rVtlvrtltn'; .llnton n. column one yenr, 'J?! half, column, o.ie year, 80 00 Ant-fourth column, one year, 15.00 XL- -nuir ( 10 lines) 1 iiKturtion . 76 err additional insertion, fryessional and Business car k of not more than 5 lines, per TtMr, auditor, Eseoutor, Administrator sd Assignee Notice, i.tnri&l notice oer line. ftO 5.00 2.r irailBVIOUt MfVIMlllft ,V " 1 limn I months 10 oenta a line. All advertisements for ft shorter r ffoJ than one year ere payable at th me they re ordorod, and it not paid tat person ordoring them will oe neld; sponsible for the monev. Poetry WHITTIER ON LONGFELLOW. With a glory of winter sunshine Over bie loeke of gray, la the old blstorio mansion, !! at on his last birthday. With lit books and hie pleasant pic ture s. And hli household and hie kin, fliile a sound as of myriads Binding Frew far and near stole In. )t eauie from his own fair olty, From the prairie's boundless plain, from the Ooldeu Gate of sunrise And the cedar woods of Maine. And his bwart grew warm within hi in. And his Moistening eyes grew dim, Tar hekne w that III, country's children Were slutting songs of hliu. The lays of his life's glad Morning, The psalms of his evening time, Whose eehoes shall float forever On the winds of every clluie AU their beautiful consolations, Bout forth like birds of cheer, Cstue flowing back to his windows, Asd sang in the poet's ear. Grateful, but solemn and tender, The uiuslo rose and fell. With a Joy akin to sadness, And a greeting like afurewell. Wlthascnseof awo, he likened To the voices sweet, aud young; The last of earth and the find of heaven Heesund in the souk they eung. And waiting a littlo longnr For tho woudorfuloliHiige to come, H heard the summoning aiiic-l Who calls Mod's children home. Aud to him, In a holii-r wuleumo Wns the mystlual ineuulng xlveii Of the worditof the blenm-il MiiHter; ''Of suoh is the kingdom of Heaven " GOOD BYE, PROUD W0RL0. BY UALI-n WALLO KMKHHoy. Uoud bye, proud world! I'm frotng home; Thou art not my friend mid I'm not thine. J-oiitf tbrongh tlu weary crowds I roam. A river ark on the ooenn hrtuvl Long I've been toeoed like tho driven foam; Dot uow, proud world, I'm going home I Good bye to Flattery's fuwnlug fuce; ToUraudeur, with bin wine grimace; To upstart Wealth's averted oye; To supple oUloe, low und high; To orowded hulls, to court und rtreet; To frozen liearts and bunting feet; To those who go and ttuwo who come; Good bye, proud world, I'm going home) I'm going to my own hearthstone, lioeoined in yon groen hills alone, A searet nook in a ploutuuit land, W hose groves tiie f roliu fairies planned; Whore arohes green the livelong day Echo the blackbird's roundelay. And vulgar feet have never trod A spot that's sacred to thought and Uod, O, when I am safe in my sylvan home, I tread on the pride ofOreeoaaud Rome, And when I am stretched beneath the pines Where the evening star so holy shines, I laugh at the lore aud pride of man, At the sophistsohools, and the learned clan; for what are they all in their high ooneelt, When man lu the brush with God may meek i Tks rsT. REBEL PRISONS. BY 'DR. It. ROTH ROCK. Bat something mast be done, and that quloklj. 8eeing ahead of me live oak, whose branches over hung the brook In whioh I was running, I prang and oanght the cods of the extending limbs, and with . more strength than I had supposed my elf to possets, qniokly drew myself oa a branch, crawled toward the trunk, and went np near the top of the tree oat of eight, and bad just got my breath when a pack of the doga, emelling the bushes, howling nd yelping In a fearful manner, and snuffing the air, and two men on horses following the doge, earae di Molly under the tree. Suddenly doge and men started off to another direction, and I was not eorry to see then take the ooaraa tbjsj did, I eat in the tree, and beard them when they captured my Comrades. Another peak of doge oums aroand tod passed, jaat to the left of the tree was perobed opon, and I was pleased that ny taotiosbad baffled wi men and dogs X bad a sroid opportunity to observe, from my Mated position, the nauuer ia rs -t i VOL.19. ' MIDDLEBURG, SNYDEIt COUNTYl whioh the horse followed the dogs. The men gave the horses a loose rein and they followed the hounds, plow ing their way throagh diffiioult places in the woods and nnder brash, and sometimes neighing in a manner which would seem to indioate that they loved the sport The eoand of ths dogs grew faint er in the distance, until I wns left on the tree to my own reflections un disturbed. Here I was. "Forty miles from home and so friends." I bad been without sufficient sloop for eight nights sod days, almost con tinually jdrencbed with rain. My hip was badly ewollou by travelling i my feet bleeding, stiff and sore from exoossivo fatigue, and my clothes, by constant iotoroourse with brambles and cane-brake of tho swamps, bung in picturesque tatters around me. Chilled, wet, and almost starved, I got down from the tree paralysed by silting with my leg over a branch of the tree, shook tnjsolf, bopped around to get up circulation, con gratulated myself warmly on being rathor smarter than tho rest of my oomrades, and thon eat down, taklug oat my note book, in which I had kept a kind of a synopsis of my 1 ings, looked at my map, rockoued up the distanco J supposed ws had made per day, aod tho courso wo had boon travelling, I judged myself from five to eight miles from the chatUhoocheo River, noar wost point, bslow Atlanta. Taking my course by the corupM. I tudoa boo-lino for tho OuattnuojL'heo Rivor which I detoriuinol should settle forovei tho qaostion botwooa tho doge aod raysolf. I aftortvtrds as oortaineil Hint I had not varied five miles n my calonlalions, which wm qnile a fuathor, I thought, in my thinkiug cap. . vVheo tho d ?i omo up in its, It was about nino o'clock, and whon I resumed my joarnny, it was about three o'olook in tho afternoon, I ha 1 not the sligbteet i lea bit that thoso following the dogs had abandonol f'irthar pursuit, and thus fult oasy. ' I bad not gono mora thou two miles before I heard tho dogs on my track, bellowing and yelling like wolvoe. I now know my doom was sealod in this undertaking. In vain I looked for a coovonlont method to get out of this sorape ; but the trees were pitoh piue, and had no branches nearer than twenty foot from tho gronod. In this ex tromitj I saw junt below me a Vir ginia fouce, whioh I reached, and wrenching a slako from the fenoo for a club, I drew my coal sleeve down over my left band, and thrust it out for tho first time to tho first dog whioh came up to bito at. He gave one jump at extended hand, and just at that time let tho stake come down upon his ugly old pati in a manner astoniehing to the dog,which made him give one prolonged yell, and rub his bead among the leavos of the forost, la a way which eoemed to tako his mind from the business on band. i The next blow itnbodiod , a com pliment to the wholo pack of dogs who had come yelling and snapping around me i and I laid one qnivor juat at the time the man following tho dogs hove in sight, and he sung out at tho top of his voice t "L it go thorn thar dogs, you yank, and get off the fenoo," . I saw I was cornered, yet I did not feel like being torn to poioes just to oblige the man on horseback. So I repliod by laughing at bim, at the sams time keeping the dogs off by a circular motion of my club, re marking that t should be happy to oblige bim nnder the qiroumstanoes but couldn't see the point of letting the dogs take a bite apieoo out of my body. J bad noticed daring this time, that be had been cocking and hoi 1 ing towards me a rusty old revolver, whioh I mistrusted, by the way be soted, was not loaded. After some parleying, he oalled the dogs off, remarking. "Well, I reckon yer are kind er tuckered eaut and I'll gin yer a little spell at broatbin t" for whioh I politely thanked him. After some conversation, in which be confessed that be bad toorn the seat of bis breeohes almost off toting around after us," I learned frem him that the dogs were put on our track about two boars after oar escape. but, owing to the rainy weather, did noMoUJiMtt, MVB,0Wb,,18 for a long lime at Flint River, but1 that, by taking two set of dogs, and piacing mem n opposite sides of the river, they finally regilno 1 onr trail. Not knowing we bad a com pass, (hoy were surprised at the el- most boe-lioe we bad struck ia the woods of a strange country. -If tor repeated requests for me to "git into the path," which I told bim I bad no inclination to follow until I was rested, t finally complied. "Wall, I'll be dot rot," said be Uughiog, "you take it as cool as though you bad caught mo, iustoad of my catching you n He was anxious for mo to go afore" him, I prefered to walk "aft," bow over I then told bim I wiwhed to walk as noar' bim as potniblo, in hopos that be might got off bis guard, and I might bavo tho plea sure of helping bim from bis saddle by a quirk lift of his leg, and thus gain tho horse to pnrsno my travels nndor more favorable circumstances. Hat no such chance Occnrod lie informed me that ho smelt a "pretty big rat," and bad hie" eyoe opon tight" and I aappose be also had his pewdor dry. l was desperate in sptto or my Booming good natore, aud wont on tho back track with as much reluot- auco as would a cat dragged by the tail over, a carpot. I was onco al most in act of soizing his foot, whon he caught my oye, and sai l : o yer au i ; yer ooedn t try yer yankeo tricks on mo. Thoroaftor he kopt me under rano of bie rusty revolver, and ho would not allow mo to come within ten foot of him. W hi tn rotnhod tue roaj and roj need our compan ions, who wcro waiting at a cross road with their dp tor a. I was informed, in my travels back to tho stockade, that tho moa employod In hunting ni woro all moo who bad been dotailod from their ruRlruunts for that purpose. Mj captor, the head hnnlor told tuo that ho had done nothing for oigh toon years but hnnt "niggers." For evory escaping yankeo caught, ho shared eqnally with othois thirty dollars. On excursions of this kind, thoy sometimes killed men, but that was soldom done unless they had bud wbiukuy in tbo crowd. He informod me that my buin captured was mere accidont, as he had boon out to a sottlomoot to for age for something to oat, when re turning, he bad rnn opou my trail, and followed it np. His dogs woro he said, the beet trained of any in Georgia, and would follow "uothiug but humans " Ho used me vory well indued, and during tho journoy back to the stockado shared with ni ths food ho purchased, and invited me to sit with him at tublo, 11 o also paid me a rather doubtful compli ment by saying. "I yor wore a nigger, I would'nt take three thousand dollars for yor." Dm the compliment. a After a long wearisome march backward of sovoutyfive miles, in which we had to keep op with horsos and males, we arrived again at the stockade headquarters. "Ah, py Ootl you is to tarn yankoe who get away once pefore last I was the first salutation of old Wirzo i and then, turning to the hunter, be said, "Veil, did you mako do dogs pito in Root, dis tarn yankeo," If I must, 1 will," said the huntor i and I expoct he did. for I saw several, who wore reoapturod after that, frightfully Litton by the dogs. After taking my name and do tacbment 1 belonged to in prison, be tnrnod savagoly around to me and said. "Voll vat you tink I do mit yon," "I am in hopes I replied, assum ing tbe first position of a soldier, you will pat a ball and chain on me, and anchor me out here somewhere where I can get fresh air," "Ah you tam yankeo. you likes it toes y oo. ' Sergeant, take dis man to de stockade." Back I went to my oomrades, among whom my blanket, and some other things left behind had almost bred a quarrel. They were quite surprised to see me, and wore glad that I had brought with mo pitch pine wood, whioh, throagh tbe kind ness of Sergeant Smith, I was per milted to bring into prison. On the whole lUouifU in? rlothea were tarn lo shrtU an I I soratolwd with briers an Uttan by thedo wy bdth was tvatwr gt.'w 4 u'ici"tttr- mi fell 111 erally than when t Urt the prison It was not long before I was tnnncl- ling again, with what rosult will hereafter be rotated. To be Vtmtbiue'l Pearls of Thought, Never associate with bad compa ny. Have good company or none. Trust not the polished stone or smooth-tongued strsngor j both are slippery. o that hoars much and speaks none at all, shall bo welcome in both towor and ball. Ho that is afraid of lonvos mustn't cemo in tbe woods. lie that is born of a ben most scratch for a living. Ho that kills a man whon ho is Iraok muwt bo hangod whon hj is sober. JJo that makes a good war bath poaco. I defy all fotlors though they were made of gold I beard so and so Is half a lie. Ho who will not be counselled cannot bo helpod. no who wonld stop evory man's month muet have a good deal of moat. Ho who would avoid tho son must avoid tho occasion of it. Ho who will vontnro nothing rount not got on boranback. Ho that lies down with dogs mul riso up with floas. I Jo that lives in hopo dancca with out a minstrel. He who wonld bo rich in one year is bangod at six month's ond. Ho who wonld bo well ppokon of himself tunst apeak no ill of others. lit who wonld client tho devil isiint mho nat ly in tbo morning. Ho who would have a hare for bis breakfast must haul over night. Ho that trusts nobody ia never de ceived. lie who uudutstauds most is other men's ruastor. Ho who will avongo ovory alTront moans not to live long. ye w ho will bo bis own master of ten has a fool for his scholar. He who would dcuivo tho fox muet riso bolimos. Ho who will havo no rovongo let hiui leave it to Uod, Ho who would mako a door of gold must knock iu a nail ovory d iv Ho who would have a mule with out faults mubt koop iiono. lfo who would thrive must auk leave of bie wifo. Ho whine houao is tiled with Ihs must not throw stones at bis neigh bors. Lovo boaroth all thinge, believulh all things, bopoth all things, endur eth all things. Autioipatod pleasures, ia point of substanco, are on a par with tho joys of droamland. Life is not so short but that there is always time enough for courtesy. Self commuud is the main eleganoe, If there is any great and good thing in store for you. it will not come at the first or second call. Many an honest man Btands in nood of help that has net tho coursgo to ask it. Many a christian abode ocoaus of tears for tbo boatben abroad but fails to see those at borao. Judicious charity is ooramondablo, but ono bad bettor be bis own al moner. Wounds and hardships provoke our courage, and when our fortunes are at the lowest, our wits and minds are commonly at the best. The man whose thoughts, motives, aspirations and feeling are ell devot ed to himself is the poorest judge as to the effect of his own actions on othor mon. Men are like an old-fashioned oonntry wagon. When loaded, ev erything works well and smoothly ; with nothing in, it rattles so it can be heard for miles. Much of the success in fruit grow ing hinges opou watching for and effectually fighting the many insect enemies. ' Six quarts of soot to a hogshead of water makes a serviceable . man ore for watering foroed plants and shrubs. 1 I Baron Llebig says i "The only method by wbiob you can possibly advuiicsaad develop sgrloulture la by experiments this is the only 1I'. '" uer wrttuo vl nou- 7 " completely twill up by exper- l'A , AUGUST 10, Pithy, Pointed Sayings. National enthusiasm la the great nnrsory of genius. ITudor onr greatest troubles ofton lie our greatest troasnros. There is gonorally no creature more irapude nt than a coward. Fame now wo profoes to do- spiao it, and yot how wo run after it. AiirctiouB oro blessings to ns whon we cau bless Uod for tho af flict ions. They w bo do good with what they have shall bavo ruoro with which to do go ul. Wo wasto our time In moments. onr mono iu shill ings, aud our bap pinoas In tiiflcs Toko caro of all lhal belongs b Ood, and ho will take caro of all that belongs to yon Moro baHhfiilnoss without merit Is awkward, and morit without mod osty Is insolent. Men rosemblo tho godn In tioth- in a so much ns in doing good to their fellow croatnres. There is nothing like having n fixed, steady aim. It digniGos joir nature, aod insuron your succors. Let friendship creep gently to a height. If it rnnhef to it, it may soon run itself out of breath. None are tnoro Industrious in pnlilishicg blemishes in others than thoro whose characters are alike im peachable. Among nil the diseases of tho mind thoro is not one rooro cpidemi cal or snore pernicions than tho lovo of llattnry. Vnmno Dntnro oppt ars a vory do. foraiod or a very boaatiful object, oo cording to the diUorent lights oui which it is viewed, "Ktcrtiity has no gray hairs.' The flowers fade, tho bcait wi'.hers man grows and dies, tho world lies down in tho scpuh hre of ago, bnt time writes no wriukloti on tho brow of eternity. i i A Wiso Choice. A good rainiatnr, whom wo wilt nsmo, whilo sitting at tho dioner tiblo with bis family, had these words naid to bim by bis eon, a lad of elevon yours : "Father, I havo boon thinking if I could only havo ono wihu oi wine what I would cbooeo." "To give you a better ehneo," said the f ithor. "supposo th allow unco bo increased to throo wiuben ; what would thoy bo ? Bo careful Charley. Ho m lo his choico, tbonghUully first, of a good character ; second, of good boalth ; third, ;of a good oJu cution. Ilis father Hngosted to bim that fhmo, rower, ncnus, an. I varioue other thingii are hold iu general oh teem among maukiud. "1 havo thought of all that," said he, ''but if I have a good conscience aud good boalth. and a good educa tion, I shall bo able to vara all tho money that shall be of auy nee to mo, and everything else will come along in its right plaoe,"- A wiie decision, iudoed, for a lad of that age. Lot onr young readers thiuk ol it, and profit by it. How He Was Wounded. Tho avorago Washington claim agent is not a mau to bo disturbed by any scruplos of oonscieucu. "You say you woro wounded dur ing tbo lato war t" "Thai's what I said," returned tho applicant for a pension. "Do you romomber what year it was" "1864, 1 think." ' "Where were you wounded " "In the wrist." "Was it a ininnie ball 1" . ".Vot exaotly. II or oamo was Minnie, but it was a corset bone that woundod me." "All right," excluimod the ageut. we'll call It a bayonot stab." And to day the eorset-scarred veteran is occupying a lucrative plaoe on Un cle Sam's pension roll. Scions, it is claimed, carry them the herring year of tbe with tree from which they were taken, Dy growing deoply-rootod orops as part of the rotation- the-subsoil iv made to contribute to the genera fertility.-"' - .. ii r-.-n.'v . "i, - Sheep are" excollent agents for rid ding knd of thistles, as they erop thorn off as fast a they shoot oat of thogronud. ' 11 1882. no, ri Tho Pretzel This d:lii'ious fruit grows best ii the shade, the sbttdo of a beer gar den boiug profcrrod. It is ripe s birth, and is rondy to cat as sooii a it is pickod. In north Germany, where tho benighted people do no know any better, the pretzel is call od "kringlo." This is enough t spoil the pretzel, only that it is iiu p SNible. Tho pretzel in always planted o free luiicb counters. There is mor nntrilioti in a barrel of sawdust thiui there is in a clothes basket full u pretzels, lint tho protz"! ii muci tho dryer of tbo two. The geuuid pretzel has a bt.art liko a mar - I- jurd, and the hide is varnished t keep it dry. t is varnished wit hot I jo, and sprinkled with salt am auieood to ;ivo it lono. Ilufoio it BHH1UU08 tho exprosxini. ho familiar to tho lovers of this per cncial fruit, the prrlzol Is about th ize of a garter snake. After it ic tied up in that intricate knot bicl makes tho ontor wondor where I. who nis nrsi bile, no man ran guest, at its length Kunugh is knowu, however, to warrant scientific au luoriuos in saving that if s unit) should swallow a pretzol whole, aud it chonld suddenly straighten out ii him, it would kill him in n luiuute It is not possible, however, for n man 10 cut a pretzel nolo, ion car eat all tbe rout of it, but while there Is more hole than pretzol to begit with, yet the rooro yon eat thu pretz ol, the mors bole there is left. John Hurniog, of Jlaltimore.bakcd tho first pretzols over baked ia Anier ic, fifty years ago. It is believed (hat some of them are tbe name proizois eel out on tbo luocn coun ter to day. Tbe pretzel, however, is of Uor mau origin, aud was first tuado in that happy land. Colonel Icgorsoll, howsvor, deoios this. Ho savs there is no evidence, in tho formation or external struct- nro of the protzel, of a ruling intelli- gonco, and he had rather be a peas aut and wear wooden shoes, thao l worth a million dollars, and manacl ed to the dust by tbo clanking chains of a bliudsd priostciaft that laid its fingers, livid with hato, upon his throat and bade bim adopt the hid eous superstition that the pretzel was made by human bands, lo says be rathor hails with glad eyes and unfettered brain tho plain, grand truth that the protzel sprang full grovtu from tho limitless rulmn of tho illuminablo infinite, like Atlas Iroiu tbo braiu of l'oricles. l'ut for infidels, ho says, to-day thero would bo uo pretzels. Iho Colonel's thonghts on these metaphysical questions nro deep aud beautiful, lint they are very mub liko the protzol i you can't toll which is tho front end. Tho protzol is caton. Why, oo lody seoms to understand. When first introduced iu this country, hackmeu asod them for snafllo rings but by and by people got to eating them, and it has boon a popular cus tom ever sinoo: The soberer the man is, tho fewer protzeld bo oats, and conversely Tho market vului of the p o -ol is one hundred and fifty for a dollar. They got etartud at this, and have nover varied from it vory much. As aa article of. food it isn't worth qui to so much ae that ; probably not by a hundred and fifty. After a man has lost all bis tcetb, it is a hollow mockery, a witheriug sarcasm, and au ineffacablu stain up on tho uamu hospitality, to offer bim a pretzol. Uuntuto. "W'beu did George Wash ington dio ' aekod an Auetiu toucher of a large boy. "Is ho dead 1" was the astonished reply. "Wuy. it is not moro than six months ago that thoy were eclebrut ing his birthday, and uow bo is dead. It's a bad your for children. J reck on bis folks let him oat something that didn't agroo with him. . I Johnny remarked that his , father and wlhor Wire Chrlstlius, but they were always ugly oa f-iunduye Ho thought they were mad at wick- ed people. Thoie aro some people so sordid that tbey swap off a few thousand years of immortality in tbe next world for a little more StU ' iu this !Wl'.d, " ' Pulilt.-hod every Thuwrt vv Evcnms? JEHEMIAH CBOTTSK, Frt- terms of Subscription, rwft IKK.LAK IT. It ANN I'M. ttif. alle viihin nix months, or f'JiOifnof paid wiihin the ) a". Nn paper d-' continued until nlf lit rcnrnir,e -V paid unhss Si Hit' 0Mloli of the pub iirhor. HtibarriptiAn-; nttliide of the fount f IMVAHf.r. IV ADVANCE. Persons lifting and tising psrter tildrrnMrd i,olh"i lic .ini'niil-'ri( rs' ml nro liulilo fortlip price of tie p pftr Failing! That is what a fcroei many people are doing1'. They don't know just what is tho matter, but they have' a combination of pains gnd aches, and each month they grow worse. The only sure rcmtxly' yet found is Hrown's Iaom Nittf.ks, and this by rapicf and thorough assimilation with the blood purifies and enriches it, and rich, strong Mood flowing to every part of the system repairs th wasted tissues, drives out disease and gives health and" ttrenh. This is why ProwR Iron Kittkks will cure kidney and liver disease, consumption, rheumatism, neuralgia, ilysjx-psia, mala ria, intermittent fevers, &c raj S. Fk St , thlrtim Not.iI.iHi, I was t great tuffcrcr from PyMtpnt,, siid for tvtrl Tveiki could tat nothing sad grow ing weaker er 1y. I tried Drnwn'i I mo Dittcn, tnl un hap7 to ray I now hire a cnou l-pctfle, aod am cilani; Bronze. Jos. McCawlt. Crown's Iron Bitters is not a drink and does not contain whiskey. It is the only preparation of Iron that causes no injurious ef fects. Get the genuine. Don't be imposed on witfr traitaUyiw, mm The Carpenter Orgus wcroArM minnfliclnrnl Maarlj u Imiwi at Bnrt I i.m', Vt. K.irm ininilH r of -ftra HiitMiT' IfeHrkKTita OauAji Wuau and Gcli.r.l Ofllv ! Imo ItcaicU at Worcoitor, Mana., U. 0. A., WIUi I'.run'li (fi!c.a au'l Vur.ikua la Nbw York (No. ; Wtt FawtoMH Si-Mtk london, Madrai '- SL PetorsbsrOj CKy of Mexico, Berlin, Baraefeaav SwtnM it "!m In rr.'ry mr-1, Donbilitx in t vrrj (nrt, rr(Mtiea in ovi-rr till of m-naf-ftnm. Are ha raclr rl at le ol Iho CAtPUfTTX OBUML. FJT'-rjr Infltrunintit W AriR ANTED lr EIGHT YEARS. MONT IIKLIAIII.H DBAI.KnS a4l b Cauiintku Omua, tut ifaar du nithaa tUatn to bow im. wrlin diract to tna Iv-tor? lur a VMm I'l-iio aul lufuruaUua aa lu whora pm aaa at- theui. OVER 100 STYLES, Baogtae In irirr. froi 1-v.on tu f UOasOSDS o no iu r-r ulillalMl, hUhW fUEU lu UikWaV Uijj imrcliMura. iiUlroaa ot al 1 ua 1 1 tiMXni Wawila, Urn. 0. t L MARBLE WORE Liiwihuuna, pa. ITALIAN AND AMERICAN MfRBLE- MONUMENTS. Tombstonen, Stiituos, Urns, Vasee LAMfW.for Children's (J aves. rotti, H'U-h, T'ifiMe), Mnrhle anrt Slide Jlanhlt, d. All Hi D wbo daflra topurobata t'tantxlonai aaytlilna: ali.a titiiiufaotured at thu alMiva mae tlunail in mlile o.irka, aliuulil c-xntull Ilia uniltf 'tKoad aKaul, banirp iurolialnK al-iwliara. saiu r.L uuwkn, dar JolfU'Tttf Ml.lJlebur.8n- Cot' riniM:s. I will mall (h-noi ttaa reli fur a alrapta' VrK'all Halm that will rama-o Tar,. Frovklra, I'liniilaa and lllnia hra. loavlna tlia m ID 'ft. claar and Ix itulKul . liu la-lrua-tlun l.ir nruduQlna a luiurlaul aruwth al hair' un a l'l'l ba-d or nuionth r. A Mrsa la sloala lo amp, HtN- VANlLlr . CO., I aarolay HI.. N. V. TO CONSUMPTIVES. Tba artvartl-er ha-lna bran Mrmaaaal l curad ol that dread dlaaaia, (loaiaaipllon, by a iuiiii- raiuotij, ip ansiou VI luaaa (Dial Itr bli lallow-aulUrtira tba uiaaua uf aura. To alf rbo dadra It, ba will -and a ap? of tha pra,. orltlua und, I Ira-of okarica -Hb tba dlraa lluni fr proparion and uilna. Iba aarao, blrb thar alii and a aura ( ural ir ralOia, cinaniniMlftii, A.thuia, Urot-rlktlla, fca. rrtlawl,blna thafr"rt.Uoa, will uiaaaaf aldr.H-. t. A. WILMONl 1M rasa bi., WllllauitbarNb, M.V. HIHORS OF VOTJTH. (rKNTT.EMA. TV hr rafTa-ed for vanralmnr Saroui DtlllL,ITY. fUtM A rili: UK AY. and Ml thaaSuta "f Touiblul ladhMr. Hon, will fur Ilia aaka of lalf- rlnic huuaaltr, ad In to all bo aoad II, tha rasi and sr rsollua l. r niaklnu tbaaluipla rawadjr tf blak baaaiourad. NuSarart ol.blna ta proSl trf tiiaadvartlaar'a t-aporianaa aaa d aa kr i' dri-i-log lo rwrfnataunfl laaoa. JOHN M. OUVLN, Oadar SI. If. T rab II, ly. ketft on haunt all tint ij JlUmk tuch v ttU, iun tiioiuo, Warrant lM.t baifUaS mmmm anL- i m I I