The Expositor, 1869-02-26, Page 1conimunie, curet opertic.
.. , .
terough the Ble )13 SW il,A, T .RINk
an.1 other fluitle.
Ile teae=poortrul in ordinary cashi is t
,
tua spoofiftti ill chroniedieease
. . -y afflicted the patient f=lr years.-- ,
j. p.eieareat Remedy, bet La itmecen:
, .
., :it isunlike ail pretaireti9us 0,
arsapard
Therefor:e, aiwaya ask for Dr. Ina's-Ewer::
! Sareapariiiim—take tie other---atee, that tlic
word Sireaparilliau is on the latielei! eact
1 ,bettle—and, IL .1.1e. It, &salve -at.:
IA
GLNIT OF IIIIA_LTIT It071.1LI:Lit T -P -:JN
,T -1.11.1A71171713. SEITILT:krx.ILLTAITriLV
::The Properties of its litcreet
PARIKALIAN..—.The prrm‘rt.11,1-. of tilt
won;'. i....t1 in 7...N. .-.!.:.c k ,. a, .1. i; t :a. cr.;:i- 1... 3.saratee-
e ea.., et taus a axillio,t t.:•.a11';e4 f`l..; lt-J1 A tti'' ‘It.inte;
.a. r..mttIe44-.--1. ft.% tr.1 el..:., S... 4-:. '11 t ‘. 11 I . ti et ks:ffrt111
n- 4'.1.-.. '' it: pi•ttb.x(--t fr -to. Cy: il.• It PI-- .- -r.-/..-:, BLOT
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;
. ..,
10171C.3-tr/V- iTruai • ese- = sateareara ''rt1 nese
•-izlx 1. 1.*.rt. 1:, :A. -:,.:,:r I. IA .‘N, t .z.. ; t. ' Is -,Wt'
;if 1-
11 v: -.T. 1" .T1 -..1i. rt.,,.',-.• '!. '., z, a:
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'S ,r,•-,.11 ........4 at eel AV.v,...1 r.1 -s It.; a ,4t -two;-.3
f -1.: xt LT $.- •-,.:1.1: • ! .... .1:\
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• t Z ;Ix C.tfabt.. •
. -
1 P.V.17-1Tan' A Vr.t 4rAs-71'4 nrivri."1"I'15 an'ent
, ,,,,, 1. i f :_, ;.; ,Jr, 11„ I; t.. It c...,„: ...--.1:•.; 1 * ;
. 7. hive -4444,f. taelaseciaess ic. I el' ::S r.up-
. I tx lp,t •:-3.C.-1'14•res are_ I..... , -a . :nee;
zrtf.it rr.:_-r-::..).a 4.14.! z.: ; c -_-`.1._;;;;Ito
4 =lei ss .v e isseeets: t -. t........ r 1, 4 4 11_:, */ 1, 11 1t,31.•
c-._-_1?-'.• c ,r.'.. .. it, t _Lai ft(
. ,,,z- .f....._....,,. cf.• , K.:.1. 1,--, 1,- : ',: --, r. -..1 VI- r .-/- 3-1-x-.1s,•I
'.oa ol
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:t -ht." t-.; cr vz• . - %1,-. .1 . : , c ....- ,.. , c., 1.7 ,--,
1 ,-..---air,s
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.1k fu wil .
tr. i-; -t..: .x ..4.:t : • (1•.. ';. 7 . -.' 1 1:•-‘,..1 I
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!
aaDad t .1..1.i1a43.:.:.'r.v 1r4. si. _
l'";:....1-v...i. 7.1417° DII9COV7r3.7....7a r0
r • ; 1 , :-.1. --e,:- 1; 4 On. tilc
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17 t.T....:.::-. t .), 1 7..4 4...T.: ,1 1- .- " 1-*
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2. * -,:t ( .. ',.* .4.• :-.:*.' :: .. • * *.;4k e \
,. 1.;-..: t .
. ;
Ifl3rirEg,
t
Not .43% -to in a til.ousand. -would
:
Dr
Itaittway's tr;e:a.t-ment
t ser-sred, arid an. N.V.hc,i• mazy- 13.e.
; seized svitb-
V-eNrer, rr y1)11, 0 id 1.7te-vers,
C]il1s axxii 17eNser,,eve and
Agu,e, 1raiittaut.: axact
tarkt anan. imal
..-%17-Ata -veget able faser are prcvem-
tt cel and. c-ur ed. by 11.A.301Wil-1'S
• 4ssiisteci whcn req -ti Pred
-
REA= LTa
As a. prevention) when either of chese
l
maladies prevail, take one pill per c !ay, this '
I will regulate the liver, arid any defie
i . - .. , , y _,.. supply, I . .
t ceae-- ofthelicattly condition of the gastric
1 jniee,.she natural solvent of the syitem, and
, ,,„
1 secure iteaaar eieestion ; Ten to twenty
t drOps, of Rtaidy Relief, in water_as a drink
1.0.1is will sdcure-iavieoratiou and' strength
a a
v;Iierq there is weakeess, laasitude and lan- -
tor,. ansV i neutralize the poisonoiis acids,
generated fFOIn the gases of inclin,reqed food,
1 initaat asalinorl.•id humors, of the ftornach,
&a, and if 'aeize..-.1 with any form of fevers,
take the pillin. late doses a to 6„ every six
, hours, a feiii doses will elisufe a cure., 11
-have etzred;Ithe worst forrn of Yellow, Ty-,
.pheicl, Marql, Ship, and IstIhratis Fevers, in
IlieWest Indies,South America, i and my
L:trcattnent*ith the Ready Relief, and Pills,
. ,
have met with the same suecess in the East,
Ifix'7.ies,-,-t.liele fc\trs are all of one family,
ncl will rnore rea.clily yield in the r milder
forms as they exist _in tempe-rate clirriates
than in theft -more fatal types of the torrid
zoixies.- ! 1
' 0..IST -RI IDI1_11_,
. .
- - f
Taken when symptoms of cl,...77;iness. fullness, or pain
in thelleag. untsen. at s!:oniaeh,, italigesjon, costive-
mezts. 1 r!u uf. or ea,ing. sIeetlessness, bai dreams; &e.,
a-..--. ear, will on cure this diffieuLy : c'..rt,-,:vray'6
lilt's are nal.Jc.e all other pills. Lath 1.il1 conning
.,:grliins of the ac ma enrative prinr_t,les ( r ex:mots-
:dam rarest iiroactets of the vesm' able h int.:. lom,-pf
.Itt7re,..1i;u.3 some cf them never before nse.I as in.edi-
Leine. an..1 to 1,citrourt,1 on 1 v in these 1 ilb-$. In i -rehas-
g, Pill.-.. see that cue c fihelaheIs i3 in arlie 1 I..=. It. R.
1111 the fae-simito 14z:flat II re c saaaway ez Co.,,
prine:1 ia Lei Ink. a cal that, 1 af.l.way's1'er:C1ab)r2
On tho o'ller label, there ay.; .7..1 pills In each box, co-
v-oro,t, v,ri.li sweet gum. 1iie 1.3 ets., per box. Sold
bY Druggists P.,111 Country Z„lerelia,nts.
-.0-r. 1-?..n._DA'A'S
SA RSAPARILL.I N
'17his.extraordina7.-re rrne is making astonishing
eures k Is t it.ea.scq. am. Tot-
1:r:.Ti;"01."Q, 1 inri,1 sittm..1 1111 1UP_
1)1 ILL (1 tho os e‘ Lion! h 1 1:3e5,
:
1 e c 1 h::s• male stKne (1 ttio-
hingF. , ( f 1 1 „re and 1 ,r( Ltims
Tumors, ;..:_waltings of
dia,iu 1.1
I a vp.r!;'.elung tlis:,-harges in La lies, a1e cIr s
110:1r.itht.s. ant (1.4;,;q12r:C6 Iona the
tho 1n1: pc i feet erzlItivol-„nownl.
In (..ise..1 s .1An.1 c n't -Urinary
'a• -:.ss I3riglit'SJ;iiease, in
cf 1.111.1e, tt.h.t 141 etzSes1 ILCIO 11 Q urino
"c(!nere..icnt, whit()
;_ 1 (r aU, 1 en hko Cio white (.f en e;fir.. et
I Avir.;:l. (ho
1.1.1 tJ 1 1,11.1m.e1-14,11 con,. iro to
1. 1:11 L. ZIVVYIP ejut i.ja.t. hag111
aro
t7le 1 1:..ct I; re hva., and. a
11 -.11(11:he i,raek.11,„.a; toins,
11.1- . .ce t1
1• I1. 1.11 ;.11,1..1.11 er:1r Oat3‘t.1 .toci
ca pa:;e1.t 1,1j3 n
crooLlote,
tall ut,Iter agents , ci lie...1110584
• ciVen. triol. lic.n.:IreIscr .,:t.ns who.
c.,;uli.elied to 1,e0 ea; lic..ers to floa-_ro
tv.Z:ter. 1.Y.' Inc tkiX1.101CC.:n
lye,..r4-4.
an,1 by Oral tett;..;::Oetift:iy ihreo t½s oer
y, (01Jo3.e.1. the1 h.tty ctpa...sln'sthctr watcr
111 all -eases see that tho wer I "
ari LI (Ja th1tiicII etieti botde, anti on 1110 front -of.
die Label 11. R L RA)VTAY'8
1.1 UL\1T Price one dollar per bottle, six bottles
er .fivadellers.
-AUclress
JOHN RADVIAY, rfl. 0. & CO.,
vazz,i4bIMQIWTEtadita.
e
SOLD; I3Y DRUGGISTZ,
,
ROSS 4 Ul-X1-3N, EDITORS &PUBLI4HERS.
-kr
VOL.it:0- 12.. •
041.: 1,7
."Freedon:i in, Trade...7-.1z er y in Religion.—.Equality in Civil %eights."
• OHIRCE W. ROSS, PROPRIET6
SEAFORTH
RIDAY, FEBRUARY -261 1S69.
4' ta nt.O.N-i BARRISTER AND
iis A.'.e.erney-at-Law, ht=otlerich, Out,
Dee. Jt, ':1,-;68. 53-tf.
iTT LVLFU,1PCM, PH-YU-
"' C1AN shaea.on. eto Egmondville.
Aginoncl eine, 1.3oe. 14, 18G8. .53-th
R. W. R. SMITH, .P.H.Y8ICIAN, SUR -
JJ &c. ' pflice,—(„)pposite Veal's
t..rucery. Ites.de3.lsie,-1\-1 ain syreet, North!,
Seaforth, Doe. 14, 1868. , 53,1y
1-3 211.-ze4.017`,T M. 001.0NE11, FOR
the Coartty of Huron. OFFron and
•-•(.intt, door East of the M.ethodist
Episcopal atireit. ' • "
6'eaforth, .1/4„ 1863. 83-ly
MCI, j(, ATTO.ED.TEI. . AT LAW,
0• So ies:tpi•anCb.auedry, Convey ancer,
tc
Paris, Ot. Ai6ray to loan on farm seen-
tylf Tort13 easy. Olti.;e--First flat, Paris
,S7c14. Budd atg.
g0-ris. Dee. 11, . , 53-tf
& MEYER,-BARRISTERS
I) an 1 Aitomeys ot. Law, Solicitors in
1111 11. insolvency; Conveyancers,
N otariai b!ic, OfitJes, --43eaforth and.
Wrk,xetc.r. .3EL,ISON, 11. W. C. MEYER.'
1.0th. .IAGS 53-1y.
_ ._ • _ .
& W. AloPTII.CLIPS, PROVINCIAL
L -and Surveyors, Civil Engineers, &o.
- Ali Milliner Of UOTLVcyancing
IleaktfiesS 1u11[(11.SpaWil. G. MahillipS, COM-
inissiollo- hi B. IL Mize ,---Next door south
of sharp's ilotel, Seaforth.
Sea.forth, Dec. 14,-1&8. 53-ly
A BUIsh.;11 OP IlEATHE-EL BELLS.
rA cluster �f the flowers of the heathcr
-
plant having been sent to the Valifornia poet
James Linen, the growth of of -his iiatiVe
*bland, oecasioned the following versos
As on thy stem a thousand bells,
In fragrant bearity hing;
So round my auld rime -withered heort
Sweet recolle° ctions .cling,
Thy bells to me have, tuneful tongues,
,That ring auld Scotia's praise,
thochts conie rushing back,
To scenes o' bygane days.
Ere thorns of care grew in ray heart,
I lap ower inossy dykes,
Whaur heather linties Sings their sangs
And bninbees build their bykes.
I've Wandered ower the weary waste,
And seen it .wrapt in snaw,
Heard lammies bleat on purple moors,
Whaurseented breezes blaw.
A.178.BATIR-r8TER'i
and” ;at:erne:1s at Law, Solicitors hi
Chancery,, 1.•Z Con veyancers,
&c. 1..N1r. Archibald's Store,
Crabb!s (;otIceich, Ont. Money to
• Lend. w.. TO t: R A N -( E HAYS. J. Y. EtWOOD.
Seaferth, Doe. 14th 1868, 53 ti
-A-xT J. 1N.5.2c.,'Ll-_11.01Y, ATTORNEY -AT-•.
V sofictr.or in Chancery, Convey-
ancer, &e., U.Opp�sitehest0rC of
NV. S. itoburtsn. r Money to loan at 8 per
cent Inf:crOst, on good 1‘,Ibrtgage security on
real estate. .
Seaforth, Dee. 12..1868. !. 5-1y
W: 1rU1.jti SV1.11,4EON
kir., Den t'is,t. Artili?.ial. Den-
tures inserted wit!). allJthe latest
iraprovem The g t.xtt,st care .taken for
the preservaT:ion of deelryed arid tender keeth.
'eeth extracted. witliout pai gowns -over
Collier's 8 tore.
Seaforth, Dec. 14, 1868.
RINI9211,ONG'S 11.0T.EL, AND GEN;
ERA]. ;.:;tage House, Anileyvil lei . Onta,
no. Tais :Louse. ciff.l.s titc hest accOomoda-
tion to •t,ra-.--oll4.-.,-rs. Staaes leave daily for
Seaforth and .'Wroxett:r, connectii g with,
i
stages to 1VaLkeri;on and the 0. T. lb,,
ailWay -
at Seafor:„Ii. '• W. ARNIM`RONC-,‘ Proprietor.
• Ainlevville, April''..f3; 1868. '20- ly
1 -1--
& HOL INISTBA.D, BAR-
It'I51'4 g.i, A ttorneys-at-Law, Solicitors
in Chancery aaid.insolvency, Notaries Public
andicana, Agents for , the _ Canada Life
, hilort;h
eoTivoiancers, 801kitors for the R. O.
B
Assnra.lt30 Go N...i:',.—$:;0;000'. to lend at
8 %,' "'arms, Houses .. and. Lots for. sale.
• Seaforth, Dec. 14, I.68. ,1 . . 53-tf.
Aly N. WATSON CAN EFFECT IN -
VV . sttranee on Tewn. and Farm Proper-
ty wita, Tee Previneial Insurance Co'y- of
Caltada, 'Mc Liver Liool &' Loudon &'•':.4.1obe
In. Co., for.L:fe and Fire. The G -ore Dis-
triet Mutual .ire insui. C-0. The Niagara
Distric:, Mutmai -'• -a lu. Co. All claims will
be liberally dealt rith' and promptly settled.
Seafortn, )2'0). J, 18t. . • ' - 1.1-1.Y.
O bonnie buncli o' bloi-uning bells,
My heart wi' rapture thrills,
While thus I hail thee as a friend
Fresh fra my native hills.
ThOu'rt red and stroulwr moorland health,
And When Compa'red ivi' thee,
The painted flowers 8' tropic lauds
Aresickly things to me.
O golden days o' joyous youth,
What transports sweet are mine,
When inein'ey thio' the mists () years
Olints tarik oh auld lang syne.
Q or a blink 0' Scotia's glens,
)7ler Mountains wild arid bare;
Bound by the tics time ca.nna break,
My heart. still lingers there.
mama.
votto;.• '
she la upon the table—were long and
-
perfect y shaped. As Astley lifted the
hand t lay it on her breast, he thought
howl b autift4 it must have been, since
nowl- is hen there was not the faintest
tin t ie healthy pallor of it, was ex-
quieite . bhe wore oue garment, a long
flai ne,l shroud, • -very slightly made,
thr eign whiCh scanty ,drapery the out -
lin of her slender limbs was distinctly
vis 1e and beloi,v whieli. her deliaate
fee• wire seen, bare to the ankle. Ast-
ley wae troubled as he had _never been
before. The idea of treating this beau-
tiful c rpse as he hid di others brbeght
to, him in like ma ner, was repulsive to
Eine a id he recoiled froin it as from
the : t iousdat of ilBut how
a 1.. eacrneee• •
cold(' ie rid himself of the lovely in-
cubus It was pOsSible that the man
who hid erought it might be bribed to
tike i back ag,ain, and if they should
refuse but he was incapable of dis-
tinct hotight upon the. subject, and
could only d ermine that in any case
the beamtifiil ,. thing liefore him should
be treated with reverence and respect.
He gr itly coVere it from. head to foot
with,i loi g whit4 elotha an I ' locking
the dib r of coannunication between nis
Lech+ na and ,', room in v hich it Ilay,
threaV - himself upon the bed without
nudre Sing, for the night., was nearly
gone. ... .
Bu his sleep was broken, and his
dreams were feverish, and in some way
comic ted with -what lay in • the'next
room. Now it seemed to him that it
glide( in through the locked door, with
hands folued on its breast, and eyes still
fast c used, and stood by his bedside ;
and low- the dream was that he had
opened a vein in one of the delicate
arms, and that warm ' Hyblg blood
poure from d it • an:finally a woke
.'
with ii, cry of horror from a ghastly
dreath that he had entered the room
and found that some unknown hand
had anticipated him in the work of dis-
sectiepi. -
Th horror was upon him after he
had s
FROM THE, GRAVE.
_ a
:Igany years actu
o a yor'a American,
-
•
a medical Suudent named Astley, went
• to 'Lima. • The love of adventure was•
strong upon! him, and all he met with
in his own. coulitry was too tame to.
satisfy it. Proud of the. proiessihn for
; .
;hick he was studying, and trusting to
it for. subsistenee, strong and healthy
in body and in mind, he left the United
•
tR. LT.T.EL8K1, SURGEON CIIIRO-
J ropT, I.e.:Tex-Italy informs the public
of Seafor.th anti surrounding . country that
he is pre3.Jar....1 to cure Corns, Bunions, Chil-
blains, ingrowing .Nails, Large Joints,' and
all diseasos of the humm.i.foot.- Guarantees
succes:Aal treatanant, without pain:or sore-
ness. Uniee d.irectly opposite Griifith Davis's
- Dry Goods Store, Main 6treet. -
Seaforat, Dec.- 14; 186b 53-tf
States 'with a boid heart, and this was
the life" be led and what came of it. -
At a time when the difficulty of pro -
easing subjects . for anatomical.st dy
Was very great, and when to procuro
then) honestly, WS impossible, .as the
prejudice against .,di8section was .eo
strong that no one was to sub-
mit, the bodly of any one connected with.
him to examination, 11 is 1,re1l known
that there. were men who made it their
business to obatin, I at 11.0 SIDA11.. risk,
b9dierr., genet...Ay those of the newly -
buried, which they . soldta to surgeons,
medical stUdents, or,.iiidee;d, to any one
veho istood in need of the ghastly. com-
modity.. •'
This class; knowne as .".betly snateh-
er< and "resfirreetion men," has. died
out,- sinee there ie Itappily now little
prei edict° againstwhath as trim nit-
ly ptoved to be a _neecssai y braneli of
Sees:title-study ; but at the time of our
etOry 'their • hideous work was a' thriving
,ind profitable .one.
Rieliard Aetley, in common with the
reSt of the prefeesion, availed himself
ef their serVieess and many times in the
hlack night, his doer Wes opened to
those who did not knock, but who were
'waited for, slid, who entering silently,
dopeeieed a dread burden urain:the 'tee
.blo prepared tor its reception, Old and
yeang, reen, women and children, - all
in turn; lay -upon that grim table, find
Aetley's skilftd iustrements cut th ir (
way to . Secrets that were destined tIto lie.
`.benefit the living.' sou
Though he wtie not -hard-hearted, it bt4)4(.1••
accuetouied - .
grow.so to the sight
was.not ll
not th
at in tune he shle had prepared a speech that was
o'd '
of ".subjeets" as,. to feel rioii
thiug but , aweto calm and reassure her when she
as ',he put aside the ke bewilderfsd to find hereelf so
clristering curls of iUfaney, or uneoveLa
ore rieeded-cabiaing and reaeturing
elothed and lodged ; but she
Monieri airy* pity
ed the face of a m.ui struck 'down in thain an infant too young- to know its
the glory of his yeare-.. •
A-70TICE. —LITTLE W,ONDER 114I11.--
11 Cutting and Shaving Saloon. 'If yOu
want a good Shave, or your hair' cut;
or Shampooned, as it ought to 'Ipe, go to
the ".Litt,le Winider, South1 side of Sharp's.
'Hotel, Main street, •Seafor h. -The Bath
ltoornS' in co ',motion be opened to the
public, on April 1st. W,Li„belslci.'s 'tonic for
mit akinIt tir grow' and. ')reventin.g it.from
comina-Gut, was neverknsm. to fail. Sold
in boe]..t.:y at 1;$1 eacm. Uoine and buy it.
Seaf r .1 De.:. 14, 1853. -53tf $. LUBELSK1.
r\OWNEY HOUSE, CdRNER OF MAIN
I / and 11 -arm:. Sts. , \Vm. LANCASTER, Pro-
prietor. The p1,-q)1ieti5r would intmaa,te to
the travelling palgic and. people of the sur-
rOunding coun:ry that having 'fitted up -his
house in a comfortable manner, he is prepared
to accomodate all who sh<all favor Inin with.a
;Alt The tabic _furnigied- with the best
_ the markdf
aFordz. Li,quors.;-&c., of thc very
best brands. There are good. stables attach,
ed. to. the hotel.,
Seafurth, Dec. 14. 185E'. "53-1y
BOXETBE, II,OUSE, -GEO- CHM-
B1M, Pre.priei.or. ThiS Ho,ter has
..been la.tely enlarged And fitted. up in good,
style. His roonli art, large and well ftirmsh=
ed, -which cannot but nxike it ,a comfortable
horee for the travelling public. His table
will -be furnished with all the delicacies of
. the season. Best .brands of Liquors and.'
Cigar's at the Bar. This Hotel is also the
general Stav, Office. -
Wroxeter, May 14, 1868 21-1 y.
1
WFi_OLE NO.
otheX room Profonndly puzzled. -lien , learneik her to- read Lid white. 81
was this bm
eatiftd woman, ignorant, and also leorned to- sew and was not lauskil
almdst helpless as a child, thrown upon fel woman's. craft .;.• but -what h
him for protection, as it was clear that taugM her she. learned quickest an
best
open'
table
'oke to know it was a dream, and
g the door he looked in upon the
No change there of any. kind.
The lingsheeted • figure lay in the half
light of _dawn 'as he had seen itin the
Ian p light, very straight and still.
It was not.. until nearly noon .that
Astl y raised the covering to 1d8k- once
:t etin upon: the beautiful dead face, and
heit he did so, he Sr' with wonder,
not 'mixed. with terror, that a change
had tome upon it. He could not tell
it might be ; the deadly pallor
there still, but in scene wily the
was not the same. He looked in-
leng and Curiously. ••Surely a
ange had come over tee eyes, for
lough they were still fast shut; they
Kiked now as though closed in sleep'
ther than in death. He lifted an
elid tenderly with his finger, uncoil-
saiousness trance, there might be, but
not death.
fie was certain now that she was not
elleas)., though he could find not life in her
paktes. ...For hours he strove to call
cl.
athe spirit, until, at length color
rettirned and warmth and life, ard she
°
lay before him sleeping trauquilly like
ackild. He ha,d placed her on his bed
a4ndJ new sat by her side with -a throb-
Llin heart to await her awakening..
She slept limg, and in the weaning
light looked so pale, that he feared she
was again abc-ut to fall into the deathly
'trance frum which he had with so much
0-
'• Lathy recevered her: In his terror
-Tied out for her to awake, and 'the
id of the cry awoke her with a
alba
was
face-
t i
01
ti
1
she did not rememoer anything which
would lead to the discovery of her
friends: It was possible -that her senses
had left her altogether, never to return ; had develope& so rapidly that she wa
the lovely woman might be -a harmless much like other -women in knowled
idiot: all the rest of her days. }ler and adquireinents, but she. had no ni
speaking English was another puzzlemory ot anything before, her tram
She might be an Englishwoman—her Astley -told her the whole story, an
beauty was certainly of the Saxon type mged iier to recall something of th
—or she .might only have learned the time before, but it was in vain, hr
English laneuage ; but if so, how Call10 meinotl was clean gone. And the pr
that knowledge to have been retained sent thee was so happy they cared li
when all else seemed gone? tle for the past She WaS somethin
His perplexity was interrupted 17 belen&gso entirely to him, even h
the entrance of the cause .of at She life 64' owed to his care, and loved hi
stood at the door wrapped round in one so intensely, there being no one in th
of the bed coverings, looking: at him world whom.she knew Or loved besid
with a sweet, childish, vacant expression
that wets. touching in its helplessness.
."I must call her ,something,"
$ A . * .•
TwO, years passed away, mid Mar
that hid could not fail tp be..very happ
and thi mystery of the bond betweeia
them aiihanced its charms.
thought as she stood apparently waiting They were married, and still iived in
for him to speak, "her name shal be the -seine privacy as befote ; her hur
Mary." Then turning to her, he asked : band love sufficed for every-
"Aie you better,. Mary and, will thingeand she shrank from enteringla
you sit in this chair ?" ' world or whichshe knew nothin
She paid no attenzion to the inquiry, listley's aoquaintances had long deci
but took the proffered seat, and began ed tha4 if he was not 'mad, he was
silently rocking herself. Astley felt a least •:eccentric enough to Make his s
sensation vel.y like fear thrill through ciety andesira.ble, and had fallen
himlie must do Something, for he one Ly one, leaving none but a prof
could .not bear this He topic up a sion:d -ireTe. He had the reputati
bookthe first one that came to lizold of benig skilful, and his practice was
it was an English one—and offered large on ; his spare bours were devot
it to her, asking if she would hice to
read.' . •
She took it 'with a smile, and laying it
on her knees, began to flutter the now,ab. nothing from. other wome
leaves backwaials and forward', playing save Or that blank existenee, of mo
idly with themthaa wenty years. The rneroory
•`Goed heavens !" thought Astley to that line never returned.- -.She liv
himself, "she is a Mad imbecile at any entnity s ithin doors. Astley had o
ieite ; I must do something with her." eveni#g taken her out for a walk, a
- But it was impossible to think with the nal:accustomed sights and sounds
her before him, and taking her by the the streets had tel tier so mu
hand, he said— that 'at. never again repeated the
'Now, Mary, you must go back to riment
bed, and to -morrow--" At times a longing to introduce iis
She did not wait for the rest of the beautiful wife to his old friends a d
sentence, but ros• at once t4 do as she relatives in America Was very stro g,
WaS bidden, threw down the book, and but ft difficulties of explanation, or of
letting fail the coverlet, tliiit\had enve- deceit,: which it would involve, comb n-
loped- her, walked quietly tee' k to her ed Wlih her aversion to the proj t,
ruomalway•A prevailed, and the idea was
Astlev fastened the door, and felt as misset as Ithe thing Wat,S impossible;
though he was going - mad from sheer ((Joncluded next week)
bewilderment She must have clothes
the very first thing, and how were they FGWER OF MEMORY. —Themistoc
to be procinald unless le took some one
-an ;indent Grecian, could call by th -dr
into'his confidence ? Even if hc knew
where to go for them; he knew nothing
of whit a woman's clothes should be.
ft ,71is evident that some one must be
told of this extraordinary ad venture,
and it was equally evident that it must
be a woman in whom he con tiled, as he
required practical help of a kind that
no Man could give him.
The morning dawaed before he could
to his: homeewhich was his heaven.
Tse more years passed—years of t ie
inost perfect happiness. May diffeteal
1
1 One night, as many T1ights before, the
iitealthy 'visit was paid and Astley took
Lis lamp to exaniiiie be new subject.
Neither strong man nor tender child
,
this, time, but a young .and
woman. The dead face was so lovely.
that, it did not eeern:possible that light
ill the -clo8ed eyes .and coler in the pale
lipe azd •chseks, coulcl. make it lovelier.
The.hair had. fallen back, and g.,ve no
.Shade to the White brow, and the long
fair lashes lay in a thick. fringe , upon
the violet tinted. underlials
She was veey tall and slender, and.
her hands—due of which hung down as -
mo
ioo
th:
res
anC
foo
rec
let
her from any other woman. She
ed around with a wcndering gaze
t was almost infantine, and her eyes
incr upon me, she sat up in the bed
asked,leini in his (r -n langtatue for
. It was evident that she had no.
llection of illness and neither anx-
. .
nor curiosity as to her present
position;
ate the food that was brought to
hei with appetite, and would have risen
from the bed,' apparently unconseious
that *she' wore no garment but a b111.011d5
had. not Astley persuaded her to lie
do4'n and sleep agin. ,
e left her sleet jag, and. went to an-
of
namett the twenty thousand citizens
Atha*. ,Cyrus could repeate
name:' of eveiy- soldier in his ari
Horttaisius, one of the orators of no "
after Sitting a whole day at at a put
sale, tould enumerate from memory
the tSings sold, their prices 'and.
of
he _
f
e,
lie
aU
namels of all the pirechasei:s. Ben Jelin -
son pould repeal, word for word,
that tie had ever written, and kad ed
arrarge any seaded° plan, and he dehi- NVI/C>0 books that he had simply re d.
dcd then Gnat he could not if he would Sone*, the rhetorician, was able to re -
rid himself of the charge of her, -there- peat two thousand names in the exact
foie she should remai i in his house, 01 de1 111 which they had been spogen
and he would tell all to the woman x,hu
acted ats his housekeeper, who chanced
to be absent at the Wile, but whose re -
Ulm he expected that very day. He
would bind, her to secresy .by the most
solemn oatli he could devise, and if she
failed to keep it, why—at ary rate he
was in a mwt texrible scrape, and this
seemed to be the best thing to be done.
The 'woman returned early in the day,
-and Astley .at Onee told 11hr-ell, and im-
plored her aseistin ce. 10 his .great re-
lief she itgreed to all that lay in her
power for the unhappy girl, and a few
arrangements made Astley left the
hOuse for the.day, determined to shake
off the unpleasant impression which
the whole thing bad made upon him.
Returning- at night, he fotind Nary
comfortably clothed, and looking leas
pale and ill. His housekeeper, told
L
him that she had been 'dressed like a
having apparently no idea of is-
eistiiig herself.
It would be impossible, to describe
minutei
ly how ntelligence dawned, and
gre* swiftly in the poor girl's mind. It
was not a gradual growth frota infancy,
but came in fitful snatches. The great-
est change came first, when her face
brightened from its sweet, blank vacan-
cy of expression at Astley's approach,
and then she began to -a ait -upon him
like a loving child. He devoted him-
self to her very tenderly, almost as ten-
derly as a mother devotes herself te
to Wan ; and, on one occasion; two hun-
-dred, unconnected verses', having b en
proOunced in his healing he at once re-
peated the whole of them in reversed .
ordt% beginning witn the last v ' rse
aud 1n-tic:ceding backward, to the fist
It D. said of Paschal that he "-for ot
nutting of what he had read, heaid or
n
see') , Sir William Hamilton,
ilie on
wt-tauthority we . give the ab ve
facto, nvintions the,. case of a yo ng
Cottican who could, wlth a meomt's
hesitation, repeat "thirty-six th&ound -
names in tin, order in -which he ima
bead them, end then reverse the oi ler
alia.._ proceed backward to the fn t, ',-- .
beerz able to de this after- the lap,. of
a Nitole year between the time of b eir-
tiige.tht.ee. names and that of repeating .
. ..-..,.....____..e.
In the edge of Martin county liv
fardi:y named Cross: Just now it is
that.,Mr. Cross is unusually c
.,
owing to -The fact that a few days ago,
. ,
.1
Meee1 Ci ossforthe eleventh time, aye
biith toil daughter. On this °cells ony
MrCross said to his wife:" AIDeia,
Jae -le, this is not to be borne!" But t is .
poree, my dear," said his wife, mee 4*,
dont be angry, my love, we all have our
httiq croeses to bear. Mr. ,Crsts gr an -
ed in bitterness of spirit, 'An elia
Jam, this thing has been gore on ong
euraigh; if you have any more 1 ttle
erasees to bear, I shan't help you. •apa
a
aid
css
her child, and with infinite patience port them!