Cuthbert weekly appeal. (Cuthbert, Ga.) 18??-????, June 09, 1870, Image 1

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BY SAWTELL & JONES. Cl,t Culfibctl cVpptnl. T«r»s t>f Subscription: On* Yka*. ...,.$J | Six Months. .. ..$1 25 XXVMKXBI.T IN ADVANCE. Httia of Advartising: (ten lines or less.) fl Oft for the ftnß%el M o nt« so- each subsequent insertion. Contract advertising as follows : Space. 3 Months 6 Months U Mo,uhß 1 Ohlh ran...... $25 00 sls ftu *75 00 I'Ooliimn 400) 75 0d I K) 00 •Ohe Column... 50 n0 90 0v 15) 00 Obituaries. $1 00 per square. LEGAL ADVERTISING. 'OntiivMuna. —Citations for letters of ad ministration, guanWenship. Ac.. $4 00 -Application for letters of dismission from administration 5 00 Application tor letters of dismission from guardianship,.... 4 Oo Application for leave to sell Land 4 00 Notice to Debtors and Creditors, 4 00 •, Administrator’s Sales 4 • 0 Sheriff's--Each levy 4 9<t •* Mortgage fl fa sales 6 00 .Sales ot Land by Administrators. Executors, orWnaidiaris, are required by law to be held on dhifirst Tuesday in the month, between the hoars oft% in the forenoon, and three in the afte.r aoo% at the Court House in the county in which the property is situated. Terms of sale must be ■state!. Notice of these sales n» <st be given in a public gaeette 40 4»yv previous to the 4gy af sale. 'Ntftlfce for the sale of personal property must be given in like m inner. 10 days previous to sale , Notice to debtors and creditors of an estate "must be published 40 days. Notice that application will be made to the *Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must be published for ore month. Citations for letters of Administration, Guard ianship, Ac., must be published 30days—for dis cission from A fmiuistration, three months ; for ■dismission from G.iardiartShip, lb (laya Rules for fb'‘eclosure of Mortgagee must be Tmhllshiid monthly tor four months-for estab isning lost papers, for the full space ot three months—for compelling titles from Executors Or Administrators, where hon'd has been given by ■the deceased, the fult space of three month*. Public itio is will always lie continued acenVfi *ing to these, the legal requirements, unless oih "erWiae'Wd fed. Going Home. Mourners, weeping o’er the slumohr Os a man with silver haifs. Did you see bis spirit going Up the angels’ starry stairs 7 • Did you hear the angels calling “ Weary pilgrim, cease to roam!” Weep not o’er his peaceful alumb-r, He is only going home. Mother,dVfeHding oe’r the cradle, Inhere your little one has laid, 'bid you know the transform ttion That the sleep of death has nthde 7 ‘Think ! his feet had only started In the'path beset by sin. When the gates ot heaven opened, And they let your darling in. Wife, upon the grasses kneeling, Where they hid away Irom sight ’ He who won your love, oh, Udl tah, Did you see no glea u of light T Be is waiting o’er the river. On the Sunset Feriy’s shore, *Y !l the pate and silent hoattn'fOl Comes to row your spirit o’er. ■Children, longing for the sunshine Os a loving mother’s smile, She has only gone before'ydh, ’’k'arry yet a little while. Soon for you the Sunset Gateway Shall, at day’s decline, unclose. And you’ll puss beyond its portals To a long nnS sweet repone. Maiden, is your pathway lone’y? Do yon miss a pleasant voice I "bo you listen fur a footstep That could m ike your heart rejoice T ! the path of peace unending Is before your loved one’s feet, ■And he’ll gladly bid you welcome When you rfittfb the goldeu street. 'When we see our loved ones dying. How our bitter teardrops fall 1 And we fain would keep them with us, Though we hear the angels cats. Yes, we kiss their lips ht'pifti ig, While the angels whisper “ Corne l” Ahd fonret. in hitman sorrow. That they're only going home 1 , Fosrrioyi n Slkkpin's —lt in better to on the right side, for then tin* stomach in very much in the -pocxrrtfn of « battle turned upside dbwii, and the cdnfrht* of it are aided in passing out by gravitation. If one gfiiis'tb-si cep fitt the 'tfitffc, The operation of em.ityiug the T-tdrhjtth of its contents in more like drawing h backet of water tr«>fh a Wll. After going to let the body take it* own position. If you sleep on your back, especially soon after a hearty meal, the ireight of the digestive ofgans ; and that «»f the fool resting on the great vein of the body near the back bone compresses it, anu arrests the fl >w ■of the blood more or less. If the jWrtreSt is partial, the sleep is disturbed, and there are Unpleasant dreams. If the meal has been recent and hearty, the ar tost is more decided; and the various sensations—such as fating over a preci pice, or the pursuit of wild beast, or oth er impending danger, and the dfcSpeVate ■effort to get rid of it—arouses us, and send on the stagnating blood ; and we wake in a fright, or trembling, or in per spiration, or leeling exliau*ti n, accord ing to the degree of stagnation, and the length of the efforts made to overcome the danger. But when we are una'tle to escape the danger—when we do fall over the precipice, when the tumb ling building crushes us—what then ? That is death ! That is the death of those of whom it is said, when frond lifeless in the morning: “That they were as well as ever they were the day before,’’ and oiteii it is ad led, “and ate heartier than com non.” Tais last, as a frequent cause of death to those wlnt have gone to bed to wake no more, we give inereiy as a private opinion. The possibility of Us truth is enough to deter any rational man from a late and heu.ty meal. 1 his we know with certainty that waking up in the night with pa.n«! fui diarrhoea, or vholera, or billions col* ic, ending in death in a very short time, is probably traceable to a late, large' meal. The truly wise will lake the sate side. Fi>r persons to eut three times u day, it is amply sufficient to make the last meal of cold bread and butter, and a cup of gome warm drink. Mo one can starve on it; while a perseverance in the habit soon begets a vigorous up. petite for break fist, so promising of a day of comfort.— Hill's Journal of Health *ar Be content wun your lot-**es t i genially if it is iu a corner. *■ T — * 7 CUTHBERT HH APPEAL. A Village Bar Room. ♦ A Touching Story, In 18—I was traveling from Ithica t<» Buff tint in New York State, by stage, intending to reach ihy home in tune to partake of tfro armu-B Thaiil(i|iving dinner with old and loved friend* at thd <hi homestead. It was a bitter culd murn ng when we net out and the roads WeVe frozen hard,there having been considerable mud duly a day or two before. The first niifht we put in at Danville, and on the following aioroiug when I awoke, i fbiVftd that the earth Was not only covered with suuw, but that snow w s falling fast After an early breakfast we set otit again on wheels, but at the end of eight miles we were forced to take ruuuers, tiie snow clogging up so thAl the wheels would not run. When night came we found ourselves obliged M stop at a small village, only twenty five utiles from where we set out in the morning. A good supper was provided at tKti inn, and the place had the appearance of c«*mfort. We had ju*t sit down to s pper when the wind began to blow furiously and we could see by the dim light without that the snow was beiri£ whirled and driven about in a furious manner. There was a fire in the small sitting room, and thither we passengers, six of us, adj mrned. We eat there and conversed until near nine o'clock ; and then I went out into the bar-room to kid >ke a cigar previous to retiring. In the bar room 1 found a bright wood fire burning, and some dozen peo ple were sitting there, smoking and diinking. (This was long bnb.re the in troduction of the Maiue laws ) Seve ral of the company I judged to bo team stern; a rough, hardy good uatured set, who were enjoying themselves hugely over a ftip. Tnen there were several whom 1 found iobo villagers—men who lived near the inn —a set of-village pol iticiaus and newsmongers, who made the bar-room a .place of-social e veiling meet ing 4 had lighted iny cigar and taken my seat near the fire, when I noticed u bulfa |o skin on one end of the settee, oppo site to where I sat, and l was uonbJent there Was a hum ta being bcueath it 1 siipp ,sed it might be a stable hand w!k> had been at work hard, or was expect ed to be up most of the night, and was now gett'.ng a little I was looking "At the buffalo, and thus meditating when I heard a low, deep, death like groan come up from beneath it, Jftfd iVaYew Vnolteehts more the robe was thrown upon the and >or, and the man who had revised beneath cable down upon the top of it, and there he lay lor some moments like a dead man. I had just'stafttM ’up, when four of the villa gers hastened to nis ass stance. They lifted him to his feet, and after enusid arable ed >rt lie managed to stand up. My liod ! wb it a thrill struck tb my heart when I saw that lace. It was one of /h rtiie a Wow, high and limply developed, over w hich clustered a mass of dark glossy ringlets j the f: <o • beautifully prop.HTfoned, and eacu fl partite feature Yhost exqui-ilely chis elle I. But what au expression -re'stod there now ! The dark eyes had a vacant, idiotic stare; the face was pale as death and the bps 'looked dry and parched, and much discolored, H.s ’clothes were torn and soiled, and one of his hands bloody, fie wus surely not more than dive and thirty, and his appearance would at on js indicate a in m of more t‘»»« common abilities. But the deni m had ii’ ji and had made him now sonic* thing below the brute. ‘How do yoo feel now, George ?' a«k ed one of die men who had gone to his assistance. But he billy groaned in reply, and he was soon persuaded to lie down again, being told that hh would soon feel belter. As soon as he was on the settee once more, and bad the buff do over him, the men returned to their seats. ‘Who is that chap ?’ one of the te*itH» wrs balking towards the Villagers who hail been assisting the uof irtuoate man. ‘That’s George LookUud,’ returned a stout, honest looking man. ‘Poes he belong here ?’ Yes. '’Pon t you nevtfr bear of him.’ Toe teams er replied that he had not. ’Well, resumed tlie fit man, ‘it's too Tik>t, t declare ’ti-. Lo-.klan i might be one of the first men in town if he’d a mind to; but yon see he will drink ; and the Ororst of it is, he dukes a f ail of himself- H • can’t touch it Without do. iiig just as he’s doing now. He started hefe as a lawyer and a smart on* he is too. Why, he can argue old Upton fight out of his boots. But y« sefc Tie’k lost all his liest eftstdmers now. They daren't trust him with bad he as, ’cause he ain’t srre of ever doing it. He’s got one of the beautilulest littie wives you ever saw ; and one of the handsomest children. Bat, poor things t I pity etti. Then the res another tbirtg; Yrflm Ope rates differently on him from what it does on mist folks. It doesn't show itself on the outside as it and *es on a’ino.-t everybo ly else, but it soeins to eat him up inside. You see how pale lie looks —well, he’s always so wh-n he's on en t . of these times. He don’t eat notin,’ and I don't supp ise he’ll pit & bit ci food into his stomach for a week to come. ‘How long has he been so?’ asked the teamster. ‘How d’yu mean ?’ ‘Wny, how long both ways? How long lie took lo drink,’ an’ how long he’s been drunk now ?’ ‘Well he’s took a drunk more or less ever since hb fame from ddllwge ; but it s about a J?eer tHUt lie’s been down hard at ft. Ye see folks began to find out how slack he was in Ins business, and they wouldn’t give him any job of consequence to do. 1 Vpose that sort o’ set nim agoin’ in this fashion. And as for this drunk, I should say he had betin on it a fortnight. He’s got dowri flow as low as he can g tatld lite, and I guess he’ll get sober iu a day or two,’ ‘But where d»m ho gut h s liquor ? asked the questioner. ‘You most ask Alike tfing.-d that ques tion,' Was tn * other's answer. All eyes word trti' ied upon the land lord who now stool behind the bar.— He was evidently troubled at this turn and moved uneasily upon his high stool. ‘Mike Fmg.il,’ spoke the teamster, ‘do you sell tii tt mini rum ?’ ‘Yee, I do,’ the fedow replied, with an eff »rt, ‘D •n’t I sell you the a .me when yoii cab Mr it?’ ‘But I arn’t a poor drunkard, and you know it, That ari’t no eXcu.-e, Mike, I shouldn’t think you’d do it.’ ‘But when he wants rum he’s hound to have it, and if I didn’t let him have it somebody else would,’ the host re plied. ‘Now, that’s tVifd,’ energetically pur sued the teamster. ‘On the same ground yqtl might take a pistol and go out ami rob folks, because if you didn’t somebody else would But that isn’t here or th.-re. The thinij? is, 1 don’t see what klild of a heart you can have to do it’ * Tue conversation was here internip ted by a ftpfttid Yr»)jiii the ilreet. The wind was still howling m idly, and the show was driving against the window, but above the voice of the storm came thewai ingofsome one in distress. It was Onrely the cry of a child for help. We were ail upon our feet in a, moment ami the lanteVft was quickly lighted. My hat whs ah eady on my head—or my cap rather—and I went out with the rest.* All went but the landlord and nis wretched ctifttomer who occupied the settee. It was some moments be fore! could see at all, the show came into my face so ; but I soon managed to turn ftiy head, and then went on. The wind, as it came sweep ing out through the stable, and piled lip a huge bank of snow acmes die Street, and to this bank we foiitld a female with a child in her arms. She seemed faint and frozen, but yet she elung to her child The man who curried the lantern held i. up to her face. The fan tures were halt covered with snow, but the momentary glare of the lantern w..s auffi ient to reveal to me a face of inure than ordinary beamy. ‘Heavens I’ utiered the man, as he lowered the lantern, and caught the wo man in his arms. ‘Kate Lock land, is this you ?’ But without waiting for a reply, ne tinned to the rest of us and cried, ‘here, take the child some of you; and I'll carry the mother.’ Tiie child was quickly taken, and ere many min tea we were back in the bar room with our burden. The two were taken to the fi.e and the snow brushed from them. •Whos them?’ asked the host. Locklanod and her child,’ answered the tat man. ‘Wh.it dye bring’em in here for?’ the host uttered augr ly. ‘Why didn’t ye take ’em to your own house, Jun Diane V *oau.-e my own house is too far/ The host was coining around the bar and his eye was tl ishmg with mingled shame and anger, but before he got fairly oat, the stout, hurley teamster who had said so much, started up. ‘Mike Pmgal,’ he uttered in tones such as only a man confident of hi* own p.iy.sioal power can command. * Don’t ye put a finger on that womau. Don’t ye rtf) ft. If ye do, I’ll crush ye as 1 would a pizeii spider ?' Fmgal looked at the speaker in t!.e eye Pm* ** summit, and then muttered something mlmhu a man having right to do as he pleased in his own house, he slunk away behind his bar again. I now turned my attention to the wo. wan and obrld. The former was surely not ydt thirty years of age, and she was truly a beautiful woman—only she was;palo and wan, and her eves were swolen. Site’trembled fearfully, and I could see her bosom heave us she tried to choke the sobs that were bursting forth. Tiie child wn»s a girl about four years,bid. ftheclm+g close to her moth es, and seemed fngniend into a ioiget fvPuvss 01 her cold fingers and feet. ‘Eate Locltland, what in heaven’s uauie are yc doin’ out this night?’ ask ed Jim 'DiU'ke. ‘On l was trying to find your own house, Jim Drake, for I knew you’d give me shelter. Hut I got lost in the snow. * wouldn't, have cued out in front «and this plan#, but my poor child did. Jim Drake nave ye Seen George ? Oh, Gq>j, have mercy on tiim ! Poor dear George ! tie don’t know we are lr«> zmg, starving in our own house ! No fuel —no food— ho—hb ’ She stopped and bitrsf into tears, and iu a moment more Geo. Lock and leap ed to tits feet. e.aiteJ me ? he cried, and ga* zmg wildly aroumJ. Kale sprang up instinctively, but ere she reached her husband she slopped. The iftao saw her, and tor a while i ivited to the spot. Soon tie gaZad around up on the scene about him, and gradually a look id intelligence relieved the utter blank of bis tmuertu pale and manly lace. ‘No fh«d ! no food !’ he whispered, ga zmg upon h'S w>fe. ‘Starved I God have mercy ! Who was it said those words 1 Where ain I?’ ‘George! George 1’ cried the wife, now rushing forward and fl uging her arms about her husbands beck. ‘Don't you know the?’ ‘Kate !no fire I—there’s fire V . , ‘Aye, George Lockland,’ eutd Jiin Drake, uow starting up; this ain’t your own home. Don’t ye know where ye are V Again the poor roan gazed about him aud a fearful shudder convulsed his frame, and his hands involuntarily clos ed over His ey«s, l knew that the truth had burst upon him. ‘No fuel! —no iPod !’ he groaned. ‘O, sir,’ whispered the wife, catching ,Drake convulsively by the «rm f Hake U away from here, do"’ rid it you’re cold, Kate.’ ‘No, no, no. It s only a little way to your house, I shall die here I’ ‘Will you go home WitH die, George?' Jim askeil of the husband. ‘Anywhere !' gasped the poor man. ‘Pi G«‘d 1 ho fuel ! no food I Kate 1 Are you hurt?’ But the wile could not speak, a,nd as soon as possible the fit old villager had the lantern iu readiness and halt a doz ell went to help linn. ‘tahne,’ he said. ‘L ;ad George; tlirb of you You take Kate —you are stoui er than I—and IM take the little one;’ This last was spokeu to a stout tSalii stcr, and he look the wife in his arms is thodgh she hud been an infant. ‘lt’s only a few steps/ said Dhifee as he Started to go. ‘l’ll send your lan tern back, Mike Fing.il.’ And with this the party left the bar room. I went to the window and saw tbeifir Wa’tfi.ig off throUgh the deep snow, and when they Were out of sight 1 pass ed away. The baht Cattfe .out and be gan to explain matters ; but I was sick CUTHBERT, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1370, enough air. ady, and with an aching heart I left the room. On the following morning I came dpwn to breakfast fftttfr than usual t for t sWpt Very little through the night About nine o’clock the driver came in and told us the stage would be ready in five minutes. I went to the har.room lor a cigar. Jim Drake had just cihiic in trt bring hack the old cloak they had wrapped Around this child the night be fore,. _ , . ‘Whal’ll you have this morning, Jim ?’ I heard the landlord ask, as he set out u tumbler. •Noth rig,’ returned th« fat nan em> phutically ‘l’m done, Mike Fingal, I’m done with the atnfl. I’ll drink no more of it. I wouldn’t have come now only p**or Lock land was up, and his sweet little W ife was hanging about his neck. They were eryin’ so that I couldn’t stand it, and 1 had to clear out. 0, its dreadful Mike Fingal. You don’t know what them poor things have sufrered 1 But’ they shan’t have my example any move.’ ‘All ready, shouted the driver, aivi 1 was forced to leave. The wind had all gone down ; the air was sharp and bracing, aild slowly we swallowed aW-ay From the village. 1 reached Buffalo two days later than ( expected to when I started, and hav ing transacted my there, I went to Mississippi, and so ou down to New Orleans. Four years afterward I had occasion to travel that same road again, and stopped iq that Bath a Village to take dinowr. The hai was st ; ll open, hut Mike Fingal had gone away. I walked out after dinner, and soon canre across a neatly painted offfot?, over the door df‘ winch I read : ‘George Lock land, Attorney and Couusellor at Law.’ In less than five minutes afterward I saw a fat, good-natured looking mail diming towards met Whdrri I at once rec guized as Jim Drake. As he cuttle up I sain : ‘Excuse me sir, but I wish to know bow Mr. Loeklaud is getting on now?’ ‘Squire Dockland you mean V he am swered with a proud look. ‘You know him then V ‘I did once,’ said I. ‘Then you ought to know him now. lie is the first man in the county, sir. Four years ago this month, coining, he was just as low as a man can be. Did you ever know the Squire’s wife ? ‘I have seen hei,’ I replied. I saw Drake did not recognize me. ‘But you should see her now. Ah, it was a great change fir her. That’s their child —that little girl coming this way. Ain’t that a p cture for ye ? 1 looked and saw a bright-eyed sunny haired girl jf eight summers, c. ming laughing and tripping along like a little fairy, tdie stopped as she came to w here we stood, and put lip her arms — ’Uncle Drake,’ as she called the old man, hiul while he was kissing her, and chatting with her, I moved on I 1 >ok ed hack once more on that happy, beam teens faeeju-tto contrast it with the pale frightened features I hud Seen on that-night in the bar ro un. Useful Medical 11i>ts. — Hall’s Jour nal of health advocates the modern e use of tea or coffee at meals, and denounces cold water and alcoholic beverages.— Tea and coffee for supper and break fast, add to human health and strength, if only a single cup be taken at each meal, and is never increased in strength, frequency or quantity. If they were ineie stimulants, they would, in eouise ot time, either become inert or positively it j irmus. Bit science and experience mute in declaring tea an I coffee to t>e nutritious as well as stimulant, hem-* they do anew good to the system every day, to the end of’lie, just as bread and fruits do. The habitu ti use d| tea At id coffee at the first au«l last inehlS o!‘ the day has another high advantage —is productive of incalculable good in avert ing evds. We drink at our meals-, and if we do not use tea or coflee, we drink what is worse—cold water, milk or al coholic mixtures. The regular hSe «>f the last will lead the young tongue to drunken -ess, the use oi milk at meals by sedentary people will prudtlee con stipation or biliousness; while cold wa ter largely used in cold weatner attracts to itself so much of the heat of ihi* kys lun in raising said Water to the temper ature of tin- body, that <1 tgeSifdti is ar rcstedand deadly sickness as of the stomach sometimes btlilsed^ .w A (‘hurch Built with Mortar Made of Wish. — The Kev Dr. Prime, ttie venerable editor ot tlw) Mew r York Ob server, who this been a fam ms traveller, and has SAetr some things foW mortals have beheld tfills tfee follow ng strange story, wtiitih would seem almost ihcredibtc if told by a less Reliable man: “l was in a region in Spain where wine is more abundant, sometimes, than water. Wine, good ftihe, better wine tbiin is Th common use in America, is sometimes used in great quantities in stead of water, to mix mortar with fdr building A oYniVeh was pointed out to die that was built with wine-made mor tar, because they had great quantities oil hand for which they had no sale, and it was cheaper to use it than to haul water a long way to the budding site. But there was little intemperance iu that region.” PC--.."- A bout Th roats. —An excellent article on this subject iu this week’s Congrega tionilist, which every minister especially ought to read, cloaca w th the iollowing common sensh suggeSLofi : ~, We speak fed ugly on file jitilrject—- because we speak what we think we know* when we beg thqrn to throw their ptis£ic and lht& wrappers to the dog.-; I--t their beards grow as God in ;ended should be the case with men; and toughen their throats with cold wa ter and sweet breath of heaven* even when it blows froth U shdvk batik j in stead of iuervating them with steam and sweat of their nasty bandages, it is our delibe'ate conviction that the worst use to which and cun piit a human throat, next to the hangman, is to tie it up for fear of the bronchiiis; Bgih ‘Guihy or not guilty ?’ said a judge to a native of the Emerland I-le. ‘Just as y--r honor plazes. It's no' the like o'rbe to dictate to your honor’s worship, vVus the reply. *@jU A sable sovereign of Texas* when repr- ved for his polyg iidy replied : —‘-ivllj, hi f I Uaz.i t got but four ’niend menlsyet, and de law openly ’laws de colored mac fifteen I” Don’t Stay too Late. One of the advantages of being ‘past thirty,’ is that one now and then can put in a word of good, motherly advice to ttiu other sex. So l'll begin at oime, and say to any single gentleman reader ul the Hearth and Home who chooses to listen—D>sn’t stay too late. At the store or office? No. Yo() know very well 1 dii»’t rtteafi thft:. 1 -attl hot fighting imaginary da.ig.-rs, but real ones. T oiear. simply, don’t siuy too lute wh- 11 you go to spend a quiet evening with a joaig lady* It is .not f.»ir; it is short sighted ; and il is pret’ ty sure to wear out your wel nine.— Even if the poor thing is eventually to allow you to stop hntii death doth you pait, that is no reason why you should bestow too milch of your tediousnes upoii her a the outset. When she re ally wishes your visits to he longer, you II know it; even then be chary «>f the moments alter eleven. At any rate, dwn’t suffer yourseit to be misled by the ushat commonplace iorms of detention that, in nine cases out of ten, arise from a sudden consciousness on the lady’s part that she may have been betraying her weariness rather hio plainly. It won’t hurl you to be longed for after you are gone ; but beware of ever cans mg a girl to give a sigh o! relief when the hall dopr Closes a.ter you. There’s a sandman for the parlor a* wtJll us tor the nursery, and after a certain hour, ex cepi in sp. eial cases, whenever he finds the eyes too well drilled to succumb to his attacks, he sprinkles his sand around the heart. Afier that your best efforts to please are wasted. Every wdr<l wiil "jffttte, evef)’ winning attempt ol yours be met only with the silicate of emotion at best. 1 know all about it I’ve re ceived young gentleman callers in my day ; yes, and enj >yed receiving ttiem, if ever a girl did. I’d think all day that perhaps John, tor instance might come in the evening, and ifh these occasion* I've gone down to tea with a rosebud in my hair, ami a happy Hatter in my heari; Yes, and I’ve started at the ritig of the door bell, anil when at last he came in, smiling and bowing, I’ve looked just as if I didn’t care a single bit.— There were others, too —not obits by any means, but frietid’s who were ul ways welconn), All.l whom i was right good and pleasant to see. But that tact did not make null and void all som nific law■; it didn’t make father and mother willing that the house should ho open till midnight; it didn’t make it de sirable that I should feel a rebuke in everybody’s ‘Good morning !’ when, with thrubhing head and wears eyes, I came down late t<> breafclast. No, you may be sure it didn't. 'I heiefure, A learned Buon to honor those who knew enough to when half past ten name ; while those V ;ho didn't know were the bane of my existence. — How they would linger and skirmish, and stand up Had sit down, and move al«>ut, and look at the clock, and in a thousand firming ways say ‘Good by* without going forgetting that I iMlltd riot turn tnem out u trie r<«o n, yet ,j idg ing try that tofc-u that their presence was tn efur and ti.dm lor all weariness! Now, never think that these (Henris stayed from kindlnitasft to their weary host ness —not at all. They stayed be* cause they didn’t know enough to go. They lined the warm mom perhaps, arid dreaded the cold si reel, but beyond that they lacked the simple grace of taking themselves off promptly and handsomely. Ah ! what a gilt that is in Ilian di’ worilan, to kiibW when to go, and knowing it, to st.md not up-di the order of going, but go at once. I Know a few sucn persons. They radiate peaee arid festlulness, or they spaikle ahd aeientil.ite, o, they and in spire you, as the case may be. An hour glides away, then aiiotue--, and Ute imdsl of another, yon are conscious only of a gentle ‘Hood by’ ti tsh, and ihey are gorie. Then a hundred tilings rnsu up on yori—yon wish y-»u had asked them this, or told them Inal, you think holy pleasant it wits to me; t l.teui and you long to see them agrim. So, dear single gentlemen, whoever ami wherevei you are, tne next time y.iU go out to spend a quiet o Veil dig with a fkd'y, remember my words,— Young gills are human; they reqmrjJ rest and sleep; they ate amenable to the benefits of domestic system and bir der; they have a precious heritage of strength, health and good looks to guard. Above ail, i! they are true, sen sible girls, tney secretly leSpept it Ui.m does not yield to the temptation to lm g r past a reasonable hour. In a word, though they tiny be glad to see you. an even trig visit is not li species of eternity Don’t go tod late, anti don’t oy in ches. ‘Good-by is the ti iwer of a wel come. If you wish it to retain its aio ma, the fewer leaves it sheds the better. —Hearth and Home. fttisig Papers.—Some one gets at the truth in the follow iug: No man who uwipt a foot of ground, or who is int»*r— eateti in the* prosperity and future growth of his town or county, should neglect to take his home paper. The loc.il press is an index, in a gies*t meas ur of the condition of the country in which it is puM shed. And if u mean dribbling and njggtmily, support is giv eii, it must *-ke out, a sickly, tiiifterab'e eJiiiUeUetj, reflecting little credit upon itself, or any locality in which it is pub lished, exerting no ii.flience for g >odj*n the place or mi the people. When our people n-fuse to take their local paper, and send away (paving in variably in advance) for some North erfi pitblie.atiiMtj made tip in iiiativ instahet*s from the ffag-iilfents of a daily paper, they stand in their <>wo light, and com mit if lly of winch they will become cognbuut when it is probably ton late tes iliako reparation for the oversight. Ah enterprising Home papef should be eue.oUiagtid at all times. It reflect*! the business of the town in which it is published; it champions the interests of the people where located, and gives prestige and prominence to the county of its adoption. Asa recorder of pas sing events, it i- the daily written histo ry oi the Community in which it is edi teu, in which every citizen is directly or indirectly interested. As the mirror < f trade, the indicator of public sentiment, nd the Orguti H l ' u particular locality, it deserves always the first consideration at the hands of the people wnose interests it champions, and whose homes it enliveus. Support jtouf home paper above all others, A T rrible Pate. A mel uieboiy and in m iry respect* singular death from WdmpTiolila’deeiYr r«l yesterday mdrfeing at Yonkers, 1 West* che.-ter county, where the horrifying cir eumstanceh is at present engrossing art Usual flhafte rtf attention. To med cal men ii is another terrible illustration of the f ic\ Vfiiit filtliortgh the poison con veyed ni the bile of a rabid animal may remain dormant in the system for an in d- finite period and its power to torture and destroy life not deteriorate. The victim, Thomas Lamb, who was in his twenty-fourth year, was by trade an engineer, and employed at a foundry in the village ‘named, throughout w hich lie wa§ fooll known its it trustworthy, in diistridris man. fining last winter, while employed in a brewery in a neigh l)oi ing Village, ueceayed was. bitten by a ferocious lif.od-hound owned by Ids em ployer ami although the wonn I inti e-t* ed by the fangs of the brute w s not very severe, the animal was at nm-e dis* patched, arid the «ffeebjd part having rapidly healed the occtir'rehce was Soon forgotten by the deceased-. On Tues day of laitt A-eek deceased was united sh mairiage with a young woman whose mother had bitterly opposed his atteii" tions to her daughter. Having by the exercise of a little strategy reuj.’zed their matrimonial wishes, the Ofatried pair had scarcely reached tire domicile of the bridegroom when the in other of the bride made her appearance ; and alter, on her km-es, imploring curses and ven geance on the luckless couple, earnestly pfa'yed that her daughter blight be ‘a widow in less thrift tniee months.’ It appeals that the diabolic impreca tions of the mother had a most depress ing effect ou the minds of the young and on the following day do ceased evinced symptoms of the awful malady the seeds of which had been s<>wn iu his system some months previ ously. Medical skill was resorted to without avail, and on Fiiday the wretched UVaTi, in one of h.h terrible par oxysms, escaped lion Ins attendant, and after reaching some open lots dis played cat*i ke agility in bounding over fences arid otherwise dbqiortttig like an uuimal. He was subsequently secured by two of the Yonkers p lie-, who found it necessary to hand-cuff the mudm-iti on arriving at his home, in Brook street. Either the sight nr sound of wuter would throw the patient into the mo.-t agoniz ing convulsions, and as the malady de veloped itself he would bark like a dog, snarling and snapping at those who were imar him. He continued to grow nunc violent and dangerous, so that tor mmy hours hours bciore his dissolution it was deemed necessary to bind him with strung cords, and while in this condition bis struggles, and howls, were timely shocking until death ensued, as above stated,— N. Y. H-ra'd. Natural History. Josh Billings is f .flowing up his styles o Vin ilihg for the benefit <d children, g.v hig them some praotic.l ideas on Na il ra! History, ihe following is the latest idea on fowls : fieus—leads ine to remark in the fir«t place, that thus tar, thay i are a suckcess. They are doniestfck, and occasionally are tuff. This is owin to their not being biled often emiff in their younger daze; but the hen aint to blame lot this. filled hell is Universally respected. There is a great deal of oiiginality tew, in the hen—exactly how much i kant tell, historians tight so lunch about u. Sum say Kuower bad hens with linn m the ark-, and some say fie didn’t. So it goes vvnich and totrter. J kaul tell you whieff was born fust the ben or llieegg w.-z—an-1 souietim -s i think i don’t kuo, and i k.uit tell now which iZ rig|;t fpr.the j;fe of m •• . Laying eggs is the hen's best grip. A hen that kaul lay eggs —is laid out. Une egg iz considered a fair day’s work for a hen I have heard of their doing better, hut I don't want a lien ov UjiiKs to and« it —it is apt ti hui t their con stitution and laws; and impair their fniure worth. The poet sez, beautifully : “Sumbody aas stole our old blew ben , I wish they’d let her bee, She used to lay 2 eggs an l ay, - And Suud ly she Lid 3.” ’ This nomids true enuff for poetry, but i bet 75 thou-artd dollars that it u.ver took place. This (icj stahd< opeh.tilj the if dav ov next November, at half past 12 o’clock. B@* A Glen’s F alls merchant recently i hired anew cl<-rk, and of course piiiia ted h.iin at once into the mystery of the ‘trade lirtirk.’ The same afternoon, tile, newly inducted kriight of the yard stick was showing some- goods to a lady cus tomer, when she demurred at jtlie price Ifie articles. The feelings of the mer chant may be imagined when the young man called at the top of % his voice: I Wh it shall I sell this, for ? It is marked four dollars and a half, and cost fifty cents!’ *®_The other day svno Jiadjes i ,i$ S.tndlake ykeht out visiting. There be ing a littie three year old present, one of the ladies asked him if lie would not kiss her. He answered “What is the rtiasofl you vviii not kiss me ? “lip too liitie to kiss you—papa kisses all the big girls.’ , lie Was permitted to play witli his drum. ‘lt was a wise son thut knew his old father.’ Here, Alfie<i, is an apple; di vide; it (mlitely with vour little sister.’ ‘How shall l divide it politely ma ?’ ‘Give the i.rger part to tie other per son my child.’ A fred Hafided the apple to his little sister, saying, Here, sis, you divide it yourself.’ *@U As old lady was ask>-d what she thought of one oj her neighbors «-f the name ..f doces, aqtf, jtfuh a ktnlwiiig wink, replied : ’\\ iiy, l don’t like to say anything about tuy tieigfißors. As to Mr. 4 >nes, sometimes I think, and then again I don’t know; after all, I rather guess he’ll Auru out to he a such a sort of a man as 1 take him to tie.’ All the gold that is used on the g|ohe would only make a solid cubical block 26 feetsqu ire. A little thing to m.ike so much fuss about. For wliat port are young men hound to during courtship \ Hound to Havre. o A HEROIC REMEDY. HENRY’S Constitution RENOVATOR! BASED OX SCIENCE. PH 7 PARED WIT i SKIED, and all tbe available ingenuity ad espertnesa that the ui t of phai inary of the present day can contiiuuie And Combi lag in CbnoenTrared Form tbe most * ,-7; . Valuable Vegetable Juices Known in the History of Medicines foi PURIFYING THE RLOOI^, Imparting NURTURE TO THE SYSTEM, Tone to the Stoihach; And a Heilthy Action of the Livjr. Kidneys Secret.vj aad Excretive Organa. A DYING ZOUAVE Lav breathing bis 'nat on the battlefie'd, his C'linpHui -iia aiirged on on l left him alone.— T >fey knew the cause of hia approaching end: — it Whs the deadly bullet. No friendly voice could cheer him to life—uo human skill could sav- hiim Thousands of Precious Lives are to-d*\ a- rap .ily Binkiug. and ad surely tottering on to an untimely end, in Suffering Agony. Wretchedness, and Jgourauee of the cause which Suo ics ifri Imst And assuage. Nourish into new Life and Vigor, Ant caus ; ths Bloom of Health To lane3 ones more upon thsir withered Cheeks DISEASE, LIKE A THIEF, st-al-u,.0 1 its viot in* uni ware*, and before they are aware of it* attack, plants .itself firm ly in the system, and through uegleut or inat tention becomes Seated, and d--fien all ordinary or tempumry tmamnjiH to leliuquiih its mer oil ess grasp. Do You Know the Cause of The w Ist *d form -the holl iw cheek T Ihe wither df ce—the sallcw complexion 7 The feeble v i:e -the suckee, glassy eye 1 The em»ciited form—the tfemb.iag .'mms 1 The tf&hcber&tti Ptafpls -the totaling sore 1 The ••epabive e nption -the i flamed eye I The impl id thee -tie roujh colorless skin I and di-biliiit 'fig alinieire <>f.ib*s 0 esent T . The answer i*. simpl'* and eoveis the whole giouud in ull i's ph-izcs vij: the FANGS OF DISEASE and HfcIMP.DIT MtY TAINT Arc tiriHiy fixed in the Fountain of Life—the BfeoJ, i.,-,.,.. TbE . Indiscriminate Vaccination . during the 'ale war. with dLnaaed Lymph has TAINTED 'fills BEST BLOOD In the entire I mdv It 'lia*planted ihegeimof the most melartfilidiy dwcaae in the v- ins of men, wo' iien and children on All Aides and no hing short of k HEROIC ;1 • will Kiadieafe it rriot find branch, forever. Such a Remedy is HEXItY’S CARBOLIC ITONSTITUttCfc RENOVATOR. Ox reaching Tiis \cn, it a*sinnla*es at once with ilie fWI and liquids therein, aud drain the lUiin.eiitdVpAMeS into the Blood, it at tache disease, afcjte Onre aiu.neA-1.. in, its-., perm and maturity, and dissipates it through the av enucs of the organs with aliening certainty, and sends Jiew aud pure Blood bounding tinoug i every artery ami vein The toK* ; r ales of >crdfula that scmetirne* flourish ard soid -he iaiier edutfng A>r the ab domen like k -rilrlo’iif corn, Arb -with- red, dis solved ad eradicated and the diseased parts nour siiedfiuto life, 'the Torpid l iver a- d*n - active Kidneys me st-riiiila'< and to a healthy se cretion. and tlieir natn~ul fnncuo..s restored to rent wtd hea th a da.-tiv.itv, Its action ui-ivi fhv blood, fl ids of the b'ldy, and GJa d'Uai- -?ysit-ih. ark ■. „ TONIJ. PHttIFiHHB Alii BHINFECTANT, At its t«ucb disease droops, dies, and the vic tici of its violence, as it were, LEAPS TO NEW LIFE. It Relieves the entire system of Pains ard Ach-s, enlivemjspirits..and inipiirts a bright ess to the Eye, A rosy glow to the Cheak, A rally ti go to tha Lip, A cloavness to Head, A bright ie* to -ho Com lsxion, A knoyiacy to the Spirits. And happiness oa all sides. Thousands liuve been rescued from the verge of ti e grave t>v its tiniel use. . This, Remedy is.tiow offere to the pulilio with,Ate m<>rt aoiemn assurance of ito it trinsio medicinal vutues, and powerful Healing prop el ties. For old Akfectiomi of the Kidoeys, Retention of Urine, And Diffuses of Women and Children. Nervous Prostration; Weakness; General Lassi tude, and Los# of Ap|»cttt.e, it is unsurpassed. It •x iiigulshes Affect or aof the Bones, itab ual Cosiiveness. Diseastj* of Ike Kid e\B. Dytpepsia, E-veipelis, Female Lr*g i lari ties, i- is— turn. all >lllll 'ti.-eußes. Liver Complaint. Indigestion, I’llei; I’ulm >nai y Disca-es, i on sumption,. Sciofula or King’s E\il, Syphillis, ifj -* 7.I’RERARED it Prof M. R HENRY, SIREUIOa-aBNERAL ( i• • OR BIIE Bn?Klin Hospital, ; £f'M. A, L. L. D„ K. R. S. •H£NRY & CO., ProprietorS,- Laboi atoi y, *7B Pearl Street. Post-OfKee Box. t,272, Kfctf tout fiK-NOV.ALOR is $1 p«r bottle, gi± bottles for $5. Sent ay where on receipt of price. Patients ere requested to correspond confi.lent ally, and reply will be made by following moil. Sold by all respectable Druggists. Entered according to At tof Congress bv E M HgNRr- in the Cl-rkV Office «f the District Cami for the Southern District of New York. mstlT-1/ VOL. IV—NO. 30. Koskoa! She great reputatigx Which Kossoo has attained in all parts of the country Asa GREAT and GOOD MEfiICINE And th} ; Large >Y« mler of TfiltViohiafo wf ich are constantly being received from Phy sicians, and persons who have been ci bso bv its use, is conclusive proof of iu remarkable value. AS A BLOOD PURIFIER. IT HAS NO EQUAL BEING POSITIVELY MOST Powerful Vegetable Alterative YET DISCO VERED. DISEASES OF TIIe'bLCOD. “The life of the fljsh is in the Blood” is a Seri pi urn 1 maxim thut science proves to be One. The people talk of bad blood, as t}i i cause,of many andi leases, and like many popu lar opinions this of bad blood is founded ia truth. The symptoms of bad bleed arc usua’ly qni’e plain —bad Digestion —eauses irpftcrfsct nutrition, and consequently tha circulation is f eble, the soft t’ssu- s loose their tor*) and elasticity. and the to -gue beeonte pals, V.-iisd; and frequently covered with a nasty, white coat. To is condition soon shows itself ip roughness of the skin, then iu eiuptive ani u'ccra’ipe diseases, and when long continued, results in serious lesions of the Brain, Liver, Lungs, or uiinayy apparatus. Much, very much, suffering ia’causca by impure blood It is estimated by some that one-firth of the hu man family are effected with sciofula iu sou-e firm. When flie Blood is pure, you ara not so iia tde to any disease. Many impurities of the Blood a ise from impure diseases of large cit fei. Eradicate every impurity from the foun tain of life, and good spirits, fair skin and vital strength will return to you. K0SKOO! AS A LIVER IM VIGOR ATOP*.'! S'CAXES VNRI'~AM ED. BEtiflG TKE ONLY KNOWN, if EDI GIN k that efficiently stimulates ahd corrects 'ha hepatie secreiions and functional i» er .* ng fm kn*ts of the Ijvkr, without Debilitating Ilia While it acts freely upon the Liver .josf'end c; copious purging, it grad urtly changv-g the dis - charges to a perfect natural state. SYMPTOMS or LIVER c'OMPIAINT AND OF SOME OF THOSE DI SEASES PRODUCED BY IT- A sallow or yellow color of the skin, or V*;l low.sh-brown spots on tlie face and other parts .of the body; dulness nnd - (hoWsiness, some, times headache; bitter or bad taste in 'he impiith, internal heat; in manv cases a dry;, teasing cough ; unsteady appelite;, sometimes sour stomach, with a raising of it he . food ; a bloa.ed or full feeling about the stomach ad aides; aggravating pains in the sides, b ck„iy breast, and about the shoulders; conatipatipn of the bowels; piles, flatulence, coldness es the extremities, etc, KdSKOO! , . • -i... Is * remedy of Wonderful Efficacy:in; the cure of di-eases of the Kidneys and Bladder, la these Affections it is as near a specific as chy remedy can be. It d.oes its work kinqlv, si lently and surely.. The .relief which it affords g both certain and perceptible, , DISEASES OF THE KI DNEYS AND BLAH DFR. . , , t Persons unacquainted wi-thr, the. structure .and funciions ot the Kidneys canrof esiiTnate the importance of th iir healthy action. Regular and sufficient action of the Kidneys is as important, nay, even more jSo. than r<-g*n larity of i.lie bowels. j-TUe . Kidneys ieinJv'e from the Blood these effete matt era , which, if permitted to remain, would speedily destroy life. A total HtiPpeiinior of the urinary dir charges will occasion death from thirtyisix to forty-eight hours. .. When tlie Urine iiTvoidcd ; in, email quanti ties at .the time, or when , ihere.is a disposition to Urinate more frequently than natural, or when .he Urine is high colored or scolding with weakness in the small of the back, it should Dot be trifled, with,, qr delayed; lut Ko-kov should be taken at a- ,ee to remsdy ir.e difficulty, before a lesion o,‘ U.«. organs la. e* place. Most of the (fiseasfSL of the Bladder originate from those of the Kidneys, 'he L’lir.e bei g imperfectly seoretedi.iij) the Kidaevs, prove ivri at.ing to the B:*4der and Uriuary pa-»ages. Wh:n Wc iecoilevt that »odici-s ' never ..reaches the. Kidneys exaopt through tr.s <nVd circulation of ti c Blood. w« sec w hecefeiary it is to keep thi Fountaia of Li fa Pure. KOSKOO! wefts with ,orxat svccesb id (fie cvr.c of DISEASES OF TIIE NERVOUS SfSTEi; Almofct,-pine-tenths of our people suffer from nervous exhaustion, and are therefore, liul - to its concomitant evils of mental depi-fig ion, confused ideas, softening of the brain, insanity and complete breaking down of the geneiai health. Thousands are suffering to-dny with broken-down nervous systems, and, urifoi tu nately, tobacco, alcoHol, late hbiiis, ovi-r-rtbrk, (mental and plijsical,} are bjiusp.g diiedSes of the nervous system to increase ai a Rarrai ra tio. The symptom* to which .Disease* cftl.e nerv ous system give rise, inav be staled as follows : A dull, heavy feeling in the head, eometim a more or le*a severe bain or Feadr.ehe ; Period cal Headache, llizzinesß, Noises or Ringing in lie Head Coi fu-inn of Ideas; Temporary Loss of Memery ; Dejection of spirits ; St-arr ing during Sleep; Bod Dreams ; Hesitation in Answering Questions ; Dubiess of Heaiii-c ; Twitching of the Face, Arms. etc., which, if rot promptly treated, lea 1 to Pa- alt sis, Delirium. Insanity, Irapoteuey, Apoplexy, etc., e' e._ KOSKOO! Is NOT a secret quack remedy. FORMUi. s around each bottle,' Recommended by the . best Physicians,, eminent. Jjfoi.iCs Ekiilor Dtuggisle. efr. Tax Best Aim Most Porct«* Sfßinerxji jn Ts ' rma-liRED xixly nr J. J. LAWRENCE, M. D ORGANIC CHEMIST’, Laboratory and Office, No. 6 Main St VA Price—ONE DQLLAR. DVR