Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 19, Number 4, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 January 1877 — Page 6
TMK MUSIC OF CHILDHOOD, V J KAN I9MM16W.
WTmhi I her the wa4w 'r JLM W teveh- UIbmom fatter ttowa, I (14 Wm I awfca m more wMte Apr" tiioilywi away. w hearts lr kepo tewlltog SWCl M UT, MM H UemUMff, I tMre a nwt ol WweWU mi tw rief A4 we talked of Jr awl artr That the year tmboat wmiW nM4r; Xwl ate MkMr4 feetped h with te rtery, tor tfcey kw it well MwfaHr, lUtUtfr, " Ke are nmnhm; Awetfa here, awl MMnmerM eomUjc: e1 lie us wbeit yea walk , a ma wiUt rea , in pride fry; Think m HA ia atWys aaady , W"h yen step a KMftU fcy; hrM flrr day have we Va hope lor, little girl aad boy. "Kauh sad ity O lifder waters) LU ew downy seea aad daughter; 1!mh, o wind, al rook their leafy cradle i thy waaderiaffS roy; Wtte,tbey vrste we'll ead tWe nsewre With a wiM aweet cry ef )leaere, A4 a ' Hey (town lierrr, JeVs be Merry, likie girl siul beyr A L.EGEXD OF PAYNETE. Pajaete is a small island in the Bay erf Xk tie Janeiro, the second is dimensions of the seventy that, beneath the Cream! summer of that region, lie emeralds upon its burnished field, llho do Gobernador, or, as we s&oeld shv, Governor's Island, being: lie largest. The former is about half a. wile in length, while its breadth in the narrower portions is only a lew iNHtdred yards. From the foliage of th latter rise the grey turrets of a jaoaastio foundation, and at morning mhI evening, and sometimes at ruiuMrkt, their bells peal along the water. To this insular arcadia came once, Jar a week or two of sea bathing, my eateeated and venerated friend the General, an American gentleman of high flkkil rank resident in Brazil. Aad hither I was bidden to dinner on a cerUtin Christmas not a dozen years ago. JU i landed and exchanged saiutaties with my entertainers, the sound trf nidday bells came floating across ihs water from the direction of the llho tfe Gobernador, and this circumstance k may have been which impelled the Seeral to inform me that among tfce guests whom he had invited to dinner was a. reverend father of the moMfttery, famed for learning and piety, whom high honors in the Church were Weteved to await. Madame General teld me that some peculiar sorrow r.ot Htaal among the restrained and discipHaed persons of his order was thought b have cast its shadow on his life. Its eafy visible effect it was sa'd was to int . 1 i man m aueienuer' nu hi prutung , devotional vigils, usages not so comm among an indolent, tropical priestWod prone to slumber and indulgence as to exempt them from attention and eriobnUion. He wasthe pride of his nkr as Sir Galahad was of that of the Jtoaad Table, and some of his religious treatises were reputed to hare been ytraeed with approbation in Rome and le have united in a common admiration tire such austere and sustaining pillars f the Church Fatbor Becks and Cardinal Antouelli, who, it is- well Known, did not always admire the same tiwags nor the same persons. After a little convcrsrtion I retired to sake my dinner toilet, and when I retanied the remaining guests were assepbled. First in arrival, a$ in rank, waa Admiral Amherst, who came in State, rowed by eight marines dreeaed m the uniform of the service ; Senhor aad Senhora Sylvia, neighbors of the island, who, from their adjacent villa, esse through the soft afternoon gloom f the tamarind trees, and Mr. Carston, 9m American banker, long resident in Mm 4e Janeiro, who came by the steamfrom the city. Dinner was served pon the porch, and it chanced that ireaa where I Eat, across a sandy opening in the thicket of trees with which like island is mainly covered, appeared &e facade of a habitation which bore a atraage and ominous look of ruin and 4tertioR. Its windows were vacant; jfta perch broken and clambered over with vines; at one side its roof seemed to have sunken through the rafters, Jeavisg a rent which the rapid Tag eiaiion of that region of heat and mnhtare was striving to repair. The jfrject was so near and visible that it MftftraUy became a topic of conversabm among the assembled guests. It belonged to Seaor Joao," said lite banker. 44 It has not been occupied for a number of years. By the nwy, this is Christmas. It was on dinetmas night, six years ago, that it wae abandoned, and under circumafasofl so mysterious and tragical that, m timorous and superstitious are people hereabouts, it is not likely ever to bt eocapied again. " Mr. Carston was unanimously on to tell us what those circurawere. Senhor Joao," he said, 4wasforrly a conspicuous if not an honored ptreoBsge in the neighboring city. Something more than twenty years beiere he made his appearance among its merchant and at once took a place of emielderable prominence among them. K ene knew his history or from whence e earne, and although curiosity on tneee punt was not wanting he seemed not at all disposed to gratify it. He was possessed of large sums of money, walehhia commercial operations almeet invariably increased. It was rumeretl in some quarters that he had ! a pirate and in that way acquired set only the deep transverse scar which mresed the sinister aspect of a oounttaance naturally ferocious and forbid4Ug, hat the great fortvne which prorcforhim whatever consideratloa
he possessed. A woreratioaal swrmise,
that tMraeil out to be tree, was that he had been a slaver aad had wade his fort use by running oargoes of negroes from the Barraooons ol the row coast ami tne uaoooa w tne West ladies aad Brazil. 44 But notwithstanding the dread and averstoa excited by his appearanoe ana the mystery in whioh hU v areer was involved, his wealth did not fail to seoure him coadjutors and allies. Among tbese was the benhor itamon iqmros, a merchant, esteemed no less for his probity than for his wealth aad his many public services, lie was the head of oae of tne most ancient families in the Empire, ami, an honored personage in the austere and exclusive society of the Capital. The singular intimacy which sprang up between the Senhor Joao- coarse, unlettered, misshapen maimed and the refined and fastidious Senhor Uamon Esquiros naturally at traoted attention, and was the cause of sot a few friendly romonstranoes aad waraines. But they were of little avail. The joint operations of Senhors Es quiros and Joao increased in magnitude and importance; they shared the own ership of sugar-mills ana plantations in the province of Entre Rios; they extended their operations to the Amazon, where they were concerned in the production of Indiarubber; they projected railroads from the coast to the coffee-plantations of St. Paulo and were meditating the establishment of a bank, the charter of which had been applied for and its list of directors named. At this point of time the Senhor Ramon Esquiros was found one morning lying upon the lloor of his sleeping apartment in his house upon the Catete shot through the heart. A small pistol identified as his own lay near mm, and after due inquiry his death was ascribed to suicide. The investigation of his affairs, which took place immediately after hisfuueral, dis closed a suincient motive for trie act His extensive estate was found to be almost entirely wasted, and it seemed to have pased" bodily into the hands of Senhor Joao. JJor could the rr jrnlaritv of the proceedings of the latter be impeached. All seemed according to the established usages of business, and though the aversion and hatred felt towards Senhor Jeao were, if any thing, increased, nothing came of them except that he was cursed more vigorously than ever on 'Change, and that more people than ever crossed the Hue Direita or the Bue d'Ouvidor rather than meet face to face a personage so dreaded and detested. 44 Among the properties which belonged to Senhor Ramon and which after his death came by right of mortgage to Senhor Joao was a plantation with about forty slaves, uear Teresopolis, a mountain town, almost within sight of the capital. Among the latter was a young girl of eighteen, a natural daughter of Senhor Uamon, to whom he bad given his name and whom he had had educated with the utmost care at Lisbon and later at Paris. She had but recently returned from Europe, and her first knowledge that she was a slave and not the legitimate daughter of her father came to her after his death and from the horrible lips of her new owner. There were many of the friends of D j:i Karaon who were aware of his inUnuons toward Carita and who were determined that she should be rescued from the possession of Senhor Jeao, and to this end a sum of money was subscribed among them, and Senhor: Joao plainly informed that he might name his price for Carita, and itnimuld be paid, but if ill befel her he should answer it. Within a day or two she had disappeared from the Teresopolis Plantation, and no trace of her was to be found. Senhor Joao professed per-; feet ignorance of her whereabouts, and it is known that at the time of her disappearance he.was himself in the city. This was about the middle of December. The search for her continued for some time,' but it was at length conjectured that, terrified by the prospect of passing into the possession cf such an owner, she had in some unknown manner, made good her escape.1' Thus far Mr. Carston had proceeded with the story of the Senhors Joao and Ramon, when the deepening twilight made it necessary to light up the porch, and this was done by hanging rows of paper lanterns of Chinese pattern on either side, and a constellation of them above the table. Their soft light shone upon the faces of the guests, which in the gathering gloom hail faded into indistfm..tness,ansd revealed the interest with which each had followed the narration. When the illumination was completed. Mr. Carston resumed : 44 The villa over yonder which is now deserted aad going to ruin, was one of the summer-houses of Senhor Ramon, and one of the portions of his estate which came into the hands of Senhor Joao. It had been for some time unoccupied, but shortly before Christmas six fears ago the year of the occurrences am relating to you the neighbors thought they discovered about it some obscure signs of habitation. On Christmas night at midnight, just as the bells of the convent had ceased ringing, the whole island was startled by a succession of pieroingshrieks. It was a woman's voice, apparently in the extremity of terror. Some boatmen returning from the city affirmed that,coincidently with the shrieks, they had seen by the moonlight a figure in white leaping from the rook which juts into the water yonder; and this statement was further conroborated by the discovery the next morning of the tracks of tiny bare feet leading through the sand from the villa to the rock. One of the windows too, was shattered, and it was believed to be through this that the fugitive made her esoape. It was at onoe surmised
that Senhor Joao had oaneed Carita to be brenght seereUy to the deserted fasenda, which had been his father's, aad that after the anxious interest in his disappearance had, in some degree, died down, he, with motives whioh may readily be conjectured, had appeared suddenly in her chamber with midnight solicitude and a guarded prison-house fur his allies, aim that in terror and desperation she had broken through the easement, fled shlveriug from her persecutor and buried herself in the sea. But although this seemed a perfectly natural eonjeeture, there was no proof that it was true. The shrieks, as it was said by the few partisans of Senhor Joao, might have been those of a fisherman's wench beaten by him ou his return from the holiday festivities of tho city, the tracks might have been those of a barefooted child, the white disappearing image springing from the crest of rock seen by the returning boatmen the vision of intellects disturbed with deep potations of Caxache. Moreover, although the waters wore searched with the greatest diligence, nothing was found confirmatory of tho suspicions against Senhor Joao. But from that day to this no trace has over been discovered of Carita. She seems to have passed from the world as completely its if she had never been a dweller on it." 44 And Senhor Joao?" said tho Admiral, after a brief pause, his countenance indicating the interest with which the narration had inspired him, 44 He went abroad shortly afterwards," said Mr. Carston, 44and has never returned. Siuce the death of Senhor Uamon it was found that he had been sending his fortune abroad secretly, but with the utmost diligence and energy. There was much, however, which could not readily be converted aHti which he was compelled to leave, for.to tell the truth, ltio became a very disa
greeable place for him to live in after tho occurrences which I have related to you. There have been occasional rumors of his death, and such property as he nas lett has been claimed at law 1 by a free negro woman, who asserts herself as his mother, and who is cer-1 rm I J lllUVVUvl V VS L4 fc I tU lOUlt K UUlUi of plausibily to her claim." This was substantially all of tho story which Mr. Carston could tell us, and after a buzx of colloquy, in which I no ticed that the silent and wan Father Petre took no part, the company broke up and dispersed. I accompanied the latter to the beach, where I bade him farewell, and watched his receding boat till it became but a spot upon the moon lit water. On the following day, in company with my host and hostess, I went to the Church" of the Candelaria, where a number of devotees, some of them of sufficient social rank to inspire a hizh de gree of curiosity and attention, were to ' take the black veil. V e went early, and attained a favorable place ne:tr the i high altar, where, among tho offlciatiHg 1 . T . t T 1 a 1 f . his ecclesiastical robes, looking very pale and troubled, as he watched tho advancing line of black figures which came slowly up the aisle, each bearing in his hand" a taper, and each attended on either side by members of the religious sisterhood among whom they had spent the years of their probation. As they neared the altar I saw among them ono face of exceeding loveliness, but mournful aud woe-stricken beneath its weeds, with troubled eyes, as of some forlorn, lost creature supplicating help, of which It was nevertheless hope less. But as her look fell upon the face of Father Petre, which was cold and immovable as marble, though it, too, wore an expression of anguish beyond the power of words to describe, her own lit with a sudden light, and, with a cry thatsoundedabovo the reverberations of the organ she throw her taper upon the pavement and advancing to where he stood sought to cast her arms about his neck, an effort which was thwarted by the alarmed and confused ecclesias tics anil acolytes to whom such an occurrence beneath the very blazo of the high altar, with its throned Madonna glittering with gems and bright rai ment, was as terrifying as if the very veil of the temple had been rent in sun der, or as if the arches above them had been rocked by an earthquake. So repulsed, the unhappy and obviously deranged young postulcnt, standing in tho midst of the clear light reflected from the double rows of gigautic candelabra which adorned the altar, began with an outward aspect of calmness and determination to tear from her her black raimtmt and scatter its shreds at her feet. She was, of course, at once, hurried away, the sisters grouping around her with gestures of sympathy and alarm, and the organ choir rolling forth a storm of music as if to drown in a tumultuous flood of melody the painful inpressions which such an event must have awakened in tho minds of those who beheld it. There was, of courhC, much commotion, and the ceremonies wore hurried through with all possible dispatch. Extreme curiosity was evinced concerning tho identity of the unhappy young lady whoso reason had been thus Btrangely and suddenly overthrown, but at that time it could only be learned that she had for a number of years been a postulant at the nunnery of the Adjuda and that her name and family were unknown even to the sisters of that foundation. It was subsequently ascertained that she had co in o thither from the Convent of the llho do Gobernador, but both herself and Father Pelre were dead before it became publicly known that she was the daughter of Senhor Ramon, the midnight fugitive, who had fled from the terribls advances of Senhor Joao and sought a desperate and terrified refuge beneath the midnight waters. She had been providentially
rseoued by Father Petre, who was returning to his cloister from a visit to a neighboring island, whither he had been summoned to perform some urKnt priestly office, and oonveyed in his at to the Island of the Governors, where she was placed in oharge of the lady superior of the convent, to whom aloHs was confided the secret of her history, that with her recovery she had loved her preserver and he had loved her with a love as intense, and as the future showed, as ill-starred as that of Abolard and Heloise. When it seemed as if his earthly passion was about to lead him to abjuro his sacred vows, the knowledge came to him through a fellow-priest who had beun the confessor of Senhor Ramon, that betwoen himself aud Carita there existed a close tie of consanguinity. Both were tho children of thusamo father. Their dream of broaking their fidelity to the Churoh, asd in another land and under other names seeking happiness in marriage was at an ami. She passed secretly and by night to the Convent of the Ajuda, Iroin which she nevsr emerged until she came to tho Candelaria to tako her final vow of renunciation,' an occasion so tragically interrupted, and which her death speedily followed. Ho resumed the burden of his life and bore it with unropining fortitude to tho end, which befel only a few years ago. They sloop side by side in tho littlo cemetery of tho Convent of tho llho do Gobernador, shadowed by a single palm, and all good souls will pray that they may find beneath tho earth that rest which was dnied to thorn above it.
k Watcher Wke Bid 'et Watch. An incident that occurred during tho progress of tho watch-night services of the fcirdt Method! 1st Enisuimil Chnrrh ( isi episcopal vnurcn, i and tayotte Streets, corner of Charles on Sunday night, caused about as much merriment to thoso who witnessed it as the sanctity of tho place would allow. Among those present was a vory pious young lady, who was accompanied by a less pious malo escort. Tho services were to continue about three hours, but before one-third of that had expired the young gentleman became drowsy, and was soon slumbering gently. The lady, on hearing something that sound ed very much liKu a snore, looked rn.t,l .l .,irt,i ... D ' She becamo vory i anry, and her indignation was increased whenshe noticed thatthe young i man's head was nestled lovingly upon the shoulder of the lady who sat next him in the pew. Wailing until his snoring indicated that his sleep was of the soundest character, the young lady quietly left tho pew and proceeded 1 homo alone. When the congregation rose to sing a hymn the movement of ' his pillow woke the young man with a ' start. Ho was, of course, very much surprised to find his fair friend non est, but when his bewildered mind fully comprehended the situation in which bo had placed her and the situation in which she had left him, his look of what-a-fool-I-hsve-made-of-myself was absolutely ludicrous. If ho did not fold his tents like tho Arabs, he certainly as silently stole away. BaUuwrc American. Trec-Cefftas. An ancient burial-place was discovered in Selby, Ehr., in 1857; and, at a depth of sir or seven feet, several Collins, formed of the trunks of trees, split in two and hollowed out, were exhumed. One of these, now preserved in the Museum at York, contained tho skeleton of a woman; and near tho neck were lying seven beads, of graduated sizes ana oval shape. In the center of tho skull a small round holo was dotccted, resembling tho perforation in the skull of a Roman lady recently discovered in an old cemetery at York. In the summer of 1876, on tho rebuilding of a house in Selby, sonic fifteen or twenty other tree-coffins were disinterred. They wore closely packed together at a depth of from five to eight feet; and, at the head of several, an upright oaken post, tlireo feet high, was standing. In four out of seven colllus examined, hazel-rods or twigs wore found in tho right hand of tho corpse. Thfro is a record of similar rods having boon found in a cemetery at Obertlact, Suabia. ' a Singular Harmeny ef Figures. Tho multiplication of 987,051,321 by 45 gives 4,'l i l,411,4.r). Reversing tho order of tho digits, and multiplying 123,450,789 by 46, wo gut a result equally curious, 5,555,555,505. If wo tako 12.1,45G,789 as the multiplicand, and, interchanging the figures of 45, tako 64 as tho tho multiplier, wo obtain another ru-marknbluproduot,C,G0G,G00,GG0.Return-ing to tho multiplicand first used, 987,051,321, and taking 54 as the multiplier, again, wo get53,!W:J,;m,3S4-aU threes except tho first and last figure, which read together 54, the multiplier. Taking the same multiplicand aud using 27, the half of 54, as the multiplier, wo got a product of 2G,GGG,GGG,GG7 all sixes except tho first and last figures, which, read togother, give 27, tho multiplier. Next interchanging tho figures in the number 27, audusing 72 as the multiplier, with 987,661,321 as tho multiplicand, wo obtain a product of 71,111,111,112 all ones except tho first and last figures, which, read together, glvo 72, the multiplier. Cream Cake.U cupfuls of flour, 8 heaping teaspoonfuls baking-powder, 7 eggs. This makes 3 cakos, in large round tins.
Thk invoice of silk-worm eggs which has lately arrived in New York, co. 8 rises 1,72 oases and is worth $2,000 . X). It reached San Francisco from Japan on December 12. The ogM were packed very carefully in the steerage duck amidships the warmest epot on tho vessel, A bamboo partition surrounded them, and a current of air played over them. Tho eggs wore immediately shipped by rail to New York, and are to bo carried across tliu Atlantic to France, Italy and England. Happy InHiioHce ef h rHl SnooIHc. For tho proscrvallmi or rpoivtrr nf ii.,m.
and MirctiKili, tho diet should bo wbikomo alimentary proecMO.i urn disturbed by jm. proper or half maallcated food, tlio bent rem. edy for the evil rcuulls of abuelui; llio ..c$. tlve organs U Hosteller's stomach bitters, a inoet agreeable, prompt and Kntlo remedy for dyipcpsU, .iml for the bilious mid evacu. alive Irregularities which re lilt from It. Tho llvor and bowels. In common with the stomach, experience lta bcncHclentlniluencM. Hit refuMi of the system is carried uil through lta natural outlet, a bcdtliy flow and secretion of the bllw U promoted, mid a powerful Impetus is rIvou to nnslmlliitloii in conserpicnce of Its use. It healthfully tim. ulatcs tho bladder and kidneys when they are Inactive, and by lie t nlc and renulutlni; aeUon fortlflee tliu system atra'wat malaria. The Genpel er Merit. Where there is so much rivalry in In the manufacture of family medicine, be who would succeed muHtuivo poaltlre nnd convlneing proof of merit. This la an ae of in. qiilry. People- take nollilit'' for granted. Iheymust know the "whys" and "where fores" before acknowledging tho superiority of one article over another. Among the few preparations thitt havo stood tlu teat, thoso manufactured t,y . v. Pierce. M. I)., of tho world's Dlspenenry, Iluiralo. N. Y., have for many years been foremost. The truth of any statement made concerning them can be easily neceruiliicd, for Dr. Suge'a Catarrh Kcmcdy and Dr. I'Jerce's (iohleU Medical Discovery aro now prescribed by many physicians In curing obMhmte casts of GV farrll anil lnrttilcnl !nnimn(tmi Tim Til. covcry has no equal in curing t'ouglu. Coldi, - jjronchlal and Nervous A ireetlouc, It allays all irritation of the mucous membrane, aids uigiMMouj ami wHcn uBcu wuii iiu Tierce's Pleasant Purga'lve Pellets readily overcomes forpfti Uir und Constipation, whllu the Favr.rite Proscription bus no rival In the field of prepared medicine In curing diseases peculiar to fenmlca. If you wlnli to "ki,ov 0W!S" procure a copy of " Tho People's common renso .Medical AuvNcr," an Illustrated book of nearly 1,000 pages, adapted to the wants or everybody. Price si.CO, ) postage prepaid. Address the author, It. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. x. Catarrh, uulcss checked In the early I -1 . . . 1 - 4 ... i. - 'Kes, icmis 10 uanzvrous ui&casee or uie t Throat and Lung's, and s the : Consumntion. 'Taken when the svmntoms f rtffirtntrmi tt nt apia-ar, SANroun's IUdical Cure rou -atahkii is instantly effective. ,S. J VEGETINE Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigorates the Whole System. ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARE aLTERATIVE, TONIC, SOLVENT AND DIURETIC. Reliable Evince, Ycgctine Tegctino Vogctiiie Ycgotino Yegotino Ycgctino Ycgctine Ycgetine Ycgotino Ycgctine Vegotinc Yegctine Ycgotino Ycgctine Ycgetine Yegetino Ycgctine Ycgctine Vegotinc Ycgctiiio Yegotino Ycgotino Ycgctine Ycgctine Ycgctine Vegotinc Ycgotino Vegotinc Ycgctine Ycgetine Yegotino Yogetino Ycgetine Ycgetine Yegetino Yegetino Mb. II. II. Stetbvs: DwSlr-I will mmi clieetfally add my tMtlmony to tho ('! number yoa have alrcily rcct'lfpd In favor of lour creat and cood taedlclan, Vjmbtin k, for I do not think enough can bo tM In Iti p-rnlfe, for I i troubled or thirty yrr with thntdrcaufnl d!i ee. Catarrh, and had t licit hid conchlni! jwiln Unit It would cr a thoHsh I never could breathe any mom, and Vmttisii hu carrdme; nnd I do fet l to think Rod all the time that there Ik to good a medicine ns Vroimsi. aad 1 nlno think it one of the hm MH'dlclne for cousin and weak, Mnklttt; feelings at the ftomach. nud dv!e everybody to tako th Vkoeti.sk. for I can rwuni them It I one of tho beat mMHciiiiMttiat ever wu, Mr 1, OOJtK. Cor. Magazine and Wnlnut .St., Camlirldt'o, .Mart. atVHs Health, Strength AND APPETITE. My dangjit'r ban received trcat benefit from tho iifo of VrnEtjM. Uerdecllnlns henlth vw a source of great anxlt ly to nil her friend. A. lew bottle of Voictink raatored her health, drench and poetlte. N 11 TIMllJN, Insurance and Heal (Mat a Agt , Mo. 40 Sear' ISullillne, Hostmi, Man. CAN NOT EE 13 X CELLED. CHAnr.KimiWN, Mar. 13, IMS, 11. lt.HTr.vicw , . Dear Sir Thlx k to certify tht I have used yoar " Ulond Preparation" In niy family for seiersl years, and think thnt, for Scrofula or Cankerous Humors t r HWU matlcatrectlonf.lt cannot Im celled; and as a blood Jim bier or snrlna medicine, It Is the bct thins I have ever uod, nlld I M 10(1 almost everything. I n cheerfully rccomm-nd it tj onu In ned or such a medicine. Yours rwrMf"jr. Mas. A A. DINSMOIIK, Ko. V) Itasttll street. RECOMMEND IT E ARTiLY. H Routii IIostok, Feb. 7, 1875. Mb. Stevens: . Dear rMr-l Imve taken (wtersl bottles of yoar Van an n a, and at convinced Is a valuable remedy for Dynpeiwla, Kidney CnmiilaW and general debility of tho system. I can heartily refommend it all sufierintf from the above cointiklnts. Yours respectfully. ' M U,MUMl0y I'AltlvUlt, Be Athens etrteU Prepared tiy H. R. Stoyens, Bostou, Mass,
Vsfetiae Is Sold by All Druggists.
