20 cent
TO C T EM MORTEM de Collections, en tontes I
parties de la France, promptemmt f?ite?, par
J. If. KRUEAUFF,
Docteur en droit, a Columbia, Lancaster Co., P
BENT, OOODNOW A to.. Host on, Mai
Publish "The Patent Stab, sell patents, ac
give profitable agencies .to canvassers.
APPLE Parer and Slicer at f2 A #1 ; "Union" A|
pie Parer, $1 ; Peach Parer, $1.50 ; Peach Stoni
A Ha'ver 75c.: Nut Cracker, 26c. Sold by Dealers.
Manufac'db.v D H Whittemobe. Worcester, Mas
Dr. Whittier, %5S&?R2?P
Longest engaged, and most successful pnysician of tl
age. Consultation or pamphlet tree. Call or write.
COOMBS' FLY TRAP. S?
the flies in a house or store in one day; only $1; agent
are making 91 ?5 a week, easily t send $1 f
sample 'rap andterms to sgente. Address AUTOMA1
IC FLY TRAP ' P.. No. 2 R-se 8t? New York City.
/hk a /"\ a value to everybodi
VC 1 I If 1 ?Old or young, higa or lo'
male or f-male, sick or we
rich or poor. Send a thre
cent postage stamp for circular. Address.
DOBMON, n \ YVES A CO.,
St. Louis, Mo. Agents wantei
^J^P^y.BOXlOTfiPinSBURGH
Breech-Loading Shot Guns, $40 to $300. Double Sh
Guns, $8 to $160. Single Guns, $3 to $20. Rifles, $8
$75. Revolvers, $6 to $25. SEND STAMP FOB PBIC1
List Army Gun*, Revolver*, frr., bought or tra led fur.
22 The Records of Tests JS "
at LOWELL, Mast., proves
T_, N. F. BURNHAM'S ? JK
NEW TURBINE dBgSB^1
superior to all others. It gave "jj/p
'N a higher percentage than any
^ other wheel of common finish. M
Pamph'et and Price List, by
N. F. BURNHAM. York, Pa.
Attention, Owners of Horses
i A THE ZI\C COLLA]
8N. /yfla PA Unguaranteed toe u
Oft hp worst case >I raw and ii
Vv5aHS^?MP3'''inied sore neck in 7V,i b<i\
l^V 1 V1 " - J M ""1 >r"rk the II -r 'rrry
\ mi" I ? ,)r mo,icy refunded ; and w
C " not chafe or wear the niauec
of the neck. For sale bv S.i
dlery Hardware Estahli*!
ments and Harness Makers. Manufactured by the
ZINC COLLAR PAD CO.. Bucharan. Mic
A GREAT OFFER !
Horace Water*. 481 Broadway, N. YJ
will dispose of One Hundred Pianos, Mklodeons. ai
Organs of six first-class makers, including Waters s,
rrtremrly low prior* tor rath, durinq thi? month, or will tal
from $4 to $20 monthly until paid ; the same to let. ai
rent applied if purchased. a new kind of Parlor Oroa
the most beautiful style and perfect tone ever made, nc
on exhibition at 481 Broadway. New York.
/id A A REWARD!
| J 4 ? 5 J I 1 t'?r any cose of Blin
ml /| I I I I I Bleeding,Itching,or Ulc
% /I I I I I I rated Piles that Dk BlNO
\'| i i i i i Pile Remedy fails
|m I I I I I I cure. It is prepared e
111 | Mill pressly to cure the Pil
Ill A? 1 1 1 M M. M and nothingH?e. Sold
all Druggists. Price tl.l
|ga^ga|Thea-Neotaj
BCACH. TEA
With the <irtrn Ten FUiror. T1
PURrcMiNK^EAir be <t Tea Imported. For airrtrr
<^BlS3K'"~>r And for sale wholesale or
AoBFaPflrA Jk bv fireot Atlantic at
W JHt\ 11 Pacific Tea Co.. No. 191 fnlt<
St X '2^t 4 (Jhureh St.. New Yor
N ' < ^ ''''' ^''' . . \ . m.
Cheapness! Durability! 1
THE NEW LATENT !
ALBERT CRAPEl
Has been sold for Over f wo Year*, givlnfr B
Universal Satisfaction. Jl
Opinions from Wearers? 3
S "The Albert CYape which I hare worn
every day for nearly a vcar h&a after the
roughest usage turned out to be most ex
H. "1 have been so much pleaaed with the H
H wrar ot the Albert Crape, that I can
strongly recommend it." 3
3 T have found the Albert Crape to bt a I
fl really good trust worthy article, and much H
cheaper than any I ever had." a
a SOLD BY jg
1 MILLINERY & DRY GOODS DEALERS. |
IB*
MOTHERS!!!
Don't fall to procure MR*, WIXNLOW
SOOTHING SYRUP FOR CIIILDRE
TEETHING.
This valuable preparation haa been naed with NEVI
FAILING SUCCESS IN THOUSAND8 OF CASES.
It not only relieves the child from pain, but invigt
ates the stomach and bowels, ocrrects acidity, and fit
tone and energy to the whole system. It will also i
staidly relieve
Griping la the Bowela and Wind Callc
We believe it the BEST and SUREST REMEDY I
THE WORLD, in all caeca of DYSENTERY A?
DIARRHEA IN CHILDREN, whether arising frc
teething or any other cause.
Depend upon it mothers, it will give reet to your*It
and
Relief and Health to Year
Be sore and call for
" Mr*. Wlaalow'a Soothing lymp/*
Having the fae-a'mile of "CURTIS A PERK IN
on the outride wrapper,
old hp DraggUta tkroaghoat Mo War)
t- enness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made
from the native roots and herbs of California, free
from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great
Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Perfect
Renovator and Invtgorator of the System, carrying
l* off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood
d to a healthy condition, enriching It, refreshing and
t- Invigorating both mind and body. They are easy
of administration, prompt In their action, certain
? In their results, safe and reliable In all forms of
disease.
No Person can take these Bitters accordin
lng to directions, and remain long unwell, provided
t- their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison
>r or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond
p the point of repair.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain
, * In the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest,
le Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad
t- Taste In the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of
i- the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain In the
td region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful
symptoms, are the oflfeprings of Dyspepsia. In these
- complaints it has no equal, and one bottle will
[>rove a better guarantee of its merits than a
engthy advertisement,
it For Female Complaints, In young or old,
u married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or
the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so de"
elded an Influence that a marked Improvement is
16 soon perceptible.
m For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheus
* matlsm and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bil*
ions, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases
of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these
Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseases
y are caused by Vitiated Blood, which Is generally
m produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs.
~ They are a Gentle Purgattre as well as
'* a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of act1)0
lng as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or
* Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs and
- In Bilious Diseases.
ea For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, SaltRheum,
Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils,
Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes,
- Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfe, Discolo rations of the Skin,
a. Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever
id name or nature, are literally dug up and carried
_ out or tne system m a noun, uuie u> we use ui mem*
y_ Bitters. One bottle In such cases will convince the
gr most incredulous of their curative effects.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever yon
?. find Its impurities bursting through the skin In
Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores: cleanse It when yon
' find It obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse
ie It when It is foul; your feelings will tell you when.
Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system
n will follow.
H Grateful Thousands proclaim Vinegar Brrters
the most wonderful Invigorant that ever suso"
talned the sinking system.
r. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking In
the system of so many thousands, are effectually
7 destroyed and removed. Says a distinguished
' physiologist: There is scarcely an individual on the
I]' race of the earth whose body is exempt from the
*1 presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy
elements of the body that worms exist, but upon
the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed
1- these living monsters of disease. No system of
medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmlnltics, will
% free the system from worms like these Bitters.
\ Mechanical Diseases.?Persons engaged in
Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Typesetters,
Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance
P In life, are subject to paralysis of ttie Bowels. To
guard against this, take a dose of Walker's Yin*
ot egar Bitters twice a week,
to Dilious, Remittent, and Intermittent
Ferers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of
? our great rivers throughout the United States,
especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Mlssou; i,
Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red,
Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama,
Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many
others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our x
[entire country during the Summer and Autumn,
and remarkably so during seasons of nnosnal heat
and dryness, are Invariably accompanied by extensive
derangements of the stomach and liver, and
K other abdominal viscera. In their treatment,
~ purgative, exerting a powerful Influence upon these
" various organs, is essentially necessary. There Is
i no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walk_
er'b Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily
J 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
v' the healthy functions of the digestive organs.
11 Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swellings,
;.,T Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous
i. Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial
'" Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore
b. Eyes, etc., etc. in these as in all other constitutional
Diseases, Walker's Vinegar Bitters have
1 shown their great curative powers In tho most
obstinate and Intractable cases.
Dr. Walker's California Vinegar Blti
ters act on all these cases in a similar manner.
?' By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and
*' by resolving away the effects of the Inflammation
? (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive
health, and a permanent care is effected.
The properties of Dr. Walker's Vinegar
~ Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative,
Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, CounterJ!*
Irritant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious.
t>e The Aperient and mild Laxative properties
to if Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters are the best
z- -afe-guard In cases of eruptions and malignant
* fevers. Their balsamic, healing, and soothing pros'
jfTties protect the humors or the fauces. Their
? -cdattve properties allay pain in the nervous syar
eta, stomach, and bowels, from inflammation,
k ind. colic, cramps, etc.
Their Counter-Irritant Influence exads
throughout the system. Thetr Antl-Btllous
.ropertles stimulate the liver,'In the secretion of
V" idle, and Its discharges through the biliary duota,
S and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure
an of Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc.
k. Fortify the body nguinst disease by
purifying all Its huids with Vinkoar Bittebs. No
epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed.
Directions?Take of the Bitters on going to
bed at ulght from a half to one and one-half wineglassful.
Eat good nourishing food, such as beefsteak,
muttou chop, venison, roast beef, and vegetables,
and take out-door exercise. They are
composed of purely vegetable Ingredients, and
contain no spirit.
k. ii. Mcdonald & coM
Druggists iind <ien. Agts., San Francisco, CaL, A
oor. of Washington and Charlton Sts., N.Y.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS.
!CJY N. U. No. 38
lilOOA '?r nnst-claas Pianos. No discount. N<
Agents. Address U. * PIAM- < O.. tft
Broadway. X. Y.
A OF.XTS Wunted.?Agents niikeroore money at
work for us than at anything else. Particulars free.
(?. STISSON A Co., fin' Art PuhllxherK, Portland, Maine.
1AAA AOEXTS WANTED to sell Our
rNFNF Popular Campaign Charts and New Map
of Union and World. C. P. BRADWAY D-neiU... Pa.
SWART" MOKE COLLEOE.-4warthmore.
Delaware Co., ka. This institution for both sexes
will re-open 9th mo., 3'd.. 1S72. For Catalogue, Ac.,
address. EDWARD H. MAOILC. Pres.dent.
Dr.Whittier.
Longest engaged, and moat successtul physician of the
age. Consultation or pamphlet free. f'ah or write.
Frjy JpL J^f J, A Tf AiMM|
The CeUysburg Katalysine Water,
Nature's great remedy for Dyspeysi*. Rheumatism.
G<iut, Neuralgia, Kidney, Cnnarv. Nervon . He.irt, and
other chronic Di-eaar s, is bottled and sent direct from
the spring at Gettysburg. Penn., to inralids wh?rever
residing. Price per single case of two dozen quart bot
tles, |ii.OO. 25 per cent, discount in favor of clergymen
and physicians on water for t heir own use. Medical and
clerical profession must be certified ty the i earest
? Postmaster or other r? sponsible person*. Where druggist*
do not keep it, invalids inai enclose? certified
check or Post-Office nionev order to WHII NEY HROS.,
227 South Front Street. Philadelphia. Pa.
Tli? Comfort.
if. The great advarta??
s ot tt'is valu*^
Sp ble chamber uter \
eil are greater cot\
venience and con V
'n aM'
/AHHH1 u3< 11 Ml
fortable an the te t
water-closet ; tr>/
cleanliness. Inva^/
nable for familic.
Adopted in msle
and female hoep:'r^ anT
(Pr "
m ?*?t diamond chinr,
~ f1 Ch'n,',
addree* securely pncaed on ri>C"pt of price.
F. IMHORST. M'l'r, 1*? Woo?ter St.. New York.T
r
! mp
Tka Kli| of the Body is the bnin; the stomach
its main support; the neiree its meo~er>*era; the bowels
the kidneys and the poree ite safeguards. Ind'*eetioc
createi a riolent remit am on* these attaches of the regal
organ, and to bring tbsm back to the dnty there is i othing
like tbe regelating, purifying, invigorating. cooling
a? operation of Tau*5T's EmmvtscsaT StLTUB ArBamrr.
It renovates the n stent and reetoree te health
both the body and the ?u]<L
hi K>U) BT XU DBVBBHT0. <
BBBfMBMBBMi