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Sf4; ObIj hi Jm*. i. Ton NeaT, 4aif«d colored men, 99 Troy Monoe, Brooklyn, W on ell iva o( tke week e pooker In OrUffton we.* oh’me Aore et ‘J4H Fulton aireet, Brooklyn. On the lerento day he tone In Bethel Ifethodlet KpUcopsl oh, at Scbenectfdy nnd Dean arc nuee. Ha D vary old, very moderate In ' hie movameata, and Me eeanty locks are tkiokly aprlakled with pray. He ie ol an eocommodeting disposition, and srhad pratty Ouasie Croppy, the little hlack-eved saleswoman, presented her •ell bfrore him in the basement lost Friday/accompanied by Will Evering- ham, a c’.eHt, who U the nephew of the Oviagtoas and the reputed hoir to large estate, and with great men imeu him to ‘Hnarry them,’’ the pot the usual questions with solemnity, and tent them sway with the injunction to go and get a rer tlfoue and hk would fill it oat. When a fiew hoars Inter Miss Crorwoy was ac by her fellbw clerks as “Mrs. she professed to be hat tin day after was very In- aad said there was no use of carrying the fun any further. said a fellow clerk; “do yon call It fun P You're man led as fau as any sroman who ever lived. Do you mean to say you didn't know that Vo ie a ministerr” JSveringhain was sutnmoned, and was apparently thunderstruck at the infor mation. lie bed considered it a joke to ask Voss to marry thorn. Of course, it could not be a marriage. , “Bnt it is,’’ his follow clerks replied, •‘and nothing can change it now. You nr* man and wife, and had better make the best of it.” Jgj ■ Bev. Voss Neai was sitting last even ing la the rear chamber of his dwelling. His cost was off, and bis stocklng-elmi feet rested in a chair. He laid aside his newspaper as the reporter entered, and looked op over bis glasses. “Did l marry Will and (iossie? Come, now! This thing’s gone far enough. I’ve heard nothing but marry, marry, for the last week, and I’ve been kept up high long enough, ft’s a plenty bad to have a hundred clerks dingin' ft in your ears without their puttin' up strangers to it.** “But it is Claimed that yon took ad vantage of the ignorance of the two young people, and when they came to you in a frolic tied them op In earnest ” ••Well, ( Just wish l bad. But it wai all in fun. There's no marriage to it They haven't got a certificate, and 1 haven't returned one of the** blanks it the Health Department. Why, I da lots of marryin’. I’m too oid’to maks such a mistake as that.” ' “ Well, ymt must own it was a good |5ke*” A good Jukol Well, I should sal no. But thev've carried It far enough down to lha stores *od l wish thev’d It. I've ready been mad about 1; once or twice, hot there’s no use gntm bUa’ about their sassy tricks. Tnsy wffi have their fun with tbs old man. aad when a lot o’ young folks think they're doin’ something smart you can’t toll them anything.” “I suppose they've exaggerated It. How did it really occur F” I ** Why, I was ettting by tbe store In the basement eating my* dinner, when these two come team' down and says •Marry us,' with lot* of gigglin’ and ear- ryln’ on. “•What's yonr nameF* 1 said to the boy, and he said ‘Joe Johnson.' •What's yoursP’ * •“Miw Cr mp.’ ••‘Wall,’ I said, •Joe Johnson, will you hove this woman to bo your wife V •‘‘Yes.’ •••And, Miss Crimp, you’ll have thli man to he your husbima P* •••Tea.” “•Well, that’sall. Now yon’re mar Hod. (Jo and got your cotUficaie and fill it out,’ ” “ Don’t yoo call that a legal msr- TiagoP’’ •* No, no! Of course uwt. They were oa o gale, and it was ail in fun. They didn’t think of getting marriod, and 1 didn’t think of marryin* ’em. It’s ail la the motive, you know. 'Hides, 1 didn't say ‘You are man sod wife.’ ” “ What If the young lady should say she was not in fun?” “ W-o-l l, that might rai*e a qne» tioa. But the won’t say anything of the kind.” “I think I will see youngErering Words, pi One would naturally expect all tol trably woli educated English or Amerb can people to prononnes the Eng.uh language corrs tly, but a close observer, well gionh led in the ar/ horit es, find that e en among well road The Hfit Ceteratieu. g weu rcafl peep of habitually iatclugent assoc atlons, r; iigenl id lay ‘Hi ■ ■ “ Don’t do It, now. Too take mv ad- If yon know when you’re well off. Don’t you do it. He’s in a bad frame of mind. The clerks have been at him every day- They’ve congratulated him and seat their congratulations by mail, and they’ve asked when the reception was eomin' off, and if be was goin’ to Grseupoint on hts weddin’ trip nil language has been awful. Profanlt don’t no way describe it. If l was nearest friend l wouldn’t mention the subject to him.” “ How does Miss Cropsey foel P” “ She cried once or twice about it, but late'y she's been more resigned. Mr. Hall, the floor-walkor, fined them both fifty cent) for le wing the floor without permission. Fact is, it’s been a pretty rough joke all round, and when they all ask mo who I'm going to marry next I feel like giving 'em a piece of ml mind.” Mr. Everingbam and Miss Cropwy urwe not to be found last evening. A clerk said: “Of oonrse it was a genuine mar- riago. and has been tbe talk of the - neighborhood. It is stated, on what seems to be good anthority, that large earns have boon offered to Miss Cropsey ' by Everingbam*s friends to put the matter at rest by declaring that H is mt a marriage, and that she has refused to do eo. They hare been acquainted toi a King time, and Will has kept company . t*. with her a Httlo. They were on a lark, of course. I guess they knew that Voss Neal was a minister, and carried the j«»ke t# that extent without realising tha> they were contracting a legal marriage.” •—Jr. Y. fftoa —-Portsmouth, R. I., is rated w'th a ala'ion of f.OOO in tin cenms of and. is probably no more populous MW. Within her-borders, it is claimed. mere jabnagenarlans titan in any eomimmiity of eqnal numbers in the Here are their names and Manchester, 101; John , W; Kl xabeth Bram n, 99; 9S; Henrietta Allen. 95; } Mrs. Green. PeJeg Almy. 90: Barker, 93; Bath 93; William SUsoo,’ his maker, elected Of Califor- ycnen alike. I arge proportion are, at feast ocoaron- aliv, iasccurate in (uonnaciatlon, when judged accord ng toxlft received stand ards. This cornea of coarse, from ca elessness and lack, of obMrvaUon. The error, hf some exemplar of early life, parent or teacher, has Wen cop od, and every repetition of it hasv in its turn, helped to fit iho mistake upon some . i hearer too indolent or too trustful to study the lexicoe-fpr himself. Perhaps few of ns have not been mortified St finding now and then how far amiss has been onr pronunciation of even familiar words. Certainly no one need be ignorant of what is correct, with such broad-cast sowing of una bridged, and smaller forms of good dictionaries, as our generation has seen. It will bo said authorities differ, and what one condemns an other sanctions. /This is true only to a Small extent, and Will not justify a tithe of the varying pronuncia tions that we boar. Ode must, of course, have a standard, and tastes dif fer in this regard, but Webster andWori cester are the authorities generally re ceived among i a. Of the two, perhaps, fn.st dh>us litcPafy peopli prefer Wnr- hoster’s decisions m orthoepy, but no pronunciation sanctioned by either lex icographer can be condemned as false, th iffh another may be preferred,' a*d any pronunciation given Dy Both, with out aa altojhiBtiVB. may aafclv be taken as the correct One. But turnfig the pages of a dictionary Is both dull and confusing Work where one is not in search of a particttl.tr word, but of brrors-gt-large, so to speak, and there fore with abundant means for thelf cor rection, we go on repeating our mis takes until something besides a diction ary forces them upon our notice. The words given below are random specimens taken from a list begun for amusement, months ago,-of words no ticed to be mispronounced by tho<e who should hare known better,'myself being ouo of tiiS offenders, and the list bhs become unexpectedly long. “Idea” should be accented on the second ayliah o instead of the first, ac cording to alt good a tiioritiaa A Speaker said lately! “The rci ft*&rch-es of Se'auoe have proved," etc , whan If he wou'd have searche l hi* dictionary he would have saidt “The re-Man-A-to.” This very day tWo highly-oduca'ed •torgv meft, one of them also an author, have, in conver-ation w th me, used the word often, sounding the t, ehen It should be silent -of eu A frequent m'spron nc ation is that of tin-y|for ti ny, mak.ng the nryt V- wej.ihort instead of long, as it ia prope ly. W* doom nally hear ‘wa fe nm fy- ce-um. a-kkr-nv n •, em.. ilteteadof mu- *t-um. lyaor um. ath •-»»<-um. And w e also hear italics and Ital'an with the hritiaf vowel long instead of short, as it should always b& Miss Wouiaon, in one at her bright maga zine sketches spells til s wr ng pron-in- ciatfea of thr ii'ter word ‘-Eye-talian,” when she puts it ato the mo .th of < ne of l, V < har.tci- A w ell-read i dy who has twti broth ers. b th professors ift cel eges, told me a day or two ago ibat a certain pl.toe was very mm hT-mjdw-ted (e e seated). Web tor would have told her to pro nounce it u o-late t and Worcester, f»- odated *1, An exactiv f ontrary mistake Is in sjsy- ing to'C-ro scope for ou-cro-scope. The fir k vowel w kmg. Perhaps no words are more frequent ly mUral ed than th so do^glla ing the •choo's of medicine. IhCy thouhi be al»top-*ti>y, ho me-op-athy. etc , and not al-lo-puM y and homn-o-puM-y. Bo with re,tain | arts of'the body mentioned in accounts of In uries. Many i f as learned last summer in that C inful watch by the President's sick d to speak (f the pa-ro‘-id g and. and by analogy would know that it is the ca-ro -id and not the ear-o-tid arterv. Pursu ngour physiol-gical studies, wo find that th* murderer >c ers the gu- iar and a-.t ih* /uo u-lar ve n. and that ab- fc-rnen. instead of uo-do-men is the \How rashy homes does the stranret inter th it are made wretebed to her hy .ho little hopbinls there, that have about . | aa Ito|swav asti the father and mo her w y wwtr^iphere: afisTtirev wereiheniute i op e ' an t nsi-trcs.-es rrf^litl house, as id fact they are! 1’hcy are at the door as alia enters, they are on the ba k of the chair as she site down, on her knees, in her pocket*, her muff, J»er reticule: the sticky little Angel's &re dattbiiig her clothes, tbe noisy little tongues are ask ing every sort of question, sbes umbles over a liberal scatter ng of tfcbir toys from one end of the house tothe other; doors. ilam t furniture upsets, voices shotlt (A glee or boTow in wrath, rude | remarks ma :c her ears tingle, imper i- nent ones make her fingers Itch she cannot hoar her own Voice for their clamor, she Cannot think her own thoughts fof the r interrupt ions; she hardly dare eaM her soul her own til! the front doorclbsd^ behind her, and she] feels as if she were escaping from pan-> demonium. 'Hie people who are responsible fur these children seem to have some such Idea about then! at peasantry have often I held about natural foo s -tlmt they aro Isomething sacred, and must not be [hindered or restra ned. And even when Unlenitatts tbe Oeeen. Prof. k. E. VerriH, of Yale College, Cearee C*mh. It is probable there Is in the world no wh ch has been the recenUydehrered a lecture In New York one instrument whch hM . ‘ > «" D City, telling of tbe wonderful country agent of mot e tori are aqdcruelt) than the lying beneath tbe depths of the sea, ei- roaree comb. I iom the 9kMmk jB Mr ^ A CATALOGUE JTJffT coxTAUnirQ lying beneath the depths pecially that lying Beneath the (Jnlf Stream, lie said be bad made l,Ao<J observations this summer for the United States Fish Commiseionere. He had cruised from Labrador to Chesape ike this eenlithent is not felt and acted upoh to its fullest Extent; the childreli art! uie ^■wet A friend lately told me that her brothl nr was ill wlth'/ftTWrA-i-tia Ho really ka<l Iron-a/-ti< (firon ki-ti*). Ally and allies aro atxxmtcd on the last syllable, nnd not on the first Grim ace and grimaces have the accent on the second syllable, with its n long— grmi-u-oea. Simultaneously and sine cure both have the first vowel long in stead of short, as they are frequently given. Bo also has ephemeral We •d'ottld call an event a no-ta-ble one. m Yng the first vowel of the adjective •t wa should call a house <oepo nor-a-ble, (a short rowel,) U wo mean that she ie aa excellent one. Probably more people nronounce rail lery with tin. first syllable long ns in rail, than short as in raTy. but the lat ter i* correct, as if the word were spelled railcry.—.Vary Lenox, in 1'he libtotoiR < 4 Parsea’s Knnperrh. One day two residents of Deal’s Island. Md., were oat fishing. They had paddled and rowed in the hot sun all the jtfternoon without even getting n nibble. They had just anchored to try their luck again when Rev. Joshua Thomas, the famoox Methodist minister, came paddling along In his canoe. Now it seemed as if one of the men had long been the subject of the reverend gentle man's prayers, without avail, however. As he came op he saluted them wi h “Well, brethren, what luck?” “Bad enough, Pa->on Tb6m*<», bail enough,” replied one of the men. The other called out in a joking ways “Now, look yer. Parson Thomas, you pray an’ we'll fish.” “ Donef" quickly reapouded the good man. k He tied his ’canoe to a post and went down on his knees. Over went their lines. Tbe parson poured forth his prayers in earnest, not forgetting to put in a word for the salvation of the souls of the men. Presently, excited and stofku riaatiar Me of the men straightened himself up and exclaimed: Stop right that, Joshua Thomas; I've got a bite; i’Udine youroongregation.” Sore enough the first fish for that day was a large sttnperch, honestly believed to have boeh caoght under the inspira tion of that prayer—on (Del.) Every Evening. ■ —. —“Air*” moaned a widow recently bereaved*“what a misfortune! 1 know what kind of a husband I have lost, but [know what kind of a husband Will beP”—D'.troU Free Frets. ■ —The Tnadk only mix nine different srtiake together to intake mince meat His the suteeatA-altd seventeenth in- which Axe A meric tn ra nee {t'fefi of toe #ori4.—/Vs* n the waters of Greenland, Spitsbergen, inade tire topics for entertainment; tho guest is regaled with Charley’s last bright saying and Julie's last bright ac tion, by Ne %’s traits and Kittv’s a l- roents, till she wonders what-there can be good and bright in children bdrn of Mch simpletons, add hails thd house she filters where thhre are none Of these WoH-sBrihgs of joy. or where, if there fire, they aro brought up according to Rose Terry Cooked advice for bovs? in a barrel, to b^Ied apdeducated through theWmg-holn* How different is the atmosphere of that home where the father and mother ma ntain their own individuality, and the children, inateadof be ng throat for ward that the WholS world rday tokk frfim ihfiifi, fire kept sufllcient n the back-ground for the world to show them, on the other hand by what to take example themselves; where, to ipeak figuratively, it being recognized Mutt they are not the plan 1 itself, but Amy thS blossoms On the stems, the plant is allowed Opportunity to grew Snd develop, hnd enjoy its own sun Ah ne. and lift its blossoms with it, not k ove it! ITiers is tootliing in Ibe woridao beaut tlful aa a groop nf chilrtrtfi around any h ton ft Poor or rich. It is a beauty that appeals to the same sentiments as beautiful landscape, a ;d beautiful flow- ers do, in all tho loveliness of lines and Hmoi^ ah l to the h gh ra and holier °!!V • 1 l 1 ' dneetkHi*l fikturet Sna id the Coascuni-ncss of that im mortal spark an mat nr each of the lit tie cioaturw. But let those little creat ure* leave the place of children, and thnf-t them elvta forward into that Of G own peopM, Indies e by Ihcir behavior ‘“P** 1 development than a childish one any war. tak ng hold of that share of life and the World which belongs to their elders before ihcir Hdera are done with it, like too ra«re heirs Uyihg pftlmature hold o' ah inher ithooe, and then much of the l*eautv and charm of ehihihojd vanishes, and one feels that tho-wi blossoms w II i>ear a gnarled fruit and that the bloom will be rubbed off that fruit while it is , c t green and sour and bitter. Every mother feels that she can man age her parcel of children, as every hen can scratch for her brood of i hickena. And perhaps she could, if aho took ax I much paint as the hen. aftd gave her- •clf no other thought or o©ourw\tion, as Mrs Bartlett d iet But people live in tbe world, and ere obliged, whether they will or not, to gho a limited por- t on of ihemsckes to that world, to the demands of friends and enemies, cred itors and debtors, that is and how to accommodate th s nncessity to the prop er care end attention rwqu red bv chil dren D no trilling matter, but might be called really an art in itself, howto restrain the** little people without re pressing them, how to deny ibem with out oppressing them how to develop them without tearing open tho t'owor and laying the heart bare too soon to the sun, bow to give them full plav, and Jet rob no one else of liberty—all that re*inirea thought and exertion and ex pression, and if one has not the first and the last of these things, (hen one must b« willing to profit by tbe advice and example of those that have, and homilitv and patience must also bo called into requisition. Pure and perfect family life is the best thing that the Disposer of ail affaire has xiven to Hi* people; but it is not perfect family life where half the family are allowed to override the oihe; half, and that the half of leaat discretion, where the wh ms of the children are consulted, to the in ury of the needs o the elders, and the sphere of their pleasure is al- A'wod to nclii M tho sphere of th« other*’ comfort* But where the op posite course is msintained, and the children, secure in every comfort and reqairemnot, are given just that liberty W’hich is given :o the fud-grown citizen —liberty exactly so far as it does not impinge upon the 1 bertv of another cit zen*- as it will not impinge on the liberty of the citizens that they are to become-then the result is likely to be a bless ng to the world Itself* as well as to iho particular horoe circle where such treatment is maintained. And the beautv of those soft cheeks and lips, those d mole i, those flying locks and srarry e\ a*, those kisses, those smiles, tbo e teare, tho e dear vo ces. is supple mented by something precious as ail the rest in the know edge of what the result of all this will be when the dar- Tngs take their place as the next gener ation. —/for per’s Lu. ar. Restoring Faded Ink. A valuable diaoevery baa been recent ly made, whereby the faded ink on old parchment* may be so restored as to render tbe writing perfectly legible. The process consists in moistening the paper with water, and then passing over the line* in writing a brash which baa been dipped in a solution of sulphide of am monia. The writing wi l immediately quite dark in color, and this ; in tbe case of parchment, it will preserve. Records which weae treated in this way in tbe Germanic Sfaseum in Narembnrg ten years ago are still in tbe same condition as immediately after tbe application of tbe prooeas. On paper, however, the color gradually fades again; bat it may be restored atpleeimre by the ioa'ion bf tbe sulphide. The ex- anation of the action of this substance appli' plans it ver or Siberia. The water is fifty fathoms deep, and the bed of the ocean is of slay. Bowlders weighing eight hundred >r 1,000 pounds are dredged up. Prof. Verrill believes that they are brought lown by icebergs from' the arctic re gions and dropped whto the ice melt*. Tiie bowlders are found as far south as Ixmg I timid. Further out to sea, aev- ?nty to one hundred and twenty miles •onto from the southeastern coast of New England, the bottom of the sea, which has inclined very gradually east ward. forming a table land, takes asud- len dip downward, so that whereas tif* water on the edge of the bluff is one hundred fathoms deep, at the Bottom of the basin it is 1,000 fathoms deep. The slope is, M high and as steep os Mount Washingtoii, find on ita summit, which is level, a diver, could he go to so low a depth, could not put out his hand without touching a living creature. The bottom of the sea is covered jnst there with A ffiuua which has never been be fort founu Otitside of the Mediterranean Sea, the Gulf of Mexioo, the Indies, or ather tropical regions. The number of •pccies of fish dredged up is eight hun tired, and over half of^hem have never before been seen by naturalists. Seventy kinds of fish, ninety of Crustacea, and two hundred and seventy mollusks have been added to our fauna. The age of manv of the specimens shows that they must be permanent in that region. The trowel let down from the ships by a mile of rope brings up a ton of livihg *tnd dead crabs, *hrimp, star fish,' and as the trowel simply scrapes over a small surface, the] ocean bed it plainly car peted wi»h c.eatnres. Sharks are seen by thousands In this region, and countless dolphins* bat it scents strAngd that not a fish bone is ever dredged up. A piece of wood may be dredged uo once a year, but it u honeycombed by the boring shell fish. This shows what aestroction is con stantly going on In those depths. If a ship sinks at sei^ with all on bofird it would bo eaten up by fish with the ex ception of tbe metal, and that would corrode and disappear. Not a Done of a human body would remain after a few dayi. It ii a constant display of the law Of ihC survival of the fitt* t. Noth ing-made by tbe hand -if man was dredged up after cruising for months in the track of ooean vessels excepting coal J clinkers shoved overboard from steam- sbipi. Hero Prof. YnrriW eorreexed* himself. Twenty-fire miles from land he d, edged up an India rubber doll. That, he said, wa* one thing the fish could not eat. Here the Gulf Htreaaa is forty miles further west than anpuiap shoWs, Prof. Verrill continued; and this stream of warm water from the south nourishes tbe tropical life near Massachusetts. The temperature further la shote is thirty-five dog. In August, on the edge of the submarine > fount \Y a* bin gum fifty-two deg., and toward the bottom of the basin thirty-nine deg., while further out to sea the temoeraturc of the water K w» colder. C’n the surface the jelly , uautilus, and the Portuguese man- of-war, with other tropk-ti fish are found. Lu this belt the til* fi"h, about which so much was said a year ago, #ere found in immense quantities, bu» this summer, although evpeditionA have been made for the express pur pose of catching some, not ^ne could be taken. Undoubtedly they had beeu killed, to a fish, by a storm which car ried the oold water into the Gulf Stream; indeed, It is known that a cold current of water resting on the ocean's bed may con tain arctic fish, and a current of warm water floating over it on the sur face may be alive with tropical fish. A* to the quantity of light at the bot tom of the sea there has been much dis pute. Animals dredged from below •evsn hundred far.tmnu fliLher have mi eves, or tains, indications of tnera. or else their eyes ate very large and pro truding. Crab’s eyes are four or five times as large as those of a crab from surface water, which shows that that liffht Is feeble, ami that eyes io bo of any use must be very large and sensi tive. Another strange thing is that where the creatures in tho*e lowct depths have any color, it is of orungt or red, or reddti-h orange. Hea ane mones, corals, shrimp, and crabs have ibis brilliant color. Sometimes if i.» pure red or scarlet, ojid in many speci mens it inuiinos toward purple. Not a green or blue fish is found. Thfi orange rod is the fish’s protection, for the bluish-green light in the bottom of the ocean makes the orange or red fi*h ap pear of a neutral tint, and hide* it from enemies. Many animals are black, others neutral in color. Some fish are provided with boring lails, s i that they can burrow in tho mud. Badly, th!' surface of the submarine nfftmtain v covered with shells, like an ordinary sea beach, showing that it is the eating house of vast schools of carnivorous animals. A codfish takes a whole oyster into it* mouth, cracks the shells, digests the meat, and spits out the rest. Crabs crack the shell* and suck out the meat. In that way o-mte whole mounds of shells that are dredged up. Net la tkfittgkt Direction. Lad week the Austin Waterworks Co. had several hundred men employed laying pipes. They were engaged In digging a trench a quarter of a mile long about a foot deep, when one of the most intelligent farmers living on Onion Creek ^topped his team and asked one of tho men what he was dig ging for. « x • “ Wather, be dad.” \ ••That just s|iows how much intelli gence these city folks have. Here they are digging for half a mile along tho top of the ground hunting for water, when it they were to dig straight down they might strike water within forty feet/’ and smiling at tbe simplicity of the city folks, he started hi* team and drove on. —Tex it SifUntjf. > V** » J P '• —A former Hartford caninet-maxcr, L. J. Toohe ,\ has recently been elected Judge of the Superior Coart of Califor nia. Leaving Hartford twenty-eiffht he s ud.cd law lit Cincinnati, of rivQi at on, . tender, delicate and nervotts children must Suffer terribly by the hands df, kkdj, merciful and kind- hearted motl ciB—wotoert who hope of Heaven when they die. Who is there In all the/brood land who doe* not recol loot as among th* crudest agonies of his ch ldhood the ra-ih and rcekle-s combing of the Jhtadr W* have seen children undergoing untoid agony from kind mothers, Sisters and friends, with tears streaming from their eyes and agonizing but half suppres ed screams, enough, one would suppose, to chlUthe blood or i-tay the hand of a a. vago Merciful and kind ia other respects, but rake after rake is continued until we have no doubt the little ones suffer ten times more a oily than persons who are hung or racked An 1 there Is neither need norexcusc lor it* 'fhe hair o. a child can be cleaned and combed a» .enderly os any other act, if only paUcnee #ul are exorcised, boi mothers Mjo'&i'c pa terns of patience iu all othoi'p n^8, teem to forget or steel ti.eir scnAhil tiesjio jjlll Stick iuffi Or they hove piilled and broken in their own liaic Until their heads have become wffTbus to pain from hair pulling, until they have not the least appreciation of the terrible suffering they intiict on their innocent children. -Some women, to avoid trontilc, cruelly cut off the noblest crown of beauty a little girl ever had- her hair, and make her such a fright that ho wonder tho mother loses ml tender fefellng for her. But we beg'jpr tlie sweet* Intie girls' lovely locks. And we plead for tnem to be varied from the necessary torture in'.icle 1 upon such lovely flowers. We fear that in the world to come, some mothers will meet, unexpectedly, the weeping and wailing of tortured chil dren. who have su’erol more than death two or throe times a week from unthoughtful mother*. Do spare the innocents. Have Wore pat once. The recollectbn of these, innocently in ’icled tortures have followeiT us for seventy yea s, nnd wo ask that the present in lantilo generation be spared.—/euxi Slate licu-stcr. 400 ILLUSTRATIONS AND PRICES OF OHONDS, WITCHES, JEWELRY ANllsiLVEIWUC Will ba Malta *njr uktrsu a pan kppUc&tioC (0 J.P. STEVENS 4 CO., JEWELERS, SfJiP*; -*» a sgFRIE! ATLANTA. OBOHOiA. —AGENTS— -v w.mwlfaftte treat *•«»»» to»okUitb« Unit.fi jKV state*. Write, or.a V". : at the it 1 ms we offer, right men. J. U. Salary » vt corommion to the CHAflBERS * CO., Allntit*. tin. A *8 Rlh li l CIS. T&iBt«“reVrri«X J0j ‘* r< ?‘ J ** Uvrtr ane/iv. W 1 ' » *■«'»' SoujVrilTUO, Jt J*w BA!tl> f llllKJ.u.» rSU -V— • -rr . o-l ai.l'vl* o I»powa Vi ',*>> ' ‘-.wit * ** O* tt.woi- the composition formed by th* reaction sulphide. into the block —A New York man Lis 9100,000 in- retted la the gathering of stole Iceafi from the hotoh at that dtv, grinding it into fuel tor pigs and poultry. Hex cm ploys nine teams iu tne business. He pays th* Aster house, for tiatitace, MOQ f XMf tor it* itAio hrottL very simple; the iron which entominto i l®*” e 4mpJsition of the ink i. Grans- Wn * one of Secretary Chase » confi- dent al clerk’s at WasLlMftwa served through the war on Uunenii Fremont’s sta & and then settled down in Han Francisco, where his abilities as a law yer h tve won him honor. — Boston shoe manufacturer* bar* de- ided that dealer* after* accepting f ;ood* riwuld b* held responsible ter utl p.i} meat w.thuut rsbai# lor re- Vanutd 'spoiled good*. —L.sHm LXtL I -:»k .tir;, ..U.I. a. wg. ", r-y " ^ • ...mtrn H ' 'Jb'li ummicr . 1.- m ...... „ .« — _ Club IU (».r'. amt wn-kljr. DIvkStM* pulo moMhlv. Cluli 13 |ttul ttur'-huKb-r* bw-k ihnr niooejr in rruSu In U*I Hirer Ml,,Hill*, anil kwrlnff ortclnul aiiHNini niflUa* tiuury in Club, or n-runml m.rii-maud. 8h»rv*. tIVcarta. txahUMtoonmilaruarM free. JtomtSscnrwssMMMils wunusl rvarywlH-rr. Adiimut It K. KukkaU. * CO, 'Jon'n n< Kf».. u: * r.» tsSuii* sc. cuicmm. lu. GONSUMPTld^ #n*Tc a pnarttra m.vmdy for tna abora Slaaua. br R m ot raar. u( Lha want klm! and at V«v UnS'n.-liaaakaananrrj. tnJnaS. aoatmmr K m-fajii ■ aAoaav. tha(J •tUrag«r*O l«<>TTI.tt HitK. w wltfca VxTCAHf.r. riljt*;i»r_ on Uu. olaaaaa. U. rar Olra Saj.reu an* ?. p. aJJrr—, ML T. A. SLOCUM. Ml PaorTst . Xaw Tort V«* il’ftailr.'.o mask's r«. 1— ’ MUON 0 HAMLIN 8*«N> arac*r*n4n»r ■ aoSerrMtint Mh * A ro*1^2;'^ "* ‘jSs'c/ntP^upfrewH |mm*I<VM I; SIS S—' on) M a IU 1 «. T. A. sboCCM. U1 I-arl 5t . SiTiV* —*% tht.CVWSm.TrNn'rrre^ Dr. LaF'tUS- FRfHCH 00087* CM f ritOt | D i AMDS .J-. II taruar-.. a.-r [Ttaw York Ornphte.] O'Domtm Moaan a Oplnlww. O’Dotrovon Rossa, speaking of the Great German Remedy to * friend, mid “Mrs. Ross* hs* been cored of s verv severe attack of nenrmlgia by 8t. Jaoob* Od. s* she will gladly tell yon, if yon call at my reoideoo-. 879 Bush wick av enue, Brooklyn. N. Y.” —*k— ■ — ■ ■ --..a —Herra wi Allen died at Whitehall, N. Y., recently; after a peculiar ilme* U-ting twelve xcars. He aj.pesred t. have drop-j, and wax insane at times V poit mor em dricl >se«l that his liver had entirely wasted sway. It is a re markable case. SxritvT Men. •Wells’ Health Ranewer” re store* health cnretdyepepaU, ItnpoUnoe $1 “Vt’acLa' Rorcu o» Coasa” lac. A»k for tc Complete cor*. Corns, waru, bboiona —Cows in milk require but littie ex- brtDe to maintain good health. The quieter they remain the richer their rank #111 be in buiier —Chicago Journal. 0 Or. UtFieOS- Ft Grow. » b'weA ow —rey rv. uorieA !• jji 1 . ■ims OMteWP!**- .BaXk ta-t n. Tana*.lnS, L.S A. Jioirot U>to »n4 tiJSn- saattjBjg RGUI IHFftOYID OlVeiUI IA* •fill cflSl2=. “ •fi Ori Ly va’ rilt nsw Pst n»*t V iff D.n ap, l et ,U cr n ««« bsftfrr y .a run t md ov. r — Missonar es textlfy to (he almost complete extinetbn of cannibulixm in tte. bmth s*a Islands. roa* c#d liver okL from selected llvrra on the sen shore by Caswell, Hazard A Ce, X Y Abeolutely pure snd sweet PatiSnn «ho have once taken it prefer it to alhetlv ers P!i)«ii'jan» declare It superior le all otbtf ail*., Chaptxd hands, Ure, Mimplsi sa l reagb Tirol Tar.Hosp uiaUr y-rk. skin cured by s*iu< Jaafpar by Caswsti. Hasard A Co.. Nee ■ ensarhakle raeape. JsXs X ikn, a L f*,»It., Inj . uad a ntj rar ->* e rap, irrm drain TkU S b S s s , ** Jas rear ■ g > I vat ta Ik* la»4 ai.faa *1 rvs-sas w-a Oar be* ^bv-Wsa. *>?• i«y c»aa up »». tty .at so 1« v tkst ear Soe.ot ftU I «*«.J u t .a ivarty-'aar brnr. Mf f.laaSt iban perebss., a b-'t:la.>( br Wa Hall’s Bit a-n ter th-L-n t »itch Vasils I ■ t. t e nUsatfi ua'tl I loot at-' ho tltv. 1 an aov la partact b. 1 i'A karta. u • at alb v nkl'e'a llearp’a t arb site • • 1 ve. Tb» BetLestsa In las vo M l^r Cav, B ata>s kirv, Ulcir-, Sa t Bkra u.TrtMrr, Ctupjad Hand* CXllbUta, Cora-and altkti^aof klsBreaMaa*, a c O-t Haary t Carbo;i« 8 In, ai all Mbsnaia but'm lalioi* EERMan ri TOR JFJ Rheumatism, ^fleuralo iia, Sciatica, Lumbago. Backache. Heidachs, ToolSacbe •ore Hi i-Ml, ■ we 111 n «•, N (sra I aai-, D laea. Barm. Wrald-. Fr*so< Bllrv. ass ill ot 11 kh iwiim.v psi»s sse sruta. SaM taf OnssUu aa# PaalTt«aiiulian. Via/ OoMaa aawM. MraaUso* la 11 taas**QM. Tile CH AK1.E* A. VOSiKLER oa. - -'Kiaua It* BaMia-r,. sa.ea.s. ClRC't LAKH. vrlLh fuU jBPpJMMP • onoAH A.r^ n- more Lew. WirtlVlte ablp Vlrst-Claaa ^ ^ sauu raff trna. aiiffti tzaifista**S br f » (.CURE FfTS! ar PaiAIVWdi. - xpwa .q»-, ogatvdp. Iwmnmima naaody t- awv taa erv« .mva fcraoaa aibor* baa* •Clad la va raoaav SMBM vrv raaaltla/aaara drvdal Oita Swimo?sld'pUelfca. yVUry^tM.. Wre »aaa UHL aad yACTOBT BTOlalfiS :t all enrol, biltivo boss sad PACUffO. MA, mP3 ALL CffLA. uwh pips, jPittnrM, ssam oocds, :tzam sauqm. iffUNB ocnuroxs U. Scad tn Prlc* list. W. H. SZL* -INOEAX A 00.. 149 Mato fftrsto, L0UXA- TLLS. YY. THE BEST ^Ji^ 1 DcBorsaT. Jlhutnied Masthly. a_ imaffAtu. nit IMt w. A. * M "J 1 ”' ftai* fWrtrtMffk.fexii 1 1" 1 j ——» upd xenn KABM COTTON FUTUBESs-iP Co-Operative F*X-aAJf SPECULATING Vflfflfcfv tnoaretilH, MnMtihij PlTVtoatotY# $1,000 Invested “C-T “ . Op aft as wad-ale Swe- li e-a<* fro »*-elarea WV '* jaailkwA safest—sAAr. raaiiiVsr. n hi., now V*rk. KO. f.WOIJTX*CO.,Bwtan, •• ttt a it* —»v >c nw t—A ia. HEALTH IS WEALTH! fiiwr MT TTm Etto rotwmo •oitA Suonmher. 7or (Atm months; row eon mhserth* Twt Dollars snd pet tea Homs Us ouku. CLUh U mill snlnff yon lh>a s fot * pear ELASTIC TKUS0 ^Biufiimiff wp§€>a< EVERY rwOesMsad a asdii low MAN Mis a> a • hsl4», _ or Or* *i^*a.e,«,vl is- SaulilM. realua: 1* SaiVuv* ^vMIN) rby-MAI rrawtxsum ar rsSSSIATtJMK urCAT. suron rvarlW •» fcvr la. vamp* v# will aand ret a*» s»#., “ 1 He lata of alfe of Iretaroa, and rir-.,* Una ua' i. IIS* Nl> .-t.v<itf MX*. S MS—- MEbI< aL AXIi nVRMICAi-UISXrttrrZ, nr K-IMbM.. <»v Tark. Naroa tba p«P*r. iatk. * S.far tbawrara , Oarriafa Oa., 04—a CalAlagas V Xk X •<«*. S -•ealilk.” a frWo mtmq.1 '*s is MARI 3UGGIESi=K »»a—ps jr area. Wi osa. vat Saab wSof »aaq»«d by aa te «U wpaalaS on* 4oi ». »Ui aaad — r— ■Amv. oa. vrttsaa gMaatsa m rvtara sba gawar * aa* ooaaaaani Sm .Ot Meal a aarv. Vnraanai aaosd tnh «T • 4 ABM*. SWetiil—■ & C. Ssaaea 1$ wa* >« awgtli mbw*»4 «a, ] .Strong’s SanilUve PiUi LlYfR. ^ svrctJTJfii , sa£?c,ff:,T!: wmr£/rs\ A r aitilainfiast < f XVe- (ewS«« of Irrm, J'.ewviqsa Jtmrtc nnd I'AtspAarwataa • tMUotaSU form, foo X—fllSy Loot of Agpo- Utr, rnrrtmtUm of f Ual j‘i mri i< U < " 2L£V. 3. U TOWHXm, lodxustry, 111., aar*-— ‘‘I conalAsr Ik a moat eaoelirrtti wnady for OPIUM HABIT AND DRUNKENNESS. • PfwUlvnly. apredlly and nermanentty cared by I DK. REELhrv OOLD HEMKDIES, coQtaialng i no form ot Opium. Truth Ini lire Invmllgatiun , -li rcoerff beat In ibe (Kata Xor tarma, pampb- I lets nnd proala, addreaa, I TV. C. BELLAMY, V. !>.. 7J« Hrofwl •«., Atlasstw, iia- PATENTS buret. U'inunaUt Pvaearadby Amwo> fawa Pataat laasss -innacua t «J MVW WART'»» f.v I'M Nwi *Kd^V.att« . \ —llmj Pleicf I M-WX. aSjsWAlSvra ,. .... 1 , .... , C n e> a Oa • -'*>0^;.., WANTED ar* a p~!u»- anr* Or all Malarial Iinaa.aa. Oral br a.ail on rreal) 1 -? pnoa, (I pot bout*, of all bottlaa tar >4. Bel.-iam VI. ATT, lit-, ivuh. r'uoa. Con A WEEK in jour own town. Terras and JH90W4HaCUrae.Afi4rs^,HaUta*OaJkxUaod.Hr t IM A WfcEJL llika day a* bocM aasOy mads. Of OCcotlTuatofraa A*dr«asTrwa*Os, Aimsia Ma — . . .ww— m.. 1 .1 1 fism- A #% Bato* *QA«r •m Tmmu) AwCVw t 9 M»d4r'aa* *o_»|«i*l IWittl -4, a ,4*. • «*a^ . HT7 f W. * < V. RXTASS9BTT31 DU. HARTER MEDICINE CO., SD ff. XJuff 67. utuciupment of Southern Industries! NEWDRC3L tvirv/RirtKa, JHI KEW ARTISTS. NEW LIFE VIGOR FOR 1883. AGRICULTURIST OEST SOUTHERN Wiitera. floMhern Farming aad Oardantag. ■ ^ CHEAPEST JOURNAL IN TMV a*f** B _ p. txymn M Hnmb^ r, llwtrBct , e«ertJ. W „ E ^ 0RLD '“ Q » vmstvjc nwlde for af (b. fMin 4»f Valuable Hints on rw.^T_ F TvU Orswlag, tuid fall maamm?' — “v’-J rt ’>•• )>. > SA.LMoS' w,^. . l v. Txarja.'Sg vswcv M 5852. J orwtnU -l-Scad KinJap foi Un-ember Isawe- TILE (.BEAT WOMliKk FOB TBE ROCTt*. ULU.HAT AUBICCLTIIUBT, tha calyj umy Oer^aa Asru—assifitoRB HubarrtntUa Dr ice, MM per antmu,. rogt b nr Oennaa. Oor* .» ; -xrajt U iexre uU aUrebeM throbto — lawCk 3S3 rrettivt a pert art tsvatetfi. tt> liSitQOeiafljsJ^Kssu;) lbs* it. •us: • Pectofte Til m