,Vivortllrior lint". Oa oolttmn one yerl tOO.Oti One-hftlt column, one year, 80.00 One-fourth column, ono year, . 15.00 On square (10 line)l tnsortion 76 Arsnr additional Inxortion. 60 Prrafnaiiinna.1 ami KnaliiM CAnl.a. ot not mora thiin 0 line., per year, 5.00 Auditor. E win tor. AdimniHtrator and Aanignne Notions, 2.50 Editorial notices por lino, 16 All transient advor lining less than I months 10 cents a line. All advortUomcnta for a shorter pe rlod than one year are payable at tha time they are ordered, and II not paid Vaa person ordering them will te neld; Mponsioio lor ine money. U - - ! Pootry. The Bridal Veil. BT ALtCR CARRT. "We're nmrrtotl.they Bay.and you think you've won me, "Well, take this rell from tny head, and look on mo; Here's doubt to distrust you, and faith to believe you I am all as you sec, common earth, common dew; Be wary, and mould mo to rose, not ruot Ah I shake out the flinuy thing, fold after fold, And see if you have mo to keep nnd liold,- Look close on my heart see the worot of Its sinning The pant Is not iulno-1 am too proud to borrow You intirit grow to new heights if I love you to-morrow. We're marriedl I'm plighted to hold lip your prairies As the turf at your feet does its hand ful of dahteH; That way lies my honor my pathway of pride, But, mark you it green grass grow on citherHide, I shall know it, and keeping in body with you, Shall walk iu my spirit witli tuy foot onthedewt We're married, oh, pray that our love do not fail! I have wings flattened down and hid tinder my veil. They are subtle as lightyou can un do them, And swift In their flight you can nev er pursue them. And spite ot all clasping, and tipite of all bandit, ' I can slip liko ixkIkuIow, a dream from your hands. ay, call me not cruel, and tear not to take tue, I am yours for my lifetime, to be what you muke me, To wear my white veil for a sigh or a cover. As you shall be proven my lord or my lover; A cover for peace that is dead, or a token Of bliss that can never be written or npokeu. DATICNPC If yi'iir f'M?s torment and taunt you If your fear harass and haunt you. If the world seems dark and dreary "Wait a weoatid dinna weary." If Hio hopes you fondly eherish, Diuthcd to eurtli seem H'.iru to perish,. Wait with patieuou for to-morrow ' No man's life is wholly sorrow. If your plans don't work to please you, If the Fates should vex and tease you ' If you oan bo bright and cheery, "Wait a who and diuua weary." If God irlvos you leisure, take it Tis his girt a blessing make it; 111. I.. Kim im uililu1.itlni fcJorve his will by patiuut wuitiug, ' Or, If work. Instead of leistiro, Pain, instead of longed-for pleasure Howso'ur your lot seem dreary, "Wait a wee and dinua. weary." Far The Post. ' REBEL PRISONS. ' bt on. a. rothhook. Here ho turned the oflonuore over i . . . ... . 10 me prison ponce, wuu a nuort epoeoh, in which be statod, that thoy bad boon Impartially triad, and found guitly of atrocious ra ardors, and thai ho left tbeir punishment in te nanus 01 ma prisoners 01 lue Btock tdo, they being in euoh cases provi Jed. lie then tamed, and fol lowed by bis guard, loft the prison. The police formed thorasolvos into a hollow square around the gallows ; the rope were arranged, and the guilty mon ascended the scaffold tops.' ' Up to this time the mardorera did Dot mwi In vanta tlA rtrrwuwwlinira In ft serious Ught, but rather as a joke. VoTor dreaming of this being reali ty. Ieavs was then given for them to speak, whioh they did, protesting tuuir innocouco, pne or two calling upon their companions to do thoir duty, hioh porperly interpreted, meant that they wished to be release h the palioe. ' . j ' The ropes were adjusted about their necks, the ' bags wore drawn Orer their bees, tbeir arms pinioned, llUflhlftif AiljinnA tnrAilA.l tha An t I'm mr, tha, drop fell, and fire of the eoQviet hang tlanggling ia the air, l. At m . Plf 100 snin, awxire. I the prison gnie, sprang at Iho time, V beiortf the drop Ml. broke tU Si VOL. 20. od his hands, ran swiftly, was pnr sued, beaten ovor tho boad with a dab, nod rocaptared, whon tho ropo was again adjustoJ, his protestations of innooaaoa wore aaho edod, nud ho was pushod from tho drop, and h;ing with his comrades ia gailt. Thds endod the losson of rotriba tioi, that p-it a stop to ni ird rj ia prison, and broko up a gn of bonnly jumping dospor 1 )ni. Lot ma bore record, ia j 'is tioi to a man who has siaco mot a similar ftto ia rotribution for crimos committod against Union prisjnors, that I and many others ot tin prisoa woro goralful t3 Cpt. Wirzo for tho pri vilege aflfordod nn, to onablo na to give the aconsod a fair, im partial trial, 1 havo purposely avoided, in these pngos. hooping nnnocossnry odinm trpoo the head of ono who, though goilty, 1 havo go.)d reasons to suppose was only tbo exocutivo of a syt'.om dovisod by men high in ro bol authority, and from whoso ordois no inferior could dovh'o There never wjw hanging cm- ducted in a niDro orJoily mannor. Thore was no clamor of voiooJ, but silenoo onddoooiu n bofitting such a scene. Thirty or forty thousand men wore its witaossos. Thonco forward raiding And flank iog were of raro oocarronco, and tbo polico became ono of tho establish- moots of the prison. That tho po lice done inuoh. to pnnisli otTunders and preserve oi'Jur, cannot bo doDi od. They wore montly of tho class donominatod '-ronsbs," scloctod fir thoir physioal rathor than their raoutal qiiaUQcations.and in eomo in- stanoos became a greater ovil, thau that which thoy woro institute J to correct Thoy loviod at i apin all traJiu! stands, and occupations in ho ptiion, ca'g Hod nnn ovor the boad for small faults, and whippod thorn upon tho buro bick, with a cat of nine tails, most of whom, how ever, deservod the punishmoot in flictod. Yot they would not tolorate any iojustioo dona by otuors than thorasolvos, uoloss they wore wull paid foruot arresting olToodors. Iloserving to thomsolvos tho right of doing iojustioo aud cotnilting abuses, they govornod tho camp, and coiTcctod all olhor abuses but thoir ovu. So that tho polico force bocaino a regular nuisance and a mockory, I am sirry to rocord, that iu Florouco (3.C ) rjilitary prison, wlion I wh aotiuf etiiuf of polioe, this kind of polioo foroe bocamo for a while, dogradod tools in tin hands of tho robots, they whippod won at the command upo i tho bare back for digging tuunols, &o. for which duty servioo thoy woro rowardod with extra rations. - I havo ontorod thus particularly into dotaiU whioh woro noodful. that tho gonoral roador should have, and that bo may roalizo in soma degroo the posiliou of a prisonor at Andor sonvillo, and to show, that anything orginally dovisod for oar wolfare might bo porvortod to oar misery. It was ia July that I first notiood nogro prisoners among us, though thoy were, doubtless, thore provious to that time. Scarcely any of tbom bat were victims of atroaious ampu tations porformed by robol surgeons. It was said that none of tho prison ers were oaptarod oxajpttho wound ed. Tboso ia the pi-isoa woro mostly New England men. Somo of them bad boon captured at tho charge on Fort Wagner, whou Oolonel Shaw was killed, and at tho battlo of Oluatoo, Florida, I observed in the nogro prisoners a oommondublo trait of cleanliness. Indeed, I may say, their clothes wero, on an avor ago, cleaner and better patched than tboso of other prisoners ofthe stook ado. ' Tbrongb exposure to the son and rain, tbey wore much blacker than the common Southern negroes, and many wore tho exclamations of sur priso among tbo guard of this faot.', "The blaokest niggers I ever saw,'' was the common expression on see iug tbom. I have said the nogroos were most ly wounded aud mntllatod whon thore bad been a ease of amputation, it had boon performod ia suob a tpannor as to twmt and distort the limb out of shapo. - . Whoa a negro was "placed in a aqaad among whito men, it was us ually aooouapuniad with the injunc tion, addrewod to the Sergeant of MIDDLEBU11G, SNYDEll COUNTY, not, lick him, or report him to mo, and I will knock holl out of him." I novor know an iniUuoo, how ever, whore a sorgoant required of a blitck man, any sorvice not usually allottol toothers. Understanding that tboro was a major of colored troops in piison, I htiutod hira np, and found Major Archibold Hoglo, who was formerly, I believe, a liioutonant ia tho 17th Masskiufantry. IIo wascapturod at Oluetoe, after being severely wound ed ia several places. He informed mo that be foraiorly lived in Molroso .I.ibs. !:'ince bo camo into tho rebel pen, bo bad boon rcfusod all modicnl and surgical treatment, though tho prisonors dotailod 03 hospital Stowards had covortly alTotdod him aid, and dressed bis wounds. Ho woro bis uniform, aud fiooly Moclai od biuuolf au ofllior of noro troops a fact which all ofllcors ot nogroos wero not willing to owa, by reason of tho bard treatment received therefore from tho ruboU. Ilia was an instaoco of tho fact, that a tmo gontleman roraaius tho eomo amidst tbo nioil squalid misory and accumulated misfortunes. His intercouse with others was digniflod, com loous, and urbane, ns if iu coiu inand of his regiment, there woro many in prison, as tboro always has boou in our army, who profeesod to doppiso negro troops, aud have a contempt for thoir ollioers. Major Iloglo was, atonotimo, I was inform ed, compellod to moss with his cc . . . ...... 1 1 of otuors amul all tuo accumulated misory of tho "prison pon," Such wero uiy improssions of Mujjr Ho glo. Many loose statements liavo boon mado in print indicating that ollicors wore as common am mg piison irs at Andersonville as oolisted men. With the exception of Maj ir lioglo, thore woro no commissioned oflicers in toutionally placed iu Audoisouvillo prison. Otbors woro thoro by their own acts ; but tbo prison was inten ded for oulistod mou ouly. At any timo an olBcor of whito troops could bo eont to Macau, or somo othor oflioors pris.m.by merely making a plain statomout of facts, which looked plausible to the robs groos;yct no always mnmiaineuiwotiv0 of ic,m.fit would kcrp tho his gentlemanly loaring aud self- , croti Ar i cry wai posto I at va respect, ond commanded tho respect I ,.; ,,iact) Wi;b men in position to So much is requirod to bo said, 0Sd igc You can buy n box cf mutch there sooms to bo a grent misuuder- ea to-day for live cent t, while Sulj stauding in relation to this matter mou's throco of ivory uud gold und it is my deuiro to writo such nJ history, and givo snch doscriptious of tho different prisons, that thoao who wero priiouors at tho timo with myself will be tho ones most rea Jy to teslify to tho truth of theso pic turos, crudely drawn with pou and iuk. Major Uogle, at ono timo, was en gaged ia tunuolling operation, in which plotted to release all tbo prisonors in tho Btookado. It failed Ihrough the treason of somo ono in tbo secret, though it eomo mighty noar being a success. slbout the time I bocamo ncrpiaiuted with him, au extensive plot was formed to break the Btookado, Over two thousand men wore plodged to risk thoir lives upon an effort to rc loaso the prisonors of tho stockado. Here soomod the ohoioo before us, to dio without an oft'ort, amid all tho misery of the prison pon, or to dio with our hands uplifted to strike one blow at our enomics, before death, in an attempt toliborato our selves and starving comrados. To no roasonable man did this appear at that time to bo any bopo for lifo but in that way. I went into the projeot. I am willing to oonfoss at this day, having fall confidouoe in oar ability to aoboive the desired result, aud with a fooling that it was bettor to dio in suob an attempt than to die a miserable, loathsome dooth by gradual starvation. Aot- ing in oonoort, wo set oursolves at work, and dug tunnels op to the Stookade i then the tunnel branchod off at right aoglos, running parallol with the stockado, a shoulder of earth being loft as a temporary sup port, bo that when a rush was made against the walls from the outside, it would bo thrown down ia the places thus mined, lo this mannor three portions of the stookade walls wore undormioedat lost, or at least I have reason to suppose so, al though I was .engaged hi digging aud englueoriog uu but ono of these places,- - V. broak through the South side, noar tho gato, and capturo tho rosorve of tho guard nuothor to broak through on the north ei lo, and, making a circuit of tho Btookado, cipturo tbo guard thoroon i nuothor parly, breaking through on tho Bouth-wcst side, near tiio gsto, was to capture tho rcblo artillery near boad quarters and uso !t according to circumstan cos, and in alio as sure capturo of rebol oOioors, as nas possiblo t while prisoners oulsi In, undtr d itad. woro to cut tha telegraph wires. This achiovod, prisouets wero to bo lib erated, rations equally distributod, tha can seized, ammunition and arms placed in tho bands of "Iho organiati n, nul fion, raidii g through rebel country, soizo npon j moots nnd rescrvo hor frown for hor horses, mules, nnd other transput--jhotnn nnd llreHido? U i slio a call lo tation, and cfl'i-et nn cscapo to tho' a wifo who comes down to brcaktssl Onlf. Such wero our plans general- iu ab.iminaMo curl pap.'rs, a soiln.l ly. All was pronounced roadj for the grand assault, nnd wo woro waiting with trembling handii, and expectancy, when a proclamation was read iu prison, nod posted iu conspicuous places, etnting that such a plan n kuown to bo organ, izod, and tbo commandant of tho prison had full knonlodgo of nil its details, even to Iho camo of thoao concortel ; aud that, if wo persist ed in carrying cut tho plan, there would bo great blood-shed which be wished to avort. Such, in substance, was a proclamation sign-id by Capt. Wire. Wo had hcou bolrayod by ono who, wo supposed, fivtn every U40 it ; twico bbi'ts-wiTo tired over tha beads of prisoners iu crowds, whilo while (lags woro placed all over tho prison au ranges or their artil lerists. T A.; C'tthii:. ,l. Tno Contrast- Tho ltttrliiiyton lituvkeyc thus disooursos in n "lay sermou'' proach od for the bmetlt of those who me porpotually coutrantitig Iho present unfavorably with tho past : "Pearly buloved, so thoro aro men in urlii)(ton this very Sabba'h morning who sigh for "tho good old timo'' uhou our limes surpass those of Solomon more Ihun hU days (ur passod tho years of l'lgyptiau bon- Jsouldu't bavo bought ono match. Tho Quoon of b'hobj thought Solo mon's wisdom and greatness wero buyoud oouiprohuusiou ; what would sho say could sho only havo behold a yard engiuo of tho Burliugtou aud North wostorn narrow gaugo Tho weight of gold that camo to Solo mon iu ono year was six buudred threo bcoi-o nnd six talents of gold, bnt with all of it bo couldn't buy a common bard ooal bass bnrnor. He had fourteen chariots and twelve thousand horsomoo, yot bo conldu't telegraph to Hiram that ho wanted a co dar raft ns soon as it could bo shipped, and ha couldn.t givo bis mosaongor a borso that could trot in 2.-30. Tboro wasn't a nowspapor nor a printing press in his kingdom so ho didn't know what it was to write 'dimee' and bavo it printed 'dinnors.' Thoro aro conveniences to-day in tho county almshouse that Solomon had to go without. We can buy a watch today for twoaty dollars yes, for five dollars that couldn't bavo boon bought with h'u kingdom. J'o haven't eo many wives as he bad, but we havo bolter ohildron, roach bolter, indeod, for whilo Solomon had the theory of traiuing ohildron all right, ho never put it into praotico in his own fam ily." An exobauge puts it in tho folio w iog terse lanaruago t "Tbo idea that a person must savo all bo makes to got rich has ruined more persons than it ever made respoctablo and usoful members of society, No more pitiable objects oan be found ia any community than the men that board np all they make and live only for self.". It is said that a pair of protty eyos are the boat mirror for a man to shave by. 'Zackry so i and it is un questionably the oase that many a uiao has been shaved by tbem. 8nientiQe co to Japan ' tf dli PA., SEPTEMBER Who Shou-J not bo a Wlfo. His th it worn n ncU to boa wife who thinks le.oro of her silk dross then hr children, nud visits her nursery no oflener than onco s lay f 11m that womau a. call to bo h wife who cries for a cnHhmc.ro hhnwl when hor husbund's notes nro being protested ? Has that womau a caii to bo a wifo who sits reading IHn last novel whilo lmr baslviod slati Is bo f iro tho glass vniu'y trying to pin to gather a buttouloss shirt bm.n '! It is th.it w.nmii a call to bo a wft who expect 4 her hns!in I to swallow dilute 1 colToc, s.gy breud, Hinoki'd tea aud watery p itatoos bix days in sevon ? An sli t a cill to b'i a wifo who tlirts with every other man b'.iu drosuug-grown and shoes down at tho hool H is blio a call to be a wife whoso husband s lovo weighed naught iu the balance with her next door neighbor's dimask curtain or velvet carpet T lias sho a call to bo a wife who would tako advantage of con jugal wcaknosi to ixtort money or exact a promiso t Has sho n call to bo a wifo who a journey for pleasnro leaving her husband to toil iu n close oflloo.' Anxious to bo Posted. At tho second battlo ol bull Hun a recruit who had j. ist joined a Now York regiment turned nroun 1 upon his cn;Uin as nu order was givuii, ami nskod : "Say, Cap, what aro you going to do no V "Movo by tho 11 ink lo tho loft tf tho regimotit,'' wai tho reply. j "All right just aa soon movo as not." After tho coiupwy h id hold its now position for a quarter of au hour there camo nuothor order, and the recruit askod : "Siy. Cap, which way now P "(r.iing to ndvauco." "All right, I'm with you." Tho company moved foiward with tho lino nnd win presently hotly on gaged with Jackson. s mon. Thoy had not been ul it over live minutes when tho recruit slid up lo thj c.;j tuiu nud Shouted ; "Say, Cap, holler as loud n you can and let's sio it I cnu hour you." "V hut in thunder do you moau f Hack iuto liuo with !" bhuutod the officer, "All right, Cip, a'.l. right Tho reason wanted you to hollar ws to see if I could hoar your voico whon you ordorod a rotroat 1 It's all right I guess I can hear it it thorn robs don't bring up any moro gnus." Tbo extent of our publio land poo scessions, aud the possibilities otlho dovolopuiont by emigration, aro in dicated in current tews despatches. Tho Duudoo Land Company of Sootlar-d is to buy 150,000 sorts iu Arkausas, and has already cloKcd tho purchase of 4i,000 acres of timber lands. Ia MiouP3ota a cats has boon mado of 50,000 acras whereon to colonize a nnrubor ot Danish fumilios, who aro on their way to thoir now homes,' with others to follow. Such facts givo ono a vivid idea of tho growth and vigor of tbo Wost and ooiuu. Juo story id spread with eter increasing swift ness and fullnous in all and tho wonderful drama goes nn with a constantly accelerated iutcrost. Tho movomont of emigration iuto tho South and Southwest is peculiarly significant. It was long ago pro dicted as an inevitable consoquouoe of returning tranquility aud ol edu cational and nows facilities and sanguine mon see the dawning ot their day of triumph. John Sanndors went from Kon tacky to the West forty years ago, swearing that his betrothed, whom he loft behind, should not see him antil he was a millionaire. jLast week be balauceJ bis books infJon tana, and, finding himself worths million of dollars, be set oat ior Kentucky, wboro the. twain were made oue. The groom was 08 and Iho bride CI y'oars of age, ' Keep your band.and heart full of good thoughts, that bad ones find no room to entef , . - J...4 HJ i! --!! ' To repent witbont mending one's 7, 1882. NO, ) The Newer Arithmetic AVbnt is tho exuet number of con stables, and bow many law suits can a wido-amiko ollicer provoke iu u year .' A merchant who has a stock valu ed at S8, (HM advertises that ho will disp iso of t at one-fourth of!, flow mcch docs ! o iniiKe Y "A plumber who di es sixteen cents woitu of lepairing dot-ires to c-hnr'i for four pound-! of Redder iu hi bill l'leao FUggcsl how it call b djuo without injury to hi system A citi.eo has n cow hicli civet ix quarts of milk per day, while hi sales foot up tiino i;uait4. There it nothing for the ntudetit to find ie this ease. Simply tin n on tho vn tit. A grocer has a borso which ho ns m rls can trot a m.lo in 'J.l. II. puis him on tho trvk uudcr a watch aud liuds his bent gute to bo II. '2 S What was the ditroreiieo betwetui the grocer's eutitu ite and the vtutoh. aud why did ho Wullop the poor horse all the way ho n o ? A fnlhir at lii.l doulh left .12,()00 for the benefit of his only sou 14 years, S months aud 1- days old, the money to be psid him w hen 21 years of ;o, with iutere.it at 'six per cent. How much ranoy did the lawyers leave for the boy T Ho Wan tod a Position. A man applied, not long sinco, to tho mayor of Austiu for employment on tha polico force. "Havo you had any experience ar resting desperate characters ?'' "N'oiio of that iu tnino." "Aro you a good detoctivo ?'' "Not much- I'm not bharp cnottgn for that. Iho reason Im out of money is bocauso somo scoun drel picked my packet." "Well, iu Iho unrno of Heaven what sort of scrvico did you expect to render on tho polico "Well," drawlo d out tho applicant "I thought you might nocd a reli able, steady iiihu to report any'leak ii'is iu tho water maiuu." 'lsttt Sirif'tlmj. t kuowed riot ott you wero a t'hrisliau, sab. No man iu do drng bizuoss Vcpt a follow ob do Lord would hang out sich a siu as ou han got. Hit shows you am a Chi is tiau fust, and a puouuiixnr nfter wards. I was jest BjVUiu' it out. Hit am da best advicotbar I got in a drug btoro.'' & ? "What sign nro yon talking about, I'uclo '!'' asked tho boiuewhat bc wildiired druggist. ''Pat nr," said tho old man, point- int to a rdacard on tbo wull, which read : "Tasteless Modiciueu " "Hal ar am de bout adviso iu do world 'last less medicines.' I nebor had tastod no medicines, nohow, aud dat am do chief reason I 'so alivo and kickin' yet. Hut you am do futt Christian druggist obur I struck, and tho old mau strolled out just in timo lo avoid stopping with his head a package of hair restorer that tho iuf uriatod druggist burlod aftor biiu. "What is tho devil?' asked a Sunday school toachor of tho new boy who was quito small. "I don't know what it is, but it can't run as fast as ray, pa can." "How do you know tha dovil can't tun fast f" "Ht cau&t I lieard pa Bay that bo always catches tho dovil whou be comes homo Iuto at night from the lodgo." "How is it," saij a sliiu vpcoimeo to a portly Qermau friond, "that I cau't got a big- stomach liko yours t" '-Dot th 8 an easy r$a," roplioJ the Teutouio citizen, "ilou'd yon effr see do carpenters building hounes J Vah. Veil you Joo'd soo dom pnt no bay wiudonrs on scboioko houses, ainM it T Dot vas da difTerenoe." It is the little things that frot and worry us. A thrce-ycar-old may keep a mnn in perfect misery, whereas no such trials would aooom puny the preoeucs of his cigb teen year old sister. The tail of a fashionable youth's coat ia very, very short. But it is not as "short," in the majority of oases, aa the fashionable youth him self by a baodsoms majority. " A young utaa. Ufaed Union baa lately be ordaioad as aoiaisUr. . li'-l '-'' I'm: i(ht rubllshtd every Thrl JEUEMIAU CHOUK" Terms of S I WtVDol.l AR. ' able vi'l-in pnid wilhii riuiliiiiii"' . uid u ,lioii of llio . lisbrr 8ul ions outbids ol I .0 colli AVAIII B IN AtiVAM K. t. I' r ;iim : i ft n n, nMiH prt addrexsed Hiir:- In i uiiiis'ilier' mid ;i r- li ible (n inc jiriec oftb- MALARIA Malaria is an almost t dcscribable malady wl i li not even the most Ulci i I physicians arc nbtc to ff. 1 1 oin. Its cause is most fre quently ascribed to local surroundings, and there is very little question, but ihi opinion is substantiated by facts. Malaria docs not nec essarily mean chills and fever while these troubles usually accompany it. s It often nfiects thcsuflercrwith fjcneral lassitude, Accom panied by loss of appetite, sleeplessness, a tired feeling and a high fever, the ter fcon afTlieted growing weak er and. weaker, loses flesh day after day, until he be comes a mere skeleton, .1 fchaduw of his former self. M.itari.i met tuvtrff UiJ lu holtl uimn tH ttumnn frtn,th lH.r or the ivttrM If thrrwnva t lo nervous diM-a.f. 1 1 hoty ' web. and entar) Irtl alMoit iw nufiitim!!!, hut nuliittiii( lipfwi Ittrlf, llie tlimiva nr,(ana mi .tirr n:Hbrin lh-ir funtim f Die livrr l'c onical'iriiia, anmhaff orK'Uit f.iililiic lo do thrlr fimlln work,pr-.My lirmi Jiorr-H( anj dutolutiua anil datK arc apt lo ciuuc. In (id liiionloirln(;accrt.-un cnr f.r m.il.irii and clnlU and frrr, l.k.iwN's Iron lirrTFRS U highly tucuniinciiilrd fur all i'.iwjwi rcquir liij; a certain and efficient tonic; n-pi'ciallyinlip,tinn,ilysprpsia,in(rr-initlciit fevers, want ot appetite, cf strength, l.tck of euerKy, etc. Lnriches the Mnuil, Hrcnthent tlm muscles, and p,ive new life lo Uia ti'vvev Act like a charm on tha digestive i rrnini. It is for tale nil te-pect.il lo ilatilvia iu inetliciucSg ptiC'.', Ii j tr Imttle De miro and get the ruulni CROWN'S IRON BITTERS. Take no other. Th Carpscter Organs wi-r! rat mannftvliirixl an Ctrl' m at Drab I nU.r', VI. a,r a iiiinU-r i f y'ira tljartuiiaive (Am i rru OujaM Wuuwa uai lii mr-l Viae liar liviii lii-atiO r; Worcoator, Kaaa., tT. S. A., With ftranrh OCii-ia aril Varcroouia la fie York (Uo, 7 Watt FaurlMnr Stfaat). London, Madras SL Pckrtbiirs, City cl Moxlcc, Berlin, BsrseJoB. Rvrataaia tf 7a In crrrj n4, iJaraaiutj in aviTf r-rt. Futcttlui lu e very Uetn I of maanfaainr. Are I hiiracterlatlr ot the UTrXTTSS CUiafl Trry Znatmmanl WARRANTED fur tiOIIT YEARS. MOST RKLIABLV DKtLCM a.tl rMii-vKTRa(Miiaj. but Kauy do nutaava tbam ia ata. w ymi. writn CirM-t l) lua t iiry foraCta- Ii'imiq aa4 iulonuatKka a W ariaara rOtt oaa aar OVER 100 STYLES. BangtKK In rrier froci fso.ootof loaxooaDdorar. A boant'.mi lnori. ratal vim. ttf flaatt vr iiuhllnbed, bit S 'UKa6 lo luwt.a luk' jmnuaaora. AdrlroM or rail nftm HP. CiWEmB, Wcrcestn, Mta. 1. 1 L MAEBLE WOM LEWlsIJUltO, TA. ITALIAN AND AMERICAN MARBLE MONUMENTS, Tomhfitonos, Statues, Urns, Vases I.AM lis, for Children's U aves, I'oita, L'tU'ls, TnlJitnpi, jfarbie and SUIe Sfanl It, ,t All that who ilaalra lapnrchtM toanbatoBM laytlilnic ! tnanulutnra. tt tjia ahovaa aii Itoaed aiarhla worka, alitinli eor al tha tiadar lnnel ayaal, brora rkaaiax a'xwhara. S&afl'Kl. BI.WF.N. a(r JulyU'Utf MhMIar,Ssy Ca.P I Bill mall (trot) tha r-Mlpl for a ilraplo Vr(ribla llalna tbat -lll ramava Tar, Vrork.Ua, tlMlra aa.t Hlatchra, laaVln tha tkia and, elaar aaa luminal 1 aUalatraa lloat lor priwlaalaa a taiurlant imwik at aalr oaabalilkaad or ara -olh larr. Ada-oaa, la loala . aiarap, hhN- VAN t)CLr JO U kaielay Ml. N . Y. mm TO CONSUMPTIVES- . . Tha adrortlaer havluf bran parraaaaattf' - rarad ol Itat ilrrad dlaaaaa, ()natun,piloa, T t liaiil' rauia-lf, I anitoat lu raata kanwa la hi, lallnw-ititlonra Ika maaua of cara. Ta all ba dajlra It, ka will aan.l a copy ol Iko pra, . ' aerlptloo aard, (Irawnl rtraraa )Uk tko dlrar . I tlona for pranarlnf aait aalna lua aaaaa, vkirh lhay will nail a ura itra tur)...!ha, Cot4S CoitaHluMlaN, AilaiiaMk, Braai ttli ia, AO. FarltaantilniaaP-K-i'li.Mi)a, will rlaata a . ft.t.traa.Ha. K. A. WlUtUNi IH roaa HI. Wllilaraaourab, M. Y. ; ERK0HS OPtYOUTH. 'L f (teNIliEMArf koMtaroa feryaararra-a ilsarvaM DtlllbltY. KM 4 I UK UK. tti,i"ti taaanaora of yaotaut iadiaa.- i Ian. wl ad (V raatrat ha IliaaiU v ia aaaa aa o. nan auwaauv. M ka aaa i II. iha n c na ard 1i atlaa tkaalBp:aiaa)irit. If kla, 4. t$atiara la hi a la. prk-bf vlraaaiaa -va rirrinNa aaa ua aa or aa-. arloalaootl'lauaA m ia.l,v , '.. .. , . . ,!. the SH'Kvt.1-'-"1' - i1mmmw