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kt rolled ^^^^cought what bliss ills H>ai the wish died oat; SPit Love's thrills. end the thought of life iB8a5 a?e H;: without love is Bovc-Iv page." B-nt love, I'll wish for thee: Kce far outweighs Which I fondly deemed s< kealth, and length of day*." * ?Bazar. trill never find a model tc idea. There's no womar h a face beautiful enougl ur design." nnd her." Wh e?' knocked over the cigar Bod np before Mark Hat Rfe in the next room, fo: I I expect her every mo Hn tnre I don't want tc ^^HH'vo-j her Hrcnare, No. 12." is Clinton's!" Bjpean Isabel Cliffton ? Sh( ^;quaw.:> mean Bel Cliffton. Joc, |HB|H^Kar the door opening." MLkly and looked "with al H vanity into the glass, Bxvavy hair a backward ^HBRn out. Kliffton! Ton are ven Hse walk this way. Thi< BKierc yon are to spenc jraonrs." He held the dooi Bfhe entered. Bxall, finely-dressed girl, He of color in her face, sav< Rips^ and with ripples o: Hfeepiag back in gracefnj Hp the qneenly forehead ali the artist desired? Hi eyes and an eiquisit* raid perfection of featnres. BuH?^ an(^ brother-artist, Mr H Cliffton." I and scrutinized him witl ymd bowed quietly. to begin my work ?" yon are ready," b? said Katicnce showing itsel Dp feverish flush on hi lebrilliancv in his eyes. orward with that I at back in the arm-chai; Divton arranged for her , without a sign of weari ed :o the artist's arrange racefnl folds of the cur turning of her splendic e him to trace its exquis be put his hand beneat! h came a grieved expres i fine mouth, and, Strang* ivton, who had delicately "the deeo recess of th< jet, man-fashion, wa: 11 the while, gave an otto tick, and frowned like ! [ea struck him, and h< of Hsrk's pencils fron vent on sketching, for ai until the lovely mode a regal sweep of her plaii arth did yon find her ?' -at Cliffton's." ^ ose vou are in love witl I " fy, she has not a dime t< >r why shonld she com< sort of nnrsery governes: the yotmx Cliff c-ons. I'c t man. If I was, I shoulc to some one like the far i dollaid enongh to hid* ' pfoofiz-mv rtf fMtnrfl el">< Ik ? Jose yon will be arounc *> tfce ClifFtons was quit* is a wonder of eleganc< amma ClifFton, in spit< of limited means, whicl not be trae, managed t< lishing display, and con was a crowd of pleasure dy to respond to evei an invitation. Ther< rooont Art tV?io /vrory-fnc eldest, aud by enemiei ed the prop of the fail n excellent humor, anc arid "with good grac< st friends withont dis |gh one nnmbered hi: ands and the other b] Ria Cliffton was radiant * bronzed-faced old fel 7j tread and a voice o who was towed aloDg b; [ike a man-of-war bj ! ng-boat, and who lcokec ortable as his condnc , mv brother, Captaii atfield, Captain Clitfton bmising artist friends o rooken." the old fellow, "I re on making yonr Sor Is fortnne is already Ixpect mr own will b< l complete the work . fflsd," said Mark. Bed we have a member o Ro thank. He found hi BridJoe. Bndered the captain. HbMr. Cliffton. H" went on the ineurabl< glance at Mark's implor Bur niece, I suppose, Mrs His Mr. Hatfield^^^ j^^tfrsTciiffton, with that^Sufu rod of hers, quietly varnished th< atter over, and whispered to Joe: ''Pray don't mind him. He is j range creature, but, for all that, ai igel. He is immensely rich, and poo: si is his heiress." ,;Poor Bel!" thought Joe, and thei > looked back at his discomlitec iend from whom the blustering cap in was pumping every drop of infor ation he required. Mark Hatfield went home that night nestly believing himself a ruinec 1-r. AVI/? V Vi A V litb WflFOl fcU9 auu tuiiu U_:-O iUWCi TTC>'U.JL^. iin make her appearance, but at th< pointed hour on the following da; e swept in. She took her seat in th< air, as usual, and sat back without i Irmnr, and Joe Dajton peepec Ibugh the curtain until the sitting fcover. Then be came out, and, witl Host unpardonable boldness, beggec Be to iee her 10 a stage. 36 accepted the kindness, as she die thing, with perfect composure, anc IBvalked awaj. is tedious work for von, is r he asked, when thej were in th< Bo not like it." ft? <io von accent his offer?" Hafcause I am poor," she answered igas treading on delicate gronnd. H&lied her attention to a handsome Ke whirling up the street, anc Mber if she liked driving. mnch. Bn; I haven't enjoyec of a drive for a long time.' Miorrcw I sh?ll be at jour doo] HHft carriage. Will you drive witl Rooked down at the plain blac* shawl, and then looked np tc raL shadow on her brave face. Bffiil not be ashamed of me.' gfetaP yen are hasty in you: |^town in the close stage 1 MPilMtous happiness in her beau- j MRyes. WBpe did call, and she came down, on j arm of the sun-bronzed captain, who I 1 placed her in the light buggy, saying : : "I hope you will enjoy your afternoon . i ride. There's a regular nor'-easter ; brewing and I am g >icg to just sit and j enjoy it." He pointed backward and laughed, i and Joe caught a glimpse of Mamma ' .1 f 1 r\'r-! v> fn ] IT* 1 i viiutvn a*iu iftaLTi A ?**?J , ! from the parlor windotv, and then they | I rode away in 4be bright .sunlight as happy a pair a* evi-r lived. This was the first ride, bnt it was not : the last. Never aiune did she walk ; from the studio, for .Toe was always : : | there to escort her, and, as of course ! jou wi!i naturally infer, he asked her j > in good time to be his wife. I Even though she had held, since her j i father's death, the position of governess and nurse to her little cousins j : for her board and an occasional present, j ; and be* n treated ia ewry respect as a ; meiiiai, yet ia her happiness she went j | to her aunt and cousin and told them of ; 1 her encasement. 1 j They had been in excellent humor all 1; the afternoon, and when Honoria had j completed her story, she looked blush-; ingly up for their approval, Isabel was j white as death with suppressed rage, but the anger of her mother knew no ! ' j bounds, and springing to her feet she : pointed to the open door and cried, in ' a voice thick with passion : "Do you see that door, you ungrate' | ful wretch ? Leave this room, gather up your effects and leave this house at j once. Ycu are an artful hussy! You : ; have tried your best to alienate the af-; j fection3 of your uncle from Isabel whom j ; he adores, and now you have caught \ *; Joe Dayton. Not that I care for the j : act itself, but the miserable spirit you j show. Go into the street. I never want i to jee yoiir face again!" Honor;a stood up, nervously worKing | : her trembling haDds, one over the ' other, wondering where -n her extremity ! she was to go, for in all the great city she knew no one of whom she might ask '; so much as a night's lodging. |j "You need net hesitate," said her r j aunt. "No, Honoria, you need not hesitate," j ' | said her uncle, stepping from the liijbrary. "Get y-_ur hat and leave this j I j house at oncc." 1 j "You hear what jour uncle says," : * 1 said Mrs. Clifftoa, in triumph. J "I "Anil don't vou dare, Honoria ClifT- i 5: ton, to again step your foot over the ' i threshold. I've got rooms at the Fitli- ! * | Avenue, and I rather think I can find : : money enough to find you a suite there, ; 1 too. I've been waiting for an outbreak j j of some kind that I might take you j ; away. As for yon, sister Clinton, I'm i : afraid you'll have to find another purse, ' |' and your daughter Isabel another rich 3 [ uncle, for I can assure you that you vill : never get a dollar from me, or anotner J j hour's drudgery from this poor wronged : child. Honoria, dear, get your hat." ? In a Insurious carriage the young girl was borne away to a sumptuous j abode in the hotel, and henceforward ! ": her life was an easy ore. She went ! * | steadily to the studio, where she met j "! her betrothed, until the picture was : ; completed, and then resolved to be her ; 1: husband's model alone. She was mar- i - 1 " ? ? 1-1 - _ J 3 ! ! nea oeiore me year enaeu, ana pruua, I i happv Captain Clifl'ton gave the bride r away, acd with her a brown stone pall ace, which made his grasping sister and ' s: her danghier turn green with envy. "; As for Mark Hatfield, his picture was * a succes?, and eventually he made a for| tune and wedded for love. i j Cutting ihrough the >'ile. 1 j I have made inquiries and find that * Baker cut through some eighty miles of 1 j the "sudd" or vegetable barrier; the y other day my steamer found this barrier j quite closed up * * * A curious little 1 cabb3ge-like aquatic plant comes float: ing down, having a little root ready to 1; attach itself to anything; he meets a | friend and they go together, and soon 5 ! join roots, and so on. When they get -1 to a lake the curren is less strong, and 5 | so, no longer constrained to move on, 1, they go off to the sides, others do the * j same, idle and loitering, like eveirthing r up here. After time winds drive a 3; whole fleet of the- -,gain?t the narrow 3: outlet of the lake u~d stop it up. Then ' no more passenger plants can pass I j through the outlet, while plenty come ; in at the upper end of the lake ; these ! eventnally till up all the passage which 31 may have been made. Supposing I 3' cut through the vegetation, I may have 31 it closed any day by a wind blowing a 1 j flow of 'these weeds from one side of 5 the lake to the other, so that the only -1 way would be to clear out the lake of * { vegetation altogether, or to anchor the 1: banks of "sudd" so as to prevent the 3 j winds blowing them together. Below > Gondokoro it spreads out into lakes; on J; the edge of these lakes an aquatic plant, | with roots extending five feet into the j * j water, flourishes. 31 The natives bum the top parts when - I drv: the ashes form mold, and fresh 5 j grasses grow, till it becomes like terra 7! firma. The Nile rises and floats out * j the masses; they come down to a curre " f and there stop. More of these islands * | float down, and at hst the river is 7: blocked. Though under them the 1 water flows, no communication can take *! place, for they bridge the river for sev* I eral miles. Last year the governor | i went up and with ttiree companies and 11 two steamers he exit large blocks of the ! vegetation away. At last, one night, * the water burst the remaining part, and swept down cn the vessels, dragged the " | steamers down some four miles and cleared the passage. The governor ; says the scene was terrible. The hipr ! popotami were carried down, screaming 3! and snorting; crocodiles were whirled ; round ana round, and the river was : covered with dead and djing hippo| potami, crocodiles and fish which had *: been crushed by the mass. One hippo3: potamus was carried against the bow ; of the steamer and killed; one croco; dile, thirty-five feet long, was also I j killed. Tile governor, who was in the j 3 | marsh, hofi to ' j ge^^t^HpaJ|i^Pg^C'o,;or, el Gordon in foretelling the Weather. . j Meteorology has been enriched bv M. 1! De Parviile, a* French scientist, who has -; published his observations on the temj perature of the present, summer, which, 1 throughout Europe, has been unusually I j high. He comes to the conclusion that r I this high temperature could have been foreseen, and enunciates the principle II that the temperature of the earth's at1J mosphere is dependent on the changes in the moon's inclination to the earth. " "The distance of the moon from ihe : ! equator," he pays?" that is, the incli> nation of the moon's path to the plane ^ of the equator?varies every year, pass- j r ing from a maximum to a mininvam ^ ' ArkM rrtL.J43ArAlAAf!/?ol /^nor. iiUiil; y io-r ?-Wi ViVfjAVU* V-i-lC*!." f r acier of a series of years appears 51 to be mainly dependent upon the *I change of inclination when these ex* tremes have been touched." Observa>; iions, he claims, show that the rainy 1! years, the cold winters and the hot I summers return periodically and coin. | cide with these extreme declinations of J: the moon. In the latitude of Paris, he - says, the rainy years have occurred for the past century when the moon had * reached the extremes of 28 and 26 and 51 IS degree.?. These rainy years are separated from each otht-r by periods of i about three and then of about six . years. The severe winters coincide, as > a rule, within a year with the same de: clinations, while the dry, hot summers ! >: come in half way between two wet i nr]>.\ 1 .-> t rafi> rr?,-? a "! CTO ; JCifcAO* -L.X.C7 V YWJU y X.<XI. n 0,0 * Vj I when the moon's dedication was 18 : degrees, and the next one, under the [ rale enunciated, will be in 1SS4, when ' j the declination will be 26 decrees. r! This year, therefore, and 1 882 should 1 be marked by a maximum of heat and I dryness, ?.nd the winters by a mimimum : i of coldness. Michigan university had 138 women '; attending it last year, r. slight increase : | over the year before, but cot in propor| ticn to the rest of the institution. j r^m 1 - r HOUSEHOLD. | Gettinr Rid of Stamp*. i In the autumn or tarly winter bore a j hole one or tvro inches in diameter, ac- j cording to the girth of the stump, and abooit eighteen inches deep. Put into it one or two ounces of saltpeter, fill the hole with water and plug it close. In the ensuing spring take out the plug and ignite it. The stump will molder away, without blazing, to the very extremity of the roots, leaving nothing but the ashes.?Scientific American. Seed Sown bv the \Vay?lde. A Maine farmer has hit upon the following ingenious plan of supplementing his corn crop. He saj3: "For two years past I have strewn a little rutabaga seed on my heap of old manure before applying for corn. Then if from any cause & corn plant is missing I allow a turnip to grow, almost invariably getting a good specimen. Last year, having a fev loads of manure left, they were spread for sugar beets. The beets did r.ot get a good stand, while many turuips came up, which latter were spare3, as they seemed to come up and grov with un- j usual vigor. The growth continued till harvest time, and such rrots I never saw before, while the bvets upon the 1 same plot were hardly rjiddiing. Some of the rutabagas, Stirrings, weighed - ?_ ?i. ? twenty pounds eueu.. Canning Vegetables. Peas and beans may be prepared for j canning by simply cooking them as von j would for the table, leaving out the j seasoning, and filling tiie cans quite up to top while boiling hot. Have the | peas and beans rather young and tender, j Add the seasoning when you open the I cans to use them. Keep them in a cool, j dark place, free from dampness. Corn, ; to can, should be young and tender, j but full grown. Strip off the outside j leaves ank silk, but^l?ave on tie inner j leaves?this will keep the sweetness in. , Let it boil fifteen minutes. Take it up, ! cut the kernels through the middle, and i then off the cob. Pack your cans as full as you can with the corn, and then j take a cob that will fit in the jar with-: out its being broken, and press it into j the middle of the corn, and screw tne tops on. Have the cans and the corn as hot as possible. Lnmbx. "By-and-by," says the Rural JSfew j Verier, "there will be complaints abont 1 loss of lambs by the disease known as the pale disease, paper skin, amemia, j bloc dlessness, cough, hnsk, hoose, <fcc., i ?fcc., fcnd persons will be inquiring:! What shall we do to save onr lambs ? j Here is a most serious trouble which ; has a most simple remedy. All that is : -Jo to l-ppn the Limbs off from i ? ? i- pastures where old sheep have run. j The old sheep void, in their dung, my- i riads of eggs of the worms (thread i worms, Strongylus filarial), which ; cause in the lambs this disease with so ; many names. The eggs adhere to the : grass and are taken into the lambs' j stomachs, or they are also taken in with water that is drank, and from the stom-j ach the worms proceed to the intestines, j causing trouble there, or ascend the j gullet and pass into the windpipe and j descend into the air passages and the ! Inn ore 3Iaki?2 S?uurkrnut. To make first-class sourkraut von j must have the best kind of cabbage? a : sufficient quantity of the old "drum- > head" sort?and after divesting the i heads of their stalks and all the outside leaves, being carefnl to leave none that are "lousy," put the heads to one side j until you can fill a tub with water in j which to wash them; and after washing them clean, as well as your crout barrel, cutting knife and maul, you are now ready to proceed with the cutting. Now cover the bottom of the barrel with some of the cleanest and best outside I leaves, and laying your cat ting-knife over the month of the barrel, proceed with the cntting. After cutting enongh . of the cabbage to form a layer of abont; three inches thi/k on the leaves in the bottom of the barrel, and sprinkling . thereon a handfnl or so of salt, pound , the same gently,'but firmly, with the manl until sufficiently compact. So; | proceed with layers of cut cabbage and \ i salt (not omitting the pounding) until j j the barrel is full. And then, after cov- j ering the whole with another thin layer i | of leave? and laying boards and weights : j on the same, the job is done. In a few j | weeks yonr kraut will be pronounced : j "goot" by any jury of Dutchmen. j Guano. The Germantown Telegraph of recentj ! date contains so sensible an article on j the subject of guano, its uses and value, [ (and it might have added its abuses also), j that we give the sum and substance of j it for the benefit of the farmer: When 1 | guano was iirst used in England as a i manure it was regarded as the accumu- j lations from the roosting places of sea- j | birds which had been deposited there j for countless aeres. It became immensely i ; popular, and the amount annually im| ported into England was enormous, j There was no donbt about its useful- < ; ness. Nothing that had been used for ; I mannrial purposes ever equaled it, ex-; ! cept, perhaps, the sweepings of hen-1 houses, and with which it was classed, j Of late, however, a theory has been ad-! vanced that birds had little to do with the formation of these gnano beds, that they are of marine origin, and have : been thrown up from the bed of the ocean, and that birds have added but | little to the original stock. Be this as j it may, the farmers of England now be-; lieve that the quality is not as good as formerly, inasmuch as the same good results of its application are no longer i obtained. Consequently the guano! trade has fallen off considerably in that j country. It is more than likely, however, that the quality of the guano is the same, and that the difference in the j result of its application is due to the i land becoming sick of the thing, just as : it does of raising one kind of crop con- i tinuously. So far as the guano is con- j cerned, it is probably about as good as j itis_a jweU-kcowii fast that 1 not only with guano, but with all ma| nures of this class (concentrated fertil; izers), comes a time when theland seems i to revolt at its use. It is the universal I testimony of Delaware wheat-erowers i that Trith the constant use of special ! fertilizers the product of wheat per acre ; declines. The same result has been ! found to follow the continual use of I fertilizers in the South, although many of those who continue to use them still | find them of great service in the pro; auction of crops. The Preservation of Ece*. The question is often asked, "How j can eggs be preserved for market ?" The j following will prove of interest to many: j In the common "liming" process a j tight barrel is half filled with cold j water, into which is stirred slaked lime and salt in the proportion of about one- j half pound each lor every pail and j bucket of water. Some dealers use no salt, and others add a small quantity of I nitre?one-quarter pound to the halfbarrel or pickle. Into this the eggs, which must be perfectly fresh and sound, are let down with a dish, when they settle to the bottom, small end j down. The eggs displace the liquid, so j that when the barrel is full of eggs it is ! also full of the pickle. Eggs thus j pickled, if kept in a cool place, will ordinarily keep good for several months. ! Long storage in this liquid, however, is apt to make the shells brittle and j impart a limy taste to their contents. ; This may be in a great measure avoided 1 by anointing the shell all over with lard before putting in the pickle. Eggs thus i nrr> to Vppn TiPrfeet.lv fr-f .r ?x six months or more when stored in a cool cellar. A much better method of storing eggs is the following: Having selected per-1 fectly fresh eggs, pnt them, a dozen or more at a time, into a small willow bas- j ket, and immerse this for five seconds | in boiling water containing about five ! pounds of common brown sugar per gallon of water. Place the eggs imme- ; diately after on trays to dry. The scald- ; iag wate? causes the formation of ?thin i skin of harS albumen next the inner surface of the shell, the sugar effectually closing all the pores o? the latter. The cool eggs are then packed, small end down, in an intimate mixture of one measure of good charcoal, finely powdered, and two measures of dry bran. Eggs thus stored have been found perfectly fresh and unaltered after six months. A French authority gives the following : Melt four ounces of clear beeswax in a porcelain dish over a gentle a-n/^ cfi* in oierVlt ormf?PK of olive oil. Let the resulting solution of wax in oil cool somewhat, then dip the iresh eggs one by one into it so as to coat every part of the shell. A momentary dip is sufficient, all excess of the mixture being wiped oil T^ith a cotton cloth. The oil is absorbed in the shell, the wax hermetically closing ull the pores. It is claimed that eggs thus treated and packed away in powdered charcoal in a cool place have been found after two years as fresh and palatable as when mewly laid. Paraffine, which melts to a thin liquid at a temperature below the boiling of water, and has the advantage of being odorless, tasteless, harmless and cheap, can be advantageously substituted for the wax and oil, and used in a similar manner. Thus coated and put into the lime pickle, the eggs may be safely stored for many months in charcoal, under favorable circumstances, for a year or more. Pry sait is frequently recommenaea as a good preservative packing for stored eggs, but practical experience has shewn that salt alone is but little better than dry bran, especially if stored in a damp place or exposed to hnmid air. A mixture of eight measures of bran with one of powdered quicklime makes an excellent packing for eggs in transportation. Water glass?silicate of^g^a?ha^recently been used in Gercrany for rendering the shells of eggsncn-porous. A small quantity of the clear syrupy solution is smeared over the entire surface of the shell. On drying, a thin, hard, rrlocctr film ronrmins serves as an A admirable protection and substitute for wax, oil, gums, etc. Eggs thus coated and stored in charcoal powder, or a mixture of charcoal and bran, would keep a very long time. In storing eggs in charcoal the latter should be fresh and perfectly dry. If the eggs are not stored when perfectly fresh they will not keep under any circumstances. A broken egg stored with sound ones will sometimes endanger the whole lot. In packing, the small end of the egg should be placed downward ; if in charcoal or other powder, they must be packed so that the shell of one egg does not touch that of another, the interspaces being filled with the powder. Under all circumstances, stored eggs should be kept in as cool a place as posrv *0-.^-^11 r? y-1 r\f flTTO biUit". X' IC^UCUw Viiau^w v* v?w v, mnst also be avoided.?Scientific American. Household Hint*. Thin slices of toast, cut ioto trianglets make a good garnish for many dishes. If half a tablespoonful of vinegar is added to the dark portion of marble cake it improves it. Ceilings that have been smoked by a kerosene lamp should be "washed off with soda -water. . To beat the white of eggs quickly put in a pinch of salt. The cooler the eggs the quicker they will froth. Salt cools and also freshens them. If raw potatoes or the peelings are cut fine and sprinkled on the carpet before sweeping they will be foimd more effectual than salt or eornmeal. The dishes on which meats, fisb, jellies and creams are placed shonld be large enough to leave a margin of an inch or so between the food and the lower edge of the border of the dish. "When making a oerry pie be sure to wet the edges of the upper and under crusts and press them so firmly together that the juice cannot ran out, or you will leave the best part of the pie on the bottom of the oven, and then have that to clean. In washing dishes use milk instead of soap. Fill a dish pan full of hot water and add half a cup of milk. It softens the hardest water, gives the dishes a aIoct Ki-iorTif Innk arid rvrpsewes the hands from the rough skin or chapping which comes from rising soap. It cleans the greasiest dishes without leaving the water covered with scum. An excellent young housekeeper who has tried the above says it is a good recipe. Reclpca. Crackers.?Twelve cups of flour, two cups of lard, one teaspoonful of salt, and one-half teaspoonful of soda. Mix in the lard well; add water enough to wet up; pound fifteen minutes; roll out, cut in rounds, and bake. Tomato Soup.?Last summer, while employed as steward at one of the most noted hotels at Saratoga Springs, one well-known for its cuisine and patronized by the wealthiest families in the land, some ladies called at the storeroom one day and praised the tomato soup very highly. One said she made it at home freauentlv. but never could make the crispy toast we served in it. I told them it was not toast-, but merely stale bread cut into thin slices and fried brown in drippings or lard, then salted and cut into dice-shaped pieces and served in the soup when dished up. "Well, I declare," they said, "how simple it seems after you know all about it." it is called in French "cretcn." Fashion and the Beard. The staid old New York Journal of Commerce has an editorial on the change 4-/-\ oliorrir*re fT->c. UI 1.JJL i V*. IVOilUtiug iMW. Thirty years ago, according to this authority, a few persons of foreign birth appeared in the streets "with hair on the npper lip, and were objects of cariosity and sometimes of public ridicule. In 1850 some of the young swells of the metropolis began to wear mustaches, but for some time no clerk would venture to imitate them. In one case a TQcl-Ciial^^-fln Pine street, who had just engaged a clerk for tWr?S~-E**a?hs, or during good behavior, dischargedtfe for wearing a full beard, claiming that the adoption of the fashion laid the clerk open to dismissal uncref the good behavior clause of the contract. About the same time a number oi' leading merchants gave notice that they would employ nobody who wore hair on the upper lip. As late as 1851 the senior proprietor of the Journal of Commerce made his cashier shave off an incipient mustache, and soon after brought his own son under the razor. Id the church of Dr. Bethune, on Brooklyn Heights, an elder who was suffering from a Tame wrist allowed his beard to grow rather than submit to a barber. The habit beginning in necessity, continued on account of the increase of comfort which it afforded, and the elder flaunted his beard before the congregation constantly. The result was laughable. Many of the brethren called upon the pastor to insist r.pon doing away with such a scandal as a full bearded elder. He led them to his library and showed them how some of the early fathers had pleaded against cutting off the beard. He turned to Lactantius, Theodoret, St. Augustine and St. Cyprian, who had stoutly contended for tho growth of the whole beard. He quoted from Clement, of Alexandria, the assertion that "Nature adorned men like a lion, with a beard, as the mark of strength and power." When one of the visitors asked him how lie would like it if the clergy assumed the mustache, Dr. Bethune referred him to a decision of a fourth Council of Carthage (A. D. 252, can. 44), in which it was positively enacted that a cleric shall cot shave his beard, and to a statement made by Luther in discussing this subject, that "all the Protestant martyrs were burned in their fall beards." This did not settle the matter, for subsequently the ladies of the congregation put in their protest. But in a few months a venturesome lawyer let his beard grow after the manner of the elder and in a little while 6inoothehaven faces were no longer the role but toe exception. i M ? E The finest looking specimens of maW hood, in every class, are to be found j ; among men between the ages of thirty- J I five and fifty, but how many comely : i women can be found even among those j ! who have compassed only the smaller j i number of years mentioned above ? The i i home work of women, whether she be j J wife or servant, needs revision ; it only i j genius can enable a person to be at the i same time master and servant, nurse | and ruler, then genius in this direction, | if there is any, should make itself i known for the bene-fc of those who are j : fighting magnificently against over- | | whelming odds. With a slighter phy- j ! sique than man, a physique that is oc- J | casionally subject to peculiar duties to | ?~w r>n n a 1 - ! i WULIULL IJL13&* U1 1IIrl 11 CO.U x-v ' | lei, woman is expected to daily endure I a strain that no man to>uld tolerate for ! any length of time. Until what is j modestly called housekeeping is recogj nized as the noble science that it really ; is, and is carefully studied, the slaughi ter of women by overwork will continue, | for at present it requires that every j | woman shall be a prodigy of sense, in- j dustry and endurance.?N'ew York Her- i aid. Hawaiian Fiower Girls. The Hawaiians are passionately fond ! of flowers. Bevies of happy, rolicking j native girls climb the sides of the ! mountains or explore the "picturesque I gorges in search of the choicest specimens, and, having gathereffenough to supply the market for the day, they dash down to Honolulu, riding horseback, man-fashion, at a terrific gait. They are sure to bedeck themselves first with "leis," or wreaths of flowers, which encircle their foreheads and hang suspended from their necks like so { many necklaces glittering in the golden sunlight. Suspended from the neck, ! also, and flowing down their backs, are ' <- -a -r it ttt^o great Bireamtuo ui nuiro plucked from a deliriously fragrant and perpetually green exotic, -without the aid of which no Hawaiian belle is robed | in the height of fashion. Arrived in I Honolulu, the flower girls select some shaded nook or corner along the public streets, and sitting by the half-dozen or more, dexterously assort the various flowers, and string them up until the leis is completed. As soon as the girls get fairly at work they make leis with | surprising rapidity, and spread thee.- ' out fantastically so as to attract the ! greatest attention, and invite belles and | beaus to purchase. The flower girls invite the Hawaiian public to patronize 11 - i ? ? ! inem Dy Singing songs, me uuiuca ui ! which is love, not in its most Platonic j form, and their love-chants are usnallv ; successful in drawing custom. At the time that the famous French Henri Rochefort, passed through the Hawaiian capital, he was, while walking along, literally covered with leis and maile wreaths by a charming native beauty of | sweet sixteen. Jiew? nnd Notes for Women. Four thousand three hundred and seventy-three women are employed in the schools of Switzerland teaching aeedlework. 1 | Many fashionable ladies who adopt j the antique style of dress are modelling I their coiiiures after the beautiful head 1 IATT AtTfiV Ui JCJ&UIiCj WftViU^ LJLLC liUXl VTV-i tug forehead, drawing it back from the temples and twisting it low in the nape of the neck, allowing a few short ringlets to escape from the coils of the hair. Madras, the so called benighted t->? i 1 t.j:. 4-^ ?/ >? -trresiueiii/y ui xuuiu, is i^o mou w ognize the claims of women to important offices. The Gazette announces the appointment of a lady, Miss Pogson, to j be Meteorological Keporter to the Gov| ernment of that Presidency. Miss Pogi son has for some years discharged with I great ability the duties of Assistant Government Astronomer. The two wealthiest widows in England are the Hon. Mrs. Meynell-Ingram, daughter of Lord Halifax, and Mrs. Gerard Leigh. The first inherited from her husband two splendid seats, each i with a deer park, and an income above i 8150,000 a year. Mrs. Gerard Leigh, I who sails in the finest steam yacht I " T?L T>_ ? *1, ^ j anoai, owns juuiou ruiji, iuiujcii^ mc seat of the Bute family, and a fine house in Grosvenor square, London. She < ntertains liberally,-whereas Mrs. Meynell Ingram lives quietly. Besides names of colors one is now expected to learn names of shades, and a sweetly fantastic list it is. "Infernal" is graded from deep garnet-red through sulphur to pistachio and justifies its name; "zain-zain" runs from deep bottle-green to copper-yellow; "col do Sardinia" from black-blue to peacockblue; "barboline" from red-brown to Leg-horn yellow; "kroomir" from dark prune to copper-gold; "eglantine" from solferino to shell-pink; "gabes" ! from deep plum to cardinal; "niolette" from brownish-purple to lavender; j "flatters" from bluish-slate to purple, aud "maccio" is toad-green graded into I drab-green and ending in magentaI pink. j Says the Philadelphia Times speakj ing of the task of marrjing off girls : I "It is the fault of the mammas themI selves if they take their wares to unprofitable markets. It is impossible to bring about marriage under modern conventionalities as it was to make men happy under the Puritan regime. Furthermore, ^the youths of the present have reached the age the Greek satirists excoriated, when they think more of their own personal adornment and indi: vidual gratification than of the sweet tor. i ments of legitimate love. How could j the painted, padded dandies of the day I fulfill the first requisition of the real j lover ? To be in love means to forget I self and to see the whole world in a j pair of blue eyes or black, as the arch j little god dictates. All the world loves ! a lover, but the lover must love some thing else than himself." Fashion Notes. The autumn ribbons are verr wide, j "Watered ribbons arg-^oveTand quite Rhadzimir silk is largely imported for fall wear. The reps of this new silk are rather i flat in appearance. Satin Surahs, with a glace surface, j produce many lovely color transitions. Plushes and velvets, plain and embossed, are used for trimmings of satin i Surah, and for wool stuffs. Shoes with lattice-work straps all over tbe instep are worn wj&c~stockings j matching the costume m^ggBP. ' While bead bassemenfenes are on the wane as fashionable trimmings, black jet is more worn than ever. Black and white is a favorite combination for fall and it will probably extend into the winter costumes. A slashed or open sleeve worn with mourning dress is this season supposed to indicate that the wearer is a matron. It is the custom at the moment to ! decorate wedding cakes with a profu| sion of white flowers, natural or artii ficial. Fraises composed of from three to j five rows of pleated lace are frequently j seen enclosing the throats of the most ! fashionable women. j Linen tucked satin merveilleux has ! been brought out at a lower figure than i the all-silk material can be bought, and j it is said to be very durable and less ; liable to crinkle than the real fabric. The fashionable width for bonnet ribbons is to be three or four inches, neither the very wide nor the very narrow ribbons of th9 summer having i proved successful. j Ribbons with shaded watered stripes | bordered by contrasting color, with I shaded plush centers and satin borders, | and with spots of plush in many colors j dotted upon a Surah surface, have been ! imported for the autumn. Very sraaii felt tonnets are shown for ! the fall, but the milliners mean tc ! cover them with plush until their I smoothness is barely visible. The ; n<n-n?aiA folt 'nart a Trtrrc naj"> Which UV?T<?J'I ** V D T port wine overdress j is striped Sarah of a bine and clouded c gray shaded to black. The garniture , * is moire of corresponding color. | * Skirts, though still clinging, appear i j more voluminous because of the numer- ' ^ ?ius draperies added to them in the wav : i of scarfs, tornurcs, shirred tunics and \ 1 paniers, Trhich are now added to all j j modern costumes. Paniers are at ], present generally applied to the edge ' * of the cuirass bodice, insieid cf being j set underneath them os formerly. Autumn millinery shows the summer 1 modes greatly amplified. This enlarge- ] merit of styles is earned oni; very geuei- j 1 ally. There are some petite fashions in J headgear, but not to such an esagger- . ated extent as presented in the opposite sizes. The poke bonnets have high tapering crowns. The importations give felt for autumn wear, and for win- ] ter there are plush and beaver chapeaux. ] Capes, or rather deep collars, made of the material of the dress, lined with ' silk or ilannel, or both, are formed sim ply of a straight bit of the material :; shirred in at the neck, about an inch !; being l?ffc above the shirring to form a i close frais? around the throat, while the front below falls half way to the waist. Lined with far and with a muff to match, these little pelerines will form the earliest additions to winter costumes. IIo"5v the Weather Indications Are De termined. At the Signal Service Bureau in "Washington the weather indication are recorded at 5 a. m., 11 a. m., 4 p. ir., and 11 p. m., dai'v. A reporter undertakes to tell how the work is done, and this is what he sees: Take a seat in the indication room with me, and we will see how the weather is gotten np. It is now four o'clock, Washington time, and telegrams are now pouring in from all parts of the United States, Canada, British America, West Indies, Nova Scotia, and falling into the lap of the sergeant in charge. The territory covered is from Olympia, in Victoria, on the northwest coast of British America, across to Sydney, aboT'3 Newfoundland, thence down to Havana, across to San Diego. California, and thence back again. There's a girdle for Puck. At a certain hour of the day ?three o'clock Washington lime?obI servations are taken at all the stations, and then they begin to come in, chasing I each other over the wires pellmell, like j ! a crowd of unruly school boys. These 1 dispatches are called o?T to six gentlemen, each of whom sits before a map, | one noting the thermometer, another - 1- A ?- ? Trm L116 DiU'OLLICJltT, U IJUI1U. lllU vuuuiuiv? w* i the weather, and so on. These are j transferred to one large map, and then Old Probabilities makes his appearance. He glances over all; sees where a storm was at 1 a. m., and notes where it was at 3 .o'clock. He takes into consideration the wind currents, the humidity, and all the minor details which his experii ence and learning have taught him. j Not a word is spoken in the room. Old i Probs is in a deep study. In a moment j he will speak to fifty millions of the J people, and a few more over in Canada, j His stenographer appears, and the indij cations are dictated for New England, | then the Middle States, the South, ' West, Mississippi Valley, then, perhaps, I a storm bulletin twenty-four hours in ! nrlmnrp tn warn some special section of i the country. Among the inn ovations made by General Hazen is the furnishing to special sections of the country special reports of floods, the condition of rivers and their probable rise or fall 'within twentyfonr hours following at given points. Then again reports are made for the | Southern States on the weather during J cotton-picking time, signals being dis! played from the telegraph stations dei noting clear or bad weather coming. It i is in contemplation io furnish the agricultural sections with indications for harvest time, so that the farmers will know when to take it in. The idea was ! to have small cannon at telegraph sta| tions, and if a storm should be discov! ered in the night, which promised great damage, to awaken the farmers so tbey I miglit save what they could. But it has : been fonnd that most country telegraph | offices close at such an early hour that j this cannot be carried out. l?ctcliler's Gold. j A few days ago a rare five-dollar gold | coin was handed us by I. Breezeale, of i Calera, for our inspection. Said coin ' was about the size of a silver quarter, a shade thicker, the color of " old gold," | and was inscribed as follows : On one ! side?" Carolina gold. August 1st, i 183i. 1-iOc. 20 carats." On the other | side?" C. Beltcher. At Eutherf*. 5 < dollars." T3ie history of this coin as j we learned it from 3Ir. B., is about i this: A gentleman by the name of j Beltcher owned and worked a gold mine i in North Carolina about the date shown ! on said coin. At this time transporta{ tion facilities were not so good as they i have become since, and the means of j communication were much more limj ited. On this account Betchler found i some difficulty in getting his gold dust | to markei and to the mints, ana ne | ! formed the idea of coining it himself I ! Not wishing to infringe upon the Gov! eminent or to be considered a counj terfeiter, he ascertained the exact I amount of gold contained in the dif| ferent varieties of gold coins coined by i the Government, made his oxra dies ! and coined his gold dust in his own name- stamping his own name and the value upon each as shown above. This was known throughout North Carolina as Betchler's gold and passed among the people of that State and elsewhere, where the facts were known, as readily nc + on or/-.Id fnlnq that bora ihe stamr> of j the government mints. The five-dollar I coin we saw, and which Mr. B. has in ! his possession, is a beautiful one and is I ! well worthy of a place in the cabinet of j j a numismatologist. ? Columbia (Alcu) ! S Sentinels ? " Calamity Jane." Among the strange characters talked j aboutaround camp fires in these regions, | ! says a Colorado letter, Calamity Jane ; takes high rank. From a frontiersman i who tunneled his way through the ! snow to these hills about two years ago, j in advance of the first rush of white I HlGDj I QlJh'dHileu. Ui >y i.c*\jco vvmvvi.1i; ing her career. Calamity Jane is a tall, slim woman ! of about 35, active as a cat, and of phenomenal endurance. She is a dead shot, preferring to aim directly under an Indian's topknot to any other merk in the mountains. When she was a i wiry girl of 15 her father was the pro| prietor of a cattle ranchc on the eastern ! side of the plains. Early one morning j the Indians broke into his log cabin i massacreing himself, wife and four ehilf dren, and taking his eldest daughter, Jane, with them to the mountains.? j After years of bondage Jane escaped I and became a government scout. Like ! most effective scouts, she has light hair, j blue eyes, quiet manners, and a silent i I tongue. She dresses in a full buckskin ! | suit, with leggings and moccasins. A ' snort barreled repeating rille is always j slung over her shoulders. A sharp j l knife, incased in a leather belt, hangs j I at her left side. Many a night, alone j | on her broncho, she has followed on the j j trail of Indians along the foothills of i | the Rocky Mountains, stealthily watch- j I ing to see if th^y were preparing to | j make early morning raids, as is their ; j custom. V\'oc to the solitary redskin ; i caught outside the lines of his camp, i He knew that certain death awaited bim when covered by the rifle of Calamity Jane. This Nemesis of the savage is now engaged, in piloting Lunt- j ing parries and miners to the BnfFiio Buttes. TPU.#i*> T tr.-n I ^rr.Vi?.'77'ea | VtUCil AJA.^ A. AAj.' +,+. -w** , ?5.000, everybody says, "the colored j cadet!'' When Captain Gowgate steals j ?100,000 nobody ? ecuembers that he is a white man, or charges iiim with Lis i race. Colored men should have a pro-1 portional share in the public service or I nr as they e^incV? fitness therefor. ' I h. :les and attends the trains :o]iecting the fare from pass^^^H^B~ seeing to the handling of the^^^^^^V is a little trjiog on theg^^^^^^K :otal stranger when he rain to have a charming rith ripe, pouting lips, ccH ip to him with " Would sir ?*' Yet it is said to be al it the Quincj depot. ThS raise of the person addr? ;lance quickly around to seS s looking, and then ne grirM :o ear and says, "I don't nH lis astonishment goes awayM par when she politely pointH )mnibus a short distance awa* a u - - - ire unsses ana Dusses.?srec The old prejudice against fl plants in living rooms as unhe^^^^H rapidly giving place to more ideas. Lindley, the English bB long ago pointed out the ab6u^B this notion ; and an Italian inveH has found, it is said, that the plants are of especial value in pugfl vitiated air. Vj Everybody Right. r [Indianapolis (Indiana) Fanner.jH When every one says a " thing it must be so." On this point Mr. Ab^H Lyman, druggist, Manistee, MichitB writes: Every ono who tries St. Jtwj Oii says that it is the best remedy? us-d for rheumatism. Mr. "VVh? Bj customer, after having e?8yii0#teM known specific for rheumatism, cured by St. Jacobs Oil. ^ #1HU *'ri 4-lnZn TYT/-VV1 A wllA Q f_ | JL11 ere ill O 1IICU 1U umo nvuu uuv W n tend church all the Sundays in the year, I and who never think of admiring the ' beautiful colored windows on the opposite side of the church until the collection box comes around. Barnard Manufacturing Company, [Fall iiiver (Mass.) Daily Herald.] Mr. Isaac L. Hart, superintended. No. 3 Ashton street, says: I have usera that superior remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, in a severe case of rheumatism in my arm. and its effect was wonderful, having banished, after a thorough trial, all pain, leaving my arm as well as ever. It is stated that Mr. Steinsmith, a naturalist, "with two assistants, has been murdered on one of the New Calidonia islands. Cured of Drinklnx. A young friend of miue was cured of an insatiable thirst for liquor, that had so prostrated his pyetem that he was unable to do any business. lie was entirely cured by the use of Hop 13ittf-rs. It allayed ail that burning thirst, took away the appetite fur liquor, made bis nerves steady, and lie has remained a sober and steady man for more than two years, and has no deshe to return to hia cups, and I know of a number of others that have been cured of drinking by it.?From a Leading IL Ii. Official, Chicago, Id. * 1 OA AAA Venezuela nas over ou,vw ^cuuaio and yet is one of the most peaceful States of South America. HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE Is the BEST SALVE for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, T,'lcera, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains. C'onis and all kinds of Skin Eruptions, Freckles and Pimples. Get HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE, as alJ others are counterfeits. Price 'Jo cents. DR. GREEN'S OXYGENATED BITTERH Is the best Remedy for Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Malaria, Indigestion and Diseases of the Blood, Kidneys, Liver, Skin, etc. DENTON'S BALSAM cures Coughs, Colds, Rheu mnt-Ktn Ki'iinf-v Troubles, etc. Can be used ex tor naily as a plaster. Use RED HORSE POWDER for Horses and Cattle. WARRANTED FOR 34 YEARS AXD XEVEIt FAILED To CURE Croup, Spasms. Diarrhoea, Dysenterv and Sickness, taken internally, and GUARANTEED perfectly harmless; also externally. Cuts, Bruises, Chronic Rheumatism, Old Sores, Pains in the limbs, back and chest. Such a remedy Is Dr. TOBIAS' VENETIAN LINIMENT. Zi}~No one once trying it will ever be without it: over 000 physicians use it. 25 Cents will Buy a Treatise upon the Horse and his Diseases. Book of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid by NEW YORK NEWSPAPER UNION, 150 Worth Street, New York. THE MARKETS. 3 NSW yoitK. Beef Cattle?Mod. Xat.live wt. 9 @ ll^ Calves?Good to Prime Veals.. 5 @ 8l/s Sheep 4 @* o}< Lambs 5 @ 7 Hogs?Live *>Vi% 7 Dressed, city 8%@ Flour?Ex. State, good to fancy 6 GO @ 7 75 Western, good to choice 5 70 @ S 00 Wheat?No. 2 Red 1 4G%@ 1 47 No. 1 White 1 43% @ 1 -14% Rye?State X 01 @ 1 07 Barley?Two-rowed State 85 @ 83 Corn?Ungraded WesternMixed 64 @ 71% Southern Yellow 72%@ 73 Oats?White State 51 @ 57 Mixed Western 42 @ 44 Hay?Prime Timothy 65 @ 95 Straw?No. 1, Eye 60 @ 70 Hops?State, 1881 20 @ 23 Pork?Mess, new, for export...19 75 @20 00 Lard?City Steam 12 40 @12 40 EeSned 12 50 @12 50 Fetroleum?Crude 7 ? 1% Refined 8%@ 8% Butter?State Creamery 29 @ 35 Dairy 25 @ 28 Western Im. Creamery 21 @ 26 Factory 16 @ 18 Cheese?State Factory 9 @ 12% Skims ... 4 @ 7^? Western 8 @ 12 Eggs?State and Penn 21 22 Potatoes?Early Rose, State, bbl 2 50 @3 50 BUFFALO. Steere?Extra 6 25 @ 6 75 Lambs?Western 5 00 @. 5 50 Sheep?Western 4 70 @5 00 "? ft RZ fit P. ks Vjuwi Luvuvav J.V^ . w ,, Flour?C'v Ground, No. 1 Spring 6 75 @7 25 Wheat?No. 1. HardDuluth 1 41 @ 1 44?\ Corn?No. 2 Mixed 70)?@ 70>^ Oats?No 2 Mix. West 45 @ 48 Barley?Two-rowed State 90 @ DO BOSTON. Beef?Extra plate and family.. 14 50 @15 00 Hogs?Live... 7*?@ 'iy* Hogs?City Dressed S,J?@ 8% Pork?Extra Prime per bbl 15 00 @15 50 Flour?Spring "Wheat Patents.. 8 00 @8 75 Com?Mixed and Yellow 73 @ 77 Oats?Extra Whits 52 @ 56 Five?State 1 10 @ 115 Wool-Washed Comb & Delaine 42 % 44 Unwashed " " 23 @ 30 WATEIiTOWJ IJIA5K5.1 UAixui* ji.viittjii. Beef Cattle?Live weight 4 @ 6% "lambs .T^.7. 5*? " ^ IIog9, Northern 8)?@ 8% PjflLADHJLPBTA. . Flour?Penn. Ex. Family, fair. 7 25 @ 7 25 Wheat?No. 2 lied 1 '46 ^ 1 46 live-State 110 % 110 Corn?State Yellow 71%@ 71^ Osita?Mixed 3S @ 33 Butter?Creamery, Extra Pa... 35 @ 3G Cheese?New York Full Cream- 12V?@ 12 Petroleum?Crude Gti@ "'Y* Refined 75?@ 75^ srs n Vegetine. Female Weaknesses. Xo bettor remedy iu the whole materia medica lias yet been compounded for the relief and cure of Female Complaints, of the ordinary kind, than Veoetcne. It seems to act in tlieso cases with unwonted certainty, and never fails to give a new and healthful tone to the female organs, to remove relaxed debility and unhealthy secretions, and restore a healthful vigor and elasticity. One of the most common c>f these complaints is Leucorrhcr-a or Whites. which arc brought on either by the presence of Scrofula in the system, or by some affection of the womb, or even by general debility. For all these complaints, and when danger begins to threaten woman at the turn of life, Vegetuce can be commended without qualification. The great prevalence of these disorders, and their cure by Vegetine, has amply shown that the sure alleviating agent remains not yet to be discovered, but is already known, and is a favorite with American ladies. Too long has it been the custom to prescribe nauseating and uncertain remedies in place of what is pleasant, efficacious and cheap. Try Vegettne, and do not doubt its power to carry you safely through danger and disease. A Splendid Medicine?Heart and Kidney Disease. Female Weakness. Gkiggsville, 111., .Inly 23, IST8. K. !:. Stevens, Bo-ton?Dt-ar Sir: I was afflicted j wish Ifcn-l anrl Ki'hi';/ y>f?w, and other Ft nut'.* If'mkiif <***, and doctored with several physicians and r.vej-.vd no benefit nntil I trio/1 your Vegetixe. and after fak:u'.' two bottles 1 was completely caret', and have been a healthy woman ever since, although 1 am in my GCth year. I do heartily recommend it as a splendid medicine to all afflicted as I havo been, and I bless the day that it tell in'o uv hands. MRS. MARIA HOBSOX. i>73 ^Fegetme. W5ZPAEED 13Y H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. i Vccjetine is Sold by All Oruggi?js. ' HMBaMaKmnaBnflHManaBMMBaanHBca - p j Decreased Population in England, r j .~?,0 mt._T ??rlrtn Tfilenrcmh saT3 : Tho de- j | LUUio, iUOiiuuuw- 1 \er7 crease of population in the farming dis- j nine- tricts of the United Kingdom is so i !s rihe steady and so alarming that it has seri-> vehi- on sly arrested the attention of the best boat", m0st competent among ouragriculB and tmal contemporaries. It has long been |?a?e< know that the tendency of our.-jopulafe of a tfon been towards a marked increase rom a j cities and towns where manufactures " ' ' ? ara carried on, and towards | , OI j.uv bluu bping ; a gtill more rapid decrease in rural disI'bus, j tricts ; but there are few of U9 who fccene , know how large has recently been the ? i m" j falling off in the number of inhabitants Ps t0 i occupying purely agricultural parishes. F ono i Speaking summarily, the decrease of B11 ear | population throughout the farming dis and tricts of the United Kingdom is not less *>ove than ten per cent, since 1871, while over the agricultural Scotland, as a whole, the ^Biere decrease in the last ten years amounts B* to as much as twelve per cent. These BS facts are the more calculated to inspire hA^ause it cannot be denied j aiJCc*':" BL jg j that the farmers and the farm laborers |Hhj6 who are obviously leaving our shores in thousands are, as a rule, the best of their class. An Obstruction Fatal to Health. Health must suffer seriously if the bowel; are oven partially obstructed. A free anc B regular exit through the natural channel, of thi ^^^^^Bdebris of the system, is essential to its well This effete matter being duly throw: bilious secretion and digestion go cn unin ^^^^H^Arruptedly, but if it is not, the bile is divertci the stomach and the blood, and headaches ||^^H^HAiou^ne^s, heartburn, flatulence and genera 9 titer's Stomach Bittors^th^eadin^perir tonic ot the day, will overcome con1 Btiun, whether temporary or chronic, and the hab:t of body regular and vigorous, not gripe like an ordinary cathartic, onvulse and weaken the bowels. On the. it invigorates them, and moreover tone and regularity to tne storaacn ana Bar CL.ttanooga they have estabindustry novel in this country. f*^^^Hsheep dairy for the manufacture Sheep cheese is a favorite ?f 100(* ]"n -^^a, and this enbegins with a stock of 1,000 my ? cuicdS^^^^^B no i o ivike Foonsb. any years my wife was confined to her Be veB^Mmuch a complication of ailment* that " could tell what was the matter or and I used up a small fortune iu i An- i Six months ago I saw a United i oon v,'t'1 ^?P lii>tcrson it, aud 1 thought 1880, a fool once more. I tried it, but for dran^^^^vrovod to be wisdom. Two botties males e ^ now as wc*^ aud fetr0Ds38 avAm<rpnf?^^Bivife' auditcost me only two dollars. avpracrfto1^^^^ fivd;ai, _;/- ir. Detroit. Midi. to be 7,092 public houses and Routes in London. During Should tako^^^^H persons were apprehended (-'uv<'- _^^^^Ktess. Of these, 15,998 were A ChicaJ^^^^Bf'8"? were feraales. The under thiri^^^^^Hps^or drunkenness seems young gent^^^^^W?&' and he young Men Kidney and Lirei Leland's ^ and EuropeaSj IX?ir,ESTIO>r7^B and nil forms o^H taking 3Iexs3Lvx's^H only preparation nutritious proper tie^B force-generating anflB is invaluable in all eiflj the result of cxliar^B overwork, or acuU.^B resulting from pulmoH Hazard Sc Ca^jwpri^B Flic* an 15c. box "Itongh 01M from flies, bed^bags^jB '25 CenJP a Treatise upon the HoHH Book of 100 pages. Vali^H of liorse?. Postage stamp^H paid by New York Newspap^H Street," ^^orL_____ Veuetin-e.?The great sucH tike as a cloanaer and puriflM shown beyond a doubt by tl^H who have taken it, and rec^f rfliftf. wrh siicb romarV^blo ctM Imagine for a moment the' thousands upon Spcclai t thousands of bottlos of Caruoldte annually $10.0 sold, and the fact that not a single complaint an^ ^ns lias been received from ail these thousands, and lull part you may have some idea of its good qualities. Johx b. _ ___ 5,00< o k Tils k hjt j tations/ (Tliteengraving represents the Lnngs in a healthy state.} profits i u in six njc A STANDARD REMEDY g IN aflANY HOMES. For Cous-h*. Cold*. Croup, Bronchitis and all I dll"l other affections of the Tliroat and LUX(5ss it ,, stands unrivaled and utterly beyond all competition. c A IN CONSUIPTIYE GASES M tliev ar< It approachesso n^ar a specific that "Ninety-five" MAYJH per cent, are permanently cured where the direo- AGES'] lions are strictly complied with. TV-re is no chemical or other ingredients to harm the youns or old. t0 * PRI ???! ll? IT HIP IIft mil A t I T.,11 AS) An EArcislunam n n?o i*u cyuMi.: IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM! cfitr? J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors, CINCINNATI, O. in vigor. Try tb? jrt for sale by all druggists. ^ N Y C 39 4 TAj] [Cheapest tiooks in the nroaio iJacaulnj'sHls-LP Talne's History oflflf MAN HA . cory of EngiasJ. fj'Ea;. Literature. l'l';re gd u-rijiitt Is l'co 12.no vois. I Blimo vol. IjanOwsaelT 89 c??'V'ti Phnfilf " cloth: Only $2.00** boiicd, for only JO rt*. J-'rte. rllUMJl MANHATTAN BOOK CO 18 V. 14th St.. N.Y. P.O. Box 4SS0. Sent to a ">I V ? |1 Yfi'if. EXPENSES TO c . T yt ? I (I ftiiliJ I I i P. O. Tlclicrywlmiu^l.'., M1." fc ?^KI^flMONTH-flGENTSW/INTEO-aObest selling articles i n the world: 1 sample/^#. I UUIM' Cwr&xJ Address Jay Bronion, Detroit. Mich- situatior C70 A WEEK, fl^actay at uumc vjuM) uiude.C.??uj> 4 LLl V ' Outfit free. Add's Xcue A: Co.- Aiigusta.Maine. ^VWeai W A TPTTPQ Ctak&v free. A.Urcn. Stasaard W aiJi Am-ri. an "a-.chCo..r;<t3b-j.-gl:,n. g~*i ?T"?fcT?3 Kev&lvora. CaThlO?ue ."rec" Add.-cs*, 33 perct. ^ST ?? v C^y Arts: TTfyt. fine Vorks.PiiulKirrh. r*. ?00 a SJRin perdayatliomo. Samplesworth?."ifrp(\ ' ? _*J? gO 10 $C\J Address Stissox &Co..l'ortland.Main>->. FOR$1 Dr. rvtETTAUP-'S HEADACHE PILLS c 6hort time both SICK and 3EEVOUS HE.' *"U^ c**?+y>Tn r'rtnncA flirt 1 r1! | regular bealtby action c 1 the bonds. A full size box of thes^ v?lnal>!c PU-L> plctc curc, mailed ?o :tnv :u?<ircs:j or. .roci J stamps. F~i- calo by c.11 <Irs:~!rists at S."c. DKOXV>; CHH3HC. ? jlj ifl ' Used and approved by the leading PHYf j CIASS of EUROPE and I The most | Sk Ma^^^ SSS CATASBH, EEKOESHOIDS, Etc. 9^^ . Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Croup and Diph J&Txj thea. 25 and SO cent sizes of all oxu ?RA!VD JTEDAL AT THE PHILADELPHIA jg?P< *1LVES HEDAJL AT 733 PAJUS EXPORTS EH REMEDY I NEURALGIA, 111| Iffimgijil I lumbago, I ' IPSP^i I BACKACHE? S i ill # !l<30*OT?5 Hi'iillWmiljfctnJKlSi SORENESS Iill WJ-il ^ i lijiwnrpm 11 l5^''a IJDS, iii priUriWM i 11 T00T"'EAR J j| i^?3ils?!!l! I ? 1 aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs On u a aire, scri. simple and cheap External Remedy. A trialentail* 9 but the comparatively trifiingoutlay of SOCxxrs, and ?T*zy & one iuffeting with pain can have cheap and positive proof of \f claim*. ontKCIIOKS 15 EIXTE5 LA.NGCACS. S018 BT AIL D8DQQ1STS AID OEAtERSlimnilCfK. 1 A. VOGELER & CO. fl Baltimore. ltd., V.8.JL. am pop BITTERS/1 1 (A .">Iedicine, not a Drink.) 8 | I HOPS, BUCHU, MANDRAKE, I 1 I And tee Purest ass Best Medical tlks OK all OT11KR blttzes. I | THEY CURE 1 AH Diseases of the Stomach, Bowels, Blood, B ( Liver. Kidneys, and Urinary Organs, Ner) vousness, Sleenlessnessand especially female Complaints. i siooo in cold. fl H TTill be paid for a case they will not ctire o^tB H help, or for anvtlilns Impure or Injurious I n f Jund in them. H Ask your drapRlst for ITop Bitters and try Kk H them before you sleep. Take no other*. S D I.C. Is an absolute and lrreslst'blp cure for I Eg Drunkenness, use of opium, tobacco and. gj narcotics. J| c1111*"11" ss.vd foe ciecrlab.'* wkb "jw All Above sold bv <irv.~\iUS. a Hop BllUri Co.. RocbCTtcr, X. V., enas to clubs. r 00 REWARD fn^thc monSs rat. Scad quick lor S'^mcn P* icSUJars to AMERICAN BOOK EXCH aues, Manager, 7ti l Broadway. > Agents Wantwl for Life^H ARFIELjUM ns the full history of his noble and e-nf lastardlv assassination. Millions of us for this boot. The best chance ofl ake money. Beware of " catchpennj^B This is the only authentic and full^H Lie of our martyred President Se^H ; rind f-xt'-a terms to agents. AL PUBLISHING CO.. Philadelphia? qJ will completely oh.nj;rc the b xxfl stem in three months. Anv V'yrs<U one pill each nipht irom 1 to 12 wnksjH to sound health, if sv.oh a thins oe i--^l rvwhero or sent by mail for 8 letter Johnson & co., boston, H ly Bnngor, !We. >ck of the Denver Land & ImprovemeiO| mense: paid in dividends overlOO per^H utbs: absolutely sale: u > personal liaO^H in Denver real estate: dividends paid ,-i'er to anv of the banlts or business m^B Any number of shares at TEX DOLI^B t by mail on receipt of the mono-. Circ^H idress Archie C. tisk, Pres't: II. H. Sn^H H. Estcs. Troas., 454 Larimer St.. Denver^M Similes of U. S. Treasifl *<"d national bank ruxs. Lmar of nine exact Imitations of United Notes, and nine of National Bank Bilfll various denominations. As a rare amSH ous means of detecting counterfeit m^l invaluable. Price. $'2 a package. I^B E\V?fc CO., New York City. PTO. BoiM fS WANTED fl I n nill jH SdInt U A fi ?1E ifl accuratc account to date. Steel porti^B strated. Term* liberal. Outfit 50c. Add? I ? i?11 .C. n~ nr r.nwt T/w?? S? N? VI1T WaSTE 7?!0N?T! Youn< tt>:q or old. J | If yoa *xct a Luxuriant B?w?ucNf. ?c*?nt i^wl " I wfcukers or a heavy growth </ hair on bald ? I b*adj. cr to THICKEN. STREN6TI I EN and ME th? HAIR aa<rwcere don't be hwT.bitcred. ^ WB o | at Spanish dijco'err which has NEVER VET 'VsSkR^^I u | ScndONL? SIX CENTS to fr. J. CONZA- cQfMM 049. Cotton. Maia. Lit rare of aU imit&cSooj. | Person * wanting Employment in Hercan^H ;e>. Hotel?, Offices, 011 Steamers, etc., at a distance, address with stamp, ITAN" AGENCY, 1.T29 Broadway. N.Y. CiM jraph of 5 Children at One Birfi ny address on receipt of 50 cent*. _H| A. M. FRASER, yew Glasgow, N. SM ?ciyrrivr WANTED to sell Station* Liij m i <a1 (roods on commission. Se^H ir terms. PHcEN'IX PUB. CO., Warren. ^ yir^L If yon wo'.iict :eara YcIettrapfajr^J j iiiici w TOTtsnrni :, ad Iiv-s P70^' Jane*vUlc. Vr^H :VS Draiis Fo?k??^s XgrvoiwDfbilit* nc?s of Generative Ori5^?- ? *r?.u Circular. A linn's Ph:>rni"-?V^-' Flr*t<.av..X.^J TS W ANTED for the is Pictorial Books ana Bibles. PricS5CftiiC^H National Pnblishing Co.. Philadelphi^M iveek in yonr own tov.Ti. Terms and S5 o^B so.Add'sH. Hallett >; Co. .Portland.Ma^B .Oadayadd'3W.E.Bowditch. TTn it n 'I'M ere roost Tronderfclly In a very fl| LDACHE; and v.hilo acting on of o."cc^3 of tile, producing a I , tcitli full directions for a comupt of rino tlirce-cent postage Sole i*roprictcrs, r?fc3 38 * ^3 H I 5-**s ** [ S3 Jsa^g^^ArlklastoaiM Tsaeline?such 23 1 P% . 1 Pcz12.de Vsse^B For taejrQ<M>T.-T.0 rv*,; rv0?M ataiest of Vaseline Cm?orB r BUBNS, Vasdi:i2 Toilst scJ LSLAXJi O, superior to iayst=U?r]H ?K vAsaRECOffECT? theri&, etc. Aa a^rceablt form ofl goods. * in#VaselineintenJB 25 C22TTS A