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THE SUNNY SOUTH.
TALMAGE.
CORRUPTION nr OFFICE.
Should the Moral Character of Candi
dates for Office be Taken Into
Consideration by Voten?
Bbookltn, N. Y., November 2.— Among the
thronge in the Brooklyn tabernacle ere noticeable
many theological students who come from the
seminaries around New York, and also a large
number of clergymen of all denomiaations may
be seen in the audience. To get some idea of the
wide attention this pulpit is attraoting, even
across the water, i» need only be noticed that Mr.
Spurgeon, of England, writing to this oountry.
says: “Mr. Talmage's discourses lay hold of my
inmost soul. The Lord is with this mighty man
of valor. Bo may he ever be till the campaign
closes with victory! I am indeed glad of his
voioe. It cheers me intensely. He loves thegoa-
pel and believes in something which some preach
ers hardly do. There are those about who use
the old label*, but the articles ore not the same.
May the Lord win armies of souls to Jesus by
this man. 1 am astonished when God bl<
but somehow I should not be so much surprised
if he blessed this man.”
The opening hymn to day was:
“Am I a soldier of the cross,
A follower of the lamb.
And shall 1 fenr to own His canse
Or blush to speak His name ? "
Before the sermon to-day Dr. Talmage read
and expounded tne Ten Commandments. The
subject uf his discourse was: “Should the Moral
Character of Candidates for Office be taken into
Consideration by Voter* ? " Dr. Talmsge an
nounced his text as “E rod us, the Mb chapter
and the first seventeen vei see: namely, the Ten
Commandments.’’
Earthquake and lightning, said he, put their
forces togeiher to rock a mountain of Arabia
Femes, and the traveler to-day finds a heap of
broken porphyry at d greenstone r. cks, boulders
against boulders, the ruins of ttie first law li
brary, not written on parchment or papyrus, but
on a nattered slabs of granite. The corner stones
of alt morality, of all wise law, of all righteous
jurisprudence, of all Roo t government, are the
two tables of stone on which the T. n Command
ments w -re written. A I Roman law, all English
las, all French law, all American law worth any
thing, civil law. criminal law, common law, mar
tial law, and law of nations were ncktd ‘n the
cradle of the 2tlth chapter of Exodus. It would
be well if at tins time all the newspapers of the
land would at some nine pu'ili-h this chapter in
place of one of their editorials. Some of its
passages have evidently been forgotten. They are
all equally in force. You have no right to say
whicn is the mara important. They are the pil
lars upon which the temp e of society rests.
Strike down any one and you damage the whole
structure. I notice that men are v*ry apt to be
come incarnate Sinai’s and thunder especially
against the sin to which they are not especially
tempted. They take one gun out of the battery
of ten guns ana unlimber that and load that and
fire that.
To-dsy I shall in continuance of the senes of
sermons on national affairs, and within two days
of tne Presidential electio.-, try the four candi
dates for the chief magistracy. This dcalogu*
prohibits id >latry. image-making and profanity
and Sabbath desecrai ion and ir reverence of pa
rents snd murder and incontinence and theft and
lying and covetousness. That is the standard by
which all candidates, national. Stats and city
must be tried. We must not expect perfection.
If we don’t vote until we find the immscnla'e
nominee we would never vote at all. Ourselves
tar from perfect, we must not be censoriitus or
maledictory or hypocritical of others. The < hrist-
ly rule is as appropriate for November as for any
month of the year and for every fourth year for
the preceding three years: “Judge not that ye
be nut judged.’’
Neither am 1 to take that which opposing red-
hot parLisaoship shall say of a man as his tru»*
character! From nearly all the great cities of
this continent I receive daily or weekly papers,
sent me regulaily or m compliment, so I see both
sides of everything. It is interesting to see the
opposites of a man st t d. The one makes b m
an angel the other a demon. Then 1 split the
difference and find that he is ha'fwa; between.
There never line been a respectable or honest man
that ran for th« Presidency since the foundation
of this g iveri ment, if I am to believe the ohi
files of newspapers in museums. What a great
mercy that ihey weie not all hung before inaugu
ration dai! It a man should believe one-half lie
saw in the new-p .pern, h'» career would tie short
outsideof Bloomi' gilale xByluin. “That proc>s-
sion last week in N-w ¥oik was 5,00(1 ” says one
paper. * It was 17.u0n says another. _ The on tore
at the rink or the academy of music receive I a
very coo reception st-ys one paper. Theaudience
rose at him as one ina>’, audit wssonly after he
had lifted his hand to quiet the multitude that
the vocifera'ion subsided. One paper twis's a
letter o e way and another paper twisis itanother
way. You mu-t admit that at such a time it is
difficult to estimne which of the candidates
comes the nearer to keepi> K the ten command
ments. 1 charge you to caution and mercifulness
in your judgments.
Be careful also not to make the mistake which
many do make in thinking that, men in h'gh
posi'ions are to be judged by a different standaid
from that which th> y apply to ordinary mortals.
Men in high places or with lsrge means have no
more liberty given them in the interpretation of
the ten commandments than those in places in
conspicuous. Sinners on a large scale are no
more to be excused than sinners on a small sea e.
Do not call such illustrious defection eccen
tricity. or chop off auythng of the ten command
ments to snit especial cases. The right is ever
lastingly right, and the wrong is everlastingly
wrong.. If m»n differ from the decal,>goe of my
text, do not fix up the deealogue but fix them up.
Remember, also, that if a man breakes oue or
two of the ten oommaudmeuts, he will find it
easy to break them all. Sm of any kind weakens
the cot cieuce. and the conscience weakened, the
door is open for transgression of all sorts. If, for
instance, a man be profane, he is not trust
worthy; for if he maltreats the Almighty do you
think he would, if tempted, decline maltreating
his fellow? After a man has been guilty of mal
feasance in office, yon cannot trust his wnd in
a ything. A man that will steal will He ard vice
versa. If a man is ni,chaste, he will do any
orime under pioper provocation. In such un-
chastity he commits theft of the worst 6ort and
is gunty of covetousness of the basest style, aid
is chargeable with falsenood oeoanse he pre
tends to be decent when he is not, and be frac
tures the law aga nsi dishonoring parents, be
cause he disgraces their name, if they were good.
Be careful how you charge such a siu against
any man, whether candidate for office or nor, for
in so doing you charge that man wuh all vileness,
with all disgusting proper sines with sll rotten
ness. A lihe ti> e is a hieasi lower than the vermin
that crawls on a summer careers, and lower
than the swine, for the swine hxve no intelligence
to sin Hgainst. Be careful how you oba-ge such
dishonor on any inan, either in office or out of
office. Be so careful of it that a mathematical
demonstration would be doubtful compared to
it.
Moreover, if you know of any man who has
thus fallen i< quire diligently a d prayerfully if
he has not r-pent d Perhupx he may have been
Aye, this decalogue is my authority for saying
that the man who swears or breaks the Sabbath
is as reprehensible as any of the candidates now
nominated if they should be found guilty of the
offenses charged. What right have we to go
through the ten commandments and make onr
selection as to which we shall keep a, d which
we shall break? Better not experiment with the
divine amnmni'ion. Bet'er not handle the thun
derbolts of God to see which has the least b!*ze
and the least momentum. Better not noddle
with the guns and say this is a Dahlgren ai d thia
is a three-inch mortar aid that an Armstrong
a»d this a Krupp si d this a Whitworth and this
a Noiden eldt five-barreled gnu. this is a Gatling
ten-barreled gu--, this is a Martigny thirfy-seven-
barreled gun ai d this is a Parroit. They are all
of the same calibre and of the same make and
they si.oot from eterni'y to eternity Cicero eays
he saw the Iliad written on a nutshell, and I have
seen the t otd's p ayer on a five-rent piece, and
t he attempt is to write the decalogue so small
that it cannot be seen at all. I protest, against
the frequent, attempt to revise the decalogue
given from Mount Bn ai amid the blast of trum
pets nnd the cracking of the perphyry rocks and
the paroxysm of the mountains of Arabia Pe-
treea.
Bland npMr. Blaine and Mr. Cleveland and Mr.
8t. John and let us measure yon by the first sev
enteen verses of Exodus the 20th. Of coarse
• hey, like all the rest of us, will be font d inner-
f<ct by that rule. But the one who comes the
ne rest to the moral accuracy of the decalogue is
the one I shall vote for ard the one you vote for
if you regard G m mom than your party. Herod
otus te>ls us that Nitocris, the daughter of
Nebuchadrezzar, was bo fond of the besutiful
village of Ardericoa that she had th« river above
Babylon changed into a winding course, curving
this way at d that, so that sailing on it for three
days one must come three times in eight of (he
exquisite village. a*>d I do not care which way
you sail if you sail all the time in eight, of this
group of divine commands. A little angular
they may seem to you, but sailing thus you will
never get * ground and yon will never shipwreck.
1 he worst army on earth to tight is the ten
regiments that with sabres and bayonets of fire
march down the side of Mount Sinai. They al
ways get tbe victory, and go down their enemies
most. What was the matter with that young
man of whom 1 read, dying in his dissipation?
Nothii g. except that he was worsted of the deca-
logue. Xu his Iasi delirium he cried out, “how
f ir the dice! that is mine! No, all. all is go. e!
More wi e, more wine! Oh, how they rattle!
Mends, fiends assail me! 1 say yon cheat! The
cards are marked! Now the chains rattle! O,
dea h! O, death!’’ Ladies and gentlemen, don’t
attempt at any time to revise and remodel the
ten commandments.
Ai d 1 charge you to use your influence in soci
ety and at the po Is for such as come the nearest
to that God-lifted stai dard. At family prayeiB
next Tuesday mori ing read the 2Uth chapter of
Exodus. I he moral or immoral character of
your i ext Piesident will add seventy-tove per
cei t. or subtract seveul, -hve per cent from ilie
moral welfsre of this nation. Yon and 1 cannot
afford t> have a bad Preaid'nt. '1 he young men
of this nation cannot xffoid it, and the homes of
America cannot affo d it. The commeicial, the
agricultural, the literary, the laboring tne reii-
T ious inter sts of our country cannot afford it.
f you cannot find a candidate who in your esti
mate comes within reasonable distance of oliey-
Jfiver a bit of dafference whither Maine or Cleveland be elected if tie com yit potatoes to ate.
LITERARY NOTES.
Thomas Hughes is said to be at work on a bi
ography of Peter Coo|ier.
The material for a life of the late Senator Hill,
of Georgia, is now in the hands of his son.
Victor Hugo has returned to Paris with his
grandchildren, frein Switzerland, where he
spent a couple of mouths.
Mrs. Oliphant's new serial story, the first in
stallment of which will ;q] ear in the January
Atlantic, is entitled “A Countiy Gentleman.”
The Messers. Appleton are to publish Mr. Ju
lian Hawthorne’s new novel, “Noble Blood.”
which appeared as a serial in the New Yolk
ing the d *chI< gne, stay at home at d w e not st I Tribune.
all. VMionihe election timra ex me in Sodom
A GEORGIAN GUILLOTINED.
MRS. DANIIL WEBSTER.
Reminiscences of the Wife of the States*
map—Slanders Refuted by Alex
ander Stephens.
Philadelphia Times.
When the statue of Daniel Webster was un
veiled in Central Park a few years ago there was
present at the ceremony—her last appearance in
public—a tall, stately old lady seated in a car
riage. Very few persons knew that this was the
widow of the Illustrious statesman, or they, per
haps, would have been more curious to see the
occupant of the vehicle, which did not attract
the attention of any one outside the circle of
gazing speculators whose Lusiness it was to
stare at everybody and everything. The nit mo-
ry of great men is soon effaced and, though his
tory In alter years may set forth their praises or
magnify their shortcomings, they soon die out of
mind, even lu their owu circle of friends and ac
quaintances. It is so long now since Daniel
Webster died, and liis widow led such a quiet
lffe and passed away so peacefully a little while
ago that we have thought perhaps a short
sketch from personal Intercourse with the relict
of the great man may not he uninteresting.
Mrs. Webster, whose maiden name was Caro
line l.e-ltoy, belonged to one ol the old New
York families, who still hold the Hi st place
among the Republican nobility ol that city, and
was in many lespects a reniaikable woman, al
though like the wives ol many men ol giealal-
tiiiuiueiils she was never noted lor any literary
talents. She was tall and line loo. mg, very
erect in figure and had a complexion which a
Philadelphia belle miglit be proud ol. She was
very particular about her diess and uislised
anything not in the prevailing style, not wishiug
to adhere to by-gone fashions, as so many old
ladies do, though her inherent good taste was
always seen in a desire to have suitable toilets
on every occasion.
Calling on her one morning soon after the in
auguration of the statue we tound her seated in
her accustomed place near the window, just
inside the white luce curtains, wheie she could
look out oil the passers-by in the busy avenue on
they are not without interest as the record oPa
life which has passed away and cannot be en
tirely forgotten, as connected with one of our
greatest and most gifted statesmen. Good were
it for our country if the wives of our prominent
all felt as stainless a reputation and exercised
as kindly an influence in society as Mrs. Daniel
Webster.
THE FAIR EURASIAN AGAIN,
“A Daniel Come to Judgment! Tea, a
Daniel!”
Editors Sunny South: The “resum* ol
the opus” appearing in tbe last issue of ths
Sunny South recalls tbe words of an old fogy,
named Thomas Carlyle. “Critics are those wfa*
have themselves failed in literature,” said be;
and the world best knows whether he was guilty
of many mistakes. Be that a<* it may, we pro
mise to icview briefly the “Review ol the ‘ Fair
Eurasian,’ ” and may be we may hang the fault
finding Ericsson upon his own gallows.
Plunging directly into the chaos of far-fetched
objections, we propose to subject them to the
crucible of logical reason and comparison with
the text.
As a critic, he Is presumed to know what he
proposes to ci itieise, and ignorance of the sub
ject matter is no less criminal than malicious
comment.
Firstly—He discovers or imagines “a proud
hidalgo of Spain raising coff ee in Java.” The
nearest and only intimation of a “hidalgo,” etc.,
in the text, is where it reads: “She was th*
daughter of Don Seva, • • * • 0 f a
long line of Castillian ancestry.” This was the
goblin that terrified him. The “Spanish Gran
dee” originates in his fertile imagination; and at
the very outset of his intelligent criticism he has
evinced an utter ignorance of the story. A bril
liant critic! “a Daniel! yea, a Daniel!'
Were his criticism less varied, lie might be ex
cused upon tlie plea uf ignorance; but since he
demands “justice,” it is well that, like Sliylock
of old, lie receives but jusiice. His next caustic
criticism is upon the woman, who, standing up
on a house-top, can see two objects. The text
reads: “Gazing upon her, as she upon the sea,
the fruitful fields, the mounts, the Celebes and
fair Sumatra.” This sentence can be justly
criticised for the intermixture of figures arid
facts; hut when he says, “The fair Eurasian,
looking witli one eye at the shores of Celebes,
with the other looks at the shores of Sumatra,”
— . . . - . , lie grossly misrepresents the author and violates
which she resided. By her side was a stand ; the text. The meaning is simple, as she is pre-
witli a large-sized photograph ul the statue sent sunied to have remained for some appreciable
her by the park commissioners. 11ns she was time upon the roof, and, while there, to have had
very much gratified to have i eeeiveo and told us control of the muscles of her neck and eyes,
she intended to keep it always in remembrance strange and unnatural indeed would sbe have
of the occasion. Her mcnioiy had been lulling been had she gazed intently upon one and only
her for years. She was llnown lioiu a carnage one object. There was mi shadow of excuse for
and received a^blow^on ^tne head wlnch^was this criticism, for no mind, unless it be that of a
’ " ' so obfuscated as to niisappre-
ai d there were four candidates for mayor, and
Lot did not believe in any of them, he did not
register at all. Politics in Babylon were in such
deepenite state when Daniel s'ay. d home all elec
tion day ai d prayed with his face towards Jerusa
lem. But we are uut shut up to such au exigency,
I am glad to sa>.
That the moral character of rulers affects the
rul. d I prove from all history. Wicked King
Manaseeh lowered the moral tone of all the king
dom of Judah and established idolatry. Good
King Josiah lifted the whole nation by his excel
lent example. What helps to make the E glish
nation h gh r in the preeent reign than in all its
predecessors? The fact that at the head of it is
Mr. Marion Crawford’s new novel, “Au Amcr
ican Politician,” is now passing through the
press in London. The story deals with modern
society and publics.
The Harpers will publish soon a “Centennial
Biography” ol Sir Moses Montefiore, the author
being Mr. Lucien Wolf. The English publisher
of the work is John Murray.
A Strange and Improbable Story Abont
a Georgia Beauty.
N. Y. Truth.
A wonderful and startling story comes to us
from Japan vi;
ful women America nas evei piuuuccu mis ucc. lo remember distinctly mug passed | The self-constituted critic proceeds again to
beheaded there through a special edict of the events, while the incidents ol the present weie ! blunder. He asserts that a Sultan must b*
mikado secured through the prayers of his forgotten. She always preserved the tael and either a “ruler at Constantinople,” or, “by cour-
miKuuo, setureu uiiuufeu me pi.iy * manners of earlier days, never allowing her vis- tesy the title mav be applied to the rulers of
prime minister. The woman was the countess j tors t„ see she did not leeogntze them, auu it Zanzibar, etc.’ - W. H. De Puy in liis encycio-
Pourtales, liee Mrs. John Beecher, of New York, was astonishing to remark lmw well she cauid j aedia, defines “Sultan” as an “Arabic ward.
The decapitation was caused llirougb tbe Japan- carry an a conversation and welcome a ltiend, meaning mighty man and * * a title uf courtesy
; even though she could not in the least recall who to people of high rank.” Like those that I have
•I P u is One of the most beauli- thought to have been tlie first weakening of her i critic, could be so
ins. one ol me most uctuti Like all ulu persons, she ap- Uend the language,
neriea has ever produced has been pealed to remember distinctly long passed The self-constitut
i tliey were at tbe lime.
Sue was Mr. Webster’s second wife, and they
ese prime minister’s love jealousy and revenge.
The story of the countess Pourtales was as lol
lows: After the war there came an aristocratic n ® ve *' 1111,1 a,, y children, though lie was a widower
with two sous and a dauglilei wlieu he imnlied
mother and her most beautiful daughter to New Miss p e Roy. His only grandchild married a
York from Georgia. Tlie mother and daughter nephew of Mrs. Webster, named bdgar, was
Yorkers amoiiir early left a widow, and is now the wile ol Col. J.
mentioned, so are all of his criticisms, ground
less ; and of tlie entire article, might he said, in
that forcible vernacular, which he ascribes to
"tlie denizens of tlie boundless prairie,” “Hi*
gun went off balf-coeked.”
The bitterness of the “resume of the opun”
recalls the words of Pope-
brought letters to many New Yorkers, among --— .... w vervimuini i*i r „
whom were Tburlow Weed, Hugh J. Hastings, j Bonapiirie'aiKl he. children, and when they went tS'critics uext^and^Voved^iWdss
A reprint of the first edition of “Robinson Cm- Thomas Murphy, Henry Clews and others. The i abroad showed much interest in the letters they 1 ur , a “ t Jj nucs u c ’ -ulu Pmvea^piatn aw
soe” (1719) is announced in England for the liol- daughter was so ravisliingly beautiful that she se . ,1 1 t llel > She always spoke ot her stepchildren
idav trade It will have uotes and 100 illustra- , , , wuh affection, but seldom or nevet alluded to
tions by Gordon Browne. made a sensation wherever sbe went. She had their after career. They appeared to be always
many suitors. Tlie suitor most favored was tlie ] children in her recollection. In lurgelling tne
wealthy John Beecher, and many New Yorkers
Funk & Wagnalls, of New York, have in press
Ihr^Hovere.Ir'n ‘of Eoreoe , ?he"TtemDt at “The Sabbath for Man” by Rev. Wilber F. ao.,.. x>™i, a.iu ...a.
^!nd£hzin* hwfame umsmtamloimESlfnfi- ' c,af,8 > il sllld y of Sal.bath observance in all its remember tlieir happy marriage,
are. The political power of Talieiiuid bn oded relations, based chiefly on a symposium of cora During Mrs. Beecher’s early married life no
into life the mckstors of the last m ety i ^ paCmm U 1,11 ual * ous :lu ‘ 1Ue -
The vice-presidency of dishoneet Aaron Harr. no, mu.iuons.
w»s so halefui thst nearly all the import Dt let- | Lord Tennyson has given Mr. Sands an oppor
tunity of taking a cast of liis bead. This, we
believe, will be photographed, and serves as a
frontispiece to tlie last volume of tbe new edi
tion of bis poems. Lord
will be entitled “Sir Timm.
birirn uionTbid n"u’-u,ot , for e .erimr‘ 1 “ co,ltaiu an , ««•* with Mm. Beecher; liow : she shot at him as j There was a great deal of talk about Mr. Web
intimation that it is not for acting. j h e passed up Ins sister s steps on h ilth avenue, ! s t,. r |,eing attentive to tlie wile of a well known
:tiul now. IPI' lllislcilifl HFIiM1“ilFil fnun liar A. _ t» .1.1 f..il I.. ..1....1 *1...
tors in the posboffice in his term were in cipher,
beCHUse the United States mails could not be
•rusted. March out, ye cour* circles of L"Uis
XV. ai d Henry VIII., followed by ihe d> bench d
nations that y<>u led into sin. Tbe maiaiia of
swamps ris 8 from the low H' ds to the height",
but moral malaria settles from the heiah's to the
plains. The higher you elevate au nnriRhteous
man the worse his power for evil. The greatest
of fa inlists tells us that the pigeons werein mor
al dread of a kite bu' kept h do * from it day
lapse of years she frequently made strange con
tusion in mixing up tlie past and present gen
erations in families. Mrs. Webster had a deli
cate tact and refinement iu always avoiding all
professional beauty received so much attention
as she. Accomplished, graceful, vivacious, and Her wont condemnation of anyone was: “They
with a color more trausceudently beautiful than an , „„ t the kind of people for me, hut they are
the loveliest rose, the young wife was always tlie ve) v .mod iu many ways.’ .She alway s abhorred
'illume of me new eui ce "L el ol | a “ , ad,,uliu ? «roup. Her toilet m the scal.ifal and never listened to it under any eir-
Tenntw«f.ew»fpm l ,il, k a,,d Jerome club house was always the cm nstafiees. There was an anecdote told of her
& ZK ut «very lady who saw i Every New during her life in Washington which is very
homas K. l.eiket, a Yorker remembers Mr. Lloyd I’hceuix s Hirtar eh-i rod eristic
p ipvf u'lil <*<inf:iin an ...iti, x i.... iLwu.1. i T...... ... t.i. . ... Ui'JJfJUtnaui.. . . __ ....
Mr. George W. Cable has finished his “Creoles and how, aliei hei husband sepal aled from her, senator. It could not fail to have reached the
-■ ■ h lessrs. Cliailes sAg'uer’a »hf Bed to Euro] e in Fursuu of Mr. I’hoemx. ears of Mrs. We
The newspapers were lull ol it at llie time.
Pine
bed for hie regular fare e pigeoi. a dny. O. e of
• hem. while waiting for his (ate, arid: “It terv.d
us ngur. ’
But suppose you i ut in the Dresiden ial chair
vice of any sor. jou simply say to the y ui g men
of America: “Don't jou see? I he I• n commai d-
mentsdo not mean as much hh they used lo.
Honesty is not the best policy. Immorality pays.
Huzzah or (he powers of darkness in ti e ascen
dancy !” What we need moi-t is to publish a cam
paign document and scatter it through all the
S alee, a well printed copy of the So ante deca
logue. It w*a a terrible waste when the old
Alexandrian library was destroyed anu the boots
were used as fuel to heat t.HMl baths for the ciri-
zeiia of Alexandria. That waa a very expenaive
heat. But without, any harm to the decalogue it
self. it might "0 made io heat 40,IX 0hatha tor the
moral purification of the Ameucan people.
The nation need a tonic, a powerful tonic, a
correct ve. a mighty corrective, and Mosee in the
text with st ady hand, notwithstanding the jar
ring of ihe mountains and the blazing of ihe air
and ihe awful orchestra of the tempest, p urs out
the ten drape, no muie and no lees, which this
American nation needs immediately to take for
its moral convale-cence. But 1 am not the man
to leave you in the discouragement that might
come from the reading of the ten command
ments, because we have all offended and we have
all done wr ng and been wrong. There is a -
other mountain in sight, nnd when Sinai thunders
the other mountain auewers in thunder, and if
__ Webster, but she took not (lie
1,1 slightest notice and treated the lady in question
“** politeness and nueuiioii,
iking her lo drivcv-iu fact,
by utterly Ignoring it. .She
.. , , _ . ..... fitted for the position ol wile
, tuous dinners, and was the sensation of tlie gay of tlie Secretary of State, and was everthehns-
Advantage has been taken of the exj iration metropolis. One ot her fust suitors was Count citable, dignified and graceful hostess, extend-
....i.,','i.r111 .... of H... ■......... ..f 1 Fouitales, formerly connected with the French j lll{ u, e same courtesy to all, whether they occu-
legalion at Washington, w hose first wile was pied prominent positions or were poor and ou
tlieriieaiit ilul daughter ol Ben Holliday. known. She often said: “The wife ol a public
Mrs. Beecher and the count were soon mar- man like Mr. Webster lias to meet all sorts of
ned. Her transcendent beauty was tlie craze people and to be agreeable to all. 1 have seen
ol Fans, and wliile tlie countess was tlie talk of men come to our receptions in all sorts of dress,
of copyright on many of lfie poems of Longfel-
. Whittier mid Bryant to issue lliem umiorm
low
with what is known iii tlie trade as “Red Line'
editions of tlie English I oels. and at the same
low rates. Houghton. Mifflin & Co., Longfellow
and Whittier's authorized publishers, will pro
tect their interests by also issuing cheap edi
tions of Hie writings of the poets, which, though
incomplete, w ill contain suite ol the poems ou
which copyright still obtains.
ABSENT-MINDED WOMEN.
Strange Stories of Women whose Minds
were Preoccupied.
“But speaking of ab» ei.t-mim.ed people,” said
a West Sider, “women beat the nation at that.
There is my wife one of the most careful and
moat level-head*d women in the world. But one
night last winter we went to a large parly, and we
both, for special reasons, were m< re than anxious
to appear well. My wife was greatly concerned
about me, as I am the absent-minded member of
the family, ai d look* d me over criticuiy and
carefully after 1 left the coat-room and before we
went down stairs. She was herself, all right of
on tlie Sunday sticceding
liked to hear her oll-
wtiieli she was never
as nothing dramatic,
tun ed pale in wbai I thought waa a fan tn g fit.
1 hunitd her from ihe room and was about to
turn the house upside down in search of n aiora-
the lightning of the one writee doom, the light- . . ,, , . ...
ning of the other writee mercy. Only in one way ; course and was superbly dressed. We weutdown
can the guns of ibe deoab-gueheepiked, and that' in high feaiher and had passed through the per
is by th« spikes uf the cross; only one rock that lore and Pad spent a delightful half hour on
can s'ep th*'boulders of Sinai from quaking, and parade duty as it were, when my wife suddenly
that is the Rock of Ages.
Higner than Sinai is Calvary. I know that one
peak of Sinai. aecordi> g to tbe English survey
exp*ditlo I. is 7,«JU feel' igh. and another peak
fi.UO 11 eet high, and another 9.0"0, and that Mount
Calvary, acceding to modern exp’orers is only a
slight rising km 11 outside the wail of Jerusalem.
But in moral power ii overtops and ovm shadows
all the mountains of the htmisphere, and • he on was too much for her.”
Hioinlayalia and Mount Blancs and Mount Wash- A SoUihsiti*r who had listen'd to this said,
ingtona and Sitiais are hillocks con.paied with it. 1 a,ter indulge g in a ci-ntei.itd Intie chuckle:—
As 'ortrese sometimes silences fortress, Moultriee j “My wife ttlis almost as go* da story as that on
dismant ing Sunders, so 1 s*t egan at Sinai the herse.f. Sbe is, as everybody who knows her at
mountain ot tlie law, the mightier mountain of : all, very paiticu'ar abort her diets, and she
the cro-s. ‘ The soul that aim eth it. shall d.e, ’; grieves over a spot on my coat or a lack oi polish
booms tl e one till iheearibja a under the canon- (l n u.y shoes with a griet riigt will not be cow-
ade. “Save them from going downto the pit, for fortcd. She went down the street shopping on
1 have found a ransom,’' peals forth the other, ‘ one occasion this spnng, at d in trying o.. bon-
and ea'th and heaven ai d hell tremble under Ihe nets became a lii He (list ur bid over the nut 'hat
reverberation. Moses, wr.o commands the oue,
surrenders to Jesus, who commands tlie other.
“Once by the law our hopes were slain.
But now in Christ they live again.”
Aristotle aaya that once when Mount Etna
erupted and torrents of sc>n» came npou the she exp>*as*d it, I.
villages at the base, the flames parted ao that! streets with notbing
the city she sailed with her husband for japan, sometimes with their hats on. They never no
where llie eouut joined the trench legation. Ill noyed me. although it used to vex my husband,
Japan, as Hie wile of an attache of tlie legation, occasionally.”
the Countess Fourtales was introduced to the Her memory in some cases would go back to
highest personages in diplomatic circles. For a her school days. The first interview witli her
tune she led court circles, hut soon she tired of illustrious husband she recall' d with greatviv-
lier' husband, as she had tired ut Mr. Beecher, illness, and would relate with real enjoyment
aiid began tin ting with a E rencli officer. j ler making tea for him on the "
The count now claimed that they were not le- tlieir first meeting. We like
I gaily man led, and sailed for France, abandon- told stories of her early life, w
ling the countess in Japan, ihe next steamer tired of repeating. There was "uuuuguiaiuauc,
| brought tlie couutess to l aris, where she com- nothing tragic, in her history. She was simply
menced a most profligate life. About three the wife of one whose eloquence shook our Seu-
, mouths after her advent m Furls she met a ate house. She filled her position well, and as
French culouel, who fell in love with her. They such we honored and respected her as a trieud
were not married, but he returned to Japan with and are pleased to thus recount her many kindly
her. Arriving as man and wife, she again met traits. When she told her numerous and simple
her old inends 1,1 diplomatic circles. Her pro- experiences of life we always were interested in
penstty to flirt again manifested itself, and her listening to tlie things that pleased her most—
third husband, s**-called, abandoned her. He ] 10 w Mr. Webster used to call her tlie “Lady
said the I nine Minister of Japan had been too Caroline,” of tlieir evening walks, and, indeed,
intimate with liis wue. many of her reminiscences were very euterlain-
Tliis was no uoubt true, for as soon as tbe ing were they less frequently or more coherently
Colonel was gone the Countess became tlie mis- carried out.
tress ui the prime minister, one of the wealthiest Mrs. Webster always read tie newsraier,
and most influential men in Japan. Here tbe and though it is doubtful if she ever fully real-
Couutels had every luxury but liberty. The jzed that she was almost alone iu uer generation
prune nuuister was so jealous of her that he some names took her back over a lapse of years
wouldnol let her taikto any gentlemen. Such and site recalled persons vividly. At the time
a life did not suit the Countess, so one day she Caleb Cushing was appointed Minister to Spain
nm away and became tlie mistress of another she remarked: "He was a very agreeable uiau;
Japanese official. Ilie affair so exasperated tlie I knew idm well.” She also added: “1 wonder
prune iiiuusier that he went to the Mikado and why he never marriedb.” The old lady was al-
"i"' >w bw ui«oc win uicminiprevailed upon linn to issue an especial edict ways a great advocate of matrimony. We once
tivee, when she ciuiched my si. ev- and port'd ! condemning tlie Countess to be decapitated. Her asked her what she thought of Henry Clay,
to her feet. She hxd before lesvu g hum- dre.wu j fourth husband, so called, was imprisoned. The “Oil,” she replied, “Mr. Clay was tlie thinnest
over her shoes a pair < t my socks and l.sd f. rgui- ! news lias now come to New York that the edict man I ever saw. He was a great man and a
ten Uuemi-ve ihetu. T'.e tho'tsht that shelad was carried out, and tlie most beautiful Georgia magnificent speaker—not equal to my husband,
bee i p trading before H 1 0 p*ople with those socks j refugee who dazzled New Yol k and tbe lovely of course.”
Countess who bewildered Paris was actually One day in reading Sir H. Holland’s letter we
decapitated. Japan nobles ot high rank con- saw an account of a dinner given to Daniel
sider it a heinous offense tor a woman who has Webster and wife wiien in England. We men-
snuled upon lliem to ever afterward smile upon tinned this to Mrs. Webster, and she was very
another. Ibis strange custom cost Countess anxious to see Hie book. A chord in her memory
Font tales her life. was touched and long donnaut memories seeni-
The Columbia Register says: The above evi- ed to awake. She related various little inei-
dently refers lo a somewhat noted and very dents of her travels abroad, but, though they
handsome Woman, a native and former resident were then so feted and made much of, there was
ot Columbia—Miss Mary Boozer. She was tlie no assumption of dignity on her part; she mere-
re) tiled daughter of Peter Buiton, her mother’s ly took tlie attention paid her as her due, being
second husband, but adopted by Dr. Boozer, tlie tlie wile of a great man, the Secretary of Stale
tliiid spouse. The liist husband was wedded on of a great nation. She mentioned driving out in
his deathbed iu Philadelphia: Ilie second died a barouche with Hie Queen, and driving with her
iu a verv singular manner m Columbia; the third merely as she would had she done the same with
suicided in Newberiy’ and the lourtli was aban- an acquaintance in her own rank of life. She
doiied by Hie muclily-murried and really beauli- smilingly said: “Queen Victoria is a very plain-
“Maria,” he said to his wife the other evening
after supper, “I think I’ll put on that light over
coat to go down town.”
“What, that bottle green?”
“Yes, dear.”
“Why, l sold that to a peddler a whole month
ago.”
“Sold it! Sold that bottle-green overcoat to a
peddler!”
“Yes, darling, for that pair of vases.”
“Then we are ruined! in one of the jiockets
of that coat was $10,000—all the casli I had saved
in the last six mouths, on a salary of 41& per
week. No new sealskin sacque—no horse—no
new house. We are ruined—ruined!”
Consumption Cured.
An old phjsiamn, retired from practice,
having had placed in hia hands by an E at
India missionary the formula of a simple
vegetable remedy for the speedy and per
manent core of Consnmption, Bronchitis,
Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and Lung
Affections, also a positive and radioal cure
for Nervons Debility and all Nervous C un-
plainis, after having tested its wonderful
oara'ive powers in thousands of oases, has
felt it his duty to make it known to his Buf
fering fellows. Actuated by this motive and
a de*i r e to relieve human Buffering, l will
send free of charge to all who desire it, this
recipe, iu GermaD, French, or English,with
full directions for preparing and using.
Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, na
ming this paper, W. A Noyes, 149 Power’s
Block, Rochester, N. Y.
none of the i r* shapes suit* d t er tace. Bi.e
therefore picked up l.tr lareeui. waited out of
the si ore, called on a v* rj srinocral c acquain
tance and then exme h* me. A g'tuioe in u.e hall
glass showed ibat she hxd no boio ei ou. (he
had taken it off io try on ihe new ones, ai d, as
she expi*es*d i', had been pxredn g xi*» g ihe
g oil l er h»xd bu> a'smail veil
"V ■ 1 •’ II1/ U A oil' C81 m I lo UJflX lllvv tlvoll " i 1 1 OK * *w civ • asws ■rest’i ' • ■ • : . . , . , ( ■ , . . a
his knees before G d crying for mercy, they made a bine of safety for those who went to ' across her fore hexd. Bhe didnt scold me about
i a man at thirty-live be reprahenaib e rescae their aged parents from the dextiuctiou of the spots on my coat for a week. '
down on
Although , — _
tor ea'th sin, there is not more than one coa> ce I the overflowing moui tain. Bo this damn g, Vol
in a thousand if he ever reforms, yet the case
you are investigating may be that glorious one.
To meet any special case enlarge your forgiv-
ness bat don’t ahaveoff ■ he Seventh 4'omn ai d-
ment. Let that stand as the everlasting defense
of society. Do not change Fairhank’a scale to
■ait what you are going to weigh with it. Do
you join in the cry that I have seen in some
newspapers that there is uo each thing as parity?
Then you are a foul mouthed scandalizer of the
human race loo are you re* If a leper. Make
room for thst leper. Whe« a man utters such a
sentiment as that either with tongue or pen, 1
know that he is a walking L*z*reth, and know
that he io a recking nicer and that he is flt for no
■oeieiv be tar than that of devils damned. Th-re
is each a thing as porit*, a> d ten thooxand times
ten thousand are its disciples, who ore the up
holders **f family and church and nation.
Yea. if i nai breaks one commandment it
makes it ea*y for hi mb* break them all. Doyoa
notice that when one uf thuee Wall street de
frauders or one of those bank embezzlers is
‘ ' ‘‘ ~ “ ' althaths
went to i “Storm Warrior*,
in fl—! **-
and herds and droves. Admit one ai d you
cuiic Sinai or the text parts its fury to lei pare
into eternity safely those whom Christ hi a come
to resrne fiom the red ruin that bound* d them
on both a aee. As 1 stand this moment half way
between tbe mountain of the 2ah uf Exodus and
The Origin of Famous Songs*
From the Alban; JournaL
A celebrated composer once lost his way in a
ftlfrtffS
fill woman, whose remains now repose in a pau- looking person, but an excellent woman and
pet’s grave in New Yorx. When Slierman evac- very sensible. I have seldom met an American
uated this city iu DS06, among the hundreds who lady at a dinner parly dressed as plainly and
followed ids ai my were Mis. F'easter and her with us little taste.”
frail but lovely daughter Mary, or Marie, as she The Hon. Alexander Stephens once said of
was pleased lo ealllierself. A brief history of Daniel Webster: "1 think Webster was tlie
tlie exploits of this young woman in New York worst slandered man I ever saw. It is the gen-
and oilier cities—for she traveled extensively— eral impression iu the countiy to-day that Web-
was published a few years ago, while she was ster was a great drunkard. You hear itsiioken
living as the wife of Count Pourtales in China, of even now whenever his name is mentioned,
th** mountain of the I9th of John, my terror sub- , deuse forest, when he found himself on a path | JJj*? but it is an outrageous slander. I will tell you
sidM in a anosmaturul culm, because the uproar , . . . , . ... ''that has beeu given to the public as to her what I know myself. For six years while we
of the Sinaitic p ak is moderating and sabeidii.g fading to what setmed a huge edifice in the whereabouts and adventures since that time. were both in Congress 1 lived next door toliiin.
and aaTeting'ui'tU it cornea toeo deep a silence distance. Meeting a ] erson i n his path, he in-
thxt I can hear the other mountain speak. Yes. quired his way, but Uie man made uo response.
Icanh ant whisper ss it sofuy says: “Ihe blood. Meeting another, tlie same pi oceeduig took
the blood the blood clesnseih fn.m all sin ” place, and so with six nlliera that he ...ct He
place, and so with six oilieis that lie met.
I I at upiarned mountain of the text, writers was at a loss to account tor this until be came to
II ue, has several wadya or water-**mre**. Ale- tlie building, where be read Ilie sign “Asylum
* a a • • t- a ban* « ban fflt* tits M lit *•<! ** Tllltt OY ll*l llUl/i it fill
tell UH, nag BOTVIIU WWiyn wr wuvrtxwna, Bio- J—Y, “V v "»r, x’"'' "*5“/
yatt and Ajelah emptying into Teiran, but they for deal Deal Mutes.” This ex)1ained it all,
are not navigable. You exnuot pot a boat of and he at once sat down and wrote, “We never
■ speak as we pass by.”
iz Abt once traveled upon a Western raB-
. where he was allowed “five minutes ior
... , . - refreshments,” in which lo eat a $1.50 dinner.
off and oat and from under the shadows into tne observing the furious gul] s made by bis lellow-
sunshine and to the lend of peace. travellers to gel Uieir money’s woitli in tl.e liin-
. . Oh, if you ooaid see that imat t»f rescae| aiming lied time, he spontaneously composed “When
brought to jaxtioeu turns out in the trial that hs you would feel as Johu Gilmore, in his b**ok, the swallows homeward fly. ,r
had loose companions and gambled tml went to i “Storm Wsrriotu," soys a ship's crew felt wbeo | ... betrothed
where Jie ••tight na? mo. go in IWk- «>«,TSS«SSrttrttodKtt uSStS
will, Kuock sand *.ff the ooxet or n g anu. A. a v. ey Dlal , w i,*|c rai vine ll.c tii.u.- <**> sic
Overbeard in the Parlor.
[New York Star.]
His bouse was as familiar to me as my own gar
den. 1 was in there a great deal and lie was as
often in mine, and in all the time of my acquain
tance with him 1 never saw Webster when he
mi.it nq vc Bum, ret tt.u ...mme >. ..ih was in tlie least affected by liquor or under the
I must have some rest this Bummer, said influence of it in any way. I have diued with
him at his bouse and mine, 1 have met him
at dinners and affairs outside, aud I never
saw him In the least inebriated. I never
heard of bis being intoxicated but twice,
and on one of those occasions—a dinner—he
the clock; “1 am really run down.
“I think 1 need a. country seat,” said the easy
chair, leaning on his elbow.
"I’m getting played out,” said tbe piano; “a
little flesh aii would be a good thing for me.”
fVMb^ir 1 sMbe sprints.’” *° U ’ * UlU ® ““d* » speech that was grandly eloquent. Then,
™ Saws with the sofa and lounge ^,^{1,^ ““ about hls
in the wiMids,” said the foot-stool.
is even a worse slander
other. When we were neighbors he
S?JSS1 fJom f TL &, k t stniefedl^^iziug^a^'jlui^sVeen.eart^^Hiat reflect,” said the minor. “The, have ^‘^Wehrter
. N l^L b ; »way »“m«of Ho-ir P'‘ m , , c sent tlie gobbler fliree times into tl.e Ian of the some tidy-locking lasses ikeie, have they not?" *
shumd ioU^Hie^countrv^orsomeVaves^ 1 *’ 1 was married to his second wife (a fine woman),
b “rnuntrv fare is a U deal fou” plain “said the mnd ’ wUh ,,ie ex *' e l l > lu111,1 Toombs and Calbouu,
sideboard^ ^-NoUidv about wWa ’knlfhbvol 1 never s3W " ,al1 80 devoted lo ills wife as Web-
staeuiara. reouoay about wno s knobby or ,, ter wa8 _ xiiey were always together. It he
— . - , - _ 1 eempaign ! away
orators b .mbuding' he snffenng candidates in | st last they
their spe cties, think nothing of riding from I through the
plaoe to pi* e all Sabbath day, or sit. as cried. “Can — - - - - . .
they probably are doing now, in a political h.sd- G d it is!” Aida jiektsr, speaking of thai boat
quarters calculating ihe eteciioa probabilities, afterward*, said: “Oh. my laris, what a beauty
, .... mid: “Oh. my laris, what a beauty Diver aud Ilie Bird.'
During tbe entire week they have been hnrli.g she looked! What a beeuty she looked rouiii.g Beethoven was <
the Eighth comma dment »t Mr. Blxiue and the over those seeer My G* d take ns all off the shower by a friend
Seventh oommaudmeiitat Mr. Cl .veland and the miserable a reek of our sin into the beautiful the elements. “1
Ninth commandment at Mr. St. J. hn. But what
are they don g with th< Ninth commandment:
“Remember the Sabbath d*y to keep it holy?"
They *re broking iu 1* not the Fourth com
mandment as good ns the 8 -vstith or Kiahth or
Ninth? Ad the w*ek denimneirg candid ass for
recaps of the gospel!
anything, and went borne and composed “The
Lover aud Hie Bird.”
Beethoven was once met during a heavy
lower by a friend who was unprotected from
-19 elements. “Lend me your umbrella,”
sighed the latter. The gieat master at once
i>»ni"isi>d tl.e soiur “Watt till the clouds roll
composed the song,
by.”
A composer of eminence being told thst bis
Snooett of the Georgia State Fair. .
. *».a w.a...*iv* rafinnsiMi of Hia ! n ' )8lc was somewhat Hasliy, and that he had
« — .w. , A member of tbf EiwuIItb CoBunitlw oi I no bp|t(*r lurii i>\tt u iipw Jp;if * nt duce wiote
misbehavior while some of there campaign «ra- State Agricultural 8octe}y;«My» the receipt ran .‘When the leaves begin lo turn."
tore profane the n*me of God, loreu g it irrev- to Hie flue figure of $11,000, witli exj enses, in- .
erently from «heir lips. And what are they d.r- eluding all premiums, about $6,000, in round **1® heart to a
log with the Thin) commandment: “Thou shaft numliers, leaving Ihe net surplus ot $5,000 In tbe whist, who levoked when dtavonds
not take the name of th* Lord thy God iu vain, treasury of tlie society, with which they can and were lea.
forth* Lord will not h-Id him guillere that probably will ran a fair next year. This tea flue 8ullivan, after looking all over tbe house for a
taketh i*ie name in vain?" Is nut th* Third result and reflects credit on President Living- piece of twine to tie a bundle with, sat down tn
commandmeut as important re th* uthsr ssvsn? stun and his corps of helpers. • a furious passion and evolved “Tlie lost cold.’
Thousand* Die Annually
From lack of attention to home surroundings'
Fiom caielcss 1 ersonal habits. „ ...
By not securing pure air, pure water and pore getlier at such entertainments.
soil.
By living in damn rooms.
By inational eating.
By ioolisb drinking.
By absorbing ioul air.
By shutting out the sunlight.
By neglecting cleanliness.
By not taking proper exercise.
By not (-hanging damp for dry clothes.
By not wearing apparel suited to the ~
By hasty eating.
By too much use of the frying-pan in cooking.
tiniore, but he always took Mrs. Webster with
him. At Uie receptions in Die city they always
were together, and whenever you saw Webster
you saw Mrs. Webster on Ids arm. It was dif
ferent then from now. It was not then consid
ered wrong for a man and his wife to keep lo-
“* “*■ Now, it a man
siieaks to his wife at any reception or affair of
the kind, lie is thought to be unfit (or good
society. He must beau around some oUier wo
man and leave his wife to !>e looked after by
some other man. Webster loved his wife and
was kind and faithful to her, and she was one of
the most elegant, refined ladles 1 have had the
fortune to know.
Mrs. Webster died at New Rochelle, N. Y.,
surrounded by friends and those who were en
deared to her by every De. Simple as these
reminiscences may appear to some, we trust
Hofttotter's stom
ach Bitter* is a fine
blood depurent, a
rational cathartic,
anda superb an'i-
bilions "pacific It
rallies the failing
energies of tbe de
bilitated — checks
S remature decay.
'ever and ague,
bilious remittent,
riyspepeiaand bow
el complaints are
among the evils
which it entirely
removes. In trop
ical countries, in
which the liver and
bowels are organs
m >*t unfavorably
aff -cted by _ the
combined influ
ence of climate, diet, and water, it ix a very nec
essary safegunni. For sale by ail Druggists and
Dealers generally.
Everybody Wants
Their Old Tidurcs Copied and Enlarged
A GOOD C1IAKCE FOR AGENTS!
0 O you desire an agency r deed lor terms (•
sgen's. II you cannot take an agency, bnt
have pictures of yonr own you wish copied, and
there are no agents ot onis in your vicinhy, write
for retail prices, snd tend picture direct to ua
'either by mail or express), and they will receive
inr best attention. * ddress SOUTHERN COPY
ING COMPANY. No a. Marietta Street Atlanta,
'loured R3-
Notire to Debtors and Creditors.
All creditor* of the estate of Josiah J. Wil
lard. late of Fol’on county, deceased, are hereby
■unified to rei der in tlieir demai de to the under
signed ncrording to ixw. end all persons indebted
to said estate are required to make immediate
payment. August 9th, 1884.
ABA 6. CANDLER,
Administrator Estate J. J. Willard.
468 law 6w
8r*
I CURE FITS
Wh'”i | * i tr cm hI «i<» u- • HiMAn merely to »iop IMti
-lAHinl thou J tvei hriiit return again, 1 mean • radical cure,
litre nt til i the <flsrci*e of WWT*nWWT PAtUNO
I’KVFfvj A liie-lons: etuilr. Iwurmnt tnrrmtfAj to euro
e worst et!M>$. B -. itnNO ut hern hove ft$Ue4 It* tiu re—on fttr
t now r»c ivlnv »<* , * r *»- trurtl— ua«l a
•e Bo»? ie **f my InfaliiMe retnetlr. 6he Ixpreia and F*mI
‘ Ktsrmi ititchhiir for « crtfll. uritl 1 will car# too.
' “ - r York.
I nr. II. u. HOOT. IKS p—rl t
431—AGt-eow
SAVED HER LIFE.
Fren IttMCem
In August, 1881, it w*s discovered that my JJ*
wife Wxt in the last staves of CO' sumption. Bne
was roughing ii ceessntly and at limes woo'd
discha'ge quantities of pus from her lunge, could
not "i*ep or retain anything on her stum* eh, ai d
wa thought it only a qua»tio" of luma when life
would be oompslh-d 'o give way to the fell rie-
atroyer. After all olber remedies hsd failed, we
got Brewer’a Lung Rerierey aid b*gsn H id very
smalt dosea, sa she wre very wa*-h. She soon rs-
gxn io improve; ooniii'O* ri the remeoy ai d was
restored to life and health, and la to-day better
than she hre ever been before. 1 regard her te^
(ontfioa as pMrlj a wiweto. wbJCfi li MB-
Brewer’s Lurg Restorer is a purely vegetable
preparation, contains no opium, morphine, bro
mide or a> y poisonous substance. Bend for cir
cular of long 1 st <>f »« dsiful cores.
I..M.a HimiiLlSlX Maced Gg.