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About The Albany register. (Albany, Or.) 1868-18?? | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1880)
- . .. SSE3 4f JL I83CED ITERT VRIDA.Y, IK THE B.E0ISTEH. BUILBINO, - Corner Ferrg ami First Street. CLEVE... ........ ..PROPRIETOR. TEBMS-1N ADTASCE. x crmy,onoycur 2 SO One copy, six months 150 Single copies Ten cents. Aiceuta for ttie Keplstcr. The following named gentlemen lire author ized to receive and receipt for subscriptions to the Rkgistek In the localities mentioned : Messrs. Kirk Hnme Brownsville. Robert (i!a3 Crawfordsville. Seth Hayes Vi"-?t y O. P. Toinnklns nnrrlsbnrg BIDAY. .JUNE 18, 18S0 Borbnrs. "Was there any mail, Eben ?" Aud leaning over the little wicket gate, her dark locks falling about her in pretty, careless tresses, Barbara looked wistfully down the shady street and then up to the tossing elms, where the busy birds were chattering. Acd sad to relate, a cloud of discontent crept over Barbara's low, white brow. "No, there were no letters for the Leightons," said Eben, in rather sav age mood. "I made especial inquiries tor you," and Eben's lower lip trem bled a little and his voice softened won derfully for hitn. "I suppose you are anxious to get away from the old place, lUiss Barbara ?" "Yes, I am," said Miss Leighton, sharply, wiib an imperial air. "I am pick of it all. I should be clad logo anywhere away from here." Eben made no reply. He looked down at the tangled curls, the 6oft, wistful brown eyes, the dimpled hands clasped over the mesh of honeysuckles then away over the tops of the snowy balsams toward the great world where Barbara's heart was. He was thinking with one cruel pang which gripped his heart at that moment of what life would be at the farm with out Barbara. He had tried of late to live without connecting her in any way with his days and nights, his duties, his hardships and his joys, but he had made sorry work of it. It gave Eben a fright , to know how much depended on this proud, spoiled beauty, whose dream now was to get away from, snch as he the common folks around Lar borough. Barbara at eighteen had a great long ing tor that gay world of which she had read in summer evenings when sit ting under the musky vines in the farm house porch, or when lying amid the cowslips in the meadow where, under a growing weight of care', Eben toiled with great brown hands in the capac ity of help to the widow Le:gbton. Eeben was as much part and parcel of the place as the crumbling headstones in the little graveyard on the hill, where all the dead Leightons were ly ing. No one ever dreamed of his go ing away ; although his merits were acknowledged, and it was cheerfully admitted" that the boy had grown up to be a haudeome roan, with shrewd capacities as a financier, and a tarn for machinery. A great many at the vil lage had dropped into the habit of ad dressing him as Mr. lies ford, and Eben's muscles commanded respect He had a little tnnzaerv in the barn he called his workshop, where, at odd hours and on rainy days, he tinkered with lathes and pulleys and edged tools When his farm work had been tidied '. tip and the cows had been milked and turned into the green woodlands again, Eben shut himself up in his workshop and pottered over his numerous inven tions and thought of what great possi bilities might have been his if he had been born something better than Sir Leigh ton's farm hand- He realized sensibly that there were sti 11 possibilitie for him out yonder beyond the long dark line of elms and firs which he could see from las study window But his benefactor had died and left all the tangled threads of his affairs for yourg Hexford to qnravel, and he eould not desert Mrs. Leighton and the girls Barbara and Theo. It would not have been right or manly. Things were going straight now, however, the farm was in a prosperous condition, and even an indifferent manager could have kept the wheels moving which Eben had fixed in their places. Bat Eben remained on the farm while the season waxed and waned, and the girls were growing into fine, tall young women, with restless yearnings tor a busier life than was to be had at Larborough. He had expected that a girl so pretty as Barbara would be some time leave fng so dull a place. but he nevertheless felt a wild, savage pain at bis heart, when he learned that a letter had been cent to a distant aunt to see it she would not look after Barbara while she enjoyed the advantages of a finishing ecboolfor young ladies. The longest cummer days would fade into short summer nights, and by and by,, when the first yellow leaves would be drop. ping into pools and hollows, Barbara would go away perhaps forever. Eben was too much of a man to sigh, and too muscular to do without bis supper, but he fell into the habit ot taking long walks alone, or ot sitting under the honeysuckles on the porch where he could see the moon rise and where he could hear the young ladies singing rather plaintive songs, accom panied by the cracked strains ot an old harpsichord in the best room. He had just plucked the first round, full rose of May, and twirling it thoughtfully in his fingers as he strolled down tTie garden path to his ,vrorit6hop, when he heard the breezy flatter of a muslin robe, and a light footfall behind him on the gravel walk. He turned with a blaze ot fire in bis black eyes and the rose exteuded. His hand dropped to his side. It was Theo who had come rapidly after him swinging a white sun-bonnet by one string. Theo was a saucy, petulant, provok ing young person of sixteen, whose pranks and whims had ctteu tried Eb en's temper sorely having him 6 top the harvesting to saddle Rulot, her pony, or meddle with his tools and up sethis newest invention, but Theo's eyes were such a lovely blue and her smile so bewitching that Eben had not the heart to scold, besides he had humored her in all her willfulness himself, and there was the faintest resemblance to Barbara in the brow and dimpled chin which tied him hand and toot. "Oh, what a lovely thing !" said Theo, coveting the rose and stretching out iter plump little baud. "Is it for me ?" "No," said Eben rather grufSy. "I've had an eye on this bud for some time. I noticed that your Lady Isabels are in fine condition. You will have a cluster of them by the day afiei to-morrow." "Well you old stingy, I suppose you don't mind running down to the mail tor me ; I forgot what Barbara asked me to do, -and I shall get a scolding from mamma, who can't have Bab crossed io anything, you know." "I shall have to go down and see Nanson about the wagon-gear any way to-night, and I can just as well stop at the postoffice. Is it the letter from from New Haven ?" And Eben very thoughtlessly bit off the leaves of the rose and mangled them with his strong while teeth. Yes, it was the letter from New Da ven, and Eben was charged to bring up a new novel, ai.d some pink setting silk and eighteen celluloid buttons by Theo, who ran alter him to suggest chocolate caramels in case the letter failed. It was a sort of satisfaction to him that the letter did fail. But it hurt him to see Barbara's disappointment. He remembered Theo's womanish little errands, and he still held the rose, which he now laid on Barbara's clasped hands. For all she had grown to hate the old place, she loyed its old-fashioned bi; flu fly roses as fondly as when a child, and Eben had braided a long garland of them tor her out of the finest and best. She caressed the rose and tucked it in among tne cniliest locks, where it rested just against her cheek. Eben Hushed and paled as he remembered how he had laid his heart in the heart of that rose. "The letter will be sure to be here to-morrow," he said gently. "I am go ing down the first thing in the morn ing. The young ladies around Larbor ough are not to be without a gallant this season.' A handsome young man is from New York to stay a few weeks in the neighborhood ; I met him with Eben was not slow to note that this bit of news awakened a faint show ot interest in Barbara. "What was he like ?" said Barbara, blushing a little. "I trust he is an ac quisition. Did he Jook like a gentle man ?" ; V . .... "Yes, he looked Tke one " Eben was compelled to admit that he did, and that he wore elegant clothes, and had slender, soft white bauds, which Eben had not. Days after this, Eben in an agony of jealous anguish was compelled to ac cord the stranger a great many other accomplishments. He rode well, was a good shot, talked fluently, sketched passably, understood women and was Miss Le'gliton's most ardent admirer. Fben foresaw all this, and yet once when their mingled voices floated out to his little den, he brought down a hammer wrathfully and smashed his thum nail. Morning and night he sad dled and brought round horses for Bar. bara and Mr. Ney, and went to his work in the hot fields, while they were cantering down the shady roads, and Mrs. Leighton and Theo were beating eggs in the buttery and getting up rare disheb for tea. The letter had come from New Haven and Barbara had ans wered briefly that she could not go on. til some time later. She bad never looked so animated and beautiful as now. She rarely saw Eben, sending him her requests by her sister, and Eb en went on at his inventions, feeling as it every blow ot his chisel drove out a piece ot his heart' core. And although he would have scorned the idea, Eben had grown wonderfully haggard and pale, with great dark circles under his eyes since Dr. Ormsby had introduced Edgar Ney to the Leightons. He took little pride in the knowledge that he was the better man of the two, but he did know that he could crush Ney with one hand into a limp, shapeless mass, and he wondered sometimes why he did not. One day he was seized with trembling. He was pruning a pear tree when he looked np and Barbara stood before him, in her habit, switching at the mottled butterflies that flattered on the hollyhocks, and arouud Eben's brown hands. "How pale and ill yon look, Eben." It was the least she could say, and it was the truth. Eben's heart beat mad ly for a moment and then went on slowly. "I am not one to get ill, Miss Bar. bara ; I am not browned so much as usual, perhaps." . His "Miss Barbara" sounded oddly and his looks belied his words. She looked down at the ground and said nervously : "I hope you will not aigue with me this morning, Eben, but I've set my heart on rid ifig the colt, Tam O'Shanter, to the falls. I am not in the least arraid." "But I am," said Eben calmly. "I cannot permit you to risk your lite with that vicionscolt." "Mr. Ney will take care of his vicious, ness," Barbara answered a trifle inso lently. "Mr. Ney may ride O'Shanter and welcome, but I cannot consent for you to." "Then I must do it without your consent. Be so kind an to have tlm colt around in a quarter of an honr." Eben finished his pear tree and went into the shop to wasli his hands of blood. He had cut himrelf to the bone. Barbara and Ney sat on the porch reading from "Princess," when the horses appeared. The colt shied and reared when Barbara sprang lightly iu her saddle. An admirable horse woman, she held her own finely, and Eben stood as it rootod o the ground when a turn in the road hid them from s:ght, then like a deer he set off down a footway toward where the railway crossed the road as with horror he re membered that the morning express would come down in ten minutes. .The riders had stopped by the way to fier. mit Mr. Ney to dismount and gather the first cardinals tor Barbara. As they trotted sharply down the road, the roar of the train was heard just beyond the curve. Maddened with terror, the wild young horse Barbara rode reared, plunged and sprang away from the other horse and darted down the cut toward the train. With a hoarse shout to "sit firm," Eben rushed out from the copse and flung himself under his hoofs. He caoght the bit in his hands and pulled the colt on his haunches, and then a violent kick made him fall like a log. Some woodchoppers came to the rescue, and as they lifted Barbara off the train thundered by. Eben was picked np for dead, and even Mr. Ney declared he was a "bravo fellow." In an agony of grief and remorse Barbara hnwr near him all those tedious days, when Eben's mind wandered and he muttered troubled, incoherent sen tences, in which, poor fellow, he told all his hopes and fears. He was now indeed haggered and ghastly pale, with an ugly scar in his left temple, and his hands lay weak and nerveless on the coverlet. The first moment ot sanity and consciousness which came made him sigh and wish that he had remain ed oblivions to life and its miseries. It was Barbara who leaned on him while tier great brown eyes filled with tears. "Oh, Eben, how can yon bear to look at me ? You can never forgive me !" "Yon would not say that if you knew what was in my heart." "Cannot yon tell me, Eben ? I am so wretched." "I am sorry for that ; I must not tell you, Barbara. I cannot suffer more than I have." "Then shall I tell yoa something ? and she hid her face in the pillow. He put out his hand and touched her head caressingly. "I have been very willful and blind and very unhappy, Eben. I would have given my lite to save yours, as yon gave yours for me." "Bnt, Barbara ; oh, Barbara, my darling, T gave mine because I loved you better than lite, than heaven. I would rather have died than live to lose you forever." "But yon will not lose me." - Her arms stole tenderly around him and she laid her cheek against his.'. "I owe my life to yoa and it is yours." "Barbara, think what you are say. ing. I shall be mad enough to think that you care for me I" 'Eben, my love, yoa are all the wirld to me. Cannot yoa see . that this is so?" "My own !" With one great effort and a spasm of his old strength 2ben pressed her to his heart. "And you never meant to marry Ney?" "I am afraid I only meant to make yon jealous," said Barbara, with her old sanciness. "I shall mend now fast enough, but not nntil yoa have promised to abide by what I say, my darling." "I promise solemnly." "Then we shall be married to- morrow." Co Mad About It. A few weeks ago, when several citi zens of Detroit were surrounding a hot stove in a Griswold street tobocco store, in came a 'stranger who had been on a "big drunk." His eyes were red, his back all mud, his clothes ragged, and his general appearance was that ot a hard up and played out old soaker. One of the group was telling a yarn about a bog, and he was going on with his story when the old fellow interrupt ed : "Sens me, but I'm an old soaker who wants to refurm." "Well as I was saying," continued the story teller, after a glance at the man, "the hog was about forty rods away when I first saw him. I got my gun-" "Say," interrupted the drunkard, "isn't there somebody here who wants to help reform me ?" "You go out!" replied one of the men. "I won't do it I I'm an old drunk ard, and I want somebody to take me by the hand and hope I'll reform." "Go on with your hog story," put in i one ot the group. "Yon shan't do it ! exclaimed the drunkard. "I wan'l some one to feel sai because I drink up all my earning and misuse my family." "No one here cares how much you drink or how soon you go under the j ground !" said one of the men. ! "You don't, eh ? Don't any of you want to give me advice ?" "No sir J" "You don't feel sorry because I am degrading my brilliant intellect?" "BrillifUit bosh !'' You never knew anything anyhow !" "Won't any man here pity my family?" "No sir ?" ''Nor shed one tear over my degraded condition ?" "Not a shed ! You'd better be going we want to hear a hog 6tory." 'Had you rather hear a bog story thau to try and save me ?" "Yoa bet we had ?" "Well, now, you hard hearted and selfish minded old liar, I know I'm worth more than any hog, and I'll prove it, too ! If you won't save me I'll save myself hanged it I won't! Yes sir, I'll show you whether I am of more account than any of your hog sto ries or not ! You needn't pity me ncr advise me nor talk with me I can run my own grocery J" No man in Detroit has led a more sober and industrious lite since that day and there is every reason to believe, that he will stick. Detroit Free Press- Two par' ies registered at a Rochester hotel as O. C. Palmerand wife. About 1 .o'clock in the night a brother of the female portion of the party appeared at the hotel with a minister and witnesses The brother, being a stranger to the other gentleman, did not wish to trouble him with particulars about his toilet The bride wore a handsomely embroi dered nightgown. Donnelly, the man who tried to steal a seat in congress and incidentally a state tor the democracy for nse in the electoral court, has had the cheek to put in a bill ot $4202 tor expenses in cut red in arguing the case and in pro ducing "expert testimony on the subject of the authorship ot the anonymous letter written to Springer. Donne1 ly, says the Chicago Tribune, really did his best to he'p steal a seat and a state, and it would be sheer ingratitude on the part of the democratic majority t, refuse to pay him (or his pains out f the treas ury. They will undoubtedly do it. The Sr-ringer anonymous letter has finally been fastened npon Finky by the testimony of the most competent expert in the Washington depaitments. This expert makes no surmises nor com pa r isons, but positively swears that Finley is the writer of the letter. This may be news in Washington bnt it is what ever? body in Minnesota has been con fident of from the start. The only doubt has been whether Donnelly did not write it himself. Ttoe Next President The tradition that the child ot the humblest citizen may hope to be Presi dent of the United States is not dead after all. General Gai field was the son of very poor parents, and at a very early age was compelled to follow the vocation of driver on the Ohio and Erie Canal. Having the metal in hirft for better things he left the canal and sought and obtained opportunities to do chores and odd jobs to pay for his living, while se curing the rudiments of an education in the common schools. After awhile he was able to secure a scholarship in the academy at Hiram, Portage county, Ohio. The industry and energy dis - , t , . .i . ' vs. Uiil V cu iy mill IE! lyitmwn v, utw ot his ambition an education, attracted attention and raised up friends who fur nished him means to pursue his studies at Harvard College, from whence he graduated with the highest hoiors. Returning to his native State he was elected President of the Academy at Hiram, where his earlier struggles had been hardest. Rising rapidly in public estimation, the breaking out of the war of 1860 found him a member , ot the State Senate. The firing npon Sumter roused the nation, and Garfield imme diately raised the 42d Ohio Infantry, of which he was maJe colonel. His command fought one of the first actions of the war in Eastern Kentuckey, in which he defeated the rebel general Humphrey. His record at Corinth, Vicksbnrg, Chattanooga and other hot ly contested fields in the west was brill, lant. In 1864 he had earned the rank of major general, when he was called by the State of Ohio to represent her in the National House ot Representa tives. He has held his seat continually through all change since, and has made the'impressionot his own personal integrity literally upon the constitution and the laws of the land which now calls him to its Chief Magistracy. Bee. A Bnllie-Korth Sc Stilp t'snsl. According to the plans prepared by Herr Dahlctrom, to whom a prelimi nary concession tor the enterprise has been granted, the proposed ship canal from the Baltic to the North Sea will be traced Irom the Bay of Kiel to Bronsbiittel in the estuary ot the Elljee. Its depth throughout is to be 20 teet 9 inche, its width at the surface of the water 160 feet, and at the bottom 64 feet. The banks have a very gentle slope. Provision will moreover be made by adoption of a peculiar system of locks and reservoirs, tor increasing the depth ot the water to 25 or 26 feet whenever it may be desirable to do so, and this depth will allow of the pas sage through the canal of the heaviest German ironclad afloat the Konig Wilhelm, a vessel of 9,603 tons dis placement, and the largest ship iu the German navy, drawing only 26 feet. The canal can, it is calculated, be com pleted in six years, and will it is esti mate!, cost $3,750,000, or about two millions an I a quarter less than the estimates made a few years ago ot the cost of constructing a canal 31 feet deep and 22 feet wide at the surface ot the water. In size, it may be added, the proposed Baltic and North Sea Canal does not compare untavoiably with the Suez Canal, the width ot this at the surface of the water being 172 feet, the width at the bottom 70 feet and the depth about 26 feet and 3 in ches. A sad tale of misplaced confidence comes from distant Maine. The green, backers in the neighborhood of Bidde ford were induced to subscribe fbr a new paper, paying in advance. The paper started out nicely for the rag-laby and then suddenly turned haidmoney re. publican. The disappointed greenback, ers consider themselves ill used. The other day Representative Alex ander II. Stevens was. in Philadelphia on committee business, and he told a reporter of the Philadelphia Press that this congress "will go down to posterity as theuo-nothing congress ; perhaps the most indolent and listless iu the history ot the government ". m The Methodist Conference ot Vermont has been wrestling with tobacco as Jacob wrestled with the angels. As yet a Vermont clergyman ot tl.at de nomination may smoke, but the power ot the Conference swings ovej him like the sword of Damocles, and at any moment may descend and wreck his nicotine joy a forever. It must be trv ing for a good smoker. ; Mississippi will be an excellent State in. a few years tor impecunious lawyers to go to. Its last Legislature passed seven hundred pages ot new command rneuts. Moes got along very well with a couple of slabs of stone to write his ou. The steamship Empire came into Es quimalt with a broken shaft. ! '.'..- ; late jrm. The Pugit Sound Dispatch, it is said, will soon be published at Sauk city. :A.tJ-'r- K: ' The saylor, James Kelly, stabbed on the ship Topgallant at Port Townseod, is dead Marshall Bliun ha?, a ten-stamp mill on a quartz ledge ou the Wenan said to pay well. A returned miner says np big strikes can be made at Skagit until late in July on account ot high water. The steamer Victoria did not get aground in Fraser river as reported and came to Victoria all right. " The Seattle Post learns that theTe are ZUU.UOU bushels of Dotatoas on , . T, , ' Whidby's Island that can , fin 1 no . , The mail carrier informs the JPos that flattering prospects have been struck on McGee's quartz lode on the Suoqualimy. Ed. Warren, a butcher at Seattle, borrowed $40 ou a forged check and then ran away, also borrowing all he could from others. The Carbon Hill Coal Company is going ahead with the tunnels on Carbon river, three and a half miles from the main Puallup railroad. ' Lieut. E.S. FarroWj the officer who distinguished himcelt so in the Indian campaign of lale, went east to Laurel, Del., and was mariied last month. Capis. Morgan and Bullene, inspec tors of hulls and boilers, leave Port Tow i send tor Sitka on au int-pectiou lour. The Independent states tliat the am putation ot part ot the hand of George Brinn, who was accidentally shot two weeks ag", wu not successful and a more successful operation has taken the hand off above the, wrist. A little sonof W. Hillis.of Fuyallup, was struck in the head three months ago with a board with a nail hi it ; the nail broke and part remained in the wound, and now the doctors say he cannot be cured, owing to neglect. A school boy about ten years old was the other day halted by a benevolcut minded citizen on Second street and' asked if he liked to go to school. "No, ir !" was the prompt reply. "Then you don't love your teacher?' "N yes, sir. That is I didn't nntil yesterday, but now I do. 1 think she's just bully" "Why have yu loved her since yes terday ?" "Well, yon know Jack Cain ? Well he's the wornt fighter in our room. He can lick me and two other boys with one hand lied behind him. Well, he was going to lick roe last night, and he was shaking his list at me in school and showing his teeth and getting me all excited when the teacher saw him "Did she?" " You bet she did, and the way she took him out 'of that and wollupped him and humbled him down made me as if she were a mother to me I When school was ont, Jack dan't touch no body, lie was wilted down, and when I hit him with a hunk ot dirt he never looked around ? . I guess I'll try and ick him in the morning, betore ho gets over feeling humble !" ! Consolidation Of Counties The leading issue with the citizens of Josephine is the annexation of Jackson. Taxation continues to increase at a ratio that must soon bankrupt the property-holders, unless we are annexed to some other county. The assessed val uation of taxable property is consid. erably less than $20,0U0, and bids fair to grow smaller. To try to keep up a county organization, with a fit 11 corps ot connty officials, on Bitch an assess ment U bound to prove a ruinous ex periment. And for the citizens ot the lower end of the con.u'y to still fight annexation (as I learn that they .do tight it) is only another illustration ot how short -sighted is selfishness Cor. Ashland Tidings. A benevolent Detroit demist announ. ced that on a certain day he wonld pull teeth free for poor persons and provide laughing gas.' He used 700 gallons of gas and extracted 271 teeth. The Chinese liav military methods which are quite ns novel to ns as mnny of ours are novel to them. LI Yung Choi I a rebel leader who lias long set tlie Peking Government at rii fiance. He can he "kept 111 his mountain fastnesses, bnt cm not be driven out of them and captured. It was recently decided that something must be done to save the imperial commanders from disgrace. One of Li's followers was accordingly attired to personate the re- doubtable chieftian. nnd after a formal . and pompous trial whs behended at. the capital With crest ostentation. The re bellion is now judicially regarded ascrush cd. ; It Is estimated that Australia lias 7.000, 000 bead of cattle and 63.000,000 bead of sheep, and that one-fifth of each kind might! be exported' annually. And yet people are starving to death in half-a-loz-en countries. . The public school system ol New Or leans threatens to co'lanse ior the lack of better financial management, which sounds badly for the largest city of tbe extreme South. . ' ' Sfl W$ P! iff 'P? ' .' , ' 'Hi: 4 I 14 Tor mors tl-a n thh-9 at cms turv the ' Known to million tot over , world s ne pnly &! reliance for Ute reirer or accidents and trh. It is a icetilclnef ftbove prtco (! ps- tmt f iTnstlingf Liniment la -without an enoal. ywtailw ie iixl mauel . 'VJT iafci the eontlna- ?t 5 P !! tnflamntion impossible. ""J, Creation are eqoahy wonderful. Ibe Mexican n IJnimrnt is needed by somebody in every bouse. Kvsrv Cay bririn new of "ffor oft Kvrlut ecaid or ban subdued, of rheounlis martyrs re stored, or a valuable hor r ox M-red by the healing power o! this which speedily rare suca ailments of Uie UU&f AM as 01 KHeomatlcm, S-w.llt.n, stiff ete4 Mu1m7 itwras sad Scalds,, Cnta, K raises mt, nprnsi! roiiaasKi MltB and Ktlnars, ttlA.n, Iusl m Stores, TJlevrs. It'rostlfelttoa, Chllklslaa. r Nlpplss, Cslud Bruit, aad Usaeedt avary reran r eataraal eUa case. Is hrsla wUhnnt swears For the Bixtk Criuui It (-urea ' Npratiis, SiaT, SUIT Joints. Founder, STnrttema i-, Ws, Ifaaf i eases, Coat Itos, fc-r Weras, Mean, Hallow Haru, t--m kn, ivsd calls. Spavin, ., "lasbois, Old Stores, J-oii j,;, JT S'ilm apa tUa tilcrhc and arery a-ther allnseat which tine eevswatt ar Use Htntile and Kioek V. 1 ara llaale. The Mexican ftfustfiwBa; Llslmeat always cures and aovar disappoints: ami it, la, positively. , THE BEST OF ALL ' Lb r r H p ' r 1 1 (U li L J La I J FC3 C3 IZAST mm n . in.i ... VW tl, 7TT WAIX to amd ear race us rer 1. hn to any ins . spon ID. Mon. Contains nmKiriouons of srerr- turn required tow with erer I,, IVrn roods at wholesale priest in cnsntltles to snlt the purchaser. To onl; iosfunon la America Who rusks this rtirir &--taj t vitinsss. Address, MON "TOO i-tWu CO., S1 S WaJaJLva, Otiose CI. 5 OLD AMD OEUIELeTj JDs. SaxroBo's Lrvxa JxtiooratobS LiyerS I fe! t k jCnngorotorS and by th publicS for more, wan 1 35 years,; ' S 5J- with ttnpreoedentrH results. IT" SEND FOR CIRfeUt.AR. SS. T. W. SAJ8F0RD, U.D., SSS s; in urann siunurai noitmim yvs Tf , King of Cures all Scrofulous affections snA di in from ImpurMy of the blood. ' t.t Is naedkMs ta specify all, asithe snflsrsx ean usually psrcsiire thaur eanse; but aoUXht-mt, iaaaaisl cause ; out aau nwa, rtmpiu, rssm j. (Mtr, SwUingt, e-, are the mast common, as wall as maay aflattioas of .the .Start, Mi, iiwtf VTonlorM Cora of Elia&tss. D. Raxsow, Sow ft Co. : For t vnvflt of alt troubled with Scrofula or Impure H iu their systems, I hereby rscoapmend Kingr e- e Blood. 1 Dare Dean troaoiaa witn n-ai tua ior p a abUnd StttaSTTJSS to try Kin of ths Blood, which h p id "Ti blsasinr to me, as it has wdikivut ' 1 as, and I eheerfi it to aii troBb- uv, win tl as re fully Kaa. B. Vbimnuv, tZa ia,K.T. . ... ... (.. ppa Mra . WSb. v. ..tf1. will be paid to any PuMia Hwntet teslta. ally agrssd upon, for erery ewrvi.msac-' .is meats . siaepubUshea bj us wlucit is But ao :; Its Ingredisati To show ear faith la the f u4 -"aQcBae e( the K. ii.. vdod proner pciof. e oa whsa astistled that no iiiteoa-tioa is i d, we will Ire tne nanaesof sa its niei.L-. Hy afftdsvit. The above eSera were never v ty the pre pristor of any ether Femj-.y i- is uts world. Hsayttttlmsntsti 't . -r inatiaa,aaa full directions for wu. , t o tbe psm- phlei "Treatise on l.inr.4 ni Bleed," is which each bottle is fscuwu. ir j.t -.. , "K botfcisson Jf ioiar 11 ouness, or 4 to a (turn. m4 by dross Mta. li. BaeoiirlK4i A ! i-. t-s, iAlio,r',I- ! .! - , '.M l ? xt tjHiuuucu j; isrnj iviQeay lot a11 Jdlisenaes of tlie Liver, Sfconjaeh J Vegetable. 18 iieTfir f N i JDebUitatea It is 1 j Cg jCatliartioand ,.a!f ? l V ' -L r 2 f 3 rtOt fiV JS 8 - ai . :. Baa 31 if it ' EL..S WJ3 KM af" Blood laHmml.