Lancaster intelligencer. (Lancaster [Pa.]) 1847-1922, October 21, 1868, Image 1

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PTT
Eleven o'clock—at least so said the
golden tide of sunshine, creeping over
the velvety turf of the village
,green,
and losing itself In the murmurous fell
age of the big maple trees Land so said
the little clock in Judge Cornell's law
office on the main street, sPeaking in a
sharp, melodious chline.
Harry Grover glanced quietly up at
the uncomprisiug little dial, as he en
tered the domain of "Coke upon Lyttle
ton."
"I'm late this morning," hemuttered
hanging up his hat behind the door;
"but, as good luck will have it, the
Judge has not made his,appearanceyet,"
He was a straight, handsome young
fellow, with curly brown hair, limpid
hazel eyes, and a healthy flush on his
sun-browned cheeks—one you could
trust, a l'outrance, as you looked into
his frank, honest face. There was 4a
many such—more's the pity!
" Whew—whew—whew!" whistled
Mr. Harry Grover, turning over his pile
of legal documents in a very unme
thodical sort of way. "Law and love
were never meant to go together;
of
that • I am certain. Pretty Ariel
Browne's blue eyes are roguish
ly out at me' from every bit of parch
men t or printed blank I touch. How love
ly she was last night—and who would
ever suppose that the old cat with the
false curls and grinning porcelain teeth
could ho her aunt? Rich, too, they say;
a good match for some desperate for
tune•hunter, who is willing to swallow
tire bitter old pill for the sake of the
gold coating. Let me see—talking
about old Experience Browne, I believe
I have a business letter to write to her
about that piece of land by the school
house corners that she wants me to buy.
Not I! When I purchase land for a
building spot, it won't be a desolate
pust.rre, where rocks and mullein stalks
light together to see which shall possess
the staunch soil. The old lady must
take me for a very unsophisticated
character Indeed. I wonder now if
blue-erd Ariel will ever be a wrinkled
(intern ran, clutching after bargains?
Pooh I, I should as soon think of a,
white plumed little dove being trans
formed into a greedy vulture?"
Ile leaned back in Ilia chair, with both
. hands clasped on the top of his curly
head, and looked out abstractedly into
the slushy village street, hunonlng an
old tune under his breath—a tune whose
burden was "Love, still love."
Plainly, Mr. Harry Grover was very
little disposed for work that morning.
And when, at twelve o'clock, Judge
Cornell came in, there was but a hope
less chaos of papers on the table to re
present iris younger partner's matinal
labors."
" Why, Grover, you haven't accom
plished a thing this morning," said the
old judge, glancing keenly around
through his antique silver-bound spec
tacles, " I am afraid that the pretty
girls at Squire Deckthoru's party last
night were too much fur your unni,,tal
equilibrium."
" Well, you see, sir, I've been rather
sorting the papers over," said Harry, a
little sheepishly, " and I've written two
letters this morning."
" Two letters I''
"Yes, sir."
" May I ask to whom ?"
"Oue to old Miss Experience Browne,
about the lot she wanted to sell me—a
regular clipper, giving tire old hag a
piece of my mind—and the other—"
"The other—"
"Ahem—that wasn't exactly a busi
ness letter. Now, judge, suppose you
and I look over these ejectment papers
together !"
The judge smiled slyly ; he had an
idea as to what the other letter contain
ed. Every one in town knew how hope
lessly Mr. Harry Grover was iu love with
pretty Ariel Browne. Judge Cornell
had been young himself notmany years
ago.
" It's just as well for the lad to marry
and settle down," thought the old gen
tleman, "and Ariel will certainly make
as sweet a little wife as humau mortal
could wish for."
Harry needn't have been en mysteri
ous, sealing and directing his two letters
' at the tall desk behind the office door.
Judge Cornell knew just as well what
was In them as if he had read every
word with his own eyes. But young
people have a mistaken idea that old
peo le don't know auythiug.
Miss Ariel Browne sat in her room,
busy with a complicated piece of bright
colored web-work that ladies call
"crotchet," when Bridget tapped softly
at the panels of the door.
" Please, Miss Ariel, a letter."
"A letter! and for me! Dear me,
Bridget, who can it be from?"
" Faix, then, it's meself doesn't know,
but Lawyer (Rover's office boy brought
it, and an impudent young spalpeeu it
it, for—"
But here Bridget became conscious
that her young mistress was paying no
attention to her, and withdrew into her
departmentof the kitchen, there to nurse
her griefs lu solitude.
Ariel's cheek had turned as pink as
the inside of a wild rosebud, as sire read
the superscription of the letter, and her
heart beat perhaps a pulse or two faster
than was its wont, but sire brokeopen
the missive with a resolute hand, and
read :
" MY DEAR Mass I3nowNE:[" Rather
cold beginning !" she pouted.] I must
' beg to decline all further negotiations
with you. As you cannot for a moment
seriously suppose I care to possess any
thing so utterly worn down and good
for nothing, it is useless to waste either
of our time in any more preliminaries.
"I will call this afternoon and return
to you the papers you so unnecessarily
took the trouble to send me.
" Yours, very truly,
" H. GauvErt."
Ariel threw down the note, and burst
into tears.
"'The cold hearted, presumptuous
villain !" she sobbed. " Papers, indeed !
I suppose he means the note I wrote
him about the picnic. Oh I how foolish
I have been, how absurd, and I am
rightly punished for my folly!"
But still Ariel wept on; when a girl
of eighteen has built up a glittering cas
tle in the air, whose foundation is in
her own heart, she cannot see 'Washed
ruthlessly into ruins without a few
natural tears.
Mean while, Miss Experience Browne,
retat fifty well-ripened autumns, was
reading no little astonishment, the let
ter which Bridget's enemy; the post
boy, had brought for her.
U—pon my word!" exclaimed Miss
Experience, slowly and emphatically.
"The impertinent young fortune-hunt
ing, humbug! Does he suppose I am a
born fool to swallow such ape& of sou
timental flattery as this? ' Lovely
eyes—dimples!' If he'd have said
spectacles and wrinkles he'd have been
considerably nearer right. No, you
don't my fellow—no —you—don't I P.,3E
.
perience Browne hasn't lived fifty-five
years in the world .to fall Into such a
trap as this at last. He'll call this
afternoon to receive the answer that is
to decide the current of his future life,'
will he'? Well, let him call,Tll be ready
for him,' and I warrant me he won't be
in a hurry to call again."
And Miss Experience chuckled to
- herself until all the false curls quivered
as she folded the letter neatly, and put
it bank ipso its hurriedly-directed en
velope,
"I never had an offer of marriage be
fore," she • thought, viewing her
autumnal countenance in the pier
glass, and adjusting the little pull's of
ribbon in her cap-torder, "and it does
make one feel kind of queer! It's
something to tell of, anyway. 13ethuar
Jones needn't go,to tidying now that I
was an old maid because I had never.
had an offer. I just wonder what Ariel
would say—l guess I won'titell.her;
she would only lauglYat me:'!
Miss Experience drew herself u\ as
grimly us if her spinal' column were a
bar of iron that afterrioop ) when Brid-.
get announced ;
"Mr. Grolier, metal'" " ,
"Show him In' Biddy-4 am quite at
leisure to , receiv.e'him," ,
And our hero entirely inpoeettt of
the impendinKstorthrthatawaltedhitn,
walked into Miss Experience's awful
presence, with•a-bundle of title deeds
in his hand,'tied with , the official-look
ing red-tape ortisprofession.
"Good afternoon; Miss Experience."
Ain't' you !ashamed of. yourself,
Harry Grover?" ejaculated the spins
-112 tiaapYst6rd voice;'got. along
• with yourself, makin' love . to 'en' bid
Woman more n twice as `old as you be,
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OLTIME .69 . . •.. :LANCASTint ;PA...WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER, 21 1868 , , NUMBER 10
.
just because she's got a little money!
What do you take me for, hey? Don't
stand starin' there! Walk out of this
Mom; quick, or Pll throw the big dlo
tiohary at your head! No, no, no
have you got your answer plain,
enough? I wouldn't marry you if,
there warn't another man in the whol ,
toWnl"
Harry Grover was a little appalled at
this charge of horse and foot, but he
stood his, ground manfully, not even
quallirig at the big dictionary !
"Itut Miss Browne--Will you hear
me a moment? I don't want you to
marry me? What has put this strange
fancy in your head?"
"You dont want to marry me? Then
What the mischief does this lettermean,
Pd like to know?"
"May I look at it?"
Harry took the letter and glanced at
it; its contents threw a new light upon
the unaccountable state of affairs.
"Good Cupid! what a blockhead—
what an unmitigated, inexcusable, in
comparable donkey I have been ! What
could I have been thinking about?"
"Hey?" demanded the puzzled spin
ster.
"Excuee me, ma'am, but there has
been a mistake—a—"
And without stopping to complete his
fragmentary sentence, he rushed out of
the room to the Attie bay-window parlor,
where Ariel usually sat.
"Well, I never !" exclaimed Miss
Experience, as the door hanged uncere
moniously in her face.
" Ariel! Miss Browne!"
But Ariel turned haughtily from the
pleading eyes of her lover.
" Your letter is quite sufficient, sir ; I
need no further exponent of your mean
ing."
"Ariel—darling—there has been an
absurd mistake; this is the letter that
was intended for you. The other was
written to your aunt on business, and,
by some unaccountable blunder, got in
to the wrocg envelope. I have been a
fool, a blockhead, but I love you dearest,
with all my heart! Ariel, you will not
send me away!"
No—Arlei did hot send him away, for
the shy smiles and the rosy bloom were
beginning to come back to her face as
she read the real letter.
" But, Harry," she said,with a roguish
dimple at the corner of her mouth, 'you
must confess that Aunt Experience's
note had rather an unpleasant style.
" I was a careless reprobate, said
Harry, frankly, "but you see Judge
Cornell was watching me, and—"
And that was the end of all misunder
standings between Harry Grover and
Ariel Browne, thenceforth, for ever
more.
Miss Experience was rather disap
pointed In two things. She would like
to have sold the school house " corner
jot," and she would like to have said
that once, in the course of her fifty-live
years of life, she had an offer of mar-
tinge.
However," said Miss Experience,
" Ariel is very happy, and may be things
are best as they are."
The llaunted Room.
BY ALICE ROBBINS
"Shall you take the house, Herbert?
The question was asked by a gentle,
delicate-looking woman, whose anxious
eyes were fixed on the face of the man
before her with an asking, earnest gaze.
" I don't thinkl shall Dotty," was his
quick reply. " Too 'expensive, my
darling; a thousand dollars a year. You
are disappointed," he added, as her
white hand fell from his arm.
"O, so much !" was the reply, lu
low, painted tone. " I had set my heart
upon it."
`Now, ',Pm very sorry for that. Of
course it's a beautiful house, and cheap
for the size and style—almost new, too.
Why, Dotty, you're not crying about
it ?'
"0, it's no matter—don't mind me,"
she said, iu the same, low, quiet tones.
"I can't help being a little foolish about
it. I was willing to give up a great
many things, if we could get it—go
without new dresses, and the set of sil
ver you promised me. Iso wanted that
house."
"Well, it is pleasant. of course it is—
perfect little palace. But, then, rather
too fine for us, Dotty. By-and-by, when
I get a few thousands ahead, why, I
shan't mind."
"No, but we shall never see another
house so completely to my mind."
Young Rutherford threw back his
head and laughed.
"I couldn't help it, Dotty dear. If
you could see your rueful face as you
said that!"
" Of course, you laughed at me—you
always do," she retorted, a spark of
auger in her soft blue eyes. " You can
always do as you like; I must wait your
pleasure."
" Now, Doty, that's not fair," he said,
seriously. " You must see that I study
your comfort and happiness much more
than Ido my own. Why, darling, you
are the pride and glory of my life, and
we have been very happy in this pleas
ant house. We never feel pinched and
anxious here : we have money enough
to spend on our simple pleasures, and to
gratify Dol-the-less in her little fairy
cradle here. Why should we want to
change and take on care and anxiety ?"
" I don't see, Herbert, that if few hun.
dred dollars more ought to signify," re
plied the little woman, toying with her
watch-chain, her tearful eyes downcast.
"And you know I have been so usad to
a handsome home."
Herbert winced.
"The rooms are very much larger
than these, Dotty."
" And we have a great deal too much
furniture for this house. I never go
into the parlor, and see that beautiful
Steinway that uncle gave me, without
feeling mortified. It is absolutely al
most as large as the room."
" New carpets, Dotty."
"Only for the parlor; and I do think
we might have one handsome carpet.
You promised me that, you know."
" Have you kept the key of the
house?"
" Yes." She looked up quickly, her
countenance changed, the sweet blue
eyes all the brighter for the vanished
shower. "Will you go and look at it ? "
"There's no harm in that, I suppose,"
he said, with a long sigh, as he lifted
himself wearily like a tired man. Dotty
hurried for her bonnet and shawl, set
the good, plain little nurse to watch the
baby, and tripped a square off at the side
of her husband, like one walking on
air,
• Such a beautiful garden! "she said
delightedly, as they gained the place.
"To keep in order," he responded.
"O, Hebert, don't think so much o
dollars and cents. You will grow
miserly. I can save enough out of the
housekeeping to pay for it thrice over.
There ! isn't this lovely ?"
Herbert thought it was, as the two
stood together in the spacious parlor.
The four French windows led upon
the balcony. The design of the chande
lier was exquisite; the freshness and
beauty of the decorations could not fail
to please a man of relined taste.
Ah I but so dear I" he ejaculated as
they entered room after room to find
in each some new and convenient feat
ure—" I suppose I could take it," he
said " tf I saw fit to help Lawson."
I
" n what way?"
"By working nights. But when he
made me the offer, I couldn't think of
it, for I felt it would be purgatory to
spend my evenings anywhere but In
your dear company, I felt a little fear,
Joesides, as I'm not overstrong this sum
mer, that it might pull me down.
However, that may be purely selfish
reasoning. If you think it would add
to your bappinness, I will close in with
his offer at once. But I shall never be
at home till nine, perhaps later. Fare
[ well our cosy chats and pleasant read.
"B
Lug.
ut, Herbert,' nave Pet, and nine
is not so very late ; we might sit up a
little longer. Besides, I could pass the
time agreeably with books and mulct"
bhe did not see the look of sadness
that clouded his'face as she said this—
that deepened almost into anguish be
fore she glanced toward him. It hurt
him to the heart to have her acquiesce
so readily. Could.he have donee° ? No,
not for all the houses and land in the
world."
The place was taken. It cost money
to move, money for carpets, money for
sopae extra furniture; but Doty's pleas
lire was contagious. Herbert tried to
persuade himself that he had done a
good thing, and for a few weeks they
were happy. Everybodyadmired their
choice, complimented their taste, eulo
gized the grounds which Herbert had
put in fine order. But the overwork
soon told on the strength of the young
man. It was warm weather ; unfor-
Seen changes occurred; his business
went behind band a little ; he missed
the gentle stimulus of his happy biome
evenings; he grew pale and careworn
in his efforts to keep straight with l the
world,
',})sere came a time when for 'weeks
his foofnever pressed the threshold' of
•is handsome new house; when poor
Dotty, white and frightened, aat in the
darkened room and listened to his inco
herent words—always toward and of
her; words of tenderness' and beauty.
There came a time when she was borne
shrieking from that still chamber, be
cause the gentle lips had stiffened to the
semblance of marble, and the love and
light had flown out of the stiff, glazed
eyes.
There, in that beautiful parlor—all
darkened now, the strange aroma of
fading blossoms telling of the tomb ; the
chilling silence and deathly pallor that
seemed to change even the familiar fur
niture, striking upon the senses of the
most indifferent—there lay the love of
her youth, the husband of her choice;
never to smile on her again, never to
whisper the words that had made her
heart leap with joy. How little she had
dreamed of this How all her reason
ing came echoing back—cold, cruel,
heartless, it seemed. 0, why did not
her heart break and let her weary
spirit fly to meet him, to beg
him to forgive her? No, not yet;
she was doomed ever to keep the
recollection of that dim, darkened
parlor before her mental vision—that
haunted room. Never afterward conld
she think of it without. a shudder; it
was always present, always a warning
to her against the pumps and vanities
of the world. As time went on, the
memory softened, its harsh dreariness
melted away, and an angel seemed to
fill its gloom with .a softened light.
Constant communing with the dear one
she had lost led her thoughts and affec
tions up to the home he had entered.
She lived for years, trained their child
to bless womanhood, and then gave
herself up to deeds of mercy. Her heart
was in heaven, and the haunted room
had become to her like the recollection
of a bower of beauty.
The Coming Landlord.
It is a marvel tome that country land.
lords do not better arrange their houses,
with a view to keeping their f, u ests later
In these lovely autumnal days. The
absence of gas, and the omnipresence of
bad smelling kerosene, are great draw
backs to enjoyment in the chilly eve
nings which follow these golden days.
Fires which get low at the very moment
they are most needed in the sitting
rooms, and a cold dining hall, filled with
kitchen smoke, are not incentives to a
prolonged stay; add to this, the utter
impossility of finding one's way of an
evening through a village guiltless of
lights and shrouded in trees, and it is no
marvel that city people begin to think
of cosy evenings by their own firesides
where are both warmth and light, with
out whiCh Paradise itself were a desert.
I think landlords who have an eye to
business should take what may seem to
them, perhaps, very uninfluential mo
tives, under serious consideration. I
am very sure that if their own houses
were made comfortable for the autumn,
enough lovers of the season would re
main to reward them pecuniarily for
any such foresight. Let the fashionists
go—there are plenty left to rejoice in
the crisp air, the falling, bright-hued
leaves, the glory of sunshine and shadow
on the mountain-tops, and the keen
sense of life at the fall which comes of
wandering among them.
I think I should understand engi
neering an hotel! I know just where
the shoe pinches, at least, which is half
the battle. In the first place, I wouldn't
smoke a pipe, and then I should not be
tempted to put those halcyon moments
before the comfort and convenience of
my guests, how imperative soever the
occasion. Tben my temper would be
angelic, and I could understand how
every larly in the house could "have
her room cleared up " at one and the
same moment, though the lady-guests
numbered a full hundred! Then—l
should see my way clear to let every lit
tle child on the premises dig deep holes
in the gravel walk which leads to
the front door, and fill them with
water, for infantile amusement, and
to further the laudable ambition of
the nurses, in reading fourth-rate
pamphlet novels. Then I should better
understand my duty iu riding ten miles
to get d water-melon for one lady, eleven
miles to get a quart of peaches for
another, and six miles for grapes for a
third ; and, at the same time, be on the
piazza, to be a walking Time-Table for
strangers and others who wish inf4rma
tion at short notice on railroad subjects.
Were I a nonsmoker I should be con
solable under the necessity of remaining
out of my bed till the latest midnight
reveller had gone to his, and up in the
morning before daylight, to be sure that
the eggs for the departing Grumble fami
ly were cooked neither too hard nor too
soft. Also I would have one pane of glass
in each chamber-window in the house a
looking-glass, immoveably inserted, for
the benefit of those ladies who prefer
some light while combing their hair.
Those who dreaded the light on that
occasion might fall back upon the time
honored looking-glass which landlords
are sure to locate in the darkest corner
of the room. Then I could see my way
clear to take files of all the oily papers
for the children in the house to make
kites of, or for ladies to wrap parCels or
curl their hair in. Also I should pro
vide oompact and portable lanterns,
with an accompanying servant, for the
use of those ladies who fancy evening
rambles through a dark village street.
You will see by this how inexhausti
ble is this subject, and how much re
mains to be done, which only a female
mind could foresee, or suggest. I gen
erously give these hints to unenlighted
landlords, free of charge, and doubt not
that my next summer's travels will at
test not only their practicability, but
their execution ; meantimewe are going
home; to coffee, real coffee, praised be
Allah for that; it is bad to leave the
mountains, but chickory is not palata
ble either.
It is bard to break up a pleasant sum
mer party, at the close of the season, for
we never can take it up again wherewe
leave off. For some there will he wed
dings, fur some there will be funerals—
good bye, said so gaily, will surely be
final to some of us who utter it. We
shall take up the paper some day, and
a well-known name will catch the eye
in that dark list of bereavement. We
shall recal Its owner on that morning of
the party to the "mountain," or the
" lake," and the bright eye, and the
flowing hair, and the voice of music—
and then the world will close round us,
and all will go on as before, till our turn
comes, too, to be forgotten.
FANNY FERN.
Life In the Dark
" Pity the blind." There are few
sentences more touching than this.—
Pennies rain into the hat of the wayside
beggar who bears it upon his breast;
for who among the wayfarers, does not
feel and know that of all the entrances
at which wisdom may be shut out, the
eye is the most precious. It ls a terrible
thing to become deaf and speechless,
but Heaven save us from that worse ca
lamity—the closing of the windows of
the soul. Yet the blind are usually
oheerful--especially those who have
been born blind—and Provldenct seems
to compensate them in some measure
for their misfortune, by sharpening
their four remaining senses. An edu
catedinmateofoneofourßlind Asylums
will make a nearer gues:at it character
and disposition of a visor, aer shaking
hands with him and hearing• him con
verse, than a phrenologist could make
after manipulating his head. The blind
are generally shrewd and sometimes
very sarcastic. The common belief in
their simplicity, mildness, and good
nature does not seem to be in accordance
with the facts. Professor Saunderson,
the blind Mathematician, once observed
of a lady who.had paid him a visit, that
she had remarkably beautiful teeth.
"How can ,you know that" said a
friend. " Very readily," replied Saun
derson, "for a full half hour she did
nothing but laugh."
The born blind, of course, have no
visions: They dream, indeed, but their
impressions in sleep are all derived from
the senses of hearing, touch, taste and
smell. "Sometimes," said a blind boy,
"I dream that I. tread on the grass, and
smell the fresh air." No ray pierces the
"ever-during dark," even in slumber.
A letter from Lima, Peru, says t a vote
of thanks has been passed by Congress to
the people of Chili, and the Ministers of the
United States and France in Peru together
with our Admiral in those waters, for
prompt and efficacious assistance to the
unfortunates of the South.
klecilotes cif!uk teciriirk.
Fred Emnions was au eccentric wlti
well known fit Buffalo,.Cleveland,and
other lake ports, severalyears ago, as a
" steamboat runner." He It_, was whop
on being stopped by a robber one dark
night with !i demand for his "money
or his life,' • coolly responded that he
hadn't goGany money, bat it he wonld
step under a lamp-post hewentd write
him his note for Ave or ten dollars!
Poor Fred! it was immaterial to him
whether it was five - or ten dollars, for he
never paid anything.
Charley Coe, of Cleveland, now pro
prietor of the Cleveland flouring mills
(and the man, by the way, to whom
" Artemus Ward" dedicated his book,
styling him in his characteristic, warm
hearted way, "a friend all the year
round," once lost a valuable dog. Think
ing that he might have got on board
the Buffalo boat and been carried off, as
he was about the dock a good deal, Coe
wrote to Fred Emmons, then at Buffalo,
to institute a search for the dog. Weeks
passed without a word from Fred. Being
in Buffalo one day, Mr. Coe met Fred,
who said he bad been searching for the
dog ever since the receipt of his letter,
but with no success thus far.
"I have, however," said Fred, " a
little bill that I would like you to settle,
if convenient."
He thereupon produced a bill, which
ran (and is running yet, we reckon)
about as follows:
BIINFA LO,
Charles Coe, Esq., To Fred E,73amons,
To one week's board at 00
To one week's board at Mansion House. 500
To one week's board at United States 6 CO
TO three meals at "Bad Jacket"......,...._ 150
To three meals at Bloomer's 1 50
To sundry meals at various restaurants. 13 00
Total
"What does this tnean ?" said Coe,
"You wanted me to look up your dog,
didn't you ?"
"Certainly."
"You expected to pay arly expense I
went to ?"
"Of course, any reasonable expense."
"Well, that's just what I've been do
ing. I have been boarding around at
the various hotels and restaurants,
tasting sausage to see if I could find any
traces of your dog ; but I haven't yet."
He was excused from any further
search in that way.
Once, in Cleveland, Fred was solicit
ing passengers at tine docks for the
Buffalo boats. As the boat was about
to leave, a carriage drove furiously to
the dock, and out got a ponderous puffy
man, with an immense expanse of white
shirt bosom, followed by an equally fat
wife, with a nurse and several children.
"This way for the Buffalo boat!"
shouted Fred.
The man with the broad shirt bosom
wanted to know what the passage for
himself and family would amount to
before going aboard.
"Tell you in a minute," said Em
mons, whipping out a big red pencil
used in filling out posters.
Then, before he knew what he was
about, Fred had it all figured out on the
old fellow's broad white shirt front!
There was a moment of speechless rage
on the part of the man as he cast his
eyes from the big red figures on his
shirt bosom to Fred, who looked the
very image of guiltless innocence at
that moment, and then he pitched in
and gave Fred such a whaling that he
was laid up in bed for six weeks after.
To most people it would seem to be
rather an expensive joke, but Fred al
ways declared it was ' worth it." He
said the astonishment on the old man's
face when he saw the figuring was
"better than to be licked to death."
We should say so.
Fred was a great boaster. He boasted
too much and too loud one day. He
had been absent from Cleveland for a
long time, and, coming back one day,
he said be had been to California and
the gold diggings, and brought back lots
of gold. Some fellows who believed the
story followed him out of a soloon one
night into a lonely street, and murdered
him for his money. They didn't find
a cent about him to reward them for the
bloody deed. Poor Fred! If he could
say anything abdut it he would say It
was " a good joke on them !"
Woman
Created to be the companion of man,
how often has she been made his slave,
the instrument of his passions, the play
thing of his idle hours. This every
where among the savage tribes has been
the case, and even among nations which
were civilized, if Pagan, woman rarely
had assigned to her her proper place.
This was but another phase of that
ferocity that has cursed the earth by its
cruelties in war. The steonger tram
pling on the weak. But there was this
mighty difference, that whereas a feeble
tribe might by conquest be made harm
less, the influence of woman could not
be destroyed. There belongs to her in
each several relations as sister, wife,
mother, a vast social power for good or
I evil, of which she canndt be deprived.
If crushed, downtrodden and despised
by an unchristian civilization, woman,
alas, bad her too ample reveige
in the baneful influences which,
from man's fault and her own
sad misfortune, went forth from her
as by a law of retribution to avenge
her on her tyrants. Her womanly na
ture which would have shed its sweet
and softening influences on society
could not be dried up, but did, without
her meaning it, give forth the soured
and bitter influences which oppression,
to its own just punishment, wrung out
from her. Never therefore, could there
be a true civilization where woman was
not assigned her proper place. But
where this justice is done to her, what
a rich reward she bestows on man. It
is her's then to humanize him by the
gentler charities, to engraft with her
delicate female touch, the softer graces
upon the under-growths of his nature,
to distill around the deep roots of his
being a secret subtile balm of all purest
passions which, when she has roused
into their strength, she then softens
without enervating them.
It is woman's mission in the quiet
privacies of home, to feed the centre
founts of society with those humaniz
ing influences which distill as natural
ly from her as its balm from the tree,
or their odor from the flowers. But why
crush the extending branch? or why
tread down the exhaling flower? The
more tenderly they are nurtured the
richer the balm, the more fragrant the
aroma will they yield. And so woman,
if herself the nurseling of tenderness,
will the most tenderly minister. Now
in the Scripture woman has assigned to
her proper place, the amenities of her
sex are 4vindicated, her mission is de•
fined, her administrations are allowed
and aeknowledged, she Is placed
at man's side his companion, his
friend, his equal, and help meet
for him. Weaker in physical frame,
she is admonished to cling to him for
support ; of Intellectual energies lese
vigorous Than his, she is taught to
make him her counsellor. But superior
to man in the finer and pure delicate
sentiments of their common nature, he
must seek toward her unless he would
become stern In his strength and In his
virile hardihood degenerate into harsh
ness.
• We know nothing finer In the whole
range of literature than are some of the
exhibitions of female character which
are to be met with in the Scripture his
tories. A loving wife and a devoted
mother, she is seen shedding a hallowed
loveliness around the household.
The sires and sons of Israel, so noble,
patriots, heroes of dauntless bravery,
men of action and of mettle in Israel's
best days, went forth from homes where
woman's work was known and her
power admitted. It was she as wife or
mother who made these sires and sons
of Israel the men they proved to be.—
But not only in the privacy of home is
the Hebrew woman to be seen. She
could step forth without forgetting her
womanly modesty, In those stirring
times equal to deeds of valor, that the
veterans of the nation might have en
vied. She too, was poetess, Priestess,
prophetess, but nobler still, she was en
nobled as the mother of the Saviour.
The Prineo 'loyal , of Belgium
The disease of which the Prince Royal
of Belgium is slowly dying seems to be an
aggravated kind of dropsy, which has
been partially relieved by tapping. Previ
ous to this operation, the poor little suffer
er's legs presented the appearance of Turk
ish trousers filled with air. And if he lay
down, his head swelled up like an Inflated
bag. The Queen sits by her child night and
day, except for a few hours' rest or an
hours' airing. The King wanders about the
palace, unable to endure the sight of the
suffering boy, constantly returning to the
chamber of Buttering for a few moments.
THE FIIBLIC DEBT INCREASING
IENORBOUS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
R4.*A.r; rszeics zrooszi?
Old itidaileeil of Appropriations rse4
Aveinge s :ExpendHere t:eaely Since the
War Over $t60,000,000.
Deficit of 6154,000,000
Frightful Deficiency mins to Come
880,000,000 Given to Manufacturers
Aarteidlortata to Pay It
From the New York Herald.
The Treasury Department has lel it leak
out a little in advance of the official state
ment that there will be "another small in
crease of the national indebtedness" this
month. We use the language of the Wash
ington telegram as to the " small increase;"
but the correspondent save " it may possi
bly reach two millions five hundred thou
sand dollars "—that is, at the rate of thirty
millions a year. This does not strike us as
a swell increase. We should not be sur
prised, however, if the sum named were to
be below the figure when the official state
ment Is published. It is said that this in
crease is owing principally to the unusual
heavy expenditures of the War Department
In currying out the Radical measures of re-'
construction. We learn, at the game time,
that the receipts from internal revenue are
surprisingly small, and that the cash in
the Treasury has been pretty well reduced.
This is anything but a flattering prospect
of our national finances. • • •
How could it be otherwise? The expendi
tures of the Government continue to be
enormous. They are war expenditures in
amount, though the country is at peace and
has been for more than three years past.
The heaviest is for the War Department in
carrying out the reconstruction measures of
Congress. It would be better to say, how
ever, that this vast expense has been for
keeping the South in a disorganized and
disturbed condition, for that is what this
so-called reconstruction amounts to. Then
the enormous appropriations by Congress
for all sorts of schemes, bounties, Freed
men's Bureau, and private enterprises must
soon drain the Treasury dry when the in
come is falling off. The stupendous frauds
in the internal revenue, and the demorali
zation of that department through the dead
lock between Commissioner Rollins and
Mr. M'Oulloch and the President, threaten
to reduce the interest from that source far
below the estimates. A hundred millions
of taxation were taken off for the benefit of
a few New England and other manufactur
ers, while the expenditures and appropria •
lions remained on the largest scale. We
see this extraordinary anomaly in the con
dition of the country, that while the crops
most abundant and general prosperity pre
veils, the debt is being increased and the
Treasury approaching bankruptcy.
. .
EMII3M
Mr. M'Culloch made a public statement
when Congress had under consideration
the party electioneering bill of the Jacobins,
to take off taxes from manufactures, as fol
lows :
Should the bill referred to become a law,
I think it may be fairly estimated that the
total revenues for the next fiscal year will
fall from a hundred to a hundred and
twenty millions below the estimates made
in my last annual report. It is exceedingly
desirable that taxes should be reduced, and
I should hail with pleasure the proposed
reduction if I felt assured that it would be
accomplished with a corresponding reduc
tion of expenditures. lam free to say that
I am greatly apprehensive that such a re
duction of expenditures will not be made,
and that the revenues of the country for
the next fiscal year, if the bill now before
the Senate, or in the hands of your com
mittee, should become a law, will be insuf
ficient to meet the interest on the public
debt and the current expense of the Gov
ernment.
" But this warning," says the report of
Mr. Delmar, "was ineffectual. The bill It
alluded to was passed on the 31st of March,
1869; and the public service, instead of
being cut down, was increased by the crea
tion of new functions and the appointment
of additional officers. In a word, the
amount of service to be performed, whether
actual or nominal, is more than it was last
year, and is therefore vain to look for any
reduction for the present."
The consequence, as states the same re
port, " is, it the Treasury endeavors to
meet its current expenditures this year (to
say nothing of matured claims deferred, or
the Post Glace deficiency) it will throw a
deficit of $14,339,202.25 at the end of the
year, to be obtained from increased taxes
or loans."
Mr. Delmar's report of the financial con
dition published yesterday, show the ex
penditures for the last three years, as fol
lows :
F0r1.805-6 $576,477,103 02
For 1866 7 312,444,291 34
For 1867-8 414,913,004 191
The expenditures of the last fiscal year
were not actual war expenditures, but were
those made in time of profound peace, an d
in the third year after the war, and when its
great incidental expenses had ceased. This
statement also shows that our expenditures
are increasing, having been 22,460,312 85
greater during the last fiscal year than the
year preceeding. The greatest mistake in
former unauthorized statements was, in
omitting from expenditures authorized the
sum of $144,778,472 25, being unexpended
balances of former appropriations.
The expenditures specially authorized for
the current fiscal year will be $482,050,202.23,
thus showing an Increase of expenditure in
the current fiscal year ending June 30th,
1869, the fourth year after the war, of $37,-
145, 598.04, as compared with the year pre
ceding. Here, too, we find balances out
atandingof old appropriations, July 1, 1868,
$150,417,522.77.
The receipts from all sources are then
given, showing "a DEFICIENCY on the 30th
June next of $154,000,000," which can only
'be supplied by new taxes, or another in
crease of the public debt, to the extent of one
hundred and fifty-four millions of dollars.
The manner in which actual expenditure
have been so much above the purposely
limited appropriations of Congress has been
by the use of balances of old appropriations,
and by the use of immense sums coming
into the Treasury from sales of material of
war. The modus operandi is thus explained
by the Commissioner of Statistics.
All that expenditure that occurs after the
close of the year goes on the next year's ac
count, so that though, if a series of years
be taken together, the back receipts and
expenditures are included, yet, if it be de
sirable to ascertain the total revenue and
coat of the Government for any single year
by itself, it cannot be done from these
figures alone. For this reason they are not
aggregated in the Secretary's report. Re
course must be had to the Treasurer's re
ceipts and expenditures, which also Include
all receipts from sales of captured and
abandoned property, confiscations, prizes,
sales of quartermasters' stores andi other
property, sales of war vessels, 6r.a. &c.,
items which do not appear in the register's
accounts as published, and which items
during the past three years, with the back
receipts and expenditures, have averaged
nearly fifty million dollars a year.
In respect to the enormous gratuity to
manufacturers at the last session. it is only
to be said that had not Congress done thus
much for them they would have revolted,
as they threatened from the Radical party,
True, agriculturalists, mechanics and la
borers have to make up the deficit, but they
had no pompous agents with well-lined
pocketbooks to operate on Congressmen in
their behalf. The bill should have been
opposed by every means and devise known
to parliamentary proceedings. It should
have never passed into legislative form
without full exposure of its enormities.—
Think of it, men of toll, that a gratuity of
580,000,000 a year was given outright to the
manufacturers who,Puring the war, heaped
up their gains to mountain heighth, and
were thus enabled to purchase Govern
ment securities at from forty to fifty cents
on the dollar. bearing gold interest on the
full dollar. If the infamous bill was pass
through menace of the manufacturers of
leaving the Radical party, why should not
the laborer, mechanic and farmer adopt re
taliatory measures? The latter interests,
in view of the situation, ouget to rebel as
one man from the party of the corrupt
Congressional rump.
Of course, under the operation of the bill
referred to, the revenues for excises dimin
ish and the public debt becomes augment
ed. The deficiency bill at the next session
will be frightful. Meantime all other inter
ests except manufactures must be taxed
well on to 5100,000,000 a year to make up
the gratuity to the former. The outrage
was hideous beyond any other thing that
our legislation records.
The national debt is now kept down by
refusing to do justice to public creditors,
thousand upon thousands of whom are
now in want because the Government will
not pay them their just dues. To keep up
the policy of the negro party to enslave the
whites of the South, a great deal of really
necessary legislation is denied to the people.
All this in order that Congress may purchase
support for themselves, or the corrupt Rad
ical party, by giving popopo a year to
manufacturers by taking off their taxes.
Some day the debt will work up to
54,000,000,000, when the Government
shall have done its whole duty in the re
pents we have referred to. Mr. Thaddeus
Il l lftevens often set the figures at 55,000,000,-
000, in which, we take it, he included state,
city, county,and town war debts. We are
not quite sure, however, on this head, as
he did not speak of them as required to
carry up the debt to ss,a/0,000,000. But let
the toiling masses think of what the Gov
ernment burden of taxation will be if the
Radical policy ofloving principal in gold
is to be the law of the country. The inter
est on the last named snm at present aver- ,
age Government rates would be yearly, in
gold, $300,000,000.
It is clear, then that we stand on the
brink of aecipice, and at the bottom of
the dark a yes will be found, under the
Radical policy, financial bankruptcy and
national disgrace. Indeed,' nothing can
use — as ftdm inpending' . ruin but an mime
died change of rulers and iSolley. Elect
bmcmote Radical Oongress,• sustained by
Radical Esecutive, atuk national mond*.
OA Iq Inevitadle. This people can change
the Position by' a cbange of policy, as !nth
cated.by The elections this U. 'Alter that
it wits be too luta •, • •
*llk SITUATION' sorra.
The Purposes of the Southern People—
An Mennen; VindienUon of Hon. Her.
schel V. Johnson.
Hoyt. Herschel V. Johnson the Demo•
erotic candidate' for Vice President of the
United States in 1880, in a recent letter ad
dressed to the Democratic Executive Com
mittee of Troup county, Georgia, eloquently
vindicates the Southern people from the
unscrupulous charges of Radical orators
and presses. He says:
The position, designs, and sentiments of
the Southern people are grossly misrepre
sented. Whv and with what motives I
shall not attempt to say. It may be from
honest ignorance of the truth, or it may be
with the design to influence the people of
the North in their choice between•the two
opposing candidates, and thus to prevent
our restoration to our rights in the Union.
But from whatsoever consideration, we are
misrepresented. I know it so far as the jaeo
ple of Georgia are concerned, and I fully
believe it in reference to those of the other
States. It is asserted that vie are ready and
willing at any moment to renew the war,
and are rebellious against the Government.
No facia exist to sustain such a charge. On
the contrary, the conduct of our people
since the surrender demonstrates its false
hood. We have acted in good faith. True,
we opposed the reconstruction scheme of
Congress; but we did so, first, because we
had already organized our State govern
ment under the President's policy; and
secondly, because the scheme was uncon
stitutional and fatal to our every interest—
social, civil and political. Wee there any
crime in this, and especially when it was
remembered that Congress graciously in•
vited us to accept or disapprove it, though
with threats of confiscation and disfran
chisement if we did the latter? But the
scheme has been consummated in Georgia,
and, what is our deportment new? Are we
offering any forcible resistance to the State
government that has been formed for us
under the dictation of the bayonet? No,
not all. We recognize and obey it as the
Government de facto established in lieu of
that which was acceptable to the people,
but overthrown by military power. If we
deny its validity, de jure, we appeal, not to
force, but to the ballot-box—to the patriot
ism and justice of our countrymen—for re
dress. We have had enough of bloodshed.
We desire nothing so much as peace—the
peace of concord and fraternity—the peace
of constitutional Union.
We are charged with the design to remit,
the negroes back to bondage. Perhaps the
poor, deluded creatures, having their ap
prehensions excited by designing, bad men,
are preparing to resist such an attempt.—
This may possibly explain their military
organizations and secret drilling. But they,
and aldthe world, may rest assured that no
such design exiets among the people of
Georgia. The lose of capital invested in
slave property was 11 heavy blow, and the
derangement of our labor system checked
our prosperity, and was felt throughout the
whole country ; but we have in good faith
submitted to it. We could not, if we would,
and would not, if we could, reduce the ne
groes again to bondage. We consider their
freedom as a fact accomplished, never to be
disturbed. We recognize slavery as staked
upon the issues of secession, and thatbeing
decided against us, we realize that the in
stitution fell with it. Hence, the Constitu
tion formed by the seceding States, under
President Johnson's policy‘-every one of
them—contained the prohibition of slavery.
Great as la the lose in property to the peo
ple of the South, caused by emancipation,
the change is not void of some compensa
tory features. It has relieved slave-owners
of a weight of responsibility that was bur
densome; it has freed us from the slander
ous tongues and pens of thepseudo-philan
thropists of the world ; and it ought to si
lence forever the wrangle over the question
of the negro which bas agitated the country
for thirty years.
Emancipation is a small evil compared
with that arising from the attempt, on the
Part of Congress, to regulate the social, civil
and political states of the freedmen in the
several States. From habit, association,
and interest, the feeling between the two
races was kind and friendly. It would re
main so, but for the pragmatical interference
of unprincipled adventurers who excite the
passions of the blacks against the whites
for political purposes. If the dominant
party had been satisfied with emancipation
and left the relations between the races to
the normal action of the principles of as
similation and growth which obtain, even
in the mineral and vegetable kingdoms,
and are especially potent in their organiza
tion of communities, a few years would have
brought adjustments mutually beneficial,
and the shock to labor, capital, and society
would soon have ceased to be felt. This was
the path of duty and policy clearly indicated
by the character of our joint system of gov
ernment—State and Federal—and by Bound
philosophy and statesmanship. But when
, the effort is made to render them equal with
the Caucasian race of the Southern States
by statutory enactment ; when they are
clothed suddenly with political rights
, which they are too ignorant to understand
and wisely exercise ; when, by disfranchise
ments of the white citizens, they are placed
• numerically in the ascendency so as to
control the formation and ratification of
State Constitutions and direct legislation,
it is folly to expect anything but discontent
in the minds of the white, and insolence in
the bosoms of the negro population. This
- is the source of the instances of collision
and violence which occasionally occur in
the South. But under no aspect do we ex
; peat, or desire the re-establishment of sla
• very. Let me say, however, to the colored
r people and to reflecting men all over the
- country, that, whether so designated or not,
e the principles and policy of the cen
tralists, if permitted to progress in
a the line of their legitimate tendency,
must make slaves of us all, white
a and black, must lead to despotism, that will
fatten upon the sweat of toil, wax insolent
-•• in the possession of conscious dominion,
71' and wield political power to pamper and
1 aggrandize its minions. If we wish to
escape bondage, and enjoy constitutional
e liberty, let us all, black and white, support
the principles and policy of the Democratic
s party. It is pretended that those who are
a loyal men and Union men are not safe in
i. the South ; that they are liable to insult and
violence, merely on account of their politi
a• cal sentiments. That is totally untrue.
e That those who flourish under these titles
g are sometimes snubbed and not recognized
among gentlemen, is certainly true • and
1-• lawless men, such as are found in all sec
• lions, occasionally maltreat them. Bat, I
d venture to say, that any man north of the
3, Potomac, whatever may be his political
'r opinions, can travel on foot from Richmond
, to New Orleans without molestation, if he
:8 shows by his intercourse that he is a gentle
's man. The truth is, we desire good men
k from any and all sections to settle among
Id us. Let them come and bring their capital,
whether it consists of money, enterprise,
to muscle, or brains. We have land abundant
y and cheap, natural resources—coal, timber,
is water power,
iron and copper — unlimited.
9
Ye
the hon Nor est, industrioandus, p'W ace es e t, com e,
men
~
ofth, East and
A- be with us and of us. We'll bid you wet
*, come, and join our energies to develop
ad those resources and build up our prosperity,
in and quicken—if Congress will permit—to
in its wonted step, our march to a glorious
civilization.
Id Equally groundless is the imputation,
m perpetually repeated, that we are disloyal
to the flag, the Union, and the Constitution.
of The flag, as displayed among us for three
be years, has been the sign of oppression, that
ed indicated the headquarters of freedmen's
id bureaus, or military satraps with their por
n- row-prison cells and sweat-boxes; or of
its military commissions, to try civilians, lm
he prisoned without warrant and denied an
is- impartial jury ; the Union as is proffered to
of us, is not the Union of equal States bat the
iot unity of empire ; and the Constitution, ad.
7e. ministered by Congress la the unwritten
ts, law of their own discredon. These .we do
as not love. But let the stars and stripes be
ipt unfurled over ns , as the insignia and pledge
of wet protection and , justice ; offer us the Union
dll of Washington and his compatriots—the
In- Union of coequal States; give us the Con
it- stitution of 1787, fairly and honestly ad
on ministered and enforced, and then the
or- world shall see whether our hearts are
ad truo to these emblems symbols, and can
up ens of liberty. Do this, and if we fail to
ige respond to the call of patriotic duty, at the
Ist sacrifice of blood and life if necessary, but
not until then, may we be stamped with
by the brand of Infidelity to our country.
-
The New Postage Stamp
The Postmaster General has Just awarded
the contract for the supply of stamps to the
department for the ensuing four years to the
National Bank Note Company of New
York. The new stamps will be somewhat
smaller than those in use at present, but
they are of a superior style and finish, with
a novelty in design. The two cent stamp
contains an engraving of a post boy on
horseback in failtmeed. The three cent has
a locomotive under fall head of steam, the
great carrier of our domestic service. The
five cent stamp contains a bead of Wash,
ington. Ti
t :en cent, the finest of all In de
sign and e ution, has a minat are engrav
ing of the Declaration of Indendence, exe
cuted with such delicacy and pe
precision that
the picture suffers nothing under a magni
fying glass. The twelve cent stamp has an
ocean steamship, and the thirty cent has a
finely executed engraving of the surrender
of Burgoyne. When it is considered that
over a million stamps are issued daily, the
importance of this contract Is at once evi
dent.
The Grace Church property in New York
has been sold for 1600,030, and stores will
take the place of this well•known church
edifice, so long a landmark on Broadway.
:r ?
'• • Nairn items; '
Thelhiola Central railroad has 158 loco.
•
A wan /it 0/ 3 04A in C,Mannett for forg
ingstreet car tickets. ;
Thera is ai r 4 Araerfeati omnibus driver"
brackinglasithip in Seri:under:a.
Wurteniburg farlonghs all the coopers in
the army during the 'due barrest.
Recent cains in Tezaa have caused a great
gram , th of grass.
The bighest.r en t paid for a dwelling house
In Chicago is $10,000:
The Japanese army is being armed with
Enfield rifles.
London has killed 10,0)0 superfluous dogs
hls season.
At tile' Pennsylvania State fair eighty
kegs of beer were sold on the gronnd by one
man.
Work on the Little Rock (Arkansas) and
Fort Smith railroad will be commenced in
November.
Iron and magnesia springs have been dis
covered near Linden, iu Marengo county,
Alabama,
The United States has,_ 5,000,000 school
population, who require 20,000,000 books,
eta cost of $lB,ThO,OOO.
Charles. Dickens is to receive $40,000 for
his series of one hundred farewell readings
in England.
The N. Y. Tribune has a report from
Washington that Secretary Seward is about
to be married again.
The meanest thing out—counterfeiting
nickel cents, which is practiced upon an ex
tensive scale in St. Louis.
Musicians, pedlars and beggars are no
longer allowed to exercise their vocation on
board ferry bouts in New York.
It is said that there are 10,000 people In
London who earn their livelihood by liter
ary work.
John Bull still sticks to his beer. The
new hop and malt exchange erected in Lon •
don cost over $700,000.
It is stated that agents of the French gov
ernment are in New York, making large
purchases of grain, 'salt, meat., clothing, kc.
The sales or pews in the new synagogue
of the Israelites in St. Louis, on Monday
last, realized $49,000.
From January to July over 0,000 tons of
guano were shipped from the American
Company's guano island.
Rnssin prohibits homeopathic physicians
practising In her dominions, under penalty
of a tine and two years in Siberia.
Two of the Lawrences, of Boston, have
given an Episcopal church, worth $50,000 to
Longwood, Mass.
On Monday the Italian Society of St. Louis
celebrated the discovery of America by
Columbus.
Hon. Jesse A. Bynum, for eight years a
member of Congress from North Carolina,
died recently in Louisiana, aged 73 years.
The artesian well at the St. Louie County
Farm is nearly 4,000 feet deep, and no water
yet, They are stilt boring.
Gen. A. Buford has sold his Bourbon dis
tillery at Midway, Ky., to Hinde, Drake Lt:
Co., of New York, for Iso,coo.
Bethel, Ct., has in operation twelve hat
factories, employing about 600 hands, and
turning out 361 dozen hats per day.
The Dismal Swamp Canal le now open
for navigation, the locks at the gate have
been thoroughly repaired.
A gentleman in New Bedford had dinner
this week of the Second crop of green
peas be has raised this year.
A movement is beginning In Virginia to
secure an intension of the stay law, which
expires on the first of January.
Another International cricket match be
tween the English eleven and United States
twenty-two has begun at Philadelphia.
Chinese hemp is successfully grown in
Kentucky. The longest stalks measure
over sixteen feet.
mis Stelgel, charged with the murder of
her husband in St. Louie, some time since,
has been tried and acquitted.
Charles J. Stille, L. L. D., was formally
Inaugurated, September 30th, provost of
the University of Pennsylvania.
The total cost of the great Illinois and
St. Louis bridge, including land and up
proaches, is set down at $4,500,000.
A German wants to know why Carl
Schurz gets $lOO for an hour's talk, when
the poor devils in the audience have to lis
ten for nothing.,
Howell Cobb's body has been removed to
a Savannah steamer and will be taken to
Georgia for interment. It is accompanied
by hie family.
At the burning of the American Hotel,lin
Now York, Monday night, a lodger named
MoCann,was suffocated and two women had
legs broken byJ um ping out of the windows.
A railroad conductors' Mutual Life In
surance Association Is proposed. A geberal
meeting for organization has been called in
Cincinnati on the 20th of October.
Vienna police have seized all the copies
of a pastoral letter by one of the Austrian
bishops. It contained matter deemed trea
sonable to the empire.
It Is stated that Chief Justice Chase says
that the newspaper reports that he warmly
espouses the cause of Grant and Colfax are
merely conjecturesof the writers themselves,
General Blair declines to address the
Democracy of South Carolina, as the can
vass in the Western States will require his
presence there.
A Swedish professor has made brandy
of common reindeer moss, and another has
discovered that mushrooms are so plenty
that there need never be a famine.
Among the latest novelties is an ironing
glove to protect the hand from heat when
ironing. The under part is composed of
several thicknesses of flannel.
There were 42 bishops present at the
opening of the Triennial Episcopal Confer
ence in New York. Bishop Chase, of New
Hampshire, was absent on account of ill
health.
There will probably be ten Quakers in
the next British House of Commons.
Among them are the two Brights, Charles
Gilpin, Edward Deckhouse and William
Slater.
General Hill yer, who was during the war
on " General Grant's staff," pronounces
Seymour "the greatest statesman of the
uge," and Frank Blair "the greatest vol
unteer officer of the war."
there is a "deficiency" of $lO,OOO or $12,-
000 In the accounts of the Radical postmas
ter at Springfield, Illinois. But he is
"loyal," and that covers a multitude of
sins, including robbery of Uncle Sam.
There Is a lady in Maine, aged 87, who
has twelve children, ninety-two grand
children, one hundred and nineteen great
grand-children, and eight great great grand
children.
Harvey Carr, of East Montpelier, Ver
mont, raised the past season seventy-two
bushels of corn in the ear to fifty-live rods
of land, being about two hundred and ten
bushels to the acre.
Jacob K. Shafer, Esq., who has been elected
to Congress by the Democrats of Montana
Territory, was a student of law in thwiflice
of Gov. Letcher. He is a native of Rock
ingham county, Virginia.
Eight theatres in New York return as
their receipts for the mouth of August,sl2s,-
844. The largest receipts were those of the
Olympic, where Humpty Damply has been
the attraction so long, $243,127.
The session of the Medical College of Viri
' ginle for 1868-'9, was opened Tuesday nigh
at Richmond. Quite a largo number o.
persons, besides the class, were present
The introductory lecture was delivered by
Dr. Weliford.
The Washington Republican says that
the lady to whom Secretary Seward Is to bo
married is Miss Risley, the daughter of 11.
A. Risley, assistant solicitor of the Treasu
ry, and that they will spend a portion of
the winter in Cuba.
A. national convention of the advocates of
the political rights of women is called to
meet In Washington next December. The
call is limed by the Universal Franchise
Committee, and is intended to be a stirring
011.3.
The earthquake of tho 13th ult., was also
felt in the Iltstona Nitta of Juan Fernan
dez. The sea leaving its natural limits
precipitated itself with groat force upondhe
Island, and carried canoes, die., far In 'the
interior.
A colored Justice in Alabama lately sen
tenced a melon -cleating darkoy to nicely°
tbirtynine lashes. " said he, '•don't
strike him• on the clothes, for that wodld
give him a right to sue you for damages—
put it to him on the bare back."
"gardwart, Aims, &c
STOVES! STOVES Ij
The Pennsylvania Dining Room Stove, Iron
Cylinder—the best Stove of the kind In this
market at 1 RUSSEL'S
Hardware Store,
North Queen street.
TGREAT EAST 1. RR COOK !SG
J, STOVE 'admitted by all who me them to
be the beat cooking etove thoy a eer need. For
sale at RUSSEL'S.
MBE GENViIIiR MORNING GLORY
.1„ PARLOR STOVE. A perpetual burner,
very ornamental, reguiree to be fired but once
daring the semen, making a regular beat all
ate time. reg_alring little fuel for amount of
heat produced, and warranted to give entire
eatiglaction. For sale at
Cl ESAT VARIETY OF PARLOROTOV EN
1 131,C00k log litowN, Ranges and Dining Room
Stoves. For sato at,
CALL AT RUNNEL'S AND NEE THE
beat assortment or stoves in Lancaster.
MBE GENUINE BALTIMORE TIER.
PLAGE STOVE for sale al
sep2l)-Iwdo3mw EUSSEL'B.
Sexcrter. Norlaze Inserted in
/oXil . 001 1 !
lb cents per line. • • - •
iran
BPZCIAL Nartcas preceding marriages and
deaths, 10 cents per line for Alp loserticorti
and 5 cents for every subset/Una trrtil u .
itGIAL AND OTEI Ca riOTICIMF. • • _
Executors'
Administrators' not sea , 2.50
Assignees' 2.50
Auditors' 1 03
°Char "Notleos,''tort fines, or ism,
three t. 50
WroMina's 6trman Vittero. I ghiindelpia gvivertionneats.
1 11:141191.APIWS GERMAN nurses,
HOGFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC
The Great Remldles for all Dis eases of the
Lnrsa, STOMACH OR DIGESTIVE
ORGANS.
HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS
Is composed of the pure J . 1 . 14=r, as they are
medicinally 'formed, LI ) of Roots,
1 ff:1 46 1/l and Barka ;
Mo i d na s k n u t g en a tife r ryle 4 ;
fram , ,szco m conce
kind
HOOFLANE'S GERMAN TONIC,
Is a combinaUon of all the ingredients oi
the Bitters, with the purest quality of Santa
Cr= BUM, Orange, dm, making one of tee
moat pleasant and agreeable remedies ever
offeral to the public.
holic a
Those pref ixture, werring
ill us ed e
a Micine free from Alco-
dm
HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS
Those who have no objection to Lilo oombl
nation of the Bitters. ae elated • will Utitl
HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC.
They are both equally good, and contain the
same medicinal virtues, the choice between
the two beluga mere matter of taste, the TWA/
being the moat palatable.
The stomach, from a variety of causes, such
aa Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility,
etc., Is very apt to have its functions deranged.
Th e Liver, (*.naps,thizing as closely as
it does with the AJ Stomach, then be
comes affected, the result of which is that tile
patient Buffers from several or more of the fo-•
owing diseases :
Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Fe ,
nests of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the.
Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust
for Food, Fulness of Weight In the
Stomach, war Eructations,
Sinking or Fluttering ut
the l'it of the Stomach
Swimming of tile
Head, Hurried or
Difficult Breath-
Lug, Fluttering at
the Heart, Choking or
Suffocating Sensations
when in a Lying Posture, Dim
nese of Vielou, Dots or Webs be-
fore the Bight, Dull Pula in the Head,
Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of
the likin and Eyes, fain in the side, hook,
Chest, Limbs, etc., liuddeu Flushes or Heat,
Burning in the Flesh CaribLant, Imaginings
of Evil, and Great depression of bplrile,
The sufferer from these diseases should cl
arets° the greatest caution In Lao selection of a
remedy for his case, purchasing only that
which he is assured (rum his Investiga
tions and inquiries passesses true merit,
is skilfully compounded, is wee twin injurious
ingredients, and has established for Daelt u
reputation for the cure of these diseases. In
this connection we would submit those Well
known remedies—
HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS
AND
HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC
PREPARED BY Dr. C. M. JACKSON,
' PHILADELPHIA, Pd.
Twenty-two years since they were first In
trodned into this country from Germany, dur
ing whlah time they have undoubtedly per
formed more cures, and benefltted suffering
humanity to a greater extent, than auy ether
remedies known to the public.
These remedies will effectually cure Liver
Complaint,Janndice, Dymuepska, Chronic
or Nervous Dlarrhma I Disease of the Kid
neys, and all Diseases aristng from a Dolor.
doted Liver, Stomach or Intestines.
DEB IL 1 T Y,
Resulting from any Canso whatever
PIIONTRATION OF THE NYtfE3l,
Induced by Sovere Labor, !lord
ships, Exposure. Fevers, &e.
There 15 no medicine extant equal to these
remedies In such cases. A tone and vigor is
imparted to the whole system, the appetite
is strengthened, food is enjoyed, the stomach
digests promptly, the blood is purified, the
complexion becomes sound and healthy, the
yellow tinge is eradicated from the eyes, a
bloom is given to the cheeks, and the weak
and nervous invalid becomes a strong aid
healthy being,
PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE,
And feeling the hand of time weighing nen vt.
ly upon them, with all its atteUdaut Ills, wit I
find in the use of this BITTERS, or the TONIC,
an (taxer that will instil new life Into their
veins, restore in a measure the energy and
ardor of more youthful days, build up their
shrunken lorms, and give health and happi
ness to their remaining years.
NOTICE.
It is a well-established fact that fully one.
half of the female portion of our populatlou
are seldom in the enr Joyment of good
health; or, to use their own expression
"never feel well." They are languid, devoid
of all energy, extremely nervous, and have no
aP l H oAh lte ui class of persons the BITTERS or the
TONIC, Is especially recommended.
WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN,
Are made strong by toe use of elther of these
remedies. They will cure every case of MAR-
A. 1311183 without fall.
Thousands of certificates have accumulated
in the hands of the proprietor, but space will
allow of the publication of but few. Those, It
will be obser• eu, are men of note and of such
standing that they must be believed.'
TESTIMONIALS.
HON. C4EO. W. WOODWARD,
Chlof Juat tc the trur: ,f eme e Court of Pts., writes:
Pita Lphia, March le, 1867.
"I find Hooffand's (Sermon Bitters' Is a good
tonic, useful In dis- A eases of the digeetlve
organs, and of great ..L - 1 benefit In cases of
debility, and want of nervous action In the
system. Yours, truly,
(Sao. W. WOODWARD.'
HON. JAMES THOMPSON
Judge of the b`uprerne ()hurt of Penneylvania.
Phl/adefvhia, April 2S, INAI.
"1 oonsider 'Hocliana's German Bitters' a
valuabte medicine In case of attacks of Indigos.
Lion or llyspepala. I can certify this from my
experience of It. Yours, with respect,
Lucas THOMPSON."
Flan( REV. JOSEPH H. KENNARD. D. r,
Pastor of the Ikath Bapast Church, Philadelphia.
Dr. Jackson—Dear air: I have been frequent
ly requested to connect my name with recom
mendations of different kinds of medicines,
but regarding the practice as out of my appro
priate sphere, I have in all cases declined; but
with a clear proof In M varlons instances
and particularly In VI my own faintly, of
the usefulness of Dr. Hootland's German Bit
ters, I depart for once from my usual course,
to express my full conviction that, for general
debilil,y of the systern , and eveeially for Liver
Ctrmptaint, it is a safe and valuable prep/radian.
In some cases it may fail; but usually, I doubt
not, IL will be very beneficial to those who Sal
, ter from the above causes,
Yours, very respectfully,
J. H. Existssnn
Eighth, below Coates St.
FROM REA!. E. D. ' , ENDA LL.
Assialanl Editor Clirktfan Chronicle, Philadelphia
I have derived decided henetlt from tile use
of floodland's German Bitters, and feel it my
privilege to recommend them m a most vulua
the tonic, to all who are suffering from general
debility or from diseases arising from derange
ment of the liver. Yours truly,
E. B. SIIDALL.
CAUTION
Hoofland's German Remedies are counter.
felted. Sea that the nignature of C. M.
JACKSON la on the wrapper of each bot
tle,. All others are counterfeit.
Principal Office and Manufactory at the Ger
man Medicine Store, No. Gil Alt4ll. Street.
Philadelphia., Pa.
A1t1.4.1.1 M. EVANS, Proprletor ‘
Formerly C. M. JACKSON .1 CO.
PRICES
Hoofland's German Bitters, por bottle 11.10
half dozen 6.10
Hoolland's German Tonic, put up in quart hot
ties, 11.60 per bottle, or a half dozen for 17.91
W Do not forget to examine well the article
you buy, In or rto get the genuine,
For sale by Lin - ism and Dealers In Medi
cines even'' ,
Jan 21
ttornego-itt-
WM. LEAMAN,:
No. 5 North Duke et. Lancaster
IL C. liREADY,
No. al North Duke Ht., Laucester
A. J. STEINMAN,
No. 9 East Orange M.., Laneaater
H. H. NORTH,
Columbia, Lanceater °minty, l'a
CHAS. DENIMS,
No. 8 South Duke et.. LALICBIItOr
ABRAM SHANK,
No. 30 Norte Drum L. Lancutor
J. W. F. SWIFT,
No. 13 North Duke et., Lanaruot er
A. HERE MMITII,
No. 10 South Queen put., LATICIUIter
The Doctor might present a volume of cer
tificate!, end teeLllllollllllll of cures, hnt the
most intiefiuttory evidence will be given the
public In n trial of Ms skill.
Loma Itriebinu devotee excluelve attention
to the anise of disesees, In which his practice
bee been uniformly successlui, effecting cures
when they have baltiod all epitome of treat
ment,
CONSUMPTION,
PAMALYSIM,
ItHEUMATII4BI,
BRONCHITIS
DYMPEPSIA,
AidTII MA,
PILEM,
N. H. PRICE. AND DItOPMY,
No. 8 North Date et— Lancaster DIMEAI4EB OF THE
EDUAB C. REED.
No. le North Duke et., Lancaster
B. W. BAER,
No
19 North Dna° st.. Lancaster
FRED. h. PIPER,
No, 6 South Duke et., Lancaster
a. W. JOHNSON
No. 25 Month Queen at., I.4inoa.star.
A. J. SANDERSON,
No. 21 North Doke street. Lsoototor
- --
WM. A. WIIAOT,
No. 68 East Kraig st..Lanoaster
n. W. PA'TTERMatir,
Hm removed Ms Wilco to No. Gil Enid King Kt
O. W. HUNTER,
No. 6 Booth Duko of., Lancariter
SIMON P. EBY .
ATTO RNEY AT LAW,
OFFICE
NORTH DUKE
ELLAIAKER., &SQ.,
NORTE( DUKE STREET,
sept 25 LA.NOASTER, PA. tywts
EUBIEN H. LONG,
ti
ATTORNEY AT
LAW, NO. 8 SOUTH DUKE ntEET,
&meter.
Special attention paid to procuring or op.
posing discharges of debtors In bankruptcy,
proof and presentation of Malmo, rendering
professional assistance to assignees, and all
baldness, In abort, connected with procoedings
in voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy,
whether baforo the Itealster or the United
Skates Courts. Parties Intruding to take the
benefit of Ow law will usually find it 'Wynn
tagenns to have a preliminary:consultation.
Delp tfw 24
RUSSEL'S
Hardware elate
WI TRAY SITIEEP.—CANE TO THE
premises of Jacob Buseer, Jr., Fenn twp.,
lIIREE WHITE SHEEP, one of them a Ewe
and the other two Wethers with horns. The
owner can have the same by proving property
and paying expenses, otherwise they will be
disposed of according to law.
sep 30 I/Lewin/I 3A0013 DUBBER.
RATE OF ADVERTISING.
Mamma Aurrarnscuirtis, $l2 a year par
wire of ten thee; 8 6 per year ler eae4 ad-
Menai square. ,
1
. •
..TAL Earkra ADVIII2III6M, Cie,
the first, and 5 canto for each itioesquens we:
lertlon.
tRICEMAL ADVIL/WISING 7 cents a , Una Insti
tint, and 4 cents for each intuequent
tlon.
Te ESTABLISHED FIRM.
j_ S. Itlelf.d.RSON d 00.,
126 MARKET STREET, PHILLVA.,
Is the largest Manufacturing Cordectioners and
Wholesale Dealers in Fruits. Nuts, de.,
mar 2.5 1u the United State& . lyw 17
DYKE et LANDELL: • -
Ei FOURTH. AND ARCH. STS., ?HULA.,
GOOD BLACK SILKS,
GOOD COLORED &MEP.
IS 98.
FALL GOODS OPENING,
FANCY AND STAPLE:
LYONS SILK VELVETS.
NEW STYLE PrLS,
NEW DRESK GOODS,
GOOD BLANKETS,
TABLE LINENS,
:MEETINGS AND SHIRTINGS,
CLOTHS AND CANSIMERES.
N. B. New Goode received daily In large lola
for Jobbing. lacy 9 Lw 36
J. DEAN, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In
L. IJ mi..OAßei and TOBACCO, PIPES, &c.
Warehouse No. alb CD etanut et, Philadelphia,
Po. In consequence of the continued inalspo
sition of Mr. M. B. DEAN the bus ness of the
firm has been transferred tO the undersigned,
wi.o will eont !nue It at the aameilocation. I
would respectfully Willa an exaeldnailon of
my selected stuck Of "in/ported rind Domesfle
,euurs. 7obaccu. ttc." I intend to keep con
stantly lu etore a lull supply of all goods in:my
flue, and guarantee perfect astiantotinn In every
particular. N. .1. DEAD,
B°phi-1111w:47 411 Chestnut et., Philadelphia.
T HE HOUSEHOLD GAM MACHINES
1 7 OR sUPPLYING DWELLINGS, STORE s,
FACTURIEs,CHURCHKS AND PUBLIC
BUILDINGS WITH GAS!
Generates Uas Fire or Real!
The simplicity and ease by which this Ma
chine In managed, as also its economy and
great merit, recommends it to the public favor.
Call and see machine IDA V n ore l
, stion
Di hestore.
Li JON ',
Manufacturer and Solo Agent,
Tin Furnishing store
No. 7TI (liven street, Philadelphia.
*l_ Send for illustrated Circular.
P BIC E el
L A:l2
I) R Y GOODS
It 1 01: E Y , SHARP ,h(O ~
NO. 727 CHESTNUT STREET
II AVE OPENED A VERY EX rENSIVE AMORTM ENT
81'1 RIIB Q UA LIT Y
SILK ANT) WOOL POPLINS
,W ~T 1112: CIRACEST COLORINGS
RICKEY, SHARP & CO.,
727 CHESTNUT .STTRA7IOT,
PHILADELPHIA
HOOP
AND
COILSETIi' COILHETH
W3f. T. HOP K I NS, . .
Ml=D==l)=l
Manufacturer of the
CLEBRATED CHA.SI PION " HOOP SKIRTS
For Ladies, M Innen and Children.
The (urgent anmortment and bent quality and
styles In Oka American Market. Every lady
should try teem, as they recommend themselves
by wearing longer, retaining their shape much
hotter, being lighter and more e/tutio than all
utherm—warranted In every respect, and sold at
very low prices. Ask for Hosokins',"Champlon"
Skirt.
Superior I land-made Whale-Hone Corsets In
Fifteen tillierent Oration, Including the "im
perial " and Thompson at Laudon'. " Glove-
Fitting" Corsets, ranging in price from 81 Cts.
to .$5.50,• together with Joseph Heekel's Cele
brated French Woven Corsets, superior shapes
and quail ty, Ten dlderent tirades from $l.lO to
45 50. They are the finest and bent goods for
the prim. over Imported. The Trade supplied
with Hoop Skirts and Canute at the Lowest
Hales.
Those viniting the City should not fall to call
and examine our Hoods and Prices, as we dely
all competition. sop 2 4mat Sh
eIIIERNINU MADE EASY
I k-)
(10.1 Fresh Butler all thz Year Round
FARMERS, ATTENTION!
tiNVETIME HAVE MONEY! SAVELABOIL
By using Tomlinson A. Co.'s (Lincoln Eng
land) Celebrated Butter Powder. By the use
of thin inexpensive Powder, churning tor hours
Is reduced to initiates, and le applicable to the
making of Butter at all seasons of the year. A.
small quantity added to the milk or cream at
the time of churning will produce Butter In
much less time, tu larger quantity, and of a
superior quality, flavor and conalstersayt It
removes the unpleasant flavor caused by the
cows feeding oil turnips, {Lathe, weetiketct; and
prevents nil rancidity peculiar to butler; also
makes it firmer and sweeter oven In the hot
test weather.
Tills Powder, now befog Introduced Into this
country, has long been In use throughout
Europe and the Canticles, and Butter made with
it has Invariably taken the prise at all Agri
cultural Shown, whenever exhibited.
Price 2.5 cis. and hit cis. per Box. Mold by all
respectable Druggists and Store-keepers
throughout the Country.
Jel7-4taw2 - I JAMN.IS A. ARMSTRONG,
General Agent for United States,
No. lilt Market scree, Philadelphia
LADIFI'y FANCY F.CHNI
JOHN FAREIRA'S
OLD E.'4TA BUSH ED FUR MANUFACTORY,
/Vo. 7IK ARCH HT., A BOVEBEVENTA,
.PHILADELPHIA.
Ilavc now In Store of illy own Importation
and Manufacture, one ofilhe largest and most
beautiful selections of
FANCY FURH,
for Ladles' and Children's Wear. In the City
Also, a line assortment of fiesta' Fur Olovos
and Collars.
I am unabled to tllspose of my goods at very
reasonable prices, and I would therefore soiled
a call from my friends of Lancaster county
and vicinity.
Remember the Name, Numb
HNePAr and Street 1
JOREIRA,
No. 718 Arch St., ab. 7th south side, Philad'a.
id - I nave no Partner, nor Connection with
an yother Store In Philadelphia. lop 80 4raw
Xtgal gaticto.
NO'flllli T., TILE HEIRM AND LEGAL
representatives of Henry Snyder. late of
Warwick township, Lancaster county, Pa.,
deceased.—You are hereby notified that by
virtue of an Order of the Orphans' Court of
Lancaster county to me directed. I will hold
an Inquest to divide part or value tbe reel
estate of Henry Snyder, deceased , on FRIDAY,
the I2rd day of OCTOI3IIII, 1008, at 2 o'clock, I'.
Ld., on thepremhes, In Warwick twp., Lancas
ter county, Pa., when and whore you may at
tend if you think proper.
J. F. FREY, Sheriff.
SHERIFF'S Orricic, Lancaster, hop. 23rdSISS
, I.
sap it.w
AvD,Tow. NOTICE—F./STATE JNO‘
Lausb, late of Brecicnock Township, Lan
caster county, deceased. The undersigned au
ditor appointed to psecupon the exam:alone
tiled W the account. of Wm. VolO Nelda, admin.
lstrator pendcnle fur of said deceased, and to
distribute tile balance remaining In his hands
to and among those legally entitled thereto,
will attend for that purpose on Teeslay, the 34
day of November, 1810, at le o'clock, A. M., in
one of tlio,lury rooms of the Court Rouse, In
the city of Laneanter, when and whore all par
ties Interested In said estate may attend
Oct 7.ltw-401 S. EIIY,
Auditor.
EDITOWM NOTICE—EaTATE OF DA
VII) HACKMAN, late of Warwick. Twp..
deceased. The undersigned appointed end'.
tor by the Orpheus' Connor Lancaster coluity,
to arbitrate the balance remaining In the
hands of Christian Rimier, executor of the
will of said deceased, to and among tlicsin
lecal p ly entitled thereto, will attend for the
purpose of Is lippoint went ON TR UItBDAY,
p
the sth LAY lii. NOVEMBER, A. q1.,1144111, at
10 o'clock A. M , in one of the Jury Booms
of the - Court henna, 10 the City of Lancaster,
when and where partial interestell are re
quested to attend. JOHN B. 888,
Oct 7 4tw 40 Auditor.
41 edical.
M EDICAL.
DIA:TOIL N. B. BRIHNINE,
l'hymiclan for Chronic Dleeaaes, Inui a per•
manent Wilco at
NO, WI EA AT K IN() HT., LANCAHTER, PA.
Where he Mu been ormeaeil for come time paid,
In the succeenfoi treatment of
OLD OINTINATE 1./NEAP:IM.
LIVER,
HEART,
LUNUH,
STOMA DU,
REIN, AND or
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM,
And all those Diseases peculiar to females
through Die, are promptly and permanently
cured when curable, cud reasonable charges
made tor medicines.
The Doctor's principal remedial agents are
selected carefully from the Pharmacopoeia of
he United States and Uermanyand prepared
and given out by him at his o dice, and corn.
tine all the unviern improvement(' of mcdl.
tine, among which are Inhalation. Atomiza
tion, Electrical and Magnetic treatment
whirl' are all used with success In this late
day of prowess.' The Doctor invites all who
are an'is'es, to call and consult him, free of
charge, and give him and his medicines%
FAITHFUL TRIAL.
Doctor lirishine Diagnoses by the Mine, one
of the most infallible tests of Disessearknown
using optical, Chemical and Mlcrolcopical
tests, enabling him to employ a rational eel
wit Me and curative I re,. tumuli and he will In
no Cage give encouragement for the lake of
foes.
The Doctor is a gradnate off4terlins Medical
College, and the old Warman Eelectle school,
was Surgeon and Medical Director In the lato
War, bas had a large experience, both in 'civil
and military practice, and only desires repu
tation on his own merits. •
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE: No. 93 East
Ring street, a few doors above the Eastern Ho
tel, and a little over a square above the Wart
.11011110. apr 29 UMW 17
Consultation tree and oonddentiaL