The Jacksonian, Volume 11, Number 31, Nashville, Brown County, 17 February 1882 — Page 4
The Imperial Coup D’etat. France lias been hitherto the mart of revolutionary sensationalism. The palm is now going Eastward- Germany and Russia are honeycombed with the clyna- I mite oi popular disaffection and the fru gal burghers may well begin to ask themselves what was gained by the heroic efforts and affluent sacrifices of the last war. To 1848 the people rose against the absolutist pretention of the house of Hohenzollern, even when those pretensions Were put forth modestly than now. The streets of Berlin were barricaded, and the present Emperor, then the king’s brother, was driven in ignominy from his country. It was supposed that the lesson would suffice, and that the German people would not again be affronted by the arrogant clams to divine right put forth by the reigning family. Bismarck, however, has but a short memory for popular lessons. He despises the people heartily. He never could un derstand why the Irish were not obliterated instead of being merely repressed, and said as much to an English statesmen. The difference, Prince said the Englishmen, is, that in Great Britain tiie monarch reigns, but the majority governs; in Germany the monarch both reigns and governs. This distinction has'clearecl,every throne in Europe atone time or another, and sooner or later it will rid the German nation of rhe monarchical mountebanks that have been ex ploiting its blood and treasure so long. It must be owned that r.o monarch would have ventured so far as Bismarck He has been tiie curse of the nation, though its apparent benefactor. Since the evil day in 1884 that the king acquiesced in his defying parliament and helping himself illegally to an enormous war budget, he lias been the evil genius of the monarchy and the curse of the German people. The insolent defiance to the nation issued in the king’s name has a graivty which all Europe, understands. The lengths lie is prepared to go are shown in the seizure of the most influential organ of public opinion in the Empire, and the imminence of the struggle portended, illustrated in the panicon the Berlin Bourse, whose sensitive nerves have heretofore jarred only by tiie threatening politics of the French Radicals. The next few months will witness some startling events on the Continent, and the oveithrow of tiie House of of Hohenzollern may not be tiie most pregnant of them. —Philadelphia Times.
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The Weekly Jacksonian FRIDAY, FEB. 17, 1882. South'Jersey Times.] HER LAWYER 3LOTER* . It had been a' long, sultry journey. An August sun blazed high in the heavens, —the seas of gently-waving emerald corn along the track of the railroad swayed to and fro, and the very forests seemed to droop in the intense sunshine. Miss Bovage tv as going to be married. Miss Bovage was the village milliner, who had recently inherited ten thousand dollars from an uncle in the cabinet making business, who had died at the good old age of two-and-se verity years,—and Lawyer Fox, who was the executor, had been smitten, —or at least said he was smitten —with the mature charms of the heiress. Lawyer , Fox himself was not young, nor had he been altogether successful in business. But he was tall and stout, with a commanding presence, a deep bass voice, and a general acquaintance with three-syllabled words, which had often times stood him in the best of stead. He had made solemn court to Miss Bovage—and Miss Bovage had smiled and blushed, in a middle-aged sort of way, and confessed that Mr. Fox was not altogether indifferent to her. "But, la!”- said Miss Bovage, "what a fool I be! And me past thirty!” "Is not the full-blown rose sweeter by far than the bud?” gallantly demanded her swain."'
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to come on by herself,” said the lady. “There she sits on the opposite side of the car. She is very delicate, what with hard work in school teaching and western malaria—and when she heard that her lover had deliberately engaged himself to another lady, who had a little money, she fairly broke down. ‘Take me to the East, mother,’ she said. ‘Let me see him, face to face, and I know be will yet be true to me!’ ” "Humph,” said Miss Bovage, thinking complacently of the many perfections oj Lawyer Fox. “if I had such a poor sample of a lover as that I’d let him go, and aing ‘0 be joyful’ to get rid of him!” “All, but she loves him,” said the western woman, simply. “I don’t see but that makes matters worse still,” said Miss Bovage,with a sniff. "So I telegraphed to him to meet me at Albany,” said the woman. "I told him I only wished to speak with him for five minutes. Of course I cannot compel him to be true to his word—but it is one last chance for Mattie!” "He must be a mean scamp!” said Miss Bovage, putting another peppermint drop into her mouth. "But it ain’t none of my business, except that I’ll give you a helping hand -where I can, see in’ you’re a stranger on this side, of the continent.” And when the train steamed into the dark depot at Albany, Miss Bovage beckoned to a hack,, and invited the stranger-—whose name she had by this time ascertained to be Gildersleeve —and her pale little daughter to take a seat therein with her. “To Stan wax Hall,” said she. , But at this momenta portly form cast its very substantial shadow across the hack door—-Lawyer Fox’s own! “My own Belinda,” said he, in the deep bass accents of unutterable emotion, "do you suppose that I would allow you—” “Why,” shrieked out Mattie Gildersleeve, arousing herself into sudden animation, “it’s Gustavus, as I live! Mother, look!” "Gustavus, as I live!” cried the pale little widow, coloring a rosy pink. "Eh?” said Miss Bovage turning quickly from mother to daughter. "Is this the man that jilted you?” "Let him deny it if he can,” said Mrs. Gildersleeve, not without a certain dignity. “Then I’m sure you’re quite welcome to him,” said the ex-milliner. "I don’t want no-second-handed lover!”
A Lecture on the Nature, Treatment, ancl Radical cure of seminal weakness, or Spermatorrhoea, induced by selfabuse, involuntary emissions, impotency, nervous debility, and impediments to*marriage generally; consumption, epilepsy,and fits; mental and physical incapacity, &c.— By ROBERT J. CULVERWELL, M.D., author of the “Green Book,” &c. The world-renowned author, in this acfr* mirable Lecture, clearly proves from his own experience that the awful consequences of self-abuse may be effectually removed without dangerous surgical operations, bougies, instruments, rings, or cordials; pointing qut a mode of cure at ones certain and effectual, by which every sufferer, no matter what Ins condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately and radically. Lecture will prove a boon to thousands and thousands. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any address, post-paid, on receipt of six cents or two postage stamps. We have also a sure cure for Tape WorM. Address Tie Ciilyomll Medical Co,, 41 Aim St., New York, N. Y. Post Office Box, 450-
Suicide. Savages rarely commit suicide; the desire for seif-annihilation is the product of our higher civilization. People are also more anxious to shuffle of the mortal coil in northern than in southern latitudes, more in summer than in winter, more in cities than in rural districts more among the educated than the illiterate, more among working people than professional men, and more among the poor than the well-to do. The Danes are the most and the Portuguese the least self-destructive, the Prussians more than the French, the French more than the English, and the English more than the Austrians, Russians, Italians or Spanish. Apart from latitude, climate has no effect. The seasons, however, exert an important influence. Most people prefer to take'themselves off in fine weather- Spring and summer are the favorite times. July offers to the victim the most and November the fewest attractions. The number ot suicides is twice as great in May, June or July, as in any winter month. That women, more than men, should shun death by ‘teiruwn iwinvl, and should make up but Cl fo *. *■ tl* -- ( Ml - 1.4. natural and proper. Nor is it strange that convicts' and prostitutes, who know neither shame nor fear, do not die voluntary deaths in any appreciable ratio. But why should the tendency to self-slaughter increase steadily and sure ly with advancing years, and old age rather than earlier life become the suicidal period .? For this strange fact appears to be established by statistics, and that in proportion to the number of individuals of each age suicides are about as frequent above three score-and-ten as between the ages of twenty and forty. The favorite methods of death are hang*ing and drowning, poisoning and the knife having gone out of fashion. MBS. LYDIA E. PIHKHAM, OF
“Nonsense!” tittered Miss Borage. “Sweet one,” persisted the ponderous lawyer, “I beseech of you, keep me no longer in suspense!” “Won’t folks laugh at me?” said the ex-milliner, dubiously. “What care we, Belinda, for the laughter of the idle herd,” Lawyer Fox assured his timid client, “so long as there is music in our own hearts?” “But I’d calculated never to marry,” hesitated Miss Bovage. “A bad promise is better broken than kept,” said Lawyer Fox, “And I’m told,” added Belinda, “'that men ain’t to be depended on.” j “My Belinda, your experience shall be widely different,” protested the lawyer, j “Well, said Miss Belinda, “I don’t know but I’ll risk it.” So she sold the lease of the little bowwindowed house on Main street, chaffered with the Wido w Penny pack for he? stock of satins, ribbons and bonnet frames, put her gray cat in charge of old Miss Hurley, and gave her canary to little lame Litella Hyde. And then she packed her trunk and set forth to meet Lawyer Fox at Albany. “Folks will make such a sight of fuss if I get married in Barley town,” said Miss Bovage; “and as Mr. Fox calculates to go to Boston on our wedding-trip, it’ll be so much clear gain on our way if I meet him at Albany.” So Miss Bovage told Mrs. Pennypack, old Miss" Hurlef, and Luella Hyde that she was'going to Albany for the vert-ding-dress.; and quietly gave them all the slip. , ' A railway Journey in August, even it matrimonial bliss is at the other end of it, is not without its drawbacks. Miss Bovage was stout, and her face got red and her curls lost their twist, before they Were two hours out of Barley town.
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■“Gustavus! oh, Gustavus!” piteously appealed the teacher, “you do love me still! Only say that you love me a little!” “I thought that we bad put an effectual end to this boy and girl nonsense,” said Lawyer Fox, turning all sorts of colors. “I telegraphed to you not to come!” “But we never got the telegram,” wailed Mrs. Gildersleeve, wringing her hands. Miss Bovage glanced at her watch. “Hum—ha!” said she. “Ten minutes of three. Weil, ladies, I’m glad you’ve Ti3.rl if \girt man at last, and I hopc- you’! . n-<”. him down to his promise. As for me, if I step around spry, I can catch the back express and be in Barleytown before the widow Pennypack has taken down my sign. For everybody is the happier for being busy, and I mean to go back into trade again. Of course folks will talk; but they’ll do that anyhow! Good afternoon, Lawyer Fox. If you have any business arrangements to conclude with me, I refer you to Judge Bartlett, of Barley town.” And so Miss Bovage vanished from the scene, “in maiden meditation fancy free,” and was seen no more. Whether Lawyer Fox married his pallid little first love or no, deponent saith not. But one thing is very certain —he did not marry Miss Belinda Bovage I
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A Lawyer Gives His Experience isi a Slceplitg-Car. [Springfield Republican.] I never did, never could, and never will sleep a second in a sleepiug-Cfiy berth. But all of the party said it was because I thought I couldn’t, and quoted many texts of Scripture and old saws to prove that a, man could do anything he resolved upon. As usual, female pertinacity and volubility prevailed, and I tried it. I resolved I would omit no means of alluring sleep, that I would array myself as for my bed at home, take my usual night-cap of cold water, “lay me down to sleep,” and “pray the Lord my feoul to keep.” I put my boots outside the curtain, crawled up to the top berth, and after many contortions of the body, bumps on the top of the head, and lacerations of my limbs, contrived' to fall in, in due and regular order. I had been told to lie flat on my back, and obediently did so. The car rattled and jolted over the rough road, stopped every few miles with a jerk and started with a greater one, until it seemed to me that my soul and all that was within me were being agglomerated into one consistent and uniform jelly. I tried my right side a while, and became satisfied that was the wrong side. Then I tried the left, and was very sorry I had left the right. I then thought it was too light, and got up and shivered around ten minutes trying to fix my overcoat as a shade to the lamps. A man who slept opposite my section alternated between fearful snoring, strangulations, and wild and copious expectorations. I felt I had nearly composed myself to sleep, when it occurred to me that sound and direction indicated that my hoots were being utilized by my catarrhal neighbor. I hustled down again and drew them in from the storm. Then I became certain that my money was in peril; that my pants and vest, which contained my treasures, must be taken from the pegs and stored away behind me in my berth. I tried for two or three hours to fix things right so that I could go to sleep and enjoy that peace; and rest that are the possessions of the innocent and good; but things went on from bad to worse, and under renewed tortures to head and limbs, 1 dressed me, took a cigar, went to the smoking-room, threw myself into a corner, and -smoked sullenly and silently through the dismal night.
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“After all ” said the bride elect, wiping the dust off her face with a plaid silk pocket-handkerchief, “it ain’t such a luxury to travel.” The pale little woman in the other half of the seat murmured an assent to her remark. “Traveled far?” said Miss Bovage, looking with pity on the white face and eyes that seemed to swim in tears behind the shabby blue veil. “All the way from Wisconsin,” answered the lady. “Bless and save us,” said Miss Bovage. “And I’ve only come from Barley town!” “Indeed!” said the stranger. “Going any distance?” hazarded Miss Bovage, whose New England education came out strong in the matter of ques-tion-asking. “To Albany !” was the meek; response. “Well, I declare!” said Miss Bovage, with a flap of her handkerchief in the direction of a particularly aggressive blue fly. “That’s!ust where I’m a-goin’ myself?” “Do you know anything of the city?* asked the western lady, a little eagerly. “No more'n a tom-cat does of Latin grammar,” answered Miss Bovage, more emphatically than elegantly. “But there, anybody as has a tongue in her head and the full use of her limbs, needn’t be at any loss, I guess.” “Do you know where Stanwax Hall is?” asked the stranger, still with the same wistful look upon her face. “Well, I declare!” said Miss Bovage. 1 It does beahall! Jua.t where I’m a-goin’ myself.” The little woman put aside hei blue veil, and looked pleadingly at Miss Bovage’s full moon face. ' “Oh!” she cried, involuntarily; “I am in such need of a friend, and you look good and true-hearted, as if you might be trusted. May I tell you my story? May I depend on you to help and direct me a little, when we get to the great, cruel, noisy city?” “Try me!” said Belinda Bovage, with emphasis. “Give me a chance,* that’s all! I don’t know you from Adam, hut if I can help you I will!” “I am going there to meet a gentle* man,” said the lady, lowering her voice “So be I!” said Miss Belinda, while the tip of her nose turned a deep mahogany color—her special way of ing“He was engaged to my daughter,” said the western stranger. There the parallels ceased. Miss Bovage rubbed her nose, chewed a pepper-mint-drop, and stared very hard at her compagnon de voyage. “My daughter was not strong enough
ALL ABOUT iflpCOliilf! THE OLD HOME OF SUIT Bill. Everything Inside and Outside. M,.:y Fd.ngs never published before. The Best Thing FEINTED IN YEARS. Suit postpaid on receipt of $1.00 Six for live Dollars. STANDARD PRINTING CO., BoxioOO. Oneida, Madison County, 30i\vi] New York. iPCHTC? llflUTCn jpor tile most magniriwith I a WAN I bU s»«rassiE 01 WILD INDIANS Or Thrty-Three Years’ personal experience with thrilling siventures on the Plains, in the Mountains, through the Wld Forests, fighting his way foot by foot through Indiar Lands, from Texas to California, by”Col.S>ods©, with an Introduction by Oencrai Sherman. Everybody will want it on sight. A Unified amount of exclusive territory will be given to, each agent. Specid terms and circulars will be sent free. Address W. E DIBBLE & 00., 51 West Fourth St. ,Cln.,0. OME TREATMENT. A certain cure for flarvouS Debility, Seminal Weak-wr-at F....rr ; ness, impotence, etc. The Recipes used in my practice for 2S Years and an illus trated book of 60 pages giving full directions forself-treatment, sent'freo. Address 9SL T. WILLIAMS. 4S5 E. Water St. fa WELL AUCQE&&. SOCK DRILLS Aril the Best -Machinesy la the World for BOBiNGand DRILLING WELLS by Horse or Steam Power ! Book Fbee. Address LOOMIS & NYMAN, T!FFIN,OHIO.
Thirty-Six Varieties of Cabbage; sS of Com; s8 of Cucum. her ; 41 of Melon; 33 of Peas ■ 28 of Beans ; 17 of Squash ; 23 of Beet and 40 of tomato, with other varieties in proportion a large portion of which were grown on my five seed farms, will be found m my Vegetable and Flower Seed Catalogue iof1§8S* Sent free to all who apply. Customers of last Season need not write for it. AiJ Seed sold from my establishmeat warranted to be both fresh and. true to name, so far, that should it prove otherwise. I will refill the order gratis. The original introducer ef Early Ohio and Burbank Potatoes, Marblehead Early Corn, the Htabbard SquashMarblehead Cabbage, Phlnney’e Melon, and a so other new Vegetables, I invite the patronage of t* New Vegetables a Specialty. ,«■ James JT. 21. Marblehead, Mass. 'A/S/J a week in your own town. $5 Outfit \hh free. STo risk. Everything new. Wv Capital not required. We will furfortunes. Lodiae make a'frnitf-ii as boys and ei.tls nvnke great p.ay. Reader, if you want a business at which you can make great pey all the time you work,write for particulars to H. Hallbiw & Co., Portland, Maine. 11-20-ly Elfiflfi 617 St. diaries Street. St, Epms, Mo>. A regular graduate of two Medical Colleges, has'been longer located than any otherPhysioiaa in St.Louis.as city papers show,and all old residents know. Syphilis, Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Stricture, Orchitis, Rupture,all Urinary Syphilitic or Mercurial Affections of Throat, Skin or Bones cured Safely, Privately. Spermatorrhea,Sexual Debility and Impotency as' the result of Self-Abuse, sexual excesses in mntirh . years,or over bvainwork, producing nervousness,sv w ' a! emissions, debility, dimness of sight,defective im. ory, physical decay, aversion to. society confusion of Ideas, loss of sexual power,night losses,rendering marriage improper,are permanently cured. Consultation at office or by mail free and invited. Pamphlet one stamp. Medicines sent by mail or express. Cures guaranteed. Where doubt exists it is frankly stated. MARRIAGE \ rfgh pHVIs. i GUIDE! The whole story, well t old, as it ss true to life, on the following subjects: 'Who may marry, who not, why. Manhood, Womanhood, Physical decay. Who should marry: how life and. happiness maybe increased; effects of celibacy and excess, and many more. Those married or contemplating marriage should read it then keep under lock and key. £S ctrs. by mail in money or postage. English—-German—French read and spoken, CDCp PRESCRIPTION SUftSt 1 IS Ha Weakness. Lost Manhood, $s.rvisnsaa,SsJgjaaBMpgaaraConfusion of Ideas, A.-ersT.hTc'Scofeis PMeofwi? Meraoty and Disorders bro'c-thtoa by Se»tAbuse. Any druggist has tho ingref hit.*. - 8t. Louli Curative Inst’e,619 St.Caarles, Et.T.auls. Mo. mjmmm 70S Chestnut St, St. Louis, Mo. at old office, continues to cure Spermatorrhoea, Seminal Weakness, Impotency,all forms of Syphilis.Goiiorrhosa, Gleet, Urinary or Bladder diseases. Recent oases cured in a few days. All the diseases resulting from i self-abuse, excesses rr exposure cured for life with safe i medicine. Advice Ires. Charges low. Call or write in strict confidence. Symptom Book for two stamp m ARR1ACE GUIDE
B. D. BUFORD 00., Hock bland, HL Manufacturers of SULK? il BANS PLOWS, MINI} M WiLEING CULTIVATORS, listing Plows, <JOMBINEI> LISTEi £10 CUES DRILL* Earrows > etc, s etc* Branch HousesST. LOUIS, SO. KANSAS CITY, 81®. ST. PAUL, Mian. ST. JOSEPH, Ho. COLUMBUS, 0. MILWAUKEE, Wls. OMAHA, Neb. Write for our Diary , mailed free. 0R a BUTTS’ IgUblisM 1847 at 12 IT. Oih Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. THE Physicians in charge of this old and well known institution are regular graduates in medicine and surgery. Years of Experience m tha treatment of Chronic Diseases have mad© their skill and ability so much superior to that of the ordinary practitioner, that they have acquired a national reputation tnrougn Prodtuv cese, without using Aiercury or Poisonous Medicines. VO 1S M G and those of middle ago who ara suffering from the effects of a .seusoSS unntsits victims for business or marriage* permanently cured, at moderate expense. . A ■p a C M by Mail a»a Lspress, b J t where possible, is^efeSecl, which is FBBB aiid invited. List of questions to be answered by patients desiring treatment mailed free to any address on application.. suffering from Rupture should send their \and learn something to their advantage. It is not a truss.;*' Communications strictly confidential, and shoum be addresseci 1>K. BUTTS, IS North 8th St., St, Louis, Ho. business now before the pubS» Il I i I c - Y° u caii ma^e m oney jlJ . J JL faster at work for us than at anything else. Capital not needed. We will start you. $12 a day and upwards made at home by the industrious. Men.Women, boys and girls wanted everywhere to work for us. Now is the time. You can work in spare time only or give your whole time to the business. You can live at home and do the work. No other business will pay you nearly, as well. No one can fail to make enormous .pay by engaging at once. Costly outfit and terms free. Money made fast, easily and honorably. Address True & Co.,- Augusta, Maine.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’8 VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Is a Positive Cure for all those Painful Complaints and Weaknesses so common to our best female population. It will cure entirely the worst form of Female Complaints, all ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to the Change of Life. It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus in an early stags of development. The tendency to cancerous humors there is checked very speedily by its use. It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, cansing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. It will at all times and under all circumstances act in harmony with the laws that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed, J.VBI.V E. PINKIIAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND is prepared at 333 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price §1. Six bottles for 35. Sent by mail in the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, on receipt of price, §1 per box for either.- Mrs. Piiikham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Send for pamphlet. Address aa above. Mention this Paper, No family should bo without LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S LIVER PILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness, and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. Sold i)y all Druggists, “©ft BEATTY’S ORGANS 27^Stops 10 up. Rare Holiday Inducements Ready. Write or call orvBEATTY, Washington, N. J.' [10-46 -Ijl SBRb i i | sa a Habit Cured in two weeks. I have i# iililfl never failed. No pay till Cured, i li U) iwl Dr. H. K. DENHAM, Richmond, Ind. C- f* from Gloot and Gonorrhea, ortadiestroub‘W wL 3TiuFaE*!rt'*& lea -with Whites, should by all means try It is assure cure for LEtTCOTUlHEA or WHITES, female disease CjjRESjaLEET AMD COWOaRKEA In from 1 to 5 days without fail. Sold by all druggists. Price, $ f a bottle or sent dry postpaid, on rebelpt or price to any $ 1‘VU part of U. S. GREAT WESTERN MEDICINE CO. 18? Central Avenue, CINCINNATI, O. Please mention this paper.
f widows, fathers, mothers or children. Thousands yet entitled. Pensions given for loss of finger.too.evo or rupture,varicose veins or any Disease. Thousands of pensioners and soldiers entitled to INCREASE and iSOIIKTY. JPAXEKTS procured for Inventors. Soldiers land warrants procured, bought and sold. Soldiers and heirs apply for your rights at once. SendS 'stamps for "The Citizen-Soldier,” and Pension and Bounty laws, blanks and instructions. We canreferto thousands of Pensioners anti Clients. Address W. W. Fitzgerald & Co.Pensioit& JPATSNT Att’ya, Lock Tios tune,Washington, D. 0«
