Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker, 
WASHINGTON. 
young girls promised solemnly what she had 
asked of them, and deluged with tears the hand 
which was still raised to bless them. 
That very night this holy woman died. The 
entiro country was in mourning; every one 
wept, except M. Offenheim; his despair was 
too violent. 
This death caused a complete revolution in 
the Offunheim castle, which became as sad and 
as deserted as it had been animated. Its old 
owner, immovable from grief, was struck with a 
paralysis in his right arm; and he had no longer 
any other consolation than the sight and care of 
Tiieela and Eudoxus. 
No two objects resembled each other less than 
did these two sisters. Ttief.i.a. tall and slender, 
with black hair and eyes, had a haughty disposi¬ 
tion,lively and coquettish temper, a more ardent 
imagination than heart. Bodomx had, if we 
may use the expression, a soul as fair as her 
hair; her blue eyes were gentle and dreamy as 
her heart; a soft shade of melancholy seemed to 
envelope her face and mind; her duties were her 
first pleasures. Everything excited the desires 
of Theela; a trifle satisfied those of Eudoxie. 
BY CD AS. EDMUND FAULKNER, 
For Moore's Rural New-Yorkor. 
ILLUSTRATED REBUS. 
“Where may the wearied eye repose 
When g&xtng °n the great; 
Where neither guilty glory glows, 
Nor despicable stale ? 
Yes—ope -the first—the last- the best— 
The Ciucinnatus of the West, 
Whom envy dared not hate. 
Bequeathed the name of WANinMraoir. 
To make man blush there was but one.” 
{Byron. 
Chief of the “ Time that tried men's souls;” 
Prophetic Hero of the free of earth; 
Conqueror, whose charm’d name controls 
The tyrant’s sway, and hide him greet thy worth- 
Washington ! we vainly strive to pay 
Worthy tribute to thy nalal day. 
The cannon’s boom, the banners gay, 
The peal of belle, parades of pomp, and sheen 
Of tinsel, and the fire-display; 
The gorgeous emblems of the festive scene— 
Illustrate faiutly thy great fame, 
The praise of thine immortal name! 
From age to age thou art the same 
Unchanging Statesman. Patriot and Sage- 
Humanity, with one acclaim, 
Accords no equal on historic page; 
Thy glory gleams on every clime— 
The light of Freedom through all time! 
Thon hadst no guile—thou didst no crime 
To reach the summit of all earlhly power; 
Ambition, in thy life sublime, 
Swerv’d not thy mind in peril’s darkest hour,— 
But led by Faith, and love for man. 
Thy wisdom wrought the wondrous plan. 
And not, we claim, since time began 
Has there a nation flourished like to this; 
And o’er the era which we span, 
Guided by thee, we have not gone amiss— 
Though foul Rebellion's dark array 
Would sweep ihv lustre all away. 
Columbia! bail th’ auspicious day 
Thai gave to tbee the mightiest of men! 
Let not his memory decay; 
Reflect on Yorktown, while rejoicing when 
Treason—now hurl’d before thy fire— 
Falls, to appease thine awful ire ! 
Shade of Mount Vernon ! we aspire 
To ask thy blessing through the desp'rate fight.— 
Washington I thou wilt our chiefs inspire 
To plan correetiy, and to lead aright— 
While charging armies, o'er thy grave 
Give battle, and our Union save! 
0,God I wc pray, and humbly crave 
That Thon wilt bless us in this savage war; 
Then Freedom's Stars and Stripes shall wave 
O’er fields well fought, and red with human gore;- 
Our cause is just, our conscience free: 
We fight for God and Liberty! 
We hear the cannon's roar—we su 
The direful charge, and bloody clash of arms; 
W tfetl the horrid agony, 
And all the terrors of Avar's dread alarms— 
We triumph! and avenged, we’ve Avon 
Our Union, and our Washington ! 
Rochester, N. Y. 
TUo Great Popular Remedy for Colds, 
Couglis, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, 
Croup and Whooping; Cough. 
Cures Gravel and all Kidney Diseases. 
There have been many severe eases tn Boston and vi¬ 
cinity cured by the WHITE PINE COMPOUND, which 
can be referred to, and hundred* of oases of Kidney com- 
plaints, (’cued v.NTi uki.v hy taking the 1 Vhila Bine Com¬ 
pound, have been reported by Druggists. 
Among all the popular Medicines offered forsalc.no 
one neeme to have gamed ttvor like the WhUr I’ine Com¬ 
pound. flits Medicine Avas first umdfi as lately *x the 
spring of 185S, ami then merely for one Individual, who 
Avas affected with an inflammation of the throat. A cure 
was effected uy It. This induced others to apply for the 
same remedy. Amt every uric using li received a great 
benefit. The article, however, Avent without 11 name till 
November following, when it was called While IHne < »ui- 
pound. ttniiDg that month it was advertised for the 
unfit umo, 
Some time IU1856, an Individ oat. who purchased abottle 
for a haul cough, was not only cured of the cough, but 
also of a severe kidney complaint, Of ten vpmh' endur- 
ance. This being truly « •Uncover </. Urn fact avuk mention¬ 
ed to ft skillful.physician, who replied, tn substance, that 
the barkoi Wmtc Pine w as one of the best diuretics 
known, provided Its astriugeney could be Counteracted. 
If the other articles entering Into the Compound v . mid 
effect this, a fortune wan tn the Medicine. The routine 
has not. yet be*n reached, but the hundreds 01 cures ef¬ 
fected by the Compound, In the most aggravated cases of 
Kidney disease.'.lot hiding Otdbeleu, prove. 1c tube twon- 
derful Medicine for such ailments. A tar-e number of 
physicians now employ It, or recommend b (or such nse. 
Bui while the. If Aft* Bum Compound, la su toioOU in 
Kidney lullaminathm, it la nlso a wonderful curative III all 
throat and lung diseases. U so quickly and soothingly 
allay-* I nils mutation, that hoarsen oss utul soreness arc re¬ 
moved ns if by magic. N'ntpnrnns casts* have been re¬ 
ported to the originator, where 1 cLIel la wrv severe rases 
"My child," replied the old man, "your 
filial utul simple piety has instructed those avIio 
Burrouiid me by all the cares Avliich my poor ex¬ 
istence demands. You have good pupils here, I 
assure you; I shall be very well contented Avith 
them. And besides, if I should Avish this mar¬ 
riage, if I should command it—" 
"lAvould disobey you, my father!” replied 
Eudoxie, "yes, ami you would not be angry. 
When my good aunt Avas near to death she made 
us promise, solemnly, my sister and me, in be¬ 
queathing us our doAvere, to marry only on con¬ 
dition of not leaving you. This vow, which 
Aims Avritten itt advance upon my heart, was very 
quickly upon my lips. Y r ou would not Avish to 
render me purjured and unhappy?" 
“ WcH, then,” said M, Offeniieui, “you 
shall be married and L will not leave you. I will 
follOAV you to France, and make one of your 
family. What have you to say iiuav ?" 
The marriage contract was signed the same 
day that peace was ratified. Ludoxte Avrote a 
letter to Thebla in Avliich her whole heart was 
disclosed. 
L£'~' Ansvvdr iu two weeks 
For Moore’s Rnral New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
I am composed of .39 letters. 
My lit, 87 , 33, 8 is a kind of flOAver. 
My 11, 25, 14,14,17, 7 is a girl’s name. 
My S3, 34, 30,12, 29, 2S is a bird. 
My S3. IS, 19. 33. 9 is the sent of justice, 
My 20.1,1(5 ie a kind of tree. 
My 23, 10, 2. 31, 4 is a fruit. 
My 5, 0, 1.5, ;ts. 12 is a kind of fish. 
My 13, 22, 10, 21 is an animal. 
My 37, 3, 20 is an abbreviation. 
My 21, 86 is a preposition. 
My 39, IS, 35 is not mo. 
My Avhole is a patriotic saying. 
Northville, Pa. 1 
t3r AnsAvers in Iavo weeks. 
Theela responded by quite a willy 
note; and after losing several opportunities of 
marriage, she Avns made a canoness, in order to 
lie at least called Madame. 
The happiness of Eudoxie increased from 
year to year, through many revolutions. This 
proves that Adrtue has its reward upon the earth 
— sometimes! 
For Moore’s Rnral New-Yorker, 
GEOGRAPHICAL ENIGMA. 
loved —the old airs of his youth. Her care, her 
gaiety, her courage were admirable, and M. Of- 
fenueim had found tears to Avcep for his young 
wife; this Avas a great joy to Eudoxie, Tueela, 
on the contrary, had nearly always some good 
reason for not being near M. Offenheim; he 
perceived jt well, but he never complained of it; 
he amis too good, as well as too much contented 
with Eudoxie, who found besides, a thousand 
excuses so as to explain the absence of her sister. 
A feAV months had scarcely glided away when 
a'wealthy marriage Avas offered to Eudoxie; but 
it would he necessary to leave Offenheim castle, 
and this marriage was refused. From the first 
moment Thebla was very jealous of it. Beau¬ 
tiful and brilliant as she aa’u?, to see her younger 
6 ister thtis sought after before her, caused her 
pride to suffer cruelly; from that day she Avrote 
incessantly to Dresden, to acquaintances that 
she had made during the last years in which they 
had received so much company at Offenheim 
castle. At last, one morning, a courier arrived 
who brought to her the neAVs that she was ap¬ 
pointed reader and maid of honor to the Queen. 
Quickly she carried the letter to her sister, who 
said to her merely, “ And the promise! at our 
I am composed of S3 letters. 
My 2 , 22 . so, 25, 5 is .1 lake in Canada. 
My S, 1. 5,12, 15, 31, 30 is a river in Brazil. 
My 29. 0, 24, 11,13, 23. 22 is a river in Russia. 
My 3, 33, 27, 4. 20,17,10 is a sea iu Asia. 
My 19, is, 14, 21, 23, 31 is a county in Ngav York. 
My 10 , 27, 7, 8 , 9, 20 is a river in England. 
My Avhole is a Proverb. Geo. Mouse, 
Litchfield, Pa. 
ZST" Ansiver in tAvo weeks. 
WIT AND WISDOM 
No one is a fool always; everyone sometimes. 
All fault-finding that docs no good is a crime. 
The talent avc aspire to spoils that avc have. 
Tilf. friends of the Avicked are always cowards. 
I knoav that flattery is flattery, but I like it all 
the same. 
When you walk out to hike the air, take your 
heir with you. 
Tile cloak of religion often shoAvs a fine nap 
in sermon time. 
The best exercise is that, iu general, Avliich we 
most like to do. 
If avc expect charity from theAvorld, avc must 
be charitable ourselves. 
Tile will influences the opinions of a man 
much more than the opinions the will. 
Character is that Avliich can do without suc¬ 
cess; say, rather, it cannot but, succeed. 
“ Be not the lira!, by whom the 11 
Nor yet the last to lay the oh'^j 
He is a brave man avIio dur. 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
AN ANAGRAM. 
Tuaw crew file thwiton mose eno ot rcche su, 
Itwh a rowd ro a limes no roa yaAV, 
A rindef hoAV ei yathluflif rean sn, 
Dan shede ton liftAvtrethos amy asy. 
net vestbar fo strieip evttb fento 
La ft delfea ni eth earc bath yeth arn, 
Orf a dnik rowd s'leif phridhassot nestof, 
Noth ays a iudk doAvr newh uoy nac. 
PentAvater, Mich. Frances J. Godfrey. 
{ggr - Answer in two weeks. 
greatcrtiuyu ntioiia coni.^ by accident. met it is Angular 
that tli 0 \\ h!iu due t.oropouiiJ, ttwdc lor toOuhii mid 
colds, should prove to be the greatest remedy lor kidney 
difficulties iuioAvn. But so Ills. SVe eaouul doubt it, bo 
many testimonials cornu u> uu from well-known men. Be- 
sides, Uic chat'actor Ot Dr. Poland Is such, that, we kuoAV 
that he will not countenance wlml U wrong. For years a 
jhipuat, cloreymnu; studying medicine to find remedies 
lor buailments,Avith a delicate,eommropiivelook. *und- 
Ing AVlth one loot upon the grave, he made the discovery 
Which hip saved himself uud called out from hundreds of 
others the strongest testimonials possible. We have 
known Dr. Poland for years, and never knew a more con¬ 
scientious, honest, upright man, and are glad to state that 
avc believe whatever ho says about his White Pine Com¬ 
pound.’ 
ANSWER TO ANAGRAMS, &c., IN No. 785 
AusAver to Illustrated Rebus: 
Y T our broken credit may be no dishonor, 
Bat your integrity must be intact. 
AusAver to Anagram: 
the wauiuou’s welcome. 
Hail! ye heroes, home returning 1 
'.V'-’ l r ' thnn- T bt$ ',r Tn<-,m 7 iiner- 
Grateful hearts w ith rapture burning, 
Welcome thus your gallant baud. 
Toils are over, foes retreating, 
Friend and lover joyful meeting; 
All our country sends us greeting: 
• Brave defenders of our land. 
Answer to Anagrams nf Rattles .’—Seven Pines 
Oaks, Lexington.' Dug Springs, Autlctam, Fredc 
burgh. Willamsburgh. Malvern Hill, Pea Ridge 
freesboro, Pittsburgh Lauding, Winchester. 
TESTIMONIALS 
V'l | Vro.l r. .... pl.j ctni.mo. darn, ........ Anollie- 
carlce, and, indeed, feont all eluA.ej, in society.ghrakiu.. t Q 
buttering ter ms ol the Whim I'm. dompuuul 
Dr. Nleliol* or North Held, V t., says: v 
Rov.,1 k Chusyot Uumuey.N. It., writes - 
thaw lor r:. (led yum White Pine Compound 
™ UiStSHIS!!.'”?'..»y '•"at t regard tt 
have 
to wear old 
clothes until he is able to pay for Yew. 
The only result of a feeble man’s putting down 
his foot is to shOAV hoAv little it measures. 
Our government is organized to go by moral 
influences, as much us mills by witer. 
In genera], those who do not annoy you with 
positive faults bore you Avith insipidity. 
Those ladies who have a passiim for tea-par¬ 
ties should remember that tattle begins with T. 
Nobody likes to be fouud fault with, but 
everybody likes to find fault Avheu things dou’t 
suit. 
Don’t confide your money, your secrets, or 
your Avife, to a friend evidently anxious for the 
trust. 
To love and to labor is the sum of living; and 
yet how many think they live who neither labor 
nor love. 
One man laughs at Avhat frightens another. 
The sides of the former shake; the Avhole body 
of the latter. 
Love is not preserved by gifts and sacrifices, 
whose influence soon disappears, but by words 
and looks of love. 
WnATis the difference betAveen perseverance 
and obstinacy? One is a strong will and the 
other is a strong Avon’t. 
What woman is that Avho kuoAvs not what she 
says? She avIio 6wcars that she Avill never love, 
or that she will love forever. 
Ik a man from Lapland is a Laplander, then a 
man from Michigan should he a Michigander. 
Is the Avonmn a Michtgoose? 
The silent accomplish more than the noisy. 
The tail of t he rattlesnake makes all the noise, 
but the head does the execution. 
Many persons, like a mocking-bird, or a blank 
Avail, say nothing of themselves, but give back 
imperfectly the utterances of others. 
Why ie n sea-sick passenger on his way to 
England like Whittier ? Because he is a “ Con¬ 
tributor to the Atlantic .”—Taunton Gazette. 
Why may the exercise of skating serve as an 
excellent introduction to society ? Because, 
Avheu once the ice is broken, you may often 
drop in. 
A celebrated song-Avritcr usked Douglas Jer- 
rold, “ Have you sufficient cmfhlence in me to 
lend mo a guinea?" “Oh, yes," said Jerrold, 
“ J’ve all the confidence, but I haven’t the 
guinea 1" 
YVhat Avill paralyze small minds may incite 
larger ones, as the breath wldch extinguishes the ( 
candle will kindle and strengthen Lhe flame upon ' 
the hearth-stone. 
When our young men come back from the ' 
Avar, how fortified and self-reliant they will be < 
for having passed through fire for such ends. 1 
Modesty will be for us who have staid at home. I 
Translated from tlie French for the Rural New-Yorker, 
By Thia Myrice. 
as an invaluable rumoay. 1 can truly 
as even more efficacious arid valuable'than over!' 
t, " c Louipoiuirl for a cold, and It works ciiavm- 
flon. P. H 8 woe too r of 8011 th Reading, ivritea; 
. [ouj known gome thing of Uic valuable modi- 
i™;, i"’ 111 ! 11 ''*. Will If Fine, I was prepared, on 
scclne an ad vertigo int at of your White Pirn: UorupoumJ. lo 
gUo the modlctno a trial. It hag been used by members 
pi my family, for several years, for cold# and couchs, and 
in some case#, of senoug kidney dittlculUeg, with rxeel- 
h L ' ni ,' ‘^ 0UV Me«to have ilso rocel5id 
alwayB on haud.” th ° Comi)ound - Wu keep it 
FROM n. F. AIKEN. 
GorvaTowx, March 14, isoo. 
* wfiih to hear testimony to tho value of 
your il /nfc ! me Compound, You will romoiubcr how 
l 1 9 lu * ealfed on you Iu Julv bud. My 
.efcomphiluiwiu InMmmalUm of the Utneyn. in a d- 
other di*i«ro«abfe ayuinioms, 1 .utferod drend- 
f ".'? ^ 0I " severe pain. > uu sold me a botUn of the Wftlte 
nci ; H1| d before 1 had Ulken two-Uilrdeof tlie 
contents of one hullfe. mv p-'en had mi felt me. Though 
I have been afflicted with that coniiduiut a loner time. I 
Theela and Eudoxie, of an honorable family 
of Saxony’, were left orphans at an early age. 
Madam Offenheim, their maternal aunt, re¬ 
ceived them into her estate near Dresden, or 
rather into the estate of her husband, a man 
more than seventy years okl, who might have 
been her father, and who, having conceived a 
tender affection for her, had asked her in mar¬ 
riage, in order to be able, naturally enough as 
she had no fortune, to leave to her a safe 
property. 
Thebla and Eudoxie established, loved, and 
petted in the castle of M. Offenheim by their 
aunt, who was from the first a mother to them 
during the difficult cares of their earlier years, 
and then an instructor for the education that 
youth demands; the dear little ones, thanks to 
so much solicitude and love, had not had time 
to know that they were orphans. 
For more than ten years the little Offenheim 
castle became, by the amiability of its mistress, 
the resort of the most distinguished and agree¬ 
able persons of the neighborhood; so that 
Theela and Eudoxie, independent ol the most 
careful education, were also indebted to their 
auut for ail their best pleasures. Never were 
young ladies more happy and contented with 
their good fortune, Avhen one evening Madam 
Offenheim had them called to the bed, where 
they thought her detained by a slight indisposi¬ 
tion, 
“My children,” she said to them, “ this is not 
indisposition; it is not sickness—it is death! 
To-morrow you will be orphans a second time. 
A tumor of long standing will in a few hours 
exhaust the springs of my life; I feel it is so. I 
have concealed the seriousness of my state from 
my husband: why darken still more the shadows 
of his old age? I have 8aid nothing of it to 
you, my dear liltle ones: why cause the roses 
©f your spring-time to pale before their time? 
Whatever I may hope from the mercy of God, I 
regret this life to which I leave you. I will re¬ 
gret it less if you will promise, me not to aban¬ 
don your old uncle, whom infirmites commence 
to weigh down, and whom solitude will com¬ 
pletely crush. Meantime, thanks to his liber- 
[special NOTICE.] 
Valuable and Convenient.—“Brown’* 
Bbonoiiial Tuocruta" are widely known a* an admir¬ 
able remedy for BronchitL, Hoarseness, Co a*; lw, and 
other troubles of the Throat ftiul Lungs. They aro of 
groat value for the purpose# for which they are designed, 
while they are usually and pleasantly efficacious, they 
contain no hurtful ingrodients, hut may at all times ho 
used with perfect safety .—Bouton Recorder. 
MOOEE’S EUEAL NEW-Y0RKEE, 
THE LABGKBT-CIRCULATING 
Agricultural* Literary aud Family Newspaper 
IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY 
D. D. T. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N, Y. 
Ollicd, Uuion Building*, Opposite the Court House, Buffalo St. 
daughter,” said he, “you arc alone, burdeued 
Avith a poor old man. God will reward you.” 
“He rewards me already,” replied Eudoxie, 
“since you call me your daughter.” 
In the meantime, the French army, which was 
marching from victory to victory, and Avhich 
marched very rapidly, seized Saxony, but under 
the title of ally. N apoleon respected the crown 
of the old Icing; only the country was occupied 
by our troops; a precaution useful to the designs 
of the Emperor 011 Austria and Prussia. Gene¬ 
rals, officers, andsoidiers Avere distributed among 
the inhabitants. A general of the guard pre¬ 
sented himself, together with his suite, with a 
billet of lodgement, at Offenheim castle. It 
Avas necessary to receive him, and more, to re¬ 
ceive him well. The General Avas Buffering from 
a recent wound; lie was, besides, still a young 
man, of great distinction, and as gentle in social 
life as I 10 was terrible iu combat. M. Offen¬ 
heim admitted him to his owu table, and the 
Frenchman was a witness of the angc-lle virtues 
of Eudoxie, ivhose gracefulness had at first, im¬ 
pressed him. 
At the cud of a month’s sojourn he made to 
the uncle an avowal of a sentiment, Avhich he 
concealed as well us possible from the eyes of 
the ncieo, and offered his name and his hand. 
The General occupied the finest position of for¬ 
tune and ambition, favored by the Emperor, and 
of an excellent family of Alasco, consequently 
almost English, which touched M, Offenheim 
much. The old man grew young by this hope: 
the idea of being able to confide, before his 
death, his dear Eudoxie to a husband so emi¬ 
nent by his position, aud Avho by his heart 
appeared so worthy of her, dilfused upon the 
countenance and throughout the spirit of the 
old man a tinge of unaccountable joy, at Avhich 
Eudoxie rejoiced without being able to ex¬ 
plain It. 
Information concerning the General was easily 
procured. When M. Offenheim Avas entirely 
satisfied in that respect, he called Eudoxie and 
revealed to her the great secret “If you do 
autif suoAvaa sign* ot nmeiHinivut. Eleven ruouiL- ojut- 
AvaiTl#, (Fab.23, ISOi.i I 11 a full tiulciii, nt of hi* {nose, lio 
say# I hellove Or. 1‘oiand‘n White / •- •,. OtwipouVirf, 
under uou, gas been the menu#of my rucovery thus far.” 
Letter from Rkv, l, e. Steven*. iMntor 
Vh urc/t, Gojf itoicn CenXr* % Ji. 
Dr. J, AV. Roland - My Dear Sir- A'riu have asked nio 
AVliat I think of your AVfilte Fine Compound. 1 imver l>m 
(ore put pen to pigier to tell any man what I thought of a. 
luedlelne. My father, u nhyslelau of the old school 
early led nwtoHertons suspicious,.i all nostrums of what¬ 
ever kind not hearing the mump of that fraternity. But 
these xuapIclotiH I have parted with hv dem-eer.,** I havo 
carpnilly uequalnted myself witii the leading pnnclptee 
ol Hydropathy, I ImiHooptithy,Thotupsonlunimi, Entert|. 
cum, amt oUier eyslems which have Claimed nubile rnyor 
within the lout twenty-five yoais; so that I feu at liberty 
on. till# ground to speak my eouvleuon*, y 
'I hen the sympathy w hich I feel f ir you, a# a former 
Baptist pastoi - obliged to relinquish the ministry merely 
on account or lli health, butstilf cSort&lng^all tbu antor 
of your early yearn tor thin Ideasod work, and luborlmr to 
your utmost Iu other ways, to proclaim the glorious ''os- 
U1 ° ,ui :l matter of duly to comply with your 
In ISIS 1 hccftjue Iioquiiinted with Dcu. Dolmcs Board- 
man of Maine hi Other of the late (n o. Dana Board mau 
Joimerly mtssionarv in Barmnh.and from him f., r Uu! 
ivai iied llie wonderful medicinal qualities uf 
white pmchiirk. He bad 1 , tew y.\u - before been tuouglit 
lo the borders ol Ue- grave, by a hiit tlie lnvt ot plivil- 
clansprtiuouiiced plijuiouary consumption,aud wasglveft 
f the Bap tint 
eiuo papcMi airoLioti 10 individuals and sent to as many 
different t’ost-CUtlcea as desired, As we prepay Ameri¬ 
can postage ou Cople# gent abroad, *2.70 t» tho lowe*t 
Club rate for Canada, and *3.50 to Europe,—but during 
the pri'M-ut rate of exchange, Cuuuda AgeuUi or 8 ub 
Bcrlhcra remtuiugfor the Rural in bills of tlicir 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 i'ubllsher, hay be hailed at uts kisk, 
StST The above Terms and Rates must lie strictly Ad¬ 
hered to go long 11 s publlslifd—ami we trust there Will be 
no necessity for advancing them during tho year. Those 
who remit less than apectUed price for a club or single 
copy, Avill be credited only as per rales, l’crsons sending 
less limn full pttce for this volume avIU find when their 
subscriptions expire by referring to figures on address 
label — thu ttgures indicating the No. or the paper to 
which they have paid being given. 
00 ,. nils ncvcrilloicM entirely cured hy a 
Pl'inTftro 1 0 n.mf‘l le | ^ " B °' VI1 lln! "' S feOtU tfli.K tiafg. BUtCO 
1 v . h U ’ 0,111 1 lu> caiue ucq Main tod with rone artlele, T 
I 
I 
■ 
