Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 27, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1878 — Page 3
THE INDIANA STATE SENTEST3L, WEDNESDAY MOHNTNG, JUNE 12, 1878:
3
THE FOBSAKO.
Gay forms were thronging "round, lie I lov'd was pnasing by; He turned a cold glance on me, And I thought 1 heard htm sigh. His eye, that sparkled brightly once, Had lost Its luster now ; Joy had forever left that lip. And marble seem'd that brow. lie turned hi hasty glance away From one he lov'd w well, Fearing, perhaps, his form, so changed. That hopeless love might tell. Upon his irm a fair bair'd girl Was leu.ilnggay and free: AIms! she little thought how well lie was beloved by me. I would not have another know How deep was my despair, When I saw him by the altar kneel. And pledge bis honor there; That he would guard with life, with fame Protect in weal or woe. Her, his own bride, who knelt too there, His best belov'd below. I g w his quivering lips were pre&Vd Upon her brow so fair; He thought not then, alas! that I, His rtrst love, saw him there, I hoped his bride, that happy girl. Would love him as I loved. Anil months and years, as they rolled by, Would see that love unmoved. I ne'er shall be that happy thing That I was wont to be; Scenes that such Joys to others bring Will have no charms for me. And though he said he loved me more Than ull the world beside. Can that, alas! avail me now? Another Is his bride. NICHOLAS AND CHARLOTTE. A Love Romance of History. The betrothal and marriage of the Trine-ess Charlotte of Prussia with Nicholas, who was then grand duke, but afterwards became emperor of Russia, forms one of the sweetest and most romantic love episodes in the world of European courts, which is usually devoid of love and romance, and would, on that account alone, deserve being remembered, quite regardless of the historical interests which will henceforth adhere to all the members of the family of the conqueror of France. Princess Charlotte was lor in the year 1793, and was the eldest daughter of King Frederick William the Third, of Prussia, and his beautiful and accomplished wife. Queen Louisa. Her early childhood elapsed amidst .scenes of terror and humiliation for the royal family of Prussia, and nobody would at that time have ventured to predict for her the brilliant career which Providence kept in store for this child, born and brought up under Mich fatal auspices. We might, indeed, make an exception in favor of her mother, who, with that prophetic intuition which seems to have been the distinguishing feature of that high minded woman, wrots one day to her father, the duke of Mecklenburg, the following liaes about his daughter: "Charlotte is given to silence and reserve, but under her apparent coolness she conceals a warm and loving heart Her indifference and pride are but the dullest of a diamond of the purest water, which some day will shine forth in its brilliant lustre. Her tearing and models are noble and dignified. She has but a few friends, but these few are warmly attached to her. I know her value, and predict for her a brilliant future, if she lives long enough." The young princess was indeed a very frail and delicate creature one of ihose tender flowers which seem to wait for the kind band of the gardener to transplant them In a warmer clime. She was charmiDg and handsome, but her beauty was rather that of a pale lily than that of a bTojming rose. Charlotte was just 13 when, in the year 1SU, the Grand Duke Nicholas, on his way to the camp of the allied armies in f 'rance, passed through Berlin, and was warmly welcomed as an honored guest at the royal palace. The description those who saw and knew the grand duke at the time have given the incomparable giaces cf his person and mind, makes it ea-y for us to imagine that the heart of a yourjg girl, just budding in womanhood, was captivated and charmed by him almost at first sight. Well he might have said, like Cse3ar, "I came, I saw, I conquered." The princess fell in love with him, and fortunately for her the young grand duke returned her love fully as passionately. The Grand Duke Nicholas bad the reputation of beirg one of the handsomest, if not the very lia!idomesl man of the times; and his majestic and stately form, which measured no less than six feet and two inches, was considered unequalled in beauty, not only in Russia, but iu all Euroje. lie was vigorous, strong, full cf life and health, with broad shoulders and chest, while his small band and feet were of the most aristocratic elegance. His whole figure realized the perfect model of manly and commanding beauty, which tbe genins of a sculptor of antiquity baa immortalized under the features of me Appollo Bolvidere. His features were of the Grecian cast forehead and nose formed a straight line and the large, blue, sincere eyes showed a singular combination of composure, sternness, self reliance and pride, among which t would have been difficult for the observer o name the predominant expression. Those who have looked closely and attentively into thesa remarkable eyes would have easily believed that their threatening glance would suffice to suppress a rebellion, to terrify and disarm a murderer, or to frighten away a supplicant. But there would have been but few to believe that the stern ness of those eys could be entirely softened so as to beam forth nothing but love and kindness. Among tnoe few, however, was the young Prussian princess, who had drank deep in their intoxicating fervor. It is true that the was the only person in the world in whose presence the Olympian gravity of his features gave way to a radiant cheerfulness, which made his manly beauty perfectly irresistible. Id tuch moments bis magnificent brow, always the feat of meditation and thought, exhibited the serene beauty and Attic grace of a young Athenian; the serious Pericles seemed, by the invisible wand of a mttgician, to have been transplanted into the youthtul Alcibiades. At this time, however, the matchless ersonal charms of the graud duke were enhanced by political prospects of the most exalted character. He was not eventually considered an heir, to the imperial crown of Russia. It is true, Alexander the First, his brother, bad no children, but in rase of bis death, which could not be expected soon, the Grand Duke Constantino was to nberit the throne of Peter the Great, and o leave to Nicholas at best but the pot-i-ion of a prince of the first blood. Nevertheless, Frederick William, charmed alike, by the beauty and intellect of his guest, and by the hope of uniting the sovereign houses of Prussia and Kussia by the c ose ies of family union, greeted the prospect -of a marriage between the grand duke and bis daughter with enihuiasm, especially when he discovered that the young folks themselves were fond of each other. The king then delicately insinuated to bis riaugbt r that, if she bad taken a liking to the grand duke, and had reason to believe that the .prince entertained similar feelings towards her, their marriage would meet with no objection on his part. But the young princess, although secretly delighted in a hope which fully responded to the secret wishes of her heart, was either too proud or too bashful to confess to her father her love for the grand duke, who had sot yet made any declaration to her. In this manner the day approached on which the grand duke was to leave Berlin. On the eve of his departure a grand gala supper was given in his honor, at the royal palace, and, by the way of accident or policy, the young Princess Charlotte was seated by the aide of her ardent admirer. The grand duke was uncommonly taciturn daring the evening. His forehead was clouded, and his gloomy eyes seemed to fol
low in space vague phantoms flitting before his imagination. Repeatedly he neglected to reply to questions addressed to him; and when he was asked to respond to a toast which one of the royal princes proposed to his honor, he seemed to awake from a profound dream which had entirely withdrawn him from his surroundings. Suddenly, as if by a mighty effort of bis will, he turned to his fair neighbor and whispered, ho as only to be understood by her: "So I shall leave Berlin to-morrow!" He paused abruptly and looked at the princess as if be were waiting for an answer which expressed sorrow and grief on her part But the princess was tally as proud as the grand duke, and overcoming the voilent throbbing of her heart, she said politely to him: "We are all very sorry to see your imperial hlghnes leave us so soon. Would it not have been possible for you to d-fer your departure?" "You will all be very sorry!" muttered the grand duke, not entirely satisfied by the vagueness of sorrow which these words of the princess implied. "But you in particular, madam." be added, after some hesitation; "for it will depend on you alone whether I shall stay here or depart." "Ah!" replied Charlotte, with her sweetest smile; "and what have I to do to keep your imperial highness here?" "You must permit me to address my admiration and homage to you." "Is that alir "And you must encourage me to please you." "That Is much more difficult," said the princess, with a deep blush; but at the same time her eyes beamed forth so much affection and delight that the prince could Bee at a glance that his fondest hopes had been realized beforehand. "During my short stay at Berlin," the grand duke continued in the same tone of voice, "I have taken pains to study your character and your affections, and this study has satisfied me that you would render mc happy; while, on the other hand, I have some qualities which would secure your own happiness." The princess was overcome by emotion, and in her confusion did not know what to answer. At last she said : "But here, in the presence of the whole court, at the public table, you put such a question to me." "Oh!"replid the prince, "you need not make aDy verbal reply. It will be sufficient for you to give me some pledge of your affection. I see there on your band a small ring, whose possession would make me very happv. Give it to me?" "What do you think of? Here in the presence of a hundred spectators?" "Ah, it can be easily done without being seen by anybody. Now we are chatting so quietly with each other that there is not one among the guests who suspects in the least what we are speaking alout; press the ring into a morsel of bread and leave it on the table. I will take the talisman and nobody will notice it" "The ting is really a talisman?" "I expected so. May I hope to hear its history?" "Why not? My first governess was a Swiss lady by the name of Wildermatt Once the went to Switzer'and in order to enter upon an inheritance which had been bequeathed to her by a distant relative. When she came back to Beilin a few weeks afterwards, she showed me quite a collection of pretty and costly jewelry, which formed a part of the inheritance. 'This is a curious ring,' said I to her, as I put this little, old fashioned ring on my finger. 'Does it not look queer and cunning? " Ferbap it is an old relic or talisman, and may have been worn centuries ago by a pious lady who had received it from her knight, starting for the holy land.' I tried to take the ling from my finger again, but I could not get it off; for I was a little fleshier than now,' said Charlotte smilingly. 'My governess insisted on my keeping itc ring as a souvenir. I accepted her present, and the ring has been on my finger ever since. Sonm time afterwards, wheu I was contemplating its strange workmanship, I succeeded in pulling it from my finger, and was much surprised at seeing engraved on the inside some words which, though nearly rubbed out by wear of lime, were still legible. Now, your imperial highness, what do you think were the words engraved upon it? I think when you hear them you will take some interest in the ring." "Ah! and pray what were they?" "The words engraved upon the inside were, 'empress of Russia. This ring had undoubtedly been presented by an empress of Kussia to the relative of Mrs. Wildermatt, for I was told that both this lady and her mother bad formerly belonged to the household of the czarina, your august grandmother." "This is really lemsrkable," said the grand duke, thoughtfully. "I am quite superstitious, and I am really inclined to regard this ring, if I should be happy enough to receive it from you as a pledge of your love, as an omen of very auspicious signiti cance." In answer to this second and even more direct appeal to her heart, the princess took a small piece of bread, played carelessly with it, and managed to press the ring into the soft crumbs. Then she dropped it playfully on the table quite close to the plate of her neighbor. And, after this adroit exhibition of her skill as an actress, she continued to eat as unconcernedly as if she bad performed the most trivial action of her lire. With the same apparent coolness and indifference the grand duke picked up the bread enclosing the ring, took the latter out of its Ingenious envelope, and concealed it in his breast, for it was too small to fit any of bis fingers. It was this ring both the pledge of Charlotte's love and the auspicious omen of his own elevation to the imperial dignity which Nicholas word on a golden chain around his neck to the very last day of his life, and which, if we are not mistaken, has even descended with bim into the vault of his ancestor?. Three years afterwards, in 1S17, Princess Charlotte, then only 19 years of age, and in the full splendor ot b-auty and happiness, made her entry into St. Petersburg by the side of the husband, whose eye bad never looked prouder and whose Olympian brow had never been more serene than at this happiest moment of his life. As he looked down upon the vast multitude who bad fkeked together from all parts of the vast empira to greet the young princess with shouts and rejoicings, and then again upon his fair young bride, perhaps the iu scrip Hon upon the rinr recurred to his mind; for, bending his bead close to the ear of Charlotte, he whispered: "Now empress of the heart, and some day, perhaps, empress of the realm." At this moment the procession reached the main entrance of the winter palace, where Alexander the First, the emperor, came to meet bis beautiful sister in-law, and conducted her into the rumptuous drawii g rooms of the magnificent palace of the czar. Who would believe that eight short yeaia afterward t be brilliant young emperor bad breathed his lat, and that Nicholas acd Charlotte would succeed to the throne of Russia? Truly, the inscription of the enengsgement ring bad proved prophetic. THe Peril of Hesitation. Boston Poet. We can not understand how any patriot but a misguided one can want the investigation abandoned now before the full extent of this Louisiana iniquity is brought to light Oar system of government, is not alone endangered, as lorjg as such a seething mass of corruption is allowed concealment The moral lire of the nation is imperiled aa well. No true citizen can want a man to make laws for him or administer some of the most important interests in the country if r liable evidence shows that man to be a criminal; and, all things considered, it seems about time to find out where we stand, as many, who at first opposed the investigation are now beginning to admit.
. Real Villa- Ufa. ,.' No sentimentalism in this graphic sketch. We read of country life in prose and poetry, and see it spread in idle colors upon canvas, but the following sk-tch pictures the real as it actually appears to an inhabitant of a New York state hamlet There are a great many things to make a man happy in life, tbings too numerous to mention; the books don t contain them. To mention a few: It is a pleasure to put your hand in your pocket and find a silver dollar there. It is a pleasure to meet a friend iut as he is in the act of treating another friend. It is a pleasure to play well on a jewsharp; a pleasure to bear a cat roll out a tattoo in tbe dead of night and let you know tbe Modocs are around ; a pleasure to get a man in a tight place and get a good bargain out of him; yes it is a pleasure to be a granger; a pleasure to hear your neighbor's wife beat tbe long rail about 11 o'clock at night when her husband has just come in from down street: a pleasure to put up stove pipe, or saw cord wooJ, or eat a hunk of candy, or tell stories by moonlight over the front gate to sweet sixteen. But of all the pleasures that can be enumerated or thought of, nothing is quite equal to sitting on the steps of a country store with your feet on a barrel of hams or a pile of codfish, and there the livelong day discuss the affairs of mankind. No sir, nothing quite equals this. It equalizes the circulation, quiets the nerves, calms the mind like no sedative in the world. And he who follows it day after day and age after age (Shakespeare mentions seven ages in the life of roan) will attain to that equipoise of temper and judgment that will go far toward constituting him a philosopher. The pleasure of this noble exercise is my theme. What opportunity for the study of man which Pope says is the proper study of mankind; what harvests maybe reaped of which other men only sow the seed. We will suppose our sitter to be a horseman; he watches every horse that goes by to note bis build, bearing, step, gait, gather, how he holds his tail, and all other nice pofnts that a horseman's eye instinctively seeks, and makes running comments ou them that show at once that his head is level and properly sighted. This horseman, too, is a sort of king in these matters, the store steps his pavilion and the much whittled arm chair bis throne. The younger aspirants of the ribbons all listen to him with deference and a marked admiration. Although a master, he probably don't own a horse; and yet it were just as well as if he po messed the stables of the sultan for that, for he can talk you blind and that is all there is of it The value of the race that lasts but a few minutes is, it inflates men's imaginations like a balloon, by which they are borne aloft on the social tide, and have talking matter for a year. Our horseman derives his inspiration from a good cigar which the boys provided him, and he illustrates the fact that wisdom is a stream that Mows clear only when mind aaa body are in repose. The country store steps are likewise the bav?n and snug bartor of tbe retired farmer and merchant. Here they sit calmly and watch the young sailor making and clearing port commenting on the probabilities of storm or fair weather, and the fortune of the voyage with much of the keen relish that they once embarked on fortune's Be a. They can tell to a yard how much sail each aspirant may safely carry, and cast his reckoning years beforehand." Their chief topics will be, as a matter of course, money, bonds and mortgages, interest, farms and farm stock and the like. These subjects are their daily food, sandwiched with the
gossip, rumors and incidents of its day. Usually there is one or two whose word is law on these themes, from whom there is no appeal men who have made a clean tblng in life, and got their pile together without any irritating failures, or becoming bilious over it They have likewise acquired a position and influence that rank them as the solid men of their neighborhood. The store fesep is their court, and here tbey are sought for society, counsel, and quiet little loans which, experience has taught them, must be made wisely, as there is nothing in the wide world so subject to leakage as money. While the store step has its regular sitters, as I have described, it has also its transient callers in great variety, who resort there for gossip and news; young men who may be termed the hang around guards. These guard the public welfare by stopping runaway teams, stoning dogs, laughing at doubtful iokes and watching for a treat Farmers' boys, who come driving in on the last half mile as if to astonish tbe simple villagers and make the passing belle think they are very Phaetons and Jehus. Nun working farmers who get up early and set their men at work, take another snooze, then eat baeakfast and drive to town to bear the news and see how tbe telephone gets along. Farmers who broke down in the field and came in for repairs and so redeem the time by stocking up with the newest news on the store steps. Young farmers who are greatly concerned for their country, and ambitious to try their cunning hmd at politics, who with wise and serious a'rs discuss the issues of the day; who are on band to make up the pirtv slate pending the caucus, and thus show a willing hand that the public must In time come to appreciate. The steady sitter at this fountain of village gossip sucks every man dry who stops to slake his thirst, thus becomes himself a perennial fountain of tbe ligh wines of corversation which the masses love to drin . He spends his days serenely regular in all things not missing his three square meals in any weather but true to all his appointments. I can not think of him as truly hap py tbat has attained to this quiet steady, unruffied life, where be may watch the strifes and toils and conflicts of other men, undisturbed without passion. Honeoye, N. Y. Aeikl. Fatcts and Ine People. I Brooklyn Eagle.l The story of the commerce between Matthews and Anderson in complete. It opens with the baldest and boldest compact of corruption capable of being stated. Tbat compact was placed in the keeping of Matthews. He accepts it, and acknowledges the custody of it. Then he wears out all his influence in tryirg to collect for Anderson the due reward for "suppressing evidence which shows that Louisiana was actually and fairly earned by the democrats." The reply made to this tbat Anderson was a bad man is no reply. He does not pretend to be a good one or to have done nice work. What work be did is recited In his compact lodged nearly two years ago with Matthews, and he asks no belief on bis own words, but be has the hands and signatures of Sherman and Matthews to prove that which he says. The fraud orgies want none of their agents believed, unless it be proved tbat their agents are an?e!s of light Their agents were precisely the men needed to steal Louisiana, and the theft is proven by proving the agents did tbe stealing, not by proving that they are saints. The tacts already out, and the" infinitely worse ones to come out, will make a case for public opinion, an3 public opinion has always proved irresistible in this country, on a matter of plain facts, fully proved and appealing to the moral judgment of the people. A Jadai Bradley Commission. (New York Bun. Suppose it should be shown that Joseph P. Bradley, haviDg been foisted on the supreme bench by tbe railroad companies to serve their own purposes, entered into an arrangement with various interested persons to wreck the Memphis, 1 Paso, and Pacific railroad, which was then a solvent concern. Suppose it should be shown that he assumed jurisdiction of suits brought for that purpose outside of his district, and by certain irregular and illegal proceedings transferred the property of the Memphis El Paso, through the hands of a questionable receiver, to tbe Texas Pacific Sucrose It should be shown that when Jo- ' ieph r, Bradley came to pre the decisive TP
in the unconstitutional electoral commission lie wrote out 'an elaborate opinion in favor of tbe Tilden electors in Florida, and that under severe pressure from the Texas Pacific jobbers, who had previously used him as above, he changed the conclusion of tbat opinion In a single night and thu consummated the fraud in the teeth of bis known convictions. Suppose these facts to be proved, what would the country think of a judgment obtained in that way? We know that the returns from Louisiana and Florida were false and fabricated. We know that the men who manipulated them were conscious knaves, and committed tbe crime with their eyes wide open. But was the judgment of the
commission itself corrupt as well as false? In this view of the case it would appear that tbe judiciary committee of the house may have a duty to perform, little, if any, less important than that of the Potter committee. A correspondent of the Boston Herald remarks: Extracts which you published in yesterday's paper from Rev. P. B. Morgan's sermon, preached to his late parishioners in Cincinnati, will be readily understood by members of the Episcopal chucb. His defection to the reformed Episcopalians excites no surprise among those who have been acquainted with his previous history. One who is now a high dignitary in the Episcopal church once said of him to a friend, when he seemed utterly irrepressible at a meeting of clergymen: 4 Some men are fearfully and wonderfully made," and a slight examination of his very remarkable sermon will show persons not connected with the Episcopal church how much weight is to be attributed to what he says about it He says: "I am a churchman. Most sincerely do I believe in the ancient faith, the two facramcnts.'md the three-fold ministry of this church." And the chief organ of this Reformed Epi.-c-pal church says: "We have eliminated baptismal regeneration, sacramental grace, sacerdotal function and apostolic succession. We have less of these than others, because we have none of them whatever." And these are the people whom this believer in the three-fold minUtry of this church seeks as the truest representitivei of "evangelic truth and apostolic order!'' But this Is not all. He seeks to degrade the church which has borne with bis vagaries many years by identifying it with the church of Rome. He says: "I do solemnly affirm that the doctrines and practices peculiar to the Roman Catholic church are, one and all, save the supremacy and the infallibility of the pope, held, taught and practiced, without let or hindrance, in the so-called Protestant Episcopal church." This information will be new to most people. I never knew it before. There are thousands of peoEle within the Episcopal church who never eard of it and who would be greatly excited if it were true. It is a good thing to say if a man wants to beat a retreat, but not a right thing to sy, unless it can be proved. Now, it may be that sjnie few people can be found here and there who believe ail, or nearly all, that he mentions. But who are they? They are simply isolated persons, and if these are their private opinion, no one can prevent their holding them. They are not the current teaching of the Episcopal church. They are not held even by clergymen who are most distinct and urgent in maintaining the principles and usages of the church. He attempts to quote the action of the late general convention in this city as authority for his statements, but it would puzzle a Philadelphia lawyer to tell when, where and how the bishop and clerical and lay deputies put theniselvts on the record to substantiate Mr. Morgan's remarkablestatement of our almost identical union with the church of Rome. A few people here and there holding "advanced" views no more commits the Episcopal church to what is called ritualism, or Romanizing teaching, than one .swallow makes a summer. This church is very comprehensive, and reasonably allows large personal liberty of opinion. If it were not so, Mr. Pliny Morgan would have been shown the door long ago, for he has been a strenuous advocate of that form of itinerant revivalism which the Episcopal church could never bring itself to indorse. It is quite unfair, to call it by the mildest name, to attempt to fasten upon the whole Episcopal church what can only at best be called the private opinions of a few persons within the fold. The truth is that this church was never further from Romanism, and never more thoroughly identified with the best things in Protestantism, than it is to day. You may ask nicety-nice churchmen out of one hundred, and they will tell you so. No one can object to Mr. Morgan's honest change of opinion; no one wishes to keep him where he does not wish to be; but I protest that it is not by falsifying the position of the Episcopal church toward the church of Rome that his changd of religious belief is entitled to weight or respect. J. H. W. Will you please inform me through your paper the condition of the public debt as compared with one year ago, and oblige. Subscriber. Yorktown, June 3, 1878. The total public debt, less cash in' tbe treasury, June 1. 1877, was $2,003,377,342 37; June 1, 1878, $2,0.J3,G37,450.G4. Ed. Sentinel. A little girl who was somewhat out of sorts, but wboss exact ailment no one had been able to discover, amended her evening prsyer of "God bless papa and mamma" by adding "and cure me if there's anything the matter with me." Boston Transcript Brown's wife went to the dentist's lately and took gas.' The new set of teeth is not ready, nor is sbe ready, and so there has been peace in tbe Brown family for several days. As Brown joyfully remarked, "Her mouth is closed for repairs." It must be very pleasant for a rich man fo know as be toils, sweats, lies and swears, that he is doing all this tbat lie may gaiu wealth to be-fought over by lawyers when he is gone. A Manifest Absnrdity. It Is manifestly absurd to claim for a mere stimulant tonic and alterative properties. Yet this Is what la daily done by the vendors of cheap local bitters, colored to make them look attractive, and agreeably flavored, but the alcoholic basis o' which in of the vilest and most hurtfal description. The transcendent success of Hosteller's 8tomach Bitters, the leading alterative tonic c f the United States, has inuueed many of these tornpoun"ers of a rams In disguise to attempt the counterfeiting of this standard medicine, but their efforts have never proved successful on a large scale, and they have themselves in many instances notoriously "come to grief through the Instrumentality of the The genuine Bilters have, indeed, a spiritnous basis, but they are emr2:aticaliy a medicine, since their botanic ingredients are signally eftleuclous In overcoming and preventing chills and fever, dys ,psia, livr complaint, constipation and many other dis- , orders. Clifford's Febrifuge Palatable, Powerful, Atitlperlodle and Tonle. Nature's remedy for fever and ague. Never known to fail in a single case. This popular remedy difiVrs from all other ague cures, in being free from all poisonous etfects on the M-8ter?j it enters into the circulation and destroys all malarious poison, and thus eradicates tbe disease without producing any of those distressing after sensations, such as fullness and pain in the head, ringing in the ears and partial deafness. Try it once and you will never be without it J. C. IiicHABDsoif, Proprietor, 8t Louis. For sale by all druggists. A Card. To all who are suffering from the errors and Indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, etc., I will send a receipt that will cure you, Free of Charge. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D, Bible House, Kw York City.
If you feel doll, drovy, debilitated, have frequent headache, mouth tastes badly, poor appetite and tongue c-a ted, yon are suffering from torpid liver, or "b liousnes ," and nothing will cure so speedup- and permanently as to
ASK the recovered Dyspeptics, Billons sufferers, victims of Fever and Ague, the mercurial diseased patient, how they recovered health, cheerful spirits and good appetite, they will teh you by taking Simmons' Liver Regulator, AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR MALARIOUS FEVERS. BOWEL COMPLAINTS, DYSPEPSIA, MENTAL DEPRESSION, RESTLESSNESS. JAUNDICE, NAIL SEA. HICK HEADACHE, COLIC, CONSTIPATION and BILIOUSNESS Ninnos's liyi:k it emulator Is given with safety and the happiest results to the most delicate infant. Takes tne place oi Quinine and Bitters cf every kind. It lathe Cheapest, Purest and Best Family Medicine In the World. J. II. ZEILIX A CO., Price, 11.00. (3) Philadelphia, Pa mm For ten years Tntl'n PHI have been the recognized Standard Family .Medic in in the Atlantic Stated Scarcely a family can be found from Maine to Mexico that does not use them. It is now proposed to make their virtues known in the WEST. A Single Trial will Establish their Merits. Do They Cure Every Thing? NO.-Thoy are for Diseases that result from MALARIAL POISON and a DERANCED LIVER, such as Dyspepsia, Bilious and Typhoid Fevers Chills, Colic, Sick-Headache, Chronic Diarrhoea, Nervousness, Dizziness, Palpitation of the Herat, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, Chronic Constipation, Files, &o. That Your LIVER IS DISORDERED When yon have a I11 pain laShonldmi Caalml Tongues C'Mtlve Bwelat Welbt la lb- Stomach after Ealing-; Soar Eructation ; Aversion (o Exertion of Body or Mind. BE ADVISED, and AT OXCE TAKE TUTT'S PILLS!! The flrst dose prod nee an effect which often nMonisho the snfTerer, nd In n hhort time follows an Appetite, good IHgention, SOLID FLESH A HABD MUSCLE. THE WEST SPEAKS. "BEST PILL IN EXISTENCE." D. TCTTI hannsrd your PilU for Dytpep.ia.'Wnlc Stomach and Nrrrouinoi. I nrvtr had acrthinjr to da me to much food in the way of medicine 'Thry rr a rood at you ropmMit Minn. They are the bet Pill In xtatnoe. and I do all I ran to acquaint other, with their good merit. J. W. T1BBETTS, Oacota. Minnw Sold by DrugrtrlHts. or sent by Mail on reeelpt of 23 rents. Office, 33 Murray ft w York. Sick Headache Positively Cured by theta Little Pills. They also relieve Pislrww from Dyspepsia Indigestion and Too Hearty Katin?. A perfect remedy for Iizziness, Nausea. Drowsi ness. Bad Taste In the Mouth. Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, Ac. They regulate tbe Bowels and prevent Constipation and Piles. The small est and easiest to tatte. Only one pill a dose. 40 In a vial. Purely Vegetable. Price 25 ceata. Bold by all Druggists. CARTER MEDICINE CO., Prop'rs, Erie, Pa. riT VI a) a py nail Tor one dollar. Agents Wanted Everywhere. Send for Circular and Terms. TI'.RS, KXrKMS, OIMBI .H AND IIOK.SE KAILKOalMtr-a, in fact to every one auDg boreea for hrary work. Attachable without troulite to any barneu. they art adapted for oeoo a I kind, of vehicle and agricultural Implements, and have received the oiphent testimonial from protniiietu practical mra who are asingUxia. EctailPrtra 1 2. SO per pair. NEWTON LULL, Bole Manufacturer, 155 Jackson St Chicago. (Coder Urand Pacific llotd.) CLIFFORD'S FEBRIFUGE VEMN . cro ERADICATES ALL MALARIAL DISEASES from the SYSTEM. J. C. RICHARDSON, Prop.. tVFor Sale by A l Drupjrtsta. ST. LOUIS. SURE REWARD. O YEARS TO PAY FOR A FARM. $4 to J$IO Per Acre. Beech and Maple Land In lUlrlilsan In the MILLION AI RE GKA VT of the Graud Rapids and Indiana llallroad Company. TITLi: PERFECT. Strong aoll sure crops plenty of timber uo drought no cUlach bugsno hoppers." Running streams pure water ready markets schools Railroad completed through centre of the grant. Send for pamphlet, English or Uerniaa. Address AV. O. IIVG1IART, Land ('omnilwftioner, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. sad Itorpkla naMtesred. Th-Orl;rlnal''"'''"lBt CUkk. head aiami for hoeaea Opium Puicg. n W B- Pqntraj M'trtalnv a, Grggn. C... lnd. NERVOUS DEBILITY, f rlta'r,pratarwaainai. narraMoa el dl-rd.n f braia aad "mi irtfta, ai Kikanrtl.a f YaantMaa.taM f r1ta'tr(prraatar watnaa. DarraMna of mini aaa fcodr. dl-rdra f braia aad Htim irxta, and aiLerto. raV BAITS SPKiriCxrhT. S a eM. tv. far $5. f aid T rurlti t or Cl'ralar wl rraparra ay aa cian; with hill paru.u.ara, addraaa Om. Sara, 4J btat. tow, Chiaac. Ilk o I XT Habit Cured. A Certain and Sure Cnre. Lar reduction In prices. A trial bottle free. Hrs. J. A. DROK.L.INUKK, Laporte, Ind. Box 1038. (Fot merly Mrs. Dr. S. Collins,) aaaaaaaaaaaaaaataaaaaavaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaaaBaaaBaaBna) CONSUMPTION. Cause, Treatment and Curability. Short treaties sent fre to any address. DR. SMITH, No. 145 ast Flftoenth at., New York.
CARTER'S KITTLE flVER : PILLS.
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TO THE SICK &" SUFFERING. HAVE YOU ' TflCESE Dangerous. Symptoms? Couch, Knrt Breath, Pains In the Side or Breast, lever, Parebed Skin, Xfaht Nweats, Tlchllngor Klnlntr In (b Throat, Wean Voice or any symptoms of CONSUMPTION! If so use a once SWAYNE'S Componnd Syrnp of liild Cherry. which seldom if ever falls to care a cough. Even when the lungs have become much disordered with nii?ht sweats, burning fever, vaii.8. snd oppression, It has effected wonderful cures. HOME TESTIMONY. Swayne's Componnd Syrup of Wlla! - Cherry. "For more than twenty years I have used Dr. Swayne's Compound Svrup of Wild Cherry for Coughs, Colds and Bore Throat, to which I am subject, and it gives me pleasure to say that I consider it the very bett remedy with which I am acquainted. SAMUEL G. SCOTT, (Arm of Jacob Eeigle & Co.,) Dry Goods, S33 Market street, Philadelphia. Swayne's Componnd Syrnp or Wild Cherry. I have made use of this preparation for many years, and it has proved to be very reliable and efficacious In the treatment of severe and long Handing conebs. I know of two patients, now in comfortable health, who have taken this remedy, snd who but for its use I consider would not now be living. ISAAC S. IIERBEIN. M. D-, Stranstown, Berks county Pa. Asthma an Distressing Couch Cured.' My Mother was a great sufferer from Asthma, cough, could not sleep, her symptoms became very alarming, short breath, pains, and oppression. Dr. Hwayne's compound Syrup Wild Cherry gave her Immediate relief, and in a short time restored her to good health. H. MEYKIt, Grocer, 17th and Carpenter streets. Philadelphia. DP Tpft TRIAL SIZE BOTTLES, 23 TEXTS inlUU. L.AKOE8IZE.OXK DOLLAR. Descrlbe symptoms in all communications, and address letters to DR. 8 WAYNE A SON, 30 North Sixth street, Philadelphia, No charge will be made for advice. T5old by all prominent Druggists.
A If yon are Billlous, take SWAYNE'S Tar and Karsaparilla PILLS. If you nave Sick Headache, take SWAYNE'S Tar and Harsaparilla PILXs. If your Tongue is Coated, take SWAYNE'S Tar and Sarsaparilla PILL8. To prevent and cure Cbills and Fever, take SWAYNETS Tar and Sarsaparilla PILLS. If yonr Bowels are Costive, take SWAYNE'S Tar and Sarsaparilla PILLS. Persons of full habits, who are subject to Headache, Giddiness, Drowsiness, and Hinging in the ear, arising from too great a flow ox blood in t le head, should never be without them, as many dangerous symptoms will be carried off by their use. PRICE 25 CENTS. Five boxes for ft. Can be sent by mall. Prepared only by DR. SWAYE fc SON, Philadelphia, Pa, HANDSOME HAIR. T O SECURE THIS YOU SHOULD USE London London London London London London London London London London nalr Color Hair Color Hair Color Hair Color Hair Color Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer Restorer LIFE, Hair Color GROWTH, Hair Color Hair Color Hair 'olor Hair Color London Hair Color London TTi 4 TTTV Hair Color London AI-i A Ulli Hair Color London Hair Color From J. A. TYNES, a well known citizen of Wilson, N.C. My wife had suffered for ten or twelve years with a kind of dry tetter, which kept the scalp covered with dandruff, and caused her hair to fall out and get very thin and tarn gray, but after using three bottles "London Hair Color Restorer" the tetter was cured and the gray hair stopped falling out, and is growing beautifully. By telling of tbe effect it had on the head of my wile I have induced a number to try It, and I want you to send me one dozen bottles by express. I inclose post office order for to pay lor it. London Hair Color Restorer lathe best snd cleanest article ever made; entirely harmless and free lrom all Impure ingredients that render many other preparations injurious. It removes dandruff, stops the hair from falling, and restores the perfectly natural color. It is exquisitely perfumed, and so perfectly and elegantly prepared a to make it a lasting hair dressing and toilet luxury. TRY IT AND BE CONVINCED OF ITS SUPERIOR QUALITIES. 73 Cents per ISotlle. SIX BOTTLES, U Hent by express to any address on receipt of price. Address orders to DR. 8WAYNE A SON. 330 North SLxth street, Philadelphia, Pa., Sole Proprietors. Sold bj all Prominent Druggists. ITCHING PILES This dlstresslnu complaint is generally preceded by a moisture, like perspiration; dls tressing itching, as though pin worms were crawling In a d About the rectum, particularly at r.ight, when undiesslng, or in bed after getting warm. It appears in summer as well as in winter; oftentimes shows itself around the private parts, and is not conflued to males only, but it is quite as frequent that females are sorely afflicted, particularly in times of pregn an cy . e x te nd 1 n g i n to t he vugi n a, pro v 1 n g very distressing, and almost beyond the powers of endurance. Cases of long standing, pronounced incurable, have been permanently cured by simply applying SIVAYXE'S OLXTJIJEXT. HOME TESTIMONY. I was sorely alTllcled with one of the most distressing of art diseases. Pruritus or Prurigo, or more commonly known as "itching Piles." The itching at times was almost intolerable. Increased by scratching, and not untrequently became quiie sore. I bought, a box of 'Swayne's ointment;" its use gave quick: relief, and in a sho t time made a perfect cure. I can now sleep undisturbed, and I would advise all who are su tiering with this distressing complaint to procure "Swayne's Ointment" at once. 1 have tried prescriptions almost Innumerable, without finding any permanent relief. JOSEPH W. CHRIST, (Firm of Roedel & Christ,) Boot and Shoe House, 331 North Second street, Phil. SWAYNE'S ALL-HEALING OINTMENT is also a spec! flo for Tetter, Itch, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Erysipelas, Barber's Itch, Blotches, ail Scaly, Crusty. Cntaneou? Eruptions. Perfectly safe and harmless, even on the most tender Infant. Price, 60 cents; S boxes, S1.2S, Sent by mail to any address on receipt of price. Sold bt all Lkadinq Druggists, Prepared only by DR. SCTATOE & SOX, SSO Vert altxtn Street, PnUnd elplats.
