The Darlington democrat. (Darlington, S.C.) 1868-1871, March 09, 1870, Image 1
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L
VOLUME 2.
DARLINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 9, 1870.
NO. 19.
“I AM AIA>.\i: IA THE WOULIK’
The followinj: Kuching appeal ia extracted
from the eloquent appeal for the Richmond
Male Orphan Asylum, delivered on 22d an
niversary, by Major Styles :—
‘■One of the batteries of our old battalion
was composed chiefly of Irishmen from a
Southern city—gallant fellows; but reckless
and wild. The captaincy becoming vacant,
a backwoods Georgia preacher named C,
was sent to command them. The men at
first half amused, half insulted, soon learned
to idolize as well as fear their preacher cap
tain, who proved to he all in all such a man
us one seldom secs, a combination of I’raisc-
God-Ilarbecues and Sir Phillip Sydney, and
with a dash of Deadly Vicars about him —
He had all the stern grit of of the Puritan
with much of the chivalry of the Cavalier
and the zeal of the Apostle. There was at
that time but one other Christian in his bat
tery, a gunner named Allen Moore, als; a
backwoods Georgian, and noble, enthusiastic
man and soldier. The only other living mem
ber of Moore's family was with him, a boy
of not more than twelrt or thirteen years,
and the devotion of the elder brother to the
younger was as tender as that of a mother’s.
The little fellow was a strange, sad, prcnia- ,
ture old child, who seldom talked, ar.d never
smiled. He used to wear a red zouave fez
that ill-befitted that peculiar, sallow, pallid
complexion of the piucy woods Georgian ; but
he was a perfect hero in a fight. It was at
Cold Harbor in 'O'. AVe had been all day
shelling a working party of the enemy, and
about sunset, as Adjutant of the battalion. 1
was visiting the batteries to arrange the guns
for night firing. As I approached C.'s po
sition the sharp-shooting had almost ceased,
and down the line I could see the figures of
the cannoneers standing out boldly against
the sky. Moore at the trail, adjusting his
piece for the night's work. His gunnery had AVo extract the following beautiful and
been superb during the evening, and hi® ; nt ,d truthful illustration from an exchange:
Tlie Tv o A lug*.
As Incident o? War in Cura.
The Kingston. Jamaica Krpres*, publish
ed au incident of which the following is the
substance:—
‘•An unfortunate seaman had been ap
prehended on charge of being implicated in
a filibustering expedition, and comdeinned
to be shot on a very improbable evidence.—
He was an American, the sou of English pa
rents. and the English and American con-
sub had made strenuous, but unavailing ef
forts to save his life. He was marched out
on the day for his execution, followed by the
| two vice-consuls. Mr. Ramsden, the British
vice-consul, read a protest against the execu
tion, declared him innocent, demanded his
release, and also declared that the ffpimish
government would not be answerable to En
gland and the United States if it were taken.
He was told that his remonstrance came too
late, as the prisoner had been sentenced to
death for having taken up arms against
Spain. The order wss given to the tiring
party to ‘‘Present I” In an instant, tho two
consuls rushed between the levelled rifles ol
the Spanish troops and the unfortunate sea
man. Mr. Ramsden, wrapping the English
flag around himself and the prisoner, cried
“Hold!” and while the American consul
stood abreast with him, addressed the officers
in command; •‘Gentlemen, as a consul of her
Biitanic Majesty, I cannot stand silently by
and see tins foul murder of an innocent man.
It is my duty to protect bis life, and if you
take his, you must take it throny thtw!”
The two consuls placed themselves immedi
ately in front of the condemned man, and
f.r some moments the Spaniards stood aghast,
their heroic conduct being more than they
could comprehend. The prisoner was or
dered back to prison ; then the furore was
beyond description. After dark lie was rc
prieved, and shipped from the country thro'
the exertions of the consuls."
‘•Mammy"’ Itcvt-I*.
It must have been a goodly sight to sec
the luminous Sumner seated in the gallery
of the Senate Chamber talking to ‘‘Old
Aunt Dinah” Revels. To do it was a part
ol the character he has been playing so many
years, and, of course, such an opportunity
of playing this strongest of cards was not tu
be lost. Fancy tho rotund, oily Charles, in
his new fashioned brass buttoned coat and
Beecher tie, sitting side by side with au el
derly old ‘•Mammy” whose toilet probably
consisted of a yellow and white linsey wool-
sey grown with wooden buttons in the back,
cut skimp iu the skirt, with her head tied
up in a red, white and blue bandana “hand-
kershief,” a pair of dollar brograns, and cop
peras dyed yarn socks an her dainty foot,
her knitting in band, and a well worn cob
pipe Solacing her. Imagine an old darkey.
fVesh from • the quarter” and the control of
an army of little negroes, dressed iu their
skins, suddenly invested with all tho honors
and rank of a Senator's wife, and then be
lieve if can, that cant could make Sumner
make such au exhibition of bimself as be has
by being seen with her. It is about equal
to dressing up a gorilla and introducing her
to the court of St. James. Sumner, though
must play his part- It pleases his people.
Courier .Jountff
A Specimen Krich,
We Tiule.
blood was up. I descended into the valley
and hist sight of the group, but beard C.’s
stern voice; ‘-Sit down ; Moore, your gun is
well enough; tlie sharpshooting isn't over
yet. Get down.” I rose the hill. “One
moment Captain, my trail is a hair breadth
too much to the right," and the gunner Lent
eagerly over the handspike. A sharp report
—that unmistakable crash of tlie bullet a-
gaiustthc skull, and all was over. Twas the
rifle shot on tho line that night. The.
rushing’together of the detachment obstruc
ted my view; but as I came up the Sergeant
stepped aside and said, “Look there, Adju
tant.” Moore had fallen over on the trail
the blood gushing from his wound all over
Ids face. His little brother was at his side
instantly. No wildness, no tumult of grief.
Ho knelt on the earth, and lifting Moore’s
head on his knees, wiped the blood from his
own tattered shirt sleeve, and kissed the
pale face again and again, but very quietly.
Moore was eviden 'y dead, and noneot us cared
to disturb the child. Presently he arose—
quiet still, tearless still—gazed down on his
dead brother, then around at us, aud breath
ing the saddest sigh 1 ever heard, said just
three words: “Well; I am alone iu the
world ” The preacher captain instantly
sprang forward, and placing his hand on the
poor boy ’s shoulder, said solemnly but cheer
fully : "No. my child, you are not alone; for
As the trials of life thicken, and the dreams
of our daj’s fade, one by one in the deep vis
ta of disappointed hope the heart grows wea
ry of the struggle, and wc begin to realize
our insignificance. Those who have climbed
lo the pinnacle of fame, or revel in luxury
and wealth, go to the grave at last with the
poor mend cant wh < be :s by the wayside,
and like him are soon forgotten. Genera
tion after generation, says an eloquent wri
ter. have felt as we have feel, and their tel
es
lows were as active in life as ours are now.
They passed ; way as a vapor, while nature
wore the same aspect of beauty as when the
The Brooklyn JCaf/ie, in a leading article
published in its issue of the 1st instant, de-
srribrs what it calls the “specimen bricks”
of South£uroliua radicalism. One of these
ia Land Commissioner and Senator C. P.
Leslie, who,^t js well known, as an ex-demo
crat and an ex-Xew York General Assembly-
man. In the well-being of Mr. Leslie the
Eagle has a great interest and it accordingly
casts some new light upon the early .career
of the distinguished politician. This is w hat
tho Eagle, says :
“Senator Leslie is described as an ex-
Xew York Democrat, ami an ex-demoeratic
legislator from Brooklyn, lienee we feel a
local interest in Leslie’s well-being. This
notorious scamp is now a Republican Senator
of the State of South Carolina, and State
Land Commissioner as well. Leslie was
chosen during flie excitement of the war to
represent one of the Brooklyn Assembly Dis
tricts. A more impudent blatherskite never
imposed on any constituency. He came out
in his true colors at Albany, all0 passed out
of sight with the close of his term. Ho
turned up. however, in the police courts ol
speech came forth. Stimulants were poured
down the throat of the vevived criminal, and
in less than one hour after he had been
placed in the surgery, Kriel sat up and ask
ed them, “What have you d r> ne ? Am 1
alive?” The students then disguised and
sent him away to a place of safety.
A True Marriage.
I believe there are few thoughtful meu
who have not come to regard as one of the
least explicable among the great riddles of
the earthly economy the rarity of well-assort
ed marriages. It might be so different, one
oannot help thinking. Tho adaptations for
harmony so wonderful. The elements of hap
piness so manifold and so rich ’ Y'ct how
often, how miserably sometimes, it all mis
carries. The waters of Paradise turned to
fountains of bitterness ; the gifts of Heaven
perverted to curses on earth’. I do not mean
that there arc few unions yielding reasonable
comfort, friendly relations, a life free from
open quarrel or secret hcart-buruing; but I
speak of every marriage without a jar—a
mating alike of the material with its intangi
ble affinities and the wondrous magnetisms,
and of the immate ’d principle within, that
survives tho death change. I speak of a
heart home pervaded by harmony not only
unbroken but immutable as that of the
spheres ; felt to be so by those whom it bless
es, ealms, satisfies; asocial state to which,
when man and woman attain, there remains
nothing iu the way of earthly need or acqui
sition, save daily bread, to be coveted or
prayed for. Some think that iu this trial
phase of our existence no such state of har
mony and happiness is to be found. Among
tho tew who do find it, none of these skep
tics will have "place. There is no entrance
into that temple except for those who believe.
Couliln’t Find a Verdict.
A Moleuml.v JRcatttiful Sene.
The Ilartf rd Commercial Times has the
following:
Mr. William B. Smith, of this city, last
week lost the third of his family of children.
A memorial service was held at Mr. Smith’s
house. In the front parlor lay the form of
the little one (a girl) last taken away, not in
a Coffin or .-lirouded in the habiliment of death
but resting upon a bank ef moss and sweet
flowers, so beautifully arranged that it ap
peared as if the child, tired of play, and laid
dawn to sleep amid the mass of roses, eamc-
lias carnations, and other fragment flowers,
with which she was surrounded and which
fell from her hands and lap. All that told
of death was removed. Tho white shroud
was cast aside, and in its place a light blue
silk robe was used. Delicate colored flowers
were intermingled with these of pure white,
exhaling a sweet perfume. Many tearful
eyes were turned toward the inanimate little
form, as the sweetly solemn hymn,
“Asleep, inJcsas, blQgsed sleop.”
whs wafted softly into the room ff m
an unseen choir as if almost expecting that
the sound would hrcr.k the mortal slumber
ol toe little one, and that she would once more
open her earthly eyes upon the heart broken
mother.
i^iroaatu and Children*
JMi pcfmdmcnt.
Tlie aheye lUparimcnt^ill beprom;ilv at!l§S_
leeileil to, anil all work in tins Hue exccutial on
the most satisfactory terms. Wc will farflisji .j;
short notice _ '
J.A H' ULA.VKS,
J/AXJ> lUUX,
POSTERS, fa
CIRCULARS,
nusixess CAiihs;'
WEDDIXG CAKES,
rill he a ns,
VAiiritl.ETS,
LABELS,
All Job Work will be (’amt on delivery.
Remarkable presence of mind was t hown by
a man employed in an Indiana saw-mill, who ,
when his coat-tail was caught in a revolving !
shaft, clasped his arms about a post and allow- j
ed liis outer garment to be skinned off his j
back.
An urchin being rebuked for wearing out
his stockings at the toes, replied that it
couldn’t be helped—’toes wiggled aud theels
did’nt.’
A white pine miner who came east on
palace car, aud slept witl^his boots on , says
the beds are ‘as soft as down on a maiden’s
lips.’
To undertake to reason a girl out of love
is as absurd as would be the attempt to extiu-
gush Vesuvius with a glass of water.
A youg lady, examining her class at Sab
bath school, asked: AY hat is the pomp aud !
Validity of the world?’ A little girl, looking'
HEALTH! BEAUTY!!
Strouit, Pore and Rich Blood—in
crease of Flesh and Wctefct—Clear
Skin and Bcantiful Complexion^
SECURED to ALL. I*
RADWAY’S
#
a Sarsaparillian liesolvea^
„ , ! HAS MAPK THE MOST ASTOXfOJTKF<*
SO QUICK, SO RAPIi) AKK THE C'H A V(i E*.
THE UOI)Y UNDEHGOES UNI>KU TU KINi r U-
KNOK OF THIS TJIULY WO-NDKKFUL ilLI>I^
CINE THAT
Every Day an Increase In FfcsJi snd Weight
>• Seen and Felt.
Bcrofnln, Co»«nmpti<m, SyphilN.unriire'l
an<l Imilly treated Venereal, la It* aiany
flWms, Olandtilar t'lcrr* in tiio ^
Throat, Mouth, Tumors, Node* In the
At a recent session of one of the courts
of South Carolina, an entire negro jury
empannclled. A case was brought before
them, the witnesses examined, and the at
torneys made their respective -^lyteiits
The judge, after laying
recapitulating the tostinionY.TpWSMIfe papers
into the hands of the forcmalt,' *i'- tftMuir in
telligent looking darkey, with irirlruot ,ns
as soon as they found a verdict to Lnn,
in without fai..
Thirty minutes or more elapsed, L *
Parents Kti.t. know how much they lose by
refusing companionship to their children.
Ot all a fleet ions, one of tlie most enduring
and grateful i that of the child, who hav
ing arrived at maturity, turns fondly back to
the authors of his existence and happiness
and strives to repay them for their love and
care, by blessing and honors, however, are
only given to those who have secured the
the confidence of their children in early life
Naturally every little child comes to his pa
rents, anxious to share with them his joys
and sorrows, his hopes aud fears. If he is
met with sympathy and consideration, his love
rvcdly bestowed; but if
Wrelcssly slighted
0 disappointment,
other and lets
mptktias. Every
sheit welfare, or
tijp.de
The
New York a few months later, as part own- j judfi 0 inquired:
ilio jury iLiurned, headed by the ibrenau.
and stood before the jiirfoo
As tho foreman appeared to hesitate, the
er ofa house of ill-fane, and having escaped
the penitentiary, wc next hear of hiw as Re-
publican Senator of South Carolina, and
Creator ommiodcd her to be. And so shall j Laud Commissioner of that most unfortunate
it be when wc arc gone. The heavens will j State. In great upheavals ol society, its rc-
be ns bright over our grave as they are now I presetitative meu rise to the surface. The
around our path; the world will have the statesmanship displayed in the policy of re
same attraction for offispirugs yet unborn i construction blossoms into
that she has now fur our children.
Descent «!'s» Itnlloouist.
The quiet neighborhood in the vicinity of
^'r. C. F. Lesesue was thrown in some ex
citement on the 10th iietmt by the unex
pected descent of Prof. S. A. King, and his
balloon in their midst, from Augusta, Ga
The Pi ofessor found considerable difficulty
in effecting a landin ', and shouted to some
freedmen near by for ass'stance in extracting
his balloon from the branch af a tree upon
its fullest aud
rarest perfection in Senator Leslie, the cx-
pimpand panderer of New York.”
Now, we have no reason to doubt the
j truth of this statement, and wo ask, is this a
: fit person to be entrusted with the spending
of hall'a million ot Land Commission funds?
Nav more, is there an honest colored man '
Barnwell County who is not disgustc:*. spr! Line dar.
ashamed that he should be inis reprt'c:..ed
in the Senate of the State by C. I’- Leslie ?
CharUemn Xi irx. ‘
the Bible says, ‘when my father and my j whic, ‘ il “"‘o 1 ' 1 - The aforesaid freedmen
J!<‘iimrkablc Fuse of Hosuseita.
lion.
mother forsake me, then the Lord will take
me up,' and Alien was 1 >i h father aud moth
er to you; besides, 1 am going to take you
thinking the dar of jiidgmuct had arrived, !
tooktolleir heels and scampered < fl'. lea-|
ving the Profes.'or to make his descent as
up, too; you shall sleep under my blanket* to- ! !,tst ,12 , which was accomplished with
joeslderoble velocity, the last fifty feet bruis-
ng this veteran mronaut i o little.
The paint of landing was on the farm of
G. B. Gan!
id tiie Prole:
so- state
to I
he had
at four
night.” There was net a dry eye in the
group; and when months afterwards the
battalion gathered on a quiet. Sabbath eve
ning on the banks of the Appomattox to
witness a baptism, and C. at the water’s
edge, tenderly handed this child to the offi
ciating minister, and receiving him again
when the ceremony was over, threw a blank. ,
et over about the little shivering form, ear- 1 *•'-
ried him into the bushes, changed his cloth- durl "." t,le »'“'»• 0, ' lld n«t be seen,
iug. aud then re appeared, carrying the bun-j save 1, - v reflect-io" upon tho water below,
die of wet clotbea, and he and the child ' ^'ch fact constitutes a strong physical ]die-
The startling announcement is made by a
Louisville (Ky.) paper, of the resuscitation
of the murderer Kriel, who was supposed to
have suffered death by the gallows. It is
said that his bearing on the scaffold was so
unnaturally calm that those who stood nea
Mr. Foreman, haveyou found a verdict?”
“No, MaAsa*Judge, wc habu't found 'em
no how,” replied the ebony juryman.
“It’s a very plain case,” said the judge.
“Can't help it. massa, couldn’t see it,” re
plied ebony again.
“On what grounds?” inquired the judge.
“We didn’t look into the grounds, Massa
Judge,” replied the foreman, “do ossifer
did not take us out into the grounds, but be
took us into a room and locked us in. and
tole u.s When wc found do verdict he would
luff us out. So we began to find de verdict,
and search ebery ting dere was in dat room,
but wc’, found no vordics—no nuffiu ob d«
which wi
on distance, o
. »3
death its * ca
lov*
arse
Trn,‘
internees, and not even
sunder.
up in her face, very innocently said
flowers in your bonnet.’
i
A d ctor’s wife once attempted to move
her husband by tears. ‘Ann,’ said he, ‘tears
are useless. 1 have analyzed them. They
contain a little phosphate of lime, some chlo
rate of sodium, and that’s ail,
A little salt thrown into the (ire will, it is
said extinguish a burning chimney.
A poultice of onions applied morning noon !
aud night, fur three ov four days will cure a
felon.
Shrewd Bov.—“Harry you ought not to
throw away nice bread like that; you may
want it some day.”
“Well mother, should I stand any better
chance of getting it then if 1 should eat it
now?”
As the snn in all its splendor was pci pin ;
over the eastern hill, a newly-married man
exclaimed: ‘The glory of the world is rising."
His wife, who happened to be getting up at
the moment, taking the compliment, to her
sells simpered: ‘What would you think my
dear, if I had my silk gown on?”
Put an Bnglishman into the garden of
Eden and he would find fault with the whole
‘blasted concern.’ Pnt a Yankee in, and ho
would see where he could alter it to advan
tage. Put an Irishman in, aud ho would
want to boss the thing. Put a Dutchman
in. and he would proceed at once plant it.
\ New E ngland editor wrote a leading
article on onv Jn tHo
he paid, ‘Girls of seventeen or eighteen arc
canes. Kriipllous. Fever Sore*. Srnl«l llentl.
Worm, Suit Hltruat, Krynlpi'l.is.
Acue | IilMt.lt Spots, Wormi in the Firsli,
Tumors. Cancers in the Won«1>, an«t all
wenkenlfijr and painful dlschnr^es,
Sweats, loss of Sperm and nil wawfe* of
tlie life principle, arc within tlie ritrntive
vniiKe of Had way’s Sarsaparillian Itesol*
vcxit, and a few days use will prove to any
person ustuff It for either of these form*
^lisvuse. Its potent power to cure them.
JYot only does Hie Sarsaparillian evolvent
excel nil known remedial agents, in the • mo of (Uironi--,
Scrofulous Constitutional, Skin ami Syphil »* '■ » •<» ut
it is tho only poait.re remedy for Kidney, lliaddcr
Arlnary, and Wouih diseases, t.rnvrl. t>!a-
helcs Dropsy, Stoppage, of Water, lurou-
tine nee of Urine, Hi i K ht's disease. Alhaiu-
Inuria, and in nil enses where there ar^
1 , * c ‘f dust deposits, or the wnter Is thick,
cloud;, mixed with suh.tnoces like • lie
White ofauegs, or ihrciWs like while silk,
or there I* a morhld dark, bilious appear
ance, and white hone dust deposits, and
where there Is a pricking, bnrnitijr sensa-
tion when passing water, and pain fu the
Small of tlie Hack, ami aloui; the hums. In
all these conditions Itad^vny’* Horsaparll^
Ilan ttesolvent nidr«| by «he app|ic«it»on of
•Heady Kellcf to the Spine nn.i
aiaiall of the Hack, and the ilowcls reirntM —
leil will, one or Iwoul Knilnair', II.uniat.
Injf I ills per day, will soon make a c-.i».-
I dcte cure. In a few days, the patient x\iil
re enabled to hold aud dtarliarue his water
naturally w ithout pain, ami the Urktte *vlll
he restorod to its natural dear, aud amber
or sherry color.
THU WASTES OP THE D^DY
are uim licJ w ith n w, healthy, and vigorous Wood,
funwsn,.s *ound structure. lloneo nil sufli-rimr
*«*'**? til her MALI* ur FKM
of the v\ omh. Uterus, or other org-ms, win. the.-
rh.c-.L bpeim. or Erupt:vo 4i-« U ir*<cs, of every ku
f;o u violence of “ Solf-uLuso,” from toe (ieniitti <J,
ar Venereal d.isoU vrgc^. qr ulcers, or screw. ihta.fJ
.eprruhrs process of h’ADW-VY^ SauJTL.
1.1 Art, ‘U'e arresied, «n.l tho ruptured orpins i»c,
THE TRUK THEORY OF OURP.
ItADWAY’S SAI-MAPAKILUAN MK’v.f
supp les the system, through th. MooiL urin
stiu ttirr-muking coastilut nU with Tia.-ue n.vi.iji'
nrikins, Heat or Calori aud F.it m tki ; , I (
All ol its Constituents are nourishinri, p ■ ifvi\
tlrcnythniinj. It Rtpairt. Hea t, llrso’r ^
out of //*« t!ie products of l>eei.v ai £3£fi!
COVKUAimo.Y, WHITE SWKLLINsTHBk££.’«
5YI JIILIS, OAXCElta, TUMORS Ac. 2BP9BI
S tofuiwua diathesis, and as sut h, arc vv’
mage of the SAUSAl’AKILLIAN i:K^.
1. Thi? Scrofula, by wj u iu
tho re n : of deposits ’
by Chr-'.nii: ii rtamatioi ' u
wlion tli L ood it pen).
holding iu somtiou its
presence of sornt) viru* *.
eury. Calomel, Corrosive^ 1 *
sive Chloride of Mercury or f, ‘ <r
cine* and which inter luiV . . 4 .
^r-r.-r'lla . . NO r Atta jU^VilP?:^
Uood Nndire at Koine.
No of <■•■-!vacfo.r is more valuable in a
wife than the possession of a sweet temper.
Home can never be made happy without it.
It is like the flowers that spring up in our
path-way, reviving cml cheering us. Let
a man go home at n'ght wearied aud worn
out by the toils of thi Jay, and how soothing
is a word dictated by a sweet disposition! It
1'KOil mens X.VTI
-• iii.it unicR-i tho repairs or ,
th.nn the wiLiti i-, th.;t decomjmtiUi
perveue, and the puverti of iife bo,
3. i’hr ‘ tho dyiiut Imdy ciiinoi
. trcalm .rit of itK“UcKition th it exhin
he was rather shocked to discover that an !? tl1 " eiu.>a, i:„ only m.
I tne rf a/ force* are preserved, and
, , cl tho body dupcii Is.
fond of beaus.’ VY henthe paper was issued,
icked to discover that an
uufbrtuuate typographical error had made
I y
him s;iy, ‘Girls of seventeen or eighteen are ! olv,ut?ai n
fond of beans.’ ' - » .. .i I »<> in ...Sdicine, th.t tti. n«
« ... .i i 10 exm :n . teaicme, mat tau n
iV bllliplc tliltll, b\ the WilV. I Chemical science, vliich baa been bj
, -..v- . . - « , . | fvet system of cure is exhibited us f<„ , „
A Wisconsin youth, sued for brcnch of 1. Its jrrotC , .*»* »D aiisDu'hitinir 1 * ?food in if* firrl
- . j ftage of distil cition iu the proccM of c/*rstion, tu
promise, otiered to compromise by marrying j •n<i chyle wiih the noumhinj? elements of Mood,
, . , i . , , . . i • ,. ® ! lepepatina from thefe liquids rmuse »ud inert q.-il-
tue girl, II the court would protect hull from I ikes befom they are taken up by the Uctecals and ar«
. I loEmed into blood. Here we see that by Us wc& V-iTul
these Other Jfirls who had tlie same teuder I power it charges the. system with tho very essence oi
, . i prinaplc that forms the’viial powers of the tiody, nud its
Claims \ipOU him. J chemical action on the blood in its primitive and coin*
: plete condition, serarate* every atom of refuse material or
A aiI element, out of which the virus of disease is formed.
\ t’llti lulCltin estimates '• 'C13f man ltd j 2. That, tlie blood thus prepared, and supplied with
couple may calculate upon 4,1 U4 o04descen-
A Good Olio,
G smithine faiiing ou liis heart,
py and care o! life are forgotten. A s. eet
t •mper h a .'-entliitig influence over the mind
of the whole family. When it is found the
wife and the mother, you eb-erve kindness
and I >ve prudmninatingovof the natural feel
ings of’u bad heart. Emiles, kind words and
looks characterize the children, and peace
and love have their dwelling there. Study
then, to acquire and retain a sweet temper.
It is more valu dil. than gold. It captivates
more th:in beauty, and to tho close of life re
tain all its fresbiieso and power.
11c is Lap- ‘ dants in about five hundred years.
him thought the man did not realize that ! but pleaded in palliation that it was a pro
In an article upon the probable scarcity of
ire during the next summer, the Hartford
Cost tells the following story :
“A good many years ago, when ice in sum
mer was a rarity in cities and an unheard of
thing in the country, a good deacon of a ru- | Too Much Elr.vKit.—Canada, it is said,
nil church wits charged with having got do- j ;,s f.irly groaning under its load of silver!
cidedly fuddled one 4th of July, in New , 'p 00 n ,„ q, i l;ir ,i
York. lie was arraigned for his misconduct her farmers, up.,a he
With tears in his eyes ho confessed his fault. ; unt.
The Prov donee Pris. says that a gentle.
.nan of that city took his five-year oid son to
church for the first tinea few weeks ago.
When tlie clergyman said, “Let u» pray,”
the precocious youth, in a rich high-keved through it. ction anj rawer over th* s«crctiui»*, u,»
. , .„ . ‘ ! IZvor secrete* itj nr j roper allotment ot bi c;
voice, electrified the congregation with the the Slli n »wcat; the Kidn.ye ureal Mia the Lunua
. , , . au-bon; eo That ihi, wonaerfut medicine not only ctub-
exclilination, “Let her rip. uhnehe iltti in the sink iKely, hut promnYM the sjatem
* in health.
The Japanese who have settled in E! J>o- fw which di»oaac i*
| these nourishiu* propoitie/ becomes otronsr” ri« h un i
healthy, uuti holds in solution its propt-x* constituents,
tbnvuprh tbe Sarsaparillian ttesolvent, Rmi
r-puiia tho wnst» s of tho J*ody with »«jund and healthy
structures. Such is the. wonderful power the Sursa-
parllUais lieeolvent exert* on tho blood and
juicne of the systciD, that no virulent humor* or poi-
«oU*» will cxb.t by which deposits pjc made.
3. The rapid.ty wbi(h tlie SaraaparJlIlaii enters
the circulation, and coiumunicate* its curative powers
thron.Trh the blood. Sweat. Urine, and other duiJs, so-
cures the constituent secretion* of each respootive orjfiin,
estahlis’iin^ funetioual harmony tiirouffhout tho sjwtem ;
W a. , tSe r - “ -
* *
i:
death was so near, and clung to lite with a
that held
Mr. (.’. F. Lesesue that
departure from Augusta ... .
I same evening, thu. aecompdshaig the trip ! ll,e tra P s s vered, and the body fell, it
taken hia j
. i i .1 terrible teuacitv. When the roi>e
i clock the i J 1
I ia four h.-ar*. The highest altitude readied
the balloon on this voyagu was two miles.
walked away hand in hand to camp—then i no,,,c,lon ^ ur the curious to
lltv
was a subject of remark that the dosed hands
and position of the legs and feet remained
entirely unchanged, showing a tremendous
exercise of will and control of nerve. The
neck was not broken, neither was the rope
drawn so closidv around his neck that its
of many per cent
it ijecUiS is aliout t
come in the shape of a
mark could be distinguished, nor was the
e. It was
there wore more tears, manly, nurif) ing eoisequently reported .imong the frcediiu u
tears, and i heard the sergeant say, -J ulth ! j ,, '« l ll " balloon contained the spirits of the ! *»' « r ar,ic! ‘h a " d il ’«»• b y
and the captain has fulfilled his pledge to
that boy.” My friends, le ur the plea ot the
orphans . “I am alone iu the world.” How i lu “Y 0UI l,,e t" 11 .- expcetcl I n ty a-iv- up n
j luientcd Abraham the first, ami Thud Etc- ' P 0,S0 " S witnessed the exection. that the
I veas. with surveyor's in-iriimentsand muics i C3r,,tiJ ; "’'eries of the neck pulsated after
I to !ay out the long expected forty
wh eh
will you answer it? 'What will you da with
it? Will you pass my noble Georgian s ' 000 buodre
s.na rn'iai-
expeetei
were to work
faty-first trip
i ‘us is the
IV.cssor
pledge “to take him up i
jt as he kept it ?
ill you keep
An lioiic: I .ilan.
King has made, and he is indeed a veteran
seruiaut.—Cl uendon Err-:.
I*<»«r Mexico!
i AM doubt of her late is removed.
fie i
the surgeons declared life extinct. After
hanging sume minutes. Kriel’s Indy was put
in tin eofiin and rapi lly driven away to the
cemetury vault. A surgeon of ski 1, am! a
thorough believer in the theory of resuscita
tion through the galvanic process, is said to
have been driven in a wagon, containing a
m i:t"C.‘8 and blankets, to th • eon ctery ; short
ly thereafter the vehicle returned with the
body of Kriel, which was conveyed to the
The Quitman Ha mar f ys: “In the year | unfortunate country is doomed to another j
1857, a citizen of Brooks t’.unty purchased j lo,.^. civi j ;lll j evon t | 10 fyi on j 8 0 f j
a negro, and gave his note for #1000 a* the j uar(I ., a , n it that the catastrophe connot bo ! i,n " th ‘‘ r fkiillui a,,J l “ arncd P 1 ^'
Mici.tii, v. lie};* some ten or twelve excited and
7 iu open ! . . .
uusound, the purchaser, at var.ous periods j iueur|cc . io|1 aIlJ thu centni l ^vcrnimnit is ■ •" i . , U tt ° <> ‘ :inxu,ui! y waiting
ante riot to and since the var. made pay-: r ,„ w . 1 . r | 1 , ss . \ cry gloomy forcb-alings of the 1'' i0 " r . , ’ !Va ‘,‘ ,!tr; "'-- 0 I"”‘.V- The fosly
ueed ia a recumbent position on the
I ” “ ’" J '"“"i"* table, the galvanic battery applied, and in
i less ihan fitteen minutes tlie warm blood
ligious hot day, and the lemons and ice in
the punch did look so cool and inviting that
he could not resist the temptation, and he
supposed he did actually drink to iutoxici- j fractional currencv a rcmc.lv worst
tion. A low-browed brother on a back ..cat, | the disease. California groans under it
listened attentively but incredulously, to the • ( ,f g.M. while m st of the Northern :
defence, and atits conclu-ion arose. “I have
no objection,” said he, “to a man's getting
drunk, if he owns it up and is sorry for it.
That's a thing a man's liable to, and p'laps
sometimes he can’t help it; but when the
deacon conics in here and undertakes to ex
cuse himself seeing any such ways as that—
talking about seeing ice in July—1 go for
jeikiu’ him out for lyin.’”
rado county, California, are setting out tea
plants, and are going largely Into the culture.
A Lady in Kansas, just from the East, the
other day noticed an animal from the ear
window, and inquired of the peanut hoy if
. it was a buffalo. The boy answered i?i a
is bringing ruin upon • t ving’ing, ‘ Them’s a mu’e ”
lahoiers. Silver is at : Naomi, the daughter of Enoch, was not
Tl •’ shop keep r who married onfii -he was five hundred aod eight
takes in (Iuty or fifty dollars a day cannot | 3'0ars old. Don’t dispute, old gals—some,
deposit in hank without submitting to a shave | hope yet I
t ovf is prayt d Ut. and
shape
that
load
tales
groan under their load of depreciated cur-
r ucy. The South groans li r both, neither
gold, no silver, n r currency, being in .suffi
cient quantities to p ir •h;i*c her produce as
in the better du\s ilo
•put.
oonsidoration. Although the u tgro proved j long averte<1 five States are now in
1 government is i r
, - , , ■ , the arrival of the stranue
ry gloomy lorcbodings ot the i
incuts on his note, aud on last \i ednesday ■ future fill the columns of the Very Cruz pa- 1
yipited t^uitinan jiaid over $ 0 > to the holder , j, er8 The next steamer at Havana may
of htso*. ligation, and carried it oft in triumph bring the news of the downfall of the I’resi- 1 . ,
We are of opinion it can be referred to as { j ent j uarfz and Hie reign of anarchy all if 0 '?'" ’V .'’.““T * r ‘’ u - U tlu; c '‘' 1,ed
an of extraordinary act of honesty in these ! over t j, e i am i. In exchanging Maximilian 1 ’ V ' “ < ■>-' e.vs open. )ue ot
days
tion.”
(per 1 de iioralizt toiu and repudia-
for Juarez the Mexicans got back tbeir re
eves open,
j the appalled students asked Krhd if he was
nsible; thu ryes answered expressively,
public, but uoi peace or good g ver: tgeut [ and the lips opened ineffectually, for no
North Caroi.ina Ahead.—There is a
man living in the mountains of North Caro
lina. not more than forty miles from Green
ville, South Carolina, says theTarboro f aro-
tinian, who has reached the extraordinary
age ot l 42 years. At the time of Braddock’s |
defeat, he was twenty yean
wife and three children
Greenville states that thi
down to us from a former
always been iu moderate circumstances; lived
upon a plain, coarse, vegetable diet; thar he
has never drank any liquid but spring water,
and bids fair to live many years longer. He
enjoys perfect health possesses all of manhoods
attributes, and wants to marry. He has sur
vived seven wives, aud, having lost his last
one about sixty years ago. he now begins p;
feel quite lonely.
The great natu’.'al curiusty known as Sun
ken Lake i> sit anted in the Cascade Moun
tains, about 75 mile-northeast of Jackson
ville Oregon. The walls arc 20110 fei • lifoG I
and aim
to
d
A young wife remonstrated with her bus-
ban 1. dissipated spendthrift, on his conduct.
“My l ive,” said lie, T am only like the
i I’roJigal Son—I shall reform by and bv,”
“And 1 will be like thd j'rodig.ul Eon.
j too,’’ she rcpliid; “for I will arise and go to
my father.”
And act rji lg!y off she went.
(. ut; no v 1 at tiini..—Don Piatt says:
I • ! was once iu 1 >ve with a fat girl; she
1 fleshy; she wa
tme lov* came to grief
her in the dim twiliuht one evening.
J, as well us the o:ily sensible theory of core,
we claim tlmt the ningo of cure of the SurMnpnrll-
liait llekolreiit I-: uialim tcd, and that overy Uia\r-e
that i* of a Cbroni’.Set ot'ulotn o/ Organic 1)> itucsi^ is.
properly within its special rnn^o.
THE GREAT SECllKT OF CURE ^ ,
in this M« U' inc cunji'rts iu *!•».- selection of in?rc*licr
ooutiininif our«tivs and ncuishin^ d;'eiqrtlo; th»t
ply the Woid tin l general uysteui with such c itEUtucnL'w d
which, in n condition of disease and depniM:>, i% ; ' -
ciont of, too ther with the Cs»inl»iiu»tien •* ^
, ingrelicnUs that fonu the SAU^Ai'AKlI.LlAN***^'
: VENT.
] If the constituent of Oxygen was exhausted t
■ xtinospheric air, life would bcce'mo extinct. ScJ/jT
the blood hoc jtnes exhausted of il* vital constituea-^^
deposit* it* tubercles end diseased hum *ra iu th<; ^
| and tho elements of decay md decomposition super
Had way's Sarsaparillian Resolvent
the blood and general system what Oxtokj* is tq
atmospheric nir; it supplies the lifo principle,
enables the blood to hold in solution uii iu natural oou*},
stitucuts.
'
* ’
y.
^ <
fi H
snr^f
DAILY CHANGES
take place, for as tho SursupariRian increases the s
%nd purity of tlie biooJ, ell dftiK>“itN are diminish
where there aro tubui-cles fmiiicd »i tho.Juimv
further deposits are a; iv»tel. nnd those thafr'ire e^tab- ,1
lished or forming didodged, oxpeiled, exhausted, or thaVv^
pottion of the diseased lung ci.-uti ised, and the consump-r^* .* oj
five, scrofulous subject revive* good, if' ttot sound, - * ___
health. . *
„ , „ r.LIND LADY CURED. ^
Gravel, Pvspep ia, Sore Lcgi, ilheding from th* ‘ . •“' v ^ ;■
Lungs, Cured. i “ • ' v
.. Mr. Gk-hok Mortimxk, a commercial .; tvelier, in''* Jt‘'-‘.dtiJ
\ci} Canada West, wmcN mi, under date of April 17, ^
eiiormc u*. but the oourso of “TIiAausap.mui.i i v v ru s.it.vkvt i, r* .-r*. k
I wa, 6ft;ing with ' % '.fc
I iv.o JiLINli, but, by the US* i *f till* S A IU? A P A UIL LI A N l -
j »> .is HOLVKVr, can now see to rc
v-iitiii C.ita'; I a <1 many goft things; I cm-I “I.* 1 ”wi>* t»
| well seuoped out by the hands of genii.’
I Chri6tiani, j cou qw }kd to flee fion tho I nAm ^ y „ , VM . PAU1 nuAX bksox.
, maiiatnus o( tho great academies of the phi- ' ii. u'k, «« uut'j** ff.Ulrlw*
A viTinunt *Uliter recently gave ttp a case ! U'sophen), the hulls of legislators, the throngs ‘.ZSuS.'xr* v.a.'
as hopeles.-, and while on his way homo he | of busy men, we should find her last retreat
broke his leu. while, to illustrate more fully ! ' v;t h woman, at the fireside. Her last audi- I
the uncertainty of human predictions, the j dice would he the children gnthering around '
man whom h had doomed to death, re- I tho mother,8 kuce; the last sacrifice, the secret
covered iu time to make him a pair of crutch- j prayer, efciping in silence from lips, and !
I heard, perhaps, ouly at the throne of God '