her favorite vine-clad •window, hamming some 
gentle song over her needle. Then the wild tem¬ 
pest of the conflict swept her out of his thought. 
It was no moment in which to bestow tender 
offices upon the dead. The living foe was before 
him, and as he laid poor Chari,et's body down 
upon the gronnd, he lifted his sword just in time 
to ward off a fierce blow aimed at his own head. 
The rebels were in overpowering numbers, and 
they drove our men hack to the road with fierce 
yells of exultation, trampling Charley Den¬ 
nison's corpse beneath their feet. 
4 Magnificent Premium 
“ Will you be quiet, Mr. D ? I shall allow 
myself an equal salary” — 
“ Ont of your own purse ! ” Charley mur¬ 
mured under his breath. 
“ Out of the contingent fund,” said Bex. 
“ And so that matter is settled. And now to 
bed. I will call in to-morrow morning at eight 
o’clock, and we will set about giving notice of 
the meeting. 
They lingered a moment at the door with 
clasped hands. 
“Charley,” said Bex, in a low tone, “you 
have a happy home here ? ” 
“ None happier,” said Charley, “were it not 
for the wolf that shows its teeth at my door 60 
much of late.” 
“ It will be painful to you to leave It.” 
“ But a necessary pain, Bex.” 
“ How will your wife bear it ? ” 
“ Never fear for her, Bf.x. She is as ready to 
bear her part of the pain, as I mine. And her’s 
will be the hardest, I think. But she will cover 
it np with sunny smiles, and cheer rue on.” 
“ Brave little woman! ” uttered Bex. “Good 
night.” 
“ Good night, old friend.” 
It took nearly a month to raise the company, 
though our friends adopted every possible means 
of accomplishing their purpose; for one com¬ 
pany had already been raised from tfyat ground. 
Dexnison was a superior orator; and Manly 
had a quiet, impressive way of “saying a few 
words,” that was wonderfully telling. They 
held war meetings in every neighborhood round 
about. In handsome churches. In school-houses 
at four-comer hamlets, and in the open woods 
they gathered the people together, and stirred 
np the patriotic fire in their breasts till a blaze 
of enthusiasm was kindled in and about the 
Harbor, and people talked of scarcely anything 
el6e but “Captain Manly’s Company.” They 
had dubbed him “CaptaiD ” in advance, you 6ee. 
Bex said nothing against it. 
There was a novelty in this occupation that 
suited Bex Manly well. There was even a 
touch of the romantic in it which gratified that 
underlying something in Ills nature which few 
suspected in him—a man so quiet, so undemon¬ 
strative. But who is the man in whose heart 
romance and sentiment lie deepest ? Not he 
who loves, and marries his fove while life is 
young; that inau glides peacefully into the 
duties of pater fumilias and of the respected 
citizen; he lives out his romance fairly, and it 
passes into the quiet content of the home circle. 
But he who has loved as Bex Manly hud loved— 
who has seen the sole object of his devotion lay 
her beautiful head upon another’s bosom and 
rest there unconscious of the love that had 
found no voice—he Is the man. The romantic 
longing, growing not, progressing not by natu¬ 
ral stages, ripens not, but continues forever, 
deep down in tbe heart, where no eye pierces. 
No one, but Ben Manly himself, knew this 
deathless thing in him that had no name. 
The company was raised at last. When the 
election of officers took place, Charley Den¬ 
nison was surprised to find that he was elected 
Captain. It was Ben Manly’s work. By means 
best known to himself, in his own quiet way, he 
secured every vote of the company for his friend, 
declining to accept the office for himself. He 
was made First Lieutenant. And one pleasant 
day they marched away to the war. Susie 
proved her husband’s words true when the hour 
lor departure came. 
“ Brave little woman,” Ben murmured again. 
We will pass lightly over the many months 
that, followed. Charley’s pay was quite suffi¬ 
cient to support his little family with more than 
their customary comfort. Susie wrote him fre¬ 
quent letters, aud never one but that made his 
heart lighter from the reading. Her life seemed 
to he one bright and beautiful song. Of course, 
Charley showed all her letters to Ben. Here is 
an extract from one of them, which Charley 
received when his company was in Tennessee: 
“What beautiful pictures,” she wrote, “do 
hang on the walls of this beautiful palace where 
I live all alone, with my little ones! Now you 
wonder what they are, don’t you, my Charley ? 
This is a woman’s juke, you know —plntse laugh! 
But if ever golden frame shut in a more enchant¬ 
ing picture than that which is framed by yonder 
winnow , as 1 sit here and look out, J ncverWw it. 
The lake lies out There In all its old beauty, and 
the up-piled clouds and gliding sails no painter 
ever mnned so exquieibAv. 1 remember now the 
many delightful hours \vF have bad ou the bosom 
of those fair waters. Shall ive ever see them 
again ? Perhaps you and I may, my Charley, 
Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
“LYRICS OF LIFE.” 
WEBSTER’S ILLUSTRATED DICTIONARY 
FOR ONLY 20 NEW SUBSCRIBERS! 
For Moore's Rural New-Yorker. 
MISCELLANEOUS ENIGMA. 
"Lyrics of Life by Robert Browning"— 
Confound the thing!” said my neighbor, frowning, 
“I read them, and dug at them, over and over, 
And. hang me, I tell you. if I could discover 
A glimmer of meaning from cover to cove. 
My neighbor's disposed to be dull, however. 
1 sent to Boston, at once, aud got oDe. 
The frontispiece, It is attractive—very: 
Six little girls, (the largest is reading.) 
A boy, a dog, and a bird so merry. 
If they understand them. I said, then ought one 
Older than all of them put together— 
And then have a dozen of years still leading— 
Find an interpreter to be needing? 
Or have to make pause ev'n, asking whether 
lie would be able their meaning to prove? 
Well, now, I have read them all. And, saving 
Those that I name, they're the merest raving— 
"Count Glsmond,” "Evelyn nope,” “The Glove,” 
With a flight on "Fame,” and some “Bongs” - 
“Love”— 
A little bewildering tho’, by Jove !— 
Wife says, “Perhaps, to a Judgment riper, 
They might not appear so”—"The Pied Piper,” 
“How They Got The Good News From Ghent 
To Aix”—tho’ the errand on which was sent 
“Roland” away, with such headlong speeding, 
I’ve yet to learn (not told In the. reading.) 
I flatter myself besides, I mastered 
One or two more—"The Confessional,” 
"The Incident” (one of Nat-oi.eon’s camp;) 
The rest, by tbe. Rood! were blank, blank, blank. 
Never, I vow, was I ever so pestered 
With any author—foreign or national. 
1 never shall open by sunshine or lamp, 
Browning again, in fair weather or damp; 
Or any hook else of Its Sphynx-like stamp. 
I’d sooner, per Bacchus 1 attack a viper, 
Than again tarn tbe leaves of that grammar griper- 
Never before were such verses in type, or, 
Bluffed and crammed with such horrible byper- 
Bolieal sentences, lntervolutcd, 
Screwed and knotted as ever were bruited 
Over the country, So all unsnlted 
For simple folk." Let the “ Lyrics ” be booted. 
And kicked, and jammed, and burned and booted, 
And tossed ekyhigh, and mangled, aud footed— 
Nay, not all of them—"Beautiful Evelyn!” 
Nothing more tender for souls to revel in— 
****** 
Reading that over has made me civil, an’ 
1 spare them all for "Beautiful Evelyn.” 
Wyoming, N. Y. 
The following Liberal Offer is made for the 
benefit of those who do not care to compete for 
our other Premiums: 
To Each Person procuring and remitting 
according to Club Terms ($2.50 per copy,) for 
Twenty New Subscribers to the XVIIth Vol¬ 
ume of the Rural New-Yorker, (commencing 
Jan. 6, ’66,) we will give a copy of WEBSTER’S 
NEW ILLUSTRATED UNABRIDGED DIC¬ 
TIONARY, the lowest Cash Price of which is 
Twelve Dollars ! This splendid and popular 
work contains oner Three Thousand Illustrations, 
is elegantly printed on fine paper, and substan¬ 
tially bound. It Is the best Book Premium, of 
its price, that can possibly be offered, and those 
who secure it will have a lile-long treasure. 
Tou, Reader, can seeure it by a little effort, and 
Now is the Time to make the Effort! 
ST” Specimen numbers, Show-Bills, Arc., &c., 
sent free to all applicants. 
Address D. I>. T. MOORE, 
Rochester, N. Y. 
I am composed of fit letters. 
My 13,10,12,1, 25, 14, 23 is one who collects detached 
parts or numbers. 
My 22, 19, 30, 21,10 is a regulating power. 
My 8, 29,1, 25. 3, 24, 2. 20 is repeating words with a 
melodious voice. 
My 15,19, 28.12 signifies past time. 
My 27, 20,1.17.11, 5, 20 is a kind of bird. 
My 6, 7, 4,16, 21, 9, 2 is a man's name. 
My 17, 31, 26. 2 is a water fowl. 
My whole is the name and place of a popular in¬ 
stitution. Hamilton W. Ogden, Ohio. 
1?* Answer in two weeks. 
Manly succeeded subsequently in identifying 
Charley’s remains. He buried them lovingly, 
under an old elm with spreading boughs, aud 
surrounded the grave with a rude inclosure of 
rails. With a knife he cut C. D. in one of the 
rails, and left the dead hero alone on the field 
where he fell. 
Manly wrote home to the young widow a 
full account of the manner of her husband’s 
death, which she bedewed with her tears. She 
wrote him a brief letter of thanks; and then all 
communication between them ceased. Mrs. 
Manly subsequently wrote to her son that the 
widow had left Rose Harbor to return no more. 
If anything had been needed to intensify Ben 
Manly’s hatred of the accursed cause for which 
the foe contended, the loss of his life-long friend 
would have furnished It, He had always been a 
brave soldier; and after that day, such was Us 
gallantry and devotion that his promotion from 
rank to rank was rapid. The spring of 18G5 
found him in command of a regiment of the 
Potomac army, in whieh position he continued 
till tbe surrender of Lef. aDd the speedy close of 
the struggle led to hie discharge from service. 
He retorned home to Rose Harbor, but his old 
restlessness was on him. Hie stay there was 
brief. He intended to go abroad again, but 
before doing so he went to Washington. 
One pleasant afternoon in June, as he was 
walking down Pennsylvania Avenue, a gray¬ 
headed negro stopped in the street before him 
aud touched his hat respectfully. 
“Co’nel Manly, I b’leve, sab?” said the old 
negro, 
“ Yes,” was the reply. 
“ You’ll ’ecuse me, Co’nel,” the old man con¬ 
tinued ; “1 didn’t ’apose you’d remember me, 
hut I recognized you im-mejitly. 1 was de 
coachman in dc snrvioe of Mars’r Castlandt, 
Eah, dern days w’en you wus younger dan w’at 
you be now; dough you ain’t, old yit, sah,” he 
added, a broad, pleased light breaking over his 
ebony face as Colonel Manly took his hand, in 
the midst of his speech, aud shook it warmly. 
“I’m glad to sec you, C'assak.” said Mani.t, 
in a cordial tone. “You’ve growu very gray. 
Arc you still with Mr, Cabtlandt?” 
“No, sah. Bcggin’ yo’ pardon, Mars’r 
Cas’landt’s dead deee two years. I’s at de 
present Limc#n de survice of Missis Cas’landt 
dat was, but she’s married agin, sah.” 
“Ah?” said Manly. 
He had taken tho old negro familiarly by the 
arm, and resumed the walk down the avenue. 
“Yis, sah,” continued Caesar, “she’s Missis 
Doctah Seymour, from Balthno', at de present 
time.” 
“ Well Caesar, do you know what has become 
of Mrs. Dennison, who was your young mis¬ 
tress at Rose Harbor?” 
“Dat’s jist w'at I’6 gwine to say, Co’ne) 
Manly. Missis Susie is at her mudder’s at de 
present time” — 
“In Baltimore,” asked Ben, quickly. 
“No, sah; herein dis yer city. De Doetah’s ‘ 
transferred hisself to Washington; an I’s had 
’structions to ’quire for you, Co’nel. Your de 
bery ge’man Missis Susie wants fer to see at de 
present time.” 
“Give me her address, Caesar,” said Ben, 
“and I will call this evening. I’ve some busi¬ 
ness to attend to now. Ah, this is the address. 
Very well. Tell Mrs. Dennison that I will call 
early this evening.” 
Ben Manly' walked away with a brisk step, 
and a strange warmth at his heart. Was it any 
other feeling than that of friendship for the 
wife of dead Charley? He did not pause to 
analyze it. [To he continued. 
■1 O O D BOOKS FOR 
T FARMERS AND OTHERS. 
ORANGE Jl’DD Sc CO., 
AGRICULTURAL BOOK PUBLISHERS 
41 Park Mow, Sew York. 
Publish and supply Wholesale and Retail, the 
following good Books: 
SPECIAL NOTICE.-Any of these Books will he 
sent, Post-Paid, to any part of the country cm receipt 
cf the annexed price. 
American Agriculturist..per year $1 50 
Amerikwdscuer Agriculturist (German).. .per year 1 50 
Allen's (L. F.) Rural Architecture.each 1 50 
Allen * (R. L.) American Farm Book. 1 50 
Allen's pUroues o£ Domestic Animals. 1 00 
American lilrd-Faneler... 30 
American Hose Cnlturlid . . . 30 
American Weeds and Useful Plant*. 1 75 
BarTT's Fruit Gardens... 1 75 
Brmrat** Poulterer's Companion.... 2 00 
Henicnt'* Rabbit Fancier. 30 
RoiiRflnuaulf* Rural Economy. 1 60 
HrUijrciriuii « Fruit Cultivator 8 Manual. 75 
Brideexcan'* Young Gardener'* Assistant. 2 00 
Brandt's Asre of Horse* (English and German). 50 
Breck's Book ol Flower*.;. 1 50 
Bulat's Flower Garden Directory. 1 50 
BuUtV Family Kitchen Gardener, .. 1 00 
Bnrr'* Vegetables of America.. 5 00 
Car pen tei*' and Joiners' Hand Book (Holly). 75 
Charlton’* Grape-Grower 1 * Guide. 75 
Colo’s (6. Mr', i Aroerlc an Fruit Book. 00 
Copeland's Country Life. 4 50 
Cotton Planter'*. Mantiol (Turner). 1 50 
Dadd's Modern Hors* Doctor,.... 1 50 
Dadd'a (Geo. H ) American Cattle Doctor. I 50 
Dana'* Muck Manual. 1 75 
Dog and Gun (Hooper's!.. 30 
Downing's Fruit* and Fruit Trees ol America. 3 00 
Eastwood on Cranberry. 75 
Elliott's Western Fruit Grower's Guide. 1 50 
Flax Culture, very good. 50 
French'? Farm Drainage... 1 50 
Field'* (J noruu* W.) Pear Culture. 1 25 
Fish Culture.. 125 
Flint (Charles 1,0 on Gra**c*. 2 00 
Flint's Milch Cows and Dairy Farming. 2 00 
Fuller's Grape Culturist.. .. . 1 50 
Fuller’s Strawberry Culturiet..... 20 
Goodale'* principles of Breeding.. 1 25 
GrayY How Plant* Grow. 1 25 
Guonon on Milch Cow*.. 75 
Haras/.tby Grape Culture, Ac. 5 00 
Harris’Julurlous Insect*, plain *8,50; colored. 4 50 
Herbert's Hint* to Horsekeepcrs... 1 75 
HiriD to Riflemen, by Cleveland. 1 50 
Hop Culture, very good.. 40 
Johnston',- Agricultural Chemistry. 1 75 
Kemp’* Landseupu Gardening. .. 2 00 
LangstrotU on the Honey Bee. 2 00 
Leucbar's How to Build Hot-houses. 1 50 
Linslcy h (I) C.) Morgan Hore>. 1 50 
Maybew’s IHustiated Horse Doctor. 8 50 
Mathew's Illustrated Horse Mangement... 8 50 
MoMahou'n American Gardener. 2 50 
Miles on the Horae's foot. 78 
My Kurnt lit. Edgirwood. 2 00 
Norton's Scientific Agriculture. 75 
Onion Culture, yerv good. 20 
Our Farm of Four Acres (bound) 00c; paper. 80 
Pardee ou Strawberry culture. . . 75 
Pedder's Land Measurer.. 60 
Qulnby'* Mysteries of Bee-Keeping. 1 75 
Ralibtt Flintier. 30 
Randall's Sheep Husbandry. 1 50 
Randall'* Fine wool Sheep Husbandry. 1 00 
Rand’s Flower? for Parlor and Garden. 3 00 
River’s Orchard House*. 50 
Scheuek’a Gardener's Text-Book. 75 
Shepherd * Own Book. 2 25 
SklMfnl Housewife. 75 
Smith's Landscape Gardening..«. 1 60 
Spencer's Education of Children..... 1 50 
Stewart's (John) Stable Book.-.. l 50 
Ten Acre* Enough. 1 50 
Thuer'n (A. D.) Principles ol Agriculture. 2 50 
Ttiotna*' Fruit Culturist.. 160 
Thompson'* Food for Animal*... l 00 
Tobacco Cnlture, very good. 25 
Todd'* (S E.) Young Farmer'sManual. 1 50 
Vaux's Villas and Cottages.. 3 00 
Warder's Hedges and Evergreens. 1 50 
Wawon’a American Home Garden. 2 00 
Wax Flowers (Art ol Malting). 2 00 
Woodward's Country Home*. 1 50 
Youau and Spooner on tlie Hors*. l 50 
Youult aud Marlin on Cattle... .... I 50 
Youatt on the Hog. 1 00 
Youatt on Sheep. 1 00 
Youmaus’ Housnold Science. 2 OO 
Youmans’New Chemistry. 2 00 
Written Expressly for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker, 
SUSIE CASTLATOT; 
BY WILLIAM WIRT SIKES, 
[Continued from page 20. last number,] 
Chapter III.— Through the War. 
If Ben Manly still retained hie oid feeling 
for the little woman whose hand he pressed so 
cordially, there was at least no indication ol* it 
in his manner toward her. She was the wife of 
his friend —the mother of his friend’s children. 
He looked at her critically, us if he were esti¬ 
mating her worth as a wife and a mother, and 
comparing her with the Susie Castlandt that 
he once loved. The result seemed to satisfy him. 
“And these are the babies?” he said, as he 
leaned over and kissed them as they sat at 
the table. 
“But how did I miss yon, Ben?” asked 
Dennison. 
“ I did not come in the coach,” he replied. “ I 
drove over in a private carriage from Broad 
Valley; passing your door I felt as if I must 
drop in for a minute; but I shall have to go on, 
for mother will he waiting,. My trunks are in 
the house by this time. So au revoir, Charley*. 
I’ll be hack to spend the evening with you, after 
au hour or so with mother. I want to talk war 
with you, my boy." 
He was gone. Susie drew a long breath, and 
kissed her little ones — on the lips Ben Manly 
had touched a minute before. Was she aware 
of it ? I think not. I think she had no con¬ 
sciousness of her real feelings at that time 
toward Manly, 1 know, at least, that her 
heart’s loyalty to her husband was without 
spot; and when he came in from the gate, to 
which he had walked with Ben, she threw her 
arms about his neck, and kissed him, too. She 
was thinking that he would probably leave her 
soon, now that Ben Manly had come home; 
for were they not going to “talk Yvar” that 
evening ? 
They talked it to some purpose, too, when 
Ben came hack. They sat over it till past 
midnight, and Susie went to bed leaving them 
thus engaged. They determined to raise a com¬ 
pany at once. 
“We will go at it to-morrow, Charley,” 
said Ben. “We will hold a Yvar-meetmg in 
St. George’s Hall to-morrow evening, and after 
that we’ll scour ibe country, all about here. I 
doubt if there are a hundred young men in Rose 
Harbor fit for service, to say nothing of those 
who are * too ' fraid to light.’ But wcTl raise them 
somehow. I shall meet the expenses from my 
own purse, of course. I shall have to engage at 
least one good orator, and pay him a good price.” 
“ Why can't I do the talking, Ben?" put In 
Charley, modestly. 
“You cau, my boy,” said Ben. “None bet¬ 
ter. I will pay you twenty-five dollars a night, 
for every meeting you address” — 
Charley held up his open hand with a de¬ 
precating gesture. 
“Don’t interrupt me, Mr. D.,” Ben went on, 
with the most business-like air in the world. 
“call it a bargain! You cannot neglect your 
clients for nothing, man.” 
“ My clients! ” uttered Charlet. 
ILLUSTRATED CHARADE 
He talked of daggers and of darts. 
Of passions and of pains, 
Of weeping eyes and wounded hearts, 
Of kisses and of chains. 
He said though Love was kin to grief, 
She was not born to grieve ; 
He said, though many rued belief, 
She safely might believe. 
But still the lady shook her head, 
As any lady may. 
And vowed my whole was all he said, 
Or all that he could say. 
He said my first—whose silent car 
Was slow iy wandering by. 
Veiled in a vapor faint und fair. 
Through the unfathomed sky— 
Was like the smile, whose roev light 
Across her young lips passed; 
Yet oh 1 it was not half so bright. 
It changed not half so fast. 
But still the lady shook her head, 
As any lady- may. 
And vowed my whole was all he said, 
And all that he could say. 
WIT AND WISDOM 
And then he set a cypress wreath 
Upon his raven hair, 
And drew his rapier from its sheath, 
Which made the ladv stare; 
And said his. life-blood's purple flow 
My second there should dim. 
If she he loved and cherished so 
Would weep one teur for him 
But still the lady shdhk her head. 
As any lady may. 
And vowed my whole was all he said, 
And all that he could say. 
Answer in two weeks. 
MOORE'S RURAL NEW-YORKER 
THE LARGEST-OlECCLATING 
AGRICULTURAL, LITERARY AYR F.llULY NEWSPAPER, 
IS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY 
BY D. D. T. MOORE, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
Kiss—A receipt given on “paying your ad¬ 
dresses.” 
lie who has good health is a rich man, and 
rarely knows it. 
The attempt to read many hooks often ends in 
thoroughly reading none. 
He who enters upon a career of crime must 
come to a hall or a halter. 
A man hanging is better than a vagabond; he 
has visible means of support. 
No matter how long you have been married, 
never neglect to court your wife. 
You needn’t have such a reverence for truth as 
always to stand at an awful distance from it, 
A child thus defines gossip:—“ It’s when no¬ 
body don’t do nothing, and somebody goes and 
tells of it.” 
The greatest objec tion to those who mean well 
is, that they seldom find time to carry out their 
intentions. 
The faults and mistakes of us poor human be¬ 
ings are as often perpetuated by despair as by 
any other one thing. 
A spirited young lady who was about to 
marry a man whose purse was longer than his 
head, said she preferred his dollars to his sense. 
Tbe Rural New-Yorker 1b designed to be unsur¬ 
passed In Value, Purity, aud Variety of Contents. Its 
Conductor earnestly labors to render the Rural a Reli¬ 
able Guide on all the important Practical, Scientific and 
otUcr Subjects connected with the business of those 
whose Interests it zealously advocates. As u Family 
Journal it is eminently instructive and Entertaining — 
being so conducted that it can be safely taken to the 
Homes of people of Intelligence, tnste and discrimination. 
It embraces more Agricultural, Horticultural, (scientific, 
Educational, Literary and News Matter, interspersed 
with appropriate engravings, than any other journal,— 
rendering It by far the most complete Agricultural, 
Literary and Family Newspaper in America. 
For Moore’s Rural New-Yorker 
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no, vgei em a oemh yb a rilngup rmaete, 
Hreew hte elvoly lidw lwofera ogrw; 
Rehew teh cumie ewtes fo het guninra krobo 
Lhasl urnrnnu fsot dan owl. 
Ehewr eth rbsid algid nigs la hte ignnorm ohur, 
Nad roughutoht het vilenogi ayd ; 
Ot ehcar ynt uslo twill eitrh Jeivyl eetno, 
Dua betas lndl race waya. 
South Livonia, N. Y. Florence A. Wells. 
Answer in two weeks. 
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*»* For Publisher's Notices, &c., see preceding page. 
ANSWERS TO ENIGMAS, &c., IN No. 833 
Answer tolllustrated Rebus:—Hope ne’er can leave 
the human heart. 
Answer to Geographical Enigma : 
A little nonsense now and then 
Is relished by the wisest men. 
Answer to Miscellaneous Enigma:—Lay me down 
and save the flag. 
Answer to Anagram: 
Columbia, Columbia, to glory arise, 
The queen of the w orld and the child of the skies; 
Thy genius commands thee with rapture behold, 
While ages on ages thy splendors unfold. 
Answer to Mathamatical Problem :-11.0i! rods. 
J2P The verdict of public taste, like the politi¬ 
cal vote of the country, settles many delicate 
questions, aud the immense demaud for Pha- 
lon's “Night-Blooming Cereus” shows that 
verdict to be overwhelmingly in favor of the 
article, as the finest perfume on this continent. 
Sold everywhere. 
