BE SURE YOU ARE EIGHT ; THEN GO AHEAD.-D. Crockett. TARBORO', N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1876. VOL. 54. NO. 2. GENERAL DIRECTORY. TAKUOUO'. Nf a Y o R Kred. Philip. Commissioners JeaM A. Williamson, J a eob FeldenheJmer, Drakd W. Ilartt, Alex. ; McCabe, Joseph Cob'). Secketary & Tmsi- Khn-Uiii i. WhKc li vat. Chief of Police Ml W. Cotton . assistant PoticK Ww. T. Hurtl, John ! Mudra, .las. E. ShaoMoa, Altimore Marnair. cocirrr. Superior Court Clerk and Prohaic Judge H. L. Statou, Jr. flijiiftr o ii-rfs Alex. Mc'Jabe. Sheriff Joseph Cobb. Coroner Treasurer Rolit. H. Austin. 8w ceyor Johu E. Baker. Standard Keeper V. 8. Hicks. School Examiners. II. II. Shaw, Win. A. I) usrsran and B. B. Williams. Keeper Poor Uous,-'a. A. Dujrirau. giWmfrlrtluri Jno. Lancaster, Chairman, Wilev Well, J. B. W. Norvitle, Frank Pew, M. Ev.mi. A. McCabe, Clerk. MAILS. UtRlVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS WORTH AND SOUTH VIA W. & W. R. R. Leave Tart.oro' (dafijr) at - - Ml g Arrive at Tarboio-(.laily) at - - SMJr. ft. trAsmnoTOM mail via greenville, FALKLAND AND SPARTA, i.aave Tarboro' (daily) at - A JJ. Arrive at THrboro' (daily) at - - I 1 It. LODtiES. I lie istn itnd lie Places of Meeting-. Concord R. A, Chapter No. 5, N. M. Law rence, High Priest, Masonic Hall, monthly convocations nrst Thursday in every month at 10 o'clock A. M. Concord Lodge No. 68, Thomas Gatlin, Master, Masonic Hall, meets first Friday night U 7 o'clock P. M. and third Saturday at 10 o'clock A. M. in every month. Repiton Encampment No. 13, L O. 0 F.. L B. Palamountain, Chief Patriarch. Odd Fel lows' Hall, meets every first nnd third Thurs day of each month. Edsrocorabe Lodge No. 50, I. O. O. F., J. G. Charles, N. G., Odd Fellows' Hall, meets erery Tuesday uirht. Edgecombe Council No. 199, Friends of Temperance, meet every Friday eight at the Odd Fellows' Hail. Advance Lodge No. 38, L O. G. T., meets every Wednesday night at Odd Fellows' Hal! gauosh Lodge, No. 235, I. O. B. B., meet on urst and third Monday night of every month at Odd Fellows' Hall. Henri Morris, President. ( Hi iU f. Episcopal Church Services every Bum at 10 1-2 o'clock A. M. and o r. M Cheshire, Rector. Methodist Church Services every third ifunday at night. Fourth Sunday, morning and night. Rev. Mr. Swindell, Pastor. Presbyterian Church Services every 1st, 3rd and 5th Sabbaths. Rev. T. J. Allison, Pastor Weekly Prayer meeting, Thurs day night Missionary Baptist Ch urch Services the 4th Sunday in every moLth, morning and nlljut. Rev. T. R. Owen, Pastor. Primitive Baptist Church Services first Saturday and Sunday of each mouth at 11 o'clock. HOTELS, Adams' Hotel, corner Main and Pitt Sts. O. F. Adams, Proprietor. EXPRESS. Southern Express Office, on Main Street, closes every inorning at 9 o'clock. N. M. Lawrence, Ageut. PROFESSIONAL CAKDS, J1RANK POWELL, Attorney and Counselor at Law: TARSORO', x. c. A3- Collections a Specialty. E Office at the residence of the late Mrs. M. E- Lawrence July 2, 1875. 8, tf JOS. BLOUNT CHESHIRE, JR , ATTORNEY AT LAW, AND NOTARY PUBLIC. WW Office at the Old Bank Building on Trade Street. Je25-tl JJOWARL) i PERRY, Attorneys and Counselors at Law. TARBORO', N. C. l lf' Practice in all the Courts, State and Federal. nov.o-ly. -yy II. JOHNSTON, Attorney and Counselor at Law, TARBORO', N. C. y Attends to the transaction of busi ness in all the Courts, State and Federal. Nov. 5, 187o. ly F iREDERICK PHILIPS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, TARBORO", N. C. 3P Practices in Courts of adjoining coun ties, in the Federal and Supreme Courts. Not. 5, 1875. ly J H. & W. L. THORP, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. PRACTICES in the counties of Edge combe, Halifax, Nash and Wil-oc, and iu the Supreme Court North Carolina, also in the United States District Court at Raleigh. Dr. G. L. Shackelford, DENTIST, TARBORO , N- C. With over eight years experience in the practice of Dentistry, I feel assured of giving satislaetion in all cases. Charges moderate. g.tjf Office opposite Adams' Hotel and over S. S. Nash & Co' store. Oct. 23, 1875. if W1 M. HOWARD, id n XX o Or i DEALER IN DRUGS. PATENT MEDICINES, &C, Sr.C.y ScC. Next door to Mrs, Peuder' Hotel, TARBOKO, N C. L.GCI8 HlI.HARI), Greenville, N. c Makcei.lus Moore Formerly of N. C. HILLIARD & MOORE, COTTON FACTORS AND General Commission Merchants McPHAIL'S WHARF, NORFOLK, YA. Keep qontantly ou band a large and varied stock of Baggiux and Ties. General dealers in Standard Fertilizers. Liberal Cash advances made ou consign ments, je S25-tf. ADVERTISEMENT. S DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES ts7 Liberal xerms oi ex. rw change lor&econa-nana crrotion. "DOMESTIC" PAPER FASHIONS, ThaBestPatternsmade. Send 5 cts. for Catalogue Address DOMESTIC SEWIN3 MACHINE CO,' W Agfkis Waxier. & NEW YOEK. 1i")a daj at home. Agents wanted. Outfit and terms free. TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine. I NO READING, PSYCAOMANCY, FASCINATION, Soul Charming, Mes merism, 'nil aaaraiage iTioue, snowing uow either sex may fascinate and gain the love and aU'octiou of auy porou they choose instantly- pa:-e. By mail 50 cts. riant Co., 130 8. 7th., Phils. 85 to $20 oer day at hoi Baranlee worth Port- l:nd. Maine. V GENTS, the greatest chance of the age. Address, with stamp, National Copying Co., Atlanta, Ga. A VVT.EK guaranteed to Agents, I Mile and Female in their own local -1 tty. Terms OUTFIT FREE. Atl drets P. o. ICKERY & Co., Agusta, Me. ADVERT IS i N C !N Religions & Agricultural weeklies, HALF-PRICE SENIi FOR Ot'R CATALOGUE ON; THE LIST PLAN. For information, address GEO. P- E0WELL & Co. 41 Park Sow, NEW YORK. ADVERTISING !N CANADIAN NEWSPAPERS $! SEND FOR OUR CATAUi ON THE LIST PLAN. For information, address GEO. P 30WELL & Co, 41 Park Sow, NEW YORK. FOR NORFOLK AND ill THE Sten PAMLK HIE Steamers COTTON PLANT ICO connecting with afford the most direct and the quickest time for shipment of produce from all poinis on the River. Through Bills of Lading given from all points on Tar River for Norfolk, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston, Pro duce is covered hy insurance, if desired, as BOOB as Bills of Lading are signed. Shipments by this line go directly to des tination without delay at Norfolk or Wash ington. The COTTON PLANT makes close con nection witn the Wilmington k Weld on Rail RoaL and gives through Bills of Lading from all landings on the River at the lowest rates. JOHN MYERS' SONS. Washington, N. C, Jan. 29, lb75. tf E. T. POOL. c A. POOL. W. E. POOL Pool Brothers FASHIONABLE I Billiard, Mooms9 OYSTER SALOON, Barber Shop AND Cigar Store, ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. OYSTERS STEWED AT ALL HOURS, treat and sweet. Attentive waiters to attend t j the needs of his guests. mrl'J-tf. I I THIS OLD ESTABLISHED BAKERY IS X now ready to supply the people of Tar boro and vicinity with all kinds of Bread, Cake?, French and Plain Candies, Nuts, Fruits, $c, c-c, $c, embracing every thing usually kept in a First Class Establishment oi the land. Thankful for the liberal patronage of the past the undersigned asks a continuation, with the prounse oi satiitacuou. Private Families can always hare tucir Cakeit Halted here at short est notice. Orders for Parties & Balis promptly filled. Call and examine our stock, next door to Bauk of New Hanover. Nov. 4.-1 y. JACOB WEBER. Manhood : How Lost, How Restored ! SStBm Just publishrd, a new edition Sajf of Br. Ctjlvbrwell's Cele- Efsi iiltATKD JissAY on the radical cure (without medicine) of Spermatorrhoea or Seminal Weakness, Involuntary Seminal Losses, Impotency, Mental and Physical In capacity, Impediments to Ma-iiage, etc; al ao, Consumption, Epilepsy and Fits, induc ed by self-indulgence or sexual extrava gance, &c. y Piice, in a sealed envelope, only six cents. Tho celebrated author, in this admirable Essay, clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years' successful practice, that the alarming consequence? of self-abuse may be radically cured without the dangerous use of internal medicine or the application of the knife ; pointing: nt a mode of cure at one simple, certain, and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, privately and radical'-. Ijf This Lecture should be in the hands of every youth and every man in the laud, Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any address, port-paid, on receipt of six cents or two postage stamps. Address the Publishers, CHAS. J. C. CLINE & CO., 127 Bowery, New York ; P. O. Box, 4586 for 25 cts. and i .US;.. RATHBONE'S a ACORN COOK. With or without Portable Hot Water Reservoir and Closet. Eoa't tray u oli-fataigssd Stws, bat get stt With all latest improvements. Largest Oven and Flues, Longest Fire Box for long wood. VentilatbJ Oven, Fire Back and Flro Box Bottom i.t sures a Quick, Sweet and Even Bake and Roast Swing Hearth and Ash Catch. Won't soil floor or carpel. Durable Double and Braced Centers and Ring Covert, Burns but little wood. Has Mica or Solid Iron Front. Carefully Fitted Smooth Castings. No Old Scrap Iron Nickel Plated Trimmings. Tin Lined Oven Doors. Ground and Silver-like Polished Edges and Mouldings. Heavy. Best New Iron: Wo ft' t crack. WAS2AHTSD SAtnTAOTOST. Manufactured hy RATHBONE, SARD & CO., Albany, N. Y. Sold by an Enterprising Dealer in every Town. W. Nov. V2, lST."..-r.iu. O. LEWIS, Aiiciil, THrboro', N. C. FALL 01 NEW GOODS J 1ST RECEIVED. Dress Goods. 1-11 . - . embroideries, UOllarS i -n a- Tr i I aild CutlS, Kid n , -r! i Vest and Shirts, Hats, Hosiery, Cassimcres. Jeans, Bleached and Brown Muslins, Ladies and Gents Boston and Phil adelphia. Hand Made Shoes. Crockery, Hard ware &c &c. and Examine. jggf A pleasure to show Good-. T. H. GATLIN. Tarboro', Oct. 1st, 1 R0BT. L1WS0 & 10.; SADDLE, UAKKSS, CCLLAK, and TRUNK MANUFACTURERS and dealers iu SADDLERY HARDWARE, WHIPS, LADIES' SATCHELS, CARRI AGE ROBES, &C. No. 277 Vet Baltimore Street, BALTIiHOBE, Tin. BLATCHLEY'S Improved CUCUM- 1!EH WOOD PUMP is the acknowledged STANDARD of the market, by popular ''El' verdict, tbobest pump lor the least money. Attention is invited to Blatcbley's Improved Bracket, the Drop Check Valve, which can be withdrawn without disturbing the joints, and the copper chamber which never cracks, scales or rusts and will last a life time, for sale by Dealers aad the tfade generally. In order to be sure that you get Botchiey's i'tnnp, be careful and see that it has my trade-mat k as above. If you do not know where to buy, descriptive circulars, tgether with the name and ad dress of the agent nearest you. will be promptly furnished by addressing with stamp. CIIAS. G. BLATCHLET, Manufacturer. 5 )6 Commerce St., Philadelphia, Pa Feb. 12, 1875. 9m The Best Household Oil in the "World ! C. West & Sons' Aladdin Secu rity Oil. Warranted 150 Degrees Fire Test- Endorsed hy the Fire Inturanei Companies. Howard Fire Ins. Co. of Jlahimore, ) December 2-i, Xb7i. Messrs. C. West & Sons : Qeutteraen Hav na; used the various oils sold iu this city for lluminating purposes, I take pleasure in re eommendius your "Aladdin Security" as the safest and best ever used iu our house hold. Yours truly, (Signed) ANDREW REESE, Pres't. 1ST IT WILL NOT EXPLODE. Ask your Storekeeper for it. Wholesale Depot : C. WEST & SONS, 113, 115 W. Lombaid St., Baltimore. Sept. 17. Cm Rocky Mount Hotel, (. W. Hammond, Prop'r. P3LTTE AND ATTENTIVE SERVANTS always at the Depot, on the arrival of trains, to conduct gut sts to thi Hotel. It is the Traveler' delight. Oct. 1st, 1875. tf TARBORO' Laqer Beer & Wine vr SALOON jesps constantly ON HAND all IV me riue vvi. ana i.ivlui, h BACCO and CIGARS, next door to J. Williamson's. ERHARD DEMUTH, Oct. 8, li.75.-tf. Proprietors. ro' Bonihnntt. Jan. 14 1876 I om I vs; s .11 Ruliijl A;ci A Tar Hoe; in C:iir.:::ivUt. Jack Thrifty is :: college bred vounff man who livs in tiii-: State in an adioinirj: county to Davidson. Ilia lather, v liliain i unity, was ! always a little weak about his boys and to please hi wife, who had the j dyspepsia and wa great novel Jack asiuo to Mr. Thriftv reader, ne uau sei jaca aeiu make him a lawyer moved to North Carolina from Con necticut a long while age, and has a brother Paul, now living near gtouington in that State, who is a plain, hard working farmer, and the lath.T of a large family of girls and bos. Jvw Jack was jast twenty -one, and concluded he would traveled about a little and mo world for himself. So his lather let him sell his hogs and what lr tle stck he had gathered about the farm, ami Thrifty told him to be sure and go to Raleigh hot, and "mind Jack," said she, "and write iro word if the ladies down there pin their dresses tighter back than i w-i do here." Jack landed in this ; city and spent several days at the Yarboro House, when at length he determined to visit Li uncle Paul in Connecticut and Seaming from Dr. Blacknall he could go to Ston- ingtsn and back fur forty lars, and having iu rag little over one hundred, 1 is board hill and took l it .I i t-.,;,, II,. ' ...,!,. m! em trail th iuu in"'" atStooineton and inquired one could tell him where Mr Thrifty lived. Hewastohlii oniv a iawD off, "'that big house you s;-e over those tree tops, said a man standing rig1-. 'sc' i r. 1 ! . i .1.' 1 . 1 . i en ins trunh. at in m-u . ...i . .-c. out atoot tor the got near the ! bonsn hf Ann i: :i V man witn his coat on . nag V "I- u;i turnips in a he d, an I thinKing mm ! one ot his undo l aui s laoorcrs, ne sung our, "Hao .' my buck, what will you charge mo to go to the ' depot and bring my trunk up here? The young man sai 1 he would go with pleasure, and Jack assured : him he would pay him a quarter if ; he wouhl. As he entered the gate he met with in old fel nf m i, it. w roiiin wneeloarr. him for another of tt he questioned him z bout how much Mr ooq ueai 1 hritty was had old worth, how many daughters CD if they were pretty, and h they were, &c. The old n plied that Mr. Thrifty was enough to give a man good and butter, and as t his gal "pretty was as pretty did.' old man turned into a lane i the stables, and Jack went w i in ',Vv re- ireat n to the house and pulled the idoor bell. A fat buxom, cheerful looking old lady made her appearance, an 1 when Jack pulled oil' his kid and handed her his card from a gilt : edged dard case, the old screamed with joy, "Why. lor' bless my soul, if this an't brother Wil liam's s n Jack 1" anil she soon had him introduced to the girls, and as much at home as one of the family. At the dinner table the young man Jack had hired to go and bring his :rank was introduced as "our son William,'' "your cousin Jack,"' ';an this is fa, cousin Jack," said one of the girls, as the old man walked in whom Jack had ecn rolling the wheelbarrow, and who shook hands with him and gave him i i .t - ' i3 hearty welcome to tueir u me a- uia i v.-! r o had done. The young man had spent a week or s iaite pleasantly, when one night, .'dr. Thrifty told one of the girls to have him break fast by day the next morning, as he wanted to go over to Hartford to hire help to get his hay up, wanted a driver for one of his wag ons. J;iek Bnoke tin aaicklv and asked him to let him drive the wag on, he would just like to show him how he conld handle the reins. Mr. Thrifty said he would gladly do so, and pay him for it besides, but J;:ck laughed at the very mention of pay, and declare ! that a day iu the har- r ii ill c M 1 vest ueiu wouia oe a pcrr.ee So the next day he was one. en a wagon, anu made omc rattling good drives, as he styled it, I otigh Mr. Thrifty called out to turn, once or twice, to take care, that ho was too reckless with that young mare. Eat wan't it a runaway when they did start ! Going down a little slope of hill Jack concluded to "let them cut," and oil' they dashed, scatter ing thincs right and left, and ma- king for the house like a lightning. They tore streak of down the new patent gate, s mashed over beo gum:;, broke up the hen house, kill ed an old hen and all her chickens, and played the wild with the green house, trampling every flower to the I rrrnnnd. Air Thriftv in nil his liffi : n.tw tion Inr.tcn rn ewAr an oath. In truth he was known all throughout ih whole neighborhood oo ".,f...fnl Panl " Itnt ha fito, ,1 now and waved his hat, he was so ! and told Jack, a rebellious- - j . , secession, stuck-up, lazv, do-noth- ing, anti-thrifty, vagabond locking j Advert upstart, to get away from the houselerner. and never sliinc his face there a gain. The girls said never mind pa, he would saon get over i but Jack waltzed away for the dcDot and took the ca Una. lie arrit rouh minus eii his way bom cot Col. Ligon s for North Caro d at the Yarbo I'jgh money to pay and Dr. Biacknali at ijrjensboro to pass him t.. ffigh Point, his getting oil place. Jack swore he never saw such a man as his uncle Paul was; that at his own home .ho had rode two h rses to death, killed two colts, and then reckoned he ha 1 knocked oil" u pile of cow horn3 as high as a lamp post, but there wa.-. more fuss made over this little mishap in yankei land, than he h.id 1-, n in e tiie . toe 'old mau s tarmiy since A little ! turnip pulli hi on in i u is studying for improve thii iv lie was uorn. i shirt sleeves and imong our young ,1 a little less croic ion, would in an ende ?rf'u:ly agn l a al point ot view. Cf) 1 TV 1 1 . aiiet. tti hi tor v irious. Compar one sense, it is aisveiy mouern in modei in another very ancient, having uj ed in old religious ceremonies. The sacred mysteries of Paganism were assisted by if, as is recorded by the Greek authors. Aristotle speaks of daneers mcnt and and action 3ime of th in his day who,' by move jesture, express passions Atheuseos says that in brought their dances fection that the greatest :udied their attitules in pr duce them in bronze to l ue in tiiis tioman as in e coDied the Greeks o e erything else. The Augustus' time, attained excellence. B a t hy lius, . Pylades w;n extended e;r pantomine and chore 11. Each had his school ;er rivalry of pupils and ed to serious disturbance Until the fall of the o a ; Hue m ncing continue 1, but u. latol v as at Uyzan .egan to taKe part, '.vii'e ot Justinan af tccording to all the ; one of the lewedest minxes, performed .h great uccess, and iave danced herseVf ns of the Emoeror. ra Ch; ana cr on t ne tage w : ii thought to into th- aflfect si ems to have been no bal Mid lie Ages, but at the he fifteenth century, when iscounti married Isabella u a spectacle of the kind such favor that it was in- Ol Galeas iscoui of Aragon a s met with such trodueed into tries besides u France was tamment. Cat iveral other coun- ery fend of enter lerine de Medici had presented at an ex- aii'i uaiiet i pense oi DjUUUjUUU livres. Ilenry 1 . enjoyed the dance; so did Louis X 1 V Oi ro he became a zealot, lallet was not firmly es- uut the Ublishe until the beginning of last century. Noverre, of thej Paris Academy of Music, having largely contributed to tint end. He says in his "Letters on the Imitative Arts" that a perfect ballet is a liv ing picture of the manners, dresses ceremonies, customs of all nations. It should be a complete pantomine, sp aking through the eyes and the very soul ;f the spectators. If it docs not without other aid clearly demonstrate the incidents and pas sions it aimes to describe, it is a mere di vertisemeut, not a ballet. It is only within half a century that women have monopolized the ballet, in which before men chiefly shone like Baldasare Vestris, cal led the god of dancing, who was so sublimely conceited that he was wont to say that hi age had pro duced but three great men, Freder ic II, Voltaire an i himself. lovo Letters- Marry you, you old cm o. no . vm j ! lou ve mudgeon ? had two wives already, ana 1 won t oe your third victim. Not I. You're not to my taste. I want no red-headed, cross-eyed, snag-toothed, dried and shriveled-up old scarecrow for my husband. What do I care for your money . I shall marry lor I he mty when I marry. I want a j husband with black hair and eyes, a une form, anu nicely-atting clothes. I want a man wdio loves poetry and the opera a man of intelligence and refinement. Don't talk to me about your cows and your barns and your houses and lands. i don't want to marry things. I want a man ! Yours, despicably, Julia Ahn Brows. TWENTY YEARS LATER. Yes, dear. Yen have waited for me all these long years, and no ODe else seems to love me now. So come and take me, and whether thou goest I will no. I always did ! ukc- auburn hair and eccentric fea tul'1 aml s'ha be happy when I au 'tress of SB your land houses ; ana oarns uiiii cows anu tilings. Y ours submissively, Julia mx Brows. jo in the Tarboio South A Spacific Against Hydrophobia. A lady met me this morning say ing, 'Did you sea that receipt for curing hydrophobia in yesterday's paper?' I had not seen it. 'Well,' she continued, 'it is just the euro I wanted you to write about two or three years ago the old Chester alley cure, it never was known tc- fail, and was usel in hundreds of cases in the eastern part of the State. 1 remember hearing of it as long as I can remember anvthing. T 1 , " 1 have told and talked, and no one would mind me. I tried to get vou to write a letter about it and now you must write, for people will not l.jlieve. They m read and for get all about it. I remember perfectly her anxie ty that I should write to the pub lic and proclaim that elecampane and fresh milk are the specific for hydrophobia, and mv nuraose to repeat the account she irave me of it, but do not remember why I did j not do so. That I may atone for i my negligence I now repeat what 1 -i , . , , r . . . , ; she so long ago told me which she now urges me to make as public as possible. In her old home in Chester coun ty, I'a., livd a German named Jo. Emcey, who used to be sent for far and wide, when anyone had been bitten by a rabid animal. He went to his patient, carrying something understood to be a root, which he himself, dug in the woods. lie milked a pint of milk fresh from the cow, put his root into it, boiled it; gave it to the patient fasting; made him fast after taking it ; gave a second and third dose on altemata days, and never failed in effecting a cure. In seme way which she 1 m - I has forgotten, his sorrer, trnn;nirr.i1 i and the root was known to be ele C3 -I 1 campane. The story, current in the coun try, was that an old German made the discovery in the days of Penn. and applied to the Pennsylvania legislature for a grant of S:i00 for making his secret public. His of fer was treated with conrempt, and he resolved that his knowledge should die with him ; but a drunk en son knew it and wrote out the receipt; making a number of copies and tried to sell them at one dollar apiece. One of them was offered to my informant's grandfather who laughed at this vender of important medical knowledge. He only suc ceeded in selling two, one of these to the man who made such effective use of it. So well did he establish the local reputation of this specific, that, in his neighborhood, the folks were not afraid of mad dogs. His reputation was parafel to that of Dr. Marchant, of Grcensburg, to whom every one in this part of the country used to go or send, when bitten by a mad dog. .'he intelligence and integrity of my informant are beyond question, and I regret that her love of pnv; cy should orevent her rfivir.tr tl.A weight of her name to her convic tioa that you have published an unfailing specific for hydrophobia. Th people of Chester Valley are not a class likely to be misled by superstition, and she ia confident it was a general or universal belief that Jacob Emery never failed to cure or prevent hydrophobia. In one case the spasms had begun be fore the first dose was given, and the patient recovered, She is anx ious you shonld publish tho receipt ntrnin n.n.1 n.fTfiin racr if atonini ana can attention to it nntu every one cuts out and preserves a copy, and is impressed with the impor tance of using the remedy at once, in caso of danger. The medical properties of elecampane are very powerful. Milk itself is a specific for many poisons, and while the medical faculty know no cure for this terrible disease, we should open every avenue of light into the dark subject. If the disease is one of the imagination, we want a specific to give confidence and cure by the im agination; but this looks like a real cure of a veritable disease. Jane Grey Swisshelm. Pittsburgh Commercial. Lost Women. . We commend to th public the following thoughts : "ias it ever occurred to you what a commentary upon our civil ization are these lost women, and the attitude of society toward them ? A little child strays from her homo enclosure, and the whole communi ty is on the alert to find tho wan derer and restore it to its mother's arms. What rejoicing when it is found, what tearful sympathy, what heartiness of congratulation. There are no harsh comments upon tired feet, be they ever so miry. No reprimand for the soiled and to n garments. No lack of kisses for the tear stained face. But let the child be grown into womanhood ; let her be led from it by the scourge of want; what happens? Do christian men and women go again. The cunning of madness in quest of her? Do they provide is left. Ho seeks to write over the all possible help for her return, or , flag its old lie. Calhoun taught, and if she return of her own notion, do j every white adult in the South be they receive her with such kindness j iieves to day that this is a white and delicacy as to secure her from man's government. Though you wandering ? Far from it. At tho J bray them with the pestle in a iaor- step she is denounced as lost Echo, friends and relatives, isown you; don't ever come to ace us. Lost, says society, erently. How bad these eirla And lost irretrievably lost, c prompt verdict of convention al morality, while one and all unite in bolting every door between her and respectability. Ah ! will not those lost ones be required at our hands hereafter. The County Skool Mom. She is invariably about iwenty three years and six months old, arid rcmanes rite thare for a term of years. She wares her hair either kut short or hanging around in rinff iets, and iz as precise in all things as. one of Fairbank's improved plat form skaies. She never laffs out loud, and S'dcium even smiles, but whei she uz she duz it accordin' tew the ras lac dowu by Murray for speakin' out and pronouncing the : i i. i inglish language korrectiy. She is the very essence of double extracted propriety, and would rather be four years behind the fashions, in her dress and bonnet, than to spel a word wrong, parse a sentence mkorrecthy. She keeps a scrap book and an album and Woe Id prefer rather to have the autograft" of some milk-and-water poet than the name of some godt man to o sixty days' note. The country skool mom seldom dies an old maid, she get married generally to sum man who has but little edukashum, and he thinks (as he ought to) that thare aint another I 1 1 - el 8Uca H"" woman on tue iacc ot the earth With all her precise foolishness, her poropous knowledges, her silly sentimantalisn, and her almost al ways mistaken manner for matter, I respekt the country skool mom; she taught me mi letters, she was pashunt when I was stupid, she soothed rne when I was fracksbus, and she often (good soul) gave me a tipit from her luncheon at noon time. May kind heaven strew snra kind ov happincs in her pathway for she iz paid pc oriy, work ed hardly, and the step mother to every body's children; she never receives from the world eny thing bettor than the most formal respekt. Josh Dili An apt Ulustrati n. We find the following excellent illustration in a late number of the New York Tribune, which will be enjoyed by every one v. ho read Grant's recent letter 'asking the nomination' for the third term : It was a great many years ago that the story was first told of Miss Ilannah Ann Stcrry, an un commonly mature virgin who had never been persecuted with inas- '. onlina itiMihnng ln.'inj,T iS tn "igorous manner in .which she shunned the face of man. It was related that Mr. Thcophilus Wim blebce, an advanced bachelor of the mildest possible deportment occupy ing single quarters ia the neighbor hood of Hannah Ann's apartments, called on the spinster one afternoon to borrow a match. Hannah Ann was not easily fooled. Folding her arms on her level breast, sho hack ed Thcophilus Wimblebee into a corner, and thus addresssd the in vader : 'Match 1 Oh yes ' Great match us you want; lou don t want no match, and you know you don t. You've come over to me 'cause I'm all alone to hug and kiss me that's what vou've come j for; but you never shall do it in the world unless you're strongjr'n I j am' and then she added in a j softened ton 'and the Lord knows you are,' A friend of llann.-ih Jinn's reading a letter from a public man tne otner uay in wmcn tne writer 3aid. 'To recapitulate, I am not, nor have I ever been, a can didate for a renomination; I would not accept a nomination if it were tendered, unless it should come under such circumstances as to mike it an imperative duty, circum stances not likely to arise' laid down the paper with, a sigh and remarked, 'Ah, how much that reminds m? of poor dear Hannah Ann.' A Tributs from a Foe. Wendell Phillips has this to say of the Southern people. If South ern character stands so high in the eye of their bitterest enemy, if their devotion to principle was so faith ful as to extract this enforced tribute to their nobility of soul from him who has maligned them and bound ed on persecution to its very ex tremes, how resplendent will their reckord be on the pages of history when impartial judgment shall weigh their motives and describe their deeds : The wild Southerner has been tamed ; he will never fight tbc flag 1 SKMMMk inW 1 is A tar you will never crush this folly out of them. Heaven forbid that I should do the white race of the South such foul wrong as to believe otherwise. respect their sinceri ty, their persistant loyalty to con viction ; 1 remember tir long suf fering, the faithful Cavalier whose party ended only when its last ad herent sunk into the grave. About Advertising. If you have a good thing adver tise it. If you havn't, don't. If you don't moan to mind your own busines, it will not pay to ad vertise. It's as true of advertising as of anything else in the world, if it is worth doing at all, it is worth doing well. We don't recommend advertising as the best way to get a wife, but we know that it is the best way to get a good trade. Don't expect as advertisement to bear fruit in one night, like the prophet's gourd. Advertising will take effect, but it takes more than one night to do it. You can't cat enough in one week to last a whole year, and you can't advertise on that plan, either. A large advertisement once and then discontinued creates the im pression that the man has fizzled. Injudicious advertising is like fishing where there is no fish. You need to let the lines fall in the right place. -V constant dropping will wear a rock. Keep dropping your adver tisements on the public, and they will soon melt under it like rock salt. Largo type isn't necessary in ad vertising. Blind folks don't read newspapers. A Discouraged Editor. He was a sad-eyed, meek-faced man, and we supposed he merely wished to give us a news item : but when ho commenced telling us about budding a barn on his ranch 190x. 280 feet, seven stories high, and ornamented with bay-windows wo thought it was time :o check him, and so we commenced : Well, we must admit that is a pretty large barn for this country but back in the States our father built a barn 825x500 fecTT nine stories high, and famished with steam elevators, but " 'IJ.tck irthe States !" mterupted our listener. Why, that wasn't much of a barn for the States. I remember, now, that when wl was quite young my father built a chick-an-coop 550x832 feet. I don't reck ollect how many stories it was high, but I know there was a cupola on it for the roosters." "About how bigii was tiie cupo la ? "we asked. "I don't remember the exact height now mistc1'," was the reply ; "but i know it was so high that the fourteen upper tiers of roosters died from the effects of the light atmos phere tho first night." Then he looked up towards the ceiling and commenced humming "Silver Threads Among the Gold," and we went out and sat down on ihu vco l-pi'c, and wondered why somebody waii always outstripping us in the race of life Colorado Miner. Not Afraid of tho Devil. A colored man named Nolson is owing a butcher five or hix dollars, and after trying in vain to collect the money, the butcher and a friend put their heads togetheruhe other Dlght and laid a plan. About mid night they called at Kelson's house, and he was awakened by a n p on the window. 'Who's dar V he called out. 'The Devil?' wai solcmuly re plied by the butcher. You is, hey Y 'Yres. I want you,' 'What fur' 'You refuse to pay your butcher's bill, and I am sent to take you to the bottomless pit !' 'You is?' 'I am ! Come forth at once !' 'Ize comin,' replied the negro as he jumped out of bed; ll can't pay dat six dollar.-- half as easy in any odder way, and de old woman is so mighty cross Ize glad to get away from home. The butcher and his friend didn't wait for Mr. Nelson to come out. An old lady residing in Ohio lost the companion with.wiiom she had jogged for many years. She neg lected to mark the spot of his burial by even a stone. Not long after, coming into the possession of a small legacy, a sister of the de ceased said to her : 'JT suppose you will new put up stones for Daniel?" 2Zer answer was a settler : 'If the Lord wants anything of Daniel at the resurrection, 1 guess lie can find him 'without a guidchoa'-d.' An old Dutchman undertook to wallop his son, but Jako turned upon him and walloped him. Tho old man consoled him for his defeat by rejoicing at his sons manhood. Ho said Veil Jako ish a shmart fellow ; he can vip his 9wn taddy. .am