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About Weekly Gwinnett herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1871-1885 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1879)
The „„**£» *»**■» Is „ SD KVKIiV WEDNESDAY BY '' & BOWLES. .jlgCJlfl*l'fcON RATES : 12 nioa., $1 50 in advance. c inns .76 in advance. ISJSOB 8 :; .50 in advance. forl ner rates charged if not jp advance- Tlie Two Mysteries, Wc knnw not what it K dear, This sleep ßo deep »nd still, The folded hands the Hwlul.vdm ’fhe cheek so pale utei still, i M.ltds that will not hit »}}W'n, 'l'lmiivli we may cull an 1 call, rhesawnge white soliiudu of peace iW settles over all. „ know not what it means, dear, ‘ This desolate heart pain— This dread to take our daily way. i jiil walk in it apain , We kB . )W not to what other sphere The loved who leave ns go, \„ f why we're left lo wonder still, \„f why we do not know. w this «e know ; our loved and dead P H they should come this duy, should come and ask us, “what is life 1 Sot one of us could say. Life is a mystery as deep As ever death can be ; Yet. oli. how sweet it m to us, This life we live and see. Then might they say—these vat ished ours — And blessed is the thought, *9o death is sweet to us, beloved I Though we may tell you naught. We may not tell it to the quick— This mystery of death— Ye may not tell us. if ye would, The mystery of breath.” The child who enters life comes not With knowledge or intent, go those who enter death must go " As little children sent. I Nothing is kno nil , bnt I believe That tjod is overhead, _ And as life is to-the living, So death is to the dead. 'blown auay. There were tlireo of them—Kit ty, Mary and littlo Tommy—the children of the station-master at Black River Junction, on the great Southwestern Railroad. The sta tion stood alone on the open prai rie, mileß and miles from any where in particular. Black river flowed through the mountains, a hundred miles away to the north, and on clear days the snowy raoun tains could be seen glimmering on the grassy horizon. The line lead ing to the Black River met the Southwestern here, and thus the place was called Black River Juno tion. The station master and his wife and three children lived in the little depot quite happily, but there was not another family within ten miles in any direction. At times the children thought it rather lonely. There was nothing in particular to be done, except to watch the trains that stopped at the junction several times a day. Once in a while a freight car would be left on the side track, and the children soon found that an empty freight car makes a cap ital play house. They could keep house iu tho corners and make vis its, or sii by the open door and make believe they were having a rule. One morning they wero awak ened by a curious humming sound fit of doors, and they all scram hied up and looked out of the win dow. How the wind did blow ! It whistled and roared round tho house and played on tho telegraph wires upon the roof as upon a huge harp. As the wires wero fastened to the roof tho house be came a great music box, with tho children inside. After breakfast the morning trains arrivod, but tho wind was so high that the passeugerß were glad to hurry from one train to another as quick v fts possible. Then the trains went away, and the great wind harp on the roof sang louder than ever. The station master said it blew H' a hi, and that the children must in tho house, lest they be jaown away into the prairie and bo bst. The station mastor’s wifo Ba ‘T it was a pity the children Jj'iwt stay in tho house all day.— luero was an empty freight car 0I ! the side track ; perhaps they nu o r ht play in that. The station waster thought this a good idea, ai "l ho took Kitty by the hand and tommy in his arms, while Mary hold of his coat, and they all out to tho empty car. Whew! io\v it did blow! They certainly 'ought they would be lifted up 2 le "hud and blown quite into 10 sky. Tho empty car was ,'l Wrn an d snug, and, onco inside, / were quite out of the wav of hie wind. Mary thought the rear end '' iuld be a good place to keep ‘<‘uso. but Tommy preferred tho o >er < nd, so they agreed to keep i°use at both ends of the empty Car ' This was a nice plan, for it " ave them a chance to visit each ’ “'r, and the open part by the u or made a promenade to walk Weekly -’Gwinnett Herald. TYLER m PKKPLKo. ( KdITOK AND PItOPXIKTOR j on. Louder and louder roared tho pale. Safe and snug in the ear, they went on with their play and thought nothing of the weather outside. Suddenly the car seemed to shake, and they stopped in their housekeeping and ran to the door to see what had happened “Why, it's moving! Somebody's pushing it,' said Mary. “They are taking us on tho freight train. Come, wo must pot out.' “I didn't hear the whistle,” said Tommy. “I guess something is pushing the car." she girls leaned out of the door to see what had happend. Why, there was tho platform ! What was the matter with tho station ? It was moving away. No, it was tho ear. It had left the siding and had rolled out upon the main line and was moving faster and faster along the road. “Oh, we must get out! They are taking ns away.’’ “No, no,” said Kitty. “Wo must stay here till the brakeman comes round. I didn’t hear them when they took us on tho train.” “There isn’t any train," said Tommy, looking up and down the line. “Ob, it’n the wind ' It’s blowing tho car away. We must put on tho brakes and stop it." This was a good plan, but how were they to carry it out ? Tin brake wheoi was on the top of th<, car, and they wero insido. Faster and faster rolled tho car. It be gan to rattle and roar as it drag god along by a swift engine. In a moment Tommy began to cry. Mary tried to look brave, and Kit ty stared fast at tho level prairie flying past. It was of no use.— They all broke down together and had a hearty cry alone in the emp ty car as it rolled on and on before the gale. The station master’s wife rolled up her sleeves to put the house in order while the children were safe ly out of the way. The station master, feeling sure the children were safe in the freight car, sat in his office nearly all morning. At last the beds were made, the din ner put in the fire, and the moth er wondered how the girls were getting on in their play house on the track. She threw a shawl over head and went out on the plat form. At once the wind blew the shawl over her face, and she could not s«e exactly where 3he stood.— Turning her back ty the wind she began to call the children. How loudly the wind roared through the telegraph wires ! Perhaps they could not hoar in ail the din Maybe they wore inside the car out of hearing She walked on to ward the siding Not a thing to be seen! She wondered if there had not been a mistake. Perhaps the car was on the other side track 1 ? No. the rails were unoccu pied as far as she could seo in ev cry dire<?tioii. What did it moan? What had happened ? She stag gored back into the station and startled her husband with a cry of despair. “The car ! The children The station master ran out upon tho platform and looked up and down the line. Not a car in sight It had been blown away before the terrible wind, and was perhaps at this instant rolling onward with the precious load to destruction. What wo fid happen to it ? Would it moot a train or run into a sta tion ? Would the children try to get out, or would they stay iu the car till it was wrecked f lie sprang to the door of the de pot to telegraph the terrible Levs down the line, but just. as he open ed the door ho saw. a faint white cloud on tno western horizon. It was a train. Help was coming.— At the same instant hi 3 wife an peared with new grief and terror in her eyes. “1 cannot get a call in either di rection. The wires are blown down.’’ This only added to the danger, for there was now no means of sending word in advance of a l un away car. It must go on to its fate without help or warning. “Help is coming, mother. — llore’s a train bound east. " Nearer and nearer came the S train, >nd the iVher and mother I s f.»od watching it as it crept along •■ f. jjs. It seemed as if it would i lever come. At last it reached. | the platform and pi ved to bu. a | vm-osenger tram hound up t ! Black river road and not intend. ?. Ito < t o in tho direction in which tt 3 l earhad been blown away. The ' in.-tout it steppe I Uio station w s Lawrenceville, Ga., Wednesday, August 6, 1879. ter ran to the engineer and told his terrible story. The mother, with quicker wit, found tho con ductor, and demanded that the engine be taken, off and sent after the children. The conductor was a man of regular habits, and such a bold re quest struck him as something ex truordinary. Take the engine loiT and leave the train and passengers waiting at this lonely station? 'I he idea W£tß preposterous ! Some of the passengers gathered near and asked what was tho matter. Three children lost; blown away in an empty car. Some one said, “yes go at once. Wo can wait till the engine returns." Tlio conductor sai l he must telegraph for instructions ; but some one said, “The wires are blown down,” and the people only cried out the more, “Let the engine go !" so tho mother ran to the tender and be gan to pull out tho pin, that tho engine might start. “Hold on, inarm," said a brake man. “I’ll cast her off You jump aboard if you want to go too. Fire up, Jack, and make her hunt It was all done in a moment,and away flow the engine, leaving the conductor and the station master staring in surprise at this singii lar proceeding. The station mas ter did not feel very happy. Ho had half intended to go with the engine, but it would never do to leave his post. “Fire steady, Jack,” said tho en gineer to the fireman. “It’s no use to get excited, for wore in for a long race." “It’s enough to make a fellow excited to seo that woman,” said the fireman. The engineer turned round, and there by his side stood the moth er, her eyes straining ahead down the line in search of the missing ones. “Oh, sir! open the throttle wide. Don’t try to saye coal at such a time as this.” “We must keep cool, marm, and go steady, or we shall run out of coal and water and come to a standstill on the line.” The woman said not a word,but nodded mournfully and leaned against tho side of the cab for support, and the fireman gave her his seat, where she could look out ahead over the line. How the en gine shook and roared ! The little finger of the steam gauge trem bled and rose higher and higher as the steam pressure increased over the raging fire The engine seemed to be eating up the track in front, and behind the rails spun out like shining ribbons in the ami. The station and train had already sunk down out of eight, tv ed the grassy horizon on either side seamed to fly away in a kind of gigantic waltz The wind died away to a dead calm, and in a few moments a little breeze sprang up and blew in at ilie front windows. “We are beating the wind," §aid the engineer. “If we can keep up this pace we shall soon overtake them." “How long have they been gone 1" shouted the fireman, above the roar of the engine. “I don’t know,” screamed tho woman, without taking her eyes from tho horizon where the rails met the sky. “It may have been two hours or more. They were playing in the empty car. “How did pile get out of the si ding (He meant the car.) “It’s one of the now switches,” paid the engineer. “Cars can ea ailv jump out upon the mainline." Ah ! something ahead. Was it the runaway car ? No, the next station. What a terrible pace ! Twenty miles already ! “Oil, don’t stop!” cried the woman, as she saw the engineer put his hand on the throttle valve. “I must, inarm. Wo are get ting out of water, and perhaps we can learn something of the ruua way.” The sudden arrival of a solitary engine, containing two men and a woman, startled tho station mas ter, and he came out to see what it meant. He seemed to guess at the truth, for ho said t “After the runaway car ?” “Yes, yes. There wero throe children inside.” -Oh, marm, I’m sorry for ye. It went past here, going twenty a - ilea tn hour It came down .v. lo ail the way, but the up ,_ _j 0 beg in if about two miles out. • -.-as i,'.:-:ide when it-passed, and didn’t, soo it till it had gone past the door." H , w long it took to fill the ten p, r ' The engine stood hot and smokiffg by the water tank, and the water came out in a slender stream, while the poor mother stood looking on, tearful aud im patient. “Good bye ! I'll put up the pipe. - Heaven help ye !- the up grade The rest was lost ,j*>r the en gine shot ahead on and on out over the open prairie The water tank seemed to sink down into the earth, and the thiniug rails stretched longer and longer out behind. Ah ! What was th»t ? A cloud of steam on tho horizon, far ahead. The engineer took out ms time book and studied it carefully. “Freight No (1, bound west, stopping on the two mile siding.” How swiftly Freight No. (i rose above tho grass and grew big along the way ! Listen ! A whis tle. The engineer whistled in re ply and shutoff steam. Their en gine quickly slowed down and they could see men leauing out from the other engine as if to speak to them. “It’s ten minutes hack. Run ning slow on main lino—road— clear—” “Thank Heaven !" said the wo man. The engineer said nothing, but at that instant the engine gave a great leap and shot ahead, at tho rate of fifty miles an hour, up the easy grade. How long the minutes seemed, and yet each meant almost a mile ! All ! A speck—a black dot on the horizon 1 The car ? Yes. It was the car. It grew bigger anil bigger. Now they could seo it plainly. But the children ! Where wero they ? Tho fireman sprang out through the forward window and ran along tho engino and down upon the cow catcher. The monster began to its ter riblepace, and in a moinent it struck the car with a gentle jar and stopped. The fireman thought himself a lively man, bnt the woman was be fore him and sprang up into the car. There they lay, safe and sound, in the corner of the car—Mary and Tommy fast asleep and Kitty watching over them. “Oh ! mother ! 1 knew you would come. Mary and Tommy cried themselves to sleep, and I— I” Nobody could say a word. The fireman tried to rub his eyes, and only marked his face with black streaks. The mother laughed and cried all at once. The engineer picked up the little ones and qui etlv took them into the cab of the engine. “There, now, my hearties, you have had a risky ride ; but it's all right. Como! We’re more than thirty miles from home, and it won’t do to be late for dinner. Fire up. Jack.” The dwelling of the Wines fam ily at Marinette, Wis., got afire in the night, and the lower part was all in flames before the three chil dren had escaped from an upper room. The oldest, a boy, jumped from a window into a bed quilt held underneath. A younger lad, only 8 years old, was about to fol low, but the mother saw that a three year old girl was not at the window. “Run back and get sis,” she cried. The boy returned to his room, but the fire cut him off, and his lifeless body was found with the little one’s clasped in his arras. ISy Universal Accord,; Ayer’s Cathartic Fills are the best of all purgatives for family use. They are the product of long, la borious and successful chemical investigation, and their extensive use, by physicians in their proc tice, ami by all civilized nations, proves them the best aud most effectual purgative Fills that medical science can devise. Be ing purely vegetable no harm can arise from their use. In intrinsic value aud curative powers no oth er Pills cun be compared with them, and every person, knowing their virtues will oruploy them when needed. They keep the sys tom in perfect order, and main tain in healthy action the whole machinery of life. Mild, search ing and effectual, they are special ly adapted io the needs of tho di gestive apparatus, derangements of which they prevent and cure, if timely taken. They are the best aud safest physic to employ for children and weakened constitu tions, whero a mild, but effectual cathartic is required. For sale by ail dealers. Tli<> DotnoraliKitiir 10Hoots of Mormoiiism. Testimony as to the terribly do moralizing effbet Mormonism lias on the young of both sexes, is giv on by both the Tribune and the Herald, of Salt Lake City. The language of the one is quoted with a hearty endorsement by the oth or. They say: For some years past tho imm ber of partially uncarod for chi) dren has increased rapidly These have made the streets their home, and contracted all tho bad habits that a street live imparts and sos tors. ►Scores of children may bo seen on our streets nightly drink ing. smoking, chewing, as full of oaths as a Fid staff This class is agod nil the way from seven to fifteen years, and they are tiie ele ments of which the full fledged hoodlum will some day bo tho ri pened fruit—that class of para sites, and bullies, and thieves, and highwaymen, and cutthroats that now infests ban Francisco. There is a greater number above tho age of fifteen years that have con tracted the habits spoken of, and they are much more dangerous be cause much older. Many of these boys are without parents, but tho groat majority, though claiming parentage, aiV‘ almost, worse off than if they had none, for no care is exercised over them, and they are allowed .to roam the streets at all hours, do as they please and contract vices and habits that will make them a burden to themselves and society. These ovils are not confined to boys alone. On any due evening of girls, some of thorn just in their teens, others verging upon womanhood, parade tho streets, losing that in na,i,e modesty which becomes them more than anything elso in the world, and gradually and not very slowly growing into the beings that fill houses of ill fame, and, as ter being on<te lost themselves, work ruin on others. Could any sane person attribute the many cases of miscegenation tiiat have recently taken place in this city, and a great many more, that it were better had taken place, to anything but a deficient education and a morbid and distorted appe tite ? It is almost an everlasting shame to see the number of white girds that seem to prefer the soci ety of colored men to that of their own hue. Recalled to Life. —The recall of a girl to life by a sister’s shriek is one of tho local topics of the Journal, of Evansville, Ind. The young lady had been quite ill for weeks, and vvas thought to be dy ing of consumption. Khe had grown so weak and emaciated that her strength was no more than a child’s. One afternoon, wli ilo ly ing upon her couch, her sister came in from a walk and sat by the bedside. A conversation be gan, and the invalid began to speak Aa she uttered the first word she felt a bewildering weak ness, and a sinking flutter -of her breath. Her eyes became fixed, the lower jaw dropped asm death, and the body became motionless, while consciousness disappeared. The sister leaped from her seat and ran to the door shrieking to her mother that her sister was dead. The sound of the shriek penetrated through tho veil of death, and roused the sinking sac uities. The biood, which had con gestodtho lungs, was sent back by the nervous shock, and gathering her strength by a strong effort of will, the invalid opened her eyes and awoke to life ugqin. breathless and amazed at the thrilling pern she had escaped. A school boy being asked by his teacher how r he should flog him, replied : “If you please, sir, on the Italian system of penman ship, the heavy strokes upward, and the downward ones light. Taken in the Act Sister Jones called on Elder Smith a few evenings since. Be ing a next door neighbor, she en t jred his study unannounced, and was greatly shocked at seeing him taking a drink from a suspicions looking buttle. He noticed her look of inquiry, anil said : “inis. Sister Jones, isTabler s Fortaiine, or Vegetable Liver Fowdor, the only remedy I huvo ever found for the many troubles arising from a ditto t; It red Liver. I can recoin men lit ” Price 50 cents i'oi sale bv A. J. Vaughan, Lawrence ville, Ga., and G. W. Gain, Y'ci ow River, Ga. sept 11 Jy Vol. IX.-No. 20- Outlaws In Kentucky A special dispatch to the Oonri er Journal from Mt. Vonmn, Ky, dated’ July 24th, says : Our neighboring town of Lon don Laurel county. lms been con aiderably excited for Ihe hat lew days over the depredations of a band of robbers. Last Monday evening the house of Win Jackson situated about one half mile from town and in plain view, was set on lire by the thieves, who expected that, the oilizey* would rush pell mell to the tlroT and in their ab sence tin town conld ho rilled. The citizens were suspicions, how ever, and only a few of (hem went to the live. On the same day some of the robbers went to the house of Wiley Watkins, who lives about six miles from London, and robbed him of about SBOO in cash. An attempt was made to roll Ro land Hodge, who lives in the im mediate vicinity of tho town, on Tuesday night, but he succeeded in frustrating tho thieves, and car ried his money into town, where ho has kept it since. The people are very much excited, as tho rob bers are fifteen or twenty in mun her, and it is feared an ('(Tort, will be made to burn and sack the town. A strong guard is kept, ev ery night. Three ot the guard gave chase to a suspicions charac ter Tuesday evening Ho was on horseback and was ordered to halt, several times, but he refused to do so. The guard tired at him and he returned the lire. He fi nully left hits horse and escaped to the woods, it is thought he was wounded. The Rev. Mr. Weirich was preaching a weird sermon on the devil, in the Methodist Church at Ephrata, Pa., and a wicked young man was strnck with the notion that tho congregation had been wrought up to just tho condition of miud for being easily terrified. He slipped out, gathered some equally wicked companions, and unfolded his plan, which was sud deuly to introduce a long-horned cow into the church. Thoy brought a black one from a field near by, twisted her tail to make her give an unearthly bellow, and thrust her through the door into the cen tre aisle. The light was dim, the preacher had excited his hearers by descriptions of eternal torture, the horns and black face of the bellowing cow were not recog nized for what they really were, and the impression created was that the enraged devil had dashed in for vengeanco, Several women fainted, and the rest screamed, but the clergyman was not deeciv od. “It :s only a cow," he instant !y exclaimed. The jokers have been arrested A bride of considerable beauty went to Indianapolis on the lion eyiuoon tour. Her husband was manifestly proud of her good looks. While thoy were goiug about the city she was struck in the face by a falling sign board and her nose was broken. The attending surgeon said she was disfigured for life “lust my luck,” tho husband exclaimed ; “poverty always goes to ruin in my hands .’’ I n (Tm ii Blepredatiou.s. The fair reader shudders when she thinks ol the set tier's wife watching, from the of her rude hut, the retreating form of her husband going out to las dm ly labor going out perhaps to re turn not again, for before night fall a savage hand may have laid him low among the prairie grass et Or it may bo a child, a bright ej ed daughter, is . snatched away m an unguarded moment, to grace the next war dance. When wo read the heart rending details of ithtse savage depredations, we are apt to bliuue the government tol uol taking more strict precautions to insure the settler s protection, lint we daily read of the depreda tions of tlmt arch fiend, consump lion, with scarcely a thought of the terrible inroads it is making in hu man life. Tens of thousands of homes are annual y desolated by consumption to one by Indian outrage. Like the Indian, con sumption oftenest comes stealthi ly, and no danger is apprehended iuuil the victim suddenly linds himself hopelessly ensnared, ami death’s fatal arrow' ends the scene, lor. iherco’s Golden Medical Dis eovery, a power!ul Uiierative, ir blood purifier, and tonic, has re stored tii jus mds of consumptives who had tried every o lur remedy recommended to them, without ob taming any ve.ief, and are willing to toi, iiy to ,l;. i'cmediai powers. - A.S— ‘ A n A (lvert in ini/ Died iit in , The !' ETi A lift is nneqnaled ha reason of its fj/rnsitc tuTvlatv '< and rivuttkuhly low inte:-. Easiness mm should fi member this BLANKS!BLANKS!BLANKS 1 (AM. KlfcDH NliATl.r rUI..TKU) FOR SALE A T T H E HEiunn job opbuch Little .Jolmiijs Fables* There was a dog and there wn£ a cat. and there wos and ox. The dog said to the ox : "That's a mighty long tail you got there, mister, with a nice ton seJ to the end, lmt you can’t wag gle it wen you meet your master." Then the cat said to the ox too : “No, indeed, sndyoti can t blow it up like a Moon wen you pet mad.” Then the lanim sod ; “You ain’t able to twinkle it. ei ther, wen you think of something funny," Then the nox lie thot awhile, and bime by be spoke up »nd red his own self : “1 pladc hookey wen I was a boy so much that I didn’t learn them vain accomplishments, that’s a fuck, but I got a tolabty good biznexs edeoashnn, and I gneso mebbo yon feVers wude h ive to Come to me for to liellup you out if you had to fill an order for ox tale supe." Staubk.l) roR Cam.urn a Man a “Rkh."- -Patrick Reilly, a painter, fatally stubbed Richard Coyle, al so a painter, in Birmingham, Conn., Monday afternoon. The men had been drinking, and Coyle called Reilly a “Rob,” the latter having served in the Confederate army Coyle also struck Reilly, who is a cripple. Reilly secured a knife after both had been turn ed from the saloon where the die pule had occurred, and the quar rel ended on the street by Reilly stabbing Coyle He was locked up, but had thrown the knife away and claimed to be innocent. Four Days at Ska without Fooi> or Watkb. —The Norwegian barf Rosenbury, which arrived at Now York from Dublin late Tuesday night, brought over three French fishermen w_o were picked up in mid ocean in an open boat, where they had been for four days with out food or water. When they were first taken on board and fed, tears of gratitude rolled down their cheeks. One of them was a man of forty-eight years, and the other two were yonng men of twenty eight and twenty-two years respectively. They have proba bly long since been given up for lost by their shipmates. The chaplain of the National House went so far as to as’/ tho blessing of the Lord upon “all measures which have been widely and prudently adopted.” There may have been some measures of that description passed during the extra session, but the Cincimuv. Gazetto docs not just now recall them. . — *»-»«►•»■ ■ Titles and degrees conferred by country colleges are about as use ful to a man as a pair of side whis kers that do not indicate the qua! ity of the brain. *'**'* *■ The Arkansas Traveler has in. vented a bottle with a cork at. both ends Now if somebody wilh invent a drunk that will bo pleas ant at both, ends, Arkansas will! probably be happy, I>o\ve believe in Witchcraft? 1 * I take the position that we do not, in its broad sense, saida gen tinman of years and experience, ‘and yet we find many of the pres ent day carrying a Buckeye in their pocket through a kind of su perstion, when thoy might be re lifivud by a few applications of Tedder’s Buckeye i’ilo Ointnont- ’ This Ointment is made front the Ibvkcve. and is recommended for nothing else but Biles. Try it. It will cm e you. Brice 50 cents a bottle. For sale by A. J. Vaughan. Lawreneeville. (ieo , and G. W Cain, Yellow River Ga. sept 11 -ly , . apvebtisiso norw>e». We know of nothing 90 well calculated to put the reading public out of humor an to begin a very interesting account of noma (scientific discovery, replete with interest, and just as the reader’s mind is thoroughly imbued with the subject, and a gigantic effort being made to grasp it iu all ita bearings, uway goes the author in praise of nonie patent medicine or new fangled hair-renewer; for instance, Carbomkk, which, by the wuy, is an article of genuine merit, and has really done wonders iu the hair-producing way, as hundreds of cer tificates from well-known citr/ens amply testify. It is cleanly, and so penetrating that the disease is reached, aud a radical liange for the better takes plaee almost .111 mediately _ It contains nothing injuri ous . is, in fact, a natural hair-restorer, made from petroleum, thoroughly deodor i*ed and delightfully perfumed." 7t is sold by all dealers in drugs aud medicines, <u one dollar per bottle.