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BY SAWTELL & JONES.
OUTHBERT,- GEORGIA, THURSDAY, a!PRIL 7, .1870.
■aShi^i
VOL.
-NO. 21.
6i)e i£ut!)bcn 'Appeal.
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When M.y Ship Cones In.
A?
BT THEODORE J. KCKEKBOS, C. S. A.
Uvea preefoua little diui>hter,
And her name is Adelaide.—
No bright jewels yet I’ve bought her.
Tho, her nut-broUrn naira in braid ;
And .ho often she plagues mu
For a bracelet or a pin,
I console her with (he promises,
*• Yu, love, when my ahip coma in /*’
Oh, the dreaming little dausbter l
lit bright visions of tb»* night,
Strings of the taiieat peartea and brackets
Si ill appear before her right.—
And before the morning kisses:
Of the morning pnyerd begih.
Up she runs to ask her father
When the ship is coming in.
* Listen, mother let me tell ydd,
What 4 plea^sat drearh I’ve b id.—
Up the straits came talher’s vessel,
And y6ti both appeared Bo glad ;
All Ilk*belli in town were ringing,
And away above the din,
fr -conId read on floating banners,
‘ Joy ! The ahip ia coming in /
‘•Then met .Cfigfct a hhStidf bright'doe*,
As the anclrafr ra&fed down,
Gathered in tW shrouds, and cheering,
Joined tt»>i bh^/.<ia of the town ;
\VTitle the Captain, smiling sweetly.
By a gesture of bis hand
Hud the sails all fur I id so neatly
By a white-wiugt-d angel band 1**
Drtirm on Joyous ltttlt daughter,—
lint a tew short, smuqy year!.
And your visions bright will vanish,—
And your pearls dissolve m tears }
For thu tone, expected v-tecl
te ars :io p *.trl jr jewelled pin,
. i»--r re.gli* ol ur.u* a.ui sad »«•
U 100.-1 surely coming •'* 1
iV.-.my ‘ru-tiug l:tie d-.i*ght«r.
• ;i>, «uj s..w»ns A te.k d.', - -
» ,.* i i e*‘ •>- t.i u> hi hied *»\ti*i",
Vi Lai) I i.S.. • »«. dj*iL S ]>.\.d
Whc. sa.t I.*ue- Ciowd ..1-oUUit Ml-,
Amt w.i.i to .ks alt wua an i in.u
i i.tn Hib w iiun my colli ' -
j lieu i .y ati>p i# mi
O* btrr fieigiii O: :ears met .-cftf$n$.
.10.14 w4l ue .o«ui lu eua. ;—
d..;c wave *tl wee a Wept and »*tift l'«*i
pilin' Ion, yeais oi gr.it ulHi Cut>- ;
Yours w.il be ihe cross, lily <Lrl-ig.
Wiiile (he crown aloitu t wtir.
Yours w.lt be klie tear** anil atigu.rii,
When my -b p comes inilihg in !
Fur iny great R deem r iiyeth I
lie.Who stilled tile racing *•**,
Steers the ship that fills ourUreanlingS;
And comrola > uch adverse limzi*;
H w,.o bore t.fe cross, my Addie.
l u •*,*jt*eiil a tk<ir d irom sin,
Alw iys smiles to bad us ready
When the sli p is coming in:
To my ear this pleasing eveiliilg.
Silting here be tore the door.
Heavy anchored chains arc rattling
Ar my Ship comes near the shore ;
J can hear the louac sails flippiu r,
And the sailors merry din,
Aud 1 see the Cap«aiu smiling
A* my ship sails slowly in!
Scene* o . tiis *)•«■•.—Our Ixiat fetid
stopped tn take iii wood. On the xhure,
aiiionjf toe ci‘.»wd, wax a reniarkxhly
•tupid Kinking ioil Shth hi* hand* in
liis pocket, utiil bis tinder lip I ungin^
down.
A dandy, ripe f-r a acrape, nmla and
winks all nuntd, saying:
‘•Now I’ll have some fun, I'll frighten
the greenhorn."’
He jumped ashore with a large drawn
bowie, brandishing it in the face of the
••green ’un,” exclaim ug :
•‘Now I’ll punish yuu—I’ve been look,
ing for you a week.”
The fellow stared stupidly at his as
sailant ; he evidently did Dot know
enough to be scared, hut as the bowie
knife c unt* near hie lace, one ol his huge
fists suddenly vacated his pocket, and
fell hard and heavy lietweeii the eyes of
the (lldidy, ahd the pour fellow was
floundering in the Chid.
Gmoney then jnni|s-d on board enr
boat, put his hands in his pockets, and
looking around, said :
"Maybe there's somebody else that's
been looking for me for a week.”
A tall, keeri'-cj-ed c-emlryinch
Walked into the eofirl roon’i dining ihfe
progress of a tiiai. Stepp hg lip to one
Of the ’ring,' he i, quested that the pris
oners might lie jaunted out t«i him.—
The lawyer he accosted being some
What of a wag; [shnted to the juiy.—
The stranger surveyed them iiuie.dly.
hh- n turning to his informer hu re
marked : ‘Well, liiey ara a bard looking
set ain’t they ? I know by their iook^
they ought to go to State’s Piiaon, ev
ery one of them !’
a®. U is rumored iu Harrisburg that
Governor .Major General John W. Geary
was invited recently to udilrcS-H the chii
dren a Public Sc1km>1, and iu uTludiu^.
to Washing.mV Birthday, put the f *:
lowing questi. nt
4 N *w, ui>\s, why should we celehnit-
Washington’s Birthday an>- more thai
mine ?'
Iu4be mid.^t of profound silence a lit
tie fellow at the foot of the class rob
and replied :
*J3ecuus<* he never told n lie. 1
S^» A poultry grower, of rank!i<
Afatfet, cleared $101.40 fro n twenty fiv.
hens during the »*aat tsesmif.
The Miser’s Story.
‘By the grace of God, I am what I
am ’ I wan b«*rn in Loudon, and rp^
member nothing !»uf poverty— stalking
** 2 crime and absolute want. Tho houses
u h tp I lived Were all in the. various
*1 age** of‘filth and decay. Whe her
the. b!par*ev«*d rti.in who ki.*kp<i and
eomtnanded me, was my father I never
knew. Whether the woman who some
times fed and often beat rue * as my
niotlrer, I cannot say All I know is,
that I had a miserable, draga mjt lit'
of i“, going ar. and after cold victuals
knocking smaller boys down to get the
contents of their broken baskets, a ml
bunting or rugs in the gutter.
1 suppose I was rather a g(*>d |o*ik
ing lay; tliey call me good looking
now for an old man. I kow I was
smart, comparing myself with children
us 1 see flipMi.
Of course I was like the rest of toy
class, I timid fij»ht a little, swear a little,
und steal a little, and eat a g« od deal,
that is when i got the chance, which
w;fs Seldom. I was ignorant--and
didn't know the letter .from another,
nft.l didn't 'JvaiVt to. What did 1 can
al»4iut education —I, who never saw a
t>«*ok Trofti ohe year’s end to ant»tlieTf
And love, grmci’tlde, t»oj»e, I could of
course und* island wither. Not»ody
loved me, theiefine, 1 loved rmb»nly.
Nobody bad ever made me grateflil—
had eveMfcld out h«»pe to rue
Sotiii strange impulse was given me
one daVv I waked Op from my bundle
• •t stiaw, and inVolnYitroily tl»e words
came from my litis, *1 atn going to d<
soitiethtiig today. 1 What tiiat 8»»me-
thing was- I had not the h*rtHil» i»t idea
but 1 j»ut on my a|Miligies for clothes
a**d s.tilied out in my vagabond way.
w histling, caring f.-r nobt»dy.
It w as about t.o*»n, and 1 had not yet
tasted a mouthful of food. 1 was hun
gry and skulked ol*out gnuery sfiops,
hoping l coUid get un »>p)Nirtuti.ty to
take something that wo-ild stay my ap
petite, till l f« it in the imoior f»r beg
ging. Passing round the corner of a
public street, 1 saw a g.-ntet l looking
in An standing at his horse’s head, g =ziug
somewhat perplexed.
•B"y ’ he cned, ‘wdn’t you take cure
of my horse for half un hour ?*
*V* s sir,* sui*l I.
1 think it was the first time' 1 ever
pul on the ‘sir.’
'That’s a nfcttrT lie etclAiirtsd. I’ve
g*>t cotisidciaide fruit here and you
m us I guard 11 well. Here's a couple ol
peaches for you ; just stand here quiet
ly, isdioily || distil, h yob ’
He IX'cut aW’ay, ..U«l { sts«d for a
white tilt 1 was tired Tneir, thinks I,
I il gel a hat tut of the fruit ami run.
Lint lot the ti rjt iiuie I f«*!r .mi inMtuci
ol slluuu at lbs ■ng.-esti n.
‘lie tltjHlc*! me—he saw 1 was u
tlit-au hstkitig fellow, t«Ni* be tnialed
me, and i w.m'l a use his kiiiduess.’
fNimcfti.iig hk«* tins reus.>(uug Pan n
iii\ In ad, aim i stjhatt* <1 <h>«t« ott tls*
cut o stone, tecliiig Hie iuiporiaiice of an
no.mr.il*U- iru-t a> 1 thitl i.uviH* felt *Wl»
h thing b**:brc. Pr *s. ntly -hujio of un
f.’lmtiV ruttH* u’oi g and h il. d me. 1
loltl ti.eili logo on. Tn**y |*e»-ie»! atW»ut
tii >'n.t, and saw the Allhuy I of Ir.e
p« ach« s.
•We’ll have B.-the"('if th.*m,’ they sai«t.
‘No you won’t,’ says f ♦ I’m put in
ctiarg. here, and *1 won’t i**-e the tiisi
thing Stoic.
vV uh that *heV begait to rumpus —
lay reached oV»*r the cart. 1 Struck
them, all* 1 used Mich efi »r|8 that the.v
itll caitib J*erl rrit+l t)ja»tl the, and we
touglit lid the hl’tod canle; out 1 Van
(pushed llieiit.
Just then «>Ut cuftie the propiieto .
*V\ hat s I lie matter ?’ says he
Y U:i, UMthmg • only l had a fight for
your fitun in r«-,’ says I.
4 l *»U did, eh ? Votl'w got a Hack eye
h r iL*
‘.No matter,’ says I. *1 meant them
btrys slmuld’ni steal a peach, and they
d Ain’t neither.
‘Well, y».u’re good pluck—here's a
crnw'ii lor yon ’
My feyfeifttond u t. 4 A whole crown,’
kiiys I.
Yes; do what you please with it,
hut I advise you to buy a )<air of slnnrs
‘Thank you,* sayB I, with a heating
heart, ‘It pays to lu* good, don’? it ’
He fiinhcd a eftrious funis, asked m •
s* Vera 1 questi*ms, aud ended by taking
me home with nun.
Home ! I ihotlght I was in Beaten
all*eit 1 had shldixu heard of Autdi a
place. My heart beat heavily every
time I dared to tiitt iriy h» »t QptKl those
lich cafj»et.*t. The oiiirom vtt*ri; aoine
thing ffevv |H ttfu. Trio nett day there
came a Ilian to set* me I w as w adinl
di-tin and had on a g»»od suit *»f t'lvtln-s.
Says he, ‘youngster, I am going wncre
you live, and proi.ably 1 shall make a
bargain wiih your people, f tf utt ;i
bt.v,jusl sgcii a hold, dev dr buy as you
afe, and If y *u will deflate y*nirs If, I
piiimise you thatyoti slia'l baVe ae pleas
ant a home as you desire *
Well, that Was good. 1 hardly dar.il
to 8}>eafe of breuth**, f*»r tear <»f break'*
ing I he illusion. N«-Ver was m» haf.py
as I was that day. They gave me light
tasks to do, I wished they were more
important. From that day I was treat
ed us ono of the household. The man
was u wid<Hfrer« and had n»» children j
cchisequently, 1 He« auh? t«i hnu a sou
educated tne h.«n<lriofYiel? and w hen
f.il, g fled and wca’thy a woman loved
me—me, wht» had been brought up in
the »»ur!i*i s of a city who had known
misery arid corruption all the first years
of my life.
Gradu «liy I broke off my intimacy
with Lucy. I received no token form
her, s was to * proud But that cheek
grew pale, that eye languid, anti though
f^seldom met h**r. I knew in my hetrt
that she was sufilling, and branded
myself :t villain.
At last «ho knew writh certainty that
I was t«» marry Miss B.dlair. She sent
me a letter, a touching letter, n t on**
word of u pl»r.»it 11ng,- Qi»t oue regret —
Uh, what a noble s**ul I wounded. Bat
she cou!<\ eaimly wish me j »y t though
ttie effort made her heart bleed, Ldtimw
it did.
t trie<l, however, tn forget her. t
cou'd not Even at thy ruagnifi-ent
wedding, when tuy bride stood before
me, radiant in rich fabrics, aud glitter
inA diamonds, the white liere of po i
Lucy girded in between, and made my
heart throb guiltily. Oh, how rich l
gre# I Year after y.-ar I added tu mv
gold. My miserly disposition began to
munifeet itself ataqi alter n>y marriage
1 carried my gold first to bauks, ttieu to
my own private safes.
1 pot constraint on my wife, for very
generously «iie made over her whulo
loMtlne to me, and Iiegati to grumble al
the expenses. I made our liying so
frugal that she rein msiratcd. and finally
ran up large bills where und wtiep she
pleased. Against this f pmtested, and
we hail *»pen quarrels more than once.
My * lothes grew shabby, I could
not afford to buy new ones, ultWtigh
the interest of my til vestments was
more that! f could spend for rational
living.
I grew finally**!issatisfied. With every
thing but my. money, i neglected my
woke and grew careless 6f her society.
Sever I g>*htteihen came to toy house,
aiming i hem a would be author ami ce
Jehriiy. He C.irrte, { thought t »o ofieu
for my g*M»d name, and I ordered my
wife to discontinue lus company. Sn*-
refused, ami I locked her iu her room.
Il*iw sin? managed to Set helse!I Tree, I
never knew; but in the evening when i
returned she bad gone Irom the house.
That caused me some uneasiness; not
nich, for I was Soon absorbed iu taking
A New Orleans worn in use
keroMeoe to build a kitchen fire, and not .
her clothes fit her husband’s second wit
remarkably well.
H.
I was twenty oue he di« d and loll me
tlirce th«>u**and pnuu.li*.
Well I comrtdfe’fvd tnvself a rich th in.
I gktauil ovsi iiff Wraith ; i bee.I in*
as an idol to me. How to i crease t
was mv first di-sire, t chfistiiud tt.m
petentjnen. aud under their c*mw>«.1 1
,mt uiy iiortiry out al interest, bought
-lo»-k* and m'»rt|pig**s.
I grew wealthier; my business (niy
benefactor had stocked n»e a fancy sb*»p')
prospered, and I was in a fair way, 1
thought, to many Lucy Manning.
Sweet Lucy Manning! the rrfost grt
less, winning maiden iu :dl the world to
•il". i loved her deeply, dearly. She
w»s blue eyed, auburn-haired, her die*
position was tiiat of an angel, and 1 h.el
plighted my vows t« > her.
One night I was invited t» the house
»f a prosperous iiierchant, and there I
net a siren Hi the person *»f Hi* neU*e, a
•lack eyed girl, wht»s» charms and
wlu»se fortune were equally spleodid.
She was an lie?res*t iu hrf ovn right, s• e
whs beautiful and u.-coirtplishod.
Heavens what tf Vt»rce # hers—
pure, clear, sweet, ravishing! I was
ha med and she Warf pleased wi h me.
Alas, a rtrit her t»»o ofieu ! fu h< r pres,
cnee 1 forgot my geutle Lucy; she
magnetized, thi ailed the.
il was triumph to feel that ao beauti-
count «.f my g.uns.
It was, perhaps nine in the eVeriing 1
had j ist managed to take up a paper f*»r
a moment to read out its bu.-iuess d
(aits when tliu d*«»r ^»|»eued, and in came
my w ile dressed bewitchiugly, as if just
l.tnn an evening nmcert, foll«>wet) by
tual moustached ctlehrity. ‘Gotnl even
ing, my dear,’ she sa:d m the coldest
Way mi tgiliable, and place! a cha.r for
tier friend. *St -p!’ I cried, my j»;a!'
•usy moused ; ‘that tnan sits not down
III my house.’
That maii—a gentleman and my
friend shall sit here if 1 please,’ said my
Wife fi inly
My passion was excited then, as it
»efei* was before, ami 1 collared tb
tundiel; lie w«s my inaicli; bat my
wife put a dirk kti.le that she drew fr-uu
a can.- into ills hand, uni he stabbed
me. 1 fainted, and l r numbered noth
ng lie .re till I f.inU i uiv-ell t.rt a bed
my .twit ciiuftioer, watche<l over by
rnv h Usekeepcr.
* VV n«rr ahe they ?’ I gasped,
•Gone !‘ w.*A ail Nhe Said.
It tic* ut red to iii • then, liisw a f! -ah tif
lightning tual s 111 *b*»d W.is ue:»r at
he time I was wounded; that my kejrs
were about n.jr pers on, Min! that I liad
r.»t» .ed, perhaps . f all iny availa
ble property.
i he thought threw me'into an sgony
f tear- l ordered, M*y ch»thSS to be
br Might t*» me. Tile keys wfere there.
Taking t>,ie «>• th nl tint, I told Mrs.
lisle, iuy housekeeper, to g i *.t» mv s if«
an i bring m - th,? papers that wete there
She relumed, her !•«•« whits with ter
ror, mi say there lias nothing there, ailf
tiis little doors w« re «>|*e»i.
‘Kobbt-d I rob .ed ! ’ I y.-lled with im-
prerations, un l again my senses deser
ted me.
Bruin fever ensued. For weeks I lay
deprived iif reason, literally treading
the vet ge of the grave. One morning,
I was conscious of a sinking, deadly
feeling, as I feebly ojamed iny eyes —
as it an uug 1 i saw st-ouling beside
me, her soft blue eyes full of piiy, |mk
• ng dow n u| nil me with the m >st c »m-
ualseruting ge.itleitess. F«*r a moment
l tbtnigtit 1 might b»» in heaven; lint
in*, I leasoued with myself—I loved
mousy t.K> well. My tieasUre was all
of the earth, earthly. Again I open
ed my diiu eyes. The vision seem
ed wavering now. but oil, «lf I it not
wear the tM*utnv of sSeet Lucy Man-
uirtg r A quiet uiiULlcrable peace took
possession of my entire being. I forgot
wealth. beauty, everything. My past
I fc seemed blotted out, aud l was again
innocent, iiutniicned by the griping
hand ol avarice, true, loving, and lovod,
ami Lucy Manning Was my Hd.
but I r.-cov.Ted slowly and at last,
as my stre gtU surely icturned I in.used
her. As soon as she saw I could be
left with safety, she had lelt iu«; and
oh, the blank—the dreadful blank ! i
wander, d around my rooms, now so
desolate, and saw the in my evidences
of my :nisc*rable habits
I new tu it w h but itot^rJs iny wife
M»y L-eimgs seem d lt» b.^Ve undergone
a reVuLio i. I !«ar 1 hate ! her. She
had nearly b«?gg.*r^d me. If td deii*-ived
»nd shattered my health, aud destroy
ed all iny hopes*
Mouths p;».<sed if -fdru I was able to
estimate the dam »ge tiiat had b -vu
dtftfe me. Every moans that could be
put forth were (fSe»f ft 1r the J recovery iff
my mthiey, but -ill in vain.
Oue nig.it 1 sat by the u *e, a cheer*
less disappointed, aud, lonely mail. i
hud been thinking thoughts that only
burned my bmfif, out did not pmify my
heart, ‘if 1 had only married sweet
Lucy,’ I -aid again and again, ‘all thi*
would n«>t have i ccii so.'
My housekeeper c one in with h let
ter— an unusually large package it
was, alid as il bote a foieign postmark,
I opened it wiih a Ircfti’Xtng hand.—
Wh.it w'iis that ? A milling crumpled
bank note! Another aud arfothef Catrru
forth, uulil tirere irfy UjMlti ttif knees
twenty bills tff tue'hugest dtSin.ninaUon.
A lew trembl.ng line* acco«upauie«i
tticm:
‘My Husband: I am dying l My
disease—there as n*» need nr tcfkiqf y»m/
Forgive me, a .d accept this enclosed *-
a I aim effort towunl r eel it n turn. It hi
not nVuCh enter half «*# what we loox
irom the safe, -lbe reel ie— I know not
wht-re. I am deserted, larewell, for-1
ever !*
An icy diill thrilled mo. It seemed
ss if her spectra! presence was near
me. I ahad-lered as 1 rolled the bills
together and tnrew them across ths
room
‘Lie there, curse of my s*»u)!’ I cried
‘Lie there till f have »i>nquere«i myself !
ay, if th-..* victory is not won till you are
rotten V
I shut the door up ami cealed it, and
for six months I toiled like a penniless
man, till I paniady redeemed myself.
By managing cautiously, I placed my
business on a successful fooling, and
began life again, a new man.
It toot many a year to wear off my
old habits of parsimony, but every ef
fort gave tue -i new and agreeable pleas-
fire. Meantime Lucy became dearer
to nta than she had ever lieen in the
flu-h iff youth. 1 entreatetl her forgive
ness 1 humbled thyse!f to a cimfeseimj.
tertad myself iu all ways, and convinced
her at lacst that I was as worthy n*»w
as om-e I waft ri^ly Vfi seetifthg. .
Ofi the day «ff my wedding, ! opened
the sealed doOT. The T»ajftk notes lay
where I ha«f hung them. I ttx»k them
up with the pride iff a conquerer, aud
pouted them in her hands, exclaimed,
•Tney ire no hmgur iny masters : use
them as you will.*
Now 1 ain a thtik/--redeemed from
thraftlohi of o«»Vet*»usness. I have three
bliHMiimg ehildien, Lucy is an angel of
goodness, and 1 write myself as I did
at the 6eg'*miing. ‘By thj grace of
God I am what 1 ant.’
Has Done Enough.—A revolvtionarj
•oldteT was rnnning for Congress, and
his opponent was u young man, who
had "never beeu to the wars,’ aud il
was the custom of the old revolutionary
to tell iff the hardships no hud endured.
Said he :
‘•Fellow citizens, I have fought and
filed lor my country; 1 helped to whip
the British and the Indians. I have
slept on the field of bailie with no other
covering tfi *0 the canopy of heaven.—
I tiuvo walked over the froBeu ground
till every footstep was tuurkoj with
blood—*
Just ubmlt this lime one of the sov
ereigns who dad ttecutiie greatly inter
ested iu his tud oft suffering* walked dp
in front ol the speaker, wiped life tears
lion Ins eyes with the extremity ut Ins
coat tail, and intetTup.ed him with : “Did
you say you hud fought the British aud
the 1 jins ?”
"Yes sir.”
‘•Did y**u say you slept ou tlib ground,
while ►eiviug your coUuiry, wituoutany
kiver
“1 did.”
“Did you say your feet coreied the
ground you walked over witn bl-«od.’*
‘*4 did” said the speuke exu.tmgiy.
U *V«*1I, ttieu,” said the sovereign, us
he gave a sigli of teaiful emolirtn, “i
guess l’l vote for t*-»lher tellow ; t«»r i ll
be bhnued il you ain’t done enougu lor
your country
a a. Sautii.
BT KKV. FATHE* BTAN.
Yes ffive rn • th** la d
h.-re tV run b »re spread,
Aral :*» rvir^f tn*atl lurbt
On the grave# Gf the dt-ad J
Yes. r.v • us iii l.i»d
That la Wfte*»t by the list.
And bright with the deed*,
OI the down-trudden ju*\
Ye-% give me the land
Where the battle’s red bloat
IX*- floshdl on the future
The forms of the post;
Yc«, iive me the Und
T tat b i h If.oiiil the laya,
T iat tell of the memories'
Of long vanished day.
$
give me the land
•t hath story and aong,
.. of (lie trife
A Good St-»«y.—This happened at a
Uc.rtta rest nn anr. A m m mitered tho
other day and culled f »r a dinner. ii *
orders wore td thu iu<st elaborate char
ucter, aud fan ly staggoreti the reSour*
ces t»i even a Utica r* ftaUraiit kee|H-r.
tie Huge.e l long at the table, auu fi-
u.ti:y wi*und uji with a bade of wine,
f.icu lignliug a cigar he hud ordered,
leisurely s .inhered np to the counter
a. ul Said to lbe proprietor :
‘Very li.ie Unincr, landl.cd; ju»t
charge them t > lue 1 huVri’i g it d
edit.’
•But I thm’l knt»wyt*u,” said tho pro-
priei*»r, liubgiiantly.
* Oicitu.sc y>*u dim’t. If y«»u had
you wouldn t let mo have tno uiimer.*’
“Fay me for the dteuer, i say !**
‘‘Ana 1 say 1 cuii’L Haven't got the
b. uuti”
“i'll dec atamt that, said the proprie
tor, somewhat lHri‘*us at the “bilk.”—
1 hell he titi.ilcued a revolver out tff a
diaw’er and leaped the counter; co tar
ing tho uiaii, exclaiming, as lie pointed
il al his head. •‘Now *»ee :f you li gel
avruV with that diuuer, without paying
fbr u >ou d d scoundrel ”
•‘vVhat is tual you hold in your hand ?”
said ate geuer uway witn free diuuois,
drawing back.
“That sir, is a revo ver, sir.”
“On, that’s a n-folver, is it ? I don’t
care a tl -d fi*r a icv*uver, l thought it
was a aioin tch pump !”
Oi Aheyight with the wrong ;
S Tesi i %iv*r me lbe .a i i
Witn a iroi in each tpot,
And lumc* id the graves
That soaii ne'er be forgot;
Ye?, give me the land
Of the wreck and the todSb',
There’s graudc.ir iu the ^;ave—
. There’s glory in the gloom ;
Fur out oT the gloom
Future brightens* is bjrn',
As alter the night
Loetas the sud rise st morn.
And the graves of the deed.
With the gross overgrows,
M *y y-*t form tiis foot-stool
Of liberty’s throne ;
And eac I s.uxpl: wreck
ta the path w iy at n'ght,
Shad yet be a rock
In the temple of the flight.
A Tax Payer’s Voice.
How one man h id hu eye* opened — the »to-
ry of a man tcho purchased hu goods
teht'ie hs could buy cheapest—kill the
bonds.
bought th-se things. pa hi for then
hom*«ly, and was /arrying them hntn»*
‘Jt is very cle»rj,wir f that you intent!
ed to tlefrmpl tjyi. G‘»vernoient, and
h»v« a good mind to cdtifitcata them
hut as I suppose they are not Worth it
1. will let you oft with paying the duty
VVhnt did you pny for,them ?’
‘Fifty dollars, in gold,* .
‘Well, I must see them, to be cerlaii
that you have got nothing else in there
and if I ind nothing else I will let yo
off with the citify.*
Then he culled np two fellown witl
revolvers stuck in their belts and order
ed them to take out the box—they got
a i-hisel and hammer, broke it oj>en
took everything «»ut and tumbled th
thingn about as jf they wer-* rags or oh
newspapers. Then he said :
‘Have you the invoice of these things?
‘No, air,’said I, very humbly, f.»r I
. felt that; I jra# * slave, 'but I have the
bills receipted*
‘Give tiw^Lto me.’
I ob**y*-n vnnt.
‘Again I looked at the feilows witl
the revolvers, and obeyed.
4 Y<»« do s lemuly swear in the pres
ence ol ANMghty God, before whose
bur you :.re to appear id. t he great and
awful day of judgment to answer for
the deeds done in the body and Y«>r the
truth of w'hat y«»u now say, that these
bills Represent the true amount which
Jod paid for these gcaid*. 9
‘YefcV ^
He mlue
A New Disco very fv Corn —iVc
find the followiag in the St L »ms Jour
nal of Agriculture, credited t*» that v«*ry
very pipnhir journal. The d.scov^iy
may 1m pioductive of great practical
gtHwf ;
An intelligent and refiable neighbor oft
ours, who has >or many years lx*cn
making experiments with corn, has dis.
coveted an inquirtance and value in re
planted corn which is quite novel, and
worthy ot publication We have al
ways thought that replanted corn • wa*
of very little consequence lie replants
whether it i* needed or not—or raihe-,
he plants two or three weeks after the
cr«»p is plan ed, a hill about every fib
teenth roar each way.’ He Hays: *If
the weather becomes dry during the
filling! tiin *, the silk and tassel both be
e-tine dl-y* aud dead. Iu this condition,
if it should become seas* i» ble, the silk
revives and reuews its growth, but the
tassei does n ik recover. Then, tor. want
of|M»ll«-Q ( tlie uew silk is unable to fill the
offi e l*»r wniah it was desigued The
j»*»lren from the replanted corn is then
ready to supply the silk, und Die fil-ia^ is
ortifpl'-ied.’ He *Uys nearly all the ab
orative ears, so comnlon in all corn crops
n» caused By want of p-nlen, and Dial In
nas known ears to double their size iu
•tiri8second filling.
Jack S—is a fellow, but he will
drink. The other nqpiff on his’ way
home from th® club, he stopped on a
•mrlMiorie, and thus addressed the moon
which was Inning clear aud bright.
‘Shim? on ! —(hu*)—- shine on as much
—as much us you please—(b»c) — l’ur
wtHih thirty l;key*»u, »tiv—( »i« ) —now !
You’re iu I but once a tnoiiih; and me
— (•lie) — go*,» 1 I’m fail every mg >l—
£3T 4 i’au yiht tell me buW old the
devil is?’ asked an irreverent lei low ot
a clergyman. *My lneml, you musi
kcepytiur own family record/ w^a the
reply.
49 f see the villain in your face,’ said
8 wextern jridi^ t«) an Irisli prisoner.—
^May it please youj* worship,* replied
Fat “Unit must be a personal reflection.”
A taxpayer living tip near the Canada
line writes as folio as to tfte N.Y. Demo
crat and it is so V**ry clear, plain ttfid
convincing a statemetit of the tariff and
taxation question and the practical ef*»
ftet* Upon tlie forking pe«»ple, that we
publish it entire, tie says :
i think eve: y h >nest wotkingmau ih
the country ought to thank jruu lot fry*
ing to kill those Ik aid*.
if we don't kill Vueiu they will kill
us.
1 urn a poor man, and work hard for
what i get, and have to make every
wlge cm. In get a In tig. Up here on the
edge of Canada is a hard country td
live iu, but by hard wt»ik, hard living,
and close saving 1 have made out to
keep eVel) UUlii last lali.
1 H ted you how it was:
1 have no lime to attend tn politics,
ar.ti III fact, they have things so mixe-i
up that L can’t understand them. 1
heard a g«*ud deal a’) -ut the Gt»Vt*ru-
meat taxes keeping tne workingman
4ks»s, but I Could nt sec Ij »w it was. To
be sure, the ;Stale and cottuiy tuies are
pretiy severe, blit i couldn't see how
Hie United Slates tales tumbled ill- , tor
u.sbt*.iy ever called • *n me lor any. But
1 ioutid oil , and, as 1 said, 1 Will teli
h«>w it Was. By dim of metal Ug aud
patching and ina ing clothes l--r our
daughiets «»ut ol her old one*, and for
the ts*y« out of min**, my wile ha* got
ali'iig without spending much for clothes
tor st-Vetai years. We had s«v d iq
htllg m«»ue\, about seVetiiy five dollars,
so uiy wile Says to me one d»y, ‘John, 1
think tb-» *1 thing wc call do v»H
iMiine of that mutit-y is to bify some
colnes for the children ; th« y h.»vb al
Ways been good children; utid walked
hard ami put Up with a. y suit ol Tag*
w« could give them, without eV. ii a
word ot grumbling, but they are get
ling up s<» large m*w, tuut they fi-cl
a*k«urd when they gel out l-mkitig
so shabby—I don’t want anything fine
tor them; but they I ught l*» haVe Whole
clothes at Icasi when they gt) to meet
ing; besides they are obliged t*» have
some winter ch-ther, for they haven't
enough, eVe.: such as they are, lb keep
them wanti. So sil|»|id*e we buy some
good, stretttf. warm thuff. aud 1 and the
girls can make the in up.*
She never said a word about any.
thing for herm*tf. Well, I had been
Blinking the sane tiling, hut she spoke
first, and wh. n she talks alniul spending
money you may bet there i* netd for it.
So, Haiti I, ‘Betsey, I’m of the same
mind, but goods ate woful high here,
out 1 hear they are dirt cheap over iu
Canada; Mi|q*>se we hitch up the wag
on und go over there, and get them.—
Our paper mousy don’t do so well over
there, but 1 cuii get some gold from
Smith ^
She took to it I w ent and gave Smith
Seventy dollars in paf-ei for fiity dollars
in gold. Vte hitched up the wagon
and off we went to Canada. Betsey is
a fiist-rate judge of common goods arid
a close trader. Trade was dull and
storekeepers anxious to £elf, and we got
a |>owe»ful sight ut g«»o*ls for our fiity
dollars. They made a good big ta>x
fad. Betsey sahl we couid-i’t have g*»t
them iu our town for a cent less than a
hundred aud fifijr dollars in paper.
tVlu-n we g-»t to the place where they
say the hueot 0 in ida is, a fellow steps
up very grand aifd SaTs to me, *\\ bat
have you g*»t in that Wag-.u ?*
•NVnat bu»iocas i» that ut yours?*
I woitM have answered him civilly,
but 1 was kinder riled at his spea&iug
Iti me in that way ah if I wum a dog, in
stead of a free clizen of tlie United
States.
Bays'he ‘I’ll) ai United States officer,
ahd it’s my business to know what is in
that wagiiti.’
1 found out that he was one of those
fellows that they call Custom house offi
ceis, or detectives, or spies, that 1 never
see doing any w-*rk or anything useful
to anytHMly, tiut they live high aud are
always aUt'kiUg their iK»*ea into otlie.
pe. .pie’s basin* *e*.
Then said 1, ‘"1 h d’s a buX.*
*What’s in tin* b-»X V
‘Some staff we've been buying to
make the chibbe i s**me chShes/
‘And you we e going to pass ou
Without paying til daty oo‘ rife-ur,* sere
yon ?*
•Certainly I was; thej^ are my prop
erty that f hate par d for, and 1 don't
bwe unyootiy anyth ng tor them.’
‘Then you inlcndod to delruud the
Government, did y *u f
‘No, Jr never d* fv«uJed anybody. I
led up the bill, took out a
book, and made Home figures
*1 see no charges here for the box
what is it worth V
‘I paid fifty cents for it.*
He made more figures.
4 What is the c»»st «»f transportation ?*
‘Hauling you mean ?’
•Yes/
‘Nothing. I hauled them myself. It
is inv own horse and wagon.*
‘\Vhat would ybti charge if hauling
f.#r anotherT
•Nothing, if it wis one of iny heigh
bora/
‘But if y*>U were Kanling fbr pay
‘I.suppose about a dollar would be
fair.*
He made more figures, and showed
me the bill. Here it i* :
Cost of Goods $50 OJ
Boxing 50
T reimportation 1 GO
1 1-2 p r cent, comuiioaion for parcliai*ing. 1 25
$52 ?5
duties. £0 per cent $26 37 1-2
•Pay tne twenty-six dollars thirty-sev
•n cents in gr#M, ami you may take
your things and l»e *.ff ’
I was dumbfounded. I did not know
what t*» say. I took the bill and l*s-k«d
«t It to try ahd g .tln r my thou.hi*.—
At last l said, ‘YoU hate Charged me
fifty cents l-*r hauling my own things?’
‘Makes no «bff ri nee, that’s the law.*
‘And y**fi have charged tue sixty-two
and a h if cents fot* corhinisHon; my
wife and I boiujht them.*
Makes no difference, that is the law.’
‘Well, I ha.Ve no gold *»r g-wenbacks,
either, but i can get the greenbacks, 1
*ti|»f•**•'» y.»u wiil take U»**iii ?*
•Not elactfy;*
4 Won’t the Government take its own
note* **
‘No. It wants gold to pay the inter
est on the bonds.*
•Well, I will try and get the gold and
bring it t«wnwrr«*w.*
* W ell, that will do.*
Tlien*ii|S»i» wife and I bud<11ed the
things into the box, and started to put
il into the wagon
• A'hat are you going to do ?’
‘Going to take the things along with
us ? :
‘Not if I knot* il. Y*»u tnajr go, but
they etay here, and if you aie fi--t liere
with tb> g«»ld l-y 12 oYha-k tbifi«itibw,
you need uotcoxiie at nil, for l will con
fiscate them ftor the Govefnlffefil.*
‘Weil, «r, yon fclnirge mb just one
dollar thirty aetrett attci a half cents in-»re
thaii hall' the cost of the things; trill
yoU take half of them und let me take
the b;ilIJre ?'
.‘No; the Governihenl lias h«» use f*»r
you: giKxls. it vi'ailts gold to bay the
interest on the iiotids. So off with you,
and get it, if y«»u want your g*e»ds.*
My wife and 1 went off with heavy
hearts. I’ll tell you sometime what
she said. 1 went to neighb r Jo nson
ud lx*tTowed tlie grcciibircks, and to
Smith and bought tftic gold, and went
back that same day and got my things
1 found out then how it in thj.t the
poor are taxed, or lather robled« lor
the bent fii ol the n- b The go^tirii*
tnent robbed me *»f just fulif o? till*
money that I luve been making for sev
eral years. | am m-w behind hand and
wmking for the money I hot rowed to
pay the Government, TJia lellpw aaid
l was.going to ccffaiiM tlie Govern-
insiit; 1 sav he rob(»ed tile f«ff the bene
fit of the rich l»udffh‘*»ltiers.
Go «*ii and kill the bonds the people
are getting their eye* am! you
will get stronger every day. 1’vs been
thinking and inquiring, and the more I
think the stronger I g-*t. My neighbors
are thinking, t*«), and I will tell y-»«t iff
ffly next what they say. JoriiL
Eoskoo !
7BE GREAT REfVrlTlOB
Yhich Kotsoo hu attained in all parte of the
eouutry
As a GREAT and GOOD MEDICINE
9
And the Large Number of
Testimonials
which are constantly
-icinna, and p**n«)ns ^
•ts o*ie, ia coucluaire
value.
rec«-iv**d from Phy-
atk bsjui era cd by
of it® remarkable
■h-Mus
S Vl-V!l*
r«»^))oof
SOD PI
IT UAS *\0 EQUAL
AS A BLOOD PURIFIER
■P p. TB« lion
Powerful Vegetable Alterative
YET DISCO VERSD.
fetSEASES ‘OF THE I5LCOO.
Murni iiiiia.iii tns; eciriice pruvtr# *.-» «'•*
The.people talk of bad blood, as th.-
s,*>( rriatir dijpitsei*, an*^ like m?>ny |)opn-
I -inions llii* of bad blocd la icunded in
‘The life of the fl«h ia in,.the B\pod," ia, n
Script oral maxim tiiat science proves to
me.
cause
ar oi-iiiioDS
troth. «o • w
The ayraptoma of. ^ad ( , blood arij irtoelly
qni e plain-—bad I»ig^«ti**n —caufes imperfect
nutrition, and consequently tb« circulation ia
f eble. the soft t-ssu-a loose their tone and
lauicily, snd the toi-giie becomea pale, bm.-td,
and frequently covert with a nasiy, white
eoat. T-ds c->n-)ition so«»n shows itself in
mughneas of the skin, then in eiuptire and
ulcerative diseases, and wh-n lone continued.
r*-euliaiu serious lesions of the Brain, Liver,
.ungs, or urina’-y apperatt s. Much, very
much, saffering is caused by jm^urv filoqd Jt
is es^jranted by ewnc that pne-fitdi oi tlie hu
man urnily are effected with eciofulit in some
form
When the Blood is pure, you are n?t lia
ble to any disease Many impurities of the
Blood arise t’r* m impur^ diseases of laige cit
ies. Kradicate every impurity from the foun
tain of life, and good spirit,*, fair sain and vital
streugth will return to you.
K0SK00!
AS A
LIVER IN^lQORAfdRI
STANDS UNRIVALLED.
BEING THE ONLY KNOWN MEDICINE
that fcmcihVTLT Stimulates and CORRKCTS »ha
hepatic s-creu-Kis and functional dkr \nokmsst8
of the JjVRR. WITU01T ItaHUTATlAO (he
•t hilc l». acts freely upon the Ltv«r instead of
copiou* purging, it grad -ally changes the dis
charges to a pjrtoct natural state.
SYMPTOMS OF EIVER CdtitL^INT AND
UFSOJIE i»FTHO>E DISEASES
FK0DU-ED 13 V IT-
A sallc w or yellow color of the skin, or y*l
lowtsii-brown spots on the face and other parts
ol tbeleKl- ; dulness and diowsiuei-e, some-
time- headache; bitter or bad tasta in the
mouth, internal heat; ia man eases a dry.
teasing c*iugh ; u-steady appetite; sometimes
sour Mt«»ina**h. with a raising of th>* food) a
hloa.ed or full fueling about the stomach., and
ri •«.■*; a_ r g avatmg pains in the sides, back, or
breast and a1>o*.t lh« shoulders; constipation
of tlie bowels; piles, flatulence; cblduvse of
the extremities, etc.
ty A Sb**nff was one® asked t<
serve u writ against a q laker. Oil ar
riving at his h( us® h** saw the Quakei V
wife, whn, in reply l*»theimjiiry whether
her litlshuml Wiis at fcrt’.ne, Haiti. H® ^a*.
at tli® same lim® requesting htm to be
seat®*!, an-i h«r hnsbaud w«nil*l *p®diijr
see him. Tli* .ofieef waited Sometime,
when the fair Q iak®res® ®*»<nmg int«» the
room, lie reinimlrd her of her promise
that h® might s*>® h«sr hu**ban«l. ‘Nay,
frn*n*I 7 * she *ai-l ; 'I promised that he
w«>nM*e*‘ thee, il-- nu> seen thee He
did n**t like thy l-aiks; therefore l»e
avoided th.*e, and hath departed froin
the house by amithvr path.*
$S»“Give » negro a watermelon, and
an umbrella; nnd lie is a liapj-y man,’
is im aid J>»ittherD a-!age. It was eu
nmi-iy il?uatratt«f fast kuminer. Oi«l
Uncle r**ny, who is v**ry religteus, was
aea ed iu liis d«**»r gazing nt the starry
skies, when Mara John mine along ah-I
reiiiatiiel, ‘IVcHj llifde T«»ny, t he end
AT. tlie Worhf h.enft &xvh f—'Jfu,
Mars John, aud 1 w as just thinking how
g- oJ *h* L *r*l i- to u« p * >r niggers to
put’It off tdl arter watenm lon seaiioo.’
K0SK00!
Is ik remedy of IVon-lerful Efficacy inrlfiv
of di-«as*’S of the Kidneys and iffjd 1«K jh
ihfAc affections ii is ns near a -p-*.*irc as any
rt-me-ly can b«*. It doe* its work kiuuiy. ai-
Iciitly and -*urelv. The RXL;*:r which il aflfords
a both c-rtain aijd |*erd ptible.
DlSbAafcj OF TUE KiU.VEYS AND BLAD-
HfK.
Person* unacquainted with the structure
and fuociions ol th-* Kidneys earn ot estimate
tne i-si-ortaiix of th nr hen!thy action.
Regular i.d sufficient action of the Kidnejs
is as important, nay. even more so. than regu
larity of die now-da The Kidneys remove
from the Bated till)® effete matter* which, if
permuted t-i remtin, would speedilj destroy
life. A total eu.-p-s«'»ioi* of th* »irinary dis-
eharg -s will occasion death from thirty-six lo
forty-eight bona.
When the Urine is voided in smalt (jnanti
ties at the time, or when ihde Is a £i*p«**.tion
to Urimte more freq-iently tha » natural, or
when die Urins ia irt*li .colored or sc.>ldii*e
with weakness iji-ihe small of tj;i bhCk, il
Mi-hiI-i od r . be mflfd with or delayed ; hut
Ko k o ritould be taken at o ce to remedy the
difficulty, before a lesion o the organs lake- 4
place. )Io.*t • f the -iis-*»s**s of the Bladdc
• riginutc fro n those «rf the Kldi.e^s, the Urine
bei g imperfectly secreted iu tiie Kidneys,
prove irri at ing lu the Bladder m.d J^Jrinary
l-a-sagvif. Wl^eii JecWfect that medicine
never reaclifea the Kidneys except ihroagh the
geae al circul*ti«»n -*f ti e fflyeu. we see how
• t-cessAr^ It m to keep tlie Fountain of Life
hire!
A
M0IC REMEDY.I
HENRY’S
oAnkoziio
Constitution
RENOVATOR!
BASED ON SCIENCE.
PULP ABED WITB SKILL,
and all the available ingenuity and experlnc-s.l
that the art nf pharmacy of the preeent day I
can contriuute
And Comb Ling iu Concentrated Term the west
*r
Valuable Vegetable Juices
Known in the Hiatorr of UediolnM br |
PORIFVI.NG Tllli feitOOD,
Imparting
TO THE SYSTEM, |
Tone to the Stomach,
And ft Hftilthy Action of th* Livar, Xidneff, |
S*er*t.Tl ud Exerttiv. Orgmas-
A DYING ZODA^E
Lay breathing his last on the battlefleM, hi* I
companions surged on an-J left him alone.— I
T.'uey knew tlie cause of his approaching end—I
It yv«s the deadly bullet. No friepdly voice!
could cheer him to life—no human skill eouM |
iv** him.
Thousands of Precious Lives
are t**-da\ a.s rapidly sinking, and as .vure.ly I
Loitering on to an untimely end, in tfufferit.g, I
Ag‘»ny, Wretchedness, and Ignorance of the I
cause which
Wleuce can arrrst and assuage, .
Nourish into new Life and YigoF,
And cant) the Bloorc of Health
" o dance once more upon their withered Cheeks. I
DISEASE, LIKE A THIEF,
>teal* upon its victims unawares, aod before I
they are aware of itH attack, plants itself fir dr- I
ly in the system, nnd throagh neglect nr inst-1
tention becomes seated, and defies all ordinary I
os t’cn\poiai*y trcainieut tb relinquish its mer* 1
eiless grasp. . %
Do You Know the Cause of
The wasted form—the hollow cheek 1
The wither- d Lee—the sallow complexion V
The feable Tries—the sunken, glassy eye 1
The emaciated fern—the trembling frame ?
The treacherous pimple—the torturing sore 1
The repulsive emptioa—the inflamed eye f
The impled face —the rough colorless skin ?
and debilitating ailments of the present tge ?
The answer i-* simple, and covers the whole |
ground in all its phases vis: the
FANGS OF DISEASE
AND
HEREDITARY TAINT
Are firm!y fix. 1 ia tb.
Fountain of Life—the Blood.
K0SK00!
meets with great scccrse . jri the rua* of
ld'EA £3 OF TUE NEuVoUS STSTEM
Almost nine-tfnths of «'Ur ;>cople suffer from
n^rv-tu-* **x‘iaus'iou. and are therefore, liable
t«» i s c -nc-uniUnt evils of mental depression
contused idfas. sottenixg of tue brain, maaiiity.
and c -inplrtt* l»r»*aki- g down of the general
hcaliH. Thousand* arc suffering t*»-iay wnh
broken-d-'wn nervous systems, and, uufortu-
ns'rlj. tshseao. »I- ohol. lafe hours, over-work,
(mental and (dutiesl.) *r« causii-g diseases of
the nervous i-yett'in to increase at a tearful ra
tio.
The symptoms to which disease- of the nerv
ous grve rise, *n«v be stared as follows:
A dull, heavy feeling in the head, sometimes
m-re or iers revere -ain or headache ; Period
ical iieiftdtchc. l>iafl*ieea. Noisea of longing in
the Head ; «’oi fu ?-»y of fden?; 'I emp.-rary
Loss «>f Wcroery iH-j-ction of >pirite ; Start
ing during Sleep; Ifed" Dreams ; llesRatioa in
Vn ddiug C&irttt&m; ifnlness of lleai ii-g
Twi elm g of Ute^a-'e, Arms. ere., which, if rot
promptly i la to
lueauity, Impoteuey, Apoplexy, etc., ot c.
• Paralysis, Delirium,
tOF k Iiftle («>ur yenr «»ltl child t*»Jd
bis father ti® Was a fad. On betnif rep
ri him tied by hia ui*»tb®r, ab«J required t«»
•ay ho wasa sorry, he In Ml- d up tn Ibr
insulted (liiirrut and cXvlaimeJ, ‘ifa^a f 'f
am sorry you’a a foul.*
K0SK0 0!
Is NOT « secret quack remedv. FORMULA
around eacbj Recommended by -the
•»est Ptiysiciaa-, eminent Divh.es, £dib
Dtuggieis. Merchants, eto.
liters,
The Bert ahd Most Pottlab Mxoiavx tn Fax.
. PB^aBAP O.MT ar , ,
J. J. LAWRENCE,, IVt. D.,
ORGANIC ClIEiHST.
Labor si or y and Office, No.' < Maht St.,
msFOttr, va.
Prict—OS'E DOLLAR TER BOTTLE.
fcrY.I e by Dn^au everywherr
marl7-$<n
. . . THE . , ' t
IndiscriMiikte Yaccmation
during pie late war. with lit.^ased Lymph baa
Tainted t. e rest blood
In the entire hnd. It has planted the germ of I
the most melancholy disease in the veins of |
men. women and children on all sides, snd
no bing short of
A HEROIC REMEDY
will Eradicate it root and branch, fsrever.
Such a Remedy it
HENRY’S
CARBOLIC
CONSTITUTION
RENOVATOR:
Ow bracking tub Stomach, it ssainulatea at
o'ice with.the food and liquids thprein, and
from the moment it passes into the Blood, it at
tack? disease at il* f -ua-ain head, in its germ
nnd maturity, and disHipafes it through the av
enues of the organs with uneri ing certain tv,
and tends new and pure. Blood bounding
through every artery and vein.
The tuber ales of Scrofula that vbtlfwtime'l
flourish and stud »be i-ncr coating of the ab
domen. like kern*<1* of corn, are withered, dia-
solved and eradicated and the diseased parts
nourished into life. ,Tb.« Torpid Liver and in
active Kidneys are stimulated to a healthy se- .
cretion, and their natu**a! functions restored te
renewed hea th a: d activity.
Its action up*v» l he blood, fluids of the b?dy,
and Glai-duiar ff^siem, are , ,
TOitC. ftiBIFYIHO ATO MSOTECTAaT,
At its taueb. disease droops, dies, aud the vie- j
tin of its violence, se it were,
LEAPS TO NEW LIFE.
It Relieves the entire system of Pairs end
Ach' a, enlivens the spirits, and imparts
Sparkling bright css to the Eye,
A rosy gljw to the Cheek,
A ruby ti goto tha lip,
A clearness to the Head,
A brightness to the Cbmplszioa,
A buoyancy to the Spirits,
And happiness on all aides/ ,
TTiou«au«is have been rescued from the verge
->f il e grave by ita timely Ur-e.
This Remedy is now offered to the publii
with the mo»t solemn aseiirance of its intrinsic
medicinal virtues,' and powerful Healing prop-
ertses.
.-r Fob old Atrscno>s or thb
Kidney*. Retention 6f tfrilie,
And Diseases of Women and Children.
Nervous Prostration,/Weakness, Geoera \ Lassi- j
tude, and Lose of A{q>etite, it ia unsurpassed.
It extinguishes.,
Affect'or s of the Bcnee, Habitual Coativen***, i
Diseases ef lbe Kidney i, Dyspepsia,
Eryaipefas, Female Irregularities, Fis-
toia. all Skis Diseases. Liver
Complaint. Indigeatioa, Pi be,
Pulmoqary Diseases, Cou-
sumption, Scrofula
or King’s Evil,
Syphilis,
Pbktabxd by
Prof M. E HENRY,
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
O* 3|(
BFRLIN HOBPrTAt,-
M. A, L. L. D„ F. R. 8.
HENRY & CO., Proprietors.
Uliowtft^, *78 PeitiStreet.
Pcjt-Oficis Bo*. *27*. Kkw Tor*.
(BT C6S’STITlJTIOJJ REKOVaLOS u t l
poFbottl*. a!x boitln for Sent my where
on receipt of price. Patient* are ]
i rrceip* or price, raitenu are res netted to
confidentially. »hd‘ «pl, win >„
>*de by following mail.
Sold by all reepcotoble Druggfetv.
. >rdmr t<
Hbxkt, in the Clerk's Office of lh^
hr DisWe ‘s«w T,
b, If. K.
_ Dielrict Coe; t
r«ak;