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GOSSIP FOR THE LADIES. "in MIrps L4ve. I remomber Meeting you In se tember, Six1 --two. We were eating, Both of us ; And the ineeting Happened thus: Accidental, Onl the road (sentiuental Episode), I was gushing, You were shy; You were blushing so was I; I was smitten, So were you (All that's written Here is true); Any rnoney ? Not a bit. Itather fuiny, Wasn't it? Vows we plighted Happy pair I Ihow delightled People were! ]But your futjmr To be sure Thoutght it rather Premature And your moiher Strange to say Was auotlr In the way. What a heaven Vanished then (You were Peven, I was ten) I That was maany Years ago Don't let any Body kvow. Nr. wAaVttler on Woman Suffrage. Our writer and poet says:' " The so ciety of the future must be acted on more directly by women than that of the past. In the bringing out of the sensi bilities they must take a leading part. Woman suffrage I regard as an inevita ble thing and a good thing. Women in public life will bring it up more than it will bring them down. There will be considerable floundering before society would become completely adapted to the change, but after it shall be fairly ac complished and in working order the work of society will go on without-any deterioration, and with a gain in purity of motives and unselfishness of law makers and administrators. I fear its effects in large cities, where bad woment will come forward. Women are so in tense that bad women will be worse in public life than bad men. But the diffi culty is in the nature of the city." A Word to thie Giris. Now that you are being courted, you think, of course, it is all very well, and it will be nicer when you get married. But it won't. He thinks he's going to keep on this high pitch of love all the time. But lie won't. He doesn't know himself, and you don't know him. When he sees you a. many times a day as he wants to, may be more, when he sees your head done up regularly every morn img in curl papers and tihe bloom is all ofl' tihe rye ; when your home contains a good deal of wash-tub, cradle and cook stove, he wo ' the house for. watching He'll b)e th of tile house., tis courtshi ' well enough aoc is worth twoj Dntmarry __ill "Kindred and ofr Albany, N. Y. , has published a painpl let with the above title, or " God's Law of Marriage," in which he. tries to show thlat a man should not, under any cir cumstances, be allowed to marry his dead wife's sister. To urge, h1e says, - thlat such a marriage is " the sweetest and most natural thing " for a widower is mere sentiment and "often sickly sensualism p)oorly disguised under a thin veil ; and against it is to be set up the fact thlat the impossibility of marriage establishes firmly the sacred and most blessed relationship of the wife's sister in the falmily. Tile very name by whicl the relation is known involves the cer tainlty of this protection. She is a sis ter-in-law-i. e., in the law of God ; as our good English defines it, a sister, 'with whlom, because marriage is impos. sible, tile wise intimacy of a brotheor's relation is possible and safe." A M~othuer and Daughter. I once met (it was at a garden party) a clergyman's wife-a graceful, accomi p~lishled women -- who introduced her three daughters, all so much after tihe mothler's type that I could not help ad miring them. " Yes," she said, with a tender pride, "I think my girls are nice girls. And so useful, too. We are not rich, and we have nine children. So we told tile ei der girls that they would have either to turn out and earn thleir bread, or stay at home and( (do thle work of the house. They chose the latter. We keep no servant--only a char-woman to scour and clean. Iy girls take it by turns to be0 cook, housemaid and parlor-maid. In thle nursery, of course [happy mother who could say 'of course I' ] they are all in all to thleir little brothers anld sisters." " But how about education ?" I asked. " Oh, the work being divided among so many, we find time for lessons too. Some we can afford to pay for, and then tile elder teach the younger ones. Where thlere's a will there's a way. My girls are not ignoramuses, or recluses eitner. Look at them now." And as I watched the gracious, grace ful damsels, in their linen dresses and straw hats-home manufacture but as pretty as any of the elegant toilets there --I saw no want in them ; quite the con trary. They looked so happy, too-so gay and at eas( ! " Yes," answered the smiling mother, "it is because always busy. They Dever d e especially eve ~gfor '.4 .~ .1or n of the rs carefull1 Vsoug be foun, we beheve, i t expenditures in every-day ericanwoe hlave a task se ore them to whlich they shlould forthwith put an earnest and willing hand. It is to return so far as may be0 to the old1 and frugal ways, tho forehanded and agacious domesi mn agemen* of their grandmothers. By ex ample, no lees than actual saving, they may do a world of good. Let them shov their husbands that they are determined o qppose wastertU aud unseemly outlay as a matter of principle. The family t may be able to afford such an outlay to day, but may not be. able to afford it to morrow. c A useful lesson is to be had here frw 7 the King who insisted that his children V should be taught a trade; and this ap- e plies to girls as well as to boys. No one.i can tell what his future circumstanes I may be. Some of the richest noblemen 3 -in England are also tfVe poorest because 1 of the constantly-increased demand upon f their resources. Poor Richard may not c be the best guide in the world in every- c thing, but he is certainly a'safe one m i domestic economy. There is no earthl t need for doing always what other peopl N do, or thinking always what other peo- 1 ple will say. If American women will t but dare to insist on becoming house wives of the good old sort, of regulating i their homes, not of necessity as others t do, but as their own sense of right and '6 length of purse justify, with an eye to e the future as well as the present, there t will be fewer breaches of trust and t broken fortunes in the business world I hereafter than in the ten sad years that i have been, as well as much sounder, be- I oause much safer, enjoyment of life a among business men. What We Call "Terra Firma. The rivers of the sea, apart from the 1 astonishment and wonder which their stupendous proportions must arouse in the mind of the student of nature, pre sent themselves to us as a subject of paramount interest, when we consider the part which they have played and are still playing in the building up of the topmost layer of the solid earth crust, in the perpetual changes of climatic condi tions, in the distribution of vegetable and animal life over the surface of the planet, and last, not least, in the recent advance of ocean navigation, by which the inhabitants of the most distant lands have been brought into close intercourse with each other. The erosive action of currents constantly tends to alter, the I configuration of the coast lines, by tak ing away land in one place and deposit ing it elsewhere. Again, immense quan tities of sediments carried by all the riv ers of the world into the sea are taken up by the currents and spread over the bed of the ocean. Geologists tell us I that nearly all, if not all, the dry land at present existing has at one time been at the bottom of the sea, an assertion I confirmed by the fact that the strata -which compose some of the loftiest mountain ranges have evidently been deposited in ages long past upon the floor of the ocean, and still retain the remains of the animal which disported themselves in the seas of former days. 1 What we are still in the habit of callhng "' terra firma " is proved by modern ob servations to be in constant motion, ris ing and falling like the heaving breast of some mighty monster, whose arms stretch far beneath the waves. By the action of the subterranean forces, as yet unexplained, vast areas of the earth crust are depressed below or lifted up *bove the level of the sea, and we are be ginning at last to understand the truth of the maxim, that there is nothing sta ble in the universe of created things ex cept the unstable.--Science for All. One Hundred Lashes on the Bare Back. 3 M. S. Root, of this city, a gentleman whose veracity will not be questioned in this community, gives us the following statement of a scene which he witnessed a short time since in the eastern portion of this county : " I was at (Jampo. An Indian had been found guity of break ing into the house of r. Herrick and stealing some blankets. He was tried before Justice of the Peace Gaskill and turned over to the old Indian Alcalde and six chiefs for punishment. They sentenced r him to receive 100 lashes.- They were r just getting ready to tie him up as I a started for dinner, after putting out my team. The prisoner was a large young man, six feet high and well proportioned. He was tied up by the wrists with a long i rope, and the rope was passed through p the springs of a high seat on one side of a wagon and over the other side, the victim being drawn up so that his feet would just touch the ground. His feet was spread and each tied to the wagon- o spokes, and his body was tied at the ~ hips. His shirt was removred, and then a stalwart Indian administered the pun ishment with a leather lariat, b~y whiurl- 2 ing it round his head and bringing it a down with his utmost force upon the ti naked body of the prisoner. The blood ~ poured from the writhing man's back. After a strong man had 'administered 41 fifty strokes he was so exhausted by the task that he gave way for another fiend, an a younger and more muscular Indian D who continned the infamous torture'' Fifty lashes had already been laid on, and the young devil continued to cut D) into the flesh fity times more. I spare a recital of the awful shrieks and cries of the poor tortured creature. When t0 the 100 lashes had thus been adminis- c< tered, the Indian Alcalde told the almost- ti dying man to leave the country, or he ' would be hung if he ever came back. Mr. Gaskill says : 'After one of these t Indians has been whipped once he will si never steal again ; it makes a " good In- " dian " of him.' This prisoner when let 0 down fell to ,the ground, and could not 0 move without support from his sister." -San .Dieflo Union. h Young Farragut's Bargain. e When Admiral iargt's son was 10 K years old the father said in his hearing t that when he was old enough to make a' 0 good contract and keep it ho had a bar- pl gain to offer him. The son rose up andl Pl asked the father what the contract was. g Cl The Admiral said : c " The proposal I intend to make is i this : If you will not smoke or chow - tobacco, drink intoxicating or strongc wines, till you are 21 years of age, I will ihen give youi $1 ,O00." " I am old enough to make that bar ain now," said Young Farragut ; " I ~ill accept the offer." The- bargain was closed, and when young Farragut was 21 the cash was handed over to him. I RAVE Buffered from a kidne diffiuty for the past ten years, accompanied with nervous apamls. Phlysicians gave me but temporary re i ef bmt after using th ree and one-half bottles of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver cure, mny nervous apasma were entirely relieved. My age is 77 years. I recommend t~ls eat remedy to all suffering from nervous troubi es. Easton. Pa. M.s ~ ue Filtering Cistern Water. Ex-Mayor Clymer, of Heading, Pa., proposes the folowing, which is proba bly the best cheap mode of fitting rain weft'ak go uiapurposos: Ke water in t e i oured the year round by their large and admirable cisterns, built of bric-k and Roman cementI in thn penter is placed a brick chimney; in said chimney the pump i lace. The water from the bop to the ttom of the cistern is con stantly filtering through tho chimney to supply the demands of the pump, and t& racmE ft the water in the main w ofttla. 4,rn in a, stet of con stant agitation, thereby it is always sweet and g0d. Every family can have >ure wate filtering the rain of heaven rom theiN AEtops, r by filtering tho impure water from our ' water basins.' Vegetine WILL CURE RHEUMATISM. Rheumatiam Is a Disease of the Blood; to Cure Rheumatism it must be treat ed as a Blood Disease. Rev. WM. T. WORTH, Recomrmend4 Vogetinae for Rheumativin and Hclatla. FALL Rivya, BlAss., May 13, 1879. MR. H1. r.. STXT~XNS: Dor Sir--For some years I have been,, at time', much troublei witIt ac'tte attacks of Rheunimatis. I e.pecially suffered tortiues. fron fcatica. By the advice of faients who knew time enefits conferred by Vrotrn xx, I began its use, and since that, time I have haid no attack like those I previously sttffered. For some timo ptlist I have had no return of the trouble, except occasionally a faint hitima tion,-which dian ppelred tn taking a few doles of the Vro XTZNX. I a!-4o take Ileaure in rec din g 11v !etiimony inl favor of its excelleitt eflect in abating at inveterate 4alt Illeum, anl I coimit it ]Io sm:i. jleani re to have beeIN thus made Rer. Respectfully. WMI. T. WORTH, Pastor First Mf. E. Church. Vegetine Has Relieved and Cured Sufferers of Rheumatism by the Thousands. READ THITS: if You iave Rheumatism Take the Medicine that Vill Cure You. ]WrLmcu SwlVI I, JENNtio (O.. l'ND Miay lit, 1S79. Sin. H. R. STatavri: Dimr s4--IHaTving ir our family received great benefit from the VEoKrN. moanuifactured by ,ou, I thought I wmtoid give you the facts or-the case, hoing it migiht nimet the mye of sone suTrinmg one, who miight I limts he reieved. I IAve a grnuidchild about ten years of age, who, two years ago or over, hal a severo attaric of rheumatisum, and for two long years wras mider the care of as good a phyISiCiain as we have in this count v, anmd yet all tI I time grow wrse, till we 'eve her l4p, anda thatiglt Alto rmtst die. She iaius mitch <eforned, and we were told hy a doctor that, it' she lited, shq wou d always be deformed h )nlt thanks to V.o - zrtax, she is t osdy perfectly trell, and as btraight IA an1 artow. .ast Decermber we ahmundoned all hope of the doctor doing riy tbing for her, and commenced nkg ,:oXTaxr., accirtliig to your directions. When the first bottle was u-d up we coutld not see ntnh itn provemeint; htIt we contitnt-t on the second hottle, and could seo s0ale ctiange for gcod. She took six Lott les, anl, thank God, a complete cure was effected in eve:It roc1wet. Yoars trily, (J. 13t RGESS. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. Sleet. the requirements of thme rational medical philoso phy which at present prevails. It ls a perfoetly putre veg etable remedy, embracing the three Important properties of a p.'eventive, a tontic, and ano atterative. It fortities the tbody against alsease, invigoraites anti re-vttahirxes the tor pid stomach and liver, And eft'eots a most salutary chtang. .n thme entire system, whenm in a morbid condition. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. fortem an ciuarfo satlenble sublscripitio b~oks of thet seatson. A "BJonan~tzal" for wideC-awatke mlenl. SOUT HER N PUBLISH ING CO., SBox 116, NcW Orla, La. Sore Ears, Catarrh. Manty people are afmioted with these loathsome diseases tt vr few eves -e. well fromt them ; this is owing to Iproper treatmenI only, se they are readily quable ii Lroperl y treat~ . This is no idle boast but a fac I have roven over and over sgain bymn treatment. send for y little Book fro a l, it will tol. ou all about these mnatters and wh I am. My large Book, 375 pages, octavo; price $9 by mail. A ddress, DR. C. E. SHOEMAKERE, Aural Surgeon, _________ eadlnsa. Pat T Agents wanted over y wher to selt to families, hotels and large cou PD Is umors ; largest st ock in thte coutn *try ; qualIty and terms the heat. Jountry storekeepers s'~ould call or write THlE WELLJ8 !EA COMPANY, 201 Fulton St.. N. Y. P. 0. Box 4560. T ANED--Several men as generat ag'ts. Permanent Spayitg. Nocapit al. W.5.BLmA ISDEL~ L, Randolph,Vt PERMANENTLY CURES KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Piles. IT HAS WONDERFUL POWER. mmmm )BOAi 9B IT AOTh ON THlE LIVERI,TLE !BOWELS AND KID.. NEYS A T TIlE SA ME TIME~. Because It cleanses the system of the poisonous humors that dlevelope in Kidney and Urinary diseases, Bil ousnes, Jlaundice, Constipation, Pies, or in Rhournatismn, bleuraligia and Peniaio disorders. ZIDNEY-WORIT Is ndl-y vegeta7,le com. Pesuedn enn bo aent by rimall Prepaid. OtO pack age w1ll mak eJ cix st fmled iclne. Buy It et thme Dirugte. Prioe, $L. WULLO, fl0EMfDC0N & CO., Propridtor, O . tur::ngeon, Vt. YOUNG NAN OR OLIP, listressing Condition of the Russian SIIPes;aantry.. The Russian Corres ndent of the !emP8 sends a fihtfily-vivid descrip Lon of the demo ization, the drunken ess, the misery, and poverty of the ussian eople, His accounts are fully onfirm by a series of articles in the otos. . The, Rugsian, writer doubts rhether the )easaantr4y hve been gain rs-whether they have advanced in civ iation--siactheir emnncipation in 861. Assurely they are 'no longer old like cattle; their children are no :>nger taken from them; they are not logged, nor are they subject to the dis retionary arbitrary power of the noble ,r his bailiff. Nor are they driven in terds to work for him five or six days in he week. But they have less land, less rood, less credit than before. The andlords, their owners, formerly pro ected them ainst the police, who now >ounce upon em for various kinds of mposts unknown to them before. Then hey had but one mastex; now they are ubject to the Mayor, to the tax-gather r, to the Chief of the Commune, to he tribunal of Zemstvos, to the Judge, nid to other functionaries. Against heir exactions, Arbitrary and frequently ilegal, they have no appeal. With thein. 'aunted self-government they have less ecurity and order than Wgefore. All the kopes which were raised by their eman ipation have been dispelled; they have allen into apathetic disdouragement, all )ecauso they who are charged with the dminitration of affairs are- not ani nated with the Czar's liberal intentions. Lfter having granted a somewhat too xtensive autonomy, the authorities ought to impede its development. The ural police and other functionaries were nvested with arbitrary powers to impose Ines and penalties. Additional vexa ious restrictions were imposed in 1874, md the disheartened peasantry, seeing Ihe hopelessness- of their plight, have allen into the most degraded drunken. iess and its attendant misery. Multi ;udes who were well-to-do peasants have ween all swept away from them-their .attle, their homes, and all; they now ;rovel like the beasts of the field, where shelter can be found. M. Kochelef, the uithor of these articles, insists that the itate must begin by enforcing agricult ural improvements; the moral and in electual development of the peasantry would follow, were the tribunals to be eorganized so that the peasant could iave confidence in the integrity of his irbitrators. Where Women Were Needed at the Polls. David Hopkins and Gustave Dettloff vere candidates for School Trustee in )istrict No. 1 of New Lots, L. I., at the aat election. Mr. Hopkins is a farmer, and was seeking re-election. Mr. Dett off is connected with an insurance comn any in this city and is a well-known esident of the town. The friends of Ir. Hopkins, about an hour before the losing of the polls, perceived that there vas danger of their candidate's defeat. k consultation was held, and it was de ided to utilize the new law giving worn ~n the privilege of voting. Accordingly everal farm wvagons wvere procurcd and ent through the district to gather in he farmers' wives and daughters. The vagons returned to the polls with 107 vomen, all of whom voted for Mr. Hop Eins, thus saving him from defeat. It vas too late to use a counter-poison. VTew, York W~orld. Jones. " I don't like Jones," said Snodgrass. ' No," he added, after a pause, " I don't ike him. The fact is, Jones speaks so nuch of himself, tells so much, you now, that he doesn't leave any room ur the imagination." Does any reader oow Jones ? THE thoughtlessness of people is so great in egard to watchfulness against Colds, etc., that ere it not for the wonderful curative power f Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, we should shudder t the fate of euich. $5,000 will be forreited and paid by the Malt litters Company if MALT BITTERs, a family iedicine prepared b~y them, does not excel, in a mur comnpetative examination all other comn ounds now before the public called "Bitters." READER, do, you admire the rogy tints of a lear complexion? Portaine, or Tabler's Vege rble Liver Powder, will remove sallowness and npart a healthy glow, by removing all impurity f the blood and arousing an inactive livers. 'rice of package 50c., sample bottle 25c. For 3le by all druggists. The Vollale BekL ('c.. Marshmal,, Much., Till acrid their Electro-Yoltaic BelL to the f~ilcted-.upon 80 days' trial, flee their adver semeont in this paper headed, "On 30 Days rial." _________ __ GET Lyon's PatenIt H~eel stiffeners applied to 3030efneW boots heror4 vonu run them ov'er. MALiarAL fevers can be prevented, also other lasmatio diseases, by occasionally using Dr znford's Liver Invigorator, the oldest general i~mily Medicine, which is recommended as a aire for all diseases caused by a disordered ver. Eighty-p~age book sent free. Address r. Sanford, 162 Broadway,_New York. RIHEUMIATXsM.-Rheumatism is a disease of ie blood. The blood in this disease is found > contain an excess of fibrin. Vegetine act. by >nverting the blood from its diseased condi on to a healthy circulation. One bottle of egetin. will give relief; but to effect a permia ent cure, it must be taken regularly, and may tke several bottles, especially in cases of long anding. Try it, and your 'verdiot will be the time as that of thousands before you, who sayt I never found so much relief as from the use r Vegetine," which is compounded exclusively fbarks, roots and herbs. "On now my BACK AcHFs!"-Ilow often we ear it said. Well may the victim complain, ~r the kidneys are suffering; and when that is e case there is always danger-great danger. idney diseases, if lot run, too often end fatal-. . Ter is, however, a sure cure for 'themn. uint's Remedy is a medicine that does not fail cure kidney, b ladder, liver and urinary coam aints. Even Bright's Disease, the terror of iysicians, is cured by Hunt's Remedy, the 'eat kidney and liver reecdicine. Try it, and ire your backache before it terminates in some ing worse. Sold by all druggiats. Trial size cents. D.BULm ABWTS ANTEDI LIMI "um RMNQa agi,,, IN. Such ~ 31 as~ a. aamwti 2f1. bee adi th b es, Ye athe "@~a r~tne Le and ~~m an Z ee- a fbr mud 3 E lweiht and strenwh.o .o ItNNA SALT MiANUI ACTURINO CO.. rexw01 rel. Grand Medalusa a er I 1111 at h eTpi at aris S~i',PpcelN1FeE thrughout the o be the beet r medy I iscoer d elibles Caeaw lisn M oP 3InordMr thatevey nusho use. Obtain om uf rui ad yo -11 And it superlor to anything you have ever ueed. h 7 e" Fe dd N AVSALKMAY4 TUgRsta0 CON#~ *P IIAL11 - A C3D .. Portlad. MXinA S$66 a wein o "-w.n**. Tercl'msgand86Oi& AAND VIM IorilThl 0 I~in laterrace Speedilly cunred by DRI. IECK('8 only known art' surt Remedy. NO CHAWE for treatme until cured. Call on or addres Dr. J. C. BECE. 112 John St.. CincinnatiG ORGANS i4-0TOP, NUa BAin & ocT. COUPLEr . " NE0 NLY$65. Meni en Taie Warranted. d'ataloguse Fren Address, DANIEL F. BEATTY. Washington, . ON 30.DAYS' TRIAL We wll mnd or Eecto.Voltuitoo Belt s I*oh Ele$ riA o n til f thiry to the, afwicted w y Nenous ontebi.T erm and diuaseedi $66areka* Ao of ted Ler," dnt, *mat.i, I. Aresa 'voltshe Belt Co.. Mashai. Miefs. 7') *.3a da at home easil mae.csi TOr-onsumptives. LODER'S EMUIAITON OF COD LIVER OIL AN) ef the enownd remedie et A unal ed remes vous Debit, and all waiing diseases 'hmaner i bhichab th Co Lvr11icobned with the Wid her. nsures complete diges in cA e o toe uhe sn ndo med bth9 most emiont physa s * ter eual to it for (Jonsumption Bofn a etn !hu efCod Ive Oil, but havedbeen unablet do so m heo wi el id tt ey cn take this paatin readiy Siz Bottles for Five Dollars. Oiiroulars and valuable in. lrmatio to al si a ers sent on free receipt of a descrip. 0. 0. A. ODER nactui Cbmist $5 to $20 =r de - C'E A -TnT "t 9 ______ METus W S I I S *fiv nFL 10103 EYE-QLALSSE S.65 Representing the ehoiseot seleted Tortoise-Shell ane Admber. The lightest, handsomest, and strongest knwn. Sold by Opticians and Jewelr- Made by IPENan o. 't. Co.. 3 Maiden Lane, New York. yasoh PENSIONS NEW EAW. Thousands of Etoldiers and heirs enti tied. Pensions date back to discharge or death. Tima Auutst.Tu AAdreas with stamp, GJEO. E. LESION, P. O. Drawer, 25. WVaalaington. D. C ALESMEN WANTE GOOD n'ENTO SELL CIGARS TO DEALERS. ' Wid 5 0 A month and ex enses Cut tlhis Note Ou o ndl send it ith your app1ication,als r AV a 0. " tn t"o i* nu"" ____________ Cincinnati. Ohio. P I S O'S C UR c 's~toughmdici'.* Do Your Own1Printing Preses and outfit from 3to 50. Or r2,000 style .Tye Caouand ree rice list freebyra . E6. W.WAR ~ALE ANbN EEALE AGENTE WiliTED arc TRAxavuagx e A 'RY. Teritr aectied- Sen for ireniar. Address W. H. ltItOWNi, No. 0 Tremont St., Boston, Maa. Prublishers' Union, Atlanta, On......Fortysoven...go K'MA piuars F TL"E, 7 cho NESET IBON TONIC emazeises appreve and Invalids anust have. A mest rhelesese asd deUee stiulast admdrably adaptd ceed f'em Dyspepsia,. Masasete. Delese~ weee r . and physiciaa, wera-es nurses, ad the bec dad it a gr ateful Lavlgerant. B3ERS & BROWN, LaO UAV rw .w ., meT.. IN Tallahassee, Fla. and-other South era cities, it is usual, Aurig the hatch.y1 ing season of the mo k -bird, to steal the young birds from the nest, to be trained for singers, As only about two in a hundred live, an early extermina tion of these birds is probable. A Flori da paper suggests that a law be enacted forbidding the capture of young mock ing-birds. #VALTH viE? *r~a KESTONE EVERY CHILD'"o'e so as to get part (of the $159 IN GOLD we are go ng to ve away Feb. 10, lI. Te first one will receive so. rice, 23 cents. Address P. 0. Box 580, Boston, Mass. YOY N ENLearn Tolegraphiy and eArn $40 YOUNG IRE to $100 a mnonth. Every gradu ate guaranteed a aying ultuation. Aduiros. VALENT NE ROS.. Managers, Janesville, Wis. NATRONA BOCARB. Ks the best in the World. It Is absolutely pure. It s the best t Medicinal FUrpoes.. It Is the beat for Baking and adl Family Uses. Sold by all Druggiats and Grocers. PENN'A SALT MANUF. CO.. Phila. $100 PRESENTI For a Machine that will Saw au Fast and Easy as this one. This is the King of Saw Mlachinos. It saws off a 2 foot log in 2 minutes. 20,000 4n use. The cheapest Anachine made, and fully warranted. Circular free. United States Manufacturing Co., Chicago, Ill. OPIUM tjMorphilne Uabit Cur-ed in 1 tov a. No pa ~tl~t.l Cured. 1)-t J. STl' EIC Leban Rx on. ohio. Pi P. A vill )istin .V enii' Fenilh Weaknisq, mu.3h as Fati IIg l f the W.>l,. Whitos Chronie In;hluinmin111 4n1 U e.rntiot uof t he Womnb. luIc ntal IHeiorrhageo o .1) ifliig, l'a inlful. SI p r i stil i Irr egtila Men: rtruntion, &e. An ohd iunai i'relial<- reuiiedy. HSend Ipo t:mI earit for a :ail'hlet wit h I ret (,-nt. Ctres an uib t h i lIar I.I itic . N. ) -. t , 4 ,ll l'ruJii L -V1 A GOOD SAW MILL. P'cr_$200. Our No. I Plantation saw Mill Ls designed to be run by 8, 10 or 12 horse power Agricultural Engines. With this power from 1,4500 to 4,000 F'eet of lumbler can be cut in a day. A product 2.5 to 50 per cent. greater than can be out with any reciprocating saw mill will' the same power. The mills are complete except sawt, and will be put on tne cars in Cincinnati for the low ice of 920)0, andu warrante~d in evry particular..- Saw of allatezes rugines tBoilerss haing, Gearing, &c. LANE & BODLEY CO., John and Water Sts., Cincinnati, 0. Literary Revolution. 3 CE NT S each formerly sl.oo to s1.23 each: I. Mac. auiauy's Life of Fredeick the Great. II. Carlyle's Life ot Roburt Buirns. III. Lamartine's Life of Mary Queen of Scots. I V. Thos. Hutghea' Manliness of Christ. 5 CT S. 'e, ahufrmnerly Si 50 each: I. Arnold's Light of Asia. 11. Gioldsmnith's 'icar of Wakefield. IlI. Baron Munichaus eni's Travels and Surpirising Adventures. For MIX OENTN: Bunyan's P'il rim's Pro reas. Illuistrated cata ingue sent free. A M E I AN BOOK EXCH ANGE, John B. Alden, Manager. Trilflie Building, New York. ENCYCLOPADIA o ThsTIOUETTEi BUSINESS Thsis the~chea pest and only complete and reliable work on Etiquette anid Business and Social Fcrmns. It tells how to periormn all the variousaduties of life, and how to appeai t lie beat adivanringe on all occisions. AgcstsWastue-d.-Se'nd for circulars containing a fldecptiou oftiie work and extra terms to A gent.. Adeian, NeriosAl. l'ig:.usnuu. Co.. A tlanis G. 70,000 SOLD YEARLY. The growiang popualarity aad aelulasess of CABINET or PANILOR ORGOAN Ia showns by thae faect thaat .%EVENTY ThfOU. SA ND are mold yearrLy iaa thae United states. Thae best are the MASON & HAMLIN ORGANS which have been awarded urangar DIarracTIoN WOK Dos-. oNTRBAT3D 5UPETioRITY at EvitRE ONE of theo GREAT WORLD's Industrial Exhibitions for thirteen years.tith-. euf o'w sigle Eeeption. NEW STYLES Are ready this season with important improvements. FOR LAIGE CIIURiWlws, jileiidid organs, with great power and variety, at $.570, $480, $300, and less rrlces - FOR SMALLIERt CUURtCHES, SCHOOLS, &c., $84 to $900 and upwards. 8UP'ERB DRAWING 1ROOM STYLES at 6200 to 9510, and upwards; A GREAT VARIETY of SMALLER ORGANS of eqnal excellence, though less capacity,or in plain oases, at $5M to 6200 and upwards. Also furnished FOR UONTULY or gUARTERLY vATMENT4, 95 and upwards. Thies organs are cerlainly unriraled in excellence, wohUl Lh. price. are net miuch hufgher thian those of very inferior inetru. useets. Before purohasing ay organ send for latest ILLUJSTRA. TEl) CATA1LOG UId 32 pp. 4to), containing full descrip tions and prices, includimg nue-w styles, and mu ch useful information for t'he puirchaseri of an oanwhich will be sont free and post-paud. MASON & I A ,1 OROA N CO., 154 Treniont Stret 1;OSTON: 46 East 14th street, NR W YORK ; 149 ~abash Avenue. CUQAGO. MS.FTEY& 09 8nA.Tn.E90 RO liats* le is the SA FEST mdu lIE4 ; it acts inatanta. couisly. producing flh moat .atural shadea o fildekl or j itroiwn;doesaNOT AIN the SK IN, and is euasiiy applied. RISTDOROSiti- -----ardprepra-tion . .md afavort neery well appointedi toilet for L'ady or - Gentleman. Mold byDrug gists and ap ied HIair >remsere. Iepot SWii. liamSt. N. Y . C. N. C ITTENTON, Ag't. -BO E a elegang eeoat asyWhisky, such as valuable bamie, a rleh, s So sta treublee s pre ever-worked eiergytet e'sry age ad elas wli