Rensselaer Republican, Volume 17, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 August 1885 — Page 3

OVEK AT I.A ST *• BT EDGAU A. POS. Thank heavens! the erisf s The danger—is past, And the lingering illness la over at last, And the fever called,' “Living* Is conquered at last. Badly, I know I am shorn of my strength, And'no mnscle I move As I lie at full length I But no matter!—l feel I am better atf length. And I rest so composod .Now, in.my bed, ; That any beholder Might fincy me dead — Might start at beholding me. Thinking me dead. The moaning and groaning— The sighing and sobbing— Are quieted now. With that horrible throbbing At heart; ah, that horrible, Horrible throbbing! And oh! of all tortures, That torture the worst Has abated—the terrible Torture of thirst For the napthaline river Of Passion accurst; I have drank of a water That qiiehclies all thirst; Of a water that flows, With a lullaby sound, From a spring but a very few Feet under ground— . From a cavern not very far DoWn under ground.' And ah! let it never Be foolishly said That my room it is gloomy. And narrow my bod; . For man never slept In a different bed; And*, to sleep, you must slumber In just such a bed.

THE MYSTERY OF EASTHAMPTON

The time has come when lam at liberty to make public one of the strangest storios ever given to the world—a story so strange and so romantic that if it were not absolutely true it would be pronounced unlikely to the verge of impossibility. Its most minute details have been known to me for more than four years, but for several reasons it has not been permitted me until now to narrate them. I. It was April, 1840, forty-five years ago. It was six years before the Mexican War. Where San Francisco, with its 350,000 inhabitants, now stands, was then, and for nine years later, the little Mexican settlement ot Yerba Buena, whither a young man who wrote Two Years before the Mast went in a Boston ship for hides. Denver, -with its 50,000 inhabitants, was founded nineteen years after.

We “make history” so. fast in this country that forty-five years with us count for more, indeed, in the world’s progress “than a cycle of Cathay.” In this sleepy corner of Long Island, however, there has been precious, little change for the better, and Eastkampton was a more important place than now in this month of April aforesaid. It was perhaps on just such a day is this—the sea as blue, the air as clear, the sails of the old windmills as active—that a high-bred, dignified gentleman, about fifty years of age, walked up to the little inn, followed by an attendant. In a pleasant voice, and with a Scotch accent, he asked if he could have accommodations. The landlord looked at him with a certain hesitation. “Is that man your servant?” he ask6d. “He is," was the reply. “Well, he must eat at the same table with you.” “1 shall conform to your customs and regulations,” was the smiling answer.

For five long years did this courtly gentleman sleep in the cramped chambers, breakfast, dine, and sup at the frugal board of this humble hostelry. Then he became an inmate—fortunate enough was he to find Buch good friends—of the home of the Huntington family, and in that substantial house (it is the fourth from the old Presbyterian Church, going south) he spent about twenty-five years more. He "was a man of marked piety and benevolence, of charming manners and address, of extreme culture, of rare social qualities. He had been the friend and associate of Jeffrey and the literary giants of his day. He had ample means, and remittances dame to him through"a chain of banks, ending in a •well-known New York house, who denied any knowledge of his personality or belongings. He led a blameless, a lovely life, in this quiet town. He was the friend of all, the comforter of the afflicted, the helper of the needy. Books and magazines in large store came to him. He' versified the Psalms and taught Latin to the boys. A blameless and lovely life indeed; but a martyrdom, a living death, one would have said, to a man of his tastes and antecedents. Think of it! He remained, an exile, in this town for nearly thirty-one years—from early in his fiftieth to the end of his eighty-first year. In all this time he never saw the face of a relative or an old friend. He went at first on Sundays to the Episcopal Church at Sag Harbor, seven miles distant, but he Was instrumental in the building of the little one in Easthampton which we just passed; he contributed largely to its support, and he was made a lav reader, and for a long time conducted the services himself. With the exception of this church-going at Sag Har-. bor, the only time in thirty-one years that this remarkable man passed the limits of the little village was on the occasion of a single trip to Southampton, twelve miles distant The servant, a Scotch valet, went to the West, and married. He made his appearance at intervals, evidently to ex'ort money from his old master. During his entire life in Easthampton this man successfully defeated all attempts to discover his identity. When he entered the little inn in April, 1840, the name he gave was John Wallace; John Wallace lie yas to the end; add John Wallace is the name which you wiU find, under a cross and anchor, on the plain white marble slab in that southern cemetery over which the old windmill watches. To the excellent family with whom he lived, and whose kindness to him while on earth and tender regard for his memory are altogether lovely, he, waking or sleeping, stalwart or failing, in the close intimacy of three decades, gave no word. The inhabitants of the village, his neighbors and beneficiaries, accepted his kindness and constructed theories

about him. With the perverseness of potor human nature, they constructed them to his detriment. He was a Bishop of the English Church--“an-otker good man gone wrong." He was a murderer. He was—Heaven knows what he was not! As years passed by. and the place was more and more frequented in summer by “city folks,” curiosity spread, and grew apace. The most strenuous efforts were made to discover who John Wallace was. One man, bearing an old New York name, and since dead, had the ill grace, to threaten l)im. He told him that tho “census marshal" was coming, and that unless ho told that functionary just who he was, he would be put in prison. After this interview the late excellent Dr. Huntington found the poor old gentleman in a pitiable sta‘e, and learned of the threat just made. “Give yourself no concern,” said he. “The ‘census marshal’ has been here. Pe asked your name. I told him, and lie has gone.” But on the night of the 3(Jlh or 31st of December, 1870, there came to the door a census marshal who could not be barred out, a messenger who brought at once a summons and a release. Mr. Wallace raised himself fibm his peaceful pillow—there was not even time for him, like Colonel Newcome, to say “Adsum”—his head dropped, and his eighty-first year, his lonely life, and the year of our Lord 1870 came to an end together. One can almost fancy that even in the solemn moment when His soul left tho weary body there may have come to him a flash of satisfaction that he had baffled all the curious, intrusive disturbers of his peace. In the expressive language of Shakespeare, “he died and made no sign.”

Often during his life in the village he would come from the post-office holding a letter in his hand, and remark, “This is from my lady friend in Edinburgh.” When he had passed away, Mrs. Huntington, with rare good taste and pathetic kindness, wrote a letter describing his last moments. She addressed it to “Mr. Wallace’s Lady Friend, Edinburgh,” and sent it through the chain of banks through which the old man’s money had come. In due time a reply arrived—cold, formal, unsympathetic. Ityvas signed "Mr. Waitace’s Lady Friend .” ii. “Who was Mr. Wallace?” I see the question in you* eyes. "T went to Easthampton in the autumn of 1878, and did my best to find out. I talked with Miss Cornelia Huntington (author of a charming little monograph anent Easthampton apd its ways in days gone by, celled “Sea Spray”) and I should count a pilgrimage fruitful which gave me the pleasure of their acquaintance. I found them at' the time of my last visit enjoying a green old age, loved and respected by all. They told me much of great interest about Mr. Wallace, and among other things they spoke of finding copies of his accounts (of charities in his native land) with the headings torn off. One had been carelessly torn, and on it I found a name. 1 sent this name with a mass of notes to my late accomplished friend Bokest Mackenzie, Esq., of Dundee, Scotland, author of A History of the Nineteenth Century, and other interesting works. In a few weeks he wrote me that he was “on the trail.” In a few weeks more he sent me what he properly called “a very tantalizing letter.” Said he, “I know the mystery to tlia very bottom, but— I may not tell you!’’ Not a little disappointed, I communicated this information to a circle of equally disappointed friends. Oqe of them, a distinguished divine, told me that “it made his flesh creep like one of Wilkie Collins’ stories.” Then I went to Scotland? No—to Colorado, of all places in the world, and at the foot of Pike’s Peak, in the summer of 1879. I found out all about the poor exile. As living persons are concerned in the manner of my discovery. I may not rightly publish the details thereof; but they are among the strongest happenings of any life. Suffice it to say that on my return 1 held all the clews, proof, and facts in my hands, and that only now am I permitted to tell the truth about John Wallace.

ir* hi. Perhaps some of you know how distinguished and important a judicial officer is tho High Sheriff of a great Scotch county. Such distinguished and important officer was, in 1840, Sheriff W resident of Edinburgh. He was a bachelor of 50 years of age. He was famed for his benevolence and his good works. He was the friend to the poor", the widow, and the orphan. His services to the State had earned him a public testimonial. He had “honor, love, obedience, troops of friends.” He was a founder and ardent supporter of Sunday-schools. People flocked from cultured Edinburgh homes to hear his weekly addresses to the children. One day, at the height of his fame, there was made against hin} the subtle charge of a grave and mysterious erime. At G o’clock in the evening the Lord High Advocate went to a mutual friend. “Go to Sheriff W at once,” said lie, in sad and measured tones, “and tell him that when I go to my office at 10 o’clock to-morroW morning a warrant will issue for his arrest.” That night Sheriff W died out of Scotland. He had just time to say to a friend that he was not guilty of more than an indiscretion, but that he could not face even the shame of that.

His disappearance is mourned in Edinburgh after all these long years, and tears come to the eyes of old friends when it is mentioned. The man who so patiently bore the long crucifixion of a self-imposed exile, the man who endured the penance of thirty-one years among strangers in a strange land, the man who read the beatitiful service in the little Easthampton Chnrch, was no J6hn Wallace. Under the white marble tablet in the old Easthampton cemetery sleeps the scholar, the great jnrist, the courtly gentleman, the "humble Christian—Sheriff W .—A A. Hayes, in Harper’a Magazine.

New Zealand’s Newspapers.

New Zealand, with a population of only 500,000, supports 1(H) newspapers, thirty of which are daily. In Auckland, a place of 30,000 people, the Star, pf that city, has 10,000 circulaChicago Herald .

Helpless Upon a Friendless Sea!

Wfao, In taking passage in a great transatlantic steamer, does not feet a thrill or exultation over her magnificent power. Against her the Storm King may hurl his elemental forces, nor pierce her armor, nor stop her onward course, f But let me describe a scene when, one morning in mid-ocean, there came an alarm from the pilot house followed by a cry: “The ship’s rudder is lost!” From the confident expression, consternation, came to every face. The wheelman being helpless to direct her course, the vessel was at the mercy of wind and wave. The captain bad been negligent—the hangings of the rudder were allowed to wear weak, and suddenly it had dropped deep into the sea!

I Strong in intellect. In physical vigor, In energy and in ambition, man confronts, undaunted, gigantic tasks and commands applause for his magnificent achievements. But, fill unexpectedly, an alarm comes—the rudder of bis constitution is gone. He has been careless of its preservation: mental strain, nervous excitement, irregular habits, overwork, have destroyed the action of hts kidneys and liver. This would not occur were Warner’s safe cure used to maintain vigor. And even now it may restore vitality to those organs and give back to the man that which will lead him to the haven of bis ambition. —The Traveler..

The Effects of Tobacco.

The following extracts from “A Resume of the Tobacco Question,” in the Medical and Surgical Reporter, are worthy of attention. After one of the protracted discussions in England on the. tobacco question, Dr. fiichardson published, in 1862, a series of papers, which were summarized by the Lancet, 1863, p. 676, as follows: 1. The more common effects are due to carbonic acid and ammonia. 2. The effects are but transitory. 3. All of the resulting evils are functional. 4. Produces disturbances in blood, stomach, heart, organs of sense, in brain, sympathetic system, and mucous membrane of month and bronchi. 5. As & cause of insanity, chorea, epilepsy, apoplexy, organic disease of heart, cancer and consumption there is not sufficient evidence. 6. It is deleterious to the young. 7. In the main it is a luxury that any nation is better without, and to the mind conveys the idea of physical detriment.

8. As a luxury tending to this condition, it is one of the least harmful; is innocuous compared with alcohol, is not more harmful than tea, less so than sugar, and is antidotal to gluttony. 9. It is a remedy in certain cases for evils that lie deeper than its own, Smoking, when done at proper times, facilitates digestion. The sense of relief obtained by a cigar after a heavy meal is well known to smokers. Dyspepsia sometimes follows the discontinuance of tobacco, and i 3 removed when the habit is resumed, While the abuse of tobacco weakens the system and leads to emaciation, used intelligently it exerts a favorable influence upon nutrition. /• Hammond, by observation upon him; self, found a gain in weight with the use of tobacco. “Tobacco, when the food is sufficient to preserve the weight, increases it; when insufficient, and the body is losing, tobacco restrains the loss.”

Bcerhaave,,of Holland, over two hundred years ago referred to tobacco as being antidotal to hunger. It seems that the power to undergo severe exertion and fatigue, either mental or physical, is aided by tobacco. Situations of loneliness are always rendered more tolerable by tobacco, and it is the constant companion of those who lead lives of solitude, such as the herdsman or the ranchman. A feeling of unrest or discontent, made up of ill-defined longings, or imaginary disappointments and unpleasant anticipations, commonly known as ennui, is responsible for much unhappiness. This unfortunate condition of mind is removed by the soothing influence of a cigar, and the moroseness and gloom are quickly dispelled. As much of every day is filled up with care, our degree of comfort.,in this life will depend largely upon our ability to bear it uncomplainingly. That tobacco assists us to do this, that it enables ns to look upon life more complacently, must be the conclusion of every one who has experienced its influence. That it enables us to toil with less fatigue is equally true. The readiest writers generally use tobacco, and cannot accomplish the same amount of work in the same time without it, and those connected yith newspaper and other literary work, who have often to write against time, find it of inestimable value.

Ruined by Rats.

Tho island of Tristan d’Acunha, in the South Pacific,., which is almost forgotten, was visited recently by ajßritish ship. The men reported that they required food. An absolute famine was threatened. The islanders reported that although there w ere only ninetynine souls on the island, about CO J bead of cattle and 500 of sheep grazed on the limited pasture lands. The most extraordinary story told by the people was that an American schooner, wrecked only a few years ago on the coast, had introduced a Colony of rats, and to their progeny the islanders attributed a continuous series of woes. The rats literally swept over the land. They destroyed the wheat fields. The crops of cereals, full of promise, perished before these famished battalions of rodents. Now the impoverished iniabitants of the island are dependent upon passing vessels for flour and bread.

Women as Army Auxiliaries.

The wives and families of Peruvian soldiers always travel with them, like the squaws and papooses of the North American Indian. In camp the women do the cooking; on the march they carry on their backs and heads a great part of. the camp equipage, and in'battle they, nurse the wonnded and rob the dead. Jj/They are poor, miserable, degraded creatures, just one degree above the "dogs which follow jat their heels. Their powers of endurance are extraordinary. Often it is the case that they will march twenty or thirty miles a day over dusty roads, carrying a child on |their backs, without food or water. Fencing is the new craze among young ladies. Well, iLtbey will occupy the fence occasionally it will give the gate a rest, and the whole business will Wear out together, i a.. - 1 . .-v • '

The distinguished D. 8. Senator from Indiana, Hon. W. Vporhses, certifies that in a case of rheumatism in the back, he obtained instantaneous relief from, St. Jacobs Oil. He sayß it is a remarkable remedy. " ■' '

Uncivilized Base-Ball Players.

“In many of the hotels the base-ball players are not allowed to go into the dining-rooms with their spiked shoes on. They always dress for a match before dinner, and have a way of tramping about on the carpets and over tho painted floors of the dining-rooms. The spikes in their shoes ruin the carpets, apd leave the dining-room floors full of holes. Now at some of the hotels they leave their shoes in the hallways, and go into the dining rooms in their stocking feet. Guests object to it, and so there are very few hotels who care to accommodate ball-players. The average ball player knows very little about hotel life, or how to conduct himself in a dining room. They ask for mince pie in midsummer, and want buckwheat cakes for dinner and apple dumplings for at table with hard-boiled eggs and saltcellars, and they invariably let the whole dining-room know how the game was played or how they are going to play,” went on the clerk, “and one night at our hotel two of them were playing ball with the ottomans in the parlor. "—Hotel cleric, in Philadelphia Times.

Supremely Delightful

To the emaciated and debilitated invalid is the sense of returning health and strength produced by Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. When that promoter o; vigor is tested by persons in feeble health, its restorative and vitalizing potency soon evinces itself in improved appetite, digestion, and nightly repose, the sole conditions under which strength and nerve quietude is vouchsafed to the human system. A gain in flesh or course ensues upon the restoration of digestion and assimilation. As snrely as winter follows the fall of the leaf does disease shadow the footsteps of declining strength, when the premature decadence of viality is not arrested, Marasmus, consumption, and other wasting maladies are prompt to fasten upon the enfeebled. Avert disease, therefore, with this grand enabling tonic, which not only renews failing strength, but mitigates and counteracts the infirmities of age and those of the gentler sex. Rheumatism, malaria, liver and kidney troubles yield to It.

A New Bat-Trap.

A large number of rats established themselves in a hay-loft, about midway between the floor and the top of the hay. The owner of the premises, hearing a continuous squealing noise in the loft, took a fork and removed the hay from the place whence the noise proceeded, and uncovered a nest of about twenty rats. Several of them ran, but were caught by the dog, hut a bundle of sixteen full-grown animals remained on the spot. Their tails were plaited together, something after the fashion of a whip-cord. By picking up one of them the reat adhered, and cotrld not be shaken apart. It was supposed by persons who saw them that, in order to avoid the cold, the rat occupying the top of the pile sought a warmer place by creeping underneath, but, not having room to draw his tail after him, it was left sticking out. The next rat did the same; and so on until all had changed their position, and every individual rat’s tail was entwined into the curious knot that hDld together. If they had not been discovered and killed they must have starved, as they could not have separated.

I saw a delicate flower had grown up three feet high between the horses’ path and the wheel track. An inch more to the right or left had sealed its fate, or an inch higher; and yet it lived to flourish as much as if it had a thousand acres of untrodden space around it, and never knew the danger it incurred. It did not borrow trouble. D. Thoreau.

Au Inventor’s Advice.

George Stevenson, when advising young men how to get on, would finish by saying, ‘•Go as I have done—persevere.” For fifteen years he plodded and worked be lore giving the finishing touches to his locomotive. In as many days those parse veringin the use ot Dr. Fierce’s ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery,” have experienced great relief and found themselves on the high road to health. Liver complaints, impure blood, chronic lung diseases and many others yield to its healing infiuences never to return. All druggists.

‘♦Matsunkee” Is Japanese for daisy. You can call your grirl or another man's wife a “ matsunkee” now with impunity.

important.

When you visit or leave New Tort City, save Baggage Expressage and Carriage Hire, arjd stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand, Central Depot: 600 elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to $1 an* inwards per day. European plan. Elevator, Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cabs, -t-age,and elevated railroad to all depots. Families' can live better for less money at the Grand Union than at any first-class hotel in the city. When’ are sportsmen like fashionable tailors;'- When they makegood “bags.” The honses we live in —in other words, our bodies—are held on repairing leases. We mast propand sustain them when they exhibit signs of weakness and decay, or they will inevitably break down. In l)a Walker's California Vinegar Bitters, the debilitated, the bilious, the rheumatic,the consumptive, will find the most genial tonic and restorative ever offered to the suffering invalid. It contains noalcofiol, and therefore, leaves no st.ng.behind. Why are troubles like dogs? Because the. smaller they are the more they annoy you.

Gen. Grant’s Book.

The American Publishing Co., of Hartford,. Conn., mike the claim that the publishers of Gen. Grant’s book exhibit bad taste in assuming as original for that work some of the features adtA-rtised as new therein. The Hartford people say that several of the important features were original with a biogiaphy of Grant published by them before the General thought of writing his book, and that the title, “A Personal History of U. 8. Grant,” was used on the biogiaphy published by them on their first edition, and has always remained the same, but has been almost identically appropriated for the General’s book. Among the features found in the latter, but claimed as original in their book, ale the famous “Fort Donelson Surrender” letter, the portrait of Grant when a Lientenant, at 21 years of age, and the celebrated horse-buying story. ( Pure Cod-Liver Oil, made fro it selected livers on the sea shore, by Caswell, Hazari & Co., New Tork. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided It superior to any of the other oils, in market. . One greasing with Frazer Axle Grease will last two weeks, all others two to three days. Try it, mt Chapped Hands, Face, Pimples and rsigh Skin, cured by using Jcniper Tar So ip, made by Caswell, Hazard k Co., New York- ■ The Akron Sowar Pipe is the best in the world. See advertisement In this paper.

Longfellow's Birthday Book

is a beautiful present to give any lady. But there la a little book published In pamphlet form, with no pretensions to literary merit, that would be as appropr ate, and mi*ht be the means of saving a life. It is called Dr. K. V. Pierce’s treatise on diseases of women, for whose peculiar troubles the “Favorite Pres ription” is especially designed. It is profusely illustrated with wood-cuts and colored plates, and will be sent to any add re.-s for ten cents in stamps, by the World's Dispensary Medical Association. Buffalo, N. Y. Xt^f® easier for a saloon-keeper in lowa to get rhrib than for a Congressman to refuse a drink. __ Ik you are oilious, take Dr. Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets," the original “Little Liver Pills.” Of all druggists. 1 have always noticed that drug store patrons who take whisky as a “medicine only,” always have the reddest noses.

“Put up” at the Gault House.

The business man dr tourist Will find firstclass accommodations at tiie low price of 82 and 82.50 per day at the Gault House, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison street*. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, onlyone block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointments first-class. Hoyt & Gati;s. Proprietors.

Red Star 4 TRADE MARK loughlure Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE For Coughs, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Influenza, Cold*. Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough. Asthma, Quinsy, Pains In Chest, *nd other affections of the Throat tnd Lungs. Price SO cents a bottle. Sold by Druggists end Dealers. Parties unable to induce their dealer to promptly get a for them will receive two bottles,Express charges paid, by sending one dollar tc TUS CHARLES A. TOCELER COJ!PART, Bole Owners end Manufacturer*, Baltimore, Maryland, V. B. A.

//“XA /hops\ MALT BITTERS, If you wish to be relieved of those terrible Sick Headaches and that miserable Sour Stomach. It will, when taken according to directions, cure any case of Sick Headache or Sour Stomach. It cleans the lining of stomach and bowels, promotes healthy action and sweet secretions. It makes pure blood and gives it free flow, thus sending nutriment to every part. It Is tho safest, speediest and surest Vegetable Remedy ever Invented for all diseases of the stomach and liver. J. M. Moore, of Farmington. Mich., says; My •offering from Sick Headache and Sour Stomach was terrible. One bottle of Hope and Malt Bitters cured me. Do not rat Hopa and Halt Bitters confounded with inferior preparations of similar name. For sale by all druggists. HOPS & MALT BITTfftS CO, Demi, Mica.

DO NOT FORGET Perry Davis’Pain Kjll^r Price, 25 cts., 50 cts. and SI .00 per Bottle. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. DECT PIIDC for Dyspepsia. Headache, and DLdl UUIIL »rvimHne»i. Sent tor sl. Sore, safe. DR, W. KANOR. lIT, Grand Island. Neb. ||CC AM CRM BIT Fastest selling book pubLlrE Ul Unlln I s lished. Agents wanted. V. K. DAVIS A CO.. R 2 Washington St.. Chicago. fl i linPn T re ® t * ( l and cured without the knife. 1 1 A IMI *n. it S°ok treatment sent free. Address UILLI UijLl F. L. POND. M.D., Aurora. Kane Co.. 111. -W- «rQs a c*|J ySsJisru here sad ear., I*> Bi-ko Fl Mf*lH * good pay. Situations j furnished. Write Valentine Bros.,.,anesrille.Wis iflßlfilll .Vlorahlnc Habit Cared in lO PATENTS Hand-Book FREE. sn I LSI I K. S. It A. P. LACEY. Patent AtPys, Washington. D.C 5165 I _Will bn a New Upright or R,uare MP I -A. 3SJ* O ! Boxed and on car*. Stool and cover fS extra. RZEIi S TK-HPUB OF MUSIC. IRQ State St.. Chicago. - : --I : ■( roa I- • ■. Man and Beast Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and jnore every year.

COUNTERFEITERS BEWARE; i A Michigan Concern Er.|elnMf« l [From the Rochester Morning Herald.] The following injunction has been obtained by {he Hop Bitters Company, of Rochester, N. Y., against Collatinnfl D, Warner, of Beading, Michigan, prohibiting him from manufacturing of selling “Germ man Hop Bitters The President of the United States of Amtr» ica to Collaiinus D. Warner, of Reading, Mich., his servants, workmen, salesmens and agents, and each and every of therm Whereas, it has been represented unto the Justices of oar Circuit Court, the Hon. Stanley Matthews, and the Hon. Henry Be Brown, at Detroit, within and for said District, sitting as a Court of Chancery, that ypn. Collatinns D. Warner, are manufacturing and selling a medicine named German Hop Bit* tors, In fraudulent imitation of the Hop Bit, tern made and sold by complainant; your said med.cme being devised, calculated, a irl in* tended to mislead the public into purchasing such counterfeit goods as the manufacture of the complainant. We, therefore, in consideration of the premises, do strictly euioin you, the said Collatinns D. Warner, anil all and every the persons before' named, from us mg the words "H>p Billers**' on any fluid* contained In bottles so as to Induce the belief that such fluids are made by, complainant; and further, from manufactory lug, veiling, ox offering for sale any bitters of. other fluids in the bottles and with the labels,' and in the general form lit wh oh you were manufacturing and selling tb; bitters cal ed by yqtl German Hop Bitters, on the hling of the bill; or in any other bottle.*, or with any other labels' contrived or designed to represent or induce the belief tbfli ttie bitters or fluids sold bv you arai the goods of the complainant, until the farthestorder of the Court. * * * Witness, The Honobale MORRISON B. WAITE. Chief Jpstice of the United States. At Detroit, this fifteenth day of July, A- D. 1833* 11. B.J Walter S. Harsha, Clerk. ,

* Prosecute the Bwindlers. If when you call for Hop Bitters the Druggist hands out anything but •• Hop Bitters" with a green cluster of Hqps on white label, shun that Druggist as yofl would a viper; and if he has taken your money for a bogus stuff, indict him tor the fraud and sue him for. damages for the swindle, and we will reward you lib's erally for the conviction. I Bee U. 8. Court injunction against C.D. Warners Reading, Mich., and all his salesmen, agents, druggist*. and other imitators. ■ißEy Cement, Fire Clay. Ground Brick. Chimney Top* Chimney Flue Linings, Plaster, Fire Sand, etc. N. A. WILLIAMS, ■■■ 1 I "i-ssKTrire Brick UPIUM^m» U I IU HI man. JefTteinon. Wisconsin. FREE Write for free, pamphlet. Address THE SEED DRILL REGULATOR CO. LKMQNT. CENTRE CO. PA. iE - fCAFBiTTt ft e.nd ,n & srsssp fill* fig 1 CfiA strengthens the liver and builds tip the nervous *y»tern, will restore health. Vinegar Bitters is the beak remedy yet discovered for ptomuting digestion, curing headATOwfjjftlUlTre a ' be ' uld . r increasing the vital R ‘ u * .AWARE Lorillarl’s Climax Ping, bearing a red. tin tag; that LorillardW Rase Leaf fine cut; that Lori Hard'S Navy Clippings, and that LorUlard’s .Snuffs, am' the best and cheapest, quality considered ? Asrents Wanted Life and Deeds of Q.EITL G-R ANT j VA By COLONEL \A M. A. EVER. 1 It contains a full history of his noble and eventfup life. Introduction written by Grant’s Pastor, Rev. Dr. Newman. Col.Burr’swork is Indorsed by Grant's mooli Intimate friends. Send for extra tends to agents. jX! dress National Publishing Co.. CHICAGO. MJ r% THE MAN W«© MAMAS nr 9 Ten W«*ao Scsta* /J lr«a L •«•**, Susl 9mm Tn» Bmb mad Btaa Bos, fw 960 and JONES h* par* taaOOfkt-fcr tee r T XlttrTriii Pile* Ual awarte* lM» papar safl -r VjpM •“B.ff.'.lgfifr* We Want 8,000 Mora BooK Agents to Self The Personal History of •] U. S. GRANT] n. k~A aim-ill Oaoal'l aaUra aiHtavr.' SOI prlvsto career, and la tLe moot compUtm as 4 ntiaMs history of M m Uat A lares twlwi setavs voltass, tapmnlr H'wcmaA esnaasi "jsatt-iasz zzstJsi ArERicA> fc ?UBLIBrtrNO CoThUS Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati* or Bt. Loots. / BslsbUahed 18M.' iff ¥ ■ Claims 1 PROSECUTED 1 /MM WITHOUT FEE * Caleta isrreufal. Hilo B. StfiYGQS & &X WfPf —orriCßsr W ■'■xAeL- Washington, D. C* ‘ t&lgJßgffiS tlerelaad. 0. kWlljii I M fll Detroit, Mirh. ~ Chicago, 111. C The OLDEST MEDICINE it) the WORLD is fk probably Dr. Isaac Thompson’s 11 elebrated Eye Watelf This article is s carefully prepared physician's pi*, ten ption. and has been in constant use for nearly a century, and notwithstanding the many other prepay . itions that have been mtroduced into the market. the ' sale of this article is constantly increasing. If the op rections are followed it will never fail. We parties* larly invite the attention of physicians to It* merits. ■fnhn 1.. Thompson, Sons Jt Co., TROY. H. T C.K.U, ■- So. 34—88 “ . W«P WHITING TO AJJVEKTIBERS* ■ HAGAN'S M Magnolia Balm j is a secret aid to beautv. / j Many a lady owes her freshness to it, who would rather 1 j not tell, and you cant telL . I