CHILDREN'S COLUMN. Sweet Pea*. " Please wear my rose-bud for love, Papa," Said Phebe with eye? so blue. "This sprig of myrtle put with it, Pupa, To tell of tny love,'' said Pino. Said Patience, " ITiis heart's-easeshall wliis per, Pupa, Forgot not my lovo is tine." Papa looked into the laughing eyes, And answered to each little girl's surprise: "My darlings, I thank you, hut dearer than these,— Forgive me, far dearer, are bottnic sweet peas. Then he clasped them close to his hoart so true, And whispered, " Sirrcl P's, Lhchc, La iicncc, and I'ruc ! " Lilian I'ayson, in Si A'ichnl i s. The tinrllln. The gorillas are the terror of Africa In the gorilla country no lion will liv. They are man-haters and kill them for the love of it, leaving the body, eating it. When they spy a negro they come down from a tree, hit him on the head with a club, which they wield with their hind claw, or carry him up into a tree, there to murder him. Their strength is so great that they will bend the barrel of a ritlo. Only one live one was ever brought to England, and that soon died. Several have been shot, but ihey are tough customers, and the natives dread them more than any animal of the African forests. The gorilla makes a bed like a hammock, and swings in the trees. The gorilla is the sworn enemy* of the elephant, because each derives subsist ence from the same source. When he sees an elephant pulling down and wrenching off the branches of a favor ite tree, the gorilla steals among the boughs, strikes the sensitive proboscis of the elephant a terrible blow with his club, and drives off the clumsy and startled giant, shrilly trumpeting his pain and rage through the jungles of the forest. Ilrave nml Tender. When Sir John Lawrence was g.iv ernor-general of India he was told one day of a little girl who had been taken ill, and was pining away with grief at the loss of a very curious pet. . The pet was a tame ostrich, which the child had raised from the egg, left by the ostrich mother in the grass of the park at Barrackpore. The little girl's father was the keep er of the park, and soon after her dis covery of the egg he died and his suc cessor was appointed. Fearing that foxes or jackals would eat her treasure, or that the cold dews would destroy it, the little girl carried the big egg to the bungalow, and buried it safely in a lidless box filled with dry white sand. This she took pains to set out in the sun every day just where the fiercest rays Would pour on it. At night she coaxed a motherly hen, whose own eggs she transferred elsewhere, to brood over the box. By-and-bv to the great fright of the poor hen, a giant chick broke the shell, and stepped into view. The hen ruffled her feathers, spread her wings, and tied. The little girl and the ostrich became fast friends, and one was never seen without the other. What, then, was her dismay when the park-keeper took it into his head that the ostrich was public property, and must go to the ; government aviary! The child was so distressed at the removal of her pet that her mother feared she would die. But the mili tary surgeon who came to see her thought he knew of something better for her than medicine, and he wrote a letter to Sir John Lawrence telling \iim all about it. The viceroy was a very great man, and had pressing aff airs of state to at tend to, for millions of people looked to him as their ruler. But lie had a , very tender heart, and far away in England he had little girls of his own; so he wrote a reply by the return mail, that the ostrich was at once to be given to its rightful owner, who lost ! no time in getting well. Does anybody ask, " How can Aunt Marjorie make a bit of advice <>ut of this little incident?" Well, you know we wrap pills up in sugar ; and so we tell stories, and hide lessons within them. A brave heart is always a tender heart, children. No matter how busy you are, you may, like Sir John Law rence, take time to do a kind act for some one who is weaker than vourself. * The Real Home. The real home is in the country ;' and it is something more than a dwell ing; the field and trees around it are part of it, and the views from it of j the landscape, and of distant moun tains, perhaps, make it unlike any other place in the world. The country home with its fixity of surrouudings, has usually some measure of perman ence, and the social life formed there is under the favorable conditions of -old family associations. Some have the happy condition of living in the j home of their fathers, and are sur-1 rounded with objects of precious mem-! ory, daily mementoes of parental af j Action and instruction. The home which it makes is the best thing of farm life. There is a necessity of permanence, and as there is no sudden or great accumulation of Avealth, or large increase, the family ; is free from that discontent which us- j ually comes with sudden or great ac- ; tions of their condition that the farm er's family is in that " fixity of sur roundings" which favors their highest ; culture.— Country Gentleman. LATEST NEWS. LONDON, July 2ft-The town ol Cisnnceioia, 011 an island near Naples, has been almost entirely destroyed by an earthquake,and two neighboring towns have been much daui aged. It is estimated that 1, 000 person? were killed and 800 wounded. Tho trial of the Jews in Huugary for mur der is nearing an end. 1 A man named Terry crossed the Engli-h channel from Dover to Calais in a water 11 i cycle. Tho French troops made a sortie from Hanoi with but small loss, while 1, 000 of the enemy were killed. The cholera scourge in Egypt continues without abatement. Senor Baron, Spanish minister at Mash ington, committee, suicide at tho Albemarle Hotel, New York, on Sunday morning. I A fire at Lincoln, Nebraska, destroyed ten business buildings. 1 /oss $250,000. Loig ton A Brown, wholesale druggists, are the | heaviest losers. ~A fire at Greenville, S. C., destroyed prop t rly to the value of SIO,OOO. This is the sec ond fire from which the town has suffered m the com se of a week. The Telegraphers' Brotherhood have in structed railroad operators to refuse all commercial business, audit is stated that 1 ail road operators will soon lie ordered out A portion of the "Syndicate" block at Minneapolis, Minn., has been burned. The crockery store of Drennen, Starr A Co., dry goods store of Dale, Barnes, Mprse A Co., and the carpet store of Folds A Griffiths were destroyed. The total loss will reach nearly $400,000. The stage which left Helena, Mont., for Deer Lodgo was stopped by two road agents about 18 miles from Deer Lodge. The robbers "went through" the passengers, the treasure-box and the mail. The agent at Helena says there was very little of value in ihe treasure-box. Officers are in pursuit. Mrs. Gadding, living eight miles from I'ronPf Texas, was struck by lightning and instantly killed during a heavy storm on Friday. She was a bride of enly two days. It is said the President of Mexico has sent to Carlos Rivas, in London, a power of at torney to settle with the English bondholders. Bonds to the amount of £15, 000.000 will be issued In the Poik case, at Nashville. Tenn.. JuJge Allen overruled the motion for a new trial, and passed sentence upon the prisoner. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court and tho bond raised to $45,003, which was given. * John B. Page commenced a suit Friday in Rutland, Vt.. against Clement A Son, for al. leged libel in a statement recently published by them relating to the affairs of the Rutland Railroad Company, of which he is president. The damages are laid at $200.000. A man supposed to bo Carey, the Irish in former, arrived in Montreal on Friday night He came over in the steamer Montreal as a steerage passenger, but seemed to have plen ty of money. The mysterious stranger is said to resemble the pictures of Carey. Homer J. Smith, cashier of the National Bank at Orange. N. J., entered a Delaware and Lackawanna traiu at Hoboken, N. J., with SIO,OOO in a valise. He had scarcely taken his seat before a man began to beat him about the head with a piece of lead pipe, and then made an unsuccessful gra?p for the valise. Passengers went to the rescue of the cashier, and three men who ran from the train were'arrested after an exciting chase. One of the men is said to be Nugent, of Manhattan Savings Bank notoriety. A terrible collision occurred on the Roma. NV atertown and < Igdeasburg Railroad at Carlton, six miles north of Rochester. N. | Y., on the shore of Lake Ontairo. 011 Friday night, by which 19 persons were killed and a large number were injured. About 9 o'clock the steamboat express from Niagara for the Thousand Islands was running at a furious rate of speed in a terrific wind nnd rain ; storm- As the train neared Carlton the engineer noticed a single freight car which had been blown 011 the track ahead of him from a siding. He at once put on the air brakes and reversed his engine, but before the speed of the engine could be lessened the engine dashed into the freight car and all was instansly a scene of wreck and con fusion. GENERAL NEWS. LONDON, July 27.— Sporadic cases of cholera have appeared in London. The death-rate from the disease in Egypt seems to be de creasing. A British lieutenant nnd eight soldiers have succumbed to the malady in Cairo. Paris Figaro is advised that the British commander at Tnmatave demanded of tho French that the state of siege be raised, but that admiral Pierre refused to comply. The liabilities of the Ward Iron Company at Niles, Ohio, which suspended, are estim ated at $500,000. Over 500 men are thrown ou' of employment by the failure. Four holes were bored in the safe in the , ost' ffice at Little Falls, N. Y., and the safe opened and $1,500 in stamps and SI. OOO in money we-e taken. The robbers escaped. Hon. Montgomery Blair, of Maryland, died at his residence in Maryland on tho 27th of J ily, aged 70 years. The United States authorities are densigning most decided measures to prevent the intro duction of yellow fever and cholera into the various ports of the country. The Seeny syndicate has purchased a con. rolling interest in the Richmond and Dan ville road. It is to be consolidated with the East Tennessee. \ r irginia and Georgia Rail road. This will place four thousand miles of road under one management. Counsel for ex-Treasurer Polk, who was convicted at Nashville, Tenn., of embezzle ment, have entered a motion for a new trial, on the ground of incompetency of the jury. Affidavits of two witnesses were submitted yesterday to the effect that Taylor Alford, a juror, stated on the day he was summoned that he was in favor of hanging the prisoner. General Wallace, the American minister to Turkey, has sent a fresh note to the Porte, demanding a prolongation of the treaty of commerce between Turkey and the United States, but agreeing to a revision of ihe tariff. A special dispatch to the Galveston Mars from Laredo says it was reported last night in Monterey that the Spanish minister to Mexico has been recalled, and that a serious rupture between the two countries is pos sible. The cause is supposed to be the re pudiation by Mexico of her Spanish debt. LONDON, July 26*— The cholera stiil rages in Egypt. Eleven British soldiers have fal len victims to the disease. In his late encounter with the insurgents, not only Cetewayo, the Zulu chief was killed but all of his wives and many chiefs were slain. The report of Mr. Tuke's committee states that in three months 5,327 emigrants were as sis e i at a cost of £35,000, of which £26, 000 were received from government. The Secretary of the Treasury lias issued a I call lor Iho redemption of bonds of the 6 per cent, funded loan of 1881. 'I he extensive works of the Howe Sewing Machine Company in Bridgeport, Conn., were nearly destroyed by n tiro which broke out in the japan room. On leaving the ship and descending the gang-plank to a lighter lying alongside, Mis Cramp made a misstep, and falling into th< r ver, was drowned. Iler body had not beei recovered up b 1 o'clock. Tne Hank ot L-adville (Col.), K. L. Camp bell, president ; George R. Fisher, cashier have in (1' an assignment to George W TiUinble. It is thought Hint the other Colo iado banks will not bo seriously affected. '1 i*o levolntion i:i lvuiador wis concluded on the Uth inst. by Alfaro and bis forces do foMing Yientemilla at Guayatpul, the forme; occupying that place. The latter has lie,! to Lima. A banquet to provincial mayors was given •it the Mansion House, Ijondou, last nigh . Mr. Ixiwell, the Cuited States minister, re spending to a to st to diplomats, dwelt npoi the growing number of American travelers in England, and the nmUial respect of the two nations, owing to their increased inti maoy, which he said was of the utmost itu portance to civilization. The funeral of Hon. Thomas Swaun at Haltiinore, was the closing scene in the long and memorable life of a man who had taken ' a part in many great and far-reaching pub lic events as mayor of Haiti more city, Gov- I ernor of Maryland and in the halls of Con I gross i The jury in the case of ex Treasurer Polk, tried at Nashville, Tenn., for embezzlement of State funds, have brought in a verdict of guilty, and fixed the penalty at twenty years mprisonmejit in the penitentiary and a tine to the lull amount of the embezzlement, i w Inch was about SIOO,OOO. In the Pennsylvania Senate the Stewart Congressional Apportionment bill, which ; pissed the II >uso yesterday, was negatively i reported Iron, tne committee. A motion to place it on the calendar was defeated. Intelligence has been received of a duel I with pitchforks in a house at High Grove, Nelson county, Ky., between two farm ! laborers, in which both are believed to be mortally wonnded. Their names are Daniel Wilks. colored, and John McDougal, white. j A reception was given on board the new ] ship Alameada, of the Oceanic Steamship ■ Company, of San Francisco, just completed ' at Cramp's shipyard, Philadelphia. Among 1 tho:c who favored the company with selec | lions on the piano was Miss Maggie Cramp, ! aged IS years, daughter of Joseph Cramp, of the well-known firm of shipbuilders. The bui'.diu jof the jetties in t! e Savnn i a. t river at Augusta, Ga., has demonstrated the practical utility of the system in tha stream. Sandbars that before these jettii were erected were barriers to the passage of steamboats at low water now lie deep beneat' ' tlie surface, and are no longer anv iiupedi | meut to navigation. LONDON. July 25.— During the twelve hours which ended at 8 P. M. yesterday there were three hundred and sixty-seven deaths from cholera in Cairo. It is reporte 1 l at quar antine will he enforced at Dover and 1 -ith against vessels arriving from ports infected with cholera. The Zulu chief Cetewayo has been killed. The British vnlunteers gave a banquet to I the American rifle team in London last j night. The American and British rifle team? j were present in full uniform. There were about one hundred persons at the tables, in cluding Earl Waldegrave, Lieutenant Colo nol Otter, the captain of tho Canadian team, and several other Canadians- The American Rapid Telegraph Company has yielded to the demands of the Brother hood, and all.their operators will be at their I instruments. | Wills A Wilkberger, booksellers and stn , tioners. at Memphis, Tenn.. made an assign ment yesterday. Their lialnlities and assets amount to about $15,000. Washington Notes Four thou nnd nine hundred dollars were contributed yesterday by some conscienc strtcken debtor to the government con science fund. Secretary Folger ha i written a letter to a gentleman in Brooklyn, N. Y., maintaining that the trade dollar cannot be made a legal t nder for public dues by executive order. Theannual statement of the exports ol I breadstuffs show an increase of twenty-five 1 per cent. Baltimore comes second after New York, with over $32, 000,000. This is I an increase of fifty per cent. The Secretary ot the treasury yesterday ' directed the consul general in London to have every vessel inspected that is bound for an American port. This is done to guard , against an introduction of tho cholera. 1 The Commissioner of Internal Revenue t yesterday directed that all patent medicines containing alcohol should be liable to a special taxation, like other spirituous liquors. The collectors of the disricts in which such ; medicines are manufactured are to deter mine whether they are liable. Till] MARKETS. j BAI,TIMORK. FLOUR—City Mills extra.. $4 00 @ 4 75 WHEAT—Southern Fultz... 1 14 ( ab 1 17 ! CORN—Southern white 50 @ 03 Do yellow 04 @ 00 I RYE—Good 65 ( 8 00 I BUTTER—Western prune. 22 @ 28 West Virginia 17 (® IS i CHEESE—New York State ' choice 1 1 <® 1- ! Wistern prime 0 @ 10'^ EGGS 16 @ 17 CATTLE 550 @ 0, To ! SWINE— 8 @ SHEEP AND LAMBS ... 4 4% I TOBACCO LEAF—lnferior 2 r>o @ 4 00 Good common 3 00 @4O) Middling 7 00 (3750 Good to fine red 800 @lO 00 Fancy 10 00 @lO 00 NEW YORK. COTTON-Middling upland 10 @ l'V* | FLOUR—Southern com. to I fair extra 450 @5 30 WHEAT—No. 1 white 1 IS @ 1 19 RYE—State 02 @ 05 CORN —Southern Yellow... 03 @ 05 OATS —White State 43 @ 43^ feUTTER—State 22 @ 1* CHEESE-State 9 @ 13 EGGS 11) @ 23 rHiiiADEi.rniA. FLOUR—Penna.fancy .... 4 75 @ 5 10 WHEAT—Pa. and South ern red 1 Iff @1 17 RYE—Pennsylvania 05 @ 07 CORN —Southern ye'low... 00 @ 05 OATS 45 @ 4ff fcUTTER—State 20 @ 25 1 CHEESE—N. Y. factory... 8 @ 12 GGS State 15 @ 20 ULA' KWELL'S ISLAND. A Reporter** V|„ir to New York** Nolcil Prison -llow Convicts nro Received. A Tribune reporter who visited Now York's famous pen .1 institution says: To tho summer pleasure-setker who passes up and down the East river, Jilackwell's Island appears an attractive spot, its natural charms being too many to bo quite spoiled even' by its stern and forbidding edi fices. A glimpse of several gangs of men, clad in the hideous uniform of State convicts, steadily toiling in the hot sun, under supervision of anno I patrolling keepers, presents tho initial idea to the gazer of tho suffering en dured by its popula'ion from the hard toil and iron dis ipline exacted and cnfor< ed in th it pen d institution. It WJI ; early 11101 ning, and sixteen newly arrived pri oners wer being put through their preliminary exer vts s in a large rhumb *r on the ground lloor, dignitied with the style and title of *• Reception-Room." At a desk erected in an elevated position, h s book recording admissions beford him, sat Hall-keeper Michael Kennedy, on the opposite side, rang, d in rows, were numerous large baths and three or four chairs, such harbors invite their clients to be seated in. A gauge for measuring tho height of pris oners and a weighing ma-hine completed the list of accessories to the " Heceptio i-ltooin." Pres ently a keeper on tho outside thrust his arm through the iron bars and, in serting a huge key in the lock, opened tho door. Then entered the sixteen sinners in double file and ranged themselves in a row before Keeper Kennedy. " Your name? 'shouted that official to the foremost offender. It was given. Then followed in success ion tho questions, " Your age?" " Na tive corntry?" *• Religion?" •'Occupa tion?" " Boon here before?" and if tho answer were in tho affirmative, " How mmy times?" •' Under what name or names?" These questions being sat isfactorily answered and the replies re corded, tho prisoner was handed over to an attendant who measured his height and weighed him, the result of these two operations, together with the color of his hair, eyes and com plexion, being quickly added to the statement and spread before Keeper Kennedy. Each man was then made to strip and enter a bath 'and, under the vigilant eyes of the keeper and his satellit s/non * failed taid of its utility, cannot by any stretch of the imagin i tion be considered aesthetic. The clothes belonging to each prisoner were then collected, neatly folded, made into parcels and labeled with the owner's name previous to being put away. Unless a man were sentenced •to a very short term and raised an objection to it, he was next shaved, after which he was considered to lie duly prepared f< r the pr son life before him. Deputy Warden Osborne rapidly scanned the column headed " Occupa tion," and assigned every man t > some particular keeper's gang: some to work in t! e quarry, some to tho black smith's and some to the carpenter's shop. After this all that roinaino Ito be done was for Keeper Kennedy to show the prisoners their cells and exnlain tho manner of cleaning them. Then they were inarched off, every man to his gang. The numb' r of prisoners admitted daily varies greatly, but, approximate ly, it may be said to average ten. At present there aro 700 male and 150 female prisoners in the penitentiary, but, although on one occasion -in January, 1878--it accommodated the large number of 1,181, it is much overcrowded, and the system of "doubling up," as putting two prison ers in one cell is termed, is in some cases fonnd to be necessary. A Fortr-Four-Ton Statue. Probably thy most colossal statue yet ordered for the States has just been finished in the plaster form by an American sculptor at Florence, Mr. Larkin G. Mead. Thero are but two in America that can ever be compared with it, Greenough's •* Wa hington" and his group of "Civilization," which adorn the capitol in Washing ton. Some idea of it may be obtained by a short description. The subject is the "Mississippi Hiver," a large re cumbent statue, not unlike tho treat ment to the "Nile" group in Home. The figure is represent *d leaning against a cluster of rocks whence springs the source of the father of waters, while as a support to the other arm is a broken paddlewheel caught in a snag, a not uncommon sight on that mighty river. At tins base are represented in bas-relief the various objects characteristic of tho stream during its long course, stern-wheeler and side-wheeler, sugar-cane and crocodile and its mineral wealth in the representation of a lead mine, while negroes are seen loading and unloading bales of cotton and tobacco and the sugar tane; crystals, too, are not for gotten, while tho giant right foot rests on a lo lgo of limestone, and in the right hand stalks of that great prod uct of the Mississippi valley, Indian corn, are hold, one mature, the other in tho shock. A wreath composed of tobacco and cotton crowns the head of the colossus, while a fishing net is carelessly thrown across the base. The plinth or pedestal is twelve feet in length and the weight of tho marble no less than forty-four tons. This is to be presented to the c ty of New York by Mr. ElliottF. Shepard, a New York lawyer, a son-in-law of W. 11. Yanderbilt.— Roma n N(ics. Conscientious Duly. "I conceive it to be my duty to you and to the public equally,"—wrote AVill Lofton Hargrave, Esq., of the Wesley an Female College, Murfrees boro, N. C., as far back as 1858, —"to state that in a constant family use of Dr. Worthington's Diorrhcea and Cholera Medicine, I have found it of unfailing etlicacy. While it is of priceless value in Diarrhoea, Dysentery and Cholera Infantum, it is scarcely, if at all, less efficient in nervous affections generally, and as an adjunct in Fever and Ague," Sold for 25 and 50 cents a bottle. Steve Ilolcomb, for many years a no torious Western gambler, has settled down as pastor of a mission church in Louisville. lie draws from his own experience for warning illustrations to use in Lis sermon-. A QUEEN OF THE STAGE. *'flcr Neconil LOVP,'' n'n(f the Important, fccr!t Mlm itevo.il* for tuo II rue lit ot Woinrti. (SAW York World.) Ssvernl years ngi tho American public werotirou ed by tno on'ree upon iho s age ot a liUle lady who had been previously but lit le aunouuoad. 6h) was one of an innu merable number of aspirants for pub io f vor and had no i strument'il ty, aside from her own tulent*. to came rerogni ion. In spite of f*- s fact, however, sho quickly ad ieved a w.A.n plat 6 in thohoartof tho public, who ihle i as cont n ed to hold eve hiure. When it was nn ounccd, t crefo e, tint MB i Maud Uianger wo Id t-tnr tho nrnt'g sea-o.t in the ulay "Her l-ecoud 1 ove,' wr tte l I y A r. John A. Me on , it wa* only i at tal that u ina ml into cs m<> Id b • man fos ed i o on y in t! o;i r a c r I s, b it in >ti er br nc'oi if to ooinui in ty. Ti i i vnssi e; ally th ra e, as it was k own 1 a Miss G:ang r h d f r itie past y.'ir, 1 'i n nex co ling >do un o loa th. niul tho dit rmiusit on to s a in n s.ro ig em >t o al pay w. • to n ore Mr. ris ng. <>•o of tio tin o tl is pa o wa actord.gly depi t. Ed to o • t':o |o ular Idy andvj.i y tlie rumor 0 - a 110 nice its incoire irns . Mia (Jinn rer's coiinse anoiia 'amilinrto nearly e o youo in the I n ted Btau?e. It is a faia ti >n. and how to remain iu periect health." " PK aso expl iin more fully." " Well, I hat e found a remedy which seotns sp< cially adapted for Uiis very I urpose. It is pi re and palatable and controls the health and" life as, i bel eve, nothing else will. It is re; Hy invaluable and if all the women in America were to use it I am quite sure most of tha suffering and many deaths might be axo ded." *• What is this wonderful remedy?" " Warner's Safe Cure." " And you use it ?" "Constantly." " And hence believe you will bo able to go th o 'gh the ooming season succe-sfully." " I aui quite certain of it." "A few que it ion 4 more. Miss Granger. Will you pha-e g.ve mo a list of the parte you have created and the plays jou have taken part in since your first appearance in public ?" "I first played for some time with the amateurs in New York and Brooklyn. 1 then went to the Ur ion Square theatre for two Reasons, after that t > the Boston Globe for one st*a-on and then to 800 h's theatre in this city. Next I supported John Mc' ullongh and afterwards starred in Juliet, C .mille, Rosalind, etc. Subsequently I created the part of Cicely Blaine in the 'Galley Slave' and abo starred in 'Two Nights in Rome,' playing the part of Antonia. The | ast year I havfc been playing in the 'PI inter s Wife' and ttie coming season, as I have Raid, will be devoted to Her Second Love.' " As the writer was returning homo he fell into a train of musing and wondered if all the women in this lßnd who are suffering could only know Miss Granger's experienoe end the remarkable result*- achieved by the pure remedy she u el, hr*w much suffering might be avoided aud how much happiness secured. An unhappy marriage is like an electric machine—it makes one dance, but you can't let go. "NOW WELL AND STtONfi." SHIPMAJi, Illinois. Dr. R- V. FIFSCE, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir —I wish to state that my daughter, aged 18, was pronounced incurable and was fast fail ing as the doctors thought, wfth consump tion. I obtained a half dozeun bottles of your "Golden Medical Discovery" for her and she commenced improving at once, and is now well and strong. Very truly yours, REV. ISAAC N. AUGUSTIN. "Discovery" sold by druggiets. "Alligator skin belts," made of pig hide, are much worn. Young and middle-aged men, suffering from nervous debility and kindred affections, as loss of memory and hypochondria, should inclose three stamps for Part VII of World's Disi>ensary Dime Senes of pamph lets. Address WORLD'S DIHRENBARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. "Tales of a wayside inn"—coaktails. (SICK-HEADACHE. MRS. J. C. HENDERSON, of Cleveland, Ohio, writes: "The use of two of Pierce's •Pleasant Purgative Pellets' a day, for a few weeks, has entirely cured me or sick-head aclie.from which I formerly suffered terribly, as often, on an average, as once in ten days." Of all druggists. "Life on the ocean wave"--£sh. The most comfortable boot in town is that with Lyon's Patent Metallic HeelStiffeners. "Cheerfulness is the daughter of employ ment." Then discontent must be its moth er-in-law. The buttonholes of Chrolithion collars and cuffs are made so they will not tear out like other kinds. While her mother was taking a fly out of the butter, little Daisy asked: "Is that a but terfly, mamma?" Skinny Men. Wells' Health Renewer restores health. vigor, cures Dyspepsia, Impotence, Sexual Debility. sl. If you are really determined to expand your chest the best way ta do it is to carry a larger heart. Eor Thick Heads. Heavy stomachs,billious conditions—Wells' May ApplePills-antibilious, cathartic. 10 25c. Some people's feet go to sleep once in a while, and other people's heads have never waked up. Don't Die in the House •Rough on Rats.' Clears out rats, mice, roaches, bedbugs, flies, ants, moles, chip, munks, goi>hers, 15c. The man with the biggest bible in his win dow is not always the safest person to give credit to. Yon would use St* Patrick's- Salve if yon knew it would do yon. Kissing by telephone is jus tillable when one of the contracting parties has been eating onions. We Advlve It. If your hair is thin and falling ont, if yon are becoming prematurely bald, if your hnir is d-y and sickly, uaa Carl-dine, the Rr.'nl natural Hair Restorer. One dollar a bo.tle When a young man wants to protect A young lady ho naturally pats hi armor round her. Grtvirlnc. This elegant preparation has been on sale since INWN and is lerommended for loss of appetite and cenernl debility. Removes all unpleasant feeling" after eating. Druggists After all, t iere is something first-class about the graduates of a school A full frclir gafter moa's, dyspoi an, heart burn ml g.n.oral ill-health relieved ly Brown's Iron Bitters. Ladies' dinners, whether ladies like them or not, are the latest fashion. SPARTA, Tenn.—Dr. W. B. Cummings a ays: " I am strongly convinced of the efficacy of Brown's Iron Bitters, and recommend them." A relic hunter—A fellow endeavoring to capture a widow. Lr.wisvu.i.E. Ind. —Rev. J. 8. Cain says: "I used Brown's Iron Bitters for nervous pros tration ami found it entirely satisfactory. Words are but leaves—acts are the fruit. Fou DYSPEPSIA, INDIOEHTKW. depression of spir its at\d general debility in their various forms : also as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the "Ferro-Phosphor ited Elixir of Calisaya," made by Caswell. Hazard .V Co., New York, and sold by all Drug gists, is the best tonic ; and for patienta recover ng from fever or other sickness it has no equal. Acorn blossoms are two weeks tardy ; de noting a late fall. The Frnzer Axle Grease- Is the best in the market. It is the most economical and cheaiMwt, one box lasting as long as two of any other. One greasing will 1 ast two weeks. It received first premium at (lie Centennial and Paris Expositions, also nied&ls at various State Fairs. Buy no other. It's Ohio etiquette now to call a young girl a "pansy." Dr.WORTHINGTDITS GREAT^^^^I ■HOLERA MR AMP K^ AND IIARRHOEAIURE ■ Mf ÜBED OVER xr YEARS. luv ii rvmiv for t'holrra. Crimp*. IMarrkora, Ih.- nti rv, Nummrrlomplainl. lli.prMl*. and ether awffttons of th* f >>m- Wtrrti, Purreyor Gftifril; Hon Ketineth Runner. Solleitor U. S. Treoiury. nd oibvr*. Pricv. 15 ct. 8l4 by Drtn*iu ind Deilrn. 'Onlt (vnuioc If our nim U blown t betUc. Sol* i.rourirtori, TMt CHAILIS A. VGQCtCI COfAT. KaLTmoU. MR.. I. P A. i "pSHTBT XUctrio ApplisacM m mt oa 30 Siyi' TrUl, TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD, "OUHO are suffering from NKRVOCS DKBILITT, F LOST VITALITY. LACK OF NERVE FOBCK AKD Vinoß, WASTIKO WEAKNESSES, and all kindred dlac:iMs. Speedy relief and complete restora tion of HEALTH, VIGOR and MANHOOD GUARAN TEED. The grandest discovery of the Nine teenth Century. Send at once for Illustrated Pamphlet free. Address VOLTAIC BELT CO., MARSHALL, MICH. OPIUM HABII Cured Painlessly. The Medicine #nld for a small in ant in abore tne cost 01 I oVnnpoumi'nx. A 1 caa<'S treated by special prescnp Don." For lull addier® the Discoverer, DR. S. B. COLLINS, La Porte, Ind. CONSUMPTION My newly discovered Treatment never failt to effect u needy and permanent cure. Give fullparticular* ot case- Address Irof. .11. 1.. NOBLE, Santa ( lam, Santa Clara C 0., California. NO PAY UNTIL CURED. WMUIMILL ELSEFCLCB, Hi Best Cough Byrup. Twtee good. jSi Mq Use in time. Bold by druggist a |SI 1 M THI BEST IS CHEAPEST." INGIXEB, THRFQHFR^ SAWS,LLS ' HorsePowcn 1 nnCOnLnO CloverHillers tSuited to all sections > Write for EE lllus. Pamphlet and Prices to The AulUnsn A Taylor Co . Mangfleid rtblo J A YOUNG MEN WANTED in Sept. to learn ALL TELEGRAPHY. Situations gur.rented- Address IU Com- AR. R Tel-Oollefe, Ann Arbor, Mich. AGENTS WANTED for the~Beat and Fastest sell ing Pictonal Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 3J peroent. NATIOWAL PP3naaio Co.. Phila. Pa. MSII }.KTS fine writing paper, la blotter, with calendar, by mail for Jac. Agent* Wanted. ECONOMY PRINTING CO.. Newburyport. MASS. CDCE^R;. B .T "HEALTH HELPER" ■ ILL" fcPeriect HeE.lt h. 11. H. Box 104.Buffalo, N.T vnilklP MC IU If vou want to become TELE IUUNU IYItIM GRAPH OPERATORS and be guaranteed employment,address P.W. REAM, Ada.O, DIM M and WHISKY HABITS cured ■ I W IWH.it home without pain. Book of par ticular* sent free. B.M- Wooi.LKY, M D- , Atlanta,Ga. A Sure Cure for Epilepsy or Fits in 24 hours. Free to poor. Dr. Kriise. 2844 Arsenal St..St. Louis, Me. *79* week. sl2 a day at tiEiraeeisily made- Costly w • A. outfit free. Address TRUE A Co., Augusta, Me. tIOLKMANS' BusinessCoiiege, Newark,N- J. Terms / S4O- Positions for graduates. Write for circulars • K ♦/ CO 1 per day at home. Samples worth 5 free 1" ' Adires MI in sit it Co.. Portland, Me. I Ladies Do you want a pure, bloom ing Complexion? If so, a few applications of Hagan's MAGNOLIA BALM will grat ify yon to your heart's con tent. It does away with Sal lowness, liedness, Pimples, Blotches, and all diseases and imperfections of the skin. It oyercomes the flushed appear ance of heat, fatigue ana ex citement. It makes a lady of THIRTY appear but TWEN TY ; and so natural, gradual, and perfect are its effects, that it is impossible to detect its application* WOMAN -^feL E RACE^y LYDIA^E. PINKHAM'S VEgETABLE COMPOUND. A finre Care for all FEMALE WEAK NESSES, Including Lencorrlura, Ir regular anil Painful Jit u*t runt ion, Inflammation and dceratien ef the Womb, Flooding, PHO LAPSUS UTERI, K*c. • rf Pleasant to the teste. efficacious and Immediate In it® effect It In a groat help In pregnancy, and re lieve* pain daring labor and at regular period*. PHI Mi ASB CBE IT IJD rtrSCKIM IT FlltllT. nrFoa aIIWKAKXBSB® of the generative organ® of either eex, it la ®eoond to no remedy that baa erer been before tha public; and for all disease® of th® Kinim® it if the Ortatnt Remedy in th® World. ISTKIDNET COMPLAINTS of Either 8w Find Great Belief iu Its Uae. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S BLOOD PrBITIEH will eradicate eeery vestige of Humors : Iron. tbs Wood, at the same time will give tone and fhenfttto thesyrtem. AM marveUoan in resnlua* the Compound. fir Both the Compound and Blood PurKler are pre fared at t33 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price of either, ft. Six bottles for fS. The Compound I® sent by mail In the form of pills, or of loscnges, on receipt of price, f 1 per bos for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letter® of inquiry. Enclose S cent •tamp. Bend for pamphlet. Mention this Paper. RRL.TMI E. NMAAM'TUM PILL® eure Constipa tlou. Biilousnea® and Torpidity of the Liver. 85 cento. Sold by all Druirgirts.fi (*> BN u 31 THE CELEBRATED "KIDNEY-WORT" THE SPECIFIC FOR KIDNEY DIBEASEB. LIVER TROUBI.ES, CONSTIPATION, PILES. FEMALE WEAKNESSES AND RHEUMATISM. PHYSICIANS INDORSE IIEAIITILY. "I have found Kidney-Wort to work like a charm, doing all that it tlaimed for if. After using it several y. are in my practice I, a "regular j hysiciao,' can • rid >rte tf heartily. It has done better than any remedy I erer used.' —K. K. CLARK, M.D., Suth Hero, Vt. DANGEROUS KIDNEY DISEASE. "A stroke of paralysisp:os r.led me, alsodsngerously dlfiifftnr TUT httlnrjf jdo ooc' ri fulw, but KlTuej- Wort cured i*e."—fc. SLAI>E, !► B ickatone St.. Boston. *'My kidney troubles had luoed for eight years. I often paav-d 1,1 >od. kicn y-Wort cured me. MICHAEL OOTO, Montgomery Center, Vt. KIDNEY DISEASE AND RHEUMATISM. '"Two of my friends hid my trouble," aay® Mr. El bridge Malcolm, uf W eet B.tb, Mc. " i was given up to die by my physician and ir.ends. We all hid kidney disease and rheumi-t sin. Mine waaof ikiyeara standing. Kidney Wort has entirely cured alt three of**- ' "I had kidney tronbles for many years. Kidney Wort cured me."— J. M. Dows, of D.ebold Befe Co., 38Cam! St., New Orleans. CURED AFTER 20 YEARS. *" I devoutly thank Cod that I found out the rirtues Kidney Wort," write® C. P. Brown, of Weatport N.T. '"lt ha® cured me of alluyars' cam of te.-nble kidney disc A PC, ** KIDNEYS. I.IYER AND CONSTIPATION. "The most satisfactory results." writes Jsa. F." Reed, of No. Acton, Me., "in cases of kidney and liver troubles and constipation, hare followed from the use ot Kidney-Wort, by members ol m family." Kidney Trouble- uud Kbriiuiatieui. "My attending physician gave me up. I'd had rheu matism and kidney troubles tor 30 years. Many doctif® and numberless remedies did me no gool. My friends, too, thought my death was certain. Kidney-Wort has rstii, y cured me," so write, £1 bridge Mxlcolm, West Bath, Me. EIVER niSORDER. "Please t4ll my bro. soldiers, and the public, toe,* appeals J. C. Power, of Tieaton. 111., through the bt. Louis Globe-Item. and Rome ana fireside, '' that Kid ney-Wort cured my liter disorders, which I'd had for 80 years."'- 12-3- W. KHErMATIg j,. " I have tried a great numtxr," truly remark® Mr. W. N. Grose, of tMranton. Penn., under da:e of Dec. 12, ltefi, '"but there is no other remedy like Kidney-Wort for curing rheumatism and diseased Sidneys." INFLAMMATION OF DLADDF.R. "Chronic inflammation of the bladder, two sear® duration, was my who's o implaint." writes Dr. O. M. Suimnerlin, of San Hill. Go. "Her urine often con tained mucus, pus, and was sometimes bloody. Physi cians' prescriptions —my own included- and domestio remedies only palliated her pains. Kidney-Wort, how ever, hat entirely cured /•-. INTERNAL PILES. "I hid internal piles for several year*,'" said.l. B. Moyer. of Myerstown, Pean. "N,thing helped me except Kidney-Wort. It c<. re I me." LADIES' TROUBLES. Respect the confidence reposed in you by ladies. '' It be* helped me in intricate diseases/* writes Mrs. Annie Rock bald, of Jarre t Urille, Md. This lady correspond ent wrote us a >out Kidney Wort's curative effects. RHEUMATISM. "Nothing else would," tersely evys Jastice J. O. Jewell, ol Woodbury, Vt.. " but Kidney-Wort did cure my three years' rheumatism." DYSPEPSIA. Our correspondent, Mr. Joeiah Kenney, of Landisburg. Pa., says: ,r Kidne> Wort cured m/ dyspepsia. I had it m its worst forms, too." A WILLING OATH. "I trill rtretrr by Kidney-Wort all the time." writes * Mr. J. R. Kauffman. Lancaster, Penn. (All its patron® do the same, Mr. K.) DELICATE COMPLAINTS. Another lady, Mr*. J. B. Clark, Am tee City. La., writes us: "Kidney-Wort has cured me ot habitual constipation, pain in tb® aide, as well as some other delicate complaints." _ j^rssrtHj^trwp"nwnr*sri"sgpw^ap , vwars r saw] ' A NEW DISCOVERY. - tSTFor several year® we have furnished the Dairymen of America with an excellent arti- \ fldal color for butters eo meritorious that it met 1 | with great success everywhere receiving the I highest and only prises at both International, Dairy Fair®. < 1 I3r But by patient and scientific chemical re search we have improved in several points, and I |now offer thu new color as the best in the world. • It Will Wot Color tha Buttermilk. It j 1 Will Wot Turn Rancid. It la the ( M Strongest, Brightest and Cheapest Color Made. I ! I (H*And, while prepared In oil. is so compound ed that it is Impossible for it to become rancid. 1 1 i tTBEWARI of all imitations, and of all i other oil colors, for they are liable to become ( rancid and spoil the butter. • I tlTlf you cannot get the "Improved" write us to know where and how to get it without evtra I icxpense. (1®) WELLS RICHARDSON A CO., Burilafi®"- I * * fl fjfc A flliß I dßfci t dWfc I dßfc 4 I Mffc I i G.wp PTPT'THII I No time ehould be glflv) P I I & lost if the stomach. If II 4#" ■ kH\ liver and bowels ars CiIEMATtI „ff e ct*d to adopt the PJR wUmA. MSSi organs named beget others far more seri we* seri^ time in using this |W - STOMACH r effective and safe . KlVvfOs b, .ii ■ I Hr Druggists and Deal- M m H P ers generally. EDUCATIONAL. 1883. The NEW CALENDAR of tho 1884. NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY of MUSIC Beautifully Illustrated.S4 pages. SENT FREE to yourself and musical friends. Send names and addresses to E. TOURJEE. Frankl n Sq , Boston. Mass. The Largest and best appointed MIMIC. Literary ana Art School,and IIOME/or young ladies, in the toorld. College of Physicians and Surgeons, BALTIMORE, MD. The practical advantages of this school are unsur passed. Clinics held at City Hospital. Maternite and Maryland Woman's Hospital, all of which belong to this school. Physiological and Chemical Laboratory Work required of every student. Apnly for a cata logue to DR. THOMAS OPIE, Dean, 39 N- Carey Street. AGENTS WANTED OTIT.SF,, ting Machine ever invented- Will knit a pair of stockings with HEEL and TOE complete in 20 minutes. It will also knit a great variety of fancy work for which there is always a ready market Hend for circular and ternts to the Twoinbly Knitting Machine Co., Id 3 Tremont Street. Boston, Mass- Or. LaFIEUS' FRENCH MOUSTACHE VIGOR Grows a beard on tbo smoothest face in 70 days or M fIV money refunded. Keverfails. Rent on receipt of 50s ff* Jj stamps or silver ;S packages for |l. Ilcware of t heap jMh.fi imitations: none other genuine. Send for circular. address. T. IT. RAXK. boy 7- " areaw. Ltd. U.B. A. \ ?f® k in f ourown town. Terms and $5 outfit ire® ♦ u " Address H. Hallett Ac Co.. PorUand. Maine.