Indiana American, Volume 9, Number 40, Brookville, Franklin County, 21 October 1870 — Page 1
',
- ' ' : -, ; -- .. .. ....... - .. , . ' '.
- f
1EI 1 6bo' i t! id 1 ifl ! Btrr hi r U V. f - I . . i
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY C. n. B I N 6 II 4 31 , Proprietor.
Office in the National Bank Building, Third Story.)
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION! $2.50 PER YEAR, is adtaxck. $3 CO " " IF KOT PAID IS Ai)TCF
within tbiR
THE UN ION. THE CONSTITUTION, AND THE ENFORCEMENT
11 Willi
No postage on papprs delivered
uiigywiiii,i mjMBBMiMi itMlnKfwii
rnnFLAHOI
mm
'(.IMF
itooJUwdg denims .Bintr, SMM jSoptyjl).. .11, Iloofljiid's (icnnaii Hitters A Bitters tcihout Alcohol or Soirits of any
fcHI( j Modk of Prepapatio.y. Buchu, in vacuo. JuI lifT-rpnt r,... . t - . . niper Berries, by distillation, to form a fine Gin. is .liferent from a. 1 otners. It is composed of tho ; . . . . . . ,. , pare j liees if vital PH!N-ipr.E op Hoots, IIkubs, l-ub"0e3 extracted by displacement with spirits oban 1 Harks (or as me dieina'Iy terued, extracts), tained from Juniper Berries; very little sugar is
ne ...ruiifsJ.irjDlTt !liirtl(D llf thf i n it
an
OF THE LAW?,
VOL. 9, NO. 40.)
imODKVlLLE, 1XD., FRIDAY, OCTOHEll 21, 1870.
To Physicians.
Ifstt-Toft, August 15th, 18C3. Allow me to call your attention to my preparation of
i being used. Therotnre. in one bottle of thin
A Pretty Maiden's Soliloquy. Oh, dar me! I Am ready to erf. And it sometime' seems as though I should die; Nobody knows The number of wP8, That besets such a maiden as I. Tl)y call m a flirt, And trv in onnvAri
; Me into a hateful, contemptible prude; j If they don't mine?, ' 1 think lhv will hud
" . That I'll soon teach them what to conclude. Compouad Ssfcract
I' lleavn oaly kn,in hy they seem so d'r mined to peraec.ita me: ! What under the sun
j I ever have done The component parts are BUC dU.Loso Leap. ma'se them act so, 1 can't see.
CUUKliS. .1 IT M IPRH ncpniuc
it ney as ue to rid. Or to wulk by t!i-ir site. Whenever I think they're aniir to propose, I mm?e the r hi t Contriving to briig The subject ac once to a close. But then if I wait It mav be too l;i For men are but fickle at hst ,a they say; I think I'll decide (On, dear, how I n tried!) To accept onr without more deiiy.
Grou t J 10 Powder. A few weeks since, I stood bv the grave of Thomas Paioe, ia the town of New Rochelle, A plain monument marks the site o biB former home, and his former
WHOLE NO. 448
Strange Secrets of the Stomach. The following shocking disclosure is creating great excitement at this moment in all parts of the country The chemical connection spoken of between tea and leather was, doubtless, discovered by the coolies of North Adams: "When we pour milk into a cup of tea or coffee, the albumen of the milk and the
tannin of the tea instantly unite and form
TER MSOFADV Et Tl S fNG.
. . TRANSIENT. r,M T"re, (IS lines.) oat insertion .."M One square, two joKr-Kofii.. 1 6 One square, thr-9 insertions.. 2 t All subsequent insertions per square...... $9 TAHLfOne column, .changeal.'e qnrterly-......tT Three-quarters of a eoluma .. 50 One-half .of, column 3 One-qcacter of a column..... 14 0 One-eishthof a column .;...;.........' IS 00 Transient advertisements sheold in all eases ba
paid for in advance.
Unless a particular ti is specified when Band.
ed in, advertisements will be published until ordered eet and charged aocordinxly.
The Kuro Siwa. Br t. u. hauit'.
Tho JiiJuatorial Current oftha Pae'tfl is wider and racdftreven than that Kqf the Atlantic. It i the parent stream, out f. which so many other bodies of water obtairt their voluuio. It moTes, as do all such currents 0 thjs ocean, on the line qf a great circle, and ihis circ'S intnrsprta th
: a. 1 "o.t ' ' ------- v
tcaiocr, or tuiuuie uaaes 01 me very satne j ejuator at an acute anuria of only a few
mucn wine. I becauie very talkative; and;
my host soon knew as much ot my busi
It is more
used, and a small portion of spirit,
pulatable than any now used. Buchu, as prepared by Druggists, is ofad rk
B ttera eolor. tt is a plant that emits its fragrance ; the
i iner uiere is contained is uiuh tuedieal virtue a will be found in several trillions of ordinary
uixiures. i ne tiocis, j;c., u.eil in this
-a Frn.n in . or m . rk . -.-;...! :
tr. -tod in that country by a scientific Chemist j acuon 01 a n lme "estroys this (its active princian I forwarded to the manufactory in this city, i P,e) 'saving a dark and glutinous decociion. wnere they are compounded and bottled. Con j Mine is the color of ingredients. The Buchu in .Mining no spiituous -rddients. this bitter in . tree tro.a the objee.io,. . urged gainst all Others V W"" predom.nates j the s,naleSt quannr, ,)dir ftir st i m nian t a n K- I l e f tlt.Y of the Other 111 LTetlien t are fttl f rt r r
- - - u t aj" a 1 rum lutTirt - rj ....
rney cannot make drunkards, and cannot,! vent fermentation ; upon inspection it will be j UB verJ easy 10 j:ist tell Hun "jej;
our, nis nair 13 so iiirlit.
Now, John will be here To-night, wit hour tear;
un K r any circumstances, have any but a beneficial found not to be a Tincture, as made in pharmaLy? ' J copoea, nor is it a pyrup and therefore can be j irlC Oil U3Cl S G I" HI n. I! JL OtllC ""ed in cases where fever or inflammation exist.. j
Was compounded for those not inclined to cxrreiue
In th is you have the knowledge of the inirro d
litters, and is intended for ue in cases when j ents and the mode of preparation. .mCii!oiiolie tiinuiant is repaired in connection wiih the Tom's properties of the Bitters. Each Hoping that you will favor it with a trial, and
th.t'Jo cf the Tonic contains one bottle of the outers, combined with pure Santa Cui'z Hum, aad flavored in such a man nor th it tho extreme Mtteruej of the TJitters is overcome, I.r;uing a (.reparation, highly agreeable and pleasant to the palate, 'tit-1 containing the inedieiual virtues of liie Hitters. The price of the Tunic is if 1. 50 per kvtile, wTiitii many persons think taa high. They luus't t ike'iato consideration that tho stimulant iei is guaranteed tube f a pure quality. A ..r arti- !e .oul 1 be furnished at. a cheaper price,
ti'ii is it not lioiter to pay a little more and have np.od arlt.tc? A medicinal preparation should j
. otin none t ut tho best ingredients, and they Kim expect to obttia a cueaj) compou-id will most crrtinly be cheated.
that upon impectin it will meet with your approbation, WJ'.H a feeling of confidence, I am, very respectfully, II .-t T. UKLMBCLD, Chemist 'and Druggist of 16 Years' Experience.
And his whi-ikers too bright He'll wait a while 1-n On Tie Stair-Y7aj. BY Mll.l.y GLKB.
on the biok of my sailie, ia whicii I had a gool su n of money for those days. 'It was an evening very much like this, in the same month; that I stopped at this same house to escape the storm. iTi,. 1 ll,.J . . i 1
a iuihiuiii wai enreuiBiv ODieauiOUs 1 u j 1. r r. -
in atteo luM to my wants, and after our it is covered wUh si ificant qaoution8 smoke after supper, he requested me to froin his litico reioUd 2 Ag jom turn ,0 dr.nk.na a bottlo of w.ne X 8tood there aD(j rected 0Q ni3eD;ou Cetn a beUted traveller, and na.luo? hia 4 ent er and real euae f loth I readily consented; and very ,on. thou.ht of Uhru-t's striking prophecy, and we had succeeded in iispoatng of six bot- , ita 9iouP historical t'uitill nnt: 'On ties in pUceotone. ! whomsoever this stoae shall fall, it shall Ai might be expected, after taking so
- . ' iils'' Ill'ii I J .f J rf 1C1 . I. ...
' 1 1 inrp nr t fi tannAil hnl anH K i o K mL-.
Ihomas Fame's c.reer was full of! f .1 " 7 .7; "
" 11 -iii , n icaiiier as ui?tinguistiea iroio me ori.'i promise. He weil led a nen wbou nnnn . . w . r-
a .. 1 : . r-r- nai ssin. In te course ot a vear io
course, among other tiots, he bectma ni;rh,M uA 11;,. ,,., V,i...
pu.ilii'cl in E iujlanl during the exciting scenes of the French Revelation, reached the unp-irailcd circulation of over a mil-
..-vie 1 nijk. lU'iuiua uctuio lilts uccurai ion ..p I i J . , v i - - .
- ui. ai ariieuueuce, is aio 1,0 uave severed
t. l.t link. u, h..,,...l ,b .t,a"- uiina.eTery one 01 us, a pan
the mother country. Sir days before the : : 0",a V 6 .carr lran -Uloca, is all aglow in India, and be-
h it.U of Trenton th fir., r,.,Vho, . . f --T constantly, to make a horse- comes stifli
1 ...A,; ... .v... u... 8fc0- chave clay ecough in our fra-
'I td taken enough cf the wine to ' 0 every Region t, an I first around, it is ? t' P0PI .PtftJ . and make t mo feel very nervous, so that I found ! aaili, the droopiug ardor of the disheart- k ' , Sojd1sued br,ck rU eat tt di.Boult to compose myself, aal my feel- cat,,j peopje , here 10 Chicago, at least a peck of dirt a
nigs were u t at all improved by the im- i Vb t i0,i,' I .innn.i ' U1',"lu o, uui is uoc too large an est
pressioi? I received irum my host
j ness affairs as ill!
111 vseif.
cjutaiiiei a
aware tint my s uall yahs large sum of mo icy.
'.My host kiu liy volunteered to take care of my baggage, it' 1 would leave it with hita; but although I had taken too much wiue, still I kuew enough to decline his luig'iariimous offer. An 1 wishiug him 'go.od-uight,' 1 took my valine in my haud au 1 we at to my appointed bai room.
compound which is produced in the tex-
drinker of average habits will have iqabi
bed leather enough to make a pair of shoes, ifii could be pit into the prople j shape for the purpose."
A great many things go into the mouth. ,tp
We have
?eea it somewhere. But it is an alarmin
oe drink, every one of us,
degrees. It sweeps to the westward, in
"uninterrupted graudeur," as one expresses it, around three-eighths,of the pijcumfereuce of the Rlobe, until diverted by the. continent oCVsia, and split into innumerable rtreaco by fche Polynesian Inlands. Reaching the Lad ro nee, it amparitf a much warmer climate than U has given
tue paudwich or Mar uuesas. The
Fhiipiues are pade oppressively hot eves
m winter, and ono iarciliar with.,it. bp said: "The fervor increases as we reach
'lie was an Italian, and had that for-
B'rom tho largest Manufacturing Chemist in the World. ST OVUM CKR 4, 1 Sot. "I am acquainted with Mr U. T. Helmbold ; he occupied the Orui; Store opposite my
residence, and was successful in conducting the
i,.y .tie ureaiesi iVTiOWa itemedieS ; business where others had not been equally so be-
. j . 1. iv 1. .11 1 1. 1 1 . i , 11 1-1, i f, 1 1 n t; ' votrs tc: iii irv, j u'irn:, ihsim.e Till: KT1 KYS, I'.liUiTlu.NS u f liil' 5s K I N , and a'l liisnase? ari-
tii jt from a disor lured Liver, Stou'aeti, nr IMPUKIXV '-1-' 1'liE Ul.i'.)U.
Head the folli'win symptoms:
t'o:isti;.:ition, F.'atulnnce, (award Piles, FuU-
nes of Ulo.il to thu Head, Am lit V of tho SiomaeT-
V',..,..o.. II.. ... .- ....
..u... UW( u , iistusi ior rooii, ruoiess:
or e:;!it in the Stomach. Snnr 1 i-nt . 1 ;
Milking or ! luiteriug t tho Pit of the Stom-.eh.
iriiuun-; of the liea.l. Hurried or DiiSeult eathing, Hutteri'ng at tho Heart, Choking or
.iioeating Muifatirns when in a Lying Posture
I'lui.ncss ot ision. t; ..r U'..j.u 1,.,
Pain in tho licad. Ilelieiinev
i i'ion, 1 ell.Mvness of U10 Skin and
in f'10 M le, Pack. Chest, -l.i .. iw .t
!,!. of lieat, li irnhis 'n the V
1 il UilHlllTl 1 L11 . an, I lit-....
"is. AM tlse ie'dieato Disea ii.utivo Urgiiiis li'oiubiuod
! fore him. ( hve" been faovrabfy impressed with
ni3 cnaracter an l enterprise. WILLIAM WEIOflTMAIT, Firm of Powers 3c W eight nan, Manufu'ctrt ing Chemists Ninth and Brown Streets, Philadelphia.
Go up higher, sturdy scho!l-boj, Do not loitr long below; You are wanted at the su nmit, IJriskly, bravely, upward go. Go up higher, little maiden, Tripping lightly at the start; By aud by you may jrrow weary, Yel go up, be strong of heart. Go up lusher in your lessons; Go up higher in yo ir play; S ep by s'ep you'il cli n'i tliestairway, (Jo up bjliT every day.
people. .. 1 , a 1 V , ' month l ' (i 1 1 ... ...nil. . K r I 1. 1..
, , - 1 . " ; mate. 1 he man who care ess v tins a "- ass secured, to which his various services in f- 1 . . V i"f-U!,a tl,a P,l,in.t the fiol.l ,...1 -s.i. ,K- ' ! U?er,at0 hwstomach, little reflect
bidding loK of a desperate character; and : had afforded no mean conclusion, no lion- I h bl ,he Q,naf',ctUf0 .of a the beauty of ins fa,e was not at all im- i or9 8oe,Ued to a triumphant Republic too Jet.su.c,hf l the ?h? m ot lh proved by a long .ear across his right : ere,t to be lavished upoa him. General ! f91"1,11". Wl ,h th chyle and forms temple; tha thumb of his hand was gone Washington received bitu with peculiar I ' T f ".-e JJ saiiie seen so often also; so that his general appearance was : honors' as his -uest. The National 7on- I . faet0.rles- Bat not being instantly
not, to say the least, at all preuossessi ug; ! .,,uu ai ,i i i ... . UMI,Z9d " ,s lJ3t- fcu" further; it is es
. . ' 1 tl 1 U l w L' l ltlV V '-i VWl 3 tl lC3L,i -IUMJ 111 i I . li 1 I , , he looked as it ne woail as soou commit j 0f the nation's esteem. New Yoric UlUate'J tbat th? bone? ,n every adult Pei"
a murder as smoke a cigar. ! seuted him with a magnid jent estate of
-.mei i uau uuareseu, i pmced my three hundred acres at. New Rochelle.
ralise and pistol under my piliow. And j Pennsvlvania voted him a co-amir,,
V.I
of
n, having carefully, as I thVt, examin- ' 0,500. New Jersey offered him a home-
ed every nook and corner, of the room, to see that there w-as no dauger of intrusion, I laid myself down, but I could not sleep; the wine instead of having a narcotic effect, produced the contrary, and the recol-
I Sections of my host had pat my biool to a I fever fi ;at. 'I mut have ben lying in this troubled 1 stare for several hours, wueu 1 wis sure I
son require to be fed with lime euough to make a marble mantel every eight months. To sum up we have the following astounding aggregate of articles charged to account of physiology, to keep every poor shack on his feet for three score years and ten:
Larkey Hjahes' Stjry
Fifteen years ago,
''" re the ol Per-
Eyes, Pain i:., iden
!"a. Constant
depression of se of the Livei with impure
Ki;t.v;n''iLD,3 Fr.utn Extract Br'cHu.for weakness
; ;:ris:ng from' indiscretion. The exhausted powers of nature which are accompanied by so many ! at urn in ir svmptoaas.ninonf hic!i will bnfnnn.l
Tndispngition to Exertion, Loss of Memory, Wakefulness, Horror of Disease, or Forebodings of Evil ; in fact, Universal Lassitude, Prostration, and inability to outer into the enjoyments of society.
traveling- in the
so pleas-
. . i' ir
mountains oi v trgiaia was u at ant as it is now.
Then the Springs were a resort for invalids, and not, as at the present, for the fashionables of society, aal hence the necessity for increase! facilities for traosTlOrtillT na.i.ifn.r.3f .lil n.r
Tho I.. ,.,l,;., . ..ii . .1 its lull length, and the pistol Ui-m y graspl tie lumbering old coich, usually! , , , , 1 H,., t... iv- i. . li, . . - ed i;i my ha. id, I awaited auy result, ara.'ti tij, six hor.es, would De driven by n - . . r'n'c ..r ,i..-. ...i 1 . ; ;. j: . ' I lie tioisouow became more distinct.
.iivfcv; itLftiuan in ivtn xvilii, I u Urir- )
ing his team to a breik-neek mw d
m l. . ' ! l'g
"uu.u ue winsiiitiT so-ne negro mjlily, while the poor passengers inside, o;i the top, or domiciled oa the boot, wo il i be
T.l! u.0 cf ft-'" rtrtfer nr '
- - . .....t. ..... o.il tiiju
,,rr i,..,,
no well and healthy.
m?i)iaAN;'8 :taEK oil, "J Core J::r Alt Ki,;Js of I'dinx cii,l Achfs. Kus r-NM t.T. It will cure all kinds m l A sa -ii aj Khou ::i i lisin , Xcuo:ii.';,c. h.Iol.iin.V, r.-r.-ir;., '.bruises, ii' il hc. Pains in th i Pa. !? and
ats or Lioib, dlinijeof fc'-
The constifution, once atTjctei with . Organic Weakness, requires the ail of Medicine to strengthen and invigorate the system, which ff ELJlIiOLirS EXTRACT BUCHU invariably dees. If no treatment is submitted to, Connor insanity ensues.
IIki.wi Vii.n's Fi.rin Extract Bcchc, in atTections pTJuliar to Fo nales, in uneq-aalle I by any other preparation, "as in Chloiasis, or Retention, Painfulnoss or Suppression of Custamarr Evacuations, Ulcerated or Schirrus State of tho Uterus, an d all complaints incident to the sc?, or the dcliue or change of life.
expecting every moment to be dashed to pieces down some of those fearful lookiu-r
stead within her borders. Virginia failed
only by a single vote in the attempted appropriation to him of a tract of land valued at ;i!),00D. 'It is doubtful,' says the historijn Botta, 'whetner any writer eer possessed in a higher degree the art of moving aud guiiing the m altit tij at his will.' 'No writer,' says Thomas JeffrSOi. 'has exceeded l'aine. in fan i i i ri t
I : :. ...i i t .. . . - . . ' . -j
uuaia souo uoi-,e a pp are u i ijr uiuurmy 0t st y le, in perspicuity of expression, hap. bed, or under the floor near my bed. pu.es of elucidation, and ia mui jle aui At. first I thought it was the result of unassutuiug language.' ' m ;ny feverish brain; but after collecting my I .Such w as t h e m ati , who, drinking in scattered euses, and c.lmly thinking a , thj irreligious philosophy of the Freueo few moments, I felt convinced that I did j E.ieyclopdtcdist, undertook in his Age hear a noise of some km 1. And so, tak- 0f ileason,' at tho end of an otherwise
.uj ...j. .1.1, miuci ...j l,i.,u.Ti a j uiemofaoie lite, to suovert toe oriuciDles. i hnii.l a .n.v,i.r, ,..i.. . ,..i ; i
ji.etly coed it under ne clothes, so as , ailti uudermme the authority of theOi.ris- j cjarbi0 enoUi,h to supply all our neighbors to make no no.se; and then, lying on my j tun religion, lie did not deny, bat as- with mantels. We have not Cured on bacrf, with my right arm stretched out to sertod the existence of a God, the claims th.- 8il , ,s r .t p .t . t.
of conscience, and the reality of an im-jbatit is safe to say that the real estate mortal existence beyond the grave. He I tilat a hearty eater masticates atidswalsimply set his lance iu poiaa to demolish l0,V3 in the course of a Ion ' and eventful
. . an vaio uio "cuja- career would amount to something; worth
iuin franklin beseecn lam .to repress a work so shocking to the religious sensibilities of mankind. 'Among us,' said the sage, 'it is not ueces-afy, as among the
lieu s shoes, .0 years, 1 per a year... 70 pair3. Horsa shoes, 70 ye.irs, to) I a month, as our arterial system reua.vs its blood every new moon 810 shoes. Pricks, li pir 7 years 12U brioks. Hats, not lesjthan 14 a year. sISl) hts. Mantels, (j, 1 a year 10i mantels. Here we are surprised to observe that we eat as many shoes as we wear, and suf ficient number of hats to supply a large family of boys, that we float io our blood vessels horse shoes enoilgh to keep a span of grays shod all the win'e: ttiat we carrv
in our animated clay, bricks enough to
and 1 coal 1 pia.nly hear some ouc draw
back a bolt. 1 ij ii-jtly turned my eye
toA-ir i tiie djjr to sea if any move as ui ide there; but hardly hai I turned my ileal, whoa I was sure that I saw the'
rug in trout of tho lirepiacj
nisTau t I
m ove.
i Hottentots, that a youth to be raised iu.
, i ... i . i i .
precipices that abpuud alo.i- the mouu-1 , , . 1 trap ,SJor w.ucn ; fo the company ot men should prove Ins taiu roads across the Alleghany. i been most careiuily concealed by this! aiatihou.i by beating bis mother.' Faiue
uf wh.iuuji) uiiuu uji, dua t uviiim my ; persKiej. Ills 'Ae Oi iViaSJU, lor
h iving if sold like the corner lots on State
street, at S.UiJd a front foot. f Chicago Evenior I'ost.
It was a dismal "I'orniug in February, ISf-, that I succeeded in obtaining accommodations on too" top of tho sti'e, bound for the Springs. The day had passed pleasantly enough, but just about dusk, signs of a storm were to plainly visible. It w.ts bid euough to think of trusting my bones on the top of the old coach, if ttie nig'it were pleasant; but the idea of riding down the m uu. tain road that night eXpeeting a storm was fearful.
Feeling as I did, I must
I
i a Ihrt 1 , i r ii etc.
I-
I t-:.:s i.i. v. It
i:
I .-i
Z",
It
L "5 11:
fill
will cure Kidney k li oil ichc," Colic,
.i r1.,,-.. :h dora Iiifanfu.n, Cholera p irid I'll i ii s in the Momaeh, Fevei i'ihs. Col Is, Asthma, etc.
-I .yi.VM'c l0i),)i'iIYLLlX iisriTUTK FOR MEltCURV PILL. TWO FILLS A DOSE. 1' tjvl innocent, VegcUbL Cathartic known s nit necessary to take a handful of theso
"" lo J .radu.'e the desired effect: two of them
IT iu;,.lr lv. 1 . . .- . .
J t"- ernn!y, cleansing the Liver,
-''jinaili. and l!..tt-t. n :
. o. iiiipuruies. a oe pai ingredient j4 Podophy llin , or the AlcoLAtract of .Hdr. i,,,ke. which i bv uim
'"e "'"re V'U, Vo.ing and Searchinir. than
Its peculiar action ii nnn
er. c e:i r. i
lajari ,JS results ! Ulil.lT,. 1
'11 disease,, ia which tho U!)9 ofa cathartic -'":..!, these Pills will give entiro satisfaolVe V"ry ihey Dever ml' i'M?esf i.iv.t,r Complaint, Dyspapsia, and :"Cosi.ivMe.S) Dr. Hoofland's German UitLK "J"ulJ be useu ir. connection with " I he tonio effect of tue Bitters or Tonio 'Z '! thJ -vto J1- The Bitters or Tonio ttia l;i .od, strengthens the nerves, regu-
t-ucr, and
confess that!
... .. . . v.. I .. I . ... - , . !
I i iisa inner pieaseu wnen, alter riling
..I. ... . . . 1. . . r. . 1 .
auout. au uour alter uusk, as we were
passing through a narrow detile, the of tho left hind wheel came off. aad stage was tumbled.
is -A .re oi aveasju. lor tue
I.....!...-.) ... I,...:.... i, :.t. ..- i ': - .....
i.,.,. .., ..j.ian uj;i, ivu a udi k , iii,rii u outrivaued tne wile spreai pp Itntern partially opened. . ; ularity of his .Com.uon Saaso," aud his 'I held my breath until he got in the ' 'Rigi.ts :f Man.' Foe Church of Christ room and began to look around, when 1 j seemed for the moment to tremble under saw by the hght ot his lantern that he also! the blow. Christian men feared for the had a desperate looking knife in his hand, j saleiy of their faith before an attack so aud kuoiug that I wjuid be iho object of ; audacious, from a pen so powerful. Cut
Ins bue:i :ry, carol illy lifted my h.anu j the lance that struct the Cross of Christ
from under the eovcriug as his back was p.rti iiiy turned to.vard mo, and fired. ' I' tie instant L dreJ the scoundrel fell. I jumped up, put on my clothes, and af-
''l indr.ike itself.
1 ' !t speedily from ull obstrus-
power of Mercury, vet free
attached to tho use o
CIO' ETr'a'CT BCCHIT AND Tur ROvkd Uosk Wash will radically exterminate from system diseases arising trom habits of dissipation , at little expense, little or no change in diet, no inconvenience or exposure ;completnly supcrsedieg those unpleasant and dangerous remedies, Copaiva and Mercury, iu all these diseases.
Uso IIklmbold's Fluid Extract Bcch-j in all j disease of these organs, whether existing in male i or female, from whatever cause originating, -and no uiatterhow Iotg standing. It' is pleasant in I last and odor, "immadiate" iu action, and more strengthening than any of Ibe.preparatioqs of Bark ! or ir n.
T se su!Triag from broken-down or delicate jo itutioas, procure the remedy at once.
ter- taking a iiuicii look at the bodv. to
a r I sea whether I had killed him or uot, I t'ilr' hi f-.tirnt.! uml lif: lliu l..i.a
'I thought I had killed him, as the mark of my bullet was to be seen ou the i .o . ;.t.. i' v, ; i. l . ; . i. .. .i . .. :r . i. .
1.1. i a. i - i 'co riui. ui ins iiciu, ll lliiu IOIU uu iue fortunately the road wai so narrow,, . . r. . ' , r , . T . . , . , lo.ver part utnis car, and I sutiDosed had
urti.C' . y'"r'. ! en tered his brain: but when I returned'
tire the
that the stage could not b
...... .. .. r... . i '
eisc some one ot us mignt nave Deca sc. . riouly injured. As it wis, the Old! Bess" was gently turned over on its side, j and the passengers were kind of mixed upj a little, without being hurt much. As there was no chance of getting the J wheel repaired that night, some of us who were not encumbered with baggage de. ' termiued to hunt up some house where J we could get a warm supper and a com- I fortable sleep for the night, but for fear of missing the coach in the morning, we' could not go far from the road. . i The driver directed us down the road ' we were on, and about a mile from the '
Tho rsadar must be aware that, however stigb, may be tae tt ek of the above diseases, it is cer
tain to affect the bodily health and uiealal po
ers.
scene of our disaster we fiaio t au
where, according to a shii
an oak-tree in front of the houe. coull
with some friends the tiexi morning, there were no traces of the villiiu.' 'Did you ever hear of him since?' asked one of the pat ty.
'No, gentlemen, I never saw until to-night.'
As L irkey said this, the intruder, whom we had uotu-ed till now, jamped up, aud making a hounJ toward him, shrieked: Vou lie!'
We caught him, and af er overpowering ;
hi.p, found the identical scars that Lirkey had mentioned the sabre scar, the lost thumb, and tue clipped ear. W e heid a council as to what course
was shivered into a thousand pieces ia his hand. His assault was as powerless to move the Rock of Ages, as the thunder-storm to shake the -granite hills over whose heads the harmless anger, plays. The stone which the builders refused, fell upon hi:n, and ground hi u to powder. lie is left withot a sect, aud almost without a follower. His sevices to liberty have been obliterated from the memory ol mankind, by his assaults upon reiigicu. .... . .
tie is tnowu to out rew, save as tne rep
resentatne ol the coarsest luiade.iiy
hven tne broad-minded Quakers
not yield to his hones a uaal re
him since i-place" in their Christian burial
lie was interred upon his own LSe.t even death brought no repose.
How iMuskrats are Cauaht.
Wien unable to find an air-hole on the I
i surface, the muskrat, in such an emergency, exhales the vitiated air from its lungs, which rises in the shape of a flattened bubble, till it reaches the lower face of the ice. Coming thus in coutaot with the water, the bubble gives out its carbonic acid, which is replaced by oyy.n. The rat then swims toward it, and, pressing his uose against the ice, sucks in the improved air. The hunters avail themselves of this remarkable device; they go in search of such air-bubbles), and as soon as they see one they break the ice above it, the muskrat is drowned, and the skin is secured.
The mukrat is uot drowned because the ice is broken, for that, of itself, would rather improve his chauees than otherwise, but because he is.drivea away from his air-bubble before hj bys tiara to take it in again. Musk rata have curious methods of traveling, long distances under the ice. Ia
their inter excursions to their feediug-
ly at great
y take in
breath at starting and remain under water
ing in its intensity as these
equatorial waters, after traveling fifteen thousand miles aud beirg Ailly three-hun
dred aays under a vertical pun, are thrown, again.-t the eastern shores of Africa." Thin Kijuatorial Current is as broad as the Tor t id Zone, and out of it comes the Jvuro Siws). i . 'I be later possesses a temperature moro striking in its coutrast with the surrounding waters than does tho Gulf Stream of the Atlantic. , v Strking off at Forrnoaa from the great tiijuatorial, it moves with majestic powers,' heedless of the fiercest gale, aud to the eye of the thoughtful observer is beut upon ihe discharge of sotnc momentous mission. Reaching the fortieth parallel of north lat-
itudo, its surface :s swept by the "brave west winds" of the northern hemisphere. It dow scs.iu9.to turn aside from its course.
ami curve away to tfjo, A.menean jSlores Ou the track of its northeasterly flow tha map-maker writes another name, as jf some mighty .power had diverted it. But ft has not been turned; only a little pf its foamy surface has been borne along in the easterly set. Tho . vast torrent is only skimmed. . The recurvation which pours around th? go:itb.crn coasts of Alaska, ao leaves the western shoere?. of Sitk'i. Island,, ij but a drift. , The tremendous bulk ko equatorial water rushes oa in a changeless cyurse. It is moving in obedience to a steady and Eitnighty , han J. Kvery drop feels the impulse of a force it caunqt resist. Every drop is jighter than the drop pf polar water, wjlh. which, it is.hasfr ecing to exchange places, lest tho cquili. drium of nature be overthrown.
But ou its way it receives, every moment, an 'tup act from the earth's rotation. And thus it moves on the line cf a gipat circle to the northeast, and entering Behring's Sea k nocks for admission at tie very grte's of the 1'olar Ocean. In ita course its pathway is strewed with, .the marks of its thermal and climatic power. If the (Julf Stream has clothed Ireland
with its robe of verdnie, and made it. the -'Kmerald Isle," tho Kuro Siwo has dope
as much for the Aleutiau Islands , and Alaska. They are mautlcd with Hying green. The flocks scarcely need shelter iu winter. If their soil is freeless, their gu. If stream richly supplies them with timber for their canoes, aud camphor wood of Japan and China for their furniture Atlantic Monthly.
e,1'ty' fgrouads, which are fre judutly wo ud jdifltaaetH fro.u theif aijji,, ttle, estia g ' i ... . - , . J
iirouua. i ... ..v, .P;. - .
j mu; as iucy uu. a 113:1 tuey rise up tl''f. i to the iee and oreathe out the air in their
.- - . 1 t. --' . ICiU IIU, L.I Ji J J.U I'Jl!
a century aro, IfOiu ins violated touiy, ,k,i r r . ,
" - . i v v Vg U. U, A. It v ail
his An
...t.-i.. j w. f . s n..i.-..-nl . A I. ....I.. .1
11; 111 .litis wciu icuju.cu w nui. u. , ,. n - 1 . .: .- , 1 c ' tii15 air reeavers oxygen from the wa eutha-tastie irieud atttieipaied for- , . , . . .
them a warm welcome. But none w,s so
' 1 iT-iS bo,f I I h.h'i'l.l r.-l iLts,min.l t.v lul
iere, according to a shingle naileloa'r , .rr.. i..., i , ,. .. , , ljar.cy wren uis vengeance on htm in
poor as to do them reverence
as by the judgements ot Almighty UoJ,
out evcu the place ot ineir final burial.
His works
has hi, tor-; recorded.
ter and tne iee, aal then take it iu again, .. .. I :i .u . .: ... .. 1 ...
L,. a a a 1:0 u'liii iu'j u.iuiaiiou iria 10 uv Msiiersed. i. , ....... . . , ,
j. 1 : repeuie.i. ia 1111s wav iney can travel ai-
m j-,t any distance, and live auy length ui time under the ice.
A Paris paper tells an amusing anecdote
about Lafayette. At Lamarq'uc's funeral
the crowd took out the General's horses, as he was returning homo, aud drew him
to his hotel. . 'Vou' tuust have Letsn very, much, pleased," remarked a friend, soma time afterward. ... "Very much pleased, indeed,' replied LFay.ette; "but I never saw anything tiiori of my horses."
The Dost Way. John liunyan was once askel a question about heaven, which he could not answer, because the matter was uot revealed io the Scriptures; and. he thereupon advised the inquirer to live ' h'jly life, acd go aad see.
Cart.
be found 'Aeeomuiodatiou for lleast.' Not having any beasts
him that he had but a few haurs to live.
Man aid
"" 1 : 1, . . 1. t r...;.
.1-3... .c a -1 . 11 vuiCA i-j mi.w a o , tuuicas
ling quarters tor ourselves
mra dlVPpeafea uom"?e vcr' of this habit of tae m,srat, in th', f,l-
- v v v i u t uj iu . U-JI1C3 11 utu I 11 C 1 4 Liaic. .1 uu mo ua.u'
aay '.uinar ho S:. We than notiHt?d anj life oi Uiiuims 1'a.iae. reimiu a iuju-
1JT i..
. . v i?..v.i .-uLLtiuu ii, u u I i 1 1 11 ;v 1 ci V , .... . ' -, ! no less tnaa
Miustauiiai supper, ana as W3 sat arouni
j a blazing fire, each oue with a cigar in
uis mouin, ruminating ou tue storm with
out, and the soiid, warm comfort within.
we would take it. Relieving our threats, ho confessed to
seven murders, and told us
whers to mi tue sKeietons ot Ms victims,) all of whom hai been murdered iu that j
room:
'omental testimonial to the truth of the
prophecy, "Ou whomsoever it shall fall, it sii3il griud him to I'owder.'f Rev. Lyman Abbott.
- .
ir ruisuiis.
Stockton Gazelle
give streujjth, energy and uretic. -IU
. i great Diuretic K-'7.t lUr n"W'3 ctive with the Pills, and ! ! tit. y5;eu, wit!j Hitter or Tonic, and 20 I
'eum its hold.or ever assail you. -eaic ii incs are sold by all Druggists and ,'"""a Ul,:''-itie ovorywhere.
i'.r., r,it j 1.:. .it J c.j
It W.-I4 nriiniKPit tllt t.v churlan lha ,.,v.v t '
, 1 r ., . . the skeletons, each one would relate some event in his ! .w . j , - (l
.j-. - i ut mined ui:;i uvc iu mo uiu 'ci sj
m i - pv pd mi nnf rin:.i.. i iii." PiTH'T st O'N nr fiiif n.- ci-. i
tit.
All the above diseases rejaire the aid of a ti,
Sold by Dragsists ererywhero. Prick $1,25 per bottle, or 6 bottles for $,50. Delivered to any address. Describe symptom ia all communication.
rc k' li't arc so universally used and high--'auHnaeJ; and do not allow the D.ugisl "cJ .u to take any thin else that he may
.. as good, because he
Ma . ' 111040 Remedies will be sent by Kx- ioal Warehouse, 594 Broadway, X . Y 5'iC!t'r lin'iUi,y uPn application to the 1 1 JhL. liXl 1 U.'.i .To ... n ....... I
' .-".va ca.avc.cia, a ia a u A- 1
lk4fa lar,,r' Address II. T. HSLMBOLn, Drug and raeban
'- - U 1 s
Ilesidea our own party, consisting of six, there was an unknown person who had intruded himself upon us, but of whom we took oo notice until it cams to the lime of Larkey llughes to tell his story. Lackey was- a tall, gauat, lanternjawed speciman, hailing from 'down East,' who had remained perfectly silent while the rest of us were telling our stories, his chief occupation seeming to be trying to
discovet who the stranger was.
thorities the next day, with his written confession, and kept on oar jour iey, the 'Old Less having been repaired; and about a month afterward I read in the Chronicle a long account of the hanging of Angelo Maesto.
An Irrgeniajs Reply. We are indebted to Miss Ada ;, for this anecdote: At a receat examination of one of the schoils in Washing ton. the question was put to a class of
j small boys. -Way is the Connecticut so
CU VS. II. EVANS. PranrliMnr. T0!J
: a. . 1 r. - nr. .rriLVAit ir r. r .i.r.. wi th fi.n-aiiiiiIlA n
Before commencing his story, he went; called?'-when a bright little boy put up his to the door of the room, and locking ir, I han I. 'Do you know, James? - l'es. put the key in his coat pocket," and then ' ma'am, because it e-mnccts Vermont and
ONE AltE GESUI.'JE USLESs D0E UP ! apologizing for hi strange conduct, butiNew Hampshire, and cuts through Mas-
'orrnerlyC. 31. JARICanv A s.n
,.e.. ' -"t'aies are for sale by Druggists, .r'Kr,an' tfJ'!io Dealers, everywhere Jat the United Stat4. IVmiln St....ib
aud the West Indies.
I iiumisiii iu cAMiam u stiisueiury oeioro i sacnusetis. was lua uiuuuaui ac'iji.
my Chemical, SVaxehousej and- signed jau2I y Ii;.. T. UELMBOtD.
he fiuished his story he commen-ced:
'Three years ago gentlemen, I had occasion to travel over these mountains on business, and as I had to journey away from the stage roads, I -pursued, my way ea horsebackwith a small value strapped
Oar Young Folks.
A gentleman was one day asked by a friend how to keep himself from quarrels. He answered, "3y letting the angry person hare all the quarrel to himself."
Sweet Oil fo
We learn from th
what a plain farmer s.ys: It is now over twenty years since 1 learned that sweet oil would cure the bi t3 of a rattlesnake. Dot knowing it could cure any other kind of poison both on man or beast. I think no farmer should be without a bottje of ii in the house. The patient must take a spoonful of it internal. y, and bathe the wouud for a cure. To cure ahorse it re juries eight times as much as it does for a man. Here let me say, uf one of tho most extrems cases' of snake-bite in the neighborhood eleven years ago this sum.mcr where the case had been thirty days standing, and the patient was given up by his physicians. I heard of it and carried the oil. and gave one spoonful which - affected" a cure. It is an antidote, for arsenic and strychnine. It will cure bloat in cattle caused by eating to freely of fresh clover; it will cure bites of bees, spiders or other insects, and will cure persons who have been poisoned by a low ruuniug vine in the meadows, called ivy.
towing. man aer: vVhea the marshes anl
! the pou Is where the muskrats abound, are
first Irozen over, and the iee is tbta aud clear, on striking iuto their houses with his hatchet for the purpase of sotting his traps, he frequently sees a whole family plunge into tha water and swim away under the ice. Following one for some dis. tauce, he sees him come up to rnew his breath in the manner above described. After the animal has breathed against the iee, and before he has time to take his bubble in again, the hunter1 Strikes with his hatchet directly over hici and drives him away from his breath:. In' this' case he drowns in' sw'iming a few rods, and the hunter, cutting a hole in the ice, takes him out. Mink, otter and beaver travel under the ice in the same way; and hunters have frequently told of taking otter in the manner described, when these animals visit the house of the muskrat for prey.
A Sweeping Simile A fellow who had never enjoyed' the pleasure of being coaxed out of his money by a paif cf bright eyes swimming in tears, and cboiequently feals angry with those who have", crustily remarks "As people sprinkle the floors before they sweep them, so wives sprinkle their husband's with tears in order to sweep cash out of their pockets.
Sir Claude di Crespigny, who
leads a j yoas life in India with his regi
ment, has lately given his friends a tjO.UOJ rupee breakfast at Lihore, which w
brought out from I'aris by express- Thia reminds us of the darkey who told of soma one whose "money was soon parted," h "diyremembered de fust part." Mount Pisgah. A gentleman, favorably known iu high moral circles in .Philadelphia, named .Jacob Stone, was relating to a Sabbath-school . his, travels in tho Holy Laod, and cmong other things told the scholars of the asseut of Mount l'isgah. Ou the following Sunday a teacher askedii in the course of the lesson, who ascended Mount l'isgah? , A lit Is urchin promptly cried out, " JiW'i, Elian, aud Jtcob iStoiie.' A man's own good breeding is the best security agaiust other peopie'i' ill man-nets.
J ustiSab'e
friend the peose.
Siingi uess. Grudging
right
of laughing at uu
ex-
Would a man be much tired if ha pass
ed a restless (k)night in horseback'
V hence would vou expect "the light or
otLer days"'" Ex (A.mp).oo-i facto.
All but two per cent, of the Prussian1
army can read and write.
A greedy boy The oua . who took the
measles from his little sister.
The ruin of most men dates from some
Spirits cf Wine. After-diauor SSYite-J idle hour. Occupation is ah' armor to ment. ' the soul.
The acrobats of every hoaseaold the
pitcher and tumbler..
Prudence gni ias ti.e wise, but passion governs the tooiinii.
The easiest iab.r is a hurt heu to himwllO iiaS too iiO.T.cj i'lu" jTil lortui U U
i - ! 1 I
if
