Terre-Haute Weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 September 1869 — Page 2
WEEKLY EXPRESS
Wednesday Morning* Sept. 28 l#®®'
THE New York World consoles its
raadere with the assurance that if
tnle has put them down.
rj£N"
DLKTOS can only carry Ohio, and PACKI win in Pennsylvania, then
1
the Dem
ocratic party, after tho election in New York State, in November, will start the new year with tbe control oi the three largest States in the Union.'' Whereby
Cincinnati cntemporary is reminded of
the sanguine rat-calchcr, who, when questioned as to hi3 success, replied: "A toon as I got tlioono I'm after now, and two more, 1 shall have three-' If the Republican voters in in those three grea Siates are properly waked up, the DCMoerncy will not carry eno of thorn.
SKCBETARY BOUTWEX-L, at an entertainment given him by the Union League Club in New Ycrk, recontly, is reported to have said that there were two things necessary to give our country the strong Cbt and most enviable position world. These were, first, to secure the payment of the national debt in gold without qualification cr equivocation and secondly, to secure the adoption 0 the Fifteenth Amendment, neither which events was he disposed to consider iu doubt. The Secretary said that ho bad reason to believe that if he had the au thority, a good share of our debt could now bo funded at four and one-half per oont., and when our interest account was reduced to $100,000,000 we should have surplus from our present resources from $60,000,000 to $70,000,000, which would make it very easy to take caro the demand debt. And that at our present rate of taxation' he believed our wholo debt could bo paid off in twelve yoars.-
debt.
THE LATE DAVID CROCKETT, early in Old Hickory JACKSON'S Administration —which he labored to bring into power— became bitterly opposed to the Old Roman, and lost no opportunity to give him and his special friends and supporters a dig under the fifth rib. In 1834, when his antipathy to his former military cominander was at its full height, he was invited by our follow citizen, JOHN DOWLING, Esq., at the request of the Columbia Typographical Society, to participate in its anniversary celebration, and, in reply, wrote the following very characteristic letter, assigning his reasons for declining its acceptance. The original, in a very fair hand, is before us, and its chirograpby, as well as composition shows that honest DAVY was not, by any means, the illiterate man he is generally supposed to have been, Here is the let-
terr:
WASHINGTON CITY Jan 3 1834 JOHN DOWLING ESQR—<Dear Sir > The very polite note of the Committee on the part of the Columbia Typographical Society, inviting me to partake of their anniversary supper on to-morrow evaning has been received, and finding that my ingagements will not permit me to do my self alike the honor and the pleasure of joining my friends in that Celebration, I meet the remaining request of the honorable committee in apprising you as their Chairman of that fact. I sincearley regret my inability to attend, but ingaged as I am in the preparation of a work essential to a proper understanding of the true history of my life, which has been made up of vicissitudes seldom meeting in the character of any one man, I have thaught it most prudant to exclude myself for the time being from seens of merth and hilearity—that in my engagements my memory may have a shake, and that with my work I may
Hre
I pray you tender my best respects to the meeting—and accept my warmest wishes for your health and hapiness. I am Dear sir, your most obt very humble
servt DAVID CROCKETT.
THK Philadelphia Inquirer mentions the immense saleofBYBON's works as one of the mcst noticeable features of the Book Trade Sale, which terminated in New York on Thurtday last. More than ten thoueand copies of all editions and styles of binding wete disposed of at advanced prices over former seasone. If
Lady BYRON did tell Mrs. STOWK that story for publication, and if her object in doing so was to stop the sale of Lord BYRON'6 pobms, and if she knows how
Mrs. STOWS'S ennning advertisement has, instead of decreasing their circulation, added to it a thousandfold, her ghost will be as restlets as that of HAMLET'S father
Reduction of Telegraphic Tolls.
As announced early last week the Western Union Telegraph Company have arranged a new system of rates for private telegrams to go into effect on the first of October, and which will make a material reduction in the present prices. On some of the lines, it is said, the reduction will amount to as much as 40 and 50 per cent. This new system of charges is based upon the air-line principle. The adoption of an air-line tariff will of necessity greatly diminish many existing charges. Offices fifty miles apart geographically, but whose messages to each other have to pass over a circuit of twice that distance, will have, so far as cost is concerned, all the advantages of a direct line. A large number of places will be thus benefitted. One tariff, irrespective of route, will also enable the Company to use any accessible wire for hastening on messages without additional charge to the sender, and without complication of checks. This will, of course, reduce the revenue on certain classes of business, but the managers are confident that by means of the reduction more people will be induced to patronize the wires, and hence bring greater profit in the end. Their supposition is correct. Reduction in cost of sending telegrams will work as has the reduction in the carriage of letters.—
of
It is also stated by gentlemen present (there beiDg no reporters), that the Secro tary explicitly dealared that he will con tinue to apply so much of the receipts of the Government as shall be in excess of its oxponses to the reduction of th9 public
DEMOCRATIC journals in various par of the country are claiming great gains fur their party in MaiDe. Tho Tribune of the 24th gives returns from the entire State, with the exception of 37 small towns and plantations, which will give but a few hundred votes, and will not ma terially change the relative strength parties. The returns show a total vole 93,820, of which. Gen. CHAMBERLAIN rc ceived 50,901 SMITH, Dem., 38,277 Hica HORN (prohibition), 4,642. This shows clear majority for CHAMBERLAIN of 7J°8»J and a majority against SMITH of 17,266 As the HICHBORN vote was undoubtedly made up entirely of Republicans, the platforms on the National questions being the same, the majority against SMITH the real Republican majority of the State The total vote for Governor, in 18G8, in the towns from which we have returns, was 129.86G, and the Republican majority was 19,342. To ehow what causo tho Democracy have
for
congratulating them
selves over the results of tho Maine elec tion it is only necessary to say that lh rolativo falling off of their vote has been groator than that of their opponent?. Enid tho vote been as full as last year, and the rolativo strength of parties remained as now, tho mnjority against the Democracy would have beon over 24,000 in placa of the 20,4001n 1868. See now how plain
When ten cent postage was charged the support of the mail service was a heavy expense to the government; when it was reduced to five cents, the revenue was increased and the burthen of expense correspondingly lightened; since its reduction to three cents, it has become almost self-supporting and whenever it is made one cent, it will not only pay its own expenses, but yield the government a handsome revenue. The same rule will work to the profit of telegraph lines. When the government assumes control of this fast mail, as it should have done long ago, and soon must do, the rates can be put down to one-fifth the present tariff, and the lines still be more than self-sup-porting. We live in the hope of this good day speedily to come. =====
State Item*-
HANOVER COLLEGE has 130 Students.
Si'KARs, the Lafayette seducer, has been pardoned and ia out of jail.
FOOT-RACINO, for a purse of $5.00, is a Sunday amusement in Lafayette.
WAYNB COUNTY FAIR, which is always a big show, como3 off next week.
THIEVES abound at Indianapolis this
week.
fair
may
just go a head. My best thanks for the politeness of the committee are tendered, yet I know they
are quite an inadequate return. My apoligy will, I trust, prove satisfactory, and, as I can't attend, I send you a sentiment. <The art of printing>. May it flourish in the liberty with out being stained by the licentiousness of the press. May it go forth as the hand-maid of universal freedom of thought and conscience. Its triumphs multiplying till public virtue shall predominate, and <despite> whether under the name of King <or President>, be made to tremble."
JOHN DOWLING Esq, Chairman Com. of Arrangements of the Columbia Tpy. Society.
It must bo admitted that CROCKETT was not always correct in his orthography, but bad spelling is not a sure indica tion of ignorance, nor is the reverse an evidence of erudition. Many of our leading public men would find it impossible to write so good a letter, everything consid
ered, as the above.
Commercial
THERE are 51 Freshmen in Wabash
College.
W. S. LINGLB, of the Lafayette Courier, haB returned from his European tour.
THE sum of $12,000 was subscribed last Sunday to remove the debt of Grace
Church, RichmonJ.
MRS. SAKAU PAGE, Richmond, was found d3ad in a cistern on Sunday. Supposed to havo fallen in accidentally.
A YOUNG MAN, in Evansville, had his
nasal protuberance neatly bisected in a row last Saturday,
IT C:ST a fellow only $10 to knock a woman down in thfl street, in Evansvill,e
the other day.
HTEALINO Looks from a Echool housois the latest nnd meanest variety of theft n: ported in Indianapolis.
SISTICR CRI.IA, tho Superior uttlieSisters of Providenco, in Indianapolis, i? a eistar of Gener»tl Hue!).
RICHMOND is about to receive an vorted blessing in the shape of a visit and lrcturo from George Francis Train.
IT is proposed to locate the new In dianapolis hotel at thi corner of Pennsylvania and Ohio streets.
Coi.. J. W. FOSTER is writing a series pf very interesting letters from
ntho
Far
W«U" to tbe Evansville Journal The la Utah.
THE Worthington Times ia informed that the gap on the Indianapolis and Viooennes railroad will bo filled up by
to-day.
THE Vincennos Sun says that Pat. Shannon, as a candidate for Slate Treas^ urer, can draw on the Pocket to an unlimited extent. AVhoso pocket'!—Jnd. Mirror.
Two MEN stole a horso and buggy from the door of t» church in Evansville, laBt Sunday evening. Baing hotly pursued they loft the plunder and effected their
cscHpe. MR. MCCORMIC, who was crushed beneath a freight train at Shelbyville, on Saturday evening, died at about twelve
:lock Sunday night.
THOMAS J. BARGIS, an old and prominent business man of Richmond, an exmernbor of tbe City Council, died on
Sunday.
PARTIES who attended the State Fair, yesterday, say that people ^cd articles for exhibition were still coming in freely but that tho display was not particularly fine. It will, doubtless, be better to-day.
FROM a tablo published in an Indianapolis paper it appears that our State
ejection will occur on the 12th proximo^ Thij might have been the case but for one of tho wise acts of the late General As
sembly.
THEY want a paper mill at Terro Haute. Terre Haute is always wanting something.— Evansville Journal.
Which is not the case with those sleepy towns and cities on which tbe linger of Time has written "finished," 1
ArPLES.of the beat quality,are worth on-, THK Lafayette Jour.Ml of yesterday ly forty cents per busbel&t Anderson, and says: "We learn from Adams Earl that the PUiindtaler sayi that thousands of General Gridley has just-closed a con-
bushels will go to waste in Madison coun ty notwithstanding immense qualities are being shipped every day. fj
OUR Indiana exchanges all contain accounts of large yields of wheat. But Johnson county, as far as heard fiom, is ahead. From three acres of ground, Mr. B. J. Keaton of Nineveh township, threshed one hundred and five bushels of wheat—Tennessee White—making thir-ty-five bushels per acrg.—
SAMUKLFANNER was convicted on a charge of assault and battery, witb intent to rape,, in the criminal Court, Saturday, and sentenced to six months' imprisonment in the county jail, and to pay a fine of $100.—Ind. Sentinel.
Verily, in the language of a Lafayotte cotemporary, "female virlue is very cheap" in Marion county!
GENERAL MORRIS settled the difficulty among the laborers on the I. & St. L. R. R., near Greencastle, by agreeing to make good the payments of the contractors, to the hands, and the railroad company hereafter to pay the hands instead of giving the contractors a chance to squander their money before the boys are paid
ON SATURDAY evening an old man named MCCORMIC, who resides in Shelby county, while trying to climb upon the westward bound freight train on the Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Lafayette railroad, fell between the cars and had his right leg and arm crushed to pieces. He was taken to the Ray House, but be was not expected to live many minutes.
THE Indianapolis Journal states that Dr. E H. Barry, Grand Secretary I. O. O. F., returnei home on Friday evening last, from dedicating an Odd Feliows' ball at Philadelphia, Washington county, quite indisposed. Violent symptoms of varialo!d or mitigated small pox, from the exhaustion of vacinalion of forty years ago, have developed, and all the important official j«ine«s of his office will necessarily be suspended.
INDIANAFOLIS is not to be deprived of the illuminating power of "Jargo's" rubicund physiognomy by the fiat that assigns bis ministerial lafcoip to franklin. He will preach at the latter piece but will continue to reside at the former. With a favorable wind be might make his stentorian voice heard in Franklin from the cupola of his housa in the Capital C|ty, thus saving the troub and expense
of traveling.
MB. W. W. THRASHER, of Fayette county, has ten head of splendid Durham cattle at the State Fair. Among these is the famous cow, Cinderilla, weighing 1,800 pounds. She took the sweepstakes at our State Fair last fall, and has taken four first premiums this year. Mr. Tj?rasher also exhibits some very fine premium hogs, among wbicfc }s a fjrped sow, that has taken four first premiums this fall at different fairs, and weighs GOO
pounds.
THE local department of the Courier lias been decidedly sensational the last few days. We hopa hereafter to have fewer horrible things to record.— Madison
Courier. Don't shut down yet. it has been so long since Madison has given us a streak of "bornblp things," thai, having now commenced, she is bounJ, as a matter of duty to the press, to keep up tbe performance for a week longer, when it will be Fort Wayne's turn, Put on steam and
"go in." THE Indianapolis Sentiml has extendedits borders and gives every evidence of that sound prosperity which its abloedi. torial and business management deserves It should receive tho cordial support of tho Democracy throughout tho State. If the twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars now paid every year by Indiana Democrats for Brick Vomeroy'a newspaper literature were paid to the Sentinel, it would be better for the individuals paying It, bettor for Ibe Democratic psrty and bettor for all the interests of tho community.
ON Monday night a week ago, a villain named David Foreshen went to the house of Mrs. Curtiss, who resides about one mile and a half from West Newton, in this county, and called that lady out of bed. He then informed her that he was a student in the office of Dr. Allen, of West Newton, and that Mrs. Allen was ill, and desired her presence at once. Mrs. Curtiss, suspecting nothing, started to accompany the fiend, but had gone but a short distance when he drew a revolver, and with threats of her life, compelled her to submit to a nameless outrage. After he had accomplished his design he told her that if she ever told it to any one he would kill her. Nevertheless she filed a complaint against him, and night before last Constable Harris and Officer Stevens went out to West Newton and arrested bim. After a prelim'inary examination before Esq. Fisher, yesterday, he was admitted to bail in the sum of $700 to appear at the Criminal Circuit Court.—<Ind. Journal, 28th>.
THE Indianapolis papers of yesterday contnin this intelligence in relation to to the proposed re-union of the Thirteenth Army Corps:
A number of the scldiers of the Thirteenth Army Corps met yestorijay afternoon, and after an interchange of opinions and plans, organdixed by selecting an executive committee, which will have the entire charge of arrangements for the re-union of the Corps on the lotb day of November next.
Additional committees were appointed, all of which will report progress through their Chairman to the Executive Committee, of which General George F. McGinnis is Chairman.
The following gentlemen compose tho Executive Committee and Local Committee at Indianapolis: Gen. George F. McGinnis, Geo. Dan. MaCauley, Mnjor O. M. Wilson, and Col. James B. Black
Colonel M. C. Garber, Madison, lod. General Charie3 J. Jfarrisb, Wabash, Ind.
General William T. Spicaly, Orleans, Ind. General Thos. Binghurst, Logansport, Ind.
General James R. Slack, Huntington, Ind. Colonel James Keigwio, Jeffersonville, Ind.
General Thomas W. Bennett, Richmond, Ind. The members of this committee are requested to confer at once with the chair man, with reference to details and assignments that are necessary to be made for each original command of the corps.
Other committees will be announced in due time. A full roster of the corps will soon be published, when it is earnestly desired that every soldier in Indiana belonging to the corps will report his name to General McGinnis, and make it known to &iqa whether he will attend the re-union.
tract with responsible parties for the completion and equipment of the west end of the Bloomington toad, from the State line
Bloomington, twenty-eight miles of
to which must be completed and in running order by the first of Janusry noxt, in order to lulfill the terms of the county appropriation as we understand it, while the rest must be done by a year from that time. The Blommington road means business, and will be putthrough promptly, as we are fully assured."
A CORRESPONDENT sends us this epitaph which he copied from a toombstone In an old, country grave yard in Fulton
county:
Here l'es a man
Had he not loved the bottle.
He took to drink, Began to sink, And fell to that base level Which men can And When, mad and blin4, (They mea to go t' the devil.
His hapless wife Will Sod till- life onely and sad without liim. She'll n.'sa the licks From those big s-icks
Ho always bid about him. .,
Let the grass wave Above this grave, The grave of od Dan Cottle, Who might have live And m'gbt bave th-ived,
Had be not loved the bottfa.
.EsOP'S FABLES.
As Translated by ili« "Fal Contributor."
THK SHEPHERD BOY AND THE WOLT.
A shepherd boy who tendei his flock of Soutbdowns not far from a village, used to get very weary of so idle a life— nothing to do but sit around holding-his crook (a shepherd wouldn't bo much witb out his crook—you always see. them in the picture boobs,)—and watching a lot of sheep grazing. He sighed for the activity of the town—said ho had rather tend bar than tend sheep. Qne day after reading tbe Ledger through twice, and exhausting all other means of recreation, he thought he would have a little fun with tbe simple villagers, so he raised tbe cry of "wolf! wolf!" just to give tbe boys a little start, as be expressed it.
The trick worketj exceedingly well. The fire-bells were rung, the military and fire department turned out with mu sic, and all marohed in procession to meet the wolf, headed by the Mayor, City Council and city officials, representatives of the press and a strong posse of Capt. Ruffin's police. When they rqpebed tbe spot the naughty little shepherd-boy was
THE GOOSE WITTl Tint OOLDKN EGG.
A certain man had tho good fortune to possess a goose that laid bim each day a golden egg. This goose was pretty much like other geesoyou meetovery day on the street, though it had a few peculiarities It was very fond of mint, particularly United States mint. Thon it was often found poring over mining news from Cal iforoia, and it bad rather sit on the Gold Board than on tbe softest plank in the lumber yard. But the man was dissatisfied with so slow an iacrease, and egged on by his avarica, believing that The gcose must be stuffed with U. S. gold-bear ing bonds, he killed tbe goose, and what do you suppose the old gosse found?— Why, he found he had been making a d—d fool of himself.
Moral—Everything is lovely when tho goose hangs high THE ASS AND THE GRASSHOPPERS.
An aes, hearing some grasshoppers chirping, was delighted with the music and wanted some of it himself. He said he would give half a dozen of his brays for one good square chirp. He asked the grasshoppers where they boarded, and what kind of bash they eat to sing so sweetly. They told him they supped upon nothing but dew, and in that, let say in parenthesis, they don't differ much from a great many people, whoso- board has been due for months. The ass betook himself to tho same diet. He took much of it, though, notwithstanding dew had beep falling for a long time, it immediately advanced fffly per cent, in tho market, greatly to the disgust of the grasshoppers. But the ass couldn't stand it, however. He died without & solitary chirp.
Moral—Give the devil his dew.—C'in Times.
Two Children Kicked to Death by a Vicious Horse. ^. Near Canonsville, Delaware county, N. Y., there occurred, on Wednesday of last week, ono ot those accidents which thrill the commuuity with horror, and cauee parents to shudder as they contemplate what may happen to their own offspring. It seems that Mrs. Augustus Flowers, the wife of a farmer, had prepared dinner, and desiring her husband to come to his meal, sent two children, aged respectably three and five years, to call bim. Soon after, the mother was horrified beyond expression to see her husband enter the house bearing the two little ones in his arms— one a lifeless mass of ragged flesh and blood, while the other was senseless from a terrible blow on the head, from the elfects of which it died the next day. It appears that the children, in going for their father, had to pass through a pasture containing a vicious horse, which attacked them with all the fury of madness, biting, kicking and stamping the poor unfortunates to de^tb. The father hearing cries of distress, hastened to the tragical scene, but too late to save either of the fated ones.
AWAKENING FROM SLEEP.:
BY CXOBBE DA»LI1'.
How she Oped her blue ejes, Making a a»w morni' g! One Vrhite arm across bar brow
With the shroud aronnd ber. Like a primrose in the snow
When the spring bas found her!
A WIDOW TO UNG IN HER WEIi'DS."
BY JOHN 6 SAXE.
Her sbawl was as sabl* as night, And her gloves were a- da as her shawl And her jewels that flashed in the uigfct—
Were black as a funeral pall. ... Her robe had the hue of the rost, (Ho* nicely It fitted her shape!)
Trom the St. Louis Democrat.] A gentleman who witnessed the play of Enoch Arden at DeBar's Opera house, relates a clrcumstanco very similar in its details to the sad story of the cast-away sailor. We givo the statement in bis own words: "That play recalls to my mind a circumstance that happened in my own experience. A sergeant in ay regiment was wounded at Chickamauga, and was reported dead. He was seen to fall in the heat of tbe engagement, and our lines being pushed back, the body was not recovered until next day. When the poor fellow was found be was so mutilated by being trampled on by the cavalry that his face could not be recognized. A comrade, however, found in his breast pocket a miniture of his wife, and sent it to bet with an account of his death. It turned out that the body was not that of Tom but a setgeant of another company. Tom, desperately wounded, fell into the hands of the enemy, and was sent to
Andersonville, where the rebel surgeon cutoff one of bis arms and one of his legs, and, in spite of his bad fare, he recover ed in due time. I never knew why they kept Tom so long in prison, except it was fur the purpose of exchanging him tor a sound man. "When poor Tom returned to his home in Pennsylvania he was a mere wreck of bis former self, and nobody in tho village knew him. His wife had removed to Illinois with hep parents, more than a year previously. Without making himself known to any of bis acquaintances in the village, Tom started for Illinois to hunt for bis wile. When he arrived in the neighborhood where she was living bo learned that she was married to an old friend of bis, who had followed her from Pennsylvania. His first impulse was to make himself known to her, and claim her as his. own but when he s^w the
rbiiiDE. SMTKSSS SA-5 SJ to split, yelling "Ohj what a guy Oh what a guy t" Then the procession marched back again in good order.— The next day be tried it again with tbe same result, and it did seem as if the monotony of his rather sed entary life Was to be relieved by a Fourth of July procession every day
The tbird day a wolf that had escaped out of Forepaugh's Menagerie, actually arrived. The boy shouted and yelled in good earnest, bi)t there wern't any fire bells rung the military didn't turn out (they hardly ever do turn put very well) and tbe villagers, pulling down a corner of the eye, remarked, "Not for Joseph." So the wolf bad a soft thing of it and he deliberately set to work and reduced those sheep to mutton, regardless of the expostulations of young Shep. This fa ble shows tbe danger of liars trying to tell the truth.
THK FOX AND THE URAPFI*. A fox, who had applied for admission into tbe Grape Grower^' Association and been rejected, resolved to have some grapes anyhow. So be stole into a vineyard at tbe time of the vintage where tho ripe sunny grapes were trellised up on high in a most tempting show. Ho could take bis pick (if be could only get up there to pick tbem) of Catawba?, lssabel las, Ivos' Seedling or any other variety he might desire. But be found they wero altogether too liigh for a fox of his moderate means. He was a fox that was ready to jump at any opportunity, but here WSB an opportunity there was no use in jumping at. He couldn' reach it by any possibility. How he wished he bad brought along bis step ladder. Failing in all attempts to reach the grapes, he walked off on ono of his ears, muttering as he went these memor able words "A littlo moro grape, Capt Bragg. They'vo sourod on me."
heard how kindly sbe was treated by her husband, he changed his mind. 'Suppose I go and claim her,' he said to himself, 'ho can I support her? What can do for her, will) only one arm and one leg, and a body weakened by months of suffering at Andersonville? No she is happy and contented, aod thinks me dead, and I will not destroy her happiness and become a burden to her.'
Tom acted upon this resolution, and worked his wav to How York, where he set up a small business as a curb stone merchant, selling nuts, and cakes, and soda-water, and getting along prosperously. He soon made money enough to buy him an artificial leg, and after a while he got a patent arm made, and to see him walking along the street, you would not cuppose that he WAS but little more than half a man. Ho was a good business man, and in the course of a year enlarged hie stocl( in trade and opened a regular retail grocery. He made money fast, and became a prosperous merchant, rospected by all who knew him. "In Lis prosperity, he never forgot his wife, and always cherished a hope that she Would be restored to him. He wa9 a regular euhscriber to the village paper published at the town near which his wife lived, and read it with great interest One day be saw in this paper the announcement of the death of the man who had married his wife. He lost notimoin starting for Illinois. He found his wife in deep mourning for her lato husband, and sbe bad added another infantile link to tho family cjrcle. Tom made himself known to ber, and was rejoiced to find that sho still loved him as fondly a ever It was sometime before he could convince ber that he was not a ghost returned from tbe other world. In order to make things sure the parson was called in, and Tom and his wife was married over again. They went to New York, where they are still liying, as happy a couple as you will ftad in Gotham. "Thoy live in a brown stone front, Rnd tbe family, when I saw lliem, were pre paring to add another link to iU circle. Of course they do not tell everybody about their family matter?, but you can rely upon tbis story as strictly true. The ending is rather belter than that ofEnoch Arden, and I t]iink Adams would do a good tbiDg if he would depart from tbe version of Tennyson, and in tho last act get Philip Ray ground up in his own mill—accidentally of course—make poor Enoch step in'and enjoy ihe wife and tbe fortune left behind. "What about the picture of Tom's wife found in the pocket of the doad soldier?" "Oh, I forgot that. Tjm says that when he wounded and left upon tbe field a straggler camo along, and he stopped bim. Supposing he would bleed to death, he gave the picture to the straggler, with a message for his wife. Tho rebel cavalry made a charge soon after, and killed tne straggler, with the picture of Tom's wife in his bosom, and carried Tom off to Anderso'nville. That accounts for the picture being found and causing everybody to believe that Tom was killed.''
True Version of a Daring ActA reportor of tho San Francisco Chronicle visited Admiral Farragut recentlj and during his interview alluded to tbe battle of Jtfobile Bay and the famous story of the Admiral being lashed to the mast-head of his flig ship, tl)8 Hartford, and gallantly leading her into action.
Admiral Farragut interrupted bim saying the whole story was purely a fiction.
Reporter—At least the story bas been allowed to remain uncontmdicted for a longtime. Will you, Admiral, be kind enough to t»ll me to what causo or incident i'.s origin is due?
Admiral—With pleasure. It will afford you an evidence of how a well-told and plausible story, frequently repeated, becomes universally accepted as fact. At the commencement of the battle of Mobile Bay, for the purpose of obtaining the best view of the movements of the enemy and to belter govern the fleet under my cjtnmand, I got into the lower part of tbe rigging of tho Hartford, just above what is known ag tbe hammock railing.
Reporter—Was not your position fraught with great peril? Admiral—1 did not tbink so but it was fraught with great discomfort. As the smoke ascended Irqm the heavy cannonading my viewbecamo more obscured and I was compelled to ascend the rigging, gradually, until finally I'got some little digtanct beneath tbe m&in-top. At this junctare Captain Percival Drayton—
Reporter—Your Fleet Captain, was he no t? Admiral—Yea, sir Captain Drayton fearing, he said, that I might fall over-
board, in OSN of being
D' awing the al-epy talr one Like a riay-*tar rise BOW— Is aha not a rare an* Still she alts in wonder io.
And the grief that was heaving her breast Boiled over the billows of crape. I couldn't help thinking the be -uty,
In mourning the loved andth& lost Wa- doingh-r coojngal
Whoso name was Dau His other name was Cottle. He mlgbt f'ave lived, And might bave thrived
ruty 1
Entirely regardless of co«t.
AN ENOCH ABDRN:
Singular Slory of the Battle of Chickamaaga—An Improvement upon Tenn)son's Poem
woonded, called'
one of the Quartermaster's and cutting off a piece of the signal halyards (a small rope) ordered him to bring it up to me that I might render my position more secure, with this rope I attached m|salf to the ngzing.
Reporter—You were but Mac Uw masthead then Admiral—I was not.
Reporter—It is understood that you fired guns from the maat-head -Is -it true
Admiral—It is the only true part of the story. I did hare a -^rew in the masthead who wore Iring guns—two twentyfour pound howitzers. This style of warfare is a favorite theory of mine. I practiced it throughout the
war.
Reporter—Did all the vessels of your fleet battle after a similar fashion Admiral—Yea, air
all
fought
RH.V. fl. W. BEBCHER.
Ilis Private Habits.
.• fid From tbe Buffalo Expreas.] The great preacher never tleeps with bis clothes fin. Ont»,,when remonatraUd? with upon tbu singularity of his conduct in tbis respect and the pernicious effect the example migbt possibly h*ve upon the younger members of-his congregation, be replied with the Irakk and open candor tbat bus always characterized him, that he would give" worlds to be able to rid himself of the custom—and added that the anguish he had suffered in trying to break himself of the habit bad made bim old before he was ninety. Mr. Beecher never wears bis hat at dinner. He does not consider it healthy. It does not immediately break down one'a constitution, but it is slow and sure. Ho knows one case where a man persisted in tbe habit in spite of the tears and entreaties of his friends, until it was too late, and, he reaped the due reward of hist rashness —for it carried him off at last, at the aga of a hundred and six. Had that man listened to reason, he might hate lived to be a comfort to bis parents and a solace to their declining years.
Mr. Beecher never swears. In all his life a profane expression never passed his lips. But if he were to take it into bis head to try it once, he would make even that disgusting habit seem beautiful—he would handle it as it was never handled before, and if there was a wholesome morall leson hidden away in it anywhere, be would farret it out and use it with tremendous effect. Panoplied with his grand endowments—his judgment, his discriminating taste, his felicity of expression, his graceful lanoy—if Mr. Beeh* er had a mind to swear, he would throw into it ap amount of poetry, and pathos, and splendid imagery, and moving earnestness, and resistless energy, topped off and climaxed with a gorgoou# pyrotechnic conflagration of filagree and fancy swearing, that would astonish and delight the hearer and forever after quiver through his bewildered memory an exquisite confusion of rainbows and music and thunder and lightning. A man of a high order of intelect and appreoatiion could sit and listen to Mr. Beecher swear for a week without getting tired.
Mr. Beecher is very regular in his habits. He always goes to bed promptly between nine and three o'clock, and never upon any account allows himself to vary from this rule. He is just p.s particular about getting up, whioh* he does the next day, generally. He considers that to this discipline, and to this alone, ho. is indebted for the rugged health ho has enjoyed over since headopted it.
Mr. Beecher does not go around and get advertisements for the "Plymouth Pulpit." If he does, it is without his knowledge or consent. If such a report has been started, it is an absolute duty to rofute it in this article. However, no euch report has yet been heard of, and therefore, it is not necessary to more than refute it in a purely general way at this time. Mr. Bescher could augment the bulk of the pamphlet to which- his ser-' mons are attached if he chooae to go round and solicit advertising, but he would not dream of doing such a thing. He has no time for such recreation. He has to preach, and he has to make tho dedication speeches for all sorts of things, and he is obliged to make a few remafks on nearly all distinguished occasions, because vety. often Mr. Greeley is busy and cannot come. And besides, h&.^has to carry on his farm.
Mr. Beecher's farm consists of thirtysix acre?) and is carried oh on, strict scientific principles. He never .puts ifl any part of a crop without consulting his book. Ho plows and reaps and digs and sows according to the best authorities— and the authorities cost more than tbe other farming implements do. As Boon as tbe library is completed, the farm will begin to be a profl' able investment But book farming has its drawbacks. Upon one occasion, wh»n itjseemed morally certain that tbe hay book could not be found—and before it was found tfe was too late, and the, bay was all"spoiled.— Mr. Beecher raisos some Of the finest crops of wheat in the country," but the untavorable difference between the cost of producing it and its market value after it is produced has interfered considerably with its success as a commercial enterprise. His special weakness is hogs, however.
He considers hogs the best game a farm produces. He" buys the original pig for one dollar and a half, and feeds him forty dollars' worth of corn, and then sells him for about nine dollars. This iB tbe only ciop he ever makes and money on. He loses on the corn, but he makes seven dollars and a half on the hog. He does not mind this, because be never expects to make anything on corn, any way.— And any way it turns out, he has the excitement of raising the bog any how, whether be gets the worth of him or not. His strawberries would be a cpqjfortable success if the robljf would eat turnips, but they won't audilience the difficulty.
One of Mr. Beecher's most harassing difficulties in his farming operations comes of the close resemblance of different sorts of seeds and plant* to each other. Two years ago his far-sightedness warned him that there was going to be a great scarcity of watermelons, and therefore be put in crop of twenty-seven" acres of that fruit. But when tbey came up tbey turned out to ba pumpkins, and a lead loss was the consequenca. Sametimes a portion of his crop gOeh into the ground the most promising sweet potatoes and comes up the internalist carrots— though I never have heard him express it just in that way. When he bought his farm he found one egg in every hen's best on tbe place. He said tbat here was just the reason why so many farmers failed— they seattered tbeirforces too much—concentration was the idea.
S1 he gathered those eggs together and put them all under one experienced old hen. That hen roosted over that coatraci night and day for elyfei} wee|s, tffcder tbe anxious supervision of 3kfr- Beecher himself, but she could not "phase" those e^gs. Why? Because they were those iuiamous porcelain things which are used by ingenious and fraudulent farmers as "nest eggs." But perhaps Mr. Beecher's most disastrous experience was tbe time he tried to raise an immense crop of dried apples. He planted fifteen hundred dollars worth, but never a one of them sprouted. He has never been able to understand, to this day, what was the matter with those apples.
Mr. Beecher's term is not a triumph.
be eealer
with
guns in the tops, fend trom tie advantage of their elevation, did considerable execu^ lion in their engagements with lh? forts
Out of this fact Admiral Farragut's having been some distance ty ii^ the rig' ging has grown the famous atory "Farragut at the Masthead." It is almost crud to destroy so interesting a fiction but the truth of history requires it. ,.{
on him if he worked
it on shares with some one, but he caiiuot find anybody who is willing to stand half the expense, and not many that a™ •ble. SUil, persistence in any cause is 'iouridter succeed. Hewaa a very infeijar farmer when be first began, but a prolonged., and unflinching aswult upon bis agricultural difficulties has had its effect at last, and he is now fast rising from affluence to poverty.
I shall not say anything about Mr Beecher's sermons. Thoy breathe the truest and purest spirit of religion they are models of pulpit oratory, and they are proofs that the scbjecta which is the nearest to the interests of mankind caivbe put to nobler uses than the chloroforming of •jations-
Mr. Beecher has done more than any nthet man, aerhaps, to inspire religion fthiti^fbfre,lve spirit of *be- nine tfe£ntn century, and make It keep step with the march of intellectual achievement and the generous growth of mans charities and liberal impulses. It is such men^asifBeechfer that porstiade religious copffaupi^es ti§ progress to something better than witcli burning wbeti the spirit of the time progresses from ox-wagons to stage-coaches, and by and by to steamboats and who persuade euch comrcuni ties to progress beyond the indorsing of Blavery with their Bibles when the spirit of the time progresses, to .the subordination of the steamboat to the railroad and ibVdii&rdin^ of pony expresses for the telegraph. He lias done as much as any matf to keep the people from reading thiir Bibles by the interpretations of the eighteenth century while they werei living far along in the ninotoenth. His fiame will live. His deeds will honor his aaemory. He has set.bis mark upon his epoch, and years hence, when tbe people turn over tbe bales ai«d bundles of this generation's ideas, tbey will find "H. W.
R." stonciled on a good many of them. MARK TWAIN.
ytjiC A BLE,
Hi Prance.
PARIS, Sept. 28.—It is sai.l Father Hyacinthe .will be defended in Council by the Bishops of Avignon, Rheims, Chal. Ions and Bayeaux.
The recent murder of an entire family still remains in mystery. The story published yesterday that the body of the father had also been found is not true.
Portugal.
LISBON, Sept. 28.—The King of Portugal pulbliciy,contradicts the rumor of his candidature for the throne of Spain. He says he was born a native of Portugal, and will die a native.
Cardinal Emmanuel Bento Rodereques, Patriarch of Lisbon, is dead. The King of Portugal in a letter denies tbat be had any intention of abdicating in order to accept the throne of Spain.
Spain.
MADRID, Sept. 28.—The troubles at .Barcelona have been quelled. ..The city i# tranquil. One hundred and twentysix persons were arrested for complicity.
Many escaped., fugitives destroyed telegraph wires'and railload "tracks to prevent capture. Troops have been sent in pursuit and to protect laborers engaged in repairing telegraph lines and railroads Reinforcements for the Spanish army in Cuba sailed from Cadiz to-day.
England.
LONDON, Sept. 28th —Chas. Dickens opened the winter seEsion of the Middle Institute, at Birmingham, last evening, with a pleasant speech. After reviewing tbe history of tho Institution, and offering advice for its future management, touched other subjects. The present, he said, was a materialistic age. His polili cal creed could be summed up in two articles. Sis faith in the people governing was infinitesimal. His faith in tbo peo p]6 governed was illitimable.
The Times in an article on the situation in*France says the coincidence of the Emperor's sickness and reconstruction of the government is a misforluno. The jenergies of tljf Emperor can not be well spared at such a cruis. Tho reforms come unfortunately while the Emperor is incapacitated, and at a time when he is most required. The speculations of tho pepple on. the uncertainties and opporlu nities of the future are so encouraged and augment the public disquietude. If the crisis had occurred ten years age the Emperor could bave brought to the work tbe energies he carried into the Italian campaign.
If the. experiment had been successful France would now possess a generation of statesmen with someparliamen tary experience. The only question is, was the prospect of success so clear then as to ustify precipitation instead of postponing the trial. Tbe present peril, serious in -tiny case, is aggravated by the Emperor's enfeebled health, but peril of some kind has been the prospect of tho government for the past two generations. .LONDON, Sept. 28.—Arch Bisbop Cullen in reply to a deputation bearing an address from the citizens of Wexlord, Ireland, said tbat by moderating their demands and not by interfering with the legitimate rights of any class of institutions, tenants would enjoy the results of their labor in undisturbed tranquility
Italy.
FLORENCE, Sept. 28.—King Victor Emanuel and the diplomatic body at Florence will go to Venice to receive the Empress of the French government on het* way to the East.
MULTUM IN PARVO.—There is contained in Morje's Pills the principle of health We have many thousands ol' testimonials of their having restored the sick to health which can-be seen at our office. JTeo Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills and find tbem not only a curative of disease but also a preventative. They should be used in all cases ot Billiousnecs, Headaches, Liver Complaints, Female Irregularities, fcc.— We make no secret of tbe formula f/om which this medicine is prepared- Ask jour .storekeeper for theOmeta Almanac, VeaFit carefully. Use Morse's Pills'.— Sold by dealers. [sep.dwlm
PHE MARRIAGE GUIDE,
BY WM. YOUNG, M. J).,
Conlaining 220 pig®» of reading matter, engravings of the male and' 'emale orgtns of gen-, eratlon the chill in the womb from ten days old to the timeof delivery disease, of the womb and of a [nfvate and iscret nature tbe production and prevention of offsprings.
Selt-abuie, in both sexee, and its treatment, on Lova and Marriage, and, in fact, every Secret rbat is requisite to be kiown by Singlo and Mar-
Jed: People.
'^-ALSO,-
THE P0C£ET $3CII4P1US! 1 QR( ..
Every one His Own rhjsiclan,
BetacaCcnfidanttai Silent Friend and Private Advlseryfollowad by innervations oa 'he Treat ment of Venereal Dhoaees. Gonorrheal Gleet, Strictares, etc. Illustrated with Cases, I* ate* and DUgrami, from Dr. Young's Private Pi sc. tics.
Persons st any diitancecan have a ropy of either of tbe shove Books forwards! to them by enclosltg Fifty Cents, aod address
DR. W. I0UNG,
•eplwly 416 Sprnoe Street, Philadelphia, Pa
SPECIAL NOTICES.
Sow is the Time
To repair tbo lareatfi mida npon ilie pby»l»l (trangth by tk« heated tciu which cloted With S« t«Dibe'. Ibe Y.t»: Icy tlat! Ot zir turuDgh the potca ia tbe form of peisplrkti o, for the IMI three mouth*, nquliej loIer.p!ai'jd, a* a preparatife to theco iudq «biuli nulci •achdluatrcui havcc-wtih relxd and uDtsmd syitima. Tbe retcrte of Tl&or with which tbe I stoutest man cjzsmeuctfl tbe Summer csuipelgu is drained oat cf b:m at it* d)«e, end on
BKSOYJ roa AM) Biooiitoa
It. a bf
tome mesas be scqolres soow stock «f TIISI Uorgjr wherewith to encounter the tbsckol scolder essoo, he may droop scd wither l.ke tbe fslliug caves whose llfe-jalces are xhsLSltd. If it is thaswlth the strong, bow asach ssoiepei KODS is the conditioD of lh) wesk sol ailing. Their itscn must srggest to them, mjre fcyciblj than these 4rlated worts, iho awes try lor iutjortiwu snd Ihs world liaTIng decliel, after an experience of almost a qasttir of a centary, that HUSTK1 TEK'S CTOJlALlI BITTgRS embrace tuih retorotire properties as are tot posstssedby any other tonlo anl alterative preparation in eaiaience. lheimpoitan of ieiortlng to that grint
it
TOE Btaa* Jt»-
CHisr, at lh:s crit cal season Is as tbTlona as the light of day. all who doeire toeac»p an att«ci of chill, and fever, bilious remittent ItTi r, dysentery, dianhocj, dyepeisla, rheumatism, hypochcLdria, or any oilier of ihe diseates ii which tae
Tall season is tie piolifla far, ut, Luvn
recourse promptly io tuts ce ebrated pieveniite «nd rsstirat.v. dwlw
consmnplicii.
Da. ScumcK's FTLIIOJIIO hvarp lor tLe cure of Qougas Uolus and Cousum^tijii. 1»B. SCBKJCK'S SBAYTESO TOMC for I he cn re I Dys,'tpti» and ail tue Dtbiluatei Commonsui the Stomal b.
Da. SCHSSCK'S MIBIa*KE Pins, for D.seates ol the Liter, to act as a Gcuile Puigstive. All of tuesa tine Medicines a'e otuu tequircu in curing Consumption, ihouga tbe tu:iuoin. Syrup alone baa cured mauy utaper*to caers.--Tue seawoid Tonic aod Jdaadr. ke Fills assist rreguliting tee Stamaoh ana Livtr, and ie'p tL.fuimonio Sprop to dig at an.l eearob thiuu£t. tbo blood vtssola, by whica rutin, a enre is soon effeottd.
Tnte 3/ediclnes are conscient'cusly offered tithe public as ihe only •afj, certain »nd reliable remedies .r Pulmonary Ccntumption, and iorall tluse moibid couaitioiisof the budy which nmt IO that latal disease, l.ivtr Complalutand HJBpc^sia are often fort..tinners 01 ConsnmpliuU, and when they mantles thcmMlrea tiny nquiu,oe uiiflt pron.pt ateatioa.
Tho Puimomo eyrup i« a mcdlcino hich b»n had A long prubai.ou belore thu public. Its v» ae bas hi en proved b) the inousaudof ecus it. hia made tbiough a period of more thin thinydTo yearn, in all of waich time its reputation hno constantly Increased, and ihe most ob»im..iskepticism can no longer donbt that II la a lion dy whioh may be usod with confidence to all cosi which aumii of a cure.
It the patient will perteveringly fallow ti-j directions winch accompany each Lottie, lu wilt certainly be cured, hu lungs are not too inncU aastea to mane a turp possible. Kven in caaod aupiosed to be incurable, wh»n friends aod pLysicians have despaired, th« uieol'thls Me.lli.lLo has save., the lire of the patient au.l re.toieJ Mm to pel feet health.
Dr. Bihtnck does not say that all caare of f'ultnonary Consumption are within the reach of mediciue, but be emphatically asaerts ili«t oitrii when patients bave the most alarming t-ymptotm, such as a vioient cosgb, creepn chltU, nix lit sweats and general deoiiiiy, evtn to seen a degree that tbey are obliged to lie in bed, and whi hey are given up by tbtir p^ytician tbey rn.y still bjcurod. No medical treatment cau create uew lunga, but when tbe lung, are very »adly diseased, and to some estent d-stroyed, acutu may be eO'ected by Dr. Scheuck's medicines.
Also in Soro ul.Di Diseases. th se medicines sin equally efficient. Dr. Scheuck his photograph* a uumber ol persors whg have been nearly coveted with running sores, and now all haalnl up. i'his sh.ws its purifying properties, wh ti must be douo to heal cavities in the lungs. in the tioatment of consumpt.ou ii is of tiiu utmuSi ltnpjrlanes to g.ve vigor and a healthy tone te tho system, hence It is nece s»ry t. ren£tb»u tne apetiteol tbe patient andimpru\u lbs digestion. Proper n^urishiaeut- la rquir, il together witti such means as will make till tood easily digestible. Tbe articles *0Jt suitable 1-r the uiet if tAniomptive patients at* designate iu Dr. Scbeiick'a Almanacs, whicti are distributed gratuitously. In general, the most hrgui nutritious articles are to be preferred, but the til' gestive ergtua must bj stieoglbene. iu oidei ti uiakeviintr focd or msdictnuseivice.be. This leqmteaaeul is wet by the $e»»eed Toms,-and tur this purpose was dssignatSa.
When tbe digestive powers era pat iu good uider the loud ha.» its proper (ffi'Cl, the ajat of tbe patient is invigorated aod the langa giu to Ixorciae llnlr functions la a uoitnil a.d healthy anuer. l'heu tbe bealing powers ol the Pulmonic dyrup will complete tbe uuie.. 1'ulmonsry Couaumptton is almost atwa a c^n.pilcated with Dyipepsia ant Liver Complaint.— -cnenck's Mandr»ae Pills are intended to ieruo\o obstructions trom the Liver aad leatore ita healthy action, 'lliey have kit thetflicaoy whicn is atcribed tj calomel or "blue iu tn," and are wai ranted not to o^n aln a part.cle »f any mintrnt poison. Thesa pills cur*e the moat obstinate ecstivmtea, sick head-acua, piles, oilious alfecii na, and all other disuses anicli arise iroiu a torpid or ubatiucted condition ot the liver. Ooe bo* of thole pill) will piot* tba efflatcy of tbe aiaaiciur.
In Consumption tbe Seaweed Tonlo anil Mandrake Pills are invaluable auxiliary medisiues.— Thty relieve tbe suOeriugsol the pstient I usaiat tbe rulmooic Syrup in effeatlng acute I hey bave been fuuud use.ul in advanced atateiofCui--sampilon, when th» lut g» area ,kt entirely d.stiojed, and»ll sjinpioins according to ilie juil&~ mint of the physicians, ladUatcd rpetidy nm. The lives of patents who werea luil in» dying conjltiou have been preset ved lor men tho t.y t,e u.e of iSchenck'a three great remedies.
Sr.&obeLck'd AlmaniC. contaiuinga full Ir.a iaoon the various lotins of disease, his IUJCO ot troa'maut, and gjjeral direct-ooa how to use Ins mediciue, cau behaigtatie, or sent Ly u.ait by addretstug his Principal. Uflice, tvu li innu oixibstreet, Philadelphia, Pa. rice of thoPulniouio?yrup and 3o..wi* Tonic each gl,60 per bjttle, or *7,50a half dozen. Mandrake t'ills'/& cents per box.
For sale by ail Druggists. d»toJunl7
WEDLOCK-
Essays on the Error* of Yoatb, ftcd lh« Kcl.lta ol Agi,)n relitlon.to MAKBIAQE and S HJlA i. EVIkS. with Bell-help for the unfortunate. S or ia sealed let'er envelopoi, free of charge. Address. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, Bos P.,Pbit». delphift, Pa. 2Klfr8a
In Remote Settlements of Infold Value.
Food m&kea blood blood xnakei tbebodjr. If the blood be pure, the bodj is healthy. £o If are not in health, we know tome imparities are Iu king abont which most he removed, and ihe tooner ihe better.
Brandreth's Pills removo all from the •yiteui which nature needs no longer. Thewonderfal curesefTooted
hf
Brandieth'ii
Pills havo arrested /Ihe attention of enlightcDrd Physicians. Upwards of five thousand now UH them In their daily pra?tic*,ani two buDdr«d oavegiTen their written testimony as to tteir innocence ai*d value, as cleaneers of the bowels andbioo*.
Their nntold vnluo Is to those )L?lcg ID aeit menta where doctors can only be had at great apeDsu. Kor if jon sre sick, yon have only to t»ke one or more doses of .Bra&dreth's Pills t« get oared. Foil Directions aro with each box.
Sold by
all
Druggista.
ttdwlm
Comfort and Bliss, or Pain and Agony.
DB. TOBIAS' CELEBRATED VENETIAN LTNJAIKNf, whom woiiderfal cure*, sure and n:?.aDtauf03s action, jn caseg of Chronic llh*ym»tiim, IJendtche, Toothache*, Cronp, luu, Barnf, Colics, Crauips I)jsentery, ttc have tuijisht-d the Civiitard world, no new catch penny bat ao artic that hus stood th of tweot-two years The enormous sal? aui| rapidly increasing demand Is at once tho sart-stvi deocoof in w8 fuiuess and popularly. No futii:ly should be without a bottle in the house.— Hundreds of dollars and m*ny hours of suuc-riug m&ybaBa*ed by .tstiwly use.
He, 3ramp, aul Utfentert yi^Id *t n:e to ltd paln-cur*ti?e pjopertio*. It i* perKctl) iubocent an can be given to the cldtHt person or yout*g st child. No milter if yoa sve no cot.fljenc* iu Patent Medium s—try tbis, and yoa wiiltm tare to buy agaio, aud recommend to ytur friend*.--llnnJredd oi i'uysic.an* lecommeud it In thoir practice
Sold by the Drufgtst* and Storekeepers. 1'ric-a Fifty Out* and One inU.*r. JUe. ot, JO P*rk PUie, New Yoik. h8.1wlm
FTILGHLTFUL DEVELOPMENTS 2
At faU the people hare got the f*ct "through their hair," that hair djes impregnated with acetate of lead aod other metallic salts are
MVBDEROUS PKiPAKATIOSS.
When ijjcy j* (he tnetsilic segment at the hot Umofthe bottle?, they koow th*t thedifgastivg •TBFF literacy THIRGCNCN WITH POIK»N. They *k, there/ore. (or a
Harmless Vegetable JDyef
ii liud it, pure and efficacious, in
Iristadoro's Excelsior Hair Dye off. r.d nod-r.thesanction of rrofeisor Chi ton's guiraut.w that it contain* "nothi d-letertoss."
OBISTADOBO'S OAI PRK9EKVATIVE, a* a Dressing, acts like a chat* on the Hair after Dysinf. Try It.
Bold tf all Druggists!
8dwla
