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MT Limit LABORER.
A tioiiMliotd toy. » fra«Ua tiling of beasfy—
YM with t(cb rising tun
Itolti* tala round of toll-ft •oleum duty
T lift I moil be dally dona.
Tr-1ay hft'ft building rattle. Iintiaa ftftd tower,
With wondrous art and ailll;
Or laltorft with lila hammer by the hour,
Willi atrong, determined will.
At on, with Itllle loaded rart ba'a plying
A In lab and driving trad*;
Aaain, with thoughtful, rarneat brow la trying
Motna book'a dark lore to road.
How, laden like aotna lltlla beaat of bnrdru,
lie drags hlmaelf along;
Ai d now lila lordly little vo!oe la heard In
ItoleUrona about and aoug ;
Ai other hour la apant In huay lolling,
•nco. Tho principal Btroet wim lined
with flUlln filled with orangeH, apples,
and gingerbread, gay croKMB, and
tingar-atickr. There were tents fnll of
“boys" and girls oatiog, drinking and
ugliing; largo pota of boiliug baoon
id potatoo*, barrels of porter luid kng*
himself nntaida the town of Ballinssloe.
There ho htd muni breakfast, and at
Ilia inti he entered into conver/iation
with homo men who wero going to Eng
land with cattle, and wero in want of a
drovor. Owen offered hia Bcrrioen. and,
. , . Si- be appeared a quiet, renpeotnblo
of potheon, and Iriah ‘pipors playing ynnng man, thoy were accepted atonco.
with all thoir might. From stall to TI
Vith hoop, and top, and ball,
and with a patience that la navar-falllug,
lla trie# and ronquara all
Ilnl steep at laat oVrtakea toy little rorer,
And on bla mothat'a kreaat,
luja thrown aaldsj the daps hard labor tnr«
•a I fold him to my boaoro, alreplng,
hlnk 'mid gathering Irara,
mat the Injure mar In atom ba krrplng,
hla tnolhaf'a kreaat,
3: ’ ’ ‘
think 'mid gathering Irara, '
oat tha Injure tuar In alora
work for maubood'a yoara.
Mutt ha with loll hla dally braad l>« earning
in iha world'* Itiiay mart;
Ufa's btllar liwaon every day lm learning,
’lfuir
Or ahalf my lltlla arrntlart t>a building
Homa monumatil of fame
On which, in lallara bright with glory'a gll
1 ha world may raad hla name ?
l'i rhajt aoma humbla, lowly oreu|iallon,
Hut ahared with aweet ooulant;
I'/rhai* a Ufa In loftier, prouder elation,
In eelflah pleaai
i three
‘•at raay croaa the portal
Ilia ilfa-work be t/i trailer truths Immortal,
Among tha aoua of
TDE MAODERMOTTB OF BALLY
BANE.
AH IIIIHIf HTOBT OF URAL I.IKK.
The bout " bolding" of land on the
Iiallvbano property wag that of old
Darby MaoDormott. Hig cropg wen
always flnit go wed and flrgt home: hii
haggard the neatest and bont thatched ,
bin teoooa in tho bent condition, and big
liotiHo tho Hiiuggogt in the villa)
!'it
liotiHo the Hiiuggogt in tho village.
Darby wag never behindhand with bin
rent. Tho lot of May and tho lot of
Novembor found him, wet or dry, good
MoaNon or bad noanou, at tha offloo with
hig old woratod stocking, in tha very
©timer of wliioh hig half year's rout lay
ggfely oonntod. Ho wuh a decent old
man, who alwayg minded hia btisincHs,
and attended to hig dtiUog, and had few
troubled in tho oourgo of hia throoHcoro
and ton yoara. Ho had two hour ; Mar
tin, tho eldeat, a dark, handflome man,
with a aqnaro, heavy faoo, and a pair of
«Urk, reatlasa, glittering oyaa—a man
whom overy ono respected, bnt very
few liked; and Owen, a fair, curly-
haired, dollouto boy, who had been IjIh
mother a darling. Old Darby wn H fond
of both hig aoug, but tho nturdy,
healthy Martin wag decidedly his favor-
i.o; and when ho diod it w«g found
that tho greater part of bin Raving went
to lifr first-born,
Owen watt not oithvrof a jealons or
rnviotiR disuosition; Mill, ho Home-
timoR thought it rather hard that hia
brother ghould have all tho luok. Mar
tin wag atrong, and healthy, and hand-
Momo, had been hie father's favorite,
ami waa master of tho farm after hie
doath. All tho Rtock and erupt, ami
everything, wrro tho property of Mar
tin ; and Owen wtut tho punsuHttor of
lint fifty |H)uiidg. Forty yoara ago two
hundred poumlg in ready money wtut
eoiiuidered a fortune, and oven fifty
pounds was not by nuy moang to bo
doaplaod; and when old Darby Mao
Dermott loft hin boyn go well oil, thorn
wore fow men in Dallylmn© who did not
envy thorn—Martin especially, who won
looked up to by hia neigh bora iih little
abort of a gentleman, certainly ns a man
who might keep hia jaunting-car if he
0)10*0. lint tho poaHORRion of motley
iniulo no nhaiigo in tho now teuaut of
the Upland farm, an the MaoDermotta'
holding waa called. Ho junt worked an
hard ah over, getting tip at six o'clock
in tho morning and going to bed Into.
Owen lived with him, and worked too,
jiMt iih usual, only that during hia fath
er g time he might npond Ilia eveningfl
ro id mg old newsmipers, or writing let-
ten t» his aoniiaintaiiooH who had gone
to A morion. Hut Martin thought anoh
oe MipatiouR more wii'to of time, and
wliuii the day's work wan ended and the
RUiipcr over, ho ordered tho ttroaud tho
liglita to be jmt out.
l'lio unit farm to that of Martin Mao-
D. nnott’s on oue aiite was hold by
Miolinol O’Byruo, a farmer who hud
been well to do onoe, but misfortunes
I' 1 *’ 0 Jo»r» had ootna thickly on him.
wtall, and from tent to tent, Owen and
Julia wandered, enjoying everything,
till late in the evening, wlion they mot
Martin MacDormott and Julia’s father,
both evidently in high flpirita, and chat
ting confidentially. They wont into a
tent togothor, and after an hour's chat
came out more good-tempered ami
fldontial than ever, and Bought Julia
and Owen.
"Come hero, my oolleenI” O'B;
Raid in rather a thick voice,
made a match for you with Martin. Oo
over and Hit by the Ride of him."
" With Martin, father I" tho girl Raid,
looking with dismay at tho Htorn, dark
man ahe alinont hated, and certainly
foared. " With Owuio. you mean."
"Horra a bit of it, Julia; but Mar
tin-Martin, the matter. Poor Owuio
baa nothing."
" He’s promised Hovoran’s farm,
father."
“ No, my dear, it's mo that has Fit v-
erau'a houldin’," Martin said, with a
sinister smllo ; and it's mo you're goin’
to marry."
Owen walked up to hin brother, and
looking him straight in the face aaid,
in a clear, calm voice: " What do you
moan, Martin MacDormott?"
" What I said junt now—that I got
Ilnvoran'H houldin', and took ray oath
to marry Julia O'Byrne. I told it to
hnr father half an hour ago."
" You mean to aay you are goin’ bo-
tween ino and tho colleen I love—the
colleen I hnve loved ginco ahe waa up
to my knee ! Yon mean to gay you are
goin’ betwsoii mo and those few dirty
acres of Hevefan’s that f axed first,
and bospoko; betweon your only broth
er and all the hopoH of peaco ho liua in
this world—you, that haa full and
plenty, Martin MacDormott?"
" I r m goin’ to marry Julia," Martin
repiiod with aullen determination.
"Julio, what do you say?" Owen
linked, turning to tho girl, who stood
ileutly woeping.
" I must answer for her," O'Uyrne
said. " I prot. iaod her to Marlin, and
not goin’ lrapk on my word, I can
tell you. What have you to show ?
Hew do yon mean to keep her?"
" What do you aay, Julia?"
" I wish to stick to you, Ownie, and
never marry any one else—never, never,
oh I hope for luok I"
" (lod bless you for them words, dar-
lin'l Only bo true and faithful, and I'll
soon havn a cabin for you Rome whore."
"Julia !" said her father, raining his
bandit to heaven, "if you ever marry
Hint hoy, ever rqmkn to him, ever think
of him, I'll ours© you on my bare
knees I You don't know wlmt u foth
er’s ouran is ! Don’t bring it on ui\
child, if you love her. Never colon
across her again, Owuio Mao Dermott 1
" You hear that, Julia. What am
to do ? " Owen asks.
" Oo away, and never oomo near in
again, or lio'U curse me, Owen. O
away."
Owen MacDormott stood perfectly
Mill for a few miuutca, and then, raisiag
hiHoeii to heaven, and with tlie irupet-
uoHity of a young Irishman,
down a bitter uursu on his only
brother.
"May you never bo happier than I
. »• *"*•«*> miuAir im iiiiii,
and ho bail hard work Uj keep tho farm
tog.ther. On the other side, a nniall
holding of about flftoun norea waa held
by a good-for-nothing old fellow named
1 atriok Hovcrau, who waa little better
tlian a imiManoo to tlio entire neighbor-
hood. However, one moruiug lio tvae
found doad in hi H botl; and Owen Mao-
I 'rmott, without taking oounsel of any
one, wout to tho agent and asked if lie
mmi t have the vuoaut farm, uh lie
wiali'd to aottlo down on hia own. ue-
cunt. The agent pmmised, amt full
o« hop© and joy Owen went about hia
work l’lio next day was the 17th of
March, Bt, l'atrick'a day, and a general
linli.li}; hih) «'irly in ilm niornlng
um n drMMd liiaumlf in lii. Baiuliij
mil mill want out. A liltli. wav ilowii
Hi., mail In. mot 11 .vihuir nirl, iil.o
ur. hi <>.t in Imr boot—n criminal oluff
ilrvoo, n ||tiy olmwl, uml n onmo of rib-
bona of all the colors in tho rainbow ou
her Hliouldcr. Her fair hair was twiated
cuteledely round hor head, and her soft
blue oyea hud a atartled look in them.
"On,Ownie, nvourueou, 1 was afoard
tcmi wereu’t cornin’; nud sure, surra s
hit of shamrock you have in your cap
tliia blessed tnoruiu'. Why in that,
dear?"
, V „ WHH * u 11 Hurry to ecoyou, my dar-
bn , ’ ho niiNwertd, looking tenderly
into tho sweet, shy faoo. "Julie, 1
l ave some good nows for you, tliia
mornin'; let uh walk down this* Uno, and
1 II toll you, and look for my slmutroek
at II e Name tirao."
I gether they turnod down a laue, or
rt' In r foot-path, bordered on one Hide
J y a thick blackthorn h dgo, and a
bou t meadow on the other.
' Juba," said Owen, "youkuowl'm
f n l of you, sinoo you were a wee, shy,
• 'elica’o little creature. I never had
any Mrindheart but yourself, and now 1
« mt you to usmo the day ; l nm goin’
to take you all to myself. You know
ueversn's houldin'? I went to the
ashes ! May your childreu
live to hate and dishonor you, Martin
MaoDormott 1" And with one loug
look at the trembling Julia. Ow.*u rap
idly pitHHnd out into the cold dnrkueHr
of tho March evening, uml whh seen nc
more in Oastlegsr. Ton inmuuIh of the
money left him by his fattier he took,
tho romaimlor lay in the bank. Hut
which side lie went, or what hoourno of
him, no ono know.
A year pause 1 away, and t hen Miohaol
inability to reiiat any longer, beoamn
the wife of Martin MaoDormott, though
she font ctl the very sound of bin voice,
anti trembled at hia touch, lie was a
tyrant, bnt she soaroely heeded that,
for ahe hud no will, auil no wish to do
anything but what he bade her. Hhc
had childreu, but one after another
tlioy sickened and tiled, nud things in
general began to grow wrong with Mar
tin ; his shabby churlishnesa making
him generally disliked. Whoa they
wero Urn years murried, J aim died iii
giving birth to twins, n Hue healthy
bey and a girl. Both lived, nud all the
affection tiieir father lmd ho ceutered
the boy ho called Darby, after his
u father. The little girl, Julia, lie
eared nothin about, allowing her to
grow up just as host aim could. The
faun Martin took co treacherously from
his brother he gave up long before, uh
uothing ever sown there prospered, and
indeed, aero by acre, the upland farm
had been going for years. l)arhy Mao
Dermott grew up to be a flue, hand-
Tiling so,nn nmn, first uml furcmoNt in every
• ® mischief the tiling© oonld afford; and
at twenty yearn of ago got transported
for sevcu years for treason felony, uh
he had taken an active part iu the re
bellion of 1838. Julia was an idle,
careless girl, who spent her liuiu iu
hoy reached Dublin in three days,
and then started for Liverpool, where
Owen lmdo good-by to tho cattle-job
bers, and took n posgoge to America in
the Golden Cross. On board, he made
himself so useful and agreeable to the
eantnin that bo gnvo him a recommend
ation to n merchant in Now York, who
took him into his office. For five years,
Owen worked patiently and steadily,
and then his master promoted him to a
clerk ; and so on from step to step, hig
pationt, honest industry mined him till
he became partner in ono of the first
firms iu the great city. Then, when he
paused to e^nsider that ho was rioh and
independsnt, and a gentleman, came
liome-longiugs. The Upland farm, tho
lane where ho last, walked with Julia,
tho quiet little market town—all mod
to come before him ns he sat iu hir
grand, lone hotiso ; and at last lie ro
solved to pay his native land a visit.
Ho arrived at Oort late on tho after
noon of tho lflth of Mnroh, and deter
mined to remain quiet till tho noxtday,
when ho felt pretty sure of meeting hrn
brother Martin. It was just thirty
years sinoo Ojren loft his native place,
and there wore fewer clmnges in
dull littlo country town tlian ho hail
tieiputed- far fewer chamros than there
wore iu himself. But when Ht. Pat
rick’s duy dawned clear and frosty, Ira
could not rest, and started early in the
woll-romombored direction of the Up
land farm. How his heart heat as hi
drow near the old cabin, weather-stained
and dssolato, wh^h had been the home
of Julia ; and how it stood still as he
roaehed tho level field of oats which
waa just coming over ground where his
father's house stood I Faint and sick,
he entered the first cabin he name to,
and asked a drink of water. A wretched
old woman, seeing how white by looked,
asked him to take a stool, which lie did,
and after a few minutes' silence, ho lie
gan to ask soruo questions about the
place. A young girl, with n fane that
would have been pretty but for its
sulky expression, and a quantity of
fair hair ueligeutly hanging over her
shoulders, looked up from a heap of
flax she was carding, and oxumincd the
stranger attentively, as ho asked tho old
woniuu what had booome of the Mac
Dermott s.
"Come here, Judy, and tell Iiih honor
wlmt become of Martin MunDormott
ami his blessed family Thut's his
laughter, sir."
" And Mflrtin, what has become of
him? Ih ho doad?" Owen asked,
breathlessly,
" ) v ®tlld lie a good job if lie
whh," tho girl said, sullenly ; " he's in
the poor-house J"
Owen bnried his face in his hands and
wept aloud. Hurijly his nurse had fallen
hot and heavy; fur, far hotter ami
heavier than he meant it should,
"(lirl I did you ever hear of your uncle
Owen? I am he f Take me to your
father. And this is Julia's daughtt-
I might have known ; you are so li
her."
It whh hard to make poor old Martin
MacDormott tin le-rstund that his broth
er had ooino back, and waa rioh, nml
willing to help him ; bnt when it did
dawn en his feeble miml ids sorrow and
h.is gratitude were toucliimr to behold.
" Take inn nwny, Ownie—take lira away
from Hellyhanc. I can never hould up
my head among tho neighbors again.
Hure, I'm a poor, broken-down ouid
©mature ; but I have a small tasto of
the spirit of the MaeDermotts left yet,
iu spite of all mv troubles. Take an
an' Julia nwny, Owuio:"
There was now demonstrated a beau
tifnl iustuucu of magnanimity. Owen
took ills brother and his niece to New
York ; but Martin did not long live to
oi’joy tho sploudid homo of Owen. Bii
months after they landed ht* died, with
out nuy visible or local cause—simply
of a broken heart. Julia took H*r plant
us mistress of her uncle's mtahlishment,
nud before very long married the sou of
hit partner, and had a tine lions© of her
own ; nud when Darby’s terra of trails
portntiou expired, his undo took him
to live With him. The young uiau lmd
learned a sovero lesson, but ho profited
by it; uml is now ono of tho most pros
porous ami estooinrd luorelnuiis o!
New York. His oliildron climb on the
kuooa of a white-haired, gentle old man
they o ill Undo Owen; and he some-
tinn'n bhvr to Darby, as lie stiokes his
eldest boy's golden curls: "Your
Owen is like me, nephew; I can
that. I’m a happy old nmn. I could
not have boon so lmd I committed
horrid not of vengeance. In doing
good for evil I feel that I urn truly
bloat,"-- Chamber*' Jourtial,
goaaipiug iu tho neighbor's house,
stead of taking euro of her father, n
weak, helpless old nmn, who toiled
early uml late tryiug to keep a roof
over his head. All those wretched
schemes had turned out badly. They
hud uot in them the riug of u strnight-
f or ward nud honest nun. Ah >vo all,
the trouble and disgrace of lit* ton
Darby completely broke him down, and
ho took to his bed, only wishing nud
wanting to die. " It’s tho curse, it's
Ownio’s curse," he would mourn for
hours, as he lay nlouo without a aoul to
hand him even a think of water.
"Sure, i might have known it would
oomo."
At length tho climax of Martin Mac-
Dermott's sufferings was reached, the
measure of his pnnishmout tilled up.
For three years he had not paid a six
pence of rout, and lie was diapossei sod,
turned out of the house in t*licit ho
was born, ami his father ned grand
father before him, to die by the way-
left homeless and frieudfess by the
dreary November morn
him upon
at be ex-
i of such
verso ami
he mouth
it Tkm.-Tam: Lips.- I have
served that lips become more or 1
contracted in ill© course of vunrs,
proportion an they ate a^-ustomed to
express good humor and generosity, ci
• »oovi»dint-*s and a ouutractod miml.
demark the ©fleet which a moment of
ill-temper or grudgingmK*
the lips, ami judge what n
pootod for nn habitual st-ri
movements. Remark the r
make a similar judgment,
i* the frankest part of the f..
in lira Ion#t oouoeal its nougat.ous.
can neither hide ill-temper witu it,
good; wo may affect wlmt we pl»
but affectation will not helo us.
wrong oaus© it will only ntako our
servers resent the endeavor to impost
upon them. The mouth ' *
one class of emotions, as
of another ; or, ratiu-r it exprosse-i the
same emotions, but iu greater detail,
aud with a morn irrepresmbls tendency
to bo in motion. It is the region of
sunles aud dimples, and of a trembling
tenderness ; a tdiarp sorrow, or a full
breathing joy ; of candor, of reserve,
of Huxioua care, or liberal sympathy.
The mouth, out of its many aenaibil
itioa, may be fancied throwing up
great expression into the eye uh many
lights iu a city reflect a broad lustro
into tho heavens.—heigh Hunt.
yesterday and axed for it,"nud the i
event an good as promised me it. Now, h ‘
Judy I” Remembering his uakiuduess to
" 1 am so glad, Ownie," was all the ol, ly brother, his harshness to the p.
girl answered, very softly, but there timid, patient wife, 1ms blind ind
were tears of genuiue delight in her gone© of bis son iu the face of p
she looked up at him. Well it tecta, his total uegh-ct of ‘
Tin: art of voicing rieds. tho most
difficult and imported in tho maun
facture of cab net or pcv’or organ-
was invented by Mr. Emmons Ilam-
'iVtil- i l' u » l ' u> Mas-m A* Hamlin Organ
dent 111 ^' s ^' 1 n*- H been uuiversa"
ouiv “d°pb d by American aud largely
CURIOUS AND SCIENTIFIC.
Bens do not form wholly from bark,
ir rom any special part of a plant,
though, of course, in a general way
nlernblo regularity in fixed places.
They come out any where along a willow
stem ; and, although they appear in
tho applo from the axil of a leaf, they
are formed any-where along the snrface
of n root of an apple when they are
propagated from the roots, ns by nur
serymen they often are. Again, in tho
horse-chestnut a growth never sppenrs
except from an auxiliary or a terminal
bond in ordinary cases; but if a branoli
bo out off between the nodes an im
mense numhor of yonng lmds will ap
pear from the now cells which form the
layer of wood on tho exposed sur
face. Home curious cases are also re
corded by Dr. Masters, where bads are
formed iu the pitli of n potato. In
some instances several small potatoes
have been found inside large ones,
from buds which have developed there.
Evbby action and emotion depletes
the physical system. Milk, the first
fond absorbed by men and animals,
the only natnrnl mixture, oontaining
all the elements of blood si
coloring. Water constitutes three-
fourths of tho body. To work well,
cither physically or mentally, we must
be fed judiciously and thoroughly.
Tho worknr must cat mixed food. Food
properly administered stimulates the
system ns wine does, only more natu
rally. Tho long night hours empty tho
stomach, deplete the system, and chill
the body. On arising the physical
condition is low, and should he re
cruited. If we lose time at tarly
morning in bringing the body np to its
ualural iisat and itrongth, we cannot
regain it during the day. A healthy
man rnqniros about one jmnud of uii-
trimeut per day to ktrap him iu good
condition. While a workingman would
need daily flvo pounds of solid mixed
food, two and n half would he enough
for persons who lounge nud sleep
much.
Natural Resources of Egypt.
Egypt has bnt a ainglo natural re
source -the Nilo. There ia no other
river iu tho country: nor has this one a
branch or nfllnent between its mouth
nud the Nubian dcaert. Beiiden the
almost shelterless date-putins there are
no palms, the few wooded parks planted
by order of Molieruet All, thcornnmeutul
tioes of tho cities, of which Cain* uud
its suburbs contain fortv thomand, and
the mulberry trees raised for silk-worms,
soarooly divrarving to be mentioned in
this connection. There is little or no
rain, tho agrioiilture of tho country
dt pending almost entirely upon the ir
rigating canals oonntcted with the Nile.
Egypt proper oonsiits of Lower, Mid
dle, and Upper Egypt. It contains
1(10,800,000 acres of arcs, and a popula
• ion, in 1871, of f*,2(tt,40r*. The arable
area of Egypt is ooifb.od substantially
to tlio innnaablo portion of the Valley
of the Nile. As tin river olosely hugs
the hills and paliisdcs on its right
bank, tliia urea ia nearly altogether ou
the left, in nomo places the arable
binds are eleven miles wide ; in others
they dwindle to a uere strip of bank.
For the most part, however, this arcu
extends westward from the river about
five to eight miles, where it is termin
ated by the Libyan hills nud deaort.
Every year it ia extended by tho riae of
lira river upon its own bed. This rieo
was found to be, »t the close of the he t
century, 4,000 inches per cwotnry. If
tin* ©Hilnratm Hiflrd bj the khedive
uud ids r* lativwe, or the unifies of his
court, be deducted, there will not re-
maiu iu Egypt over oue half an acre nl
arable laud to ©act person; and even
if the land cultivated lit present were
divided equally amtug all, there would
still bo not over niu*-ieuths of nu acre
per capita, lmagiio how small must
lie the portion of at Egyptian laborer
who, it nil the feed products of that
land were kept at Ip me instead of bo
ipg shipped abroad, us a largo portion
of them are, woulc still possess but
one-sewnth the hrrktgo of an American
or Englishman, and hut ono-fourth that
of a French mnn !
Bohton'b Latbst Honnon.—The re
markable murder ci»«* whioii is Betting
HobUiu an I vicinity iu a ferment, scarce
ly reocivea ns much attention as it de
ad ves. A beautiful and accomplished
woman, Mrs. Margiret Bingham, was
murdered at her own house in the day
time, aud when othir i*ersnns were near
at hand ; but tho oiteumateucea of the
crime, and the chasi aud oapturoof the
criminal are uot authors of comnmu
notoriety.
The murderer win a trump or beggar;
his motive was plunder. He wanted
money k* satisfy his nppcbto for drink;
ho obtained it by killing Mrs. Bingham
vii house and seizing the small
articles of jewelry which alto had about
her person. He made directly for a
ilrinkiug-saloon ami openly offered his
booty for sale. Tho police wore early
tho track of tho criminal, and he
h arrested the third day after the
murder, lie wan identified positively
by tho ssloon-kefper to whom he ha t
ottered the jewelry for sale, and ou his
person was found a penknife belonging
to Mrs. Bingham.
Modkrn Mrdicai. Discovkry. — It is
-laimed that disease, with n few ex
ceptions, has been conquered by the
research atnl intellect of enlightened
men; and yet u noted pvofassor of New
York admits that "of all sciences, tiled-
ioino is the most mioettniu," and that
"thousands are Minimally slaughtered
in tho nick room.” Certain “schools"
of medicine arc iu cxkt^ioe, one of
which "makes the pati&ut ill," iu ir
drr to claim a cure; and another ad
ministers "sugar-coated broad pills,"
relying noon nature to effect h
cures. Dr. J, Walker, of California,
an old and respected pnysiciau, tried
both modes of treatment and both
failed. Ho then appealed to nature's
curative—herbs; ana now enjoys rug
ged health. Ho has given the benefit
of hii discovery to tne world, iu the
shape of Viuegur Bitter*, nud since
its introduction haa sold a quantity
almost large enough to make a small
harbor, or to float the "Great Eas
tern." Its curative properties ore at
tested by grateful thousands.
Ann you aware that tho premonitoriea
of consumption are conghs, ooMa, brnnuhitia,
pains in tlio aidn aul chest. diflcnUlss of
rcathiug, *to ? If yon permit Ibsra symp
toms to run on tubercles will Is* lira reoift,
and end in consumption. Now. if yon want to
euro tlraira diseases, use Aden's hung balsam
without delay. For sale by all medicine
dealers.
A PRinxn of ours who is chief clerk
in tlra Govommnnta! Diapenaary, aaya that no
poiod it wsh prsHcribf d > y law -. if it is Dot, it
ought to Ira, for certainly'there ia nothing iu
tho wholo titairria medica of eo much iu*|>ort-
worrns, horse ail, thick wind, and bnavea.
i lUvor Hide Water Cc
. Hamilton, III.
■to not Deapntr* Your rangb can be cared.
Ur. Tutt'a Kipectnrsrit is tbs rauady. Tboiuauda
lOOII, t'linoMftM ft if ft; two for 3V- A(i>nu
lfcw»nte<1 y. W Mrl'luv* Or l o. 'tilraao.
ICACIf WKKK IlnaliiMa IsaltlirHts. Ad-
C* 4 & l‘alinrr A III. r. A (nl. J^.mi Mo
Agrnia. Chant Chant •ella at «ltht J*sc«ra*ary
. (iooda frw.
» 149 1
*»n<) tnr "Chrnmo"
*1(1 cataiotua. J. If nbrroan'aHoMH.timton.
I > A V **i-iil» wanud, mala and fSinala.
m Addreaa Koratta M‘ft k <>. Itiichaciari Mich.
IBi$20 BS^8taB»j5rfeati t £SS
$200 USES
J.l V K It V KAMI LY W A NTH I
I *Holi| hf atsnta Addrria M N
o atari la ••rsr* wnara. Add ram
* W alk as, bajtoVouiu
WANT*'II AtlKNTs Kverywhara.
ulnr^'l Ifejif lir l.lthia ona.' from
»T >' I* A(IKf
I Ifajd |lr l.l«|n»n n
Till BT.4HTIO TBUHH
lie mircnw and uulver-
hi I ^aetlafactlon tjrajj
WiVC 1 ■'
t* r* pra«>nira of Matal Trn*»«* and ftippoi
Is tha ooly aure cure foi Haro a, aa It la tor om/
Triiaa In uaa ibat will bold ilia mpiura aaruraly In
all iHHitlnnaln which the Irady ran la- placed. It
will p*rform radical ruras whan all nitrara fail. It
can ha worn with ra-aaad romfhrt wh«ai noaprint
troaa can ba used. U'Iran once a^ljofiad no motion
of tba iHoly it arc donl ran • laplac* ll Tbcaa In
aiMimania have tba •im/uiH/Irti ajyiroaaf of the
DKiat ••rulnan' practitioner* to lb* profvatlon.
From the nutnaroua t«*itliuonlaii In otir po?sea
•Ion wt a|ii>atid tha follow in*:
experlenmof monlba. patients t**tl
f> atroiiHly to tha rJHrnry, aa wall a« to tliamia und
frr«*li>ni from Inconveiilanca wllta wlilch^in* In-
i|sj»l««r ail v »nta«a<
tut tueana for lira rallaf and euro of 1
ltr. 4. Walker's California Via-
1-trur llillrrs aro a j.urely Vcgctnblf
jitt-ji:ir;v- .on, tniulo chiefly from tlio mv-
1 In Chief • f NaaiYork Hiata IlnplaUI.
my ownjtrraon, from tha uac of every form of
M>'talln Triiaa pr< curah a In tliia country and In
Kuru|w I, i»o )car* i»t<*. applied your Aim ir,
V/ un. and alorw that time I • a va a* per In red cum
fort a>id »all*f*ctT<iii and *>acn lau.ht IJraltrnlh
that I ha Maatic Truaa it th* only Instrnniant that
ahould tra urad for toe relief and curs of llcrnla ;
aud i ow afiar mor» than thirty vaar*'r<>nil non*
■.ardhavint a<J>i*tcd many liundradauf
-“d for tha last laaniy month* yoar* rx
I srulsfally derlare It t» Ira my dellbar
1 to tlra coofldalirw of tha ■■
with ii my own koowlntga of pai|»nia from Utc
7* yaar« of a a If Hl’IlMi A M, M. I)
Prof^of Anatomy and aurgary, If V. K. Matlical
Hauarenf rhaap and worthless Imitation Kla«ll
I rei ••• WDWTi *-.rnc pari advritlM* and »a|l
fraudulently n-j M-raniiug t-iai ih*y ara manufac
• herlrf* found on tlio lower ranges of
the Sierra Novntln mountains of Califor-
Buparlntendant KUatlc i |j|^ 11>U tltetliclllltl projicrllca of W 111 CD
lug for thirty year*. In IM eXtr.U'tOtl tlllMT'frotD without tllO I1SC
of Alcohol. TllO question i« alimsu
i dully asked. "What ia tho cause of the
unparalleled success of Yinrgar Bit-
! thusf” t Mir nnswer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, nml the patient re-
j ©overs hi* health. They are tlio great
blood purifier nml a life-giving principle,
I u perfect Renovator and Invigorate!
i .if the system. Never before in tilt*
I history of the world has a medicine tract,
i touiiMiuudcd pov-cs-ing the remarkable
j ijtmlitii-.* of Vinkoab ItirrKRs in healing tht
nick of even diaease man In heir to. They
I are a genth !*t rgative an well as a Tonic,
! relieving Congestion or Inflammation m
I tho Liver and Visceral Organs, in lliliotu
i hi»rliildli(io<l In
I fty tlra Klaallc 1
•mulry. Ha H fact Ion * ...
Hai"r|t purchMlug any othar, writs for Oaacrlpiiva
»■ I.AHl tC TlttlHS COM**A XV.
0-1. Hnmdwiiv, NfW York.
CRANJ.FAIR
IMIlMt i:XIIIHITIO\.
jCib
valuanra information for Una* whoara
A'hlra^a 'hV luM uC' lUMK*.N»A HY
|>|i*'* HUmlard KditLu of'llivVl'oly 7tc'l'...|iii'h:i.
wiLBots oonotm or ~
PURE COD LIVER
j llisen
tn> propi'r
iiak iIittknh «re Aperient, bianhoretic,
Cunninative, Nutritious. Laxntive, Uiurvtio
: Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Altars
j live, and Anti bilious.
Clnitenil 'I’lionsatids proclaim V t*
roar BiriKits tho most wonderful tt>
I viguraut that ever (sustained the iiiukiuft
i system.
No lVrson can lake tliosu Hitter}
according to directions, and remain ltm&
unwell, provided their bones are not do
stroyod by mineral p^son or othet
means, and vital organs wasted boyobd
rr|»alr.
Riliotts. Homlttont and lutpr
in it tent rorer*, which nre so preva
lent iu the valleys of our great rivet*
throughout tho United States, espociallv
those of tlio Mississippi, Ohio, M'saotm,
Illinois, Tenttenoec, Cumberland. Arkan
K.w, Hod, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Qraodtv
I’earl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro
anoke, James, and many others, with
thoir vast tributaries, throughout our
entire country during tho .Summer and
Autumn, and remarkably so during **uv-
sons of umiBuul heat and dryness, iae
: invariably accompanied by extensive 1©-
alignments of tlio stomach nml liver,
mu other abdominal viscern. In thoir
tn utnmnt.n purgative, exerting n jk-w
i l*rfuI liitlucnco iiiMin these various of-
lmiih, is essentially necessary. Theii*
is no cathartic for "tho purpose equal ut
I Ml J. Walkkk’s Vinkoau DirrgRB,
as tlioy will speedily rontovo tlio dark-
colored viscid matter with which tit©
bowols aro londod, at tho somo tiruo
stiuuiluLiug tho secretions of the liver,
and generally restoring tho healthy
functions of tlio digestive organa.
Fortify tlio body against (Unojihf
t*y purifying nil Its fluids with Vinkoau
BrtTKlts. No epidemic can tako lufid
of n system tlma tbre-armadr „ .
p/t.juuusTn or itiaTgoslion, riond-
nche, rain in tho Shouldors, Coughs,
Tightness i*f tho Cheat, Dizzinoas, Hour
Kructntlona of tlio Stomnch, Bad Tasto
in tho Mouth, Bilious Attacks, I’nlpItA-
tntion of tho Heart, Inflammation of tho
Luuga, l'ain in tho region of tlio Khl-
neys, and a hundred other painful symp
toms, aro tho oflhprings of Dyspepsia.
One oottlo will prove a boltor guamntoo
of its merits than a lengthy udvortioo-
uient.
.Scrofula, or King'H Evil, White
Rwsllinr*, Ulcors, Eryaipoln*. HwellNock,
(ioitro, Herufulourt luilaiumat.iona, lml»ieut
1 iiflaimnations, Mercurial Affectiona, Old
Horca, Eruptions of th® Skin, Hnro Eyes, ,*to.
la these, us in all other countitutioual Dia
na*©*, Walkkk’s Vinkoab Hittkbs tu»vo
shown thoir great cnratlvo powers in the
most obstinate and intractable ca-c*.
For Inlluminntory and Cltroitie
Hboiiniatisni, Gout, Bilious, Remit
tent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases ol
tho Iilood, Liver, Kidnors and BlraMor,
theso Bitters Jiavo no equal. Such Diseases
are caused by Vitiated Blood.
Mt’clinnirnl Disrnsos.—Persons en
gaged in Paints nml Minerals, such as
Plumbers, Tyjra-settcr-*, Gold-beaters, and
Uiuers, a* they ad ranee iu life, aro aul**>*ct
to paralysis of tho Bowel*. To guard
agnitrat thin, tako a dose of \Yalkko'o V >S*
Kiras Bittkks (H'ca.Hioually.
For Skill Diftcaseg, Empt ions, Tet
ter, Balt-Kheum, Blotchea, .Spot*, Pimple^
PUatnles, Boll*. CnVbuncb-, King-wf»rms,
Scald-bead, 8oro Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch,
Scurf*. DiacoloratioiiH of tho Skin, lluinors
and Iiiscjuras of tho Skin of whatovor naiuo
or nature, aro literally dug up ami corned
out tho Kjatctn *n a short timo by the hm
of thc*e Bitter*.
| Tin, Tape, and other Worms,
lurking in the ovatem of io niwiy thouoanda,
are efTactually aeatxoj'od and rymoVed. &+
*v«tem of nradicin*. no vonnifugra, no an-
, tnehniuitica will free tho *y»tcm hum worms
! like these Bitters.
For Fpinnlo Complaints, in young
or old, married or ningle, at tho dawn of wo
manhood, or the turn of life, theso Tonic
Hitters display »o decidetl an influence (hat
J improvement is soon perceptible.
I’letmso tlio Vitiated Blood when
ever you tind it» impurities bursting through
tho skin in Pimple*. Eruption*, or Holes:
cleanse it when you find it obstructed and
alurgish in thn vein*: cleanse it when it *a
foal; your feelings will tell you when, h ecp
the blood pure, and the health of the eynlcxs
will follow.
H. II. Mr (MIN A I,I> A CO.,
DrucjcisU and (ten. Ajrta^ San Francisco, Calibrate
Hod oar. or tVMhlnrtor. sail Charlton S*a. S'. Y
Sold by all ib'ikrul.i* nnd Dralrn-
DR. WHITTIEF,
ha. 617 St. Charles Street, St. Louis, k‘9.,
CREAT MAGIC
TRICK CARDS
t.i1**rf»»l *Wr>J, anab’.r any oira u
I al(hl apovi, ail
^‘Nula^ENSinWe;
t tho great j
! Mas
j Tliia fact
; by musicians.
*‘»* that neither of them saw the dark daughter, and liia menu, schemteg chaf
to** which watched them from the seder, there were few to pity Martin ,
otui r side of the hedge, or heard the Mae Dermott in hia trouble ; aud ko le -- u
m *t ©red threat* that were hnrltsi after taken to the workhouse, bra hoirae
tlictu, or they might uot nave onjoyml knocked down, and not n trace 'e\t rf
the remainder of that day a* they Aid. wlint waa onoe a happy Lounratead.
Si. Patrick's day in Ireland, ‘forty Aud Owou. whou he left the tent :lrat
V “I * ago, used to l*e very different 1 ever memorable St. Patrick's night, t " We find the i r
i -m what it is now; auid when Julia waa with the resolve of going awnv hut the kissing bnsiu
O i tie and OwenMsaDtirwo'.t entered fororei -anywhere, s.» that he was tur ped 1 w.is v©rd:et
1 «* M ‘tket town of Oort, after a long away from tuw place which had sudden- t'lmrltou t N. Y.) jury
ritublo through the fields in search of a ly beoomo hateful to him. He walked j tnestic trouble.
otcel-
it which is reaohed in tho
HumUn Cabinet Organs,
universally recognized
clcoi*siug orgm of tho ►
lumaoke«|HW of our bealih at work, amt lira
font corruption* which gender in the blocd 1
and rot oat, a« «t were. t|„« nia.-hiocry of life,
ms gradually eijrafied from tho system. K< r i
thi* purjraso l>r. Pierre'sUohlea Medical D s- !
©■'very, with small dailv doao* »,i Dr. Pioica’m
Plcasa: t Purga'ive Pallets are pr«-«uuoently j
the article* needed. They entw every kind of j
linmor Iron* the worst scrofula 13 the common j
pinole, blotch >>r eruption. (Boat eating 1
ulcers kindly heal under thoir migh'y cu’s'leo - ]
iurtnonce. Virulent blood poicona tiist lurk in :
rolha. •> dwindle
*• all dealers iu
JUST
BOOK
CAN
h, I j IJ Balrrlav-Uf
BIUtN MIOTCfNS. IMSTOl.aj
o
PIUM
Habit Cured
Wwt «*«•* fllfl- InVu m”u‘. • «*
Mta^uaarat it ct: "y
MARRIAGE CUIDE.
OPIUM
> VV.tth *| iln O.
KKTOLTTBS,
dl*t-OTeml and'pro.laced the rim*T. osioixal aao
oxlt am mi rom onr* k*tino.
nit. S. n. COLLINS, U Portr, Ind.
II. M. WOOLKY, *olr Agt.Kouthrrn Stair*,
■OJPlfJliEJjABIT airaedlly
kouwu un.I »ur» Ht tnadr.
XO CHARGE
- treatment until corr.1. Call >.n or aduraai
DR. J. C. BECK,
112 John Street, CUC155ATI, OHIO.
\v\
i- name of ihi* |>«
. N.U.
AND ARMS.
OPIUM
■ 1 NNA 1 I t* li
rtsvn LE. K Y.
: Marih.Qutocv.Mlch.
iCOAA mad exi i dm - * month toaceata. Address
9aUv.\.L hTODD.\RD,*JoDe»Ttlle, Mich
WDONT - !!
SJPEISJ1D A. DOLiIiAR
: THOI'HAMI