The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, August 02, 1877, Image 4

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    THE flTlttfitJIUm RIOT.
iiTr.,,,""n ' ,nr tlh BcmcMi the !
kThJ .?rom """elfhl nil the Mo j
Told by One ,r the Knrmer. '
'plT,,1 0f tll Fi,-8t H'fttaeiit of ;
v.1l- """"i'uce iiiuro, gnve me
VwT1,' u,r,'U"g description of the riot
t. - lloe the nrivftl of tl'o rogimeut
10 "New York reporter i " '
wo arrive'l ot Pittsburgh we
were all in good spirits, and responded
with alacrity to the Poinmaud to move
out to Twcnty-rfghth street, where the
Mnkeru had gathered in force. Wheu
arrived hero, General Brittou, com
nnding, formed 11s front and rear on
le outside of a network of track at this
point and ntationcd the Kevstone hnttery,
with its Galling gunis in Kttle flat plot
on the hillside, elevalion perhaps ten
Jeet above the lVel of the tracks. At
this moramt the crowd began to scatter,
toot in retreat, bnt nppnrently to make
room for.the military. - ' c
As we rested on our arms the nileiice
ti the great crowd viflp btvkt'ii and a
1 mVf W,f,e!, nl'd cheei-H greeted
"a. Then a platoon of onr regiment wns
ordered to clear the crowd from the head
uf Twenty-eighth street, which wa
hlockadiug the tracks of the railroml.
i-he sheriff and his deputies mingled with
the troops and endeavored to make hhn
Hclf heard, urging the crowd to fall back
and retire to their homes. He could
toot make himself honrd, owing to the
oonfusion and the cries and the ydls f
the people. The platoons of soldieVs
Wished into, the crowd, surging them
back until the order ' halt 1" Was given.
At this time the hillside was literally
covered with men, women and children,
mostly spectators, I judgedwho were
in a manner penned up. All this time
the cries and yells of the crowd grew
louder and fiercer and the military made
preparations to form a hollow square on
a platform of tracks, us near the Twenty
ighth street crossing as possible, with
two Galting guns in the center. The
Pittsburgh troops and the Fourteenth
regiment, I believe, were drawn up in
line, but remained passive.
After some manuvering, rendered
difficult by the jostling of the crowd,
three sides of a square were formed by
our two regiments First and Second
numbering from four to five hundred
men. Que si.le of the square faced the
lull, one faced to the east and the troops
on the other side stood with their backs
to Twenty-eighth street and also faced
the hill. The crowd was slow in clear
sng n space for the east eido of the
square, and the soldiers .began to force
them back. This occasioned come
scuflling, several of the meu taking hold
of the muskets and saying: " You would
not shoot working iuen, would you?"
while those ou the outskirts continued to
hoot and yell. About this moment the
Grays were ordered to charge on the
crowd which was impeding them. This
was done amid the most intense confusion
and excitement; but the troops pushed
back the throng and retired.
The First regiment, when the crowd
began again to press the men, was or
dered to charge, which they did with
fixed bayonets, and in this charge one of
the strikers is reported to have been
wounded by a bayonet thrust. Hie crowd
now began pelting ns with stones, and
some of our men were hurt more or ess.
This was the match that fired the train,
and, goaded to frenzy, either through
fear of violence from the crowd or stung
to desperation by being hit with mis
'.'Ues, we fired, and fire we did. Some
say there was no order given to fire, but
one of the guns iu the hands of a mem
ber of Company A went off, and others,
mistaking this for an order to fire, level
ed their pieces and discharged them.
This may be, but I heard distinctly the
order to fire, and did not discharge my
piece until such an order was given.
The firing was sudden and unexpected
and seemed to come upon the vast crowd
like a stroke of lightning, and it was
scarcely realized until here and there a
man was seen to fall. Along the brow
of the hill ran a deep ditch, into which
those who had enough presence of mind
oast themselves. After the first shot the
troops tired iu every direction. The
first volley swept over the hillside and
was delivered by those troops nearest
the hill. l)n second side of the square
was along H e track, and the others, so
fur as could be ascertained, wheeled ami
lired down 'twenty-eighth street.
Uefore d.-rls, when the dead and wound
ed had been carried off and the crowd
got over thy fright and commenced to
gather again in great number, we wero
ordered into the round house, as afford
ing us shelter for the night and better
protection from tho stray shots heard
every now and then. With the approach
of nightfall we got hungry and tired, but
were consoled in a measure by the an
nouncement that supper had been order
ed aud would arrive in a brief time. At
dusk, peeping out of the windows of the
round house, we ?aw the wagons carrying
our rations captured by the crowd;
dishes and their contents burled into the
Htreet, while the crowd cheered like
demons. As the crowd in the streets
was agumented witli the approach of
night, all thoughts of sleep were given
over and guards stationed at the wiudows
of the round house and also placed at
each of the gates leading into the yards.
They were out of the reach of the crowd
and had instructions to fire upon persons
who nttemptod to enter.
At midnight tho crowd outside, as we
could observe from the windows, had
grown into many thousands, and shots
were lired at ns from out of the vardH of
the company iu close proximity to the
round house. We replied to them, with
1. L iV..l. I I . . .
wiui t, uurei u wero uuauie to ascertain.
' When the fire was started iu the box cars i
we beeair.e very seriously alarmed. Some
few meu I have heard made their way
out of their quarters in citizen's clothes
and escaped from their perilous position.
We could see long lines of cars, one after
the other burning, but dared not expose
ourselves to the guns of the mob. -
The fire slowly but surely crept down
on ns, aud ab.mt this time the crowd
captured oue of the guns belonging to
Hutchison's battery, of Pittsburgh, and
attempted to get it into position to fire
upon us. It was heavily loaded, we
knew, and if it was fired in close proximi
. ty to us it must have done heavy dam
age. However, we prevented them from
putting it in position, as wa covered it
well, und were in quarters where we
could pick off the meu without much !
injury to ourselves. The number of
times th freight cars ran between us
aud the gun shielded the strikers from
our shots, but they finally gave the mat
t;r up and hauleti the gun away. All
this time the situation was becoming
more mid more sorions. 1 lhe fire was
creeping down upon im' with' the cer
tainty of driving us out sooner or later.
The crowd, t'", wns growing nre dense
and bold, aud threats of violence should
we come out were distinctly heard. Away
up tnc tracK m tne yam wnero tiie curs
were burning we could tec mc-upillagiug, j
while their old rusty anna wero miugleU I
with briglit barrels which fluKhed iu the
glare of destnictioi .
Suddenly down tho grade cuiat ono
par after unualier, sonie Judcu with oil
which was on Are ond burning noree'y.
These enrs wt re ftmir flown in order that
thoy might ItfVMy 0 wooden work of
thOjhwVd house and the company's
b.'.lh oer yard. They were heavily ladened
with comlm;tibe material, and when the
box cars took fire they bunted and scat
tered tho contents in every direction,
dealing out disaster with lavish linnd.
The machine shop, between Twenty-fifth
and Twenty-sixth streets, then caught
fire and soon our building was surrounded
with a wall of tire. The heat was so in
tense that we were obliged to retire-from
the windows aud gathered ih the center
of the building. Many rf us would have
run out, but the dtlnger outside from the
Violence of the crowd wan as much feared
s the fire element, which was fast ap
proaching us. . At dawn of day a consul
tation of officers was held,, which was
prolonged for some time, It Was then
decided we must go out and face the
anpty devils who made the strePts in the
neighborhood black with their presence'
It, was better to run the risk of being
shot down than burned to death, and so
we filed out in a compact body. and. re
ceded by the Gatling guns, With Major
iten. muton, JJntradter-Ueri,
Matthews
and' Land at the head. ' It was lively 1 The Chinese consider paper so iudis
ttmeB, I tell you, reaching the United j pensable that they usually secure a cer
States arsenal, where we thought we j tain quantity to their wives in the mar
would be protected. The sentries here ' riage contract. The Arabs acquired the
refused to allow us to enter, and the j urt from the Cliinese, aud by them it
command held a conference with onr I was brought to Spain, from whence it
officers. A number of us scaled tho rapidly spread oter the other, countries
walls aud took refuge from the mob be-, of Europe. Cotton paper, well authen
hind the shrubbery and piles of shells j ticated, hos come down to us from the
and Cannon. We remaiued here until tenth century; but linen paper cnunot be
the rest of the party formed in line and j traced further back than the thirteenth
marched up the street. I thought we century, after which date it rapidly rore
should be all cut to pieces, and having j to the first rank, and was extensively
no relish for this sort of death I em- i manufactured from rags. At the present
braced the readiest means to escape j time paper is made from an infinite
from it. I never saw such a wicked, number of materials which are nearly
desperate mob in all my life. How any ! all of vegetable origin such as flux",
of us escaped with our lives is a mys-1 hemp, cotton, wood, straw, esparto, ma
tery. I had given up all hopes of seeing J nilla, jute, cane,; etc.; and the art of
home again. If the crowd could liave paper-making consists i the reduction
got arms I am sure not one of us would j of nil tluwe materials into their primitive
nave come out of the round house a ivc.
-
Why Old , Pcoplo . Remember
Till j
llllllgS. I
The extraordinary persistence of earlv
impressions, when the mind seems al
most to have ceased to register new ones,
is in remarkable accordance with the
law of nutrition. ' It is a physiological
fact that decline essentially consists in '
the diminution of the formative activity I
of the organism. Now it is when tho
brain is growing that n definite direction J
can be most strongly and persistently i
of thought come to be formed, and those
nerve tracks laid down which (as the
physiologist believes) constitute the
mechanism of association, by the time
the brain has reached its maturity ; and
the nutrition of the organ continues to
keep up the same mechanism in accord
ance with the demands of its activity so
long as it is being called into use.
Further, during the entire period of
vigorous manhood, the brain, like mus
cles, may be takiug on soma additional
growth, either as a whole or in special
parts, new tissue being developed and
kept up by the nutritive process, iu ac
cordance with the modes of action to
which the organ is trained. And in this
manner a store of "impressions" or
traces is accumulated which may bo
brought within the sphere of conecioup
ness whenever the right suggesting
strings ore touched. But as the nutri
tive activity dimishes, the "waste" be
comes more active than the renovation ;
and it would seem that while (to use a
commercial analogy) tho "old-cstab-h'shed
horses " keep their ground, these
later firms whose basis is less secure aro
the first to crumble away the nutritive
activity, which yet suffices to maintain
the original structure not being capable
of keeping the subsequent additions to
it in working order. This earlier de
geneiatiou later lormeu structures w
a general fact perfectly familiar to the ,
physiologist.
w- I
The Sea Serpent.
The London Graphic contains a ! business, and the one in which tho
sketch by Lieutenant W. P. Haynes, of largest amount of capital has been ex
her majesty's ship Osborne, of the sea j peuded and the greatest improvements
monster seen by the officers and crew of attained. The first operation is in the
that vessel off the north coast of Sicily j purchasing, sorting, cutting and dustiug
ou the second of June. In a letter ac- of the rags. In the purchase of rags the
companying the sketch he savs
My attention was first called by seeing
a long row of fins appearing above the
surface of the water at a distance of
about two hundred yards from the ship,
and " away on our beam." They were
of irregular heights, aud extending about
thirty or forty feet in line (the former
number is the length I gave, the latter
the other officers); in a few seconds they
disappeared, giving place to the fore
part of the monster. By this time it had
passed astern, swimming in an opposite
direction to that we were steering, and as
we were passing through the water at
ten and a half knots, I could only get a
view of it "end on," which I have shown
in the sketch.
The head was bullet-shaped, aud quite
six feet thick, the ueck narrow, and its
head was occasionally thrown back out
of the water, romaiuing there for a few
minutes at a time. It was very broad
across the back or shoulders, about fif
teen or twenty feet, ond the flappers
seemed to have a semi-revolving motion,
which seemed to paddle the monster
along.' They were about fifteen feet in
length. From the top of the head to the
part of the back where it became im-
merseu i snoiutt consider about nfty
feet, and that seemed about a third of the
whole length. AU this part was smooth,
reserabling iv seal. I cannot account for j
; the tins unless they were ou
i below where it was immersed.
1
the back
Little Thoughts and ltig Phrases
j Simple and unpretending ignorance is
always respeotable, and sometimes charm
ing; but there is little that more deserves
contempt than the pretense of ignorance
to knowledge. The curse and the peril
of the language in this day, and partiJ
i 1 1 LI bM
cuhtrly in this country, is that it is at the
mercy of men who, instead of being con
tent to uue it : well according to their
honest ignorance, use it ill according to
their affected knowledge; who, being
vulgar, would seem elegant; who, being
empty, would seem full; who make up in
pretense what they lack in reality; and
whose little thoughts, let off in enormous
phrases, sound like fire-crackers in an
empty barrel. Richard Grant White.
Aj Unsaintlt "Satst." A three-ply
polygamist, living a few miles south of
Salt Lake City, who desired a fourth,
boldly declared his intention toa young
widow residing there, and pleaded for her
Hand, but was rrtiiRPU, As ins own
pleadings hud availed him nothing, he
forthwith dispatched his No. 1 to uo his
courting and cany out his design. En-
treaties on one side u.et rebuttal on the
other, when nt hibt the young widow
ashed if slui (No. 2; did not act against
her own will au.1 tn.hur nvn iWriniMnr.
when the lust mentioned answered! " JJ
do not wish Mr. -to take ituy more;
wives, but I so dBsent and hate the very
bitrhtof his No. 8 that I would doanv -
thing in piv power to thwart Jjer hapiiii
ness." , " ' - -
PAPER.
lis Origin nnri by Whom Firm tTai-ri Mnte
rlnl On I of Which Pnprr In IVndn, and
Other Inlcri'Mlnn Informal Ion 1'onrrrn
ln It.
If we attempt to trace the history of
f aper bock to its origin, we lire carried
o times very remote, when the Egyp
tians prepared a plaut, called the papy
riw, on which to record their sacred in
scriptions, and from which we derive the
present name for writing material. Sim
ultaneously with papyrus tho ancients
Undoubtedly made use of the skins of
animals in the form of parchment, and
also hod recourse to wood and stone, for
the preservation of their records. , It
cannot bo ascertained with certainty
when the art of making paper from fibers
was first discovered, but to the Chinese
Is usually ascribed the honor, ns they
Very early learned how to convert the inner
bark of the mulberry, bamboo and rags
into a web or felt suitable for writing ; and
it is iu China at the present day that the
manufacture has reached its highest
perfection, and ' where it is used for
clothing, handkerchiefs, napkins, twine.
furniture and numerous other purposes.
into felted '
fibers, and forming tuein
sheet
XT 1 - 'A ,.C .. .1 .1 1.
Jfllll(v cvaT THTirijr ui tcciuuic uuri
i Kunn tri'a.1 in tliA mminfanfnrn itf
paper roots, leaves, stems, Dark, cab
j bope, potatoes, beets, vines, bnt in prac
i tic-j these have not been found of much
j value. On the other hand, straw, wood,
I corn-stalks, rice-straw and esparto-grass
i have been successively introduced in
various conntrius. In Austria the husks
I of corn are not only made into paper,
but into clothing, and a good article of
food for cattle is also produced from
them. Paper clothing is also made in
China and Japan, where a good coat can
be had for ten cents, and a suit of cloth
ing for a quarter of a dollar. In Ger
many paper napkins are introduced ;
the cost of them is a trifle, and they
can, after having been once used, be
thrown into the common stock to be
worked over again. The fact that cotton
and linen are really the same thing,
chemically speaking, as paper, may take
away from the prejudice that some per
sons entertain in reference to the use of
I paper collars, cuffs and clothing,
i Munsell's work on paper-making says
that in 1867 the following substances
j were in actual employment : Manilla
I hemp, agave of Cuba, cultivated hemp,
white hemp of Jiayti, India hemp,
acacia, fibers of aloes, jute, Spanish
broom, hops, silk-weed, flax, Chinese
hemp, mallow, mulberry, Chinese nettle.
New Zealand flax, esparto-grass, linden,
yucca, bamboo and cane. To the above
list must be added the ramie plant, wild
aud cultivated rice, potato pomace, the
bark of coniferous trees from which tho
resin has been extracted, stalks and
fibers of cord grass and okra ; in fact,
more than sixty different kinds of fiber
have been experimented upon in tho
search for new material, and it cannot be
denied that the result of all these trials
has been favorable to the paper industry
bv dinR permanently to the supply of
Bfck unVhich to draw in emercencv
and ir special kinds of goods.
The manufacture of paper from raff3 ;
! is the most imnortant branch of the i
mill-owner has to encounter the same
attempt to cheat that seems to obtain iu
every line of buwiueBB. Dales are made
up looking well outside, but iu the in
terior inferior articles are put, uud the
rags are moistened or loaded with sand
to increase the weight. The dealer soon
becomes expert, and can tell from what
country the rags came, by their color,
strength and general character. Some
nations wear more linen, others more
cotton, some fine, some coarse. City
rigs are apt to be white, country rags j body is, it appears, of .the utmost im- j
yellow or dark-colored. All of these j portauce for the proper cireulutiou of
points have to be considered beforo j the blood, uud we have Baron Reiohen
making the purchase. J bach's authority for stating that many
Out of dirty and apparently unbleach- 1 disturbances in the human organisms
able tarred ropes is produced a tissue I have been cured by simply placing tne
paper of the most beautiful fabric, of bolster at a different point cf the corn
even surface and delicacy of color, a i pass from that it had occupied before. '
ream of which weighs, with wrappers i Let such as have hitherto been iu the !
aud strings, two and a half pounds. It habit of sleeping with their heads where .
is principally usea in ine poweries ior
transferring the various patterns to the
earthenware, and is found superior to
any substance yet known for that pur-
pose.'. It is so tenacious, that a sheet f
it twisted by the hand in the form of a
! rope, will support upward of one hun-
! dred pounds' weight. Corn husks have
Deen successiunyempioyeu in uerniauy. ,.;
I The husks are first boiled with an alkali
in tubular boilers, which converts them
into a spongy condition hlletl witu
gelatinous substuuee or Uougu, wiiicn
latter is pressed out from tho fibers in
the shape ot longitudinal tnreaas, inter-
Hpersed with a deuHe mass of short fiber.' j
Alio JUUH uucjb nre uaeu iui ojuuuiug,
and yield a cloth suitable for clothing,
The short fibers are used for paper,
whioh is fitronsrer that that made from
o .
littnn -was imrrull tUlfrU I r. 1 U 7aT v 111 I'M I 1IU
ii Tif -i T.i.
j nd can be made extremely transparent
1 ... . . . ..
wituout gacritlcing any port
tion or its
streneth. . Dr. Eudal calculates that the
i qunntity of paper produced in the whole '
; world paper of au Kinas, oi nemp, oi
' linen, of straw, of jute, of rice, of wood,
i etc. amounts to 1,800,000,000 pounds.
Half of this quantity is employed for
j printing purposes, a sixth for writiDg
! purposes, and the remainder for miseel
j laneous uses. The whole may be thus
i categorized : For government purposes,
200,000,000 pounds are required; for in
struction, 180,000,000 ; for commerce,
j 240,000,000; for industrial manufacture,
I 180,000,000; for private correspondence,
100,000,000; an. I for printing, auu.uuu,
000. For the production of all this paper
there are 8,000 manufactories, employ
iug 90,000 men and 180,000 women;
while 100,000 persona are engaged in
collecting rags. The number oi paper
: mills in the United btates Tit the present
, time, according to Lockwood's Directory,
i is 934, aud the number of firms 795. Of
I these 254 firms aud 327 nidls are in the
I Kastern States: 328 firms and 3(i0 mills
in,.the. Middle Btates; 155 firms and 170'
mills -in' '-the .Western States; and
4 fifty-eight- Aims and wxtyreight mills
''n the Southern
States.' During
fthe last few years
Icoiietaatlv jnereasm,
paper Jin found
r uses. Iu ad-
dition to the familiar applications, for
stationery, newspapers and books, we
now hear of the employment of paper
for boats, car-wheels, furniture, clothing,
roofing, sheathing of ships, and house
building. Every yoar brings ns new
applications, but, fortunately, the pro
gress of chemistry and the improvements
in mechanical arts, keep pace with the
increased demand, and the article is
furnished from a greater variety of ma
terial and in various forms and conditions
Bititeble for the wanta of mankind.
There aro few industries of more im
portance than the manufacture of paper,
and none in which greoter progress has
been made in the last few years.
-: Cnst Ont,' '' "
The Philadelphia jforth American
sayst Here are faint photographs of
some of these men as seen along the line
of the Boston and Albany railroad, whose
hearts might have been reached if the
winding otairs hod been climbed by
love, patience and kindness. w 'Tis night
fall; along the railroad track,' near a
small stream of water, fifteen to twenty
men are lying n the ground without
any . covering, asleep; old ' boote,
shoes and dirty, hard stockings are scat
tered around, and several bare, blistered
feet are visible; when aroused, they
answer any questions willingly, and the
tales narrated would freeze the life from
out young hearts, which language fails
to portray. A man is seated on the ton of
! aflat rock. He has some pieces of what
j appears to be a letter in his hands. The
j paper is rotten from age aud from being
i carried in his pocket. The almost illegi
ble lines were written by a tender-hearted
mother, now dead, niid the poor out
cast is trying to rend her Inst words to
him. Ho repeats the story of a mother's
love how, when he lay a loy in her lap,
and her hand ou his head, she told him
of the boyhood of good men, and made
him promiso, when he would become a
man, that he would remember her eonn-
sel nu,i r1,ow tupir example. But when
! ne came 10 xne great city toe began to
i drink with reveling companions, and no
one ever gave him a kind word after-
1 .
, waru; ana me sincKen wreck in agony.
; 01 soui uurBt into tears, ana refused to
1 be comforted or receive auy nid. An-
other has seen better days; lie was once
j a happy husband and father. His wife
j went down to the grave uncomplaining,
i and soon a sweet, golden-haired little
girl lay at her side. He feels accused
in one sense a murderer; he is-fifty-four
years old and friendless. Rum has
I been his ruin. When found he was eat
I ing corn from an empty car, where some
kernels had been left scattered on the
floor. Tiie next in review is a mau Who
hod formerly been employed in the
Freedmau's bureau; ho hos n wife and
four children. He has been to New
York to obtain employment, has failed
and is returning to his family in Maine.
He states that he had lived in Washing
ton aud had entertained Representatives
and Senators at his home. He is a Free
mason, well posted, and had been a
member of Dr. Storrs' church, Brook
lyn, N. Y. He is an object of pity. He
said he had washed his shirt on Sunday.
He was furnished with a lunch, and he
purposed calling on Rev. Dr. Webb. A
man was found in a very weak condition ;
he had not strength enough to go into
tho woods, and asked for food ; he had
walked from Providence to Worcester
and thence to Boston, and did not seem
to care for life. The Boston and Albany
railroad detective from whom these items
have been obtained has, from observa
tion and long experience, an insight into
the character of this class, aud in the 300
whom he has interviewed in the past
few weeks he considers that the men
spoke truthfully, and in most cases would
rejoice iu finding labor, many of them
having learned trades.
How to Place the Betl.
Baron Reichenbach, who has devoted
many years of deep study to the art of
bedinakinjt. maintains that von must
not always lie on voiir heil ns it ia made.
I uutier penalty 01 uoriuging your mo ny
i a great number of years. If, says the
boron, a mere magnet exercises an innn-
ence ou sensitive persons, the earth s
magnetism must certainly make itself
felt on the nervous life of man. Hence
he dwells on the salutary effects of tho
inhabitants of the Northern hemisphere
j lying with their heads to the north, and
tlioBO of the Southern with their heads to
the south. For travelers with short
memories we may put the rule in general
terms: Tu whatever hemisphere yon
may be, always eleep with your feet to
the' equator, und let your body lie " true
as 8 needle to the pole." In giviug this ,
rule the bnron hns simply told us how to
live louar: for the polar direction of the
their lect ought to be, take to heart the
example of tho lute Dr. Fischweiter,
( JLigdebiirg, who died recently at the
aae of 10SJ years, nnd alwavs attributed
; his long life to his faithful observance of
' the uoie to nolo uositiou of sleemiitr.
The most unhealthy position, we are
, told, is when the body lies due east and
west. Home observers assure ns that
to sleep in such a posture is tantamount
to committing slow suicide, und that dis-
i eases are often aggravated by deviations
from the polar posture.
' ; ,, .
; . , , , , Poet's Habits.
. i 0-7 " - -
rsomethmg like thm, nays the BoHton
Jerald.e He ,mes early, takes a com -
i paraiiveiy iignc ureaKinHi, uuti 11 lue uay
i. ; a.. l . 11. l.:t.
tu tirr munv uura -nr tit o ivu i ir
I ID UVSV .itlii .11 t3jw uu V a " t iv a .
W 1 1 If 'II
takes up an hour or two, according to his
LI n ,. M ..l .Ana
' luouuauou. nu.8iiimm tu uuV,
and as he walks
llO holuP Himself per-
per-
fectly upright.
TTa lrwoa Tint ramhla ta n
iie UOCB 11UI. raiUUlU U
mornings in the
Same direction but
i alien uib auutc uaiii, iiicir iiT iu
he calls on his printers, at the University
Press, and receives or returns proofs of
his workB, if he baa anything in type, '
Lwhich is mostly the case. lie studies bis
matter carefully after it is in print, lilt- ,
tie, if any, of his poetry, as published, is
written on the spur of the moment. 1
The Divine Tragedy is said to havo I
been rewritten after it was nearly all in I
type. During late years he has been lit
the habit of publishing his poems in the
magazines, and, after having obtained a
sufficient number, adding a few new'
ones to them, and issuing thein in book
form. He brings his 'copy ' to the office
of the University Press, which in only
half a mile or so from his own residence,
written in lead-pencil, in a small back
hand, very much like the average news
paper man's style of haudwritiug, clear,
and mostly free from interlineations and
erasures. His magazine poems are' al
ways revised and corrected, or at least
altered more or less, before their publi
cation in book foini, to that the reader
rarely encounters one in exactly the sain
shape as in the periodic!,'' j -
Where may everlastingspring be found?
In an india-rubber factory.
' Thn IV Atnlnt IHen' ' l '
The war wiigi d againiit dieHe by Hplet
tflr'n Btomach Hitter Roc bravely on. DIh-
fmtrhei are oonntantly received from the cored
ncli. ntingtbe ducinive nature of the advantage!
obtained by the ureat botntliti cordial over its
fnirnlrlnlil arltfnranrv. MftltrifLl . fATP.rA POn-
atipation, torpidity of the liver aud kidney, j
general debility, nervotinea and rheumntio
ailment lnv&namv yieia to una conqneror ana
preventive of diWra. For -the . inflrmitica
incident to Die decline of life it Is also an m
cellent specific. ' It hastens convalescence and
repairs the ravage of ill health by facilitating
the conversion of food into blood of a rich and
nourixhhiLr qnnlity. The appetite is improved
by it, and in oases of nervous disease it tran
quilwoa that great sensormm, the brain, far
more effectually than any mineral sedative. ,
1 h"&T sold Hatch's Universal Cough -Syrup
for five years. It has by far the best sale of any
cough remedy I keep. The sale has steadily
increased from its first introduction. . Having
seen it so thoroughly tested, I ieel safe in
recommending It to my customers.' :' '
M. P. BhzbmaX, So. Sotliia, Wayne Oo.; Ni T.
, P. 8. I have customers who say they cannot
live without it. I will refer any who may in
quire to the parties direct i. ,' i H. P. 8. :
CHEW '
The Celebrated ' '
. ; . " aiATOHlHR " , ,
'" ' ! ' Wood Tag Plug
Tax Pionkf.h Tobacco Compact,
' ' New York, Boston, and Chicago.
-1 , , .
Physicians of high standing unhesitatingly
give their indorsement to the use of the Oraef-uborg-Marshall'
Catholioon " for all female
tfoinplaints. The weak and debilitated And won
derful relief from a constant nee of this valu
aWremedy.. Bold by all druggists. 1.60 per
bottle.1 Bend' fur almanacs, Oraefenberg Co.,
Sewlork.:. ;!,
i The HiMory ail" CtolllxntioM
Might be written is the gradual tirocesee of
improvement wrought out In articles of food.
Kvery progressive stop is a public blossing. To
no one article in more due than to Dooley's
Yeast Powder. ThiB with proper care insures
the inoBt delicious and digimtible brcrtd, bis
cuit, pastry, etc. .
' ' Pond's Kxtrnrt.
There is no swelling it will not abate : no pntu
it will not cure This is the teniimony of those
who have used it many years. .Try it !
Hour Ntoiunrh and Hearlbrm
Are sigUB of a bilious attack ; Quirk s Irish
Tea will remedy all these. Price Mcln.
The Market.
ItXW TORE.
Bref Oattle Native
Texas and Cherokee
Milch Cows ,
Hogs Uve.
Dressed....,
Sheep.,.;!. '..
Lambs
Cotton Middling
Flour Western Oood to Choioe. ,
' 8t ste Good to Choioe. . . .
Wheat Ited Western
No. a Milwaukee
Rye Stat
Barley State ,
BarieyMalt
Oais Mixed Western
. 11 11.
07Jk 09
.39 IK) 040 00
. UBS'S Of
, MIV, 07.H
; 01S' 06
07 (4 07X
. 12 12
6 10 l V 75
. 6 30
1 90
. 1 70
in
ft
, 1 35
$ 6 60
14 1 (0
(4 1 12
9 i
S 1 35
!
fl
Corn Mixed Western...... .i.'. 6-Jt' a)
Hay. per cwt . . . . 71 Ml
DO
75
Rtruw, per cwt
Bn 7fl'a 8 lo ..
Pork Mees ,
lard City Hleaui
fish Mackerel, No. 1, new...
60 (4 PS
76 s C (4 10
....14 35 U 0
.... ax lix
... 50 00 3l 00
Mo. 2, new.. .
.18 011 (414 00
IryO.d, per cwt 1 8 01
llflrrlntr, Scale a, per mx
30 4
31
P jtroleum Crude
UTtfi4'j7,V
ReOued,
14 K
Wool California Fleece 28 (31 81
Texas " 3t (4 ' 81
Australian " 43 4 45
Bntter Htnte 21 C4 35
Western Choice 18 9 1
Western Oood to Priti-.e.. .0 (4 IT
Western Firkins 11 (4 IS
Cheese Rtste Factory Ot (a lojf
State Skimmed OH (4 0(1
Western' ('8 (4 09
Eggs State and Pennsylvania 17 (4 IS
BUFFALO.
Flour TS (4i9 25
Wheat No. 1 Milwaukee, 1 0 (4 1 60
Corn Mixed 6S($ 6i,'
Oats 4U . 40
Rye 4 'IS
barley 8'2 (4 '
Barley Mbit 1 00 (4 I 10
PHILADELPHIA.
Beef Cattle Extra.. . lH4 rS'
Sheep IS (4-07
Hora Dreaeed 0S(4 09
Flour Pennsylvania Extra,
9 61)
85
76
(4 60
Wheat-Red Western
4 1 K
Rye
Cora Yellow
Mixed
Oats Mixed
Petroleu m Crn it.
Wool Colorado...
. . - Texas
California.
3 7i
' t4
24
M
8
14
27
80
96
a (4
..HiJt'iaioX Refined,
23 (4
2S 4
as a
ROSTOH.
Beef Cattle OliSm
Hbeep 05i4
Hoes 0 4
f9,
0s
Flour Wiarnnxiu and Mlnueaa.. 8 0 ))
Corn Mied :IXS f
Oats " i wt
Wool Ohio and Petinajflyanlii IS.. U &
Culliorula Fall 21 ' &
l2!
28
BhTOHTOK, MASK.
Beef Cattle 0V4 X
Sheep 03 ( iMX
Lambs 1)7 M
Uofc-s 7 Vv Cd
Beef Cattle Poor to Uunioe.'. 70 ctOl to
Sheep R 75 8 OU
Umla T 00 V 50
T ATTTCTTTTC Prosecuted n O I'M T I KM
llAW aUllO and renelnnn oWtnrl. So
charge unless aucceenful. T. IHANCIN U1HHONS,
Att may and i'ounaelor at Law, Notary and Commie
ninner, Wo. 1 H Wm Jtb St., near Bnsirtway. N Y. City.
TIIJ-2 NKW
Providence Line
TO BOSTON,
Via PROVIDENCE DIRECT,
A WHOLE NimiT'eJ HKfT.
OM.V 4 MILKS OK It .Ml..
TIMK 0 JIIM TKH.
' THK Nb'W MAUNIKICKNT KTHAMKR
ZbX aasaohusiettBi,
('The I'alnre Nlenmi-r at' the World,"'
AMD THK WORLD-RKNOWNKD STKAMKII.
Rliodo Il.xxrl,
.. t"TUe turn at'ibr fcuul,"
WiU on aud after MAY T leave (daily) froui Pier t),
N. K., IcKit of Warren Htreet al 5 i. M-, arriving at
I'rovidenrr nt It A. .11. aud lloxinn 7 A. ill. No
intermediate landiuji tatHMa h'ew Vork and rrori
uence.
,
Al Creation' Dawn the hiedteinal sprinca ef
: -pk," f-J botf,Dw.i,mr.'n
, to reproduce them from tiieir elements, a thu Beiuer
' water haa ltttn rutr(Mlnoail in i
-
1 Tarrant- fcircrvescent hotter Aperient, I
Im tmikl. HnBt4tM anm nktuMi nf mim tiimi k WhnUv
- ,7,rii; , rMahii na feb7ifuj.;nl afowirlul
anti-bilious agent at pras.nt kvnii. The immediate
permanent relief tliat it aSorda in caaeeof enronio
,nmMion. bihouaneaa. stcmaoh comnlainla. aarroui
I deprusaion, fevar , rheuraatiKm, dropsy, piles, headache.
i riviiiKea portion oi tne American uontinenu ooia uy
' fJL'J1!"!"!!!)--
THE SUX.
1877. ;
NEW YORK.
1877.
The SlN eoittinuM to be th atrenuoua advocate of
reform end retrenchment, and of the anbsiitutioD of
tuteeinanabip. wibdora, end inteirrity for hollow pre
tence, iuibeotlitj, end fraud in ttie edrainiatretion of
public alfaira. It oontenda fur the gofernraeot of the
people by the people end for the people, a oppoaed to
jcijvermnent by f ruuda in the ballot-box and in the count
ing of vote, enforced by military violence. U endeavor
to aitpply ita read or body do not far from a million
of o u la with the most careful, complete, and truet
wortby accounts of cuirent event, and employe for thi
purpose a numerous and careiully aeleoted aUff of re
porierH and eorreapondentj. Ita report from Waahing
ton, ee pec tally, are fall, accurate, and feurleaa; and it
doubtleha oontinue to deaerve and enjoy the hatred of
thoae who thrive bv nlundarinaT the Treasury or by ua ure
mic what the law doe not give them, while it endeavor
to merit the oonfldenoeof the public by defending the
right of the people against the encroaoameuu of
ju&itaea power.
The pnoeof the Dan-TBoKliSS centos month, or'
86.50 a year, aoaUnaid
o.Q4 a rear.
T.aUarear.
or, with the bonday edition
Tho Sunday edition alone,
ight pasea. St.ltO a
rear. DOHt-naid.
The Weeelt Sua, eight pases of U broad colonuu
Is f uraiahed at S 1 a year, poatrpaid.
Bl'KciAt. Notice. In order to introduce Thi Boa
more widely to the public, we will send TUB WKKKLY
edition for the remainder of the yaar, to Jan. 1, 1b7s, post
paid. Haifa D-JKr. Try it.
4lireap, . THK V.flM
Twins snd MA mtl
., Pottlsnd. HaW '
$10 to $25
A lAV ht'KK iwli 1 1
Airnnt SAthnffmir Otirnaft,
Crayon, Ptatura and (3hrn
tno Cards, f V Sftrhplen,
worth KM tent- Pfit-paiil,
for R.I Unnta. liluMLn.t.tl
OMhlnm I'rni. .1
II. IK rrilllll'S HOlNr-.
Honlon. tKsthHhrt Ihho.)
KEEP'S NIIIKTW-nnlr om. iJo tttf-Tbs hii
HHnp'n Pnttnt Pnrtly-mada Drt Shirt ... .
Villi .err
Knnivso
u ! nnifthafl aa aaaf ad nnmpiing a ManaMnminT.
!.-(.. 1 1 for Ml.!!).
JuntoTU Shirtn ninriata tnsaaura.
Tba awry hnt, sit for RtMrO.
An elegant aat of iranuma (told.plat Oollar and
Sieavn Hultnna sivan with anch naif dos. Kaap's Shirt.
Heap's Shiita ara ddirarad FHKR on raoetpt of pnov '
In any part of the Union no eipraea eharf aa to nay, ...
SnmplPM with f till directions for aelf-maaaaratf,ent .
Sent Pre to any address. No stamp required. -'
Deal directly with the Manufacturer and get Bottoia,
Prinea. Keep Mnufaotnrint Uo.t I Oft Mercer St., N.
TIIE
GOOD OLD.:
1 . , TAND-BY.
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT
t 1o f A .,i..T ., ,'-)i . .
for man And beast:
n
.i
Established 39 Years. Always sure. Always
ready. . Always handy. Has never failed. Thirty
mlllloni knvi il . The whole world approves the
glorious old Mustang the Beet and Cheapest IAnlmeht-
in existence. 125 cents a bottle. The Muaun Llofmerrl
cures when nothing else will. . j.-m t ,
KOI,T BV ALL MEDIOINR VKMDBKS. '
OLOVE-FITTI
CORSETS.
The Friends of this I
UNRIVALLIOCORSCT 1
are now nsmBtrad by I
MILLIONS. I
rrices arc much reauctdl
MEDAL RECEIVED
IT riMTfMUl.t. I
Gervhe Genulna and I
beware of im Uationv.
JJS. ASKAISO FOR
(THOMSON'S
UNBREAKAIIE STUIS.I
The belt ooda made.
See that the name of
TUnMtriM .nil the
iraaeMarK.acROWN,i
'.pea on every ConetsSt
THE
fi
UNITED STATED
ELSURANCE C0MPAK!Yr
IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK,
261, 262, 263 Broadway.
0RK AM7,E ISI0-
ASSETS, $4,827,176.52
SURPLUS, $820,000
EVERY APPROVED FORM OF POLICY
ISSUED ON HOST FAVORABLE TERISS
ALL ENDOWMENT POLICIES
MATURING IN 1877
WILL EE
AT 7$
OX l-RESEXTATIOir.
JAMES BUELL, . . PRBStDEI'TT.
Bev. J. P. LUDLOW "WRITES :
- " 178 Baltic Btrket, Diiooklth, N.:Y..
Nov. 14, 1874.
a. n. ST EVEN fl, 11 RQ.
Dear Sir From pcrnuiiul benefit received by its
mo. aa well aa from pemoual koowlfdse of those
whose euros thereby have m-emert almost miracu-
loua. I can niorit heartily snrt siucerely recommend
the VrGtvTiNK for tUe complaints which it U claimed
tO CUre. JAJlr.a P. LUULOW,
. Late Pastor Culvary Baptist Cbnrch,
bacraineuto, CaL
SHE RESTS WELL. '
Boutb Poland, Mt, Oct 11, 1878. -Mr.
H. B. Stevens :
Dtar Hir I liave been sick two yean with the
Liver complaint, and during that time have taken a
reat mauy different medicines, but none of them
id ma any goud. 1 was restless nights, and hsdlio
appetite. Since taking the Vkoetimb I rest well and
relish my food. Can recommend the Veoetink toe
what it has done for me. Yours respectfully,
Mas. ALBEltT B1CEEH.
Witness of the above :
TUB.Gi.(JliCiE M. VAUOHAN, .
Hedford, Mass. ' ' '
NATURE'S REMEDY
The tEAT Blood Puainrn
Rev. O. T. WALKER SAYS :
pRnvinp.NcE. IltI.. 1(U TaiMm-p RTau. '
i B. R. Rtktens, Esq. : " ' ;
j 1 feci bouud to eipress with my signature the (Ugh . 1
raiue i luucenpou your vkoetimv. My family Have
iMd itforthelaat tuoyrars. Iu nervous dubNiiy
I It Is Invaluable, aud I raioirnnend it to all who may
t need au iuvigoratiiig iruovstiug topic,
O. T. WALKKB, -
' Formerly Pastor llowdoiu-square Church,
( NOTHING
i f South Salem, Mass., Mot. 14, 187&
Ma. H. B. Stevenb: .
htar Hir I have been troubled with Scrofula,
Canker, aud Liver complaint for three years. Noth
iug ever did me any good until I commenced using
the Vihstine. I am now getting aloug nrst-rada.
and aiill using the Veqetine. I consider there is
nothing equal to it for such complaints. Cau heart
ily recommend It to everybody.
Your truly, Mrs. LIZZIE M. PACKARD,
V So. 16 Lagrange HL, South Baleai, Maaa.
V. -. J.
ft ft a vnI: In your own town,
NO F3
bV'-J V tVi l7 NJVn
-my
r- -f, -w-stan
BauaiiiM'iii;
NAT U HE'S REMEDT.V .
The DngATjioop ?mrtnjr
NATU RE'S REM EDVra.
EGEfIHlp3
S3
Boston
NATURE'S REMLDYr,"V .'.'' ',
fEGSIIHEsSl
THt Xiicw BtooD Pimific
EQUAL TO IT
NATURE'S REMEDV."
The &seat Biooo PimintiiV
GOOD FORTHE CHILDREN
Boston Home,'14 Ttlee Stbrt)
Koston, April, 1876.
H. R. Stfvens: :
Dtar in We foe! that the children In our horn
nave been greatly benefited by the Vmitiss yon
have ao kitullv given ua Irum time to time, especially
those troubled with the Bcrofula.
, With respect,
Maa.M. WORSTEIX, Matron.
Trepartd by . .- . .
II. R. STEVEN'S liosiou, Slass,
Vegetino W Sold by all Druggist.
I
WATCHMAKUTl' Tools end MsJrlsls. "end fnr
Prioejint, tiKO. K. Smith A Co., P.O. BoiJHlOOt jLXt
REVOLVER
J 7thot oe.tn styles, tit. Cot.fr.
Wistfbk arm Wonas. Chicago. IIU
St I 41 A WEEK. Catalorne and Sample FKKhV.
flWM I Fltt.TON A CO., lift Nasaaa St., New York.
Q1 n Any st home.
Arents wanted. Ontfit an
jpjLAs terms rreo.
TRUE 5 (JO- AuauitA, Maine. .
4b R R O OW A Week to A cents. tio pyil svea.
H 4 I P. a VlCKMiy, Awujt, Maine.
$5 10 $20
Samples worth Wft
'P., lVrtlnnd. Maine.
TINSONACO.
QT,I Rnnnty l.rinil Warrants honerht, hlshes
cah price paid hyOll.MotiE A Oo.,Whingion,D.Q
IIOKstfC B H EfII EH Patent mblier hnrk snpertop
to any otner Brnah mailed on receipt of Std.ftO. VMti
A. MARTIN, Hardware Dealer.O loc SHuare.BoBtoP. ,
RTEM-TOVw
DAt. F.LT. WATC
H WATCH. ihnt In th
Spnd fir. ntutD frr Hrcu1nr. Ad'
WATCIf 00.,fil Itroidwny.NewYork.
S5937
Miwlo hr IT Aironti In Jnn.T7wHh
my l lncVrtrH.-ir. Samples fre
REVOLVER Free 1,1x1,535 :
Adri'a y. rtmm A Sin. 13 t 18 Wood St.. PlttBbnrn, Vn,
S5 A month 4
I Nil I fela mrtA .It Mnntituan Italid.
Nn IVildlfnff
Qun-.ftTiht Lamp Wnrlt fSnrtnrtati, 6.
Month. Atrents vinitfd.-" 30 hrt 3U
r prtieles in tho vrnrM. Onn fiHmnla frf.
Ad.lreM JAY HJUrON, Dptmit, Mich.
$25001
TMT to A pent. i0.iffl nnA
$25 Shot fc'im frrt. tfOT tf:rmB d
rpfS.a. llnr1frd-(o Kf .lsniit.tr Ot
SWA HTII MOUK C'nllrfre For both MirnMindef
enrp of rripndH. All nxponspn oovprd by JKRAO m
ywar. Kpwp, H. Maoilt,, A. M., Preft. HnrflithmorB.Pa.
LI
Yonnff Men and Ijidien. nnd Mrti from ! li
to Hf0 or moiitlt. Good nitnotmnn srniir
a meet i. nmnu winry wdiim lenminir- an'si, ,
ith atunip, M. P. llAYWAnp. Olinrlin, O.
)lUUsUU n riKAvr bz.nv MMurM on
oat In'uTT. tr illfurfrit "O.t
( hj It,,. ', in cJr4
MckftfF. ctu i i kTr tnlf
a. i- uiru ' o . i . lu.t s.t
K-Ww r.irt( rtK Mil
El'I.EfTH' .MEMIWI. INHTITI'TE,
Clmrtered IN In. II 5li:t Htndente. '
V0.1II:Nk llKWII'tl, t'O 1. 1. EK
AMI) SCHOUI. OF MIIWIKKKY.
(liven extra tactll ienl'ir a thorirtinh medical education
to'both men and women, hy a urn-ittt eotire in the cot.
lese without the nen of offire instruction. Kor full infor
mation address John M. grninEn. M.P..Cincinnati.O.
1 WATER-WHEEL
Is deelereri the " KTAN l AH r TlltHIK.
lr over wvo perwaa who n.e it. I'rlepa reiltired.
-New paniphlnt. free. X. F. BrilNll AW. Yokk. Pa.
Patents, Secured!
Piiaaailliirtla. f I f. r ilftu til hi ii itncr t'v uliUtinrtl.
t aft,
KSitS K K K. Pfltetit Kir
OuUa Tatftnt Aifency, 124 bfln-.li.y tStreei (P. O. Bi
I.MJ), NowVwl
BOSTON WEEKLY TRANSCRIPT
Thm bunt family nw)pa.er published : eiffbt pujiofi; fifty
ix clumn roadmft.
Tornia Jsii? pr annum; hihi of eleTen, If. 1 5 ptf
annum. In artTani.
HV VA ' I 1 j H V i R ATIH. '
j The' Berkshire Hills Sand Springs
GREYLOCK HALL,
1' HHJ.IAMSTOWN, MASH.
This tMftnl.frtl anil doduIat Suinmer rMnrt will Iwomii
for tho reception of jru-bt9 ,lune 11K li.iurd .'mm RIO
t Mt tonr wnek. Out And s.alle in pvpft roiim. Hew
and BUi-rior accninmoilhliorn fur priatte liveriet.
Superior hath I nit. Sml fur rirrninr.
t A.MOL! V'- I'ronrlrior.
$1.00 : $1.00
Osgood's Heliolype Engravings.
The ehoieeit household ornamenit. Pries
One Dollar earh. Send for catalogue,
JAMES It. OSGOOD & CO.
BOSTON. MASS.
$1.00 $1.00
Dunham & Sons,' Manufacturers,
Warerooins, 18 East lAlh Street,
Established 1834. REyw YORK.
S ndar lllmtrnttd Cirmlnrand Price LUt.
100,000
Facts for tho People!
for the Farmer, t lie McToIi'tnt, the Horaeirum. th
tock rnijwr, t mHTy-Ufwr, ttt Hte-keeper, the
rttbonir, tlia Fruit-raj wr, the .ar.lo:!r. rlx Uoctor, thm
.airy:n:ir, t tie Umifel old for evry fai:ly who want
n KftaDaoney. Tltr HmiU of iliti lfili i'cutiiry,
FAC TS KOU A4ir.MH
Maltt And Funis t AffiitA coin in ,7 nionpy on ft. Hnd
tn ua tt oncn for extra terms. - lN'tiKAM, SMITH A
BlaACK. 131 Walnut StrnM. Philadelphia, Pa.
A noiidve rt'iiu'tiy lor Jriv ami itll ti;acai's ot
the Kidney HlatiUi-r u.ni I rlnury Or
(una. iiuiic-H i&emeuy u imui; srnnauu- nu
priimfeil expietalv far tn ohuve Uiicait. It has
jurtd tiiouwiuJu. tvery b-rttlo warrant"!. Send to W.
. Clarke; I'rAvidence, R.I.. lr iliuitraU'd pampliWt.
If your dmnt iton't have it, he will order it for you.
$777
is tint snfrily enrnsd in these tun,
Jjnt it cau t mutln in three months
by any one of either sei, in any
pftrt of the country who is willing
to work Hteitdtlyat tiipeinplrty ment
that w furninh. HUi per week in
vonr own lo jrn. Vou Htad not be
away from horns over neht. Vtm can wive ymir whole
tint to the work, or only your pirn in'rinenta, We have
axenta who are mnkinn over )i'i( per ny at the bast,
nans. All who tikuka at once c.m nuike money fast. At
the present time money cannot be maiin ao eiibily and
rapidly at any otltsr huinesK. It ooBta nnthinR to try the
bnainen. Terms and Outrlt fre. Adtlrens at once
II. IIAM.hT'P i' I'orilim!, .Intnc.
IN VINO VERITAS.
Alter nine yeira experience we have detailed tn offer
our pare I'alirVrnia'Winee ami If randy to families hy the
nlloo or amgla u?iae at greatly reiucpd prices. Ihese
. Wines are Aeltnioua .I'ur family use. while their strict
: parity rowlera them invilu-ible for medicinal and aacra
i idhiiuI purposes. A trial ia ohly nM'estary Ui ahow their
; suerionty over stbiUeniU'd furein Koode.. "( rown
; Prince," the ohMct-ttt American champagne, m
spt-oialtv. Ken a ffr circular .tin! ur'wt IWt to
J I'UA V BKKI.I.N CO.sJ.'i W wm K..Nw York.
j ONLY" FIVE DOLLARS
! FOR AIT ACHE! -
OI tin. Ht K.iti Ui AMtHH'A, iwur thv lirt-.U I'KION
I'acii-io Raii-uoai.
A FARM FOR $200.
Iu aafey Paymuuts with kw rau-a uf liiti'ivst.
I HWDHK IT V!
! full infuiuiatiOD avnt five, atlJivav,
' " O. V. OAVIS,
1..D.I Annl. IT. V V. R.. Omiilin, Ni b.
BABBITT S TOILET IS0AP.
Unrivalled for the
TvfcM Mil tb fiaio.
No artiflclal aiul
lticptir odor te
cuvcr eouiutoD aod
dtivtcrlou logrtilU
aU. Alter yeanof
cUolttlv zprrtincDft
tha nianufau-inm f
B. T. Babbuf Jtm
Son bu pr(tcW4
'-mi now utVn to (ha
AP In the World.
! Mblli Tke FINEST TOILET SO.
teFpr Use In th Nursery it haNo Equal.
Wartn tatt liin lUcoit to every mctttt-r and faintly ir.t hriKUndoCU
ampl boa, ronulaing 8 caktt of I ou aactt, auut frva Iu aay a
VM OB raca.pt of H ccntc A(tdra
coURATroRiGoNTrfACK
265 BROAD WA Y. N Y.
t9R(.in
WUVU
Mil U N H Am
1 i , -W-saW -Mad
Dll. IIKMtl OK BKJOTAM
A new mediciriil remy thst ovefhadiw all there
In preventing and erda;.iting those (litteanes which -ia
very ape haa duri mated the human race.
AeculapiriR nt Athens, universally conceded to he the
Father of Medicine 2,fcUi ye ire ao in one of lit publio
leo'ures In the Itceum Hulls of the Avitapoli. sdiUm
that he who cetld dioovjr and introduce .a reuedy
which would ni-twnnt and destroy that disBaee which
haa blighted the live of million a and battttd the skill of
the phytioians, would be hailed aa a public btmeluctor
and at his death would be worthy to be ranked among
the Gods, Such a remedy, aftor twenty-live jwara' of
inoeasaut labor and experiment has been found by Pb.
Hknui V iiKGOTA, and is noworTured for sale for the
Bret time in thi country, in all of the principle drug
torea and at hi uflioe No. ((1)7 Broadway, N. Y CUyT
PntHj Our Dollar per Uottle witu direction.
Order by mail pruuipjly attbded to.
WHK WHITIJ. Tts ArVKKTIHKkt.',
"loan itil a U iiiiw,