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SUE CTSCIKS ATI DAILY STAR, TIIUIISDAY EVENINO,-NOVEMBER 13 1879. THE DAUGHTER OF THE DARK. On the twenty-first of February, 1857, Michael Grame, beins then twenty-eight years of age. married, and an engine ; driver by trade, met with an accident ,. wnereby he was permanently dittabled. As he was taking bin engine out of the - shed in the morning a pipe burst, a frag ment of the pipe utruck his left knee vvittt such violence that when diftrliargcd 1 from the hospital, he limped out with a stiff leg, and carried the assurance that Li, knee would be stiff all hia life. The steam had so scalded the right side of his face, that cheek, forehead aud ebb were .deeply scurred, and, worst of all, the right eye was so injured that the orb had to be removed. After the accident a flaw was discovered in the pipe which had burst. Several coniDlaints had been made of the engine before; the locomo , live superintendent was to blame, and . through him the company. So, upon llichael Grame sisriiine a ducuuieut dis- . charging the company from all further vAmi...:!.:):! :al j a i , i cnjmiioiuiiuy wiin regaru 10 nmiseii anu the accident, thev handed his solicitor a cheque for four hundred and fifty pounds as compensation tor the injury sustained by him. . , s The accident was a very sad one, and awoke s good deal of nitv for Mirhnnl Grame. He had been married just a year to uie aaugiiter of a small shop-keeper in a little Devonshire town. .She was still short of twenty. They were both young, and by and by there would, the neighbors nam sympathetically, be still younger beings looking to them for bread, and here were his trade and his strensrth taken from him in 'one moment, and at such an important period of his life. If ine accident had occurred before his mar riage, or when his future family were grown up and in the way of doing for themselves, it would be so much easier to tear. Death would have been prefera ble. That would have left his wife free. with four hundred and fifty, pounds, if not more, in hand, .and no dread of fu ture responsibilities. What good was four hundred and fifty pounds to them as they were? Neither had the least faculty for business, or knowledge of it. Supposing no children came, the money might last them seven years; but in seven years he would be no more than in his prime, and she still young, and then what should they do? Much talk took place among the neigh bow and friends. In the end, a further sum of seventy pounds reached them; fifty from a friendly society, and twenty the result of a subscription among the engine drivers and stokers of the eoin pany. Michael Grame took advice of the sec- rotary of the Independent Metropolitan Engine Drivers' Association, and invested five lfundred pounds in an annuity for bis wife's life. Thus he was sure they wijulil have forty pounds a year dyring their joint lives and she the same during her life should he die first. He could get no more than thirty pounds a year on the two lives, and, as he nut it: "Thirty pounds is neither here nor therefor two people, but forty L some thing. " It's queer if after a bit I can't iuake a few shillings to keep myself and any little ones God may send us, and she'll have all the more tor herself and them if I go first." When 1877 came round it found Mich ael Gramo's worldly affairs much im proved. He was now forty-eight years of age, Still childless, and paid secretary of the Independent Metropolitan Endue Drivers' Association. Before the accident which made him b.ind in one eye and lame he had been clever and popular auiong his fellows. As the years went on he had developed mentally, and had gath ered to himself the admiration and con fidence of the men around him. So that jn 1873, the secretary , dying, he got the secretaryship with a weekly salary of three pounds. ' In 1877 there was uo secretary of any branch of a trade's union in London more respected than Michael Grame. He was low-surad, keen, energetic, pale, slight, light-bearded and bent. Over the cavity beneath the right eyebrow he wore a black glass to conceal the un pleasant void. ' Over the other eye he wore an ordinary convex clear glass, for already he was growing long-sighted in the remaining , eye. The dark patch made, by the one black, glass lent his countenance a grotesque and whimsical appearance, hven those who knew him best and were in i the habit of meeting him daily could neTer fully divest their minds of the idea that the spectacles with the o'dd glasses were assumed for a joke, aiid' that sooner or later Michael Grame would indicate the way in which the joke lay. When strangers met him they wero always inclined to laugh, and generally did smile, at the deliberate comicality of his face."" " But Michael Grame's joke never came, nis face never relaxed. In all London it would be hard to find one whoso views of life ami things was so sincerely grave. In his youth he had been ardent and melancholic; His dreadful accident and years had tended to discipline his enthu siasm. He was religious without using any specials forms of religion, puritanical without a code, sincere out of nis natural temperament,and grave out of au unform ulated theory that men who are not grave must bo rascals. ; For a mau of his position and oppor tunities, pe wa$ welj informed. In speech and manner he was thoughtful and pru dent. Now and then the fiery ardor of a reformer would break out' in him, and for tt few moments he would fill his lis tening fellows with wonder and send them away ' mentally reeling under the weight or some startling novelty in thought. He would sit still and talk most cautiously for an hour, then all at once, and just before departing, fling out Dome, tremendous principle, or sugges tion, or doubt and then retire, leaving bis astonished fellows gasping in the presence of some revolutionary principle which seemed to threaten all order that is, and to leave society once more in the abaos ei barbarism. i , v From the day of hU appointment as secretary to the Independent Metropol itan Enrine Drivers' Association the in fluence rof this man . spread and grew. Incapacitated himself from labor, and vet closely allied to his old companions, his whole soul went into the work at his feet. The duties of bis office absorbed only a drop in the ocean of his activity. Hith er and thither he wandered, among oth ers of his kind, and those who, though not of bis kind, were stilt allied to the branch of labor he represented. He was an apostle of progress and preached the nobility of the future. , Durine the years intervening between 1857 and 1873 he had led a restless and unsettled life, now trying one thing, now another; succeeded in picking up a few shillings a week, and giving all his spare time to reading in the line of hid favorite study. All the sincerity of his nature had been wrapped up in the circle of his reading. No natural outlet presented itself to the enthusiasm of his - nature. Like an internal fire of earth, he was al ways wandering about in search of some vent for his pent-up activity, and never finding any more capacious crater than a fierce shout of approval at democratic sentiments uttered in speeches by popu lar leaders, or his own furious and some what incoherent attacks upon the system then governing the regulations of labor. He did not exactly side with the repub lican element of the country. He did not care in the least what the form of government, so long as the hard-working honest man got his rights. He was anti employer and not anti-king; he had the most complete belief in his own theory, the most sincere conviction that be waa right and all opposed to him not only wrong, but wickedly and stubborulv wrong wrong to the ruin of the individ ual, the country, the vital principle of the Christian creed. Once invested with influence and pow er, as secretary to the Independent Met ropolitan Engine Drivers' Association, he found it necessary to curb the violence of his feelings for fear of causing mis chief to others, and out of a belief that his words would lararclv and oerhaDs in juriously affect the acts and fortunes of those around him, since to his words would be fixed a semi-official value, and and he would seem to speak with the authority of the Society. Jwly m October, 1877, Michael Grame became gradually busier and busier day by day, until his home saw little or nothing of him from early morning till late at night. He lived in one of the houses in that long road on the west side of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway, between Heme Hill and Cold harbor lane. ' His absence from borne at this time was particularly trying to his wife, for, although still childless, there was at last, to the great joy ot himselt and lus wife, Helen, the prospect of a change in this state of things. Mrs. Urame was very tar from Btrons. and those around her felt most anxious about her. Her married sister had prom ised to come a little later on, but up to the early part of October the household of the Grames consisted of Grame, his wife, and a young servant girl not more than seventeen years of age, named Em- It was very hard upon Mrs. Grame to sit up, ofteu until after midnight, for him; nothing could persuade her to go to bed betore he had shut tip the house for the night. To sit up for him had been a habit of twenty years, and she could not put it away now, although it sorely taxed her strength. What added to . the difficulties of her position, and gave her anxiety of mind to increase her distress of body was that for the first time in all their married life he had placed a limit to his confidences. When he came back late he made vague replies. When he went out early he made vague excuses. Of nighta he said merely he "could not get back earlier," or "business kept mm." Ut mornings he "wanted to be off early," he "had a day full of work" before him. Once when he come home later than usual, she, being weak and full of dis quietude on account of him, reproached him with growing weary of an ailing wife. ' He went to her and sat down beside her and took her hand and stroked it softly. He pushed back the thin black hair from the faded, weak face, and takinsr the face softlv between his hands. kissed it, saying very gently but veiy nrmfy: ' "lo-nisht I ' was at -the London Gas Stokers' Society, and they kept me very later, for the thing is of importance, and I am doing most of the work." 'What tiling; What is of import ance?" "It is a secret. ' I must 'not tell even you. 1 ain arranging it all with them with committees and secretaries. We are all bound to keep the matter private even from our wives. , "Then it must be a thing of no good -no good for the wives, any way." -., "Yes, it will be good for all working men and their wives and families and fortunes, and," he rose and drew himself up to the full height of his stunted fig ure, "it was I first tliought of it; I, I tell yon, I, Michael Grame, your husband, am organizing it. Do you hear that, Helen?" "The what?" she asked quickly, trying to take him off his guard. "ihe , he paused in time, and looked at her half angrily, half reproach fully. The enthusiasm of the man had been kindled as ho spoke, and his imag- maviuu uu aiuivm ueilttveu iUUI ill 10 forgetting his pledge. He turned to her sharply and said: . : - ; "Wo to bed. xou must not wait up again. I shall be busier and busier and busier as the time lor the Urand stroke comes on. You must sit up no more." In ajreverie, and quite ignoring her pres ence, he continued his one eye burning ana fixed into space, the gas-iignt shin ing on the black glass over the vacant socket, and through tUs darkened glass a 1 J?lI.t3 1. 1 i ! ll'l 1 pool oi in iu gnaaow sinking; on nis noi low cheek amid the scanty growth of grizzling hairs: , "We have them all now. all we want the Ga Stokers, the Horse Drivers, the Postal Telegraph, tbe-; Eiver Craft, the Wapping Seafarers. AM 1H" 1 ' ' TO IB COSTtHCBDj ' AVer's Cherry Pectoral the world's great remedy for colds, couch, conmmntlon. and au agecuoui 01. tlx: lungs and throat. Will SHE "wanted to hurry. A Woman lum a Doctor and !)! . " r frusta Preacher " .' -. I Baltimore News. . A few evenings .ago. the landlady of a tavern in East Baltimore, a widow, sent for a physician to attend a man who was seriously ill. The doctor came and found the patient, an old soldier, rapidly sink ing. A prescription wait given ana m the doctor ww leaving the widow said: . - , "How sick is he, doctor?" ...... -, :. "Very sick, indeed," said the physi cian. "Will he die?" "I think he will." "When?" "To-night." ; "Will you call again?" "Yes, I'll look in again in an hour or two." About two hours afterwards the doctor again called, and perceived the veteran past the power of his skill, in fact at the point of death. "Well," asked the woman with nervous anxiety, "is there any hope?" "None whatever," said Esculapius. The widow appeared relieved. "Send for a clergyman and doctor, dear, you'll be a witness." "To what?" inquired the latter puzzled at the widow's conduct. "Oh, I want to marry him." "Marry him!" "Yes; you see if I marry him and he dies I shall be entitled to $300, as his widow, from a society to which I belong. Then you know he gets a pension from the government, and I, as his widow, will continue to draw it." The doctor was amazed. The clergy man came, but being acquainted with the circumstances indignantly declined to perform the ceremony, and the bereaved woman lives on a "lone widdy." A Tennessee Heroine, Knnxville Republican. Among the many notable events which transpired in the early settling of Graves ton, there is none so brave and dauntless as the one performed by the noble he roine, Mrs. Mann. On tho night of the 25th of May, 1795, Mr. George Mann, who lived in one mile of this place, heard a noiso at his stable, and leaving his house to discover the cause, his approach was intercepted by Indians, who fired upon and dangerously wounded him. He fled, for concealment, to a cave a short distance, but was fol lowed by the savages, dragged from his hiding place and slain. 1 His wife had heard the retreating foot steps of the Indians as they pursued her husband, and, having locked the door, sat in silent expectation, with her sleep ing children around her. Soon she heard the tramp of approaching feet. Perhaps it is the neighbors, alarmed at the firing, and coming to the rescue. She is about to rush out and meet them; but she hears their voices in a strange tongue. The horrible conviction seizes her that the savages are returning to the slaugh ter. The rifle is instantly in her hands. That morning she had learned the use of its triggers, and leveling it carefully at the crevice of the door, near the lock, she waits the result. Stealthy steps are moving along the wall; the door is pressed against; it yields; ispiirtly open; a savage is on bis hands and knees at the entrance, another behind, aud still another. Her fingers are upon the trigger; she thinks of her children and fires I The first Indian falls heavily to the ground, the second screams with pain, the others gather up the wounded and fly. . That lone woman, by her courage aud presence of mind, had repulsed twenty five savage warriors. The Indians after wards said had a word escaped her lips after the explosion of the rifle, they would have slain her and her children also. The perfect silence impressed the Indians, and believing armed men to be in the house they fled. , , ' This cave, upon a direct line, is said to be twelve miles northeast of. Knoxville, and is now owned by J. C. Campbell, Esq., but still bears the name of Manu's Cave. 1 The IVerves an a Source of Trial. Instead nf beiuu a vehicle for agreeable sensations, some people's nerves are a most distressing endowment. Such sufferers, it will usually be found, are "dyspeptic, lack vitality and flesh. , What they need is more vigor. There is a means of obtaining it, if they will but avail themselves of that means. It is Hostetter's Bitters, a tonic which experience has shown to be of the utmost service to the debilitated, nervous riwI dyspeptic. Digestion restored upon a a permanent basis by the Bitters ministers as it should to the wants of the system, and its integral parts, of which the nerves are one of the most important, are properly nourished and invigorated. The various functions are th us more actively discharged, and obstacles to a return to health removed by increasing vitality. Instead of nervous prostration, new strength and vitality will be infused iuto the whole motive ma chinery.' ,,.;J ';. Hon. John eeanat " 1 ' Under date March 3d, '75, writes: " In the space of twelve hours my rheu matism was gone, linvine taken three doses of Durang's Rheumatic Remedy. My brut ti er, J. B. Cessna, of Bedford, Pennsylvania, was cured by a similar amount. " - "JOHN CESSNA, ' " Member of Congress from Pennsylvania." It cures the worst case in the shortest time. Bold by all retail and wholesale druggists in Cincinnati. . Write to B. K. Helphenstine, Washington, D. C, lor his 40-page pamphlet .r Chew Jackson's Best Sweei iiavyTobotco. A Democrat Cured. , A leading democrat of Burlington, Mr, E, M, Sutton, speaks in the highest terms of the curative power of the celebrated Kidney-Wort. It first cured bint of a distress ing kidney disease, and he now uses it whenever ha has any symptoms of bilious ness or needs toning up It acts efficiently on the bowels, and cures the worst cases of Piles. ' -V . PAINTER'S MANOAU-HOUSE AND HQS painting, mlnln. varnlshlM. poUsh'lni. kal- omlniuc, papering, lettering, staining, gilding, Ac,, Wo. Book of Alphabets, SO. teroUfluidOit DUDtmU, II. Purnitur and Cabinet Finiwet, SO. Watchmaker and Jeweler, 60. Carpenter, 50. HoBenuoet, 3S. Soapmaker, 25, Baker, SO. Can. dymaker, SO. Taxidermist, 50. Of bookaeltenor by mail. JXSSK HANKY CO., U NeawM K. Mew Yetk. ,.!..! ' .hu ii'iv,- CHILL Fever & Ague NEVRALGIAYSPCPSIA, BfT JOUSNESS, aa wen aa all forma of MALARIAL ' "FEVERS and DISEASES r imiinaninly cataa by Magill'a Chill Cure, Tonic and Appetizer. It oom not cantata mania, Oatmnat, Jfarmry, Quint na, or injwriona Drvgt Uon't ferret tbia it you vahu health. Maay nedknua now on the market rely on oar. or more of these poisona or atrong drujjs, or upon othera nuially as bad lor whal little claim they have to merit At best they only give temporary retta ana are liable to permanently inyire the system. MagiU's Chill Core, Tonic and Appetiser is positively ires from these and ever other harmful retrretlicnt and nay ae riven to young; children or persons in fet ble health with out possibility ol s shwlow of iojory briajr prodwwl. The proprietor holds hiinseU responsi ble lor this statEmcnt and pledges tumseli lo the public to guard and protect the absolute punty and great merit of this medicine by personal attention to its manufacture. He receives many letters from persons sayfnrthey have been humrnifred by worthless medsrmea. This naturally makes them ske ties and is likely to destroy confidence even in articles of real merit. Hun dreds of ssutements similar t tha one give h rewit h could be published If our space allowed of it. The aronriotnr reten to thous- tide who have used this medicine and are adviamr othera to use it as evidences of its merit. From J. Singleton, No. 7i Jeftcrson Street, I-ouisville, Ky., March m, 1879: "I suffered for rnanv years ahnoKt constantly with Fever and Ague or Chilis, had several doctors, used Qniiiine and other medicines freelv, a-'i failed to cure me, waa com pletely unfitted for work, MapriTs Chill Cure, Tonic and Apnetizer cored me htst August and I have cniy d perfect health ever since. 1 gained rapid I v in flesh and strength, I believe this medicine possesses most remarks rue merit, and in my case it was apparent from the very first dose I used." Price ijoo per bottle. For sale by drngijista and general dealers. v HENRY A. MAGIIX, IP! Wholesale by Allen A C., Filth and If ain. Betall GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY Dr. Tierce's Uoldcn Medical Discovery cures all nnmon, from the worst Bcrafttla to snmmrm Klolch, riuiple, or Eruption, Erysipelas, sult-rheniii, Fever Sores, Bealy or Rough akin, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood, are eomiiiered by this powerful, purifying, ami invigoraling medicine. Espcuinllr has it manifested its potency ia curing Tetter, Rose Rash, Roils, Carftnn ties, Sons Kyea, gerornlons Sores and Swellings, While nwclUnga, Uottre ar Thick Keek, anil Enlarged Viands. If you feel dull, drowsv, debilitated, lmve sallow color of skin, or yellowish-lrrown spots on face or lioilv, frequent headache or iliaiiness, bnd tnne in mouth, Internal heal or cliills alter nnicd with hot flushes, irregular appetite, and tongue comcd, vou nro suil'ering from Tarnid Liver, or "Itlllowsiiess." As a remedy for all such canes Dr. Tiercels Golden Medical Discovery has no eqiml, aa It effects perfect ami radical onres. In tho cure of Bronebltia. Severe t'anglis. Weak Langs, nml enrly stages of Can dmniptlon, it has astonished the medical facnltv, and eminent physicians pronounce it tha greatest medical discovery of Um age. Sold by druggists. iMLPC S '' VQQB a VW. while tiainir XY$L.SvMQ svsiem, diet, av X tonsiipauon, v W va V 9 Tirrhtuesa of Ths-Llttle Giant" Csttwrtio. rzt L .r JH about Mamacb, Bnsb af Bloed s Head, tale lr. I'loroe'a Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Bold by druggists. WtfllliDti DlhPEXSAUT UED1C1L UiSOCUTION, Prop'rii, Buffalo, H. I. THE CINCINNATI THE CIP3CINNATI DAILY STABj Eight Pages, Forty-Eight Columns, U B o ft With Pour . Editions Newsy, Bright, Readable and Reliable, and 2 all for the small sum of o Twelve Cents per Week. w The Star is virtually the only Afternoon Newspaper published in Cincinnati ; and, having the immense field of after noon journalism almost wholly to itself, has been able by a con tinuous increase in business, from time to time to make very marked improvements, until we are justified in announcing that iurj oijiA m now uie Largest and Best Afternoon o Hi EH CO O Ph H H "B Q 0 The very comprehensive news of the National Associated Press, and a complete system of Special Telegraphic Correspond ence covering every part of the country, enables THE STAR to present the news of the world on the DAY OF ITS OCCUR RENCE with very much more completeness than was ever before attempted by an Afternoon Paper. People who read THE STAR are the only ones in Cincinnati who retire at night with a knowledge of what has happened the world over during the day. Not to read it, is to be twenty-four or forty-eight hours behind the wide-awake portion of the com niunitv. THE STAR is emphatically a "Newspaper of TO-DAY, not yesterdav." FOUR EDITIONS are published daily, giving the people of each locality the very latest news which it is possible get to them. -... .,. . i i : -,- ,.- : , :: . ; f CTThe popular Price of 12 CTS. PER WEEK will not be Changed, but Improvements In the Paper will Constantly 59 e8- JOB PRINTING. f. 0, 0AEUAHA5. I Fn 0, CARNAHAN & CO, I PRACTICAL I JOB PRINTERS. 230 WALNUT STREET, I BELOW "Star" Building, i a VITALIZED A BRA I N AND NERVE FOOD. VITAUZED PHOSPHATES. Tkia Ailf era f rm all ather ta-ntc. bcoa,Ha It la eaaapo.ed ( tha vital or ncrva sjlvipsj prlaclplca of tha x brain and wboat sjerna. 1 : Fhvslfflans hava found it so necetsarv that titer alone bav prescribed 183.000 packages. It restores lost energy In all weaknesses of mind or body: relieves il-bility and nervousness; gives vitality to the Insufficient growth of chTtdren; strengthens the digesttoa: cores neuralgl and preveats consumption It restores to the brain and nerraa th aleioeriu that have been earned oft br disease or overwork. ,, JtesllDiUel?U. -' ' :HOSBtfcxtBATne,wXA CURE. "fllf""""'""" nasswjiiiiiair mi i . Chills & fever, j trop'r, Louisville Ky.v by at. F. Keeehaa k Bra., Third sad Broavray. Mo nse nf taking l bo large, repulsive, nauseous pills. These l'ellets 1 Little lMllsl nro aeureolv Iniuitr than mustard them. Thev operate without disturbance 10 the or occupation. For Janndice, Headache, impure auooa, ruin 111 sue nnuwiuira, Uioat. Dlaasaeas. Hour Eructation front Stomach. Bad Taste In MoutU, lllltous attacks. Pain In resiuu of Uidurvs. Internal Fever, liliuifed feeling DAILY STAR. a Every Afternoon. S O d Paper in the Country. 3 H u 8 o M Q T.V. KEATTHG,- I SIXTH, CINCINNATI. PHOSPHATES. HOP BITTERS. - O. I. c. Is aa abeaUto aad Irwaietafcla tara far raasas.Iiawii(jias aad the aae ef Osimt, To baeco, Aaraouca. aad tttinmlaats. nruovi g al tuste, desire and oabtt of using any of thr ..rra derlnathe taste or desire for suv of sBean si rf jti adtousaiMl dissruatlnr. Ofvinz ev.rv qm nrf ivi ana,irresisuuie eontroiei ma sotnet 01 waav selves or (bir friends It prevents that abeotote aknieal and BMral nrostratloa that follows the su'fuea lueaklag C trovsaslag sUmelsats or Baroutlca. Pai:kM"e. nrenaiil. to cute 1 to&nersons.tlor at yoar drastiata, 1 1 . par bail le. Temperaaoe aocieuea aaoast rrerrairaraw at. It la perfectlr harmless and never-failing. Hop Balers Bfy. Co, Rochester, R. T. Sole Agents TTna Tanrtl Tart, destrovs all IMln. Inosenr J the cough, qaieta the ourvtis, prvHliKwa rest, aaul trover xaiis to care. . i The Waa 1ad f or Strmtarh. T.twranrl Klfrnrvs I Is aaperia to all others. Caret kjr sbsorytsso l it is pcriect-auc aruggists. TW. B w Mml'K. f. .t SsdMtfw. H. T. . 1 ibevenpeeri.k.slmiil.B.tlhrPiTmtManwt Jsnriciiu mtlj tk.riwMiki. slto ttar H B:um.wliii sretn mmu, OMtag nwt mm HMSllil. wwiim. I FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. gsjgsjsyjrjBaTCsavBKSasssBS gjjsya 1efl-lmTn.Th.8 VENETIAN LINIMENT. Warranted for 32 Years and Never Failed DR. TOBIAS' VENETIAN LINIMENT Has Riven universal satisfaction since it has been lntroaneea imotne imitvwi states. Aiwr being tried by millions it has been proclaimed The Pain Destroyer of the World Thousands of Physician Krcmn- mend it a au External Remedy lis ( ast of Chronic Rheumatism, Headache, Toothache, Mos quito Bites, Cuts, Bruises. Sprains, Old Sores Fains in the Limbs, Back and Chest, Pim ples, Blotches, Freo'cles, Stiffness in the Joints and Contraction of the Muscles, ITS WONDERFVL CURATIVE POWERS ARE MIRACULOUi Taken lnt.-riio.IIi-- In cases of dysentery. Diarrhea, Sea Plekness. Cholera, Croup, ColioCramps and Siek Ilt adaelie, its soothing aud penetrating qualities are immedi ately felt rn is perfectly innocent to take iuterually. READ THE CERTIFICATES. One Thousand Dollars will bo paid If they are not an uenuine. SEVERE RHr liTHTISTI. State of New Jersey, Bergen County, Township of riHCKeiisacK, sh. , Thomas Johnson, of said townshlo. belnednlv sworn, doth depose and say, that he ha& been severely afliiek-d with rheumatism for above a year, ana was so baa that be couhl scarcely walk, being bent almost double, and was utterly unable to do any work. Having heard of the wonderful cures made by Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment, he was induced to try it, and after using it a short time, was able to go to work again, after being unable to do anythiug for nearly a year. X. JOHNSON. Sworn to before me. J. H. BniNCKERUofF, Justice of the Peace. , CROIP. Dr. Tobias. I write to inform yon that tbe child of a friend of mine was cured of croup, af ter being given np to die by three physicians. One hour after your Venetian Liniment was used It was out of danger. I hope yon will publish this, so that mothers may know they have a remedy for this terrible complaint. I lost a child by crour previous to hearing of your Liniment, but now never feel alarmed, as I have your medicine al ways in the house. I hare also used it for pain sore throat, etc. and alwnva fonud it to cure. -.(KREMIAH CASEY, 17 North Moore street. New York. . GREAT CURE OF RHElTifIATIU. This is to certify that I had the rheumatism in my bio so I could not walk without my cruteh, and after using Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment a short time, I was entirely relieved, and candidly believe it a must certain cure for rheumatism, as I have tried many hings without any good, and after using th-s Venetian Liniment for only n few days I was well. . Hl'GH PA UL, 201 Avenue B, New York. From Dr. Sweet, the Famous and AVorld-renowiiea Honc-Netter. Nouth Kingston, K. I. Dr. Tobiais Dear Sir: I have used your valua ble Venetian Liniment in my practice is bone-setter, for the past fireyears, ard consider it the bes srticle I ever tried for bathing broken bonest wounds, lame backs, sprains, ifcc. I have no hesi, tation in recommending it to the public as the best article for all paius flesh is heir to. Tours truly, JAMES SIA'EET. ASTHMA. This fs to certify Jhat I have had the Asthma since 1841, and have been treated bv many physi c aus without relief. Your Venetian Liniment has made a perfect cure. WM. Y. TOWNSEKD, ; Port Richmond, Stateu Inland. TO THE LADfE. Certificate of the Surgeon of th Royal Mail Steamer America). This is to certify that I have used and recom mended Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment, and have found it useful in a variety of cases. It aiso elves unfailing relief from the annoyance and irritation consequent on mosquito biles, aud prevents a mark being left. J. A. GRAHAM, M. R. C. 8., of London. ; . Royal Mail Steamship America, . Jorsuy City, July 28th. Thousands of other certificates can be seen at the depot WflAT HORSEmEX WANT. A Good Reliable Home Liniment . and Condition Powder. Ftieh are to be found In Kit. TOBI AS' HORSE LINIMENT in pint bottles, and Derby Condition Powder ; , NO PAY If not superior to any other. The Horse Liniment la only half a strong as the Family Liniment, and will not take the ha r off if used as directed. The public appreciate it, as during the epizootic. 3,141 bottles were sold inane day, aa the lollop ing oath will show: OATH. ' " ' This is to certify that I sold, on the 2Stli inst.; three thousand one hundred and forty-one (3,141) bottles of my Venetian Liniment. HI. TOBIAS. Sworn and subscribed to before me, this awh day of October, 1871 - D. ft HART, Commissioner of Deeds. FROM COI.. D. McDAMEL, Owner of Saute of the Fasteat if na iling Horses in the lVorld. Jerome Park. June 21, 1S77. Thi Is to-oertifv that I have used Dr. Tobias Horse Venetian liniment aud Derby Condition Powders, on my race-horses, and found tlrem give perfect satisfaction. In fact, they have uevor failed to cure any ailment for which thev were used; the Liniment, when rubbed in by the hand, never blisters or takes the hair off; It has more penetrative qnalltles than any other I have tried, . which I suppose is the secret of its wonderful suc cess in curing snrains. The ingredients from which the Derby Powders are made have been made known to me by Dr. Tobias; they are pact fectly harmless. D. MtDAMEL. ,. ,;: From Col C H. Delevan. - New York. April ao, 1877. After years of use, It gives me pleasure tocnrtlfv to tbe virtues of Dr. Tobias' Venetian Horse Lini ment, It has saved the life of one of my four home black team. This recommendation I give without solicitation, as I think owners of auracs should know its value: - ,,; ,, , ,. CHARLES H. DELAVAN,., ) Kb. 126 West Twenty-second street, ' The Family liniment II ahAW eenftrine Horse, u cents, in Pint bottles; the Derbr Pow ders, 2& cents a box. Sold by the dnicgtaia. Depot, No. it Murray street. New Yolk. .-.. -i -I .!-' .parBAwljt. i ,