Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, September 19, 1855, Image 2

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poetry..
IRTY.FIVE.
" The years of a n'in'e Mb aro tt rba sear° and ten."
• ,
Oh, weary hen. t l thou art half way hthnol
• Wu siandno life's meeldian bettyt—,s •
'2l As far froth ehildhood's morning dawn
'As to the grave's forgetful night.
\Giro Youth and Hope a parting teat—
' 1140 promised but to bring us' here,
And Beason takes the guidance lIONV.-•-•
0110 backivarut look—the last—the last!
• Ono silont tear--for youth ts pasta
goes with Hope and passion bath 1
Who comes with 1)10'li n d memory our.
•
Oh, lonely ions the downward track—. '
• Joy's Musie roes gone!
To pletisnro ail,' her giddy i.qmp
F:Metre'l, withtet;a Op or tear! ' •
But heart g'reS way and snirits droop,
1 - To think that Love may lee ,•1! Ale hero!
t l k , have we no charm when youth is flown— ,
•
' 'Midway tthdeath 16ft sad alone
~ Yet stay I—tni 'twee'llhrbt star
TM! t 'srMds its thread aimei.s the Wave;
'il• I seo a I”l:_bLening 13731 t tr io fin',
ti oil down a path beyond the pyarel •
And now—bless Cod!—:ils golden line
Coons r. and 11 , ,fhts coy rlmdowy way.
Aml shows the heir band ritsp'd to Intl.!!
. Ltd 11,1! o hat those sweat rupees say:
'The be:ler lami's in siOlt,
Al by ;Is ri n :alt'uin_
All lose is driven.
hot. stir!•c ]and . 1' Itinq
'lhee Oil
3I i Lit ciiuilruULi.
SCENES ABOUT SEBASTOPOL.
LIFE IN THE TRENCHES
J 31.—The surf'ace of the ground in the
the neighborhood of the Malakoff works and
the Itedau is presenting every day a more
checkered appearance. -- It is one mass of
•reaches, traverses, rifle pits, and batteries
a perfect maze; so that it, requires a strongly
developed organ of locality or else many days
of trench duties to find one's way.' The rail-
way is perhaps - the best test of the gigantic
activity which is prevailing ; numbers of mor
tars and largeouantities of ammunition come
up daily by it and vanislragain silently, to lie
replaced next day by Others. It is as if the
enches were an unfathomable abyss, such an
' , credible mass cf mortol•s, guns, shells and
shot do they seem to swallow up. IV hen they
satiaied and when the, word "enough"
NC' be said seems as uncertain as Crimet.n
Weather. I heard, a few; dayS ago, from a
French officer of artillery that Pelissier, being
asked when offensive siege operations would
be again' resumed, said, " Well, I don't know ;
the Russians are losing every day three or
'Our hundred men by sickness. If we wait a
week they will have lost a brigade ; if we wait
a month they will have lost a carps d armee."
But if the RuSsians Ipse many men by sick
ness they. seem to be.eareful to replace them
again
TIIE FLIES.
One of the greatest curses of the camp at
,'pc present moment is, the multitude of (lies.
It is really an Egyptian plague. In every
tent arid hut they swarm in myriads. From
6osquii.oes and flees we are pretty free; there
are no bugs; at least I have neither seen
nor heard 7 of any. Probably bedsteads are
not euffielently numerous here' to encourage
, . . .
the presence of those flat and foetid' insects.
We are duly grateful for the absence of. such
irritating vermin, and w•e try to be resigned;
but we•certuinly cannot be thankful .under fly
inUietion. The Crimean:fly is the most daring
and aggressive animal of its size that it has
ever been my lot to encounter. It befouls
everything, in your quarters, bites
. you, and
will not, be rebuffed. Its courage and activity
Ocitotitute it the ZoMace of the fly faunlly. ii
'dashes into the cup you raise to your lips and
defiles the morsel at the end of your fork.—
War with it is not to be thought of. Kill a
thousand and you shall have a million in their
stead. Whatever food is exposed upon the
table, sugar, meat, bread, 'is in an instant
••black with flies. The camp resounds with
maledictions on the genus. A cargo of "ketch
,'em-alive" papers arriving just now at Balak
lain would find an instant 'sale at exhorbitant
prices. We should paper our huts and tents
with them, and still despair of exterminating
our tormentors.
THE UNDERGROUND HUTS
These singular dwellings are as may be sup.
posed, damp and gloomy. They aro entered
by three , or four ste,pa cut in. the earth, and
usually, soiter'Sd 'with atones or plafiks. Hero
-is one of which the entrance is So low that a
man of average height must bend double to
etin: It -is-oonsidered_rather a good hut,
and its owners speak with, gratitude, almost
with enthusiasm, of the excellent shelter it
afforded them in the trying times of last win
ter. , • It is eight or 13itio feet broad and about
12 in length. 'A.t one end $ sort of embrasure
admits light through the thigh wall, composed
of mud and shapeless mains of stone. below
this embrasure is the bed, barely raised from
the grouttd;,-6i(one aide is altmall,..niche in,the
wall used ArvidCo; the 'Wails ttie tappstri
ed 'with sail-cloth, horsoblankets; and with
manta : that have comp alt thaiWay fiom Cat's- lonia:-and"Valoncia; • whii.o:'•thO:.SPaitish mules
and muleteer's, are adorned with pictures cut
from illustrated periodicals, and with numer
ous pipes, Lien culotices, well blackened; that
is to, sly, by the tobacco oil that hassoaked
through the porous clay. actuidly
chimney-piece—a thick board wrenched froM
some.packing case, the rusty nails-Still stick
ing iu its edges—which supports a biscuit box,
tobaldco; bottles in various stages of c:onsuMp
tion; and 611Mr' small comforts: Here' is"a
rough tubused for the inmates' ablutions until
scarcity of water caused the prohibition of
such luxuries. "Suspended from the homely
tapestry. are a sword, a pouch-belt, water
proof' and leather leggings. A pair of tall
boot are in one corner, and hard by the door,
the lightest place, is a crai'y table, with
writing, material's and sundries. A shelf has
been contrived, and holds a few well-thumbed
volumes. The heavy rain has flowed into the
hut through the doorway up to'the edge of the
bed, the consequence being that the floor re
sembles a muddy -road, in which you Slip
about and almost stick. A trifle this to Cri•
mean campaigners, The roof does not leak,
which is more than can be said of many buts.
The one I have described may be taken as a
lair specimen of this class of edifice. Trans
ported to England and et.hibited as the dwell
ing of an Esquimaux or American Italian it
would doubtless excite surprise and cont;tas
slot', and people would wonder that even
savages could ett_ist in such dens—here cheer
fully tenanted by very civilized pc , su ns.—
Huts and hovels are few in number compared
to 111-e ten's, which, when carefully pitched,
with a good gutter round them, male endura
ble habitations for tilts t;ate of year, although
liable to be over-thrown by vcOty winds.
lint against the cold, what the canva s
crackles with the frost and the icy breath of
winter enters at every chink, they afford poor
protection indeed.
SELL' SG COI LIMEN FOR DEF..% u.—The Rev.
Dr. Wnytivontu, a Methodist Missionary in
China, writes to the Rev. Dr. DcuniN from
IToug song, under the date of June ti, and
ME
"We anchored safely in this harbor on the
morning of the 24th' ultimo, fif:eeti days 'rem
Singapore and one hundred and thirty-three
from New York--a good run, taking out the
eighteen days we lay at Singapore, for this
season of the year. After twelve days of
loitering upon the China sea„With 'calms and
variables,' a severe gale,. 'tiro corner, of a
typhoon' the eaptaiii„called us, and
compelled us to •qie ta' four bour4,ou Sunday,
the 2'oth, renewing all the delights of sea
sickness to the uninitiated. it was providential
that do wei no further north. One ship,
perhaps a hundred miles,from us and nearer
the centre of, the,tempest, was 'thrown on her
beam ends,' and came into port. a few days
after us dismasted. Our barque was heavily
laden with rice for the Cantdu market, as
were nosily or qiiite all the vessels front India
to China at this season of starvation, scarcity,
and general stagnation of business resuhing
from the war. Such was the distress a month
ago among the poorer , classes in the vicinity •
of Canton that girls twelve yeari of age were,
offered for sale by their own parents for a
Couple of picots of rice, valued at twelve or
fourteen dollars."
A Btu STORY.—Au old gentleman who had
a neighbor rather addicted to tolling large
stories, after listening one day to several
which quite taxed his credulity, boasted that
ho himself could toll a bigger ono still; and
proceeded to relate the following:—
, Said he, one -day I was qUite at the farther
end of my farm, more than half a mile from
my house- -when all at once, I saw a heavy,
dark cloud rising in the west. Soon I saw
torrents of rain descending at a distance, and
rapidly approaching the place where I stood
with my wagon and horses. Determined—if
possible—to escape the storm, I instantly
leaped into my wagon, started "any team to
wards home. By constant application of the
whip to my horses, I barely escaped being
overtaken by the rapidly npprottehing torrent.
But so tremendous did it pour down, that my
little dog, who was oloso behind me, actually
had to swim all the way!
A dry old fellow called ono day on a
member of Congress elect; tho family were at
breakfast; there was a vacant seat, but the
old man was hardly in a plight to by invited
to the table. The following conversation took
place : " What is the news ?" The old man
said, " Nothing much, but one of my neigh
bore _gave his child
_a . queer name." " What
was it 7" ""Como : and cat." The name sound
ed so peculiar that it was repeated--n What,
come and pat " Yes, plank you, said the
old !Tian, "I don't carp if I do," and drew up
to the table.
°'what tree most resembles the remains
of a flue Havana cigar? The white ash.
gMa-Uh (WAr.,B,\ 5) ,
THE PLAGUE. 'H
Tha ,Most , terrible scourge of ;the Middle
Ages was the "Black Death." It is computed
that this mighty reaper gathered in his l' her
vest home" twenty-five millions of people,
one-fourth of the then population' of Europe.
The disease first appeared in the kingdom of
Cathay to the. North of China in the year 1383.
Ih )c0 it vtsited France and' England, and
subsequently. - Scotland; Norway, Russia and
,Poland....R.dashed in among tbe.roles with,a
wolfish appetite and seemed ; to anticipate the
EnrssianS in Making a Morsel of its nationality.
Three-fourths . of the entire'' population' were
devoured by the hungry monster. .Of Itus•
sians and Norwegians two-thirds were de
stroyed. The disease is described by Hecker
as a species of, Oriental plague, exhibiting it
self in inflammatory boils and tumors of the
glands, accompanied with burning thirst; some
times, also, with inflammation of the lungs
and expect : oration of blood ; in other eases
with vomitings of blood . and fluxes of the
bowels, tenninating •like malignant cholera;
with it discoloration of the skin, and hlack
spots indicating putrid decomPo'sition, from
which it was called in the north of Europe,
the "'Black Death." The attacks were usual
ly fatal within two or three days of the first
symptoms appearing, but in many cases were
even more sudden, some falling as if struck by
lightning. In some countries dogs, cats, fowls.
and other animals were affected by the disease
and died in great onmbers. In England it
was followed by a fatal murettiß,auAng cattle,
occasioning a great advance in ire price of
Upon the heels of this black night of Mor
tality, there came ',Diking into Europe the
Dancing Maria or Tarantism, as it was called
in Italy where it was ntt , ibuted to the bite of
the ground spider:--the tarantula. The dis
ease, it is sail, showing itself in violent invol
untary movements in the muscles of the legs,
the physicians of the times conceived the idea
that if the patients were encmr•aged to dance
until the fell eshausted, a reaction would com
mence and a cure result. This singular pre
scription was so much relied on, that music
was every where provided, and airs composed
to harmonii:e with the peculiarities of the
dance: but these public exhibitions seem to
have hatl the effect of propagating the epi
demic.
In a short time—naturally enough, to be
sure-,all Germany was in motion. The no
lion 'en masc. took to dancing until the father•
land became a vast ball room, and the anti
ebarnlMr to the " valley of
. death." Their
circles were . lnrmcd' in the Churches, public
buildings - and in the streets.
.Joined han d in
hand and
, appearing. to have lost control
over Ihernselves, they continued dancing re
gardless of the bystanders, for hours together
in wild delirium until they fell to the ground
exhausted. The dancing mania, however, ap
peared to' run its course more rapidly in Ger
many than in other places. prevailed in
Italy as late as the seventeenth century.
We have historical accounts of two other
singular epidemics, the 'biting .mania and the
mewing mania: The forther began, it is sail,
with a'.iuu, in a German mlnucty, who showed
a great propensity to Idle het companions,
which spre . ad to many other nunneries. The
mewing mania was also a nunnery disease—
Ole victims of this disease would spend several
hours in the day in imitating the mewing of a
cat, Both of these epidemics occurred in the
fifteenth century, when nervous diseases up
pear to have been unusually prevalent in Eu
rope
Tho " sweating sickness," another terrible
epidemic, made its appearance in England in
1544 ; it produced a fatality nearly as great
as that of the Black ) Death. The disease de
vastated England five times within six years,
amt then entirely disappeared. The disease
was a violent inflamatory fever, that suffused
the whole body with a Read perspiration. Its
attack was followed immediately by complete
prostration, and arriving at a crisis in a few
hours, it seldom spared its victims—scarcely
One in a hundred escaped with life. It was
remarkable, that robust and vigorous Men
were generally singled out as the favorite tar
gets for the arrows of this deadly archer,
whilst children and the aged almost universally
escaped.
Plagues have existed in nearly all ages, and
can hardly be said to be extinot—even at this
day. The great plague of London in 1665,
carried off nearly 70,000 inhabitants of that
city. It commenced with shivering, nausea,
and headache, followed by total prostration or
delirimn, and sometimes paroxisms of frenzy.
If the patient survived those, till the third day,
buboes commonly appeared, and when these
could be made to suppurate, there was hope
of recovery. ' The ",plague of the guts,"
which is mentioned in a table of London cas
ualitios of 1659 and 1660, and which proved
awfully fatal in - 11370 - ond 1699; is supposed - to
have been . the i cholore. in its malignant form.
The minute descriptions given of this disease
by Dr; Hecker, indontify it with the epidemic
cholera of this period, and seem to explode
the theory that before the year 1817, the 64:
era was altogether unknown either in India or
Europe. • •
. p . uc CESp. IN L1F.E;;1.,::
It is the peculiar vice of our ago and coun,
try to plit a ftilSe estimate on the mere ac. 19 ,1-
sition of riches: I - do .net, a$ till undervalue
wealth or the diligence and enterfiriSe so often
exercised in its attainment. I would not say
a word to thrown - doubt on the importance of
acquiyip,g such `a measure of this world's
gdods as to render ono independent, and able
to assist others. The young man who thinks
he may amuse himself as-he. sees fit, at - the
same time throwing the burden of his ; sppport
on others, or leading a precarious 'fie on the
verge of debt and bankruptcy, is a dishonor
to his species. But I assert that the too com
mon mistake which makes men look upon the
acquisition of a fortune, - or the having a fine
and fashionable hduse, ns cehatituting BUO•
cess,in lite, is. extremely pernicious SuCcess
in life consists in the proper and harmonious
develapement or, those faculties- which God
has given us. Now we have fact tips more
7
important to our welfare than 9 of m. Ong
money—faculties mote condn gie to ctAl•
happiness, and to our health efliody and soul.
There are 141ter and better modes of activity
than those which ere exhibited in multiplying
dollars. Men can leave to their children a
better patrimony than money ; they can leave
them the worth of a good example, good hab
its, a teligious faith, a true estimate of the de
sirable thiugs of this life ; resources of mind
and heart which will shed sunshine on adver
sity, and give a grnee to prosperous fortune.
" I t is not wealth which is deserving of hom
age, but the virtues which a man exercises in
the idow pursuit of wealth—the abilitics so
called forlit. the self denials so imposed."
I have heard o wo brothers, whose father
died ;e: • 1 , rem five hundred dollars apiece.
"I will take this money and make myself a
r l ch man," said Peary the younger brother.,
-I will take this tnetie,y, and make myself a
goad man. - said (loorge the elder. Ilen , e,
who knew but little beyond the multiplication
table, abandaned a'l thoughts of going to
school, and bean by peddling g'dods, in a
small way, over the country. Ile wk's shrewd
aid quick to leniat what he gave his attention
to; and he gave all his attention to making
money. Ile succeeded. In one year his
five hundred dollars had become a thousand.
In five years it had grown to be twenty thou
sand ; and at the age of fifty he was - worth a
million. Geotge
,remembered the words of
the wise man:—"With all thy getting get en
ders; anding.
He spent two thirds of his money in going
to school and acquiring a taste for solid knoWl
edge. He then: spent the rpminder of his
patrimony in porchasings feic' acres of land
in the neighborhood of a thriving city. He
re§elved on . heing a favnir:
After a lapse of thirty-five years- the two
brothers inetiqt was at George's house. A
bright, vigOrens, alert man was George,
though upwards of fifty-llye ye4 4 flold. Hen
ry, though several years you was very
infirm. lie had kept his couti,t, - rtorn' long
after the doctors he'd warned I.oMiiko,.giVe Up
business, and now be found him4leStricken
in health beyond re4r. But that was not
the worst lie was out of his element. when
nut making money. George took him into
the library and showed him a fine collection
of books. Poor Henry had never cultivated a
taste frt. reading. Ile looked on the books
with no more interest then he would have
looked at so many bricks. George took Lim
into his earden, but Henry began to cough,
and said he was afraid of the east_wind.—
When George pointed out to him a beautiful
elm tree, he only cried out "Pshaw !" George
took him into his greenhouse, and talked with
enthusiasm of some rare flowers, the beauty
of which seemed to give the farmer great
pleasure. Henry shrugged his shoulders and
yawned, saying, 'Ali! 1 do not care for these
things.' George asked him if he was fond Of
painting§ and engravings. 'No, no ! Don't
trouble yourself,' said Henry. 'I can't tell
one daub from another.' 'Well, you tthall
hear my daughter Edith play on tbo piano;
she is no ordinary performer.'. 'Now, don't
brother—don't if you love me?' said Henry
beseechingly; never could endure music."
'But what can Ido to amuse you? Will you
take a ride?' I am afraid of a horse ; but if
you will drive me carefully down to your
loge bank, I will stop and have a ghat with
the president.' Poor Henry ! Money was the
one thing uppermost in his mind; to it ho had
sacrificed every other good thing. When a
few days afterwards he parted from his far
mer brother, he laid his hand o* his shoulter
and said, 'George you can - justEinpport, yofr•
self comfortably on the ititereit of your mon- .
td I hr eno-Itlo, buy up ;the
ey, any Java got enougtt,,,-
whole of your town, bank and all—aud et,
your, life has been it apneas, and mine a ead
failure.' Sad but 'true words,
Yte. A traveler in England,: observing a
peatientat work, and seeing that he wail taking
it retanrkably,easy; said to
"Itly friend :you. do not appear to swant
anyl" ,e
'iThy, no, master; rePlied be, six shillings
a week ain't sweating wages?" , •
'COLtRIDO
, -
~-.,.:,:....'-,-}•
As an 'eloquent talker,'' it May be doubted
whether his Superior ever lived. ' The State
ments made on this head,- would certainly bo
judged most- extravagant and incredible, if
theyverenot froM minds of widely differing
t
asso • tions and tastes, and some of them from
sources which forbid' the .thoUght of undue.
Partiality for the man. Thus DeAnineey,
whose ungehe'reue impuititiont
, tir- plagiarism,
and unfeeling allusion . to, personal. tiailtieS.
and domestic embarasaments, arouse , one's
highest indignation, -says: "He spun daily
from the loom, of his own magical brain, the
ories more glOrious by far, and supported by
a poMp and luxury of images, such as no Ger
man that ever breathed could have in/hit-ea
in his dreams." Thus,-too,:lltizlitt;''WhO'al
lowed•differences of -political opinion 'to con
vertearly friendship into blind hospitality,
writes':—"lle talked on forever, ' and you
~ .
wished him to talk, on'foreve?; hiS thoughts
did not seem to come With labor and, effort,.
but as if borne on by the gllsis'of genius, and
as if the ',wings of imagination lifted him
from off his feet. His voice rolled on the
ear like the pealing orkan, and its sound
alone was the music of thought; 'ids •mind
was clothed with Wings, and raised on them
he lifted philosophy to. heaven. In -his -de
scriptiims you then saw the progress of human
happiness and liberty in' bright and never- -.
ending succession, like the rsteps of. Jacob's
ladder, iv;th airy shapes ascending, and de
scending, and with the voice of God at the
top of the ladder." Thus also the conscien
tious and gifted John Foster. det.crtbing a
talk in Bristol, says :—"lt was,perfcetly won
derful, in looking back on a few hours of Vs
conversation,' to think what a quantity of
perfectly original speculation he had tittered
in language
.incomparably - rich in ornament
nud now combinations." And thus, once
again, henry Nelson Coleridge, his son-in law
and editor of most of his works, writes:—
'-Throughout a long-drawn summer's day
would this man talk to you in low, equable,
but clear and musical tones, concerning things
human and divine, marshalling all history,
harmonizing all experiment, probing the depth
of your concionsneEs, and revealing visions of
glory and of terror to the imagination; but
pouring withal such floods of light upon the
mind that
,_ou might; I' --a season, like Paul,
become blind in the very act of conversion."
Further quotations would.be needless, but we
shall be pardoned for adding the testimony of
the inimitable litia:—"Come back into" my
memory, like as ;bon West in the dayspriug of
thy fancies, with hope like a fiery column,
before thee, the dark pillar not yet;;turned—
Samuel Taylor Coleridge 7 -Logician, Metaphy
sician, Bard ! How have I seen the casual
passer through the cloister stand still, entran
ced with admiration t wilit° be weighed the
disproportion between the speech and the
garb of the young Murendula,) to hear thee
unfold, in thy deep and sweet intonations,
the mysteries of 1-mblichus or Ploilnus,
(for. even in those y •:.:s thou naxedst not
pale 1.. t such pliiosophie draughts,) or 7 c 6.-
ing Toner in l,:s CI eel,: or l'•!..(1::••—wFe.
the wa!ls• of tile oio .il•ey I'mtri re echoed
to the aecents,of the lusp:red charity boy.
1U Tuaetjiciiti.
10.31(L't WA.l'll IC. All , : D R'A L COL
LEGE tfl , PENNSYI,I A :NIA,
T.t ,0 in rootat St, above E,:l:ve , ltll. l'hila.lelphia
-1:10 , lam tot EA of (1i llegithe Con, su kill rolmne.!re
on the SIC DO a :i OH ttOy Of oCfrOber, :ILA coat eatenlll."
the tirol. of :lineal enhulng. .
Aolovot, of Fete ha' a full C.an , o of Lev,tLes [in
variably enthl , , :.• , 100 00
Stavients %thallium attended two fall course:, in
other 31, dies! Colleges,;,o 00
Graduates of other Mt:Lilt:EA Colleges, :Al 00
Nat &illation 1. . ,, rail only once, 500
Practical A unto:3ly,, . 10 00
l;railaation Fee, 50 00
. ,
. FACULTY.
W NVILLIAMSOII, ALI), .I':Llerltm4 Profmsor of Clio
ionl Medicine.
.1 P. 1.): RE, M. D., Profss,or of Mtherla lludiea foal
'mei:Tootles.
ALVAN E. SMALL, Peofessorof lhomeopthic
TnEli
totes. Pathology, mid the Prardiee of Medicine
IsAsto M. Waitn, M. D.' Peoliasor of Obsiettles ' Disease!.
of Women and Cliqdren, and .3.ledical Jurisiem
denco.
11A1 Tl!!at' SP.MPLF., M. D., Profes:Tr of C11[11118:41 alk
Toxicolozy.
3Aeou 111. D., Pmfo.ror of Surgery.
WILI.I,I)t A. GAIIDINLP, 11. D.,liolissor of Anatomy.
WituAst A. Itimn, M. D„ Peofesqor or Physiolo;y„
A. S. Coven, M.D.,Demonstodor of Anatomy,:
WILLIAM A. CAI:DINER, M. D., Dean.
auf.ll-16. No. 120 Nee 1.11 Tenth tit.
-ia TRUSSES! TRUSSES
C. IL NEEDLES,
TACSS AND BRACE ESTADLISIIMENT,
S. W. Cori or TwOlab and Rao Streets, Phllad'r
Importer of fine French .Trusses, comLlniog estrum
lightness, ease and durability whit correct construe
tion. • • •
lierulAl or ruptured patients can be suited by remit
ting rtuounts:—Sending number of inches round th
hips, stud staling side effected.
Cost of Single Truss, $2, $3, si, $5. Double—ss
$S and $lO.
Instructions as to wear, and how to effect a curt
whon possible, sent with tho Truss.
'• 'Also for sale, in great variety,
DR. BANNING'S' IMPROVED PATENT BODY DEMI
For.tho curd of Prolapses Uteri; Spinal Props.and Sur
ports Patent Shoulder Braces, Chest Expanders an.
Ereceor Braces, Adapted to all With Stoop Shoulders an.
ItudiVealt Lungs; English Elsustht •Abdominal •Betts
SW 4 Ponsories , Syringes—niale anti
' in-Ladles' Rooms, with Lady attendants. •
EMOV NEWLAND & Co l l —
ratan I,OOKINEIAILABB AND PR
T RE FRAME AN LIPACTORT,.No.I2 O ARCII stree
opposite the 'theater, Philadelphia.. • '
N. N. & Co. xecelved 'the only Pitas Medal, siwkrdsel
the Crystal Palace exhibition, N. ,MI In the tlnh
States, for allt,,Decorated, Mantel And Pier Masses.
*PDX WANTED.--A b'oilvante4 fron
18 to 20),Toote of ago g t tho.Storo of
O. W. lIITNER.
0