Evening Star Newspaper, October 7, 1871, Page 3

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AN Love. Shean, At An The Ae t Within» fronge of watered firs; And there my Wigwam. Gres burn. Fea wn petiont hand. That small brown faithful baud of hers wampa That she bax wore—the sabre pelt hi nged red threede eronnd; ng with the wind, while baby swings bn sea shell cradle by the bough & Ike the oh forty -fold return— & to learn jenst.as many must . ot ower-tall or fair; eurtained by her hair, through the eilken tringe, wealth, like wine. Pure: through ip lueciona rnddy tinge— Acad all ite wealth and worth are mine. 4 know not that one drep of blood Of Prive or Chief us in ber veins: Teimply say that she is god, And loves me with pure womanhood. >. - When that i said, why, what remains? —From © Sones of the Seerras, —__ +e - —____ Mr. Solomon Winthrop was a plain old farm- er_an austere. precise man, who did everything by established rules, and could see no Teason why prople should grasp at anything beyond what had been reached by their great-grand- tather. He had three children, two boys and a girl. There was Jeremiah, seventeen years old; Samuel, fifteen; Fanny, fourteen. It was cold winter's day. Samuel was in the kitchen, reading a book, and so interested was he that hedid not notice the entrance of his father. Jerry was m the opposite corner, en- hering out a sum which he had arithmetic. “Sam,” said his father, “have you worked that sum out yet.” «No, father,” answered the boy, nesitatingty. «Didn't I tell you te stick to your arithmetic 4iN you had done ft?” said Mr. Winthrop in a nevere tone. Samuel hung down his head and looked trou- bled. “Why baven’t you done it?” continued the ther. father. « wre do it, father,” tremblingly said Sai “Can't doit! And why not? Look at Jerry, there, with his slate and pencil. He hadciphered lurther than you have long betore he was as old ae pee fond of nd probe + Jerry was always fond of sums a1 lems, father. They have no interest at ani for me.” “That's because you don't try to feel an in- terest in your studies. What book is that you ure reading.” ~: It's a work on philosophy, father.” ~« 4 work on fiddiesticks! “Go, put it away this instant, and then get your slate; and don’t you let me see you away from your arithmetic until you can work out fl roots? Do you under- ‘Samuel made no answer, but silently he put away his philosophy; and then he got bis slate and tat down in the chimuey corner. His lip trembled and his eyes moistened, for he was vi unhappy. His father had been harsh tow: a and he felt that it was without a cause. gone out of the room, “I'll do thatsum for you.” ~+ No, Jerry,” replied the young brother, with a ul look; “that will be decei father. Dl try to do the sum, but ! fear that 1 shall not sueceed. Samuel worked very hard, but to no oy His mind was noton the subject before him. ‘The roots and squares, the bases and perpen: ésculars, though comparatively simple in them- selves, were to hima mass of (ncomprehensibie came lexed an thered. "The ruth was his father did not understand im. Samuel wasa bright boy, and uncommonly intelligent tor one of his age. Mr. Wi was a thorough mathematician, he hardiy ever came across a problem he could not solve, and he desired that his boy should be like him; he eonsidered that the acme of educational per- feetion lay in the power of conquering Euclid; | the opinion that and he often ex were Paclid living then, he could ‘give the old | ‘tussle. grometrician a hard .” He seemed not rstand 4 with different capacities, and what one mind with ease another of equal power would Jail to comprehend. Hence, because ae ee greseed rapidly with his mathematical hy and could already survey a piece of land of many angles, he imagined that as Samuel made no progress ip the same branch, he was idle and careless, and so treated him ‘accordingly. He never candidly conversed with his younger son, with a view to ascertain the true bent of his mind; but be had bis own standard of the er of * minds, and he pertinaciously ad- to it. There was another thing that Mr. Winthrop could not see, and that was that — be continual dering upon such profital matter yay to him, and that he was scarcely ever idle; nor did his father see. either, that if he ever wished his boy to become ® mathematician, he was pursuing the very course to prevent such a result. Instead of en- deavoringto make the study interesting to the child, he was making it obnoxious. The dinner hour came, and Samuel had not obli; the we without his dinner, at the Wace walag iin cerke waren iicrions Poor Samuel left the kitchen for his own Foum, and there he sat and cried. At gp his mind seemed to pass from the wro: had suffered at the hand of his father, and his face lightened up. There was a large fire in the room below his chamber, so he was not very cold, and getting up, he went toa closet, and from under a lot of old clothes he wok forth some long strips of wood. He was evidently fashioning some curious affair from these pieces of wood. He had bitsof wire, little scraps of tin plate, pieces of twine at wheels that he had made himself, and he seemed to be working to get the whole together atter some particular fashion of his own. Halt the afternoon had thus passed away when his sister entered his chamber. She bad her apron gathered up in her hand, and after closing the door sottly behind her she approached the spot where her brother sat. «Here, Sammy! see, 1 bave brought you fomething to eat. I know you must be hun- ry.” - As she spoke she opened her apron and took out tour cakes, a piece of pie and some cheese. ‘The boy was hungry, and hesitated not to avail himselt of his sister's kind offer. He kissed her as he took the cakes, and thanked her. . what pretty thing is that you are mak- ing?” uttered Fannie, as she gazed upon her brother's labor. “+ Won't you give it to me after it is done?" ~« Not is one, sister,”” returned the boy with but 1’ will make you one equally as retty. : Pasnie thanked her brother, and soon after left the room, while the boy went on with his work Before long the various materials that had been subject to Samuel's knife and pincers ‘were joined and grooved wgether in a curious ++ What! are you not studying?” exclaimed Mr. ‘Winthrop, as he noticed the bey standing in middie ofthe four. . = FI 6 pect ‘oung apprentice. farm, and I to on OS ven hopes ofever making a surveyor caf otros’ ant if you had @ farm you would not know how to measare itor iay itout. Jerry will soon be able to take my place een Thave made arrangements for having him sworn and obtain his commirsion. Bat your See one, a good living at it.” ~—— Young was a blackemith in a town, and be carried on quite an extensive busi- Moreover he had The Household. a fine man. Samuel w: aod Gueex-Grare Piz.—tin the absence of other weaterials, sed 9 trised bavi sesente om ed me a y take a good deal of surat; tis hiet objection w tem. T have at times wided a few grains of soda in order to neutratize Mme Of the acid, #0 ax TO Use Jess ~ngar, pie would then be batrnctare of BY ROBERT L. WALTSKRUKY,M >. food comes lodging. To secure a comfortable bed is to the creater part of ee 2 ted any manoft capacity may himself make the foan- an excellent one with a few hours’ labor. When we reflect on the importance of time “pent will not ap Of life must be passed in sleep. Why we ara thus constituted is not to th: What relation the hours of s! te inclination of the iphabitants of the planet Mars sleep, we shail not stop_now to ing Sancho Panza to invoke blessings on Jeep— it eov: ra one 90 like a nature's sweet restorer, balmy descending as it does “like tired eyelid es. How strange it is that in this decade of the nineteenth century we should first be able to 1 the attendance, certainly amd securely, treth of the fable of other, mounted the stage and set oif for his new destination. He found Mr. Young all he could wish, aad his ih an assidaity’ tet good; bat for those wuo it, no soda. and the fall complement Of sugar, Will give better satisfaction to most fe SOMES are ROW riper they will make a better ple 1 though we all a excellent, and qu! xasted. Without rprised his master. is ne earth's axis, or if the that green-grape pie is to the shop after all the equal toe green- ini shop after work and gone home, and quite a number of side, ard some were curiously riveted and fixed with springs peared not yet ready for their . Young ascertained what the young wor! Tash Was Up to, and he not only encouraged him in hisundertaking, but he stood for half an hour and watched him at hix work. Next day Samuel Winthrop wax removed from tip blacksme © the machine sho sme! often visited his parents. At the end wo years his father was nota little surprised when Mr. Young informed Lim that Samuel was yet useful band in h GREEN GhaPrE h, she tells me, e8 a good sauce case nuthing less eaxpetinive is conve ces om the bench at his and slides, while others destined ‘Gravy Jerry. — There is hardly a i nate fem yreen gr turn evlor is thé tume t finer gelay tan Lethean waters. the experse of @ toverith reaction; promised it, but failed in the perform: rotorm gave it, Dut at a serious rixk. denly chloral has come imto use! quickly as the shades of night, whieh it so aptly rer resents, has this invention crowed the Al- lantic on downy pinions to visit the abodes of Amcrican care and distracting brai is the veritable ang: Lot sleep. - Ci nestles under her wings and comes forth re- newed, clad, strengthened. typhoid tever, that terrible seourge brain-workers, loses halt its terrors and a moiety Unless intestinal ulceration cut the nervous system can now be so supported as to out-last the disease. Thas dees steep, the emblem of death, become the be- ghming uf new lif produce sleep we may save lite. sleep restores the lost faculties of the mind. But of the bed bottoms conducive to sleep: The foundation of the firm, light, open, elastic, noiseless; affording no jizens. To such as are in GxAPE JELLY.—itipe grapes make an exeel- lent, fine-favored, tnutlscmely colored (Mm the stems any quantity of ripe quite sound grapes. Extract the juice in the Oven or over the tire, bruising them as slightly ie, and usitig « wooden spoon to stir th mup. Atter the grapes bave the juice trough a flannel bag, twice. ad juice, and let it boil for Yminntes. Now stir in the +: for fiticen minutes, stirring comstamuly. Grave Catsvr. vinegar, cloves and other spices, boiled tender, make an excellent reiish to eat with © was twenty-one. had been free aimos: two years, and Was one of the most accarae and trustworthy eyors in the countr: Winthrop lovke: boil Bp the strat upon biseldest son with In he: Presence come home to visit his parents, bad come with him. *Mr. ¥ said Mr. Winthrop arte cleured away, « have just erected in your Squvasu Pre.—We have had so of ail kinds this summer that wi to know what to do with them. We gav We had some white seall which we considered) wonders in ‘One fellow struck us as so remark- and size that husband took it to a butcher's shop and bad it wei the scale over four pounds an Suppose some farmer, with plenty of good land, ano and super-phosphates an home-made what-do-you-eali-’ems at his mand, will laugh when he over @ four-and-a-halt-po: squash, but he must remember that we have any Peruvian nor super-phosphate stutts to coax “cm with, but just plant the seed in the telling about squash et St handed made and many squashes | "returned Mr. = ? Young, «there are and they ing a AY, hem, a ey are doiug a very heavy — ~ Tunderstand they have an extensive ma- chine shop connected with the factories. Now, if my boy Sam is a good workman, as you say he = perhaps he might get a first rate situation t ‘Mr. Yeung looked at Samuel and smiled. “By the way,” continued the ola farmer, noise I see aad hear in the pa- nt Winthrop looms? Thoy ead of anything that was ever “You must ask your son about that.” said Mr. Young. “ That is some of Samuel's busi- ners.” “Eb? What! harbor to insect den: common use there are objections. The cord is in reality non-elastic; tho pport the straw as to bring its el: into play. By sliding, it also pressure of prominent body. But its general action is like that of a thorough-brace under a carriage—t merely al- lows change ot position. In its best estate it is iz, causing the surface of the bed ards the center, continually tightened and weark nidification too, it affords the best of facilities. Slats, as commonly applied, though they bend ith their burden, have no’ proper elasticity. is of no consequence to the prominent hi bones and short ribs of an emaciated are afew inches more or tant from the floor; but it is of co: minent portions of the body should nding Lae ncprone thus exten the sui Neithe: as ives way @ little reads of our boasting under of a summer pers about those _ tell me they go und. But I was pies. I think them most As I had no reci them according to my ju‘ it, suited the children, at any rate. | Boil until tender any quantity of squash which has previously pecled and freed trom seeds. Mash oye. Te ooo = pint of poonfuls of sugar, hali-pint of new milk, and two Bake in a tin paste, as @ custard pie is made. igricultw: requiring to_be Ing Out soon. For The old slogpes hartand gavbd ot his ol man an He was bewildered. his son—his idle son—was the inventor of the rer loom that had taken the manufac- mean?” he at length inquired. dat "the Wom is ith conscious pride. grated nutmeg, mine,” returned Sam “I have invented it and taken a patent right dollars for the patent right ta two sata rs for the patent ri in two ining ber that ‘trap your foot, six years “Yes,” replied the old man, whose eyes were bent tothe floor, and over whose minda new “ that was almost have made alter- sSDppol medium, of contact and avoiding chafing. slats, as commonly used, aul of different individuals. If too rigid; if too thin, they come down. Sacking is difficult to maintain in position; surface, in most cases is entirely inelastic; and disks of wood 88, are expensive, harbor in- sects, easily get out of order, and withal are so preclude their use. People do not ighbors whenever they ‘Wire mattresses remedy man: enumerated; but wire is heat—their surface is fi them must always restr: steads have not come into vogue. The main question is—ean we, out of mate- rial at hand, without skilled labor, construct a good foundation for a bed? The hunter, in the Wilderness, answers this « , averring that t mp, Or that some m: hemlock prevents his taking cold answers much in th SEASONABLE DOMESTIC RECEIPTS, Peach Conskrves.—Take the yellow open stone peach, cut them in halt; to one pound of fruit and half a pound of the best brown si take as much water as will moister then put some peaches into the kettle, let them boil five minutes, take them out with a strainer, put them on flat dishes in the sun till dry, put yrup until all are done; then put them ina peaches and white thick, they are light seemed breaki * Well,” continued &@ pattern, though, of course, ation and improvement, and there re. * And that was what you were studying when yon used to stand and see me weave, and then Tumble about my loom so much ?” “You are right mother. Even then I had conceived the idea which I have since carried hence its use is confined Sota springs, supporting flat Made into a mattre: other peaches in the # sugar, until packed full. STUFFED Peacnes.—Rub your peaches with a towel, cut in balf, take out the stone and stuff with grated horse-radish and white mustard seed, equal quantities. ‘Tie the peaches well i ings, ane lay them gently in large jars; then make a syrup of one pound of su, pints of vinegar, pour on the peac! and then cover the jars with cloth GRxEN CorN.—Boil the corn one hour, score it and scrape it from the col with a lump of butter the or ae — pepper and salt, = spoonful of white sugar; until the butter is melted and all is tained; this should be done just before sending it to the table and need only to remain over the fire about ten nd the expense of “And that is why you could not understand my mathematical problem,” uttered Mr. Win- from his chair and took Gi y son, forgive have been blinded, and now see how I have mis- derstood you. WhileI have thought you were careles#, you were solving & phi I could never have compre! Samuel_—I meant well enough, but Judgment and discri: - course the old man had ven for his harshness, and pened to a new lesson in human natare. was simply this: Different dis inte for which hes bulling hot juestion with hemlock put it in a saucepan ; Stir in these in, @ same way, by means of straw in bulk. If his bed is dry and elastic and warm, be is satisfied. uf all qualities in a ted, we detest dampness. fear a mustv smell, an mtinually exhaling from the surface of the body, amount of carbonic If this arrested. by a Tomato AND Oxna Sovr—A le; polled slowly: aking ofthe grease » taking o1 ie Tises; at 10 o’clock at in five dozen okras cut up, leaving out the stalks, and six dozen to- ing first taken off the skins with Lee it boil gently four hours ToOMATORS FOR WinTER—Skin and seed the tomatoes, then squeeze them and hi bottles well cork a kettle with cold and the vapor of water. of breathing thro oo Boy Se ot he agpertged }, OF gutta-perch splints, (as in case of broken bones,) or a dam) : pressive sensations. An extra in upon the lungs, and we “ take This objection to water-beds and air- cushions is so great as to preclude their use. boots sweat the feet; splints and starch irri substructure of a love it has no taste. First, seek to understand the natural abilities and disposition m in your management of ot children, and the: their education for after life, govern it leads to op- amount of labor place iter up to the necks and boil five hours. When the water boils down take off the kettle and let the water cool a little betore pouring in more warm water, as the bot- tles are apt to burst if water is poured in.—Ger- mantown Telegraph. ABOUT OYSTERS. Put two quarts of oysters, 3 Set them on the stove to boil or come very near to it; now drain all the liquor into your soup kettle, mtot water and two quarts of new spice and pepper; have the oysters time where they will keep warm, add them and salt to taste just as you are ready to serve break up some crackers fine and put the oysters P Salt should always be put in the last thing in any soup, fricasee, where milk is used, or it yater ld never be boiled, scalded; it makes them tough and ¥ are to be stewed, "t boil them, always have twenty-hours must be 0 ‘Wood, then, shall be the material; and we will construct the fabric with interstices for aera- tion. We will give the slats upward direction, and support them in such a somewhat under ngland, it is known that she has been laboring for some years past one phase of mental infirmity. She has a firm Prince Albert is always present with her, and that she can hold communion with a rooms were when he was alive. P Opposite to her own in the library, and the books which be delighted to read to her order, upon the she will converse ing her own share of the conversation alow interest of old times. He terprises_—eapecially @ curve in the manner that the pressure. And if ent, and thin enough, and elastic ave @ bed-bottom construc the frst form Of th 8 rom two ‘elongation. the distance between the id rail of the bedstead. If may be two inches wide, nd a slat will come o site each orifice. The slats may be sawed trom two-inch plank, and made five-eighths or half an oF if not thoroughly seasoned, r. They may be with least expense. also required, an inch thick. To construct: T: an additional one, as the cord in an end rail; eut bedst ” was a half sprinj points, allowing limit To do this, measure rope holes in the eight inches, the s and two .nches apart, a lovingly, in pig EA hour and with the vigor had taught her, by his business en agement of the duchy of m all up; if the: tend as much as heat them hot, but don the soup or gravy hot. Oyster StEw. ters, with their liquor, as you need, into a pan on the inch in thickness. I ‘Put as many fresh 0; ‘ake twice as many slats, and stove to heat, but not re are apertures for the Drain the juice off into a saucepan, as inches shorter and of butter and ils add a pint of cream en @ little with flour; after this boils and more salt, if hot. soon a8 it boils a per; when this up once, put in the oy: Overzns Frrep.—Drain the oysters well, roll in fine rolled cracker, and f) in hot lard and butter, two-thirds lard, one~ Home. butter.— Rural More False to the advent of the new prophet ‘isher in Australia, the London Specta- tor has some curious ligious movements. promulgator of a creed which teaches person how alive is the reproduction or Uon ot some Biblical she ‘ince Albert himself, who was a sort the mystic, and J. es cae of it as a theory belief by sober, common-sense Victoria @ source of great consolation.’ and she often talks with the prince concerning the state ‘She has been gradually withdrawing from public life for some rs past, and lives in a world of herown. Her and her easel are both neglected, ys nor paints, except at rare intervals, when she willsweep ber harp-strin mc ments in memory of some sweet German air that her husband loved to sing or to hear suog. ————— eee Bill of Pare for One Week. Some time since the editor of Hearth and Home requested its correspondents to forward actual ills of fare for ongweek, the same to be pub- if thought suitable, for the benefit of its these are given in a recent select the following. The h lowing bill was prepared was the last week in April: SUnpay. — Brealfast— Muffins, eggs, water-cresses.” For this and every other breakfast, coffee, fresh milk or water to drink. Dinner—Koast chickens, mashed potatoes, boiled onions, pickles, currant jelly, gravy, butter, custard. between Jacob Behmen, .Fichte, the philosopher of ‘hatever be t philosophical or religious » it appears, ts the and pin each slat Piece with a small, frame or hurdle in the use cord small enough to the holes in the end rails. in place, lie under the end and around each alternate hurdle to the level of the to; fastening, use the former side rail to side rail. This makes a comfortable su usual straw bed and mattress, or mt unseasoned state. Kach slat recedes under pressure, and yet cannot escay but in a few weeks it settles so muc! and assumes a shaj imearna- ” Fisher himself SS a plurality of wives. He has a of loyal followers, who give their daughters to him wives, and attack body whom he de- oper te eae ym the amazing devotio: mankind in re! is moved to won: would make him dozens of small | lat, thus raisin, fervor and the ious matter, the S; why some able and unserupu! seize on some new idea w! cond Mahomet and give him unlimited er over thousands, perhaps millious, of the to the huge and’ super- ussia, to Australia, and especially to our own western population, as most likely to receive such a man, a religious but civil betrays an amusin; -cord to suj |, by passing Fn os for the feather bed, in uman race; pointi stitions masses of De a ximatii ‘The places Waewiected ‘s ssure become most depressed, and the y seasoning, grow hard, If now this bur ignorance of the Ameri- regard to religion, in such a speculation. Jonathan is of all men least eredulous with to supernatural levated, and the surface will sesereee rem | Stor aeee, ern et Bread and butter, canned quinees, cheese, one i hs ey man © farew kind of cake. Tea, tresh milk or water to drink Mona. Breakfast—Broilea ham, mashed potatoes made in small cakes and browned, rad- ishes, omelet. Dinner—Cold roast chicken, whole joes, rice as a vi eider apple-sauce. Dessert, baked Indian pud- a toast, water-cresses, one ie. ‘Tuxspay.—Breakfast—Chicken hash, potatoes, corn bread. inner—Soup of beef and vegetables, sour apples baked with hard sate and earrant je stewed To give greater elevation and elasticity, the centrat slats no doubt might be made somewhat i hint of the power w. char! can acquire; but it is a curious fact th: bi believers of Joe Smith and Young are recruits trom Norway ‘and their fol! are, invariab! merican followers pba at litical power outside of th ght or latitude of bed curvature of the end ule greater free. which. when a would give still more fullness —New York tp the middle of the bed.—Country Fancy soaps, which are made in Se ears mmalyecesied For this branch WEDNESDAY.—. Deet of Tuesday's dinner, roasted 2 oaated in apr an ped = ith’ white. of with w on milk, or muah snd rap ‘Something else ly who may not THURSDay—. ith some of the trade the ‘under- ‘ates oree EF Es i fl 5 f Pa! ul tl § ty 5 3 ne ; i ° & | if H iH j i |MAsseop | IN THE YOUNG AND RISING GI The vegetative powers of i few years how often the pal! care et hue, the lack Justre eye and emanciated form, and the impossibility of | application to mental effort, show their banefal in- | fiuence. It soon becomes evident to tid observer that some depresting influence is checking the de- velopment of the body. Consumption iw talked of, and perhaps the youth is removed from school and | rent into the country. This is one of the worsjmove ments, Removed from ordinary diversions of the ever-changing scenes of the city, the powers of the body, too much enfeebled to give z-st to bealthfal | and rural exercise, thoughts are turned inwardly upon themselves. If the patient be a female the approach of the menees is looked for with anxiety as the first symp- tom in which nature is to show her saving power in diffaxing the circulation and visiting the check with the bloom of health. Alas! increase of appetite has grown by what it fed on. The energies of the system are prostrated, and the whole economy is deranged The beautiful and wonderful period in which body and mind undergo 60 fascinating # change from child to woman, is looked for in vain, The parent's heart bleeds in anxiety, and fancies the grave but waiting for its vietim. HELMBOLD'’S EXTRACT BUCHU FOR WEAKNESS ARISING FROM EXCESSES OB EARLY INDISCRETION, attended with the fellowing symptoms: Indisposi- tion to Exertion, Lows of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficulty of Breathing, General Weakness, Horror of Disease, Weak Nerves, Trembling, Dreadful Horror of Death, Night Sweats, Cold Fest, Wake- fulness, Dimness of Vision, Languor, Universal Las- situde of the Muscular System, Often Enormous Ap petite with Dyspeptic Symptoms, Hot Hands, Flush- ing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin, Pallid Counte- nance and Eruptions on the Face, Pain in the Back, Heaviness of the Eyelids, Frequently Black Spots Flying before the Eyes, with Temporary Suffasion and Loss of Sight, Want of Attention, Great Mobili- ty, Restlesness, with Horror of Society. Nothing is more desirable to such patients than Solitude, and nothing they more dread, for fear of themselves; no no repose of manner, no earnestness, Do speculation, but a hurried transition from ope question to ‘another. THESE SYMPTOMS, IF ALLOWED TO GO ON-—WHICH THIS MEDICINE INVARIABLY REMOVES—SOON FOLLOW LOSS OF POWER, FATUITY AND EPILEPTIC FITS, IN ONE OF WHICH THE PATIENT MAY EXPIRE. During the superintendence of Dr. Wilson at the Bloomingdale Asylum, this sad reeult occurred to two patients. Reason had for atime left them, and both died of epilepsy. They were of both sexes, and about twenty years of age. Who can say that these excesses are not frequently followed by those direful diseases, Insanity and Consumption? The records of the Insane Asylume, andthe melancholy deaths by Consumption, bear ample witness to the truth of these assertions. In Lunatic Asylums the most melancholy exhibition appears. The countenance is actually sodden and quite destitute; neither mirth nor grief ever visite it. Should a sound of the voice occur it is rarely ar- ticulate. “ With wofal measures wan deepair Low sullen sounds their grief beeuiled.”” While we regret the existence of the above die- eases and symptoms, we are prepared to offer an in- valuable gift of chemistry for the removal of the con- nequences. HELMBOLD'S FLUID EXTRACT OF BUCAU. ‘There is no tonic like it. It is an'anchor of hope to the physician and patient. This is the testimony of all who have used or prescribed it. Beware of counterfeits and those cheap decoctions called Buchu, most of which are prepared by self- styled doctors, from deleterions ingredients, and offered for sale at ‘less price” and “larger bottles,” &c. They are unreliable and frequently injurious. Ask for Helmbold’s. Take no other. Delivéred to any address, Describe symptoms in all communications. HELMBOLD’S FLUID EXTRACT SARSAPARILLA THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER AND BEAU- TIFIEB OF THE COMPLEXION, ‘Will radically exterminate from the system Scrofula, Syphilis, Fever Sores, Ulcers, Sore Eyes, Sore Legs, Sore Mou Sore Head, Bronchitis, Skin Diseases, Salt Bheum, Cankers, Ra nings from the Ear, White Swellings, Tumors, Cancerons Affections, Nodes, Rickets, Glandular Swellings, Night Bweats, Bash, Tetter, Humors of aij Kinds, Chronic Rhew matiem, Dyspepsia, and all diseases that have been established in the system for years, HELMBOLD'S CATAWBA GRAPE PILLS. ‘The Most Reliable Purgative and Cathartic Kown— Buperseding Salts, Magnesia, etc , Ts Plaints, General Debility, etc. No nansea, no grip- ing pains, but mild, pleasant and safe in operation. < - ‘ tnwbe Grape Juice and Fiaid Bitree Rhabarb. Boware of those cheap patent pills, carclessly pre- pared by inexperienced persons, most of which con taim either calomel, mercury or other deleterious drugs. Eotablished upward of twenty years. ‘Prepered by’ . T. BELMEOLD, Mur Bew fuk. od 100 Soe Tenth Oro, Philadelphis, Pa. Foo) Hie DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. STEAMBOAT LINES. |“PlOneER Live. N*ro'tis Sent AND RooR i The | sta8 o clock,: NEY EXPRESS LINE, Vla CANAL, PDL AER a Ue Norm ‘Wherves CSenetows, WeoxEs | © Acciona roure PEPER s2 rave eet DE & 00.24 eetn Wares NERATION | [J % aie KUCTS TU NouruLa, | Steamer Lady uf tne Laie, James tra “ eee ere em POL RALTTRO ‘SoC es: eg. datina | | eat and Fortress | &. | aTOR ALL GAR STATIONS. |, | mela? a oes train. tickets to the Wy be bad at the et can stall boors is the SURAT Cee, a CC ae WASHINGTOR, yon, Sone 3 iee—nown MEAL STAIR SR ERRORS 643 LOUISIANA AVENUB, ‘THIRD Doon Bast or Stvextn Sraeer. $187.000 TO on \L ESTATE in the Paste PROPERTY SALE. 5 ction, pecial Seetes Os eae ate i A LARGE Lis! A McRORERTS @ CO., SEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE OFFIOR Corner sth and G streets, opp. U. 8. Treasury, WASHINGTON, D. 0. AND REAL ESTATE AGRET' Corner of Hew York avenue and lsh street. reece Ne saancm orrice. NATIONAL LOAN OFFICB. ROBERT FULTON @ CO., 324 NINTH STREET, | BETWEEN D STREEL ABD PENNSYLVANIA ADVANCES MONEY aT LESS THAR ONE-HALF THE USUAL RATES, 3 GOVERNMENT, i iti AND OTHER SECUBITIES if i 3 { i il i i * 5 i - i i GOLD AND SILVRE WATORES, i Fi i £ i

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