Balsamo, the magician; or, the memoirs of a physician

CHAPTER XLVI.

Chapter 469,863 wordsPublic domain

A TERRIBLE WEDDING-NIGHT.

The dauphin opened the door of the anteroom before the wedding chamber.

The archduchess was waiting, in a long white wrapper, with the strange anticipation on her brow, along with the sweet expectation of the bride, of some disaster. She seemed menaced with one of those terrors which nervous dispositions foresee and support sometimes with more bravery than if not awaited.

Lady Noailles was seated by the gilded couch, which easily held the princess' frail and dainty body.

The maids of honor stood at the back, waiting for the mistress of the attendants to make them the sign to withdraw. These were all ignorant that the dauphin was coming by a new way in. As the corridor was empty and the door at the end ajar, he could see and hear what went on in the room.

"In what direction does my lord the dauphin come?" inquired the Austrian's pure and harmonious voice though slightly tremulous.

"Yonder," replied Lady Noailles, pointing just the wrong way.

"What is that noise outside--not unlike the roaring of angry waters?"

"It is the tumult of the innumerable sight-seers walking about under the illumination and waiting for the fireworks display."

"The illuminations?" said the princess with a sad smile. "They must have been timely this evening, for did you not notice it was very black weather?"

At this moment the dauphin, who was tired of waiting, thrust his head in at the door, and asked if he might enter. Lady Noailles screamed, for she did not recognize the intruder at first. The dauphiness, worked up into a nervous state by the incidents of the day, seized the duchess' arm in her fright.

"It is I, madame; have no fear," called out the prince.

"But why by that way?" said Lady Noailles.

"Because," explained Louis the King, showing his head at the half-open door, "because the Duke of Vauguyon knows so much Latin, mathematics and geography as to leave room for nothing else."

In presence of the king so untimely arrived, the dauphiness slipped off the couch and stood up in the wrapper, clothed from head to foot like a vestal virgin in her stole.

"Any one can see that she is thin," muttered the king; "what the deuse made Choiseul pick out the skinny chicken among all the pullets of European courts?"

"Your majesty will please to observe that I acted according to the strict etiquette," said the Duchess of Noailles, "the infraction was on my lord the dauphin's part."

"I take it on myself. So, let us leave the children to themselves," said the monarch.

The princess seized the lady's arm with more terror than before.

"Oh, don't go away!" she faltered; "I shall die of shame."

"Sire, the dauphiness begs to be allowed to go to rest without any state," said Lady Noailles.

"The deuce--and does 'Lady Etiquette' herself crave that?"

"Look at the archduchess----"

In fact, Marie Antoinette, standing up, pale and with her rigid arm sustaining her by a chair, resembled a statue of fright, but for the slight chattering of her teeth, and the cold perspiration bedewing her forehead.

"Oh, I should not think of causing the young lady any pain," said Louis XV., as little strict about forms as his father was the other thing. "Let us retire, duchess; besides, the doors have locks."

The dauphin blushed to hear these words of his grandfather, but the lady, though hearing, had not understood.

King Louis XV. embraced his grand-daughter-in-law, and went forth, with Lady Noailles, laughing mockingly and sadly, for those who did not share his merriment.

The other persons had gone out by the other door.

The wedded pair were left alone in silence.

At last the young husband approached his bride with bosom beating rapidly; to his temples, breast and wrist he felt all his repressed blood rushing hotly. But he guessed that his grandfather was behind the door, and the cynical glance still chilled the dauphin, very timid and awkward by nature.

"You are not well, madame," he stammered. "You are very pale, and I think you are trembling."

"I cannot conceal that I am under a spell of agitation; there must be some terrible storm overhead, for I am peculiarly affected by thunderstorms."

Indeed, she shook by spasms as though affected by electrical shocks.

At this time, as though to justify her assertion, a furious gust of wind, such as shear the tops off mountains and heap up half the sea against the other--the first whoop of the coming tempest filled the palace with tumult, anguish and many a creaking. Leaves were swept off the branches, branches off the boughs and from the trees. A long and immense clamor was drawn from the hundred thousand spectators in the gardens. A lugubrious and endless bellowing ran through the corridors and galleries, composing the most awful notes that had ever vibrated in human ears.

Then an ominous rattling and jingling succeeded the roar; it was the fall of countless shivers of glass out of the window panes on the marble slabs and cornices.

At the same time the gale had opened one of the shutters and banged it to and fro like a wings of a bird of night. Wherever the window had been open and where the glass was shivered the lights were put out.

The prince went over to the window to fasten the broken shutter, but his wife held him back.

"Oh, pray, do not open that window, for the lights will be blown out, and I should die of fright."

He stopped. Through the casement beyond the curtain which he had drawn the tree tops of the park were visible, swayed from side to side as if some unseen giant were waving them by the stems. All the illuminations were extinguished.

Then could be seen on the dark sky still blacker clouds, coming on with a rolling motion like troops of cavalry wrapped in dust.

The pallid prince stood with one hand on the sash-handle. The bride sank on a chair, with a sigh.

"You are very much alarmed, madame?"

"Yes, though your presence supports me. Oh, what a storm! all the pretty lights are put out."

"Yes, it is a southwest wind, always the worst for storms. If it holds out, I do not know how they will be able to set off the fireworks."

"What would be the use of them? Everybody will be out of the gardens in such weather."

"You do not know what our French are when there is a show. They cry for the pyrotechnics, and this is to be superb; the pyrotechnist showed me the sketches. There! look at the first rockets!"

Indeed, brilliant as long fiery serpents, the trial rockets rushed up into the clouds, but at the same time, as if the storm had taken the flash as a challenge, one stroke of lightning, seeming to split the sky, snaked among the rockets ascending and eclipsed their red glare with its bluish flaring.

"Verily, it is impiety for man to contest with God," said the archduchess.

The trial rockets had preceded the general display by but a few minutes as the pyrotechnist felt the need of hastening, and the first set pieces were fired and were hailed with a cheer of delight.

But as though there were really a war between man and heaven, the storm, irritated by the impiety, drowned with its thunder the cheers of the mobs, and all the cataracts on high opened at once. Torrents of rain were precipitated from the cloudy heights.

In like manner to the wind putting out the illuminations, the rain put out the fireworks.

"What a misfortune, the fireworks are spoilt," said the dauphin.

"Alas, everything goes wrong since I entered France," said Marie Antoinette. "This storm suits the feast that was given me. It was wanted to hide from the people the miseries of this dilapidated palace of Versailles. So, blow, you southwest wind! spout, rain! pile yourselves together, tempestuous clouds, to hide from my eyes the paltry, tawdry reception given to the daughter of the kaisers, when she laid her hand in that of the future king!"

The visibly embarrassed dauphin did not know what answer to make to this, these reproaches, and particularly this exalted melancholy, so far from his character; he only sighed.

"I afflict you," continued she; "but do not believe that my pride is speaking. No, no, it is nowise in it. Would that they had only shown me the pretty little Trianon, with its flower gardens, and smiling shades--the rain will but refresh it, the wind but open the blossoms. That charming nest would content me; but these ruins frighten me, so repugnant to my youth, and yet how many more ruins will be created by this frightful storm."

A fresh gust, worse than the first, shook the palace. The princess started up aghast.

"Oh, heavens, tell me that there is no danger!" she moaned; "I shall die of fright."

"There is no fear, madame. Versailles is built on terraces so as to defy the storm. If lightning fell it would only strike yonder chapel with its sharp roof, or the little tower which has turrets. You know that peaks attract the electric fluid and flat surfaces repel them."

He took her frozen yet palpitating hand.

Just then a vivid flash inundated the room with its violet and livid glare. She uttered a scream and repulsed her husband.

"Oh, you looked in the lurid gleam like a phantom, pale, headless and bleeding!"

"It is the mirage caused by the sulphur," said the prince. "I will explain----"

But a deafening peal of thunder cut short the sentence of the phlegmatic prince lecturing the royal spouse.

"Come, come, madame, let us leave such fears to the common people. Physical agitation is one of the conditions of nature. A storm, and this is no more, is one of the most frequent and natural phenomena. I do not know why people are surprised at them."

"I should not quail so much at another time; but for a storm to burst on our wedding-night, another awful forwarning joined to those heralding my entry into France! My mother has told me that this century is fraught with horrors, as the heavens above are charged with fire and destruction."

"Madame, no dangers can menace the throne to which we shall ascend, for we royalties dwell above the common plane. The thunder is at our feet and we wield the bolts."

"Alas, something dreadful was predicted me, or rather, shown to me in a dish of water. It is hard to describe what was utterly novel to me; a machine reared on high like a scaffold, two upright beams between which glided an axe of odd shape. I saw my head beneath this blade. It descended and my head, severed from the body, leaped to the earth. This is what I was shown."

"Pure hallucination," said the scoffer; "there is no such an instrument in existence, so be encouraged."

"Alas! I cannot drive away the odious thought."

"You will succeed, Marie," said the dauphin, drawing nearer.

"Beside you will be an affectionate and assiduously protective husband."

At the instant when the husband's lips nearly touched the wife's cheek, the picture gallery door opened again, and the curious, covetous look of King Louis XV. penetrated the place. But simultaneously a crash, of which no words can give an idea, resounded through the palace. A spout of white flame, streaked with green, dashed past the widow but shivered a statue on the balcony; then after a prodigious ripping and splitting sound, it bounded upward and vanished like a meteor.

Out went the candles! the dauphin staggered back, dazed and frightened to the very wall. The dauphiness fell, half swooned, on the step of her praying-desk and dwelt in deadly torpor.

Believing the earth was quaking under him, Louis XV. regained his rooms, followed by his faithful valet.

In the morning Versailles was not recognizable. The ground had drunk up the deluge, and the trees absorbed the sulphur.

Everywhere was mud and the broken boughs dragging their blackened lengths like scotched serpents.

Louis XV. went to the bridal chamber for the third time, and looked in. He shuddered to see at the praying-stand the bride, pale and prone, with the aurora tinging her spotless robe, like a Magdalen of Rubens.

On a chair, with his velvet slippers in a puddle of water, the dauphin of France sat as pale as his wife and with the same air of having faced a nightmare.

The nuptial bed was untouched.

Louis XV. frowned; a never-before-experienced pain ran through his brow, cooled by egotism even when debauchery tried to heat it.

He shook his head, sighed and returned to his apartments full of grim forebodings over the future which this tragic event had marked on its brow.

What dread and mysterious incidents were enfolded in its bosom it will be our mission to disclose in the sequel to this book, entitled "THE MESMERIST'S VICTIM."

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=LIFE IN THE BACKWOODS.=--A Guide to the successful Hunting and Trapping of all kinds of Animals. It gives the right season for trapping; how to make, set and bait all kinds of traps, traps for minks, weasels, skunks, hawks, owls, gophers, birds, squirrels, musk-rats, foxes, rabbits, raccoons, etc.; how to make and use bird lime. It gives the English secrets for catching alive all kinds of birds; it tells how to know the true value of skins, as well as how to skin all animals; deodorize, stretch, and cure them; to dress and tan skins, furs and leather; to tan with or without the wool or hair; to skin and stuff birds; baits and hooks for fishing; how to fish successfully without nets, lines, spears, snares, "bobs," or bait (a great secret); how to choose and clean guns; how to breed minks for their skins (hundreds of dollars can be made by any boy or young man who knows how to breed minks), etc.

This book is by an old trapper, for many years engaged in trapping in the Northwest, who has finally consented to publish and disclose these secrets. Persons living where wild animals exist, with some traps and the information contained in this book, can make money faster through the trapping season by giving their time and energies to the business than they can by seeking their fortunes in the gold regions or in oil speculations. This is at once the most complete and practical book now in the market. Price, 15 cents.

=MODEL LETTER-WRITER (THE).=--A comprehensive and complete guide and assistant for those who desire to carry on epistolary correspondence--containing instructions for writing letters of introduction; Letters of business; Letters of recommendation; Applications for employment; Letters of congratulation; Letters of condolence; Letters of friendship and relationship; Love-letters; Notes of invitation; Letters of favor, of advice, and of excuse, etc., etc., together with appropriate answers to each. This is an invaluable book for those persons who have not had sufficient practice to enable them to write letters without great effort. 15 cents.

=NAPOLEON'S COMPLETE BOOK= of Fate and Complete Fortune Teller.--This is the celebrated Oracle of Human Destiny consulted by Napoleon the First previous to any of his undertakings, and by which he was so successful in war, business, and love. It is the only authentic and complete copy extant, being translated into English from a German translation of an ancient Egyptian manuscript found in the year 1801 by M. Sonini, in one of the royal tombs near Mount Libycus, in Upper Egypt. This Oraculum is so arranged that any question on business, love, wealth, losses, hidden treasures, no matter what its nature, the Oraculum has an answer for it. It also shows how to learn of one's fate by consulting the planets. Price 15 cents.

=OGILVIE'S HOUSE PLANS; OR HOW TO BUILD A HOUSE.=--A neat new book, containing over thirty finely executed engravings of dwellings of all sizes, from two rooms up; also churches, barns, and out-houses in great variety.

This handy, compact, and very useful volume contains, in addition to the foregoing, plans for each floor in each and every dwelling of which an engraving is given. It has, also, valuable information relative to building, such as number of shingles required in a roof, quantity of plaster for a house, quantity of materials required for building a house, etc., etc., and much other information of permanent and practical value.

Any one of the plans is alone worth very much more than the price asked for the book. It is invaluable to every architect, builder, mason, or carpenter, and particularly do we urge all who anticipate erecting a new or remodeling an old dwelling to send for a copy, as its fortunate possessor may save hundreds of dollars by following the suggestions it contains. 25 cents.

=HOW TO BEHAVE.=--Hand-book of Etiquette and Guide to True Politeness. CONTENTS: Etiquette and its uses; Introductions; Cutting acquaintances; Letters of introduction; Street etiquette; Domestic etiquette and duties; Visiting; Receiving company; Evening parties; The lady's toilet; The gentleman's toilet; Invitations; Etiquette of the ball-room; General rules of conversation; Bashfulness and how to overcome it; Dinner parties; Table etiquette; Carving; Servants; Traveling; Visiting cards; Letter writing; Conclusion. This is the best book of the kind yet published, and every person wishing to be considered well-bred, who wishes to understand the customs of good society, and to avoid incorrect and vulgar habits, should send for a copy. 15 cents.

=MISS SLIMMENS' WINDOW.=--Complete edition in one volume now ready. 16mo, 150 pages. Bound in heavy paper covers, with 13 illustrations, 25 cents.

=OGILVIE'S HANDY MONITOR AND UNIVERSAL ASSISTANT=, containing Statistical Tables of Practical Value for Mechanics, Merchants, Editors, Lawyers, Printers, Doctors, Farmers, Lumbermen, Bankers, Bookkeepers Politicians and all classes of workers in every department of human effort, and containing a compilation of facts for reference on various subjects, being an epitome of matters Historical, Statistical, Biographical, Political, Geographical and general interest. 192 pages bound in paper, 25 cents.

No more valuable books have ever been offered containing so much information of practical value in everyday life.

=OLD SECRETS AND NEW DISCOVERIES.=--Containing Information of Rare Value for all Classes, in all Conditions of Society.

=It Tells= all about _Electrical Psychology_, showing how you can biologize any person, and, while under the influence, he will do anything you may wish him, no matter how ridiculous it may be, and he cannot help doing it.

=It Tells= how to _Mesmerize_. Knowing this, you can place any person in a mesmeric sleep, and then be able to do with him as you will. This secret has been sold over and over again for $10.

=It Tells= how to make persons at a distance think of you--something all lovers should know.

=It Tells= how you can charm those you meet and make them love you, whether they will or not.

=It Tells= how Spiritualists and others can make writing appear on the arm in blood characters, as performed by Foster and all noted magicians.

=It Tells= how to make a cheap Galvanic Battery; how to plate and gild without a battery; how to make a candle burn all night, how to make a clock for 25 cents; how to detect counterfeit money; how to banish and prevent mosquitoes from biting; how to make yellow butter in winter; Circassian curling fluid; Sympathetic or Secret Writing Ink; Cologne Water; Artificial honey; Stammering; how to make large noses small; to cure drunkenness; to copy letters without a press; to obtain fresh-blown flowers in winter; to make good burning candles from lard.

=It Tells= how to make a horse appear as though he was badly foundered; to make a horse temporarily lame; how to make him stand by his food and not eat it; how to cure a horse from the crib or sucking wind; how to put a young countenance on the horse; how to cover up the heaves; how to make him appear as if he had the glanders; how to make a true-pulling horse balk: how to nerve a horse that is lame, etc., etc.--These horse secrets being continually sold at one dollar each.

=It Tells= how to make the Eggs of Pharo's Serpents, which when lighted, though but the size of a pea, there issues from it a coiling, hissing serpent, wonderful in length and similarity to a genuine serpent.

=It Tells= how to make gold and silver from block tin (the least said about which the better). Also how to take impressions from coins. Also how to imitate gold and silver.

=It Tells= of a simple and ingenious method of copying any kind of drawing or picture. Also, more wonderful still, how to print pictures from the print itself.

=It Tells= how to perform the Davenport Brothers' "Spirit Mysteries." So that any person can astonish an audience, as they have done. Also scores of other wonderful things which there is no room to mention.

=Old Secrets and New Discoveries= is worth $5 to any person; but it will be mailed to any address on receipt of only 25 cents.

=OUT IN THE STREETS.=--By S. N. Cook. Price, 15 cents.

We take pleasure in offering the strictly moral and very amusing temperance drama entitled, "Out in the Streets," to all entertainment committees as one that will give entire satisfaction. The parts are taken by six male and six female characters.

=PHUNNY PHELLOW'S GRAB BAG=; or, Jolly Tid-Bits for Mirthful Mortals.--Josh Billings, Danbury News Man and Bret Harte rolled into one. It is not too much to say that the book contains the choicest humor in the English language. Its size is mammoth, containing more than one thousand of the raciest jests, comical hits, exhilarating stories, flowers of wit, excruciating jokes, uproarious poems, laughable sketches, darky comicalities, clowns' efforts, button-bursting conundrums, endmen's jokes, plantation humors, funny caricatures, hifalutin dialogues, curious scenes, cute sayings, ludicrous drolleries, peculiar repartees, and nearly 500 illustrations. 25 cents.

=SCIENCE OF A NEW LIFE (THE).=--By John Cowan, M.D. A handsome 8vo, containing over 400 pages, with more than 100 illustrations, and sold at the following prices: English cloth, beveled boards, gilt side and back, $3.00; leather, sprinkled edges, $3.50; half turkey morocco, marbled edges, gilt back, $4.00.

=SOME FUNNY THINGS= said by Clever Children. Who is not interested in children? We are satisfied that this book will give genuine satisfaction to all who are interested in listening to the happy voices of children. This will show that humor is not confined to adult minds by any means. 64 pages, 10 cents.

=PALLISER'S AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE=; or EVERY MAN A COMPLETE BUILDER. The Latest and Best Publication on Modern Artistic Dwellings and other Buildings of Low Cost. This is a new book just published, and there is not a Builder or any one intending to Build or otherwise interested in building that can afford to be without it. It is a practical work and everybody buys it. The best, cheapest and most popular work of the kind ever issued. Nearly four hundred drawings. A $5 book in size and style, but we have determined to make it meet the popular demand, to suit the times, so that it can be easily reached by all.

This book contains 104 pages, 11×14 inches in size, and consists of large 9×12 plate pages giving plans, elevations, perspective views, descriptions, owners' names, actual cost of construction, no guess work, and instructions HOW TO BUILD 70 Cottages, Villas, Double Houses, Brick Block Houses, suitable for city suburbs, town and country, houses for the farm and workingmen's homes for all sections of the country, and costing from $300 to $4,500; also Barns, Stables, School House, Town Hall, Churches and other public buildings, together with specifications, form of contract, etc., etc., and a large amount of information on the erection of buildings, selection of site, employment of Architects, etc., etc.

This book of 104 pages, as described above, will be sent by mail, postpaid to any address on receipt of price. Price, heavy paper cover, $1; handsomely bound in cloth, $2.

=SECRETS FOR FARMERS.=--This book tells how to restore rancid butter to its original flavor and purity; a new way of coloring butter; how largely to increase the milk of cows; a sure cure for kicking cows; how to make Thorley'e celebrated condimental food for cattle; how to make hens lay every day in the year; it gives an effectual remedy for the Canada thistle; to save mice-girdled trees; a certain plan to destroy the curculio and peach-borer; how to convert dead animals and bones into manure; Barnet's certain preventive for the potato rot, worth $50 to any farmer; remedy for smut in wheat; to cure blight in fruit trees; to destroy potato bug; to prevent mildew and rust in wheat; to destroy the cutworm; home-made stump machine, as good as any sold; to keep cellars from freezing, etc., etc.

It is impossible to give the full contents of this valuable book here; space will not allow. Price, 25 cents.

=SIDNEY'S STUMP SPEAKER.=--Price, 15 cents.

A collection of Yankee, Dutch, French, Irish and Ethiopian Stump Speeches and Recitations, Burlesque Orations, Laughable Scenes, Humorous Lectures, Button-bursting Witticisms, Ridiculous Drolleries, Funny Stories, etc., etc.

=SUNNYSIDE COLLECTION OF READINGS AND RECITATIONS, NO 1.=--Compiled by J. S. Ogilvie. 12mo, 192 pages, paper cover, 25 cents. This book contains a choice collection of Readings and Recitations, which have been selected with great care, and are especially adapted for Day and Sabbath Schools, all adult and juvenile Organizations, Young People's Associations, Reading Clubs, Temperance Societies, and Parlor Entertainments. They comprise Prose and Poetry--Serious, Humorous, Pathetic, Comic, Temperance, Patriotic. All those who are interested in providing an entertainment should have this collection.

=THE SUNNYSIDE COOK BOOK.=--12mo, 250 pages. Paper cover, 25 cents; bound in cloth, 75 cents. This book is offered as one of the best and most complete books of the kind published. Not only are all the recipes practical, but they are economical and such as come within the reach of families of moderate income. It also contains valuable information in relation to home matters not found in any other publication. It also gives plain and easily understood directions for preparing and cooking, with the greatest economy, every kind of dish, with complete instruction for serving the same. This book is just the thing for a young housekeeper.

=HOW TO GET MARRIED ALTHOUGH A WOMAN=; or, THE ART OF PLEASING MEN. By "A Young Widow." A new book that every woman will buy! The following table of contents indicates the character of the work and will also insure a large demand for it: Girls and Matrimony, The Girls Whom Men Like, The Girl Who Wins, The Girl Who Fails, Some Unfailing Methods, A Word of Warning, The Secret of the Widow's Power, Lady Beauty, The Loved Wife, etc., etc.

Every unmarried woman, and, indeed, every woman, will be interested in reading this book. It will be sent by mail, postpaid, to any address on receipt of 25 cents.

=DO YOU EVER DREAM?= And would you like to know the meaning of any or all of your dreams? If so, you ought to buy the OLD WITCHES' DREAM BOOK AND COMPLETE FORTUNE TELLER, which contains the full and correct interpretations of all dreams and their lucky numbers. Also Fortune Telling by cards, by the grounds in the coffee cup, how to discover a thief, to know whether a woman shall have the man she wishes, to know what fortune your future husband shall have, to see your future wife or husband. The Dumb Cake, together with charms, incantations etc., etc.

This is a book that every one that wishes to know what is going to happen ought to buy. It will be sent by mail, postpaid, to any address on receipt of 25 cents.

=ADVICE TO WOMEN= ON THE CARE OF THE HEALTH, BEFORE, DURING AND AFTER CONFINEMENT. By Florence Stacpoole, Diplomee of the London Obstetrical Society, and Lecturer to the National Health Society. This is one of the most valuable and practical books ever issued and should be in possession of every married woman. With this book no woman need have any fear in reference to childbirth and confinement. Paper cover, 50 cents.

=THREE THOUSAND THINGS WORTH KNOWING.=--By R. Moore, author of "Moore's Universal Assistant," 12mo, 410 pages. Price, paper cover, 50 cents; cloth, 75 cents. It contains Calculations, Processes, Trade Secrets, Rules, Legal Items, Business Forms, etc., in every Occupation, from the Household to the Manufactory.

A work of unequaled utility to every mechanic, farmer, merchant, business man, professional gentleman, and householder, as it embraces the main points in over 200 trades and occupations. It contains 410 pages and is illustrated.

Until this new edition was printed the book has always sold for $2.00. It is worth $5.00 to any one.

=WEDDING RING (THE).=--This book contains a series of sermons delivered by Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, D.D. No sermons ever delivered have created so great a sensation as this series. Hundreds of people could not get into the church to listen to them.

If you are married, or expect to be, or if you have father, mother, brother, or sister, you should read this book. The sermons are not only on the relations between husband and wife, but on all the family relations. It tells how, when, and whom you should marry, and gives good advice on all the relations of life.

The following is a table of contents: The Choice of a Wife; The Choice of a Husband; Clandestine Marriage; Matrimonial Harmony or Discord; Marital Duties; Costume and Morals; Duties of Wives to Husbands; Hotels _versus_ Homes; The Domestic Circle; Sisters and Brothers; The Children's Patrimony; Motherhood; Trials of Housekeeping. Paper cover, 25 cents; cloth, 75 cents.

=WOMAN; HER POWER AND PRIVILEGES.=--This is a series of Twelve Sermons by Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, and should be read by all who are interested in the home and family, The following is the table of contents:

Women Who Fight the Battle of Life Alone; Worldly Marriages; Broken Promises of Marriage; Dominion of Fashion; The Veil of Modesty; Wifely Ambitions; Good and Bad; Woman's Happiness--What Can and What Cannot Make a Woman Happy; The Grandmother; Woman's Opportunity; The Queen of Home; Parental Blunders; Christ the Song. Paper cover, 25 cents; cloth cover, 75 cents.

=THE SUNNYSIDE SERIES.=--This is a new series of paper-covered books. Price, 25 cents each, UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED.

1 THE SECRET SORROW. By Mrs. May Agnes Fleming.

2 FUNNY STORIES. Funny enough to make a horse laugh.

3 WITTY SAYINGS SELECTED FROM ALL SOURCES.

4 WHICH SHALL IT BE? By Mrs. M. B. W. Parrish.

5 HOW TO ENTERTAIN A SOCIAL PARTY.

6 OGILVIE'S HANDY MONITOR OF USEFUL FACTS.

7 THE SUNNYSIDE COOK BOOK. By Mrs. Jennie Harlan.

8 SUNNYSIDE COLLECTION OF READINGS AND RECITATIONS.

9 THE FUNNY WORLD. 125 illustrations.

10 LOOKING BEHIND. By Frederick Alva Dean.

11 A FORCED MARRIAGE. By Frederick W. Pearson.

12 THE VICTIM OF HIS CLOTHES. By Fielding and Burton.

13 ONE HUNDRED POEMS. By Jane A. Van Allen, A.M.

14 A DARK PLOT. By Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.

15 TWENTY-FIVE SERMONS ON THE HOLY LAND. By Talmage.

16 A MORAL INHERITANCE. By Lydia Hoyt Farmer.

17 MASTER AND MAN. By O. O. B. Strayer.

18 MARRIED FOR MONEY. By Mrs. May Agnes Fleming.

19 THE FUGITIVES OF PEARL HILL. By E. A. Young.

20 LIFE OF REV. T. DE WITT TALMAGE, D.D.

21 FUN ON DRAUGHT. A Comic Book. 10 cents.

22 A BASKET OF FUN. Cover Printed in 12 Colors.

23 FUNNY FELLOW'S GRAB-BAG. Cover Printed in 12 Colors.

24 TWENTY GOOD STORIES. By Opie P. Read. 60 illustrations.

25 A DOUBLE LIFE. By Ella Wheeler Wilcox.

26 LOVE AND REBELLION. By Miss M. C. Keller.

27 "CY ROSS." By Mellen Cole.

28 HIS EVIL EYE. By Harry I. Hancock.

29 THE WIDDER DOODLE'S COURTSHIP. By Josiah Allen's Wife.

30 THE HANDY COOK BOOK. Price, 10 cents.

39 DON'T MARRY. By Hildreth.

40 A LITTLE NONSENSE.

TWO HUNDRED OLD-TIME SONGS.

This volume contains the _words and music_ of choicest gems of the old and familiar songs we used to sing when we were young. It has been arranged with great care and we have no hesitation in saying that it is the best book of the kind published. Read the following =partial table of Contents=. The book contains 130 songs besides the ones mentioned here and would cost $50 in sheet music form.

Annie Laurie. Auld Lang Syne. Angel's Whisper, The. Black Eyed Susan. Billy Boy. Baby Mine. Bell Brandon. Bonnie Dundee. Ben Bolt. Bingen on the Rhine. Comrades. Comin' Thro' the Rye. Caller Herrin'. Do They Miss Me at Home? Don't You Go, Tommy. Flee as a Bird. In the Gloaming. John Anderson, My Joe. Katie's Letter. Little Annie Rooney. Larboard Watch. Life on the Ocean Wave, A. Low Backed Car, The. Mollie, Put the Kettle On. Meet Me by Moonlight. Nancy Lee. O, Boys Carry Me 'Long. Oh! Susannah. Our Flag is There. O Had I Wings Like a Dove. Old Oaken Bucket, The. O Come, Come Away. Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep. Rock Me to Sleep, Mother. Sparkling and Bright. There was an Old Woman. 'Tis the Last Rose of Summer. Willie, We Have Missed You. Wait for the Wagon. Oh Dear! What Can the Matter be. Oh Why do you Tease Me. Oh, Would I Were a Bird. Oh, Would I Were a Boy Again. Over the Garden Wall. Pilgrim Fathers, The. Pat Malloy. Pauper's Drive, The. Paddle Your Own Canoe. Robin Adair. Robinson Crusoe. Rose of Allandale. Star Spangled Banner, The. Saint Patrick Was a Gentleman. See Saw, Margery Daw. Sing a Song of Sixpence. See, the Conquering Hero Comes. Stop Dat Knockin'. Sally in Our Alley. Scots, What Ha'e Wi' Wallace Bled. Sword of Bunker Hill, The. Spider and the Fly, The. Shells of Ocean. Steal Away. Take Back the Heart. Three Fishers Went Sailing. Ten Little Niggers. 'Tis the Last Rose of Summer. Ta-Ra-Ra-Boom-De-Ay. Thou Art Gone From My Gaze. There is a Green Hill far Away. There was a Jolly Miller.

This book of 176 pages containing the above entire list of songs and many others, _words and music_, will be sent by mail postpaid upon receipt of price. Paper Cover, 25 cents. Address all orders to

=J. S. OGILVIE PUBLISHING CO., 57 Rose Street, New York.=

AYER'S PILLS

are a sure cure for sick headache, liver and stomach troubles, dyspepsia constipation, and all kindred complaints. Taken in season they will break up a cold, prevent la grippe, check fever, and regulate the digestive organs. They received the highest honors at the World's Fair.

=CURE=

"I was troubled a long time with sick headache. It was usually accompanied with severe pains in the temples, a bad taste in my mouth, tongue coated, hands and feet cold, and sickness at the stomach. I tried many remedies, but until I began taking Ayer's Pills received no benefit. A box of these pills did the work for me, and I am now free from headaches and am a well man."--C. H. HUTCHINGS, E. Auburn, Me.

=SICK HEADACHE=

AYER'S SARSAPARILLA purifies the blood.

Transcriber's Note

"=" is used in the text to indicate bolded text.

Inconsistencies have been retained in spelling, hyphenation, punctuation, and grammar, except where indicated in the list below:

- "Sicil ian" changed to "Sicilian" on Page 4 - Quote removed before "One" on Page 7 - Quote added after "strong-minded." on Page 8 - "become" changed to "became" on Page 10 - Comma changed to a period added after "form" on Page 14 - Quote added after "afternoon." on Page 20 - Quote removed after "voice." on Page 20 - "Christain" change to "Christian" on Page 23 - "gentlemen" changed to "gentleman" on Page 24 - "has" changed to "had" on Page 27 - Quote removed from before "Startled" on Page 31 - Quote removed after "seige?" on Page 32 - Quote added after "five." on Page 33 - "ere" changed to "here" on Page 34 - "on" changed to "an" on Page 35 - "oustretched" changed to "outstretched" on Page 37 - "widdow" changed to "window" on Page 41 - Quote removed after "honor!" on Page 42 - Single quote changed to a double quote after "properly." on Page 43 - Quote removed after "then!" on Page 44 - "semed" changed to "seemed" on Page 44 - Question mark changed to an exclamation mark followed by a quote after "us" on Page 47 - Double Quote removed after "princess." on Page 49. - Single Quote added before "The" on Page 49. - Double quote changed to a single quote after "cordial," on Page 49. - "particulary" changed to "particularly" on Page 54 - Quote removed after "coldly." on Page 55 - Quote added before "but" on Page 60 - Comma changed to a period after "gold" on Page 62 - "of" added after "lap" on Page 64 - Quote removed before "The" on Page 66 - Quote added after "here?" on Page 67 - Quote removed before "Go" on Page 68 - Comma changed to a period after "Jean" on Page 70 - "comm" (blotted word) changed to "communed" on Page 72 - Quote added after "alive?" on Page 74 - Comma changed to a period added after "chastised" on Page 77 - Comma changed to a period added after "up" on Page 83 - Quote added after "lady," on Page 86 - Exclamation mark changed to a question mark after "Chon" on Page 87 - Quote added after "morally." on Page 87 - "said the" added before "viscount" on Page 88 - Double quote removed and single quotes placed around quotation within a quote on Page 89 - Quote added after "up." on Page 90 - Quote added after "to-morrow." on Page 94 - Period changed to a question mark followed by a quote after "coach." on Page 95 - Single quote added after "is." on Page 95 - Quote and indent removed before "Blue" on Page 98 - Period changed to a comma after "angel" on Page 99 - Duplicate "he" removed after "for" on Page 99 - Period removed after "countess" on Page 100 - "Clapping" changed to "clapping" on page 100 - Period changed to a comma after "Well" on Page 100 - Quote added before "and" on Page 100 - "Gramont" changed to "Grammont" on page 102 - "abscence" changed to "absence" on page 102 - Quote added before "and" on Page 103 - Quote added after "meet!" on Page 104 - Duplicate "with" deleted on Page 106 - Illegible word replaced with "****" on Page 113 - Quote added before "but" on Page 117 - Quote added after "knows." on Page 117 - Single quote added after "for!" on Page 118 - "gentlemen" changed to "gentleman" on Page 120 - Comma changed to a period added after "timidly" on Page 120 - Quote removed after "up," and placed after "Therese," on Page 120 - Quote added after "them," on Page 129 - "every" changed to "Every" on Page 130 - "harpischord" changed to "harpsichord" on Page 130 - "undestand" changed to "understand" on Page 132 - "freight" changed to "fright" on Page 134 - Period changed to a comma after "castle" on Page 134 - "pain ful" changed to "painful" on Page 140 - "Lorenze" changed to "Lorenza" on Page 140 - "from back" changed to "back from" on Page 140 - "prepartions" changed to "preparations" on Page 145 - "Here" changed to "Her" on Page 145 - Single quote added before "Are" on Page 147 - Double quote changed to a single quote after "me." on Page 147 - Quote removed after "living." on Page 147 - "Saint-remy's" changed to "Saint-Remy's" on Page 150 - Period changed to a question mark followed by a quote after "highness" on Page 150 - Duplicate "shall" removed after "I" on Page 150 - Quote added after "me!" on Page 151 - "harmany" changed to "harmony" on Page 153 - "Anthing" changed to "Anything" on Page 157 - "to" changed to "too" on Page 161 - "employe" changed to "employee" on Page 161 - Quote added after "master." on Page 165 - "why" changed to "Why" on Page 172 - "fredom" changed to "freedom" on Page 172 - Quote removed after "help," on Page 173 - Period changed to a question mark followed by a quote after "driver" on Page 175 - "Balsmo" changed to "Balsamo" on Page 178 - "emenience" changed to "eminence" on Page 179 - Quote removed before "He" on Page 184 - Quote added after "be." on Page 185 - "to day" changed to "to-day" on Page 186 - Quote added after "destroyed" on Page 186 - "Parliment" changed to "Parliament" on Page 186 - Quote added before "that" on Page 188 - Quote removed after "beat." on Page 189 - "materializng" changed to "materializing" on Page 191 - "shepherdessses" changed to "shepherdesses" on Page 192 - Quote added after "Well," on Page 195 - Quote removed after "favorite." on Page 195 - Illegible word replaced by "****" on Page 195 - Quote added after "concerned." - Quote added after "display." on Page 201 - Quote added after "storm." on Page 204 - Comma changed to a period after "prince" on Page 204 - Period added after "$2.00" on Page 211 - Illegible text replaced by "****" on Page 212 - Illegible text replaced by "****" on Page 212 - Comma changed to a semicolon after "secret)" on Page 216 - "hundred" changed to "hundreds" on Page 217 - "has" changed to "have" on Page 218 - Period changed to a comma after "Secrets" on Page 222 - Period changed to a comma after "Items" on Page 222

End of Project Gutenberg's Balsamo, The Magician, by Alexander Dumas