Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 March 1869 — Page 2
XEE&LXJ
•n Wednesday Morning, March J24, 1869.
THE proclamatiofoftSoyrtnor BAK3EB,| calling the LegiBlff^e to* mwt In extr4 session on the 8th|]£ of April, is publiahed elsewhere in\_ »aper. This ses-3»fceoet-$6ol which, added to
Giaj
elections to
the $100,000 that th be held to-day will en!£il upon tax payers, foots up the enormous sum of $150,000 as the price which the people
part'of
members of th.4 General Assembly. The only a^olog^ these rfesigners have been able to mike to ah .outraged people, is that they left thef Capitol in order to ^prevent the adoption of the proposed 15th amendment. Wo have demonstr»ted a score of times that there was ampl? time to have passed all the really indispensable bills before the hour set for the consideration of that amendment. By remaining in session
five
hours longer,
hundred and fifty thousand dollars might have been saved from the taxdu^plicates, and
the
revolutionists could then
have accomplished their purpose by thp same high-handed, unjustifiable means that they employed five hours earlier.
ItiB still, as of old, a cardinal principle in the "Democratic" faith that "Democratic" minorities shall Mt submit to the dictation of constitutional majorities.— How long the people will indulge them in the exercise of this principle, paying at the rate of $150,000 for each illustralion thereof, remains to be seen
The April Election
In a few days the April Election will be upon us. If is highly important that Republicans throughout the county—and indeed throughout the State—should fully appreciate the importanca of making a good report on that occasion. Are the organizations, perfected during the recent campaign, still in good working order Are they industriously employed in the important duties of such organizations?— Wo fear these questions cannot be answered affirmatively. It is very probable that there is not a single live, efficient Republican organisation in Vigo county.
We hear from the Democracy, in every township whero that parly is in the minority, the old, old story, "Politics should sot control local elections." By this thoy mean that Republicans should not insist on having the offices to which their nu.merical strength entitles them. It is. certain that Democrats will vote for Democrats only. Such has been the usage ot the party from time immemorial.
JNo party can long maintain its ascendancy in any State, unless it has spirit enough to contest, with vigor, tho township and municipal elections. An army, *plit up into small detachments, and beaten in skirmishes, soon becomes utterly demoralized. The Republican party cf Indiana, beaten in local contests, would be in bad-condition for that groat struggle which it must make in tho next gen eral election. The opposition expect to ..control Indiana within two years. Every iilittle local victory gives them fresh cour--age, inspires them for further conquests.
The Republicans of Vigo have fought this enemy too long, have sacrificed too much, to forego all that has been gained. Lst •tis go to work in earnest, determined 16 'succeed, leaving no honorable means unemployed that may tend to insure victory
Remember that every triumph of the opposition, however insignificant, will be heralded from Maine to Texas, from^ Florida to Oregon, as "a great Democratic victory" and will furnish inspiration for an enemy that countless defeats hayo failed to dishearten.
THE Inaugural Address of President GRANT has made a very favorablo impression abroad. The London Times sayB of that part referring to the public debt: "General GRANT'S expressions, coupled with the recent action of the Legislature on tho subject, will have a good effect in maintaining American credit. The President arguos that if it bo well understood that not a singlo farthing of tho public debt is to be repudiated, the national crod. it will bo so much strengthened as to enablo the Union to roplace the debt with bonds paying less intorest than is now paid. Nothing can be more certain than this ana we can well understand an American looking with jealousy at tho easy terms on which a country like England is able to obtain money on occasion —the consequence of honorably bearing immense burdens throughout a longserios of years. Happily, the principles of the party Of dishonesty have been disowed by the nation, which will find, as all States which have tried it have found, that there is no resource in time of trial like a reputation for punctual paymont."
SOAUC of tho Eastern papers aro urging that as tho Sultan of Turkey has just settled a pension of $15,000 a year upon tho widow of his Grand Vizier, our Congressmen should settle a pension of $5,000 a year upon Mrs. LINCOLN. Tho Cincinnati Times remarks that tho logic of tbis is that Congressmen havo aright to imitate Turks if they wish to do so. If this is tho fact then Washington morality is no longer an onigma. •-s
THE Chicago Republican thinks tho rush to Washington for foreign service indicates that there is a general disposition on the part of office seekers to quit the country. If this is really tho explanation of the hitherto inexplicable, about the best thing that can be dono in the way of legislation for the country will be the establishment of embassies and consulships in a few of the fever-tainted and can-nibal-inhabited portions ot tho world, where aquick rotation in office will be most likely to diminish the rapacious liorde.— Wo mako the euggetion in good faith.
IT IS agitated in New York medical circles that perhaps persons who eat pork muchly aro moro subject than others to typhoid fever, cholera, and epidemicsjjonerally. On thissubjoct aNew York paper says '-During the prevalence of cholera in one cf our Western cities, where ih'e morality from that disease alono in two consecutive yoeurs exceeded six thousand, the interments in Hebrow cemeteries were disproportionately email in number, and could only be accounted for by the fact that the'Jewish population, which in that city was quite large, did not pirtake of the meat which is the peculiar diet of Christians, and especially o( tho poorer classes of Christian?, in Western towns."
Fertvnal.
———
ta, Ga., has mysteriously disapjioared*
SK6|JS?ABY BAUXW-EU. is a graduate of
ft£- xJj&sed an JsW his paper and its accompanying real estate. "l
ELLIS AUKS is mentioned as thu-prob-able successor of Judge Hoar on the Mas sachusetts Supreme Bench.
YOUNG ROKSSLE, son of the former proprietor of the famous Delevan House,
of
Indiana must pay for the base desertion Ulbany, hasbeen arrested,, charged with of duty on the
the Democratic forging his father's name.
GIDEON WELLS has been appointed Register of Bankruptcy in the Tenth Massachusetts District. This is not the ex-Secretary of the Navy.
BISHOP LITTLKJOHN, of Brooklyn, bitterly denounces the practice of expendthousands of "dollars annually on church music. He contends that music in God's service should be free, not hired.
EX-GOVERNOK -SFRAGUE, of Rhode Island, ha- a fine farm in the south of tjio State, on which ho kepp3 mammoth oxen. He has now one pair weighing 4,100 pounds, and two .o.thpp, jycighing 3,000 pounds each.
BBV. DK. EDDY, of Chicago, declined the nomination of Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives in vance, having accepted the pastorate the Charles street church in Baltimore.
MR. WHITEHEAD, an old man, was knocked .down, severely beaten and rob. bed in the highway noar Frencbtown few days ago. His assailants were two -women. 'nv
PROFESSOR EDWARD T. Cox, of New Harmony, has been appointed State Ge ologist, under the late law passed creating a department of geology, mineralogy otc The new department is undor the 'control and direction of the State Board of Agriculture.
THE story of many a Republican defeat may be told in two words "bad nominations." Let us avoid such mistakes in the township elections which will occur in this Slalo in a few days. Put up good men, then go to work and elect them.
A HOG, in DeKalb county, was recently found in an unoccupied house where it had been accidently shut up three months before. It had lived without food during that time,but had shrunk in weight near, ly hundred pounds. This seems a tough slory, but it is vouched for by respectable parties.
TOWNSHIP elections are near at hand. These small skirmishes are not less important in their gonoral results than the great biennial and quadrennial field engagements. Aro our friends ready meet the onerny You may be very sure that tho opposition is active and zealous. It is time for the Union forces to bestir thQuiselFes for the encounter.
IT IS now supposed that Sir. and Mrs. Todd, Lebanon, who were reported as murdered some days ago, came to thoir death without the aid of a third party.— It is bolioved that tho old man killed his wife and then committed suicide. This hypothesis is the result of a recont examination of tho bodies, they having been disinterred for the purpose of further inspection.
ADDISON MORRIS employed at the saw •mill of A. Hobson, near Taylorville, was caught in tho belting on tho 19th inet., and drawn up under the fly-whoel. He was very badly mangled, and survived only thirteen hours, during which time he was in great agony. He was a man of about fifty years of age, and was highly respocted. Ho leaves a wife and several children.
MRS. JERRY SHOAF, who was supposed to have accidentally shot herself, near
Fort
Fort Wayne, last week, appears to have been murdered by some unknown person who visited the house in the absence of all the family except Mrs. S. Various conjectures are afloat as to the manner in which the deed was committed, and ex-
planatory of the presence of the gun on
the body of the murdered woman. The
most
most plausible theory is that Mrs. Shoaf, thinking to intimidate the robber, seized the gun, which was kept in a different part of the room from where her remains were discovered, and retreated to the closet, where she was killed by the miscreant or, it may have been placed over the body, by the villain, after the murder had been consummated, to make it appear as the result of an accident.
BED KNIFE
.T--:.- flfc"
SIT CABSOP LAST TEAIL
BTiEONunrtt,
AUTHOR OF FIXDEB,'
"*HB WAGON TEAIN. "ill* WATtB W«lr,"
adof
Slate Items.
LEOISLATOTIE meets April 8th.
GENERAL Sol.. MEREDITH is convales
pent.
ONE Republican voted at Evansville
yesterday. THERE are 335 prisonors in the North
orn Penitentiary.
TEXAS CATTLE FEVER Washington county.
is raging in
REPUBLICANS, get ready for township elections. Nominate none but good men
SJXTY-NINB thousand dollars is the cost of the new jail in Wayne County.
THE remains of the late Judge Morri son, Indianapolis, were interred yester
day. ____
MAJBTIN GOLDEN, with a first class company, ,wiU soon Ppen the Evansville Opera House. ,.s^ .iM esi'X
BURGLARS blew open the safe of But' ler & Dickens, Indianapolis, last Friday night and secured $30 1
WASHINGTON, Indiana, has a Dramatic Company, consisting of resident "artists who have been playing to good audiences
CAPT. F. M. PICKETT, formerly of the Indianapolis Herald, and more recently of the Connersville Examiner, i?.about to atari a paper in Saline.county, Illinois.
LAst week a jour tailor, eighty-seven years old, who has been "tramping six ty-six years, passed through Adams County. ...
"TH* WITCH ETC., T.JO.
CHAPTER 1.
A LIFE GLORIOUSLY STAKED. Toward the close of a beautiful day in June, 1867, a man and woman, mounted upon fleet horses, came g»ll°PLne
ove^
one of the great plains of the West, and drew rein in the shadS of a olomp of cot-ton-woods upon the bank of a beautiful rivBi Tkey bad ridden far and rapidly. Their steeds were panting, and covered with sweat and foam. 'We must gi?a the horses a breathing ine spell,' said the former,
8DThe
slipping
to the
ground and his companion nodded a graceful assent, as she followed his ex-
couple were evidently father and
The man was in the prime of life, hale and hearty, with a large frame, wbicb was sinewy and athletic, without ceasing to be refined and prepossessing. He had the keen, shrewd look peculiar to the ad-vance-guards of civilization, and there
waB
an honest, frank expression on. his sun-browned face that proclaimed his integrity and courage.
In her way, his daughter was equally picturesque and attractive. In tho early flush of womanhood, with a pure, sweet, and tender face, with eyes darkly glowing, with coral-tinted lips and cheeks softly flushed with the hue o: the rose, with amber curls floating be^r her, she waa as graceful as a-gazelle, light-hearted as a .bird, as lov,ely.i$8
t0
Th^ stream by which the couple had haltrd was Wood river, a branch of the Platte, in Nebraska, at a point fifty miles northwest of Fort Kearney. 'Are you tired, Miriam?' asked the hunter, George Dane, with fatherly so licitude. 'Tired, father?" rejoined the maiden with a happy laugh. 'Oh, not Bpw could I be tired after a day like this I— Eyery minute has been filled with pleas ure and excitement. I feel as fresh yonder bird.'
The father smiled understands gly, with a look full of the fondest affection. 'I can guess the cause of your lightness of heart,' said be,- smilingly. 'The return, now daily expected, of a certain Hubert Earle, from the mines of Idaho, may account, I suspect, for your present
A heightened color appeared on Mi riam's face, for the name mentioned was that ot her lover. She answered her father, however, with a frankness that attested his entire sympathy with her, and said: 'True, father, my heart has been unusu ally light for several days past. How could it be otherwise, since I know that Hubert is coming
Mr. Dane did not reply. He was looking with kindling eye?, over the fair flower-dotted plain, and His next remark showed how widely his thoughts had itrayed. "I wonder what mother has been doing without us all day, Miriam. She must be lonely, with no cue to speak to or share her meals. I shouldn't wonder we could see our home from this point, and his face lighted up with a soulful glow. 'Our cottago is not moie than seven miles distant let me see?'
He drew from hi3 coat a pocket-glasi adjusted it to his sight, pointing it in northerly directipn, and gazed through long and earnestly, towards his ranche upon Barrey's Fork. 'Yes, I see it,' he said, at last, with long, deep, and joyful inspiration, as the sight refreshed him in every nerve, •There is our cottage, a3 plain as day can even see tho vines you plantSd be fore the windows, Miriam. And there On the grapejvine bench, under the big elm, sits ypur mother busy at her sewing. Bless her 1 She does npt iipagine we are looking at hor. Look, Miriaip-'
He yielded the initrument to his daughter,
who
obeyed bis injunction, ber
lovely face glowing with smiles as she regarded tho distant home-scene. 'Dear mother I' she murmured. 'It is treat to her to be able to sit out under the trees without fear of molestation. There are no hoatile Indians hereabouts now— are there, father?' 'No. Red Knife, as you have already heard, was killed yesterday by a settler, and his band has retreated towards the mountains. I will confess, Miriam, that during all the time wo have been in the West, I have not felt so light-hearted and care-free as since we received newi| of Red Knife's death. You have just seen how this joy bubbles over in me. Red Knife was a demon rather than a sav
age.' Miriam shuddered, and her features even paled at the memory of tho Indian mentioned. 'Ho never spared a palo face,' she said, striving to spoak calmly. 'Desolation and cruelty marked his path. For more than three years he has raged to and fro upon the plains like a ravening wolf. He was the terror of the border.' 'You havo named him appropriately Miriam,' said tho hunter. 'He had fiendish hatred of tho white race, and his victims have been many.'
Mr. Dano held out his hand for the glass, and Miriam was in the act of storing it, when a strango, gasping, panting sound htarllod them both, and sent them quickly to thoir saddles.
Tho hunter wheeled his horse and looked down upon tho river-bank, from which direction the sound had come, his manner self-possessed, but his counten atice indicative of alarm. The maiden followed his oxufiJlo.
Her eyes were tho first to discover the cause of tho sound that had startled them detecting a man's figure creeping along through tho undergrowth of bushes lining the shore.
At the Eame moment, their presence in turn was detected, for tho man drooped suddenly among the protecting bushes, as if he had been shot. 'An Indian?' whispered Miriam, drawing from her bosom a revolver.
The hunter shook his head, continuing to watch the spot at wbieh tho man had fallen, his hand on his riflo, his manner that of one ready for action.
Suddenly, as the man showed a haggard face peering cautiously from his concealment. Mr. Dane's anxious countenance broke into a smile, and he cried out: 'Hallo! Is that you Thompson? Do you take us for Indians, ibat you skulk there in the bushes?'
The individual addressed was silent a full minute, as it seemed from sheer amazement then he sprang out from hie hiding-place with a cry of relief, and advanced swiftly towards tho father and daughter.
Ho was a man of middle age, of the ordinary type of backwoodsmen, strong and brown and stalwart, of the rude, rough typo that seems to belong to the border. His faee was haggard and white although covered with presperation. His breath came through bis parted lips in quick, uneven gasps. He had run far siji swiftly, and looked as if about to drop from fatigue. 'What has happened Thompson?' asked Dane, with keen anxiety, the man's singular appearance giving him a sudden shock of alarm. •The Indians!' gasped Thompson, scarcety able to command his voice. 'They are coming Red Knife and his band—divided—my wife—ipy children Help me! Help me!' •'Wkat talk is this?' cried Dan agitated
In ppite of bit effort* at Mlf eootral 'IU1 Knife was killed ye»terd»y-—' 7 "^hompionr 'Hels coining to take his vengeance on ui sottlert. He baa divided his b«nd Into two.-Ih«y were up at the Deer fork thla Aonteg, and are now coining'this ^ay. ?fy pointi to be
but
ik are yd#r houMknd^Rine. Jjr fiod!' .^aculaira Dine, aa his informant paused in bis excited, breathless narration. 'A horse! a horse cried Thompson, reeling with fatigue. 'I cam. go njQ -fflT*' ther on foot. 'My wife, mychiUK®""" God pity and save them!'
Be looked from huntar toT"11 'dabghttir Jn agonised «$d nmj» _«n(#JlC1 tion.
There was no hesitation in the soul of the brave, Miriam. ... •Mine is but a single life fie has seven depending oo. him,' she said, aloud.
As *h? spoke, she Isapaifrom her saddle, and, with a gesture, commajjdad him to take her'place. 'But—your danger!' faltered Thompgou. ixUn-#Jqe£. la ife 'The Indians—' ....
a
flower, and as spirited as an uptam^a an-
Miriam again pointed to the saddle. 'Go,' she commanded. 'Think only of your family, and be gone!'
Still Thompson hesitated, sweeping the horizon with eager glances, to assure himself that no immediate danger threatened. A change came oyer his face as he looked, and he uttered a wild cry, catching up the glass Mr. Dane had let fall, and looking through it.
The eight he beheld convulsed him with terror. Not a mile away, ts the west, he saw .coming over a ridge in the plain, and approaching rapidly, a considerable body of -mountod sayages. 'They're coming—a band of red-skins —directly towards us I' he gasped. 'I'm lost! Fly, Miriam, while you have the time 1'
The maiden took the glass and gazed through it in an instant at the approach, ing foe. A strange light appeared in her eyes—a light possessed only by those upon whom GOD has bestowed a conscious? ness of His great protection^the light of a heroism which death itself cannot mas ter. 'Sure enough,' she murmured. 'They are coming! The leader is Red Knife Go, neighbor Thompson—on the instant! 'We can ride together!' cried Thomp son. 'No! The horse is tired. We have been to Willow Island. We should be overtaken before we had gone two miles!' 'Then we'll die together I' ciiUI 'No! no! You must mount!'
With a grasp so sudden and firm that it startled him, the maiden pushed him towards the horse, and in another instant he found himself, more by instinct than by thought, seated in the saddle. 'Away, Selim!' cried Miriam to her steed, with an imperative gesture,— •Away!'
The horse broke furiously over the plain, giving Thompson only time enough to flash a loot of gratitude towards the maiden, as dashed away to the northeast, towards his menaced home.
A moment later, Mr. Dane looked over his shoulder—took in at a glance the situation of affairs, recognizing the peril as well as the heroism of his child—bowed head solemnly, ns one submits to the in evitable, in approbation of her conduct, and then he swept on to tb0 rescue of his wife, his soul totp by such emotions as are seldom brought to' battle together.
Miriam, threw herself flat upon the plain, in the very path of a score of mounted Indians, who were gallopipg toward her with the switness of the wind!
CHAPTER II.
A CURIOUS AND STARTLING MYSTERY! Skirting the Black Hills, forty miles w?at of Fort Laramie, a party of horsemen were riding eastward.
They had left Fort Bridger eight days before, taking the route of the North Piatt, and now following the Oregon emigrant road, among those long ridges, dry beds of rivers, and sterile plains, by which the region of the Black Hills is distinguished.
The bulk of the party consisted of ten cavalrymen, under a lieutenant, who were returning to Fort Laramie, their post of duty. They were well mounted, and had several led horses in their train, loaded with their provisions and appur tenances of travel.
The balance of the party comprised three civilians, who ban seized the opportunity of crossing the mountains under military escort. Two of these were emigrants who had settled near Fort Bridger' but who had tired of the great soiitude, or been frightened by the Indians, and were now returning eastward in search of homos nearer the haunts of civilization.
The third civilian was Hubert Earle, the lover of Miriam pane, tho settlor's daughter, whom we have just left in such do&dly peril.
He was a splendid specimen of American manhood, magniflciently .formed, broad-shouldered, deep-chested, as .vigorous as an athlete, and rode his horse, a flery Mexican steed, with the grace and ease of a Centaur.
At tho moment of his introduction to tho reader, he was riding in the rear of the little train, busy with his own reflections, which were evidently as bright as the morning itself—the forenoon preceding the events we have recorded.
His thoughts were wraped in the sweet memory of Miriam, who had wept so bitterly at his departure, and who, he expected, would smile so joyously at his return. 'The dear little soul!' he murmured aloud, 'Where is she now?'
His eyes darkened with tender sweetness, his lips quivered with the ineffable love that flooded his being with a happiness akin to pain. He piotured their meeting, the pretty home they would shair together, the years they would ^pend in each other's society, the tendor mutual love and care that would bless all their coming days.
He had left her a RQor adventurer, to seek his fortune atpong the mines of Idaho. He was returning to her a more than moderatelyjrich man with billa of exchange in bis chamois money-belt of sufficient value to support them both in luxury as long as they might livq.
It was not to be wondered at that his thoughts were pleasant. Suddenly ha waa arousod from his trance-like silence,by cries of delight from his companions, and by the fact that they had checked their speed.
Looking around bim quickly, he beheld the cause of the unusual excitement To the southward, at no great distance, a
small
heard of buffaloes was grazing laaily, seemingly not at all alarmed by the near presence of a formidable enemy.
The wind was blowing from them, the horses were fresh, and, as he looked at the tempting game, Hurbert felt the spirit of the hunter grow strong within him.
Giving rein to his horse, he galloped along tho line to speak to the lieutenant,
was
Miriam's
Dane snatched the hands and placed lt He look«d to th* nort*w*fd—saw his pretty eottage, .his wife busy at her needle under the trees—and glaneed at the aim line of the horizon rtfttching away eastward and westward from his -home.
Suddenly the glaaa dropped from his hands—his face blanched to the. hue-of snow. From the wMt, Meming to emerge from 'the cloudi of scarlet and gold, he had beheld a band of mounted Indians riding boldly towards that unprotected home, towards that unconscious and helpless woman.
With a frenzied cry, he put spurs to his horse, and dashed away like 4 mad man, shouting to faia .daughter to' follow him at the same instant Thompson staggered forward and fell in the maidep's path, holding uphis hands in anguish.' 'My wife! my children I' he groaned.
m»t balf way by tbat flieer,
whose sparklics eyes and eager dp mean
ieair"
'What do you say to an hour's sport, Mr Barltil' shouted, the lieutenant, as he borajNST jpoa hi* friend, for Hubert ik^d&dfKfaitorfte «Kh evatf memt$r «the pnfy II 'lSunk UMtould bk&JSwacight sj&me to tarn our backs on such splended game, was the quick response. ''Who could eat a dinner of salt pork, with those fat butfaloes so near usTl lieutenant-smiledjr-glanced up-ana-down the line, reading eager loging in thef facet of bis Aen a6£resqlved to carry ^utlua 4twiraiid|he eeoeral
a word ot command from "fi'mj'lfie party set out at a quick galloped lor tho Kcna.of aetioii.raartfcws.B*-
The buffaloes, allowed the enemy t? approach quite riea, the wind faVorihg the hunierr, but atf length began te shake their headland to look for the cause of their apprehensions.
A moment latter they had beheld Ihey onetfay, and^jth* frightful bellowings and mighty trarttj^ had-begun their wild, mad flight! to the southward.
The chase, was a long one and it wad not till the hunters had run the buffaloes upok Vsbur of the Black Hills that they got-a gbod chance at (hem. They then brought down several plump young buffaloes, and dinner speedily became the watchword. 'It is noon, and we'll have dinner,' Said' the lieutenant, observing that the baggage animals with their drivers were approaching. .'Kindle a fire,- boys, and we'll have steaks and roasts in abundance
While this order" was being carried into effect, Hubert and several others were engaged in surveying the scene. 'A lonely and desolate spot,' said Hubert,- thoughtfully. 'It looks as if man had never before visited it.' 'And no wonder,' retijrnoi Brydges, 'since it's five miles off the route, W^at could any mab want here, unless he might be in pursuit of buffaloes?'
There being no answor to this question Hubert proceeded to find an excellent grazing spot for his horse, tethered him and flung himself on tho ground in the shadow of the hill. The lieutenant and a portion of-the'men followed his example.
Plenty of low bushes were found dry enough to burn, and several fires wore soon kindled. The choicest portions of the'buffaloes were readily prepared for cooking, and It was not "long before the odor, of burning flesh was diffused on the air four or five hungry soldiers serving as cookf.
It was a wild picnic scene on those lonejy wilds, and every man there on joyed it with true gipsy zest.
Suddenly a shout from one of the men Who were strolling aroundf arrested the attention of
the
others.
•Hallo, boys!' ho cried 'I'm blest if here isn't a cave in the hill! Come, see the hblo under the bushes. You never saw anything hidden neater in your lives.' 'Jones thinks nobody over saw a cave before,' said one of tho loungers. 'For my part, I think more of something to eat, than of a hole in the ground.'
This seniment was echoed by the oth ers, but the inquisitive cave discoverer, nothing daunted, approached the fire, took frofp it a torch, returned to the bu^te, parted the bushes, revealing a dark aperture in the face of the rock, and disappeared within it, fcis light giving back a yellow glare for a second after he had ceased to be seen.
The camp revelry went on, the cook ing progressed, the minutes passed, and Jones did not reappear. 'If that fellow had found a gold mine in there, he wouldn't call one of us,' growled the lounger who had before spo ken. 'I wonder what Jones has found' I'll just take a look, as dinner isn: ready.'
He arose lazily, abstracted a stick of burning wood for a torch, proceeded to the cavern" entrance, and disappeared from view. 'Probably,' said Hubert, 'thore's a large cavern under that hill. If wo had time, it might pay to explore it. Under the present circumstances, I am like Brown and prefer my dinner to scientific explorations.'
The meal seemed to be nearly ready, for the rattling of tin cups and dishes hegan to be heard tho lieutenant's small camp-chest was unpacked, and the cooks shouted to the strollors to corae to din
ner. 'Have Jones and Brown came back? asked the lieutenant, as he rose to a sit ting position, and glanced towards ..tthe cavern.
The men replied in tho nogative. 'Go after them, then, King, and hurry them up,' said the officer. 'Wo must resume tho march after dinner, and can not afford to waste time here.'
King, a fine young soldior, took a torch and entered the cave. The dinner was dealt out—hot, savory steaks and roasts—the coffee measured and the meal commenced, but none of men who had entered the cave made their appearance! 'How singular!' ejaculated Brydges testily and impatiently. 'What can keep those men King has been gonq ten minutes. Here, Sergeant Halsey. hurry those men up!1
The sergeant, a brown, strong man of middle age, hesitated, and ventured to stammer: 'I bog your.pardon, Lieutenant, but I think there's something wrong inside the cave. There's three men in there—all hungry and knowing that dinner's now ready. Surely they'll come back if tbey could. Perhaps thoro's wild beasts, or gome strange kind of gas that smothers 'em, or—' 'Nonsense, SergeantI' interrupted tho lieutenent, frowning. 'I give you five minutes to bring those men back. Go
The sergeant's face paled, but, without another word, he took up a torch and entered the cavo, disappearing from the gaze of his friends.
The minutes passed, tho lieutenant and men ate their dinner mochanically awaiting anxiously tho expected return yet none of the four came back.
The words of the sergeant had mado a deep impression on tho minds of his hearers. A general gloom fell upon the camp, and tho men cast frequent and fearful glances in the direction of the cavern- Even the lieutenant and Hubert felt a strange depression creeping over them, which neither could resist.
What can be tho matter?' at length demanded the officer. 'The sergeant is in trouble 1 should judge, by this lonj absence. There can't be gas in the cave, or if so, he would probably havo had time to ory out. There can't be wild beasts, for those four men were all well armed, and would at least have fired. Wihch of all you men will go into tho cave and learn what tho matter is?'
There was a general shrinking back. Every soldier was brave in an Indian fight, but not one dared to face a mysterious Jind unknown danger. Not one wished to risk the complete and total disappearance from earth and human knowledge that had befallen his comrades. 'Whoever will venture in search of the missing men shall receive from me a hundred dollars in gold!"«xclaiming Hurbert, in his clear, ringing tones. "Who speaks first for the money?"
The offer was .tempting but was not accepted. Not a word of reply was made to iu
Hurbert hesitated, giving a brief thought to Miriam, his loved and waiting Miriam! His face then glowed with a heroic light, and besaid, in tones that did not falter: 'J will go in search of the men, Lieu? tenant Brydges. Only, your party is now small, and in if I do not return iu twenty minutes, you may resume your journey." 'But. Earle." expostulated the lieuten-
nnt, '-this potlt'Te modora*. Ton must not tiak your life. We will wait ailn aa«ntw •i8jiUy^iR^MJ»JWI 80
irm move uu!
"They may need help," replied Hubert, steadily. '-They may have encountered— well, Gkd knows what, I can^ lmaiSn lf &?« my rifle, «(me ik\ mf If rettrn
.jgpthiK "the
tjfle ippo
move^pn!" a went upto ine nearest Ire, picking up a blazing stick, arranged his rifle for instant use, approached the mouth of the cave, peeped into it_cautiously,.and listened intently foreome^oand of life within.
No sound came. All was as still aa death wiUiia tKcflWrjfc
All was now breathless suspense. The lieutenant .and.hia men gmtfcafed around to listen for the fenqxt of The minfcta jmssedL^lnft
-feami
Five minutes dragged by—ten—fifteen, and still no soubtf reached theirs eara. They, could see a brief space into the cavern, by the light ef their own torches, bat nothing but roeky walls me*.1 their gaze.
Twenty minutes were thus jirased. The time was up, ^n3" Hubert Jiad: »ot returned. -.«•*«»*.»*& I-*'* •The men looked* fft!6"iie' anothef1
The time continued to drag on. At last, when two full hours had passed, Lieut. Brydges staggered to his feet, and said: ...
Tnis is horrible—terrible beyond expression! We have lost four of our comrades and this noble young stranger, whom I loved as a brother. This fearful cave must bold the secret of their fate, be it what it may. Lot us go.'
Without a word, but with white faces —in a sortof mute terror, the men mounted tbeir horses and resumed theirJourney. The above is all of this story thai will bfe published in our columns. The continuation of it from where it leaves off here can be found only in tho New York Led-, ger, which is for salo at all the bookstores and news depots. Ask for the number dated April 10, 1869, and in it you will find the continuation of this beautiful talo. The Ledger is mailed to subscribers at three dollars a year. The publication of Rev. Dr. Tyng's great' story, which has been written expressly for the Ledger, is commenced in the Ledger, so that our readers will get the will get the whole of these two stories in it. The Ledger has the best stories of of any paper in the world and Henry Ward Beecher, James Parton and Fanny Fern, have articles in every number.
"YOXJR LOTION' has cured the most obstinate case of chronic tetter that has baffled the medical skill of hundreds," writes Bank & Olure, druggists, of Clarendon, Ark about Palmer's Lotiofo. 23,dwlw.
MORSE'S INDIAN ROOT PILLS.—We give you in this Medicine the result of a lifetime of study and trial before this Medicine all others are but nostrums.— They are made from simple Boots, and are the best medicine in the world for all Billious diseases. Female Irregularities Headaches, Indigestion, Liver Complaints &c. Thoy purify the blood, remove all obstructions, oleans the skin of all pim« pies and blotches, and are perfectly sure and safe in their operation. We ask you to use them because we know their virtues. Trial is t^e Touchstone by which to prove them worthy. Use Morse's Indian Root Pills. For sale ^y all Dealers. marldwlm
ONS hundred years ago the now celebrated PLANTATION BITTKRS were as well known in the West Indies as they aro now known in the United States.' It is true that they were not known by that name, but their components and manner of manufacturing were the same—eave that there has been added Caliaaya or Peruvian Bark, celebrated the world over for its wonderful tonic properties. Even to this day these Bitters are popular as ever, and their sale and use on these islands is constantly increasing, and there can hardly a family bo found, rich or poor, who is without them. We do not wish to impute any wrong to the American proprietors of these Bitters, but that they are the originators, we most stoutly deny, and tbey must take such umbrage at it as they please. At the same time we take this ocpasIon to say that a more valuable tonic Bitters cannot be found in all the world. We consider them just the thtng for weak and delicate females, and all those requiring a mild and gentle stimulant. dwlw
MAGNOLIA WATKB.—Superior to the best imported German Cologne, and sold at half the price. 10-dwlw
COSTAR'S REMEDIES.
HOUSEKEEPERS! HOUSEKEEPERS! :'s,
lieu—Women—Children! 9lci)-Woqieii-C|iild|ien!
s-- HE A D—HEA D.
Oool log to Scalds and Barna,"* Soothing to all painfal wound*, Ac.'Vr a Heal ins to all SoreS, Ulcer*.
Ac."
OOSTAP-'S"
BUCKTHORN SALVE
Ti tho most kxlraordinary SALVE ever known. Its pe#er of Soothing anl Healing for all Uuta, Buroa, Btuigee, Soree, Uloera, Obapprd llande and Skin, for Sore Nipplei. for Piiea, Ac., Ao.—i• without parallel. One person a*ya of it,
SPECIAL NOTieil.
"I
would not bs without a Box in mv fiouae, if it cost 5 0C, or I weaM travel ail the way to New York for it.-'—AT. 1'.
Evening Neut, Seat.
•'COSTAR'S"
Standard Preparations
ARE Hlb
E A I I E
BlTTER-SWEEf ill) ORANGE BLOSSOMS One ilottlo, 81,00—Three for 82,00.
"Coslar's Bat, Boach, *c., Eiltralaatora, "I'ostarV KcS Bag KilcrralnMors, "t'ostar's (Only Pure) iBstct Powder. ••Only Infallible Remedies known." "18 years esfabliihad in New York." "2,000 Boxes and Klasks manufactured dally. "11 1 Beware 11 of spurfouslfiiltatlonS?, "All Druggists in TSBU HAUTE sell them."
Aeidresa "COSTAR," 10 Crosby St, N. T. Or, JOHN F.
Hkniiy,
(Succeecor to)
DEMA3 BABNKS CO., 91 Par11 Bow, N. YSlid In TEBBl HAUTE, by
BARB, GUL1GK BEBRT, Jan4dwly-n to BU.
To Ovien tf IMTM* Hi (fettleToblea' Darby OnMtln Powdtra in warrant. Mfi'taf I ij"l jjhia, or pay, lirttacir of 0hl(Jw, M^s, Ooagha, (toUnMBi HaifS aa4 CoMc. Coi o^Kflk.jBftck ToS* Hem
Dl
They ar*perfectly aaf* ui lucent
ot
(topping the workiag of rar raiael*. Thoy lucre*** the appetite, |lna Una coat, elaaaaa the
Mrtwf »li5- Ikn.fifM
milk of
ocvf.
20rannliiKkotM ta 11a charge,
r^?ith
pallid faces. As if turned to stone, tbey stood an awe-stricken group about the cavern's mouth, Until the minutes had more than made up an hour—and still they lingered
During this time they had cleared away the bushes from the mouth of th&'cave. They had tried again and again to p«(|r into the dark depths of tho oponiog, but could not. The lieutenant had called repeatedly to Hubert but received no answer. At length he proposed to tie a rope around his waist and descend into tho sinister abysss, but his man objected unanimously. 'What'B the use?' asked one, 'There's something here that no mortal man pan conquer.' 'We can't risk your life, limitenant,' said another. 'Just think bow few there are of us.'
Diaeatah!
tfca
Try thin, aa4 will sever b«
without them. Colonel PhlUp P. Bath, of tho JIIUM Beo* Caaree, Tordhaa, N. T., wottld aot wo them until ha waa told of what tkiy are eoapoaad, elaoe
for th. iMt
them. Be haa kindly parattted me to refer any one to him. Over 1,0 0 other nfcraaeea can be aeon
So'
j£\. aendlDrae Ihalr addteatf •Itfc 8S Mat* en oloeed, will r«ceire by B»il the name ail carte da*rUite of their fatarew.iWor hMfe&ed.
Ja27»3m BKKTM+ Ofc.
YOU
wimj
work
gpns?—
eoSKIiwanmiJB oaru Oaaaoap-
tton, Bronchltii, Hpar*ana«L Aithnu, Caught, Goldi, Catarrh, Crap,- Son Threat, {NaagfMaMe Breath, Tight new of th* Ct«at, DiSculty of Breathing, M. P*Wo ifaafcara art ti»g»ra will find tbep uaiivaUad for •Mrtet'tha volte. Price as caata par bos. For lata by all Druggiatf, JmnWwa*
BCHINCTO toMONIO STBVr,
Seaweed Tomio aad Mandrake Pllla will care Ooneamptton, Lhtr Ooaplatnt aad Dytpapala, if ,taken,ac«ord iagj to the d(MMt|M*. affttirtn* to takes at th* tame Urn*. They cleans* theatotaach, r*lax th* llTer, and pat It to
1hotf th* |gfy*tl^ej*ai**s*o4} tfe*'*f*od digest* aad.mak** food blood tha patiewt begin* to grow la 0a*h: the dhaaeed Matter ripens in the lnnga, aud the patient outgrow* th* disease and geU well. This I* th* only way to car* Oon-J aumptioii.
To these thiee ••dlclaaa Dr. J. H. Schanck, Philadelphia, owes hi* anriralled succ*aa in the treatment of Pulmonary Consaaptiou. Th* Pulmonic Syrup rip*n*i tha art Id aatUr In the lungs, nhtnra throws it off b/aa aa*y expectation, for wh*n tfes phlegm or matter is rip* a •light cough will thvow1 it offj aad-tb* patl*Dt has rest, aid theluagi b*gin to heal.
To do Oil*, th* gaawead Tante' —d Xandrak* Pilia mvit be ftasiy de*d to clcaat* th* stomach and liver, *o that th* palmonic 9rup and the food will make good blood.
SohMckf Hankraka fills aet upon th*' liver, removing all obsUrucUoas, relax the duct* ef the gall bladder, th* bll* atari* fr**ly aad th*'liver is soon relieved th* atool* will sh«* what the Pills can 4o nothiag haa «v*r bMn lav*Btad *xcept calomel (a fcadiy poleoa wWeh I* very, dangerous to us* unless with grsat C4re) that will nnlook ihegallbladdaraud start .ttaaa«Mtioaa ef the liverlike 8*h*nck'* Kandrak* PUI*.
Liver Complaint la on* of IB* moat prominent cause* of Consumption. 8ch*nck's Seaw**d Tonlo Is a feat!* stimulant and alterative, and th* alkali ta the Seaweed, which tbi* prwaratlQB la mad* of, a**i*ts the tomach to thtqw o«t thsgaatiie Jofc* to dis**lve the food with th* PalmoalCjByrap, and it I* made into good blckd ^Uhout'firmantatioa or aonrlng in the stomach.
The great -reason why phyitciaaa do not cure Consumption is, tbey try to do tod mueh they, give mwUcin* to stop th* *oagha, to atop th#
cUlUc.to stop night sw*«U, luetic fsv*rt mot by *o doing they d*raag* th*
whol*
dlf**tlve power*,
locking np tli* i*cr*tion«, and *V*Bt*ally th* patient sink* and die*. Dr. Bchepck, In bla tr**tm*nt. doe* not try to
J2S-
own accord. Mo on* oaa b* cur*d of Ooaismptaon, Liver Complaint, Dy»pspsla,vC*ta»rh, Cankei, Ulcerated Throat, apt*** th* llv*t' *ud stomach *r*m«k*'li**thy.
If a persoir has OoBsnmptlon, of coara* the lungs In loibe way jar* dia*aa*d, *Uh*r tubeicUs abscesse*, bronchuf Irrication, pl*ura aelhMion or the lungs area qw* of inflammation and fast decaying, -^h aach caees, what must b* don* It is not only th* lungs that ar* waiting, bat It i* the whol* body. The tomach and liver have lost their power to mak* blood oat of food. Mow, the only chance 1* to take Dr, Schenck'* three mediciu**, whlf* will briag np a ton* to tb* stomach, th*patiwt wiU begin to want food, It will digest easily aad make goU blood then the patient begin* to gain la 1Mb, and «s soon as the body begin* to trow, th* lung* oommeac* to heal up, and tt» (ittent g*ta fl**hy aad weU Thi* ls the only way loeiur* ConsnmpiioB.
When there'll no Inpg
U*eai*t
6Bcii*
and. only Liver
Complaint ahd. Dyipepala, Scheaskla Seaweed Tonic and Xandrak* Pill* ar* iuOei*nt, without the Pulnionld Syrup. Tak*th* Maadrak* Pllla freely In all hUloo* complaint*, a* th*y ar* perfectly harmleas.
Dr. Schenck, who haa eajoyad unlnt*rrupt*d health tor many years pait, and now waighi 325 pounds, wa* wasUd away to a m*r* *kel*ton, in the very laat itage of Pulmonary Oonaumption, his physlciani having pronouncei his oaa* hope, len, and abaadoaM bin to,hi* fat*. He waa cored by the afore*Md madicine*, and since hi* recovery, many thouandi similarly afflicted have used Dr. Scl(enck'l prenaratiom with the lame remarkable lacewa. NU diriKtions aexknlpany
It cflt abtolntsly n*tis**ary to perdefctek, aalM patisnu wbh their sd and for this parpae* b* is p**-
m,
__
aonallj see Dr
fessianally at hi* principal cB**, Philadalphia, eyery Saturyay, what* aU letters far advice unit be addresasd.
Price orthePnlmonic Snap and Seaweed Tonlo, each |1,S0 par bottl*, or VI,bQ a half doaen. Man drake" Pill* 25 c*nt* p*t box.
For sale'by all Drnggliti. ial7dwly
A CABD.
Pr—of Okarf.
Addrtu JOflKPH T, IRSAff, Statloa D, Bible Hbuie, Jal2dw3mo Mew Tork City,
Sterling Silver Ware
riHE WAU. THI QOBHAH MANDf CO., Of PBOV1DENOC, B. I., having the l^rgsit manufactory of Solid Silver Ware In the world, with the most Improved machinery, and employing the most skilled labor, are enabled to offer an unequalled variety of n«w and b***Hfal d**ign* In Dinner Servleef, Ttoa Servite*^ aad *very artltl* specially adapted for Holiday anei
They offer also, thsir well-known and nnrlval led Ktckel Silver Electro-plated Ware, Iu which they have lutrodnced new pattarns or rare elegance. TKeBelid Silver I* guaraataed to b*of sterling parity by O. S. Hint a*s^y- The Xl*o-tro-plate is guarantee^ to b9 superior to the finest She^ield war9. Qrd*i* r*oelived from the only, but these goods may be obtained from responsib'e dealer* everywhere. Trade rxi ran TradeMark
-rail®
5.
All Tm?giata in TKBRE HAUTE fell It.
.1.-.',
Silver. Plate. QOBHAM MANDPAOTfllSlHO CO., Salesroom No. S Halden Laa*, S. T. nldwt^mo*
Phalon's PaphlM Lollra
fbr
Beantl^ias
tie UM
aal
Raaaves
*llk
For
Mi
SPECIAL
n.tVV cheap alcohol, which is surcharg
Ctl.
aaVfli(i3leia.
BITTERS,
POOL!
"822Z&
A& dreee. Br. AHfoclatigjk, Jrtaiadaijfhla, Fa.
the
ante
Howard wSaa
A PERSON
NOTICES-
The Trying Season.
The toarcaing «ind«, th-j cold, drizzling rairt tbe he^vy Togi, anil,~oocsVenal warm and moist f|^e of Marrt), tlsildei^itt upon t^o «holo, tho y^*t Pah^jaHhr luMitb of tbojenr. Its depressarejgJ.ec!ally unfavorable to iovti- .• anaUiousandsof persons with feeble coc.iti. tntioni, who have borne the winter bravely,1" break down la the^first month of Spring, 'the vi rlatioes of temperature and coU.east winds are a Mrioas trial tcrth* djspepiic &»d billion*, win,,, symptoms thej invariably aggravate. Intermittent ftver is also rife whereter theru is ovoivnble poison In the water or tho soil. To t-nable the system to combat these evils, them is nothing like a good vegetable tonl: and among tliia clau ol medicine* UC3IKTKH'S STOM A.C1I BITTKRS stand •opreme, Medical men prescribe it in '—pMlfaha I iinWjPreparations bf the that tnv ordlnall based upou, cheap alcohol, which is surcharged th acrid essential oil, and absolutely poisonous. Th.-)' know, on tbo other liaud, that the rectified asence of the finest rye grown in this ccmi-ry is the sole spirituous ingredient cf UOSTETrKR'a
and that the vegetable raeiiicinnl ele
ments of wlsich It is composed arc of tare efficacy. Hence it has tha conSdenco of pliytlcian*, and And* it* way into hospitals whero no other preprietary medicine is lanctloncd.
A course of the BITTERS is eipccinlly recommended io persons of dclldata habit, of both sci. s, at this season. In the fever and ague district* in the West and South, qninlne lias been ulmo.-i unlvenally discarded as a chologo^ue, ana this invaluable antidote to mclariotn disorders adopted inits stead A double (tain is realiwd by tha keloid. ftreagro»»ble to the palate and their cnr»^ live affect is much moro permarent. ilulw
THJB PI-ASTEII «»FTHE ALiCOCH'S 1'OKOIN. 1 In lumbago they act like a charm. In f,-w hours a violent coagli is relieved by a I'las'.iir apkli*d'tn tbeckeat. Mauy p«rsnn bcEevei 1 bmitt be takfn vhife a l'lasior Is Woru there: this wisakn6#, tS^pgreatly assist'la thiVrure' of a neglected cold, so rltcn the intrcilurer of Consumption.
Cure of Lesion of tho Liver. A.
gentleman, ofter ft sovere sickness, had legion of the liver. Every quick, movement or sudden jar gave him sevore pain,often laying him np for days. Honoe heyfas anahlc to Jollfivr aoV ccupatlon with rogolurt'y.
In this condition, he applied over the pajlnflfcce•dan ALLCOCK'S POROUS PLASTKU. At first It seemed to irritato, eo it was takes
of.
But lw
marked improvement he experienced afterward, gave him courage to try again, an.l he thoref re •pplied anothor riaster. In a f.-w il»ys aomethlng ga^v^ w^yr-J'sl^ped,',''*50' ",c Rentle* man's own words. Tlier.i was nome soroneas tiea few days after, then liis health was peit-ctl.v restored. Dpou being sounded by his physician,, the adbtsbn or lesion, waaf^Bad te,^e go^ot [j*p principal'Agoncy, tirandrelb tlonse, K»*w\oik. 'Sold by all Druggists. u-.17.1*lnt
VICTORY.
A CONQUEST INSTANT AXI) SUBLlilK.
O'er spiteful Natttro uuft-o'or blighting Timo'l, Hair white or gray, or red as (•uuset's iky. Assume* a Black or Brown, that e.lmrms tire cjf-, Beneath the spell of ClllSTAPO'S D1KI
PreservattveJ
OriBtidoiio'saialr AND BKAtJTIThis
—This fim»H5 preparation
I* guaranteed to preforve the lir in its full beauty and luxuriance throngliout lifn, If the hair Is thlo, it thickens it if dull aud dead-looking, It give* it a mageiflcent gless. It is warranties to remove scurf and dandrulf, present thebaic falling off, restore it in ball ipots, came It lo oari, and keep it in splendid order aivivr ali.clr-. camstauceB, and in all climatus.
Sold by Druggists,and applied by all Hair, Dressers. Manufactory No, (iS Maidevi !.an«.—. Principal Depot No.15 "tor Ifoum- mlTdwlm.
BUCHU
[From Dispeneary of the Vnitfd Stateis.]
DIOSMA VKF.SATA—BUC11U
'Proveriiei.—Tbeir
LEAVES.
odor is strong, diffusive, aud
somewhat aromatic, their taste bitterish, aud analogous to mint.
Mtdkal Properties anil Dies.—Buchn
l«.ive» are
gently stlmiiiaut, with peculiar tendency to the Urinary Organs. TU©y are giveu ill complfiiutaof tr.o Urinary Org|n| inch &s Gravel, Chronic Cttturth 1 tho SPider, Morbid Irritatiou of the lUaJder and XJthere, Disease of the Prontate Gland, and H--(ention or Incontinence of Urine, from a loss o«* tab" In tlie parts concerned in it* evacuation.— Tts remedy haa also lioen recommondod in p^paia, Chronic IwlunaiAti»nit Outtti.ooiu Affections, and Dropsy.
HELM HOLD'S KXTRACT Bucnu is ut)ed by vor•oiifl from tho ages of 18 to and from 35 to 35, or In the decline or change of life alter Cooflriement, or Labor Paina Bed-wttiiujc in Childen.
In tflectionB pecnliar to Female*, the Kttract Bachn is uneqoaled by any t»Wror remedy, aa Ohloroais, or Ketention, Irregularity, Paio(nluew Or Suppression of Oastotuary Kvanirttifnn, tJlcer-s ftt»d or 8cirrlRtis Stat© (fftlie Ifteroa, licnchrrfidC^ or.Whites*,
Diixuts cf the Bladder, Sidneys, Cfrtiverand Th'cp^ ncalStotUivys.—Tbis
medicine lucressnfl the powur
of Digestion, and Excites tho Absorbents into healthy action, by which the watery or calcari ons depositions, and all Unuatural Kularg^monta are reduced, aa well as Pain aud liiiJuiuniAfiiou. I
IHLMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT IJCUHU HAFLENRET^ etiry case of Dlabetis in which It IIIIH IKK«U ^iven. I a N a a flammatton ^f the Kfdney^j iTtcAfatiHu of tho"®KfdnefS and Bladder, Retention ot Urine, Diaeasea^of the Prostate Giai^l„Su»ue in tho^luddor, Oalcnlua, Gravel/Brick Pun Deposit, and Mucnj or Milky Discharges, and for enfeebled aud delicatoconititutiona, qt b^th spxoi,' attentted. withjjgy-} the following
symptom* :'Iudl»porfiffon to Exer
tion, LOBS
of Power, Loss of Memo'-y, DiQlcnlty
of )reathittg) Weak Mervns, -Tioiflblmk', Warrorj of Disease,
Wa1cefh1no«»g/ Dfinopss if Vision,
Pain in tho Back, Mot llaoda, Fla»hiui of thn Body, DryneBS of the Skin, Krupt:oit on the Kace^ Pallid CouDtenanc^, Universal Lassitude of tli^ Moscnlar System, Ac.
IHILMBOLD'S FLUID EXTBACT BCCHU, ia and Blood'Pnrifying, and
A Clergyman, while r**1dlag In Bonth Amsrica as a missionary, discovered a*af*and simple rem edy for the cur* of Marvoas Weake***, Karly Decay, Diseases of tho Urinary and Seminal Or gans, and the whole train of Disorders brought on by banstal and Visions habit*. Great number! have been cared by this nobl* remedy. Prompted by a desire to beneflt the aflioted and nnfortu nate, I will send the receipt for preparing and using this medicine, In a sealed envelope, to *ny onp who need* It,
Bridal Olfts.
cures ail iseauus ariai/,
-ing from habits of dissipation, excesses aivl *M prudences in lifo, impurities of the
blood,
irawn aa a whole or in part
OOpriUION
all IBOPTItMS. mUUL mirui, MOTH
BLVTOHn, Tir
•via Diniivnaoi Rmvn
TflK SKIN
bortj
BIAOMINfi.
LADIH la -«*a OTBaBBT It Mh lifalaaMa. ForeKXTLBMIN alter
SHAVlNii Itfeasa* c«aal,
"PHAP1AN LOTIVH" Is tke aalf miakleraa edy for Olscaasa aad hlcsalskca
*f
the 9K1.V.
PAPBIAH
»0Ar' n* the tourr.
PHALOM"8 NIHUKB1 Price, as Delta •tiahs,
NI1UKKY aad BATH, wm aatclai (fee SUN.
HATdS,** ttt«et Hi
"rvom 1»B «AT»."
A NVW rmriiMB FOB TBB IASHIHIIU, KXUVU1TB. PBMCA1B. FCA8TU» BMMQ PHALO.H son,
NBW ROBK, BaMhyall Brag.
Clsla. Sdwly-ator^t oiriD I
Ay
•uperioding Copabia in alfcteionfl f.»r it ntj, used, such aa Gonorrhoea,
Gleet
of
Ion
staud*^.
ing, and Syphilitic Atfectiona—in these di^cuse%'
osed in connection with UELMBOLD'S KCSKWASII. Sold by a'l
Druggists and doainrH everywh»ro.
Beware of
Counterfeit?. Aak for IMtuholdV—
Take no other. Price—91,25 per bottle, or «fx bottles', for $6,50. Delivered to any address. Describe pyifptoiun in all comma nlcations.
Address n.T. UKLMBOLD, Drngand Chemical j' Warehouse, 694 Broadway, N. Y. iMnNone are GKNUINR unless done up iu iitet mgraved wrapper, with fac-siuiiio of my Jal .Warebouso, and slgued feb24deod-weow2m II. IT ELM 80L*a.
Til
10 be
by
CUKCK.
AT
SIGHT and WITHOUT NOTICE, all-.wiuit iiitorest eu ALL DAILY BALAVOEH, parties throughout the eonniry caVtfwp acconnts in this Inatttutlon With special advantage of Hecnnty, con vonieno**
and profit. '1^ Jel7dwUm
•RANBItETH'S PH.M vs.
ISO.
Bleeding may give because the Mood Uft
has moro room lut ttu tase does not Ia*t, anc\ miti is followed by perrannent wtakuw. BBANDBETH'S RILLSrelisve lh*3 circuUtioA \'t&jft and give esse more afln-ly audaUnoet ea quickly bleeding bnt lirnqdYnh'* PlPa nr*ver hurt, and the good tbey do it prrnxanent, l»emna they takeonly uUat Iho boJy and ar«» bettor witiiout, Porgitlon Ilh these piiliwill lie fonnd
A UNLV£BSAL CUBATIVK PlMNCIPItR
Let the wise examine its claims to their cooflcence. Mrs* Hooker, of Barnstible, Slass., was cured.by them of £t. Vitus'* Dan&e, of l^yeaiV ttanding. Abram Van Wart VM cured of inter, nal tnmor by the ose of Brandn t.Vs I'll wJ •11 other moans had fniM.
RATIONAL TRUST 00.
or TUE CITY OF NKW YORK Ho. S38 I I O A W A T!
Capital, ONK MILLION D0LLAH8,
C'UAUTJCKED HIT TilK dlATK..
DaaiCH ANOAM, ^ree't. AS. iirnaiLL, Beceives Deposits aud allows FOUU I'KKCKNX INTEREST on all paily llalane*.—, sul'j^ct to Check at Sight. SPECIAL HEI'O.'ITr) tor Months, or more, may bo ma le at Hteper cent, ffi'l The Capital of ONK MILLTOW KOM.AUS'dtvl-iVv' dad among over 500 SharrUplderM, fmnprUiuR many gentiemeu of iar^'o wealth aud OuaooU) experieuee, who area!?.' p«rsouaMy hable to depoaitdrs for air obligations of tiie f^ompewy double the amonnt of thoir capital stork. An j-ri be NATTONALTltUST CO. recdve^d^iHJsits in larzeor small amounts, anl permits 'tbfiu
Dr. Brandreth'a office, Branlreth Kon^, New Tork* Sold by ull prnggistn. fl7dwlm
