£JUl 
“Count Pipehamxner! — well, tlie Germans 
have certainly an odd fancy at names. Pray, 
what is his business ?” 
“Business!” said Horace, laughing; “why 
his chief business at present is to collect the 
revenues of his principality.” 
“ Principality 1—fudge! — a few barren acres 
with half a dozen mudholes in it, I suppose. It 
won’t do, Horace—it won’t do! Adelaide de¬ 
serves something better thau a mouthful of 
mooushinc. What the deuce did you bring 
him here for? I don’t think I could treat him 
with common civility, if it were not for your 
sake.” 
“Then, for my sake, dear uncle, treat him 
civilly, and I give my word you shall not repent 
your kindness.” 
Every day saw the Count paying liis devoirs 
to the lovely Adelaide, and always framing 
some winning excuse for his visit. A bouquet 
of rare exotics, or an exquisite print, or a scarce 
book, or a beautiful specimen of foreign me¬ 
chanism, were sure, to he his apology. Could 
any girl of seventeen be insensible to such gal¬ 
lant wooing, especially when proffered by a 
rich nobleman, who wore such splendid whis¬ 
kers, and whose moustache and imperial were 
the envy of all the aspirants of ladies’ smiles? 
Adelaide soon began to discover that, when the 
Count was present, time flew on eagles’wings; 
and when, after spending the morning in her 
company, he ventured to make one of the gay 
circle usually assembled in her drawing-room at 
evening, she was conscious of a degree of pleas¬ 
ure for which she was unwilling to account. 
His intimacy with her cousin Horace afl'orded 
him the opportunity of being her companion 
abroad ns well as at home, and in the evening 
party, the morning promenade, or the after¬ 
noon ride, the handsome Count was ever at¬ 
tendant.—[Concluded on page 145.] 
mania for everything foreign. Her manners, 
her dress, her servants, all came from abroad, 
and she has declared to me repeatedly her reso¬ 
lution never to marry an American.” 
“What is it that my fair countrywomen so 
much admire in their foreign lovers?” asked 
Charles. 
“Oh. they say there is a polish and elegance 
of manners which Americans never possess. 
Two of Adelaide's intimate friends have re- 
centlv- married scions of some antediluvian Ger¬ 
man i imily, and our lovely cousin is ambitious 
of forming an equally splendid alliance.” 
“If she were to marry a Western farmer," 
said Charles, with a smile, “she would reign 
over a principality quite as large, and perhaps 
more flourishing, than usually belongs to these 
emigrant nobles.” 
“Adelaide is a noble-hearted girl,” replied 
Horace, “and I wish she could be cured of her 
folly.” 
“If she is really a sensible girl. Horace, and 
that is her only fault, I think she might he 
cured.” 
Horace shook his head. 
“ Come and dine with me, Horace: be careful 
to tell no one of my arrival, and we'll discuss 
the matter over a bottle of flue old Madeira, if 
vou are not too fashionable to drink it.” 
Ovt of several of the recent pieces sent us on the 
death of Sergeant Ha mi)ton, we unhesitatingly give 
the preference to the following simple, sweet verses, 
very well adapted to music, which the author has al 
ready provided for them, and will soon publish. Mr. 
Clark, the author, (the poet-vocalist,) is an adept at 
this kind of work, having written and composed music 
for, and publicly sung a number of poems, as “ The 
Mountains of Life,” “Marion Moore,” "Fremont's 
Battle Hymn,” “Rock of Liberty," aud other popular 
eon«-s. We think “The Children of the Battle Field ’’ 
Deafness, Catarrh 
AND DISEASES OF THE 
EAR, AND THROAT 
(HIGHEST 
Authors of “A Popular Treatise on Deafness,” “Letters 
on Catarrh,” ,fcc., &c., can be consulted cm DEAFNESS. 
CATARRH,DISCHARGES FROM THE EAR, NOISES 
Of THE HEAD, and all the various acute or chronic 
discuses of the EYE, EAR, and THROAT, requiring 
medical or surgical aid, at ihelr otUee, No. 84 St. Mirrks- 
place, New York. To save useless correspondence, per¬ 
sons residing at a distance are hereby Informed that a 
personal examination Is necessary In every ease before 
appropriate treatment can he prescribed. 
Operations for Cataract, Artificial Fupll, Cross-Eyes, 
&C-, &c., successfully performed. 
BY JAMBS Q. CLARK. 
Upon the field of Gettysburg, 
The summer sun was high, 
When Freedom mot her haughty foe 
Beneath a Northern sky: 
Among the heroes of the North, 
Who swelled her grand array, 
And rushed, like mountain eagles, forth 
From happy homes away, 
There stood a man of humble fame, 
A sire of children three, 
And gazed, within a little frame, 
Their pictured forms to see; 
And blame him not if, in the strife, 
He breathed a soldier's prayer, 
“O! Father, shield the soldier’s wife, 
And for his children care.” 
Upon the field of Gettysburg, 
When morning shone again, 
The crimson cloud of battle burst 
In streams of fiery rain; 
Our legions quelled the awful flood 
Of shot, and steel, and shell; 
While banners, marked with ball and blood, 
Around them rose and fell. 
And none more nobly won the name 
Of Champion for the Free, 
Than he who pressed the little frame 
That held his children three; 
And none were braver in the strife, 
Than he who breathed the prayer: 
“ O! Father, shield the soldier’s wife, 
And for cis children care.” 
Upon the field of Gettysburg, 
The full moon slowly rose, 
She looked, aud saw ten thousand brows, 
All pale in death’s repose. 
And down beside a silver stream, 
From other forms away, 
Calm as a warrior In a dream, 
Our fallen comrade lay; 
His limbs were cold, tfcs sightless eyes 
Were fixed upon the tliree 
Sweet stars that rose in memory’s skies 
To light him o'er death's sea. 
Then, honored be the soldier's life, 
And hallowed be his prayer: 
“ Oh! Father, shield the soldier’s wife, 
An d for his children care.” 
[American Presbyterian, 
STARCHER COMBINED 
tjp*In consideration of numerous and constant appli¬ 
cations for treatment from parties residing at a dls- 
tance. who are unable to eome to New York, 
DR. C. B. LIGHTHILl, 
Will tie at the 
American Hotel, Buffalo, April 25tli to 30th, 
Delevan House, Albany, May 2d, 3d, 4th. 
Bagg’s Hotel, Utica, May 5th, 6th, 7th. 
Angier House, Cleveland, May 9th to 14th. 
Osborn House, Kochester, May 16th to 21st, 
UNIVERSAL CLOTHES-WRINGERi 
ITas been exhibited iti competition with every Wringer 
of any consequence Ui market, and lias been awarded 
the highest premiums ofibred. 
It was pronounced superior to all others at the World's 
Fair in London,lsfi2; received the BronxeMedal (highest 
premium,) at the Great Fair of the American Institute 
in New York City, 1863; also the Silver Medal and Di¬ 
ploma In 1562, aud Diploma and Certificate in 1663, at the 
New York Slate Fair, (being the highest premiums.) It 
also took the First Premiums at the State Fairs, in' 1863, 
In Yermont, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa> 
and at the principal County and Institute Fairs through¬ 
out the land. 
We invite special attention to the following points, 
which are peculiar to the “UNIVERSAL CLOTHES 
WRINGER," aud which render It 
The windows of Mr. AValsingham’s house 
poured a flood of light through the crimson silk 
curtaius upon the wet and dreary street, while 
the music heard at intervals told to the gaping 
crowd collected about the door, that the rich 
were making merry. The rooms were brilliant 
with an array of youth and beauty, but fairest 
among them all stood the mistress of the festi¬ 
val. Attired in a robe of white crape, with no 
other ornament than a pearl bandeau confining 
her dark tresses, she looked the personification 
of joy. 
* Cousin Horace,” she exclaimed, as she saw 
her favorite cousin enter the room, •• you have 
not been here these three days;’’ and then, in a 
lower tone, she added, “ who was that splendid 
Don Wliiskerando with whom I saw you walk¬ 
ing yesterday ?” 
Horace laid his finger on his lip as a tall figure 
emerged from the crowd at the entrance of the 
room,— “Mi?3 Walsingliam, allow roe to pre¬ 
sent to you the most noble Count Ffeiffenharu- 
mer.” 
The blood mounted into Adelaide’s cheek as 
the Count bowed low over the hand which he 
hastened to secure for the next quadrille. There 
was a mischievous sparkle in Horace’s eye, and 
a deep and earnest devotedness in the stranger’s 
manner, which made her feel a little uncom¬ 
fortable, though she knew not why. A single 
glance sufficed to show her that the Count was 
attired iu a magnificent court suit, with diamond 
buckles at the knee, and diamond band looping 
up the elegant chapeau hr as which encumbered 
his arm. After some minutes, she ventured to 
look more courageously at him. He was tall, 
and exceedingly well shaped; his eyes were 
very bright, but the chief attraction was a 
beautiful mouth, garnished with the most splen¬ 
did moustache that ever graced an American 
ballroom. Adelaide was delighted. He danced 
elegantly; not with the stiff, awkward manner 
of an American, who always seems hall-ashamed 
of the undignified part he is playing, but with 
a buoyancy of step and grace of motion per¬ 
fectly unrivaled. Adelaide was enchanted. He 
spoke English very well; a slight German ac¬ 
cent only betrayed his foreign birth, and Ade¬ 
laide did not like him the less for that. It is 
true she felt a little queer when she felt herself 
whirling through the waltz in the arms of an 
entire stranger, and her brow flushed with 
something very like anger, when she felt his 
bearded lip upon her hand, as he placed her in 
a seat, but this was only freedom of foreign 
manners. 
The evening passed away like a dream, and 
Adelaide retired to her room with a burning 
cheek, and a frame exhausted by deemed pleas¬ 
ure. She was too much excited for sleep, and 
when she appeared at her father’s breakfast 
table, (a duty which she never neglected,) it was 
with such a pale cheek and heavy eye that he 
was seriously alarmed. 
“ These late hours will kill you, my child.” 
said he, kissing her forehead; “I shall return 
at noon, and il' I find you still so languid, I’ll 
send for Dr. B-.” 
So saving, he stepped into his carriage and 
drove to his counting-room, where, immersed 
iu business, he quite forgot Adelaide’s cheek, 
until the dinner hour summoned him from his 
dingy little office to his stately mansion. As he 
entered the door, he recollected Adelaide’s ex¬ 
hausted look. 
“ Poor child,” murmured he, “ I wonder how 
she is.” 
A low, musical laugh struck on his ear as the 
servant threw open the drawing-room, and the 
sight of her radiant countenance, looking more 
brilliant than ever, as she sat between Cousin 
Horace and the Count, soon quieted his fears. 
Mr. Walsingliam, in common with most 
Americans of the olden time, had a great preju¬ 
dice against foreigners. “If they are real 
Lords,” he used to say, “ they don’t want my 
daughter; and if they are not real Lords my 
daughter don’t want them.” 
His notions of the Teutonic character were 
founded on the stories his mother used to tell 
him about the Hessians, and vague ideas of ruf¬ 
fians and child eaters were associated in his 
mind with everything German. The coldness 
with which he saluted the noble Count formed 
a striking contrast t.o the cordial warmth with 
which he grasped the hand of his nephew. 
“Glad to see you, Horace—couldn't speak a 
word to you last night, you were so surrounded 
with pretty girls. By the way, boy,” drawing 
him aside, “ who is that liuiry-luced fellow ?” 
“That is CountPfeiffenhammer, uncle.” 
Dr. E. B. Liglitliill is in constant attendance 
at tlie Institute, in New York City, that patients of the 
Institution may sulVtrno interruption in treatment. 
Drs. Lionm ill’s work, “A Popular Treatise on 
Deafness, Its Causes and Prevention,” with tlie illustra¬ 
tions, may be obtained Of CARLTON, Publisher, No. 413 
Broadway. New York, or through any respectable Book¬ 
seller. Price $1. 
NEW TESTIMONIALS, 
1 . The *’Universal Clothes Wringer" has strong COG 
WHEELS tor turning both rolls together, so that each 
roll shall hear the strain equally. Otherwise, the lower, 
or crunk roU, does all the work, having both to turn the 
upper roll, aud carry the clothes through the machine 
by friction. 
2. The *• Universal Clothes Wringer" has “THE PA- 
TKNT COG WHEEL REGULATOR,” for securing the 
Cog Wheels In their place, and preventing their being 
thrown out of gear, by the pasting of large articles, to 
allow which, the opposite ends of the rolls arc arranged 
to separate, when uecessury. Without the Regulator, 
Cogs wouty be useless. NO OTHER 
Prom the Her. PretPk Jewell , Professcr State 
.y'ormal School , Jlbotty, .V. I*. 
This may certify that I have been, since 1844. subject 
to violent periodical attacks of catarrh, marked by a 
highly Inflamed condition of the lining membrane of the 
cavities Of the head, producing a most distressing species 
of headache for days at a time, wholly incapacitating 
me from business, atnl during the paroxysms confining 
me to the bed. In some Instances the Inflammation has 
extended to the teeth, occasioning tooLhache; to tlie 
throat, producing hoarseness and partial loss of voice; 
and twice It has so affected the left eye as to confute me 
for a month or more to a darkened room. These at tacks 
have been accompanied by strong febrile symptoms; by 
stoppages of the head, and in the first stages by watery 
discharge- from the nose, and subsequently becoming 
acrid and yellow, and towards the close of the attack 
becoming bloody and purulent, 1 nave tried medicines 
of almost every kind; external applications to t he head, 
each as camphor, ginger, hot vinegar, snuffs of some half 
dozen kinds, and other catarrhal preparations, together 
with internal remedies, such as alternatives, cathartics 
and emetics. These have produced uo change In the oc¬ 
currence or character of the disease, and in most eases, 
with Utile or no temporary relief, 1 bad come at length 
to believe U>c disease to be practically beyond either 
core or material alleviation. 
Under those Cl rcums tauees I was led, some five months 
:Vgo, to make a trial of Dr. LlghthllTs treatment. Ills 
metlKid at once approved Itself to my judgment, as sim¬ 
ple, philosophical nud likely to be effective. Notwith¬ 
standing the disadvantages under which lie labored, In 
dealing with a <1 ist-nse of such long standing, aggravated 
by nervous debility and dyspepsia, and constantly In¬ 
duced by the ncchlents of professional labor,! found the 
treatment reaching the disease a* It had never been 
reached before, and producing such a modification and 
alleviation of its character as I had supposed Impossi¬ 
ble. I chronicle the result thus. Although I have been 
situated several times so that I should formerly have be¬ 
lieved a severe attack Of my catarrh inevitable, 1 have 
escaped thus far; the symptoms of threatened attack 
have been very light, aud have yielded to the remedies 
employed by Dr. Lighthiu, without the need of recourse 
to the old liol fermentations or emetics; and the dis¬ 
charges from the head have resumed the original aud 
natural condition. 1 count upon a complete cure. That 
I have been able, however, to obtain so material a relief 
Is to ine a cause of gratitude, in that alone, i am re¬ 
paid for whatever the treatment may have cost me. 
1 make tiffs statement unsolicited, as a means of ac¬ 
knowledging my obligation to Dr. LIglithill’s method of 
treating catarrh, and with a view to aid any who may 
have suffered from that disease, In forming a just opin¬ 
ion of Us merits, and its probable utility In their own 
ease- FRED'K S. JEWELL. 
Albany, N. Y., March 14, 1864. 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
I am composed or 37 letters. 
My 11, 23, lb, 7, 82,10, is what we all should be. 
Mv 2. IU, It. 80, Hi, Sit, .7, JO, 10, :>'i. i- a girl's name. 
Mv fl, 17. 84, 81, SO, is the name of .in excellent paper. 
My 16, 4, 0. 85, is the name of a State. 
Mv to, So, 2s, 111, 5, is an article of furniture. 
MV 37. 22, Si, S2, la called • w eel 
My 12,17, 21,1.80, is pleasing io the ear. 
My 3, 2. 0,10,13. 81, is one who suffers and dies for 
truth and right. 
My 4, 25, 23, 84, T, is the French Tor mam 
My S, 27, 32. is iu the past tense. 
Mv i. 9.18, is a pronoun. 
Mv 20, 0,15. 29, 2, is a musical instrument. 
My whole is a dispatch sent from Gen. Thomas to 
Gen’ Rosecrans in the mid--, of a deadly tight with the 
enemy. | Minnie L. 
Madison, Ohio, 1S<54. j 
EF” Answer in two weeks. 
Wrinner is Licensed under this Patent 
3. The ••Universal Clothes Wringer” Is both SELF- 
ADJUSTING aud ADJUSTABLE. The elasticity of 
the Rolls, combined with tho strong wooden springs' 
render il so far self-adjusting, as to need no change for 
ordinary washing, while tlie thumb-screws at the top 
give greater power, If needed, for WASHING tlie 
Clothes, or less pressure fur STARCHING, or more ca¬ 
pacity for the passage of large articles. 
It U not only a PERFECT WRINGER, but the Cog 
Wheels give It a power which renders It a mutt 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
ANAGRAMS OF FLOWERS, 
THE COUNT AND THE COUSIN 
Wells deep, 
Nettie M. Coin, 
C Vn Lu SalvoD, 
Tar on Cain. 
Neoma A. B. 
A silly arm, 
Le h orbel, 
Lada Hi, 
Se Mary Ro, 
Shelby, N. Y., 18W. 
ty Answer in two weeks 
“ Who is that beautiful girl to whom you 
bowed so familiarly ?” said Charles Winstanlev 
to Horace Grenville, us they proceeded down 
the steps of the City Hotel. 
“ That was Adelaide Walsinghsm. your cousin 
and mine, Charles,” said Horace; “really, you 
must have left your memory among the beau¬ 
ties of Paris, if you cannot recognize your near¬ 
est of kin.” 
“ You forget, Horace, that when I last saw 
Adelaide she was a lively little hoyden, scarce 
ten years old; the lapse of seven years makes a 
lady, whatever it may do with a gentleman.” 
“Nay, if you begin to discuss time’s changes, 
Charles, I must confess you cannot congratulate 
yourself upon hav ing escaped a touch of bis 
finger. Who. in that bronzed complexion and 
hirsute visage coidd discover any traces of the 
smooth-cheeked boy whom I last saw on the 
deck of the French packet-ship some seven 
years ago? But, tell me, why did you not write 
that you were coming home ?” 
“ Because I did not know my own mind, Hor¬ 
ace: I really was not quite certain about it 
until I had been a week at sea. The odd pro¬ 
nunciation of my German valet having caused 
my name to be placed on the list of passengers 
as Sir. Stanley, it occurred to me that the mis¬ 
take would enable me to return incognito, and I 
thought 1 would humor the joke, if but to see 
how many of my old friends would recognize 
me. I arrived late last evening, and should now 
be a perfect stranger in my native city, bad I 
not accidentally met you this morning; and 
even you, Horace, at first did not recognize 
me.” 
“Know you, Charles! who the deuce could 
even see you behind that immense growth of 
brushwood upon your lip and cheek ? Do you 
really mean to wear those enormous whiskers 
and moustaches?” 
“ Certainly not longer than it suits my present 
purpose, Horace. "When I was in Germany I 
learned to wear moustaches for the same reason 
that I learned to smoke the meerschaum—be¬ 
cause everybody else did it. In Paris I re¬ 
duced them a little, but did not entirely banish 
them, because there also I found them in fash¬ 
ion. A lively little French lady, a passenger in 
our ship, wagered a pair of gloves that I would 
not wear them a week in America; I accepted 
tlie bet, and for one week you will see me bearded 
like a pard.” 
“Nay, if you like them,” said norace, laugh¬ 
ing, “you need not seek an excuse tor wearing 
them; they are quite the fashion, and ladies 
now estimate a man, not as they once did, by 
his altitude, but by the length of Iris whiskers.” 
“I have no desire to win ladies' favor by 
wearing an unshaven face,” answered Charles; 
“but pray, Horace, tell me something more 
about our pretty cousin.’’ 
“ She is as lovely in character, Charles, as she 
is In person, but slie has one great fault; like 
the most of our fashionable belles, she has a 
When we reduce every invention for washing clothes 
to a principle, they all amount to that of pressing and 
squeezing and forcing the w at«r through them, thus re¬ 
moving tliedlrl. Most “Washing Machines” Uo liby 
rubbing. TheU. C. W. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMAS, &c„ IN No. 744. 
Answer to Historical Enigma;—Take care of the 
pence and the pounds will take care of themselves. 
Answer to Riddle:—Kingston. 
Answers to Au.ierams of States;—Wisconsin, Mich- 
lean, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Minnesoln, 
Nebraska, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Is¬ 
land, North Carolina, California. 
Answer to Mathematical Problem —The axis is 22.) j 
feet, and the base 15 feet. 
Soak the clothes for half an hour in strongwarm suds; 
then increase the heat, aud pass them quickly through 
the Wringer, ahd half the dirt wiU be left in the first 
water. Return them at once to the 6uds, run them 
through three • r four time, and pass them directly to 
the boiler. 
NO RUBBING IS NECESSARY I 
SLIGHT COLD,” COUGHS 
Except for starched linen and very dirty clothes. 
From the boiler piss tho clothes again through the 
Wringer, also from tlie rinsing and bluing waters, when 
at last they go on the line, nearly dry. and much smooth¬ 
er aud whiter than when done the old way, besides 
avoiding the usual 
Breaking of Stitches and Buttons, Founding, 
dialling, Stretching, Straining and 
Mauling of the Clothes, 
To say nothing of the par-boiled bauds, raw knuckles, 
lame backs, aud wasted time; for with the Wringer 
Few are aware of the importance of checking a Cough 
or “slight cold” iii its first stage; that which lu the 
beginning would y U hl to a tuild remedy, If neglected, 
soon attacks the lungs. “ Brown's Bronchial Troches” 
give sure and iff most immediate relief. Military Officers 
and Soldiers should have them, as they can be carried In 
the pocket and taken as occasion requires. 745-11 
Remarkable Cure of Deafness, 
Among all the disagreeable consequences that follow 
fast the decay of the teeth, an Impure breath must be 
the most unpleasant and mortifying to Its possessor, as 
It Is the most Inexcusable and offensive lu society. How 
often Us possessor experiences a distant coldness shown 
even from the be si of friends, or perhaps the one most 
fondly cherished, from this source. Yon are Ignorant 
of the cause yourself,— the subject Is so delicate your 
most Intimate friend will not mention if. Why not re¬ 
move tiffs one great barrier to your health, beauty and 
holiness, at once, by using that Justly popular Denti¬ 
frice, Fragrant SOZODONT, the most convenient, 
pleasant and efficacious gem for the toilet the world lias 
ever produced. 
bold by Druggists everywhere at 75 cents per bottle. 
Prom the Iter. Joseph *W. Clarke , Hector of 
St, James Church, 
Syracuse, February 20th, 1S64. 
I have been deaf iu one ear ever slnco I was in College^ 
some twenty years ago. By tlie skill of Dr. Lightblll, its 
hearing was entirely restored, so that now I hear alike 
with both ears, and 1 find that l can use my voice with 
much more ease and comfort than before. 
JOSEPH M. CLARKE. 
TUB WASHING CAN BE DONE 
X3NT TT AT. V TILE TI3VEE2 
Otherwise required. 
Hi STARCHING, the Wringer can he used with much 
ad\ milage, for spreading the starch evenly, especially 
hi large articles, like skirts, dresses, ,4c. Lace curtains, 
too, can be 
“ DOJ\'E CP BEJUTIPVPL F.” 
No twisting and tearing iu washing, and no mending 
thereafter. 
Prom Iter. John dwlj W. JL, Professor in 
Union College , Schenectady. 
Since I first publicly acknowledged the great benefit 
which I received from the. skillful treatment of Dr, 
LightlilU, In n-gurd to my hearing, letter* of inquiry 
have lueestsHOtly poured upon me from all parts of the 
country from purlieu di-slrmg lo learn the partleulurs Of 
, 0 } ciui-, and 1 am Indued surprised at the number of In¬ 
dividuals who are affected -.hollar to the maimer In 
wlffeb I have been, and therefore feel 11 more and more 
» i,acred ffnlv which I owe to those sufferers, to direct 
•hi m to a proper and reliable source to obtain the bene¬ 
fit 11 it- v much covet and which mv many afflicted om -i 
hu\. hitherto sought lu vain. Just as 1 had done prcvlou- 
to applying to Dr. Iffghlbilt. 
I Imd had from infancy one very deaf ear whleh always 
discharged more or less offensive matter, and wan the 
source of the gr eatest annoyance,and discomfort n, me. 
Last year the oilier ear also became diseased, an,I both 
ears discharged a yellow matter very profuse and highly 
offensive. My heating became very much Impaired aim 
tin; discharge pi'Oibu ed the greatest deblllly of huffy 
and depression of spirits. 1 applied to my family pity- 
-Irian and other practitioners without derivhigany ben¬ 
efit, uud almost despaired of baling restored to health, 
wiiuu. providentially. I applied t/i Dr. Ltghthill. Under 
lib. treatment my ears began to Improve at once, and 
continued to do mi, until. In a comparative short time, 
both ear- wore healed, the discharge removed, and my 
bearing restored. A t tl r-1 1 reared" llu- cure would not 
tie pernuuieni, or that the stoppage or a discharge of so 
long-landing might prove detrimental to iu> general 
heal Ui, a tear which 1 find a great many entertain lu re¬ 
gard to the removal of discharge from the ears. My ex¬ 
perience. however, lias proved conclusively that my ap¬ 
prehensions are groundless 111 both respect-, for both 
care lire I-well, uud my hear Lug as goodjat present, as 
the day Tleft off tn-nlment, and the -d-oppageot me dis¬ 
charge, Instead of being detrimental to m> health has 
given nu llu- highest elasticity and vigor of body, and a 
flow ot spirit* not experienced for a long time previous. 
1 wish the above untemmt might serve as n general 
:uiHWi*r iu those? but tnouhl ouu »»r thi? Oth‘*r 
desire to apply h> me personally, or by letter, 1 "III 
cheerfully satisfy all reasonable demand upon my time. 
1 avail‘myself of this opportunity of again publicly 
expressing mv deeply felt gratitude to Mr, LightlilU. 
win-ill I L-fiteein n c n gentleman and a man of sclcnOC, in 
whom tile highest confidence may be placed. 
JOIl-N rtU11 • 
MOOSE'S BUBAL NEW-YOBKEB, 
THE LARGltcT-ClItCULATING 
Agricultural, Literary and Family Newspaper, 
IIS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY 
D. D. T. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
Office, linioa Buildiiurs, Opposite tlie Court (louse, Malo St 
PRICES. 
SUe or. Rolls. 
Length. Diameter. 
No.J, Large Family Wringer, $10,uu..ll ' 4 Inch. 2 ‘* In. 
No. lk, Medium •• $9,00.. 11 V “ Uj “ 
No. 2, Medium « *7,0(1.. 9$ “ 1 T „ “ 
No. -'V Small “ $6,00.. 10’* “ HJ “ 
No. S, Small “ *5,50.. ««£ “ l’£“ 
No. s! Large Hotel “ $14,00..14 “ 2'* “ 
NO. le, Medium Laundry “ $18,00..17). “ 2‘4 “ 
No. 22, Large “ “ $ 30 ,oo.. 17J, “ 31,- “ 
Nos. 18 aud 22 to run by steam or bund. Pulleys, $3,00 
per pair, 
Nos. 2 ,‘J and 3 have SMALL ROLLS and NO COGS; 
all others are 
TEHJtS, 7.V Jilt PJ.VCE ; 
Two Ihdinm a Year—To C-lubs and Agents as fol¬ 
lows;—Three Copies one year, for $5; Six, aud one free 
to club agents for $19; Ten, and one free, for $15; and 
auy greater number at same rate—only $1.50 per copy. 
Club papers directed t-o individuals and sent to as many 
different Post-Offices as desired. As wc prepay Ameri¬ 
can postage on copies sent abroad, $f.7U is the lowest 
Club rate for Canada, aud $2.50 to Europe,—but during 
the present rale of exchange, Canada Agents or Sub¬ 
scribers remitting for t-be Rural In bill* of their own 
specie-paying banks will not be charged postage. The 
best way to remit is by Draft on New York, (less cost of 
exchange,)—and all drafts made payable to the order of 
the Publisher, may be mailed at his risk. 
The Poe ta«o on the Rural New- York eh is only 6 
cents per quarter to any part of tiffs Stale, (except Mon¬ 
roe county, where It goee free.) and me same to any 
other Loyal titate, If paid quarterly hi advance where 
received. 
Direct to Kochenter, N. Y.— All persons having occa¬ 
sion to address the Rural New-Yorker, will please 
direct to Rochester, A'. 17, and not-, as many do, to New 
York, Albany, Buffalo, Ac, Money Letters intended for 
us are frequently directed and mailed to the above places. 
On receipt of the price, from places where no one Is 
selling, we will send the U. C. \V r ., free or expense. 
A good 
CANVASSER WANTED 
Iff EVERY TOWN. 
V3P Liberal inducements offered, and exclusive sale 
guaranteed. 
Jl’Llll IVES UO., 
347 Broadway, .»«> Pork. 
T->p For further description and testimonials 
of the UNIVERSAL WRINGER . please refer 
to pages 108, 110, 124, of the Rural. 
