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BBPOFEB TO MEWS, POLITICS, MTEBATOBE, A6BtCVLTBBL AMB GBMEBAE PBOmESS—MBEPEMBENT W Alh TBIMGS.
VOL. XIV.
For the Herald.
Ouc that Tlioiiittt and lid
Right.
It is not only profitable, but pleasur
able, frequently to contemplate even in
detached form, the words as spoken and
written by those who have been emi
nent in the land; and this is especially
so concerning the one who has been
super-eminent in every act and thought
of his life, untinctured by the least self
ishness, when those acts related to or
were connected with the welfare of his
country. The pure, simple and genuine
piety of this inestimable person, whose
ritual was the adoration and worship of
the Great Jehovah,uninfluenced by the
formula of any church, and unbiased ty
the bigotry of Church or sectarianism,
is only surpassed by its fervor.
As the political acts and opinion of
this most distinguished person have re
cently been refered to, by the various
members of govrnment, in the measure
that have been passed into temporary
acts, it can hardly be deemed amiss to
give his undoubtedly correct views con
cerning the present and future welfare
of government as pertained to these
United States, as receiving aid and sup
port from that Invisible Hand that di
rects the Universe. After offering
“fervent supplication to that Almighty
Being who rules over the Universe —
who presides in the councils of nations
—and Whose providential aid can sup
ply every human defect’' — he goes on
to - ive his reflections in the following
words, concerning the beneficent inter
vention of the Great Author as to these
United States:
“In tendering this homage to the
Great Author of every public and pri
vate good, l assure tnyseif that it ex
presses your sentiments not les3 than my
own; nor those of my fellow-citizens at
large, less than either. No people can
be bound to acknowledge and adore the
invisible hand which conducts the affairs
of men, more than the people of the
United Stales. Every step by which
they have advanced to the character of
*n independent nation, seems to have
been distinguished by some token of
providential agency, and in the impor
tant revolution just accomplished in the
system of their united government, the
tranquil deliberations, and voluntary
consent of so many distiuqt communi
ties, from which the event has resulted
cannot be compared with the means by
which most goverom n‘s have been es
tablished, without some return of pious
gratitude, along with an humble antici
pation of the future blessings which the
past seems to presage. These reflec
tions, arising out of the present crisis,
have forc'd themselves too strongly on
my mini to be suppressed
From this it was unquestionably the
opinion of Washington that the United
States received the peculiar benedic
tions of the Almighty. If it was a
hallucination upon his part, it was a
glorious one, to confidently believe that
in his endeavors to advance human
government and individual happiness
that he was being assisted by the hand
of God, and not an instrument in the
power of hell. Alas! how chaugcd!
These views as quoted were addressed
by Wa hiugton in his first Inaugural
Address to Congress, but he takes oc
casion to bring his topics immediately
before the people, when he uses the
language “nor those of my fellow-citi
zens at large, loss than either.” lee,
changed they are indeed, when proba
bly the prominence of waalth and po
litical station, their bane
ful influence at the various immoral
and dissipated fashionable resorts
throughout the country,as the centre of
Ft e L yeism and its numerous and
incurable evils: and from these Grand
Centers as it were there is an emana
tion, that disseminating its baneful in
fluences, contaminates the whole.
Here what he says in conclusion of
this Inaugural, when speaking of the
then assembled wisdom of the nation he
says.
“In these honorable qualifications I
behold the surest pledges that, as on
one side, no local prejudices or attach
ments, no separate views, nor party an
imosities, will misdirect the comprehen
sive and equal eye which ought to
watch over the great assemblages of
communities and interest; so, on anoth
er, that the foundation of our national
policy will be laid in the pure and im
mutable principles of private morality;
- —since there is no truth more thor
oughly established, than that there ex
ist in the economy and course of na
ture an indissoluble union between vir
tue and happiness." A.J.S
Whisky is now made from leath
er. and this may explain why so
many persons who drink it are al
ways strapped.
A girl went back on her bow-legged beau
because she said she ditfn.t like to waltz in
brackets.
A character, like a kettle, once men
ded, always wants mending.
Sflje (6 recurs born’ Hcralb.
STARTLING THEORIES.
Will I lie - ; Star of Bcttftehem
AfUie Its appearance
during 18S7 I
A GLOWING METEOR THAT MAT FORE
TELL THE END OF ALL THINGS
TERRESTRIAL SOMETHING
FOR THE SECNND AD
VENTISTS TO CON
SIDER.
* ~ i
The recent conference between
Swedenborgian and other evangeli
cal clergymen concerning the Sec
ond Advent has resulted like that
of the ecclesiastical confab of some
month? ago, in no conclusion what
ever. Still, some of its members
were of tho opinion, though they
refrained from publicy expressing
their views on the subject, that stir
ring events are at hand. The
twentyfourth chapter of the Gospel
according to Saint Matthew,proba”
bly furnishes the most elaborate
description of the events which
these Christians believe will fore
shadow the second coming of their
Redeemer. In verse 30th it is
written.
“And then shall appear the sign
of the Son of Man in Heaven, and
then shall the tribes of earth mourn,
and they shall see the Son of man
coming iD the clouds of heaven with
powor and great glory.”
The question immediately arises,
“What is meant by the phrase,
‘Tho sign of the Son of Man?’ The
only sign of tho Son of Man of which
we read in sacred or profane history,
is the star that appeared at his birth
the star to which anthems have
been raised and which Christian
poets have sung—the star of Both
lohem! There are excellent astro
nomical reasons for believing that
this extraordinary star will
RE-APPEAR DURING THE TEAR 1887.
In Prof. Whiston’s Astronomi
cal Lectures a remarkable star is
thus described,
“A long space of time after there
shone anew star in Cassiopeia’s
chair which was a very notable one
indeed, and was much celebrated
by Tycho Brahe and other astrono
mers. This star appeared first
about middle November, A.D.,
1572, and continued the space of
sixteen months, and upwards even
until May. 1574, when it utterly
disappeared, and it abode all the
time in The same place. This star
was of a perfectly round form. It
was without any hair or tail, and
twinkled more than the rest of the
stars. The apparent magnitude of
it at the beginning exceeded that
of Lora and Sirius, the greatest of
the fixed stars—yea, of Jupiter
himself, which at that time, was in
opposition to the sun, and, conse
quently, nearest the earth and
brightest. Nay, it seemed once
like Venus itself when it is in
perihelion, in so much that it was
seen by some even
IN THE DAY TIME
about noon; and it appeared by
night through the more thick clouds
when no other of the stars could
be seen, until at length it gradual
ly diminished and at length wholly
disappeared, and has never, from
that time to this been discovered
in the heavens. Its color, at the
beginning, was clear whitish and
splendid; it afterwards grew yel
low, and red like Mars or Aldeba
ran. After that it put on a certain
wan whiteness, such as that of Sa
turn, and retained the same, which
yet became gradually more dull
until both the colors and the star
itself vanished from sight. A great
and stupendous celestial wonder
this, and such as must be trans
mitted to future ages without fur
ther solution here.”
This magnificent celestial ohjeot
has not been seen for three hun
dred and five years, and has gen
erally been classified by astrono
mers among the so-called
GREENESBORO’, GA., THURDSAY, AUGUST 21. 1879.
“LOST STARS,” ,
There were, indeed, savaos like
our own Ennis, and others, who
were disposed to regard the won
drous star that startled QueeD
Bess in 1572-’74, as identical with
the celestial stranger of A.D. 945,
or thereabouts, which was so bright
as to attract the attention and ex
cite the fear of maukind even in
that benighted age. as well as with
another “bright particular star,”
that excited Europe about A. D.
1264. There are good grounds for
believing that these suggested iden
tities have been established, as
well as the of all others,
with the Star of Bethlehem. This
conclusion has been reached in a
natural and rational manner. In
the first place it will be noticed
that between A. D. 945 and A.D.
1264. an interval of r three hundred
and nineteen years intervenes;
while between A. D. 1264 and A.
D. 1572, there is an iaterval of
three hundred and eighteen years.
llow unreliable chronology is as
respects even the great events of
the Dark Age, no student of histo
ry needs to be informed. Much
more, therefore, are dates likely to
be inacurate whero a mere star was
concerned, for there were no as
tronomers in those days, no record
of astronomic events, and only a
few superstitious and unscrupulous
charlatans who extorted money by
pretending tc read human fate in
the signs ef the heavens. The dif
ference between the assumed
PERIODIC VISITATIONS
was so small that an English as
tronomer felt himself justified in
assuming that the chronology was
incorrect, and that the three ap
pearances were due to the same
star. “Chronology,” writes this
ingenious astronomer, “cnlesß sub
ject to some infallible test, such as
an eclipse, can seldom be relied on.
I was, therefore, prepared not to
accept either of these years as ab
solutely correct. After ten week’s
constant and prolonged study, I
had the happiness and privilege to
determine the period of the star to
be three hundred and fifteen years.
The number 945 is exactly three
periods of the star, and would in
dicate correctly the year of its re
appearance if dated from the ac
cepted Christian era. But as noth-
cao be more certain thaD that
O
our present era dates tbreo years
after the Nativity—for it occurred
in the lifetime of Herod the Great
who died in the month of Novem
ber, A. D. 4 B. C., as verified by
the lunar eclipse which took place
In tho month of March of that year
the three periods from B. C, 4,
would give 942 in place of 945;
or the difference between the true
and the accepted commencement of
the Christian era. I, therefore,
rejected the latter date, 945, and
held 942 to be correct. Then, on
applying a period of
THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN
YEARS
to 942. I obtained A. D. 1257, or
a difference of seven years from
that recorded. But, on applying
two periods, or 630 years to 942, I
abtained A. D. 1572, the exact
year of the last appearance of the
star. Accordingly 1 rejected the
year A. D. 1264 in favor of A. D.
1257. Theso facts, in my opinion
completely bear out my estimate of
the period of the star, and I there
fore look for its re-appearance in
the year 1887, with implicit confi
dence.”
Prof. Hutton, in the same re
markable paper, also takes occasion
to question the generally accepted
theory that the nativity of Christ
occurred in midwinter. “The win
ters oF Palestine,” he says, “arc
occasionally very severe, and in
the history of Herod the Great, we
are told that one winter was so ex
treme that the people died in hun
dreds from want of vfara clothing,
and Herod was obliged to send a
great quantity of his household
plate to Egypt to purchase warm
clothing for the people. If this bo
tho fact, is it credible that the Ro
man governor should select bo in
clement a season for collecting the
Jews into their several cities for
the purpose of enrollment, or that
at such season shepherds should be
tending their flocks by _ eight in
the plains of Bethlehem ? Iby no
means reject tho testimony of I
Scripture that the nativity occur- '
red at the time of the enrollment
of the Jews by the
ROMAN GOVERNOR OF SVRIA,
or that it occurred whe.n shepherds
were feeding their flocks in the
open fields by night, but I dispute
that these ‘events took place at the
period of the year assigned by the
Greek .and Roman Churches, and
adopted so implicitly by the
Churches of the Reformation.,.,.
My estimate of the period of the
Nativity would place it about the
23d of Augnstjand the visit of the
Magi about the 6th or tho Tth of
the following month, September,
or, according to Persian tradition,
thirteen days subsequent to the
birth. This view is, I think, com
pletely corroborated by Jewish his
tory. for, according the best au
thority, there elapsed only a period
of about ninety-four days.between
the nativity of Christ and the
death of Herod the Great, which
last event Archbishop Usher states
to have taken place on the 25tb
November, B. C. 4.” *
The ingenious author u£t-r<e fore
going views, is not unprepared to
expect that they will encounter
violent opposition from orthodox
Christians. But declamation is not
proof and the evidence adduced
will compel the serious attention
of all unprejudiced minds. It is
impossible to watch the
SIGNS OF THE TIMES,
religious, social, civil and military,
without beiog impressed with the
convictitjn that we are approaching
one of the most pre-eminently im
portant chapters in the whole histo
ry of the human race. The com
ing perihelia of the great planets of
our solar system will be followed
by a total eclipse of the sun as well
as of the moon. Then, in Novem
ber, 1887, it is claimed, will pro
bably appear the sign of the Son of
Man, in the heavens, and then, al
so, the Second Adventists expect
to receive that justification which
public opinion at present withholds,
[New York Mercury.
Itcaiting (lie Whirlwind.
The follewiog we clip from an ex
change :
The richest man of our town set np
one of his sons in tho liquor business.
A temperance neighbor protested earn
estly against it. The rich father said :
“Why, he can make a thousand dol
lars a year." “No matter, said the
temperance neighbor, “he may beruin
od by it.” In ten years the wife of the
rumselling son died a drunkard, leav
ing two motherless children. The
rumseller forged his father’6 name, and
at length involved his father so much
that the old man failed, losing the earn
ings of his life. The rumselling son
died a drunkard, and his poor brother,
too, died a sot; and the poor old father,
who was one of the moderate drinkers,
drinkiog enough to plant seeds of ruin
in his family, died too. And now all
that are left of one of the first families
of the town are the orphan grandchil
dren. “Woe to him that puttetb the
bottle to his neighbor’s lips.”
Did our young readers ever think
how little it takes to stain their
character? A single drop of ink is a
very small thing, yet, dropped into
a tumbler of clear water it blackens
the whole; and so the first lie, the
first oath, the first glass, tboy seem
very trivial, yet they leave a dark
stain upon your character, took
out fof the first 6tain.
nARHiEii mm for spite
The melancholy Story of ft
Young Hau left with the Baby
[Hannibal (Mo.) Courier.]
. .* t. ;*
Everybody around the Upton, Depot
this morning, from early in the day un
til train time, noticed a young man
walking mournfully around, and carry
ing a bright and pretty little b®by.—
After watching tho evidently despair
ing man for some time, the reporter
“made himself conspicuous to him” (as
all Reporters kpow how to do), and we
bad not leaned long against that lamp
post until the party spoke to u. and
when the train went out for Ransas,
This opened a conversation—just
what we wanted—during which the
man told us the tallowing story. We
give it as he ttt)d,itas near as possible.
“My name is James Myers. About
twenty-one months ago I was married
to Miss Jennie McMullen. Bhf was a
beautiful girl, and I thought a great
deal of her and I thought that she
lqved me; but now I find my mistake.
After our marriage I leased a farm
near Summerville, Pike county, 111.,
and moved onto, it, and everything
looked bright before me. I worked
hard last season and did well.
Wo lived happily together, and I can
prove that I provided bountifully for
my wife. Her father and mother lived
only about three miles from my place,
and used to frequently come and see us.
I always used them well, and wa* ve,ry
fond of my wife, and did my whole du
ty by her. A little less than a year
after our marriage this little baby
born, and we were both seemingly glad
io receive it—l know I was. I was
everything that a good husband could
be. and I wasliappy?
Now, although my wife has left me,we
have never, up. to the (Jay she depart
ed, had a hard word or feeling between
ns. The separation occurred in thi*
way, and I was greatly surprised when
it came up. About three weeks age,
after I had done all my morning chores
about the house, I ate my breakfast,
kissed my wife and child, and went out
plowing. After I had commenced
plowing, my wife oalled out and aaid:
‘Jim, I have made up my mind to
leave you now, and want you to eotne
into the house and divide the thing*.’
I then asked her the reason why she
was gtjing to leave, and she answered
that she had just married me for spite,
nod ‘now I’m done with you.’ I told
her if she was in earnest and wanted to
leave roe, she could take just what she
wanted. She says you can keep that
young one; I don’t waqt and then
she went to work and picked up what
she wanted about the pl.aoe.
I was very glad she did not want the
baby, because I did, a f nd would have
bated to have given it op. After she
had given me that, I was willing she
should take everything. She picked
out what she wanted, und then left on
foot for her father’s, and I have not
seen her since. She is a woman that I
thought a good deal, of, and done my
best to use right. Don’t think there’s
another mao in the case, as l have not
had many male visitors at my house.
I don’t know what she meant when she
said she married me for spite. She
has frequently, since leaving roe, made
the same remark to my friends, and
that she never loved me anyhow. I’ve
got a sister in Fontan*, Kansas, who
will take care of my child, and I am
going there to live; have given up all
hopes of ever seeing my wife again.and
don’t care now; as long as I can keep
my child she can go.” ,
Then the train was made up and the
gentleman stepped on board with the
child and baggage, He was a young
man about twenty-two years old,with a
a good, honest countenance, and from
his appearance was a hard-working son
o p the soil. We expect that the un
■fit**4.l
faithful wife will sometime regret her
rash step.
Spare moments are like the goldust oftime v
Of all portions of ear life, spare moments
are the most fruitful in good or evil. They
are gaps through which temptations find the
easiest access to the garden of the soul.
——■• —i
An Irishman, fresh from the old
country, found a tree full of green
persimmons, climbing to the top,
he helped himself to the fruit. A
passer by overhoard him say; By
the powers au’ I’m the lad that can
knock the socks off of the men that
poured vinegar on these plums.
. . _ r X , -*
How two Tent?' IHeml* met
nd Exchanged Compliment*.
Two men fiaijed each other from the
opposite bank of a stream and exchang
ing greetings, many friendly questions
were put and answeredj The men
were evidently delighted to meet each
other, and their only regret appeared
to be that they encountered one anoth
er in a place where it was impossible
for them to clasp and shake hands,
river not being fordable on account of
its swiftness and the rocky and treach
erous nature of its channel, while the
bridge was five miles above. Both
men lamented these unfortunate cir
cumstances very much, but at length a
way of getting over the difficulty sug
gested itself to one of them, whose pet
name was “Bravo Bill."
“I say, S,am !” cried Bravo, “it’s a
little rough for old friends and neigh
bors to meet away out here, thousands
of miles from home, and then have to
part in this way.
“Got yer pistol with yer 7"
“You bet! Allers carry her."
“Good 1 That’s some comfort; ef
we can’t get across this yar stream to
shake hands, why thar’s nothin' to pre
vent us from takin’ a shot or two. —
Thar, now, jistone good old neighbor
ly home shot!”
The men rode aside, and bang! bang!
wen their pistols.
“Yer smashed the pommel of my
saddle,” cried Bravo.
“You done better, Bill; yon got into
the flesh of my left arm 'bout half an
ino V', ,
“Good morning to you, a safe jour
ney to yer and tell the boys at home
we met and had a good, sociable time
together*' v
“Thank yer, and the same to you,
but I’ll give them a good aooount of
Sam then turned to our friend and
with tears in his eyes, said: “It's a
great comfort to meet an old friend
like him. A kinder more accommoda
tin' geqtleoian never lived. I wouldn't
•missed seeing him for 850.”
Fritz's Troubles.
Frit* has had more trouble with his
neighbor*. This timo he determined
to appeal to the majesty of the law,and
accordingly consulted with a legal gen
tleman.
t if
‘How va dose tings 7" he said.—
‘Veil a vellar’s got a garden, under
odder vellar some chickens vat eat ’em
up. Don’t you got some law for dot?”
‘Some one’s chickens has been de-
? i '
stroying your garden ?’ asked the law
yer. ~v , /f .
‘Straw in uiy garden ! Neio ,it was
vegetables.’
‘And the chickens committed depre
idatipfis on them V , .
r ‘lsh dot so V asked Fritz in aslon*
ishment. t
‘And you want to sue for damages V
continued the lawyer.
‘Yaas. Golt for, damages, und der
cabbages, und lettuces.’
‘Did you notify him to keep his
chickens up V *
? ‘Yaas I did notify him,’
1 ‘j4nd what did ho say V . ~ , ,*
‘He notify me; to go to h —l, und
vipe mine chin off und pull down mine
ve .. . ~ ■■ M tv *r i
j ‘And he refused to comply with your
ijust demand V
: ’Hey?' . ? v .
•He allowed his chickens to run at
large-?’
‘Yaas Some vas large und some
. vas leedle vellars. but dey scratch mine
garden more as der seven year i,to!i.
‘Well, you want to sue him V
■ ‘Yaas, I vanttosue him to make
a blank fence.up sixdeeu veet his house
lall round, vot der blamed chickens
don t got ofer.'
The lawyer informed him he could
not compel him to build such a fence,
and Fritz left him in a rage, exclaims
* „
iner r
I ° m- , r •. >#
‘Ncit summer time I raise me chick
ens too, you bet, I raise fidin chick
ens, by Urn ! Vjpe vest down.’
When you speak evil of another,
you must bo prepared to t have oth
ers speak evil of you. There is an
eld Buddhist proverb which says,
“He who indulges in enmity is
like one who throws ashes to wind
ward, which come back to the same
place and cover him ail over.”
LIVER
' This-important organ weighs hut about threo
pounds, and aM tlie blood in a living person (about
Sthreti gallous'j has.through it at Ii once every,
half hour, 0 n. • . the bile; aa-l oiljer impurities
# strain el or titered from,it. Bile is the natural
purgative df lhtt bowels, and if the Liver becomes
torpid it la; not separated from the blood, but ear
_ fled thfoHfchllie veins to all parts of the system,
H ami in-trying to escape through the pores of th®
skin, cause* it to turn yellow or a dirty brown
T color. The stomaoh becomes diseased, and Dys
q|
. oiisness, Jaundice, Chiits, Alaianal Fevers, Piles,
u Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debility fol-
low. Murrell’s Hrpatimthe great v, "•tabl®
44 discovery for torpidity, causes •the Livqr tv throw
. - ofT from one to two ‘ounces of lilc,each ti ‘ the.
4j blood'passes through it, as long a there is an cx
. cens 'cl bile; and the effect of even a few doses
Q upon yellow compljycion or a brown dirty looking
skin, will 1 astonish 'all' jvltq. try it— thf-y being tha
first symptotrs to disappear, ’i he cure of all bili
ous diseases and Inver conSplnint is made certain
by taking Hbpa TCKn in accordance with directions.*
Hehdache is generally cured in twenty minutes,
and no disease from the Liver can exisf
if a fair'trial is given :
-SOLD AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
I>Y ALL DRUGGISTS'
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
iLUNGS
■J The fatality rtf ’ CojwfUhption or Throat and
Lung Diseases, which sweeps to the grave at least
onc-third of all death's victims, arises from th*
Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu
' pefies as the work of death goes on. gi 0,000 will
be paid if Opium or Morphine, or any preparation
o of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found
*M in the Globe Flower Cough Sguur, which ha*
jj cured people who arc living to-day with but one.
remaining lung. No greater wrong can be done
£ than to say. that Consumption is incurable. The
? Glouk Cough Sykut will cure it when
j all other means have failed. Also, Golds, Cough,
4 Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of the throat
and lungs. Read the testimonials of the Hon..
Alexander H. Stephens, Gov. Smith and Ex-Gov.
Drown of f-a., Hen. Geo. Peabody, as well as
j3 j those of other remarkably cures in our book—free
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■f i you wish to be cured ymi can be by taking the
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ji Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Throat,
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((Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
BLOOD
Grave roiyalffc® are made in tac treatment of ai
diseases* th.** •rfr-e from poison in the b:ood. Not
gjjone ifp.se of Syphilis, White Swelling,
: . jClocruhs Sores nnil Shin Disease, iu a thousand,
- JJ is treated without the use of Mercury in some form.
I Mercury rots the lxn.es, and the diseases it pro
3'<li:r< s arc worse than any other kind of blood oi,
-Uhin disev e C.i:\ Ixr.’ D;s.
2 GLA or O v is Ac billy medicine
allupon-whi ‘ Wu 1 vt*>• very ?r6sn Sy
-1 idiitfWv’i-.Tth' .' v .* : -cH>-sin .* itajrc*, can
-4! r ,soii.u>'v *b'rV . and th. t will cure Cancer,,
-f: x i.l l> paid by the propri* ;oi - if Mercury,
lor any ijtg'viii* iot purely vegetable and harm
• J k-.- s can i • found in it.
•a! Price by all Drtijgfists fli.c**., ,
* Glome Fthwr 1; *.h-S.ijijj- and Mekkfll s
s IlmTiMi i'K ilia Liver f**r s® by nil l‘iug
1 gists in s$ cent and/*.OO bottles. f
| A. 7. ME2SELL ft CO., Proprietors,
a f.t't'V- lr> -. r ' ,, V. • ,
THE GENUINE -5
DR. C. McLANE’S
Celebrated American
WORM SPECIFIC
OR
VERMIFUGE.
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.
THE countenance is pale and leaden
colored, with occasional flushes, or
a circumscribed spot on one or both
cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pu
pils dilate; an azure semicircle runs
along the lower eye-lid ; the nose is ir
ritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds
a swelling of the upper lip; occasional;
headache, witlHiumming or throbbing
of the ears; an unusual secretion of-*
saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath
yery foul, particularly in the morning;
appetite variable, sometimes voracious,
with a gnawing sensation of the stom
ach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting,
pains in the stomach; occasional,
nausea and vomiting; violent pains
throughout the abdomen; bowels ir
regular, at times costive; stools slimy; ;
not unfrequently tinged with blood;
•jelly swollen and hard; urine turbid;
respiration occasionally difficult, and,
accompanied by hiccough; cough'
sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy
and disturbed sleep, with grinding of
the teeth ; temper variable, but gener
ally irritable, &c.
Whenever the above symptoms
are found to exist,
DR. C. McLANE’S VERMLFUGE
will certainly effect a cure.
IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY
in any form ; it is an innocent prepara
tion,. not capable of doing the slightest
injury to the niost tender infant.
The genuine Dr. McLane’s Ver
mifuge bears the signatures of G. Me-
Lane, ,nd Fleming Bros, on the
wrapper. —— :0: —; - .
DR. C. Me LANE'S
LIVER PILLS
are not rCcemmen<lc<! as n remedy “ for all
the HU that flesh is heir to,” bin ia afiectioni
of the liver, and in all liilious Complaints,
Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of
that character, they stand without a rival.
AGUE ANI FEVER.
•.No bet ter cathartic can be used preparatory
to, or after taking Quinine.
Asa simple purgative they are unequaled.
T BEWARE OF IMITATION®.
The genuine are never sugkr coated.
Each box has a red wax seal on the lid with
the impression Dr. McLane’s Liver Pills.
Each wrapper :hears the signatures of C.
McLank and Fleming Bros.
Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. Mc-
Lane’s Liver Pillß. prepared t>v Fleming
Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being,
fujl of imitations of the name Me, Lnn,
apelled differently but same pronunciation.
NO. 34