University of South Carolina Libraries
*? Wlmr^ ^ 13ock <for JBrory .Woman i# Jip^icfu T WOMAN, 4Mb Mar Thirty Tears' Pilgri mage. ^ * * \X W3y W W. ULISS, *.D., JPow Yodt. Trx* dcsigii ami Rcojv* of ibis valuable \vork ci*v T^o lcfciiUy imuMuhummI fhmi Hie fitie 1,'he obi eel ?:ipt<i at h 'to ]>kkIh<-c a Volutno winch miv contHjil 'infonoati^n atfc vabtsifHiut hihI net unacceptable l? WViak; tu Instruct ?iei ru recants her eiii*nt/.atlyn mid the** taws tbst regit* uioVt* functions, and of the groat j?ur|v>-r?'of t 01 hxistenca 'and the causes thai deftest th<ur.; i luipa t a k-owloIgo that is IniUmtel;' eonriac to>l \Vllfi the h valtb *iul woll-baln# or vcvsa * no are moment, ?i"? only oMmtlv'duals but c,<? 'tmti.ms, and who b.v their fitienxlh ?? ' yW ?'f coi.stltubar, t.* i}r physical w?J moral pvr'WUn, trsvtf'iitt Jiilrttly-dos elnpesl ph.vaiool, m nial, and imrU naulttios t>. th. tr oftkpikig; or, It wo*kein>d an.l ondrvnto<l by exVesses or dlsoa*}, tlijdr souf-an'l-body jientroylji# legacy 'to an unoffending p'rnrw; ? and to throw u ray of Jitrht ever ihc rtl?oa??s peculiar t.? hei ***. their eouues, syuip'.iowt. insults, nnJ the true iiblicatloci of tioiuimmL Woman hoods hp instructor. This lo>'k ?<:<>!<? to hJ\!hc them j seeks to show what i>j>#rlfn|'fl 1 si Uujiit Ji^ivcs wynin the benefit of li nt experience. l?x. ,lti.iss, iho author o4" this work, ~ r. graduate of tbo T'ntversUy of PcniwylvP.nln. Philadelphia, ( :?.<* of 1841 ? has for tflfuvy yr?a:? iiikde feuiUo oonijdi nta and chronic, ib?n:<?*s Ih t'ewual a BpccW.ly, M?d l? In every way Cu.thSed f?r netting a book of IU? kln.1 for tho pt"era! The U>'? though U a tftiUcult r.i 1 delicate ot.p, jer V> he of service, to benefit. t j warn o.' ^Ipp^er, truth tnnts f t tpolm, but with a delicacy of diction, a discreet choice of words, and a veiled manner of expression that *?i:i weird 1U way to Uio uiuiars'andinit y.Ithyut wounding s-uslh'.Uty, <.i cnpMiig x blush b,t mantle the chock of the ni wt f.o?y.Ucnj' Tfce lealer Is reminded, however, how almost! in possible it u i<> tiead the pat\i tha* tlu> nuttier sot out ttpon, ani not suouu to violate tiioao conventional forms cl language to vhioti Atprric.vi traders arc nx'Stl v accustom -d, aril, whether ^tale or huivUv, Is aU.riwtiishcd, it is i if the book be i ab op. up is IQj the cs ptotntluii of dndlV-S r.orltii.p but n rvhnsh of those tar^ihlr matter* thai have Ken thousands of times hcfoiv eititen upon, they ei,l ;.i tf:cy proceed t.pd their tpbitrAe. Tlic reader muet than be prnpa.es! to hear many sinpulatlUos.; AVid if they eh.ruM appear miller the offspring of a perverted linKgltiAii m, thfva )wj>t and scientific conclusions, be or stu) i? ?t libc-ty to rale thuip arcordlnsrly Every one has hlg . own nuuiner of thluliln?, and?Mr anther hut his. It Is bwUoved, h wever, thai it the Usik t.c read tar oovrse and ^ In the t'i.d.'Kj'. si'tuir, l>> th ?ss at any mto who, like the eulhor, Pa\c d.sl'.bwttKV ui^m Lyman liapjUnntip mid the cautu>? that oppose it; by those who^tave strivbyte aeceruvm the true sources <?1 e mnlUpltctty nt Inth milieu, i,.. I whs l.uvc ever been diligent m rocking t.? auieliomts: bar s itforlnpr, many valuable lessons, t.i say the loajt, may r lie diawn frmu tu couusol upon hubjvcls iuUiuaLdy conriccted wiUi the health, happiness, ruid welt-lielng of the female portt.ui of our race. The Kh>1i 1* .li->t intended f?n youth, hut those, of rnaturer years; more rrperolly the married, parents, and iboeo lutv^ in*; the dii'ecuou of youthful iucxpciicnee. C. ?Ml ? ? ...... **>j>iujn.y.? Jbpri!:$/:. ki jMiily C>*osi,. II " Vv'otofuu. Hiyd hor Titinby Yeats' ** t>v W. \V. .iJtfcg, ,M.I>., ig?jbraetliral iiH*ti?>'upon lite !>'<. nil*f nature. dUiv *s. r.rvds, .and euliuiv of >vomaa, sahicli has I fin of ruy<KUhi? ohvri.dAisa <x 1 ?-* therapeutic tolne. hi id wlu?ii: yvuit to Ik*, in ? *:<irAi ix>int?f Mow, imtsxecpOonMo ami i>j uUuiilAUd to bouseWK-?Jiintun Cor-0refwiivt>ai\st. 'iiic bu-jfc contains o>m(sK, I'Aio, tnuiitrsli1^ by a ft-.< fitici fUKiaviuj;, anil Is cuWanti&Uy b.-uxal 10 wuaiiu. JSRJEF SYHOPSJS .OF CONTRETS, 7 JXTJROJPJUCTOBX* 1 Tta<lwti)?tU)* htcrfeOM of female IovaJUb. Wo* Is the WMf't 1 Indue cultjvntlon olllu- inentJ.1 piAicu. lli? MOUOlHtiVJ. ao?l 111" K?w>. u>ns. I. leH?eiUfPt*. IU*Uand character <?i aor.uU >CiMccoyr*c. H. Uw ?$z/A tjf pure. all, jn\')Ki f<*s!. and buaUhftd out-door e\rnwac, 4. 'I bo Ik-rjj'HVi fiis of m id) the ibtllp* of .Oi^liiuo, aa? elicinjurious widci of dw*?. ft JLs clung .Oik imagination by iiio.iiciu9.il of proruxt booV-s, pasxion sumac pic- * turns, Tie totmt qj wyptt itk|riwf, m.?iat. 1 Mtiti mvfti trawt/ip, lvsultlui* tn A yivul .jejree fn?a en?\r J tuid iguoiaucc. 'lli" object pi this booh t>? f noitif<uw?iion dime difieane* jjeowllnr iu smkimui, ? ili?ir sources, syrup<oh)?, tosulu, uud indications of treatment-. The lank a /lclicate and diOlcult one. No iiriyrojniely hi imparting < i.nowi<j4j;e to ttaov who arc 1>< fce t>?< iin?U?o<* of luiUova. I N'tt a isp Vo swi'tii~;< hiqo.r. i:i fpot to .natural Ah.w?4. 7XiWeata. *>nd misery follow close n|>on J4W*acc and my a- ? S*>ry. liui a otl submitted t?< lb" nnUl cih-ndorauoh ui *, wustftn " 2b Wtepure, all doopt w pure. *. ixiijiiirv. fha 0K5ftt crirtu In worr.an'c exletorio*. The mhvl e*- / Tard#, Uictaeavi swHkfos, and.'lie bo>K lecutoes Jitvi-lojwL thUdlfch mouwr.cnu !</?? their nttnuii.m I.!or misiiou ;u hhr. Will it he. Ailttlled? IV t)iiMU"n ao^miKtrtaalooiv t_>r,terminal by her pb\<k kJ U?"r. riit m al itu|K?tV-u>l , ?f iicr diseases those of" the wcnttj uul -xgau?. iJ. *JXNSTZtUATfT>N^ Wh.1t i?lt? The ovarlai: nr**ne a?d their officii l>ui-atum of o\ tuian influence n. diiu-ioiw cJuouUw. /Syft.iiotl t.jr temiiertiTncht. influence of. city life apd stnonljkuuji rr food. '1 be country preferable to the c-Uj . Slrul.-ulcs? f unbent phyaidann. Jurodlbtryinfluence. Cuabujiain JtnUu. r'ie?j>u?ney nf -the menstrual period. Affected by |>ieg*>ur.cy ami lactation. Tib'quantity v?rle?. I ruii naiuiu cf the dlHchrotte. It* cense- JieJmf af U?c ancient*. I ho toiy of Jacob and Labnn. Hebrew lawn. SpeettlHtlao nnd theories of the. earls ldiy?iologi4t?. 0\ uiation. Cl./wto and beautiful language or i'/ofcaaor Aldg-. 'lire organ* of CMtMUuaUoa. I1J- JKFLAWMJlKMf OF Ml^STRCAl. / /ion ? art Acute and rub-*oot? forma. Chronic infltunnruifkm. Tie e,ain*?.. Opinions of innoiM ptctluoneTx. JKx|?>*ur? wo mechanical injury. The orunJ.au \eairie Ignorance ui regard U' ovarian inflammation. Multiplicity of ojculona In regard l<> woman'# chief h flratliy. '.Kdlatlon of the Fallopian tut** to the womb. Woman r atifluiiiifrs for thirty year*. The "change of life." Go.'dou peilod of existence. Dlscwe of the ovaries more, common than .generally admitted. '1 heir linportam ? In the sexual Merit, lunation to pregnancy. Jmluenocr i the complexion, tha voice, and the figure. Control the development of the brain, and aftevt the Judgment fionotvtiation dependent npon the existence oftbe o\ arte*. Melancholy picture of u fainalaln which these or/an* have no exmiance. Iheir ?lifct.a?e seriously impairs use whop* ?v*'.eui. (>iw-? the development ot the 10 productive organs. Upon tnolr tt? anoval or kpm, the female approximates the <j>potuie sex. Remarkable cases recorded hy medical inun. The primary +ryani of U* tejcuai .ytlrrn. XV. WYMXTPOMS Or MJfcNSTIUJA I, DlfiJtAKK. f-ocai. ftTKCTotn.?TarVui* flejrreae of pain. Merbtd Influence of diseased o vanes ever tbv ?r<H]ih an.1 vugiua. Trolaiaras uteri; Its caimo and treatment. Irritability yf the tdwWer. Painful evacuation*. i<?pugnarvce to soxuhI hitereonme. fccnaltRenGan of the generative or* ins. I?hv- u< Unbar*** that have their rise and origin In the ovaries. 1rwa XljT?f}3pyifffnynf^ J)r. ?1. Witlkor's California Vinegar JUttqi's aro n pvniely Vegetable preparation, made cliielly front the natlvo herbs found on tho lower ranges of tho Sierra Nevada nio\intains of California, the medicinal properties of which aro extracted thorofroni without the uso of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked, ''What is the causo of tho unparalleled success of Vixfoak Hit'j'Kusf" Our answer is, that they remove the causo of disease, and the patient recovers his health. Thev are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and invigorator of the iiyatem. Never before in the history of tlio world lias a inudiuiuo been compounded possessing tbo remarkable qualities of Vinkoak Bittkus in healing tho sick of every disease man is heir to. They ure a gentle* Puiyutive. as well as a Tonic, rchovitig Congestion or 1 nflummat.ion of tho J.i\cr and Visceral Organs in bilious Discuses Tho properties of Dr. Walkku's V IXKCAIt ItlWVBU nrn A uni-iniit 1 kl. .1? ???*? urn pormlt nor Jh It ?y to ; present a lun^r list of TKSTIMOMALS; u. 1 fevr v\ 1U imlicato the unlynrnai favor will* r wtxiclx tltc work Is rceelved. Maxsfiki.d, May 1J, 1870. I have iwrnsed T?r. bliss's work, " Wnaiitn, nn?J li?jr Thirty Yours' I'iljfriiijoijje," Willi <lr>o;i Interest. 1 believe it A book <>( great value io ?li>for whom U w:i9 designed. aud liopc it arill meet with that dxwuhiu clicuiaUou which Itaiucrtt* sv well ilciiewc. M. S. CAUl'LNTEK, M.l)., Fellow Mam. Me?l. Soc. Bostox, May 13,1870. fr I have examined tl\p hook entitled *' Woman, and t l??*r Thirty YuarH' l'lljfrilOHxre," written by \V. W. lilisn, 11.l?.. of NGw Vink, und In vuy judgment, his n vr?-. SralM-aMe work, and calculated to t?: usel'ul. especially Rioonf women, wheic 111 liuallh in nun* too provident nt present. It '? nlilioRovWcallv, ?ejiehUfloi?Uv, suntntqlrtlly, phyal( ?logically and nuthol'-n'cally correct In Its dOfceijpthtnii of the organs of urn body, o atria*. of ten. ale diseases eml tholr . cure >r, what u much Iteltcr, tlieir prrcewbon ; :u>d tloo ' quotiuv<Tu? (somewhat ntiueiir.o) ate from standard wnt- j ora, crnmeutin this medioff profession. V* M. M . t.'Olth y.lAj. M.Om IX volume entitled ? Won\un, ?"<* Pnr Thirty IMlsriv'ftCC," In \? . M . JHoa. Al.lt., und dCnyit-xJ c?iiecn:tll> tot married women, is satd by inodlcty to lw of^ickt vjdue for the loltniuatloti It Unpads. ? JitotHa Jvur ltui "dViDOaiii and lve> Tldriy Yearn* PHjrri'J*.- i pgfcf?'," I* tin* llllo of H book iilkl thrown unt.n ...... will: Uio uiolto, " Jlmi tvti ?'i? unit y " Ii is a inr 1 ?lrfff ?n0 O'Micr aueuipi. iiiau iu nnsdoccMui* to ucji jHijKilait,* i?Uil yet denently and Willi lion*-'t purpose of s( ?!?? of iJm mwl ilallftto of iulijuCU. .. . J t?' t'liTU>; nod jiuixrly acienlitic qn: airs ot lit" fx?>k indicate a careful < lutd niteJbn'vtii pliyssc-iuo to be ILe nuUnir. ? .\eifarA 0m(? j AJtclissr. * TVotmaxi, ami Ufr'JTWrty 1"ofcT?>J Pjljfr4o*AX<S** S'V \t .vv. iibset, Ai.I>., New VoiU. This hook i* * ui>u?l'\.vliiudtcnR upnv ii ralijuct of winch only too iiitiv is mivlor^ ^ a tour1 wtBuie tiie nit-Ilea! pi le-sioui, uvt would m\e a via.; V'liouiit ui the ?t?tleruix wldcfc la now causod In lynouu'.ea W Ui?' b'oal vIlA' laws of health, il ii weiv hi the bands of t>eiy iwri-aii. The v?duihe la the wos k oi'n pl?>aicVm c\ i ry way'qutihhed lot ilm task, lint m# niuOe for many \ cai* lo** Wo"coiii|>litivu Jus ajHioluAty- 11 throws UkUi upon the A-i'O-aMt- peculiar in the rex, rued Kuufre.sts the. proi* r iviue<?lee. mii1 it hi every wa> miHiu*bi? lot inbtiwcuun ai-d .ounat-lmUoO. -jSosVjn i'mt. " W.omsup,, fcj.nl ki r f^iirty 1'carw' rilyiiiKLr Hit- work, by a New V ] k pii; .-) of ej pert itv.il note, trials k deJlrato u; ,i i njvoi i:\i ?jbjet:5 Ii VrMJ? pothxTi-t *< i-iurli dqll.jyy %* t?>? nature ?.J the. riwa n itvDselnut. am! it ceihJ.nly brkms niilbsib.it evoi v wo- ?' tn^p, arni evpoebillx fcvery rneitluii f kp<>\?, irtiiutuely O e-iuorK'tbd ks it.ry .tu with tierovrp health :i?. :o?? of hoc..off, print.. T here rnu he no ihmhi that ?. inert shaia of 3kr dbnM&e Hinl JWtfeiivti entailed u??h Imtb. arises flort. 4:111f* e. that tibahl l?e svniitiil, i1 wmr.cn full;.- uiotenUoutl .. * Irrstr 'i<a -i ? Distil . . i t it- ktwn ufibMun, wklth can >1. La i ? ? ? Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, iliurotic, Sedati ve. .Conntor-i rritant iSudorilic, Altera. *ve, and Anti*HiHous. It. If. MfIM)NAIJ? CO., l>iupui?tR mxl ('.en. Aj'tR., San Kranniitoo, Cnlifnrnla, nnd tor nT Wn&lungton ami Charlton Sla., N. V. Split by ull lki un;;l ?(s ivml 1?? xtlrrs. HIE WEEKLY IIEKALI). The Cheapest and Bast Newspaper i? the World. TONF.W Y(WK HEfiALHis tiw Icadug paper?known to l>e such tlirougliout the ivilized world. h you want the luteal and most accurate v.'s from ever y section t"f the Globe, suhibe for lite WmKSZ&V FX If yot. want a correct report, of all tlio Marictfrr-Kortiign anil Domestic?subscribe for lie W&RR&Y iXRlt;Otrfn? If you want for fireside reading woii sc- : ectod stories for the entertainment of the r'annty, subscribe for the WlSMK&F M In politics it is neutral, hut givtv; a fair and m partial review of all political matters hap icuing throughout the known WV>rjd. ( '1 Single subscription, ?2; three cop- , ps , ?o; five copies $8; ten copies, f Ifi; RiugLe * opios, five cents each. A limited number of Vdicrtiseijieuts inserted in the Weekly ilerId. VC7" Su Inscriptions received at tlie iloiutv {jewa Oilier.-. Is'ov. 11, 1873?Bin. THE TRUE SOUTHRON IS8TJUC2TLY A WHITE MAN'S PAPER I i puhlished without the aid of any official atronapc whatever; is fearless. free and indeendent in all tnnl'crs concerning the interests f tare. good citizenship of the country, and ppoals a kmc. to the friends ol honesty and ood government for ;uip]iort in its light gainst thv corruption juid villainy which is t>w litst destroying tlie. resources of our once rigid and prosperous laud. r Stand by us and we will stand up tor you. u Mii\ ac Proprietors, Sumter, S. C, c W. C. KENKPY, ^editor, r HE EASTMAN jizsrxdjrr.a t misb:\I:.SK t oMj;4^i; > la an Institution for KiLie.a.tjjjg (OUNG MEN for BUSINESS, )nly Actual Business College h n the South Combining The* ory and Practioe. kr.d is especially designed for those'who detr.ro to engage in a <Ve ti vo S n ccessful 13n si* Hess* T" The boat mode of Commercial Colleg . Instruction ever offered to this or any other .country Thecou/sc of study comprises every variety of Business and Finance fioxn ictaii to hanking operat ions, by the great ,C system of ^ Ictual Business Instruction. ' > IiooK- keeping in all its \arious methods, Business Forms, Terms ami Usa- ^ ges, Business Writing, Correspondence. Commercial Arithmetic. Commercial Jaw; Partnership Settlements. lJotoctlucr Cniii?rotC?n o ",v>|u iuv"" f.t Business liii>^raj?liy thoroughly taught at tiijo EASTMA 1ST Atlanta business College, -COJtNJFiR rjEACJITKEK & FINE 6T&, a, ATLANTA, GEOJiGIA. ^ The total e xpkn&ks pon a pull corns*: m ill not kxokkd $130. For College Jour- *6 U and Specimens of Penmanship, address j* Dftniler A Wagcc, {? .Dec. Pox 586. Atlanta, Ga. I & &OR&Y WEEKL! Professional & Business Cards \V. I>. .TOIlJiStXN. J. ,M. aoIIN.soN ,C. P. .QrATTI.BBA.UM. JOBHSOKS; QUATTLEBAUM, V11 u.Ka\ mS and <;Ol%mi>KS AT LAW Conwayboro, Q. CLaw Card* QfcLlJERS, HUDSON & KKLLEY, Attorneys & Counsellors at Law, Will practice in all tlie courts of Iloiry, (e tlier State or Federal. D^" One .of I ho hrm will he in attendance at every.term of the court, and such other times as business may require. Oltice, Marion, S. C. W. W. SELLERS, J. IT. HUDSON, J NO. A. KKLLEY. Oct. Si J, 1873. yOS. T. WALSH, Attorney at Law and SOLICITOR IN EQUITY, Will practice in the courts of Martou, Horry ami Cieorfcetowp. Omc? ai .UON WAVHORO, S. U. NovJS, lb70 tf. rp r. (J1I,LES1'1K, Attorney and Cotmsclter at Law. WiH pho prompt attention to all business entrusted to bis care. -CONWAYBORO, S. C. June, 20, 1871. P. O. ttaf.liuo, F. A. IIKMINN A. 6. H1GG1N8 & SON, ( j()M.MIS.SH)N A'l KUCHA NTS, ?8 KUMMTJII STItKK'i', .Jf/ZTT JfOMK? Tjibcral Advances made on Tiills of Jjddiny of Cotton , jXavul /Stores, and (drain. Oct. 14, 1813.-tf rpor>A:t a iiAjiT, Commission Merchants, [(,'1 FUONT ST3EKT, yir.w YD 11K. Liberal advances nuule on consignments o JS aviil Storey, Cotton. &c. Orders reeeivo promot Altont,ion. Unexcj'jHionablo retercncca given North an?J South. ?J.|K.(Toi.ak *J. II. ilAirr. ofN.C. ofS. C I. T.& J. G. Frost & Co. IlcalcrM in I'tnir A Meal, tint ol Heady liaising Flour l Front Street, JSTpw oris . Viwticular nttciilion )>ai<l fo tilling i irrlers for Mm Southern Markets I May 20 1873?]y. S. S- FBASEB, i Commission A fthipgrfcxtg: i Merchant, t DEAI.EK IN (Hi A IN, HAY, 'KOVISIONS, FLol'K ANi>, SrilHT KAUUKUi. ^i: ( ) ? i 'M it w, M; i Orders IVomjitly^filled Free of Commission 5 Fob 18?I y, 1 yWOS. L. IIAKUJELSON, , Commission Morch&nt, 1 >1 lipping and Foiwarding Agent, < HULL. CJIKBX. ? O. i Special attention given to the buying Mid t piling oJ'Ton Tnituat, and other produce. RW Comfortable Houses, Cots and Stable#, 'or teams, icilt be famished to 1ransi<nt Tim- I rr men, withcuim Charge, ichu entrust their j usintss to me. t" i\ WUJ3AM.S, * J>KAI.XUR XM J tiENFJtAL MKRCJIAN DI/iE, 1ANUFACTUROR tOF N AVA L STORKS ! COMMISSION MERCHANT. ANU IFORWAKEinS AGENT. 1 CT?' Speeial fcUeotioi) given Uo the buying * ml selling of Ton limber. < HULL CJtEEJt, S. C. j The Orphans' Friend, 5 A I'APKll FOR THE FAMILY OIKCL 1 PUBLISH EI) JCVJWY SATURDAY BY THE t CAROLINA ORPHAN HOME. l >ufi year, in adyaucOj $2,00 c ix months, in advance, 1 00 'o all Ministers, One Dollar per Annum. Males of A duerslising Reasonable. A I Ji the profits of tUirf paper are used * [ A. in supporting rUaLitnto orphans. We \ rant e?ery one who reads this to subscribe. ^ Address ICC. OLIVER. Bup't Carolina Orphan Homo, SPARTAN HURO, S. C, J N. 10th, 1874. I Ti?e UDew JElaMic Xriios* i< An Impoi tnnt Inrentlon. )tretains the rnpt g re at all Un\es,a,i\d .u.nder the hardest exercise or ndtur *?>T?re?t biriuu. it la wo/m With com " >rt, and If Wept on night and day, effects a per J< nnent cure In a few .weeks. {Sold cheap and mi by Mali when requested, circulars free, when V dered by letter sent to the Klastlo Truss Co., Hl o. 83 Broadway, N. Y, City, Nobody uses MeI Spring Trusses; too painful, they slip off too V cquently. I i; AprilVIIst 1873-ly. ' * 9 If NEWS: JUNE 13, ' I. I.I ijli A Dollar BUI. The crisp of one dollar bill is or n work of art simply beautiful. Freak from the presa, with the promise to 1,.... l... ~ - |/hj \iiiwi uiw'ii i iy it i;i 1 (-m jllUI IIITH unsoilcd and unwrinkled, and its crinkly sound as significant of wealth as was the jingle of coin in llio barbarous times when the promise had contingent relations with performance, the dollar bill is an object of admiration and delight. Few things are superior to it in nature or in art. On the upper left hand corner Ohristopher Columbus is discovering the J.and of Promise ; in the centre is the promise to pay of the land he discovered, and on the lower right han 1 .corner, the signature of Treasurer spinner, a gentleman whose integrity is as Roman as the nose of the Father of his Country, whoso portrait adonis the middle of the bill, because he never told a lie. There may be citizens who have never seen this work of art and symbol of wealth in its crisp condition. Possibly to those to whom the dollar bill 1 1 iims cuinu limp, creased, and measly, the statement thai the portrait which ' adorns it is of the Father of His Country, and thai he wore a I toman nose , when in lift; and ia so represented in i the engraving, and that he never told 1 a lie, may seem incredible. It is not ' impossible that it may hedonhted, and that men?niero men-?of whom the | poet beautifully says, "Men may c-ome s and men may go, hut the one dollar ' lull flows on forever,"-- may assert thai ( this is not the portrait ol any man who , never told a lie, and that he does not 1 wear a Ko;?an nose either, it is the 1 misfortune of such persons not to have seen the dollar hill when it was fresh and crisp; when the promise and the i Roman nose were both unbroken bv ( repented foldings and wrinklings, mid the face of the Father of Ilia Country ( hml not been pinched and punched tand "wuzzled up" inlo a counterfoil t presentment of Judas Iscar lot. Ttibvne. ! MUere. is the Antarctic ('oitlineiiU [New York llcr.ild.] I We publish in another column a ' highly interesting letter from a young * ..131 ? I - ? * 1 * " ? ' * niiuur <m would me l/nuan fliscoverv j ship Challenger, for two years pa&? on '| a voyage; around tho world, addressed ' to one of our host known explorers (' who has handed it to iim with a lull 1 e appreciation of its value. It has long t been a disputed question whether.the :i Arctic Ocean was an open sea, and v whether at the South Pole there was !' land. Tiio late Lieutenant Maury had t Fin ingenious theory that opposite to [ land we wouid always find water, and J lience i t I here was an ocean shout the 1' North Pole there must be a continent the South Pole. This theory has t seemed to have been confirmed by k many discoveries of land in ilie South- ii mi hemisphere, and among others of i stretch of coast line which has long y borne the name of the "Wilkes An- j larelio Continent," which Wilkes \ claimed to havo seen in January, 1840. Its existence has often been called in .j piesiion. The letter which \vc pub- j. listi from Lieutenant JIaynes, of the [ Jhalenger, to l)r. Hayes, shows that to such land crisis; that Wilkes saw, s n fact, nothing hut icefields and ice- i bergs. it Thus we see one problem after an- u itlier solved with the greater accuracy o rnd perfection of scientific appliances; J' ml it is not often that a whole conti- j icnt is so suddenly bowled down, as if jr t were but one of a set of ninepins, on h he general plan of progressive science. V Notwithstanding, however that the j"j Jhalleoger lias in point of fact sailed >ver the land of Wilkes, yet wc must |? jelievo that land does exist in tho h ricinity of the South Pole.; for other- P vise, while whatever ice might he ^ 'ormed upon the sea, icebergs could n jot be created inasmuch as land is n lecessary, the iceberg being a frag- tl np.nt. rvf t.hr? erhirunr u)ti/'t 'a "I"'""-. - - -~-,J .. ?" itinroj.-" j if mountain origin, and, according to ' ho best accounts, icebergs aro more mmeroua and larger in tho Antarctic iv ban in the Arctic Seas. The tiuth is vc know too little about either ol Ucse dreary regions of the earth. In he interests of commerce neither of J' he poles are likely ever to prove of \h greater value thau for the capture of ], hales, oa elephants and seals; but to a, eience they arc of infinite importance, J* nd in the new awakening of geography 3al exploration they cannot much loner be a simple ur..ytb to the ignorant t) nd wonder to the wise." J4et the Chal- M jnger go on in well doing, and \vc hi ,'ish a like good future to our own pi Ldentific expedition in the Tuscarora, fi fhich under command ol Commander lei knap, United States Navy, h$s oi 1874. done such splendid work in the Pacific. Wonder of Newspaper Printing* The New York Herald claims that a recent Sunday edition consisted of one hundred and lifly thousand copies. Each number j,otts$M.cd of twenty pagea, ithat is one hundred and twenty columns, of which seventy-eight were advertisements and forty-two reading mutter. The Jfcr</.ld says: t4A detail which will be perfectly new to rion-prolcasioiiids is, that to produce one hundred and fifty thousand copies, it is necessary to take nine hundred thousand impressions. To accomplish this in the short time allowed, five rotary Iloe presses,ol eight and ten eylenders each, and two l>ullock perleoting presses, were kept rolling oil'at the rate of one thousand a minute* To drive t hese presses two large engines of eighty horse power were kept in mention by burning six tons of coal in the furnaces. To form .I - .1 .. . . y - - * * ? uu: hiurniy pe puucs lor nu: cy lenders, eight tons of t\po metal were used to east one hundred and forty-eight plates, weighing when finished and dressed, thirty-eight pounds each. I lie ink on a single copy would not be taken into observation by the average observer, but it required seven hundred and twenty live pounds to keep the rollers prepared to leave the imprint ot their kisses on tiio eighteen million virgin pages that were to glow nt daylight wii h .the news. And these rollers were coir.posed 'd live hundred pounds oi glue luingh d u iili one thousand pounds id honey. Then the virgin pages ? the paper on which all ihis is printed. There are eighty men lud hoys about the presses, handling. Sheet by sheet it is passed through die press, until seventeen tons, or thirty-four thousand pounds are primal on both sides. Jl you were to pile hi>80 sheets one upon another they tvouhl make a monument one hundred <,iid twenty feet high." The Austrian Krnbassador in Talis s not fortunate in his lights. In the lnel, a lew years ago, which glow >ut of the Beaumont scandal, he was langerouslv wounded in the arm, and he dispatches yesterday from J'aris >ay that in his late encounter with he Duke do AIi*ntebello, lVnicc Metcrnieh was again placed "in the iin ossibiliy of eoiitinuing the combat." ?'ate has not been kind to the gooduitureil nobleman, for neither of these piarrels was his own. The first time te assumed hishr ther's causa, and the iceasion of the late affair was that the united and eccentric JVinoesa ol lletternich declined to npeak to the )uUe de Monlehello, at a recent bill, ['he cynics will have a good opportu iity to repeat their moth-eaten witiiistn about the loquacity of women. io\v that one of the most fascinating it the sex has drawn her husband into rouble by holding her tongue, lint mote serious result of tins affair rill probably be n revival of dueling inong fashionable people, now that t has once more received the saneion of the non of the great Prince Metcrnio.h and the grandson ol the great farshal Cannes. There has been a uospect for some time that Braivce I'ouid follow the lead of England and How this irrational and unfair ordeal o lapse from among gentlemen to porting people. Jhut there is enough u a single example like that of Meternich, or that of the Duke of Mont enwier, to keep up the fashion for curs among the petita-creccs of the ockey Club and their imitators of the Vashington.?A. J". Tribune, A East Nkw . Yokk Youth's Viai..?-Jonathan Palmer Loper, uniliarly designated as "Parm" lOper hy his yachting htends, was ailed to the har of the General Lesions, New York, on Wednesday, for rial upon an indicrneut for anion. It- ia a portly, tine looking young lan, the son of a New London (Conn.) lillionaire, ('apt. I.oper, the original wner of the vacbl America, who j olds the Queen's Gup, which was won y ids yacht in the English channel in 860, trie yachts ot Great Britain tryig in vain to wrest the prir.e from er. Young Lopcr has been a last outli, and has been the catu>cof great rief to his father and relatives by his lsfcipation and numerous irregularies. On more than one occasion his vther has been called on to assist itn out of scrapes into which his imudence led bim. The?" escapades of oung Loper are said to have cost bis ilher at least $.100,000. lie pleaded ot guilty to the charge in the indictlent, lie was convicted of arson in to New York General Sessions on 'hursday. lie had been leading a ist life and committed the deed for diieli he is to pay the penalty while 1 a semi -drunken condition. The i.ixuiuiffi penalty tor his oUlnae is wen years in the State prison. "I toll you," said a Wisconsin man ) a neighbor next day alter burying i is wife, 4'when I came to get into ed, and lay thar, and not hearing ucinda jawing around for an hour i [id half, it just made me. feel as ii d moved into a strange country." < Some people are not endowed with 1 10 facniiy of seeing a joke. Lord iorpeth used to tejl a Scotch trjeud of is who, to the remark that some poo- i le could not feel a jest unless it was < red at them with a cannon, replied: t "Wcel, but who can yc tire a jest l < it of a cannon mon?" I < IIis and Sine?"Lonely To-nidht, Love."?Husband, traveling. Scene 1 ? Kooin in bote). Spittoons full of eignr stumps. Bourbon whiskey. .All hands equipped tor a night's spree. Husband, in n hurry to bo off, writes home: "Oearept Honey?My ume is ho occupied with business that I can hardly spare a moment to writo to you. Oh! darling, how I r?is? you! and the only thing that sustains rue during my absence is the thought that | every moment thus spent is lor ; dene III or my Clear who auu cuuoru^py i Take good care of yourself, my dear. Feed the baby on 0110 cow'b milk. Kxeuse haste, ?&c. Wile at home. Scene 1'2. ? Parlor. All ilit* gas Jit. Thirteen grass widow?. Fred, from around the corner, with his violin; Jim, irom across the way, with his banjo; Jack, from above, \vw it Ins guitar; Sam with his flute; lots of other fellows v/ilk their instruments; dancing and singing; sideboard covered wiih nuts, 11uits, cake, cream, wine, whiskey, etc.; wi/e, in a hurry 1 to dance, writing to her husband: ''JDjs.ut Pkksh'?Ilow lonesome I feel in your absence! The hours pass tediously. Flobody calls on tne, and I am constantly thinking of the time when )ou will be home, and your cliorlul contenuncc light up the routine ol every-day lile. My household duties keep me constantly employed. 1 am living as economical as possible, knowing tnat your email income will i . ...i ". .. . r i- i u... nui, ;i<uji!o yj i; ivo;Mi,j t*AptMi?e, i>uu I now, dear, i will say good-by, or I i will be too lute lor the monthly concert ! of prayer. 111 baste, yours etc. What Constitutes a Muni To lve a man, and to appear to be a man are two very different things; and yet, .though strange it may seem, there are but lew who can tell the true from the fa'se?the genuine from the bogija c?in. lint there are many who choose and select the counterfeit, because it appears i? he unore dazzling to the eye. Such persona look at the shadow, but not the substance; ut the outward instead of the inward. JNJanv appear to think if they wear tinw clothes, and put on style, and stnoke their meerschaum, and their choice llavanns, and occasionally sip the most costly wines and champagnes, they then have become men. We pity such short -sighted beings; "they have eyes, but they see not?ears have they, hut they hear not, neither do they understand," when told that such habits make them loss than men. We have many boys among ua that have grown up to the stature ot men, but they are boys still. One hundred and sixty pounds ot muscle and bono is not a man. The sv. ino often attain that weight, but they are not men, To be a man, one must think a man's thoughts and do a man's deeds. This implies more than one would suppose at tirat sight; it includes all that makes a man noble pure and Godlike. Jt includes self-government, without, which man ta little uuavn tlwi hoafit ol the lield, but with which all his faculties and p6we.rs arc eubdued and controled. When this is accomplished, lhen, and not until then, does ho stau 1 forth in that noble ami Godlike sense? a MaK. In spile of a certain fastidious and quite natural dislike which possesses men to feeing their feminine relatives doing any sort of v holeaowvo work away from the hearth, the ways ol the world in this regard are changing wonderfully. We hear ol young ladies of the cultivated and reserved old Knickerbocker families going into tho medical profession with as simple, earnest, and modest a desire to make a lifelong work of it as any young masculine student can feel. Ju this they are not driven by necessity any more than is that daughter/)! JVarotj Alphonso de Kothsehild who has just received at the Hotel de Ville, in Paris, a certificate of competency as a schoolmistress?the result of a very croutauie examination. Nothing could be better than the umbrellas which Mile, do Kothschild and our young Americans have get ready for possible rainy days. (m ru ral Lee one day found :Dr. Cutting, the army surgeon, who was a handsome and dressy man arranging his cravat complacently beiorc a glass. "Cutting," ??id be, "you must be the happiest man in creation," u\Vhy, General ?" "Why," replied Lee, "because you are in love with yourself, and have not a rival on earth Oongukksman Cain.?Jji the absenca of ft- U. Cain, Congressman at large lor Mouth Carolina, to make answer to the charge of perjury and libel, made against him by the Mia'.c, t^^dourt of ( Seneral Sessions yestcrdfT^B^ lercd rules to issue, returnable on tnir '-at day ol the next term of the court, to compel him to show cause why the bonds given for his appearance for tiial should not be forfeited jto the State.? Arew$ and Courier, 3, inst. Ghangks*?The total number of granges in the Cnited States is lO.Rfii. 1 - - - - - I 1 rind the total membership 780,000. The only States in which there arc no granges are Connecticut, Oolayar* and Rhode Island. Those who bequeath unto themsolvef ft pompous funeral are at just so much expense to inform the world of something that had much better bo concealed?namely, tliat their vanity bai outlived themselves.