Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, December 28, 1876, Image 4

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The Farmer's Wife.
The farmer came In from the field one day ;
His languid step and his weary way,
HIb bended brow, his sinewy hand.
All showed his work for the good of the land :
For he sows, sows, sows.
For he hoes, hoes, hoes.
And he mows, mows, mows,
All for the good of the land.
By the kitchen fire stood his patient wife,
Ught of his home and Joy of his life.
"With face all aglow, and busy hand
Preparing the meal for her household band.
For she must broil, broil, broil,
And she must boll, boil, boil,
And she must toll, toil, toll,
All for the good of the home.
The bright sun shines when the farmer goes
out.
The birds sing sweet songs, lambs frisk
about;
The brook babbles softly In the glen
"While ho works so bravely for the good of
the men;
For he sows, sows, sows.
For he mows, mows, mows,
And ho hoes, hoes, hoes.
All for the good of the land.
How briskly the wife steps about within,
The dishes to wash, the milk to skim ;
The Are goes out, the flies buzz about;
For the dear ones at homo her heart is kept
stout.
There are pies to make, make, make,
There Is bread to bake, bake, bake,
And steps to take, take, take.
All for the sake of the home.
"When the day Is o'er and evening has come.
The creatures are fed, the milking done,
He takes his rest 'neath the old shade-tree.
From the labor of tho land his thoughts are
free;
Though he sows, sows, sows,
And he hoes, hoes, hoes.
And ho mows, mows, mows.
He rests from the work of the land.
But the faithful wife, from sun to sun.
Takes her burden up that's never done ;
There is no rest, there is no play,
For the good of her house shemust work
away:
For to mend tho frock, frock, frock.
For to knit the sock, sock, sock.
And the cradle to rock, rock, rock.
All for the good of the home.
"When tho autumn Is here, with Its chilling
blast,
Tho farmer gathers his crops at last;
His barns are full, his fields are bare;
For the good of the land he ne'er hath care:
While it blows, blows, blows,
And It snows, snows, snows,
Till winter goes, goes, goes.
He rests from the work of the land.
But the willing wife, till life's closing day.
Zs the children's guide, the husbatd's stay
From day to day she has done her best,
Until death alone can give her rest:
For after the test, test, test.
Comes the rest, rest," rest.
"With the blest, blest, blest.
In the Father's heavenly home.
fingers off before I should gfvo it up.
Went to England no better there;
came within an ace of jumping off
London bridge. Went into a shop to
earn money enough to come home
with ; there I met the man I wanted.
To make a"long story short, I've
brought 30.000 home with me, and
here lam."
"Good for you !" I exclaimed.
"Yes," aid he, "30.000 pounds;
and the best of it is, she don't know
anything about it. I've fooled her so
often, and disappointed her so much,
that I just concluded I would say
nothing about thie. When I got my
mnnev. though, vou better believe I
struck u bee line for home."
"And now you will make her hap
py," said I.
"Happy?" he replied, "why, you
don't know anything about it. She's
worked like a dog while I've been
gone, trying to support herself and
the children decently. They paid ber
thirteen cents a piece for making
coarse shirts; and that's the way she
has lived half the time. She'lljcome
down there to the depot to meet me
in a gingham dress, and a shawl a
hundred years old, and she'll think
she is dressed up. Oh, she won't
have no clothes after this oh, no, I
guess not!"
And with these words, which im
plied that his wife's wardrobe would
soon rival Queen Victoria's, the stran
ger toro down the passage way again,
and getting in his old corner, where
he thought himself out of sight, went
through the strangest pantomime,
laughing, putting his mouth into the
drollest shapes, and then swinging
himself back and forth In the limited
space, as if he were "walking down
An Inside Ticir of Louisiana Politics.
HOW HIS SHIP CAME IX.
An AffectinglStory of; Struggle, Pa
tience and Triumph.
I ran across what first struck me as
n very singular genius on my road
from Springfield to Boston. This
was a stout, black-whiskered man,
who eat immediately In front of me,
nnd who indulged, from time to time.
In the most strange and unaccounta
ble manoeuvres. Every now and then
he would get up and hurry away to
the narrow passage that leads to the
door in these drawing room cars, and
when he thought himself secure from
observation, would fall to laughing in
the most violent manner, and confin
es the healthful exercise until he was
as red in the face as a lobBter.
As we neared Boston these demon
strations inoreased in violence, save
the stranger no longer rau away to
laugh, but kept his seat and chuckled
to himself, with his chin deep down
in his shirt collar. But the changee
that those portmanteaus underwent!
He moved them here, there, every
where; he put them behind him, In
front of him, on each side of him.
He waB evidently getting ready to
leave, but, as we were yet twenty-five
miles from Boston, tho Idea of such
early preparations were ridiculous.
If we had entered the city then, the
mystery would remain unsolved, but
thestranger at last became so excited
that he could keep his seat no longer.
Some one must help him, and as I
was the nearest he selected me. Sud
denly turning, as if I bad asked a
question, he said, rocking himself to
and fro in his chair the meantime,
and slapping his legs, and breathing
hard,
"'Been'gone three years!"
"Ah!"
"Yes, been in Europe. Folks don't
expect me for six months yet, but I
got through and started. I telegraph
ed them at the last station ; they've
got it by this time."
As he said this he changed the port
manteau on his left to his right, and
on the right to the left again.
"Got a wife?" said I.
"Yes, and three children," he re
turned, and he got up and folded his
overooat anew, and hung it over the
back of the Beat.
"Yon are pretty nervous over the
matter, alnt you?" I Bald, watching
his fidgety movements.
"Well, I Bhould think so," he re
plied; "I halnt slept soundly for a
week. And do you know, ' ho went
on, glancing around at the passengers
and speaking in a low tone, "I am al
most certain this train will run off
the track and break my neck before I
get to BoBton. Well, the fact is, I
have had too much good luok for one
man lately. The thing can't last;
'taint n iral that It should.
Broadway," a full-rigged metropoli
tan belle. And so on till we rolled
into the depot, and I plaoed myself
on the other car, opposite the stran
ger, who, with a portmanteau In each
hand, had descended and was stand
ing on the lowest step, ready to jump
to the platform. I looked from his
face to the faces of the people before
us, but saw no sign of recognition.
Suddenly he cried, "There they
are,' and laughed outright, but in a
hysterical sort of a way, as he looked
over the crowd. I followed his eyes
and saw some distance back, as If
orowded out, shouldered away by the
well dressed and elbowing throng, a
little woman In a faded dress and
well-worn hat, with a face almost
painful In its intense but hopeless ex
pression, glancing rapidly from win
dow to window asjthe coaches glided
in. She had not yet seen the stran
ger; but a moment after she caught
his eye, and In another instant he
had jumped to the platform with his
two portmanteaus ; and making a
hole in the crowd, pushing one here
and there, and running one of his
bundles plump Into the well devel
oped stomach of a venerable looking
old gentleman in spectacles, he rush
ed toward the place where she was
standing. I think I never saw a face
assume bo many different expressions
in so short a time as did that of the
little woman while her husband wa3
on his way to her. She didn't look
pretty. On the contrary she looked
very plain, but someway I felt a big
lump rise in my throat as I watched
her. She was trying to laugh ; but
God blesB her, how completely she
failed In the attempt! Her mouth
got into the position, but it never
moved after that, save to draw down
the oorners and quiver, while she
blinked her eyes so fast that I suppose
she only caught occasional glimpses
of tho broad shouldered fellow who
elbowed his way toward her. And
then, as he drew close and dropped
those everlasting portmanteaus, she
just turned completely round, with
her back toward him, and completely
covered her face with her hands.
And thus she was when the strong
man gathered her up in his arms as if
she had been a baby, and held her
sobbing to his breast. There was
enough gaping at them, heaven
knows, and I turned my eyes away a
moment, and then I saw two boys in
threadbare roundabouts standing
near, wiping their eyes and noses on
their coat sleeves, and bursting out
anew at every fresh demonstration on
the part of their mother. When I
looked at the stranger again he had
his hat drawn over hiB eyeB; but his
wife was looking up at him, and it
seemed as If the pent up tears of those
weary months of waiting were stream
ing through ber eyelids. .
To tho Editor ot the Inter Ocean.
JNew Orleans, La., Dec. 12, 187G.
Your telegrams from Louisiana have
long since informed your readers how
the White League Reformers tried to
buy an electoral vote forTilden. But
much more yet remains to bo told.
Other electors besides those mention
ed were offered bribes. Tooneof them
tho agent of Reform said: "You can
visit the bank and see the gold if you
doubt the reality of our offer. With
thatsumyou can go to Europe and live
there. It will make no difference
there to you what is said or done
her."
Jf Jt be true, as some assert, that
"every man has his price" then the
Republican electors must value'them
selves very highly, tor not one of tiie
whole number could be bought for the
prioe which the champions of Reform
and Honesty offered them.
When we reflect that the electors
were selected without any special care
or inquiry and that no legal penalty
would be inflicted if they vote for
Tilden instead of Hayes, and then con
eider the immense bribe offered, the
result speaks well for the honesty of
Republicans everywhere. Some to
whom these offers were made are poor
men, who have devoted many years
of the best part of their live9 to the
support of the party, without receiv
ing the recognition and reward due
their services yet they could not be
tempted to betray their trust. Dem
ocrats call themselves tho party of re
form, and denounoo Republicans as
the party of plunder, yet we find
the self-styled party of reform offering
bribes and the party of plunder refus
ing to take them. The true name of the
Democracy of Louisiana is, "The Par
ty of Murder and Perjury."
LiEsa
fejcxycjgpwr t v, iti'.ta
Ahont Building Fires.
In theWest, especially tho prairie
region thereof, where soft coal is
much used for fuel, in still or muggy
weather, difficulty is sometimes ex
perienced in securing a-good draft at
first, and, as a consequence, the stove
gives outsulphuroussmokeand fumes
at the covers and cracks, instead of
sending It up the chimney. To obvi
ate this a light fire of shavings or pa
per placed on top, after the kindlings
and coal are laid underneath, will by
the force of heated air ascending the
chimney, thereby establish an upper
current at once, and create a draft, and
as a rule allow tho smoke from the
fire lighted below, to pasB immediate
ly off by the flue, instead of diffusing
itself throughout the room.
Ask the recovered
Dvsnentics. Bullous
sufferers, victims of
Fever nnd A cue, tho
mercurial diseased
patient, how they re
covered health. cheer
ful spirits nnd good
appetite, they will
tell you by takh'g
SIMMON'S
IilVER
REGULAROR
Tlie Clienpcst, Purest, ami Best Fam
ily ill ertlclncs intnc World.
For DYSPEPSrA. CONSTIPATION, Jaundice.
Bullous attacks, SICK HEADACHE, Colic. De
pression of Spirits, SOUR STOMACH, neart Burn,
l-c..fcc.
This unrivaled Southern remedy is warranted
not to contain a single particle of MERCRUY, or
any Injurious mineral substance, but la
PURELY VEGETABLE,
containing those Southern Roots and Herbs, which
an all-wise Providence has placed In countries
where LIverDiseasas most prevail. It will pure
all I)incnsin caused by Derangement of tho
liivcr and Ho'vels
The SYMPTOMS of Elver complaint are a bitter
or bad taste in the mouth; Pain In the Back, Sides
or Joints. often mistaken for Rheumatism; fjour
Stomach; Loss of Appetite; Bowels alternately
costive and lax; Headache: Lossof Memory, with
a painful sensation of having filled to do some
thing which ought to have been done; Debility,
Isoxr Spirits, a thick yellow appearance of the
Skin and eyes, a dry Cough oaeji mistaken for
Consumption.
Sometimes many of these symptoms attend the
disease, nt others very few; but the Elver, the larg
est organ in the body. Is generally the seat of the
disease, and If not Regulated In time, great sufler
lng. wretchedness and J) JJATII will ensue.
I can recommend as on efficacious remedy for
disease of the Elver, Heartburn and Dyspepsia,
LKWISCI.WUNDER,
lfcSMasterStreet.
Assistant Post Master, Philadelphia.
"We nave tested Its virtues personally, and know
that for Dyspepsia, Btlllousness, and Throbbing
Headache, It is the best medicine the world ever
saw. We have tried forty other remedies before
Simmons' Elver Regulator, but noneof them gave
us more than temporary relief: but the Regulator
not only relieved, but cured us," Ed. Telegraph t
Messenger, Macon, Ga.
Manfactured by
J. H. ZELIN & CO.,
3IACOX, GA., and PHILADELPHIA.
Itcontalns fourmcdlcal elements nerer unltedln
the same happy proportion in any other prepara
tion, viz: a gentle Carthartlc. a wonderful Tonic,
an unexceptionable Alterative and certain Correc
tive of all Impurities of the body. Such signal suc
cess has attended Its use, that it is now regarded as
THE EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC
For all diseases of the Elver. Stomach and Spleen.
Asaremedyln
MALARIOUS FEVERS. BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
DYSPEPSIA. MENTAL DEPRESSION. REST
LESSNESS. JAUNDICE.NAUSEA.SICK HEAD
ACHE, COLIC, CONSTIPATION and BILLIOUS
NESS, IT HAS NO EQUAL.
fJA TTTTCi IV. As there are numerous im
y kj x zuiT . ltnttnn, 0rerfcd t0 tne pub.
lie, we would caution the community to buy no
Powders or Prepared SIMMONS' LIVER REGU
LATOR, unless In our engraved wrapper, with the
trade mark, stamp and signature unbroken. None
other Is genuine.
J. H. ZELIN fc CO.,
fllncon, Ga., and Philadelphia.
Your valuable medicine, Simmons' Elver Regu
lator, has saved me many Doctors' bills. I use It
for everything it is recommended, and never knew
it to fail. I have used it in Colic and Grubbs, with
my mules and horses, giving them about half abot
tle at a time. Ihave not lost one that I gave It to.
You can recommend It to every one that has Stock
as being the best medicineknownforall complaints
that horse-flesh is heir to.
E. T.TAYLOR.
yl Agent for Grangers of Georgia.
"Go Home."
CITY HOTEL
Tenth Btreet, between Farnam and Harney,
Omaha, Nch.
"S NEAR THE BUSINESS CENTRE C-F TIIE
x. city; open day and night; busses runningto and
from the House making connection withall trains
East, West. North andSoutn. We solicit a share of
the patronage from Southern Nebrasks. and the
traveling public generally. Give special rates to
U.S. Jurors, or any parlies remaining with usany
length of time.
E. T. PAGE, Proprietor.
1856 os-the-sd 1877
THE
I
r
OLDEST PAPER IN NEBRASKA
T
"I
AND
THE BEST LOCAL PAPER IN THE STATE !
THE ADVERTISER IS IN ITS
TWENTY-FIRST YEAE.
Its hiBtory Is co-equal and co-extensive with that of
NEMAHA COUNTY AND SOUTHERN NEBRASKA.
Its politics are
Anti-Democratic and Anti-Monopoly!
-IN A WORD IT IS
Recently a young man was driving
a loaded team near Smithfield, E. I.,
when the linch-pin of the wagon
broke, throwing the driver out, and
rolling a barrel of cider upon him, and
breaking hia leg in two places. In
this sad position he availed himself of
the intelligence of a St. Bernard dog,
which had accompanied him. Tak
ing from his pocket a pencil and piece
of paper, and writing what had be
fallen him, he tied the paper to the
dog's collar, and told him to "go
home." The faithful dog did so, and
help came to hi3 assistance within an
hour. Boston Herald.
A Wreck of a Man.
you
Know. I've watched it. First it
rains, then it shines, then it rains
again. Ii rains so hard you think It's
never going to stop : then it shines eo
bright you think it's always going to
shine; and just as you're settled in
either belief, you are knocked over
by a change to show you that you
know nothing at all about it."
"Well, according to this philoso
phy," said I, "you will continue to
have sunshine because you are ex
pecting a storm."
"It's curious," he returned, "but
the only thing that makes me think
I'll get through safe, is because I
think I won't."
"Well, that Is curious," said I.
"Yes," he said. "I'm a machinist
made a discovery nobody believes
in ft; spentall my money trying to
bring it out mortgaged my home
all went. .Everybody laughed at me
everybody but my wife spunky
IJttle woman she would work her
What wreck is so shocking to be
hold as the wreck of a dissolute man
the vigor of life exhausted, and yet
the first steps In an honorable career
not taken In himself a lazar-houeo of
disease, dead, but, by a heathenish
custom of society, not buried !
Rogues have had the Initial letters
of their title burnt into the palms of
their hands even for murder. Cain
was only branded on tho forehead ;
but over the whole person of the de
bauchee or the inebriate, the signa
tures of infamy ar written. How na
ture brands him with stigma and op
probrium ! How she hangs labels all
over to testify her .disgust at his exist
ence, and to admonish others to be
ware of his example! How she loos
ens all his joints, sends tremors along
the muscles, and bends forward his
frame, as if to bring him upon all
fours, with kindred brutes, or to de
grade him to the reptile's crawling !
How she disfigures his countenance,
as if intent upon obliterating all trac
es of her own image, so that she may
swear that she never made him! How
she pours rheum over his eyes, sends
foul spirits to inhabit his breath, and
shrieks, as with a trumpet from every
pore of his body, "Behold a beast !"
-ft. Y. Varieties.
John Morley says tho very best
thing he can think of as happening to
a young man is, that he should have
been educated at a day school in his
own town ; that he should have op
portunities also of following the high
er education In his own town ; and
that at the earliest convenient time.
he should be taught to earn his own
living.
Dr. Allen Thompson, at the recent
meeting of the British Association,
exhibited and described two skullB
from the Adamite Isles, and referred
to the custom the natives had of pre
serving portions of their friends' skel
etons and wearing them as ornaments.
The skulls of their husbands were ac
tually worn upon the shoulders of
widows.
Elizabeth Oady Stanton laughs and
chuckles, and giggles and grunts, and
chokes, and squeals, over the existing
political muddle, because as she says,
"there is for once, a terrible muss,
with no woman in it to lay the blame
upon."
"A Complete Pictorial History of the Times." "The
Best, Chcapest.and Most Successful lumily
Paper in the Union."
HARPS R'SWEEKLY.
SPLENDIDLY ILLUSTRATED.
NOTICES OF THE PRESS.
HARPER'S WEEKLY should be in every fam
ily throughout the land, as a purer, more In
teresting higher-toned, better-illustrated paper Is
not published in thts or any other country. Com
mercial Bulletin. Boston.
The Weekly is the only Illustrated paper of the
day that In its essential characteristic- is recog
nized as a national paper. Brooklyn Eagle.
The leading articles m Harper's" Weekly on polit
ical topics are models of high-toned Discussion, and
its pictorial illustrations are orten corroborative ar
guments of no small force. Examiner and Chroni
cle, X. Y.
The Weekly has to a still larger degree distanced
all competitors as an Illustrated newspaper. Its
editorials are among the most able of their kind
?IV?lts otner reading matter Is at once learned,
brilliant, and amuslni;. Itslllusti-ntionsamxiuuu-ant
and ol rare excellence. Christian Advocate, X
TRTtMS.
Postage free to all subscribers In the United States
Harper's Weekly, oneyenr ft oo.
?t Includes prepayment of TJ. S. postage by tho
publishers.
Subscriptions to Harrer's Magazine. Weeklr and
Bazar, to one address for one vear. smm- nr nvn
of Harper's Periodicals to one address for one year
57 ,C0: postage free.
An extra copy of either the Magazine. Weekly
or Bazar, will be supplied gratis for every Club of
Five Subscribers at H00 each, In one remittance:
or Six Copies for f20,00, without extra copv ; post
age free.
Back numbers can be supplied at any time.
The Volume? of the Weekly commence with the
year. When no time is mentioned. It will be under
stood that the subscriber wishes to commence with
the number nextaftcr the receipt ot his order.
The Annunl Volumes of Harper's Weekly, in
neat cloth binding, will besent by express, free oi
expense, for $7.00 each. A complete set, comprising
20 Volumes, sent on receipt of cash at the rate ot
$3.25 per vol.. freight ut expense or purchaser.
Cloth Cases for each volume.suitablefor binding,
will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of il.QO
each.
Indexes to each volume sent rrratis on rprnint nf
stamp.
Xewspapers are not to copy this advertisement
n iiiium me express oruer oi Jiarpcr it Brothers.
Address
HARPER & BROTHERS, Xcw York.
ilici Jonrna
John MoPhsrson.
DEALER IX
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING,
GBOOBRIES,
JZATS AMD CAPS, HOOTS AJSD SHOES: ,
QUEJEIsrS'W.AJRjE,
GLASSWAEE
and all other articles kept In a general stock.
COUNTEY PKODUCE
G?l1EIN' XIV EXCHANGE 3TOI2, GOODS.
72 Main Street, Brown ville, Nebraska.
Free to do right, free to approve honesty or denounce corruption, because
no political or religious ring or clique owns any part or parcel jjn it, and
it owes indorsement to no man except to him who has acquired the right
to be indorsed by discharging his duties well and honestly as a private citi
zen or a public official.
THE ADVERTISER believes in Free Thought, Free Schools, Free
Politics, and the broadest individual liberty, consistent with the rights of
others; and that every Individual, South, North, East and West, should be
protected in the enjoyment of those rights by the General Govornment in
obeyance to the guarantees of the National Constitution.
3?EITJ, NEIVXA-XiA. COUNTY, NEBKASKA.
THE COURSE OF STUDY
Extends throngli five years two in the Elementary Xormnl, three in the Advanced Nor
mal. It is the almof the School to secure thoroughness in scholarship, and still and abll
ity In the special work of teaching.
FACULTY FULL. TUITION FREE.
First class Boarding Hall; beautiful location ; ample buildings.
Fall term opened September 2nd ; Winter term, January 6th, 187G; Spring term, April 6tb
For information address the Principal, s. ;r TJ310'2&TS01X'-
-AS A. LOCAL lElA-ZPZEiR,,
RE YOU GOING TO PAINT?
tab? 3aSE23EJ,XJ,3S33E BROS
Ssr.c'KS p yruipjn dsiut g&ssssafiS?
lunce as long as any H f Iff 1 1, fl J f fl I fl I otherpalnt. Isprepar
ed roady for nso In UlS LIB I UHi. 1 ill I or any cofordeslred
IS On mnV thonSnnrfS nf thf finPfct. hnHrHnirc of fhm rnntt7 Ti,nn- r.r -n-l.t.V.
have been painted six years, and n ow look as well ns when first painted. This CHEMI
CAL PAKsT has taken first Premiums at twenty of the State Fairs of the Union. Sample
card of colors sent free. Address
JIILLER BKOS., 100 Water StClcTcland, O. or X. Y. Enamel Paint Co., 10S Chambers St., X. T
"When I have work todo,' 6aid an
old toper, "I always set about doing
it." He had been "setting about" in
a bar-room for years.
As usual, we are threatened with
the English custom, which prescribes
bare necks and shoulders as tho only
evening dress.
"What these niggers want," said a
Florida man, "is education." Then
he picked up his shot-gun and started.
D. Be COLHAPP,
Manufacturer of
Uiurtestionably the lest sustained xcork of the kind
in the World!"
HARPER'SMAGAZINE.
ILLUSTItATED. "
NOTICES OP TIIE PEESS.
fJiHE MAGAZINE has attained In Its one quarter
J- century and more of existence to that point
where It may be Bald of It. In the words of Dr.
Johnson. "It Isvaln toblameanduselessto praise."
The lustre of its long-ago-attained reputation has
luticiKi-u ns me years uave passed, and its future
seems as briuht If not brighter than at any tlmo
since tho golden hue of prosperity settled around
Its latter and best years. Brooklyn Eagle.
Ilarper's Monthly is marked by thesame charac
teristlstics which gave It circulation from the first
with the better class of readers. It combines read
ing matter with Illustrations In a way to make clear
and vivid the facts presented. Pictures merely de
signed to catch the eye or the ignorant are never
Inserted. Chicago Journal.
TKHMK?
Postage free to all subscribers in the United States
. .I,Iarler's Magazine, one year. f i oo
V,,n?lude3 Prepayment of U. S. postage by the
publishers.
Subscriptions to TTnrnnr's'Arnr'nTlnn Woolrlt-onr
Bazar, to one address for one year, ?10: or, two ol
iraperr's Periodicals, to one address for one year
? : postage free,
An extra copy of either tho Magazine, Weekly
or Bazar will be supplied gratis tor every club ol
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THE NEW YOEK LEDGER,
No paper Bent from the office unless paid for in advance.
ST. NICHOLAS,
"The .King of all Publications Issued
for tlie Young on eltiier side of the At
lantic." Southampton England) Observer.
The third voIumeofthtsIncomparobleMagazine is
now-completed. With Its eight hundred royal oc
tavo pages, and its six hundred illustrations. Its
splendid serials. Its shorter stories, poems, and
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ST. NICHOLAS for 1877,
Wear, profoundly grateful for tho generous and
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the renewed and new subscriptions to the ledger
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another, the price is never permitted to be an ob
stacle In our way.
llfA l.nA nn- n 1 mn .n ,
? doSer ss f gisgassssj feffSSJ!
Which opens with November. 1876, begins a short
and very entertaining serial from theFrench. "The
Kingdom or the Greedy," a story adapted' to the
Thanksgiving season. Another serial, of absorb
ing Interest to boys,
CH1S OWX MASTER,''
By J. W.Trowbridge, author ol the "Jack Hazard. '
Stories," begins in the Christmas Holiday Sumber.
Besides serial stones, Christmas stories. lively
Spurgeon, in a sermon, told the
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public interest to the negleot of do
mestio duties : "Let the buttons be on
the shirts, let the ohildren'e socks be
mended, let the roast mutton be done
to a turn, let the house be as neat as a
new pin, and the home as happy as a
home nap be."
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Every pains taken to give pleasing and be
coming positions. None but
PIRST CLASS "WORK
allowed to leave my pnllery. A full assort
ment or PICTURE FRAMES, of all styles
and Rrades on hand. ALBUMS, LOCKETS
COLORED PICTURES, ana many other
PLEASING OSNAHENTS FOR THE PABLOS
Persons "wishine PhotoeraDh work donnin
the best style, at lowest prices, should not
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ROBERT BOXXEK. Publisher.
William and Spruce sts.. yew or..
"TETTER HEADS,
U BILL HEAD
Xeatly.printcdat llii&offlce.
some astonishing illustrations of Oriental sports.
with drawings by Siamese artists. The Christmas
Holiday Humbrr of St. Ntcliolas, superbly illustrat
ed, contains a very interesting paper.
"THE BOYS OF MY BOYHOOD,"
By William Cnllen Bryant; "The Horse IIotel,"a
lively article by Charles A. Barnard, splendidly il
lustrated ; "The Clock in the Sky." by Richard A.
Proctor: "A Christmas Play for Homes or Sunday -
I Schools." by Dr. Eggleston , "The Peterklns' .
Christmas Tree,"by J.ucretla r.iiale: "roetry and
Carols of Winter," by Lucy Xarcom, with pictures.
Do ?fot Fail to Buy St. Nicholas for the"
Chsiatmas Holidays, Price 25 cts.
During the year there will be interesting papers
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land, George JlaePonald, Sanford B. Hunt, Prank J!.
Stockton, and others.
There will be stories, sketches, and poems, or
special Interest to girls.by JarrietPrescoapofortl.
Susan Ooolidge, Sarah IVintcr KeUogv.J3teab'th.StH- .
art Phelps, Louisa Alcott, Lueretla Pi Hale. Celia
Thaxter, Mary Mapes Podge, and many others.
There will ne also
"TWEL VE SKY PICTURES,"
Bv Professor Proctor, the Astronomer, with maps, -showing-The
Stars of Each ifontb." which will be
likely to surpass In Interest any series on popular
science recenu y " wcjiuuhw
AMUSEMENT AND INSTRUCTION, with
FUN ASD FROLIC, and WIT AND WISDOM. -will
be mingled as heretofore, and St. Nicholas
will continue to delight the young and give pleas
ure to the old;
Tlie London Zilterary World saya :
'' There U no magazine for tlie voiina that cante said. '
to equal this choice production o"ScRinNEB's press.
Alt the articles, rchether in prose or rhyme, are throb
bing urith vitality. 1 M literature and artis
tic illustrations are both superb."
The London Daily Jfews says: "We irtsh we
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