V. WISE WORDS. All the passions die with the years; solf-love alone never dies. It is barren kind of criticism that tells j on what thing is not Hypocrisy becomes a necessity for those who lire scandalously. Recollect that trifles make perfection, and that perfection is no trifle. The reproaches of enemies shoaiJ quicken us to duty, and sot to keep as trora it. I The praises of others may be of e to teach us, not what we are, bat what we ought to be. The changes we personally experience from time to time we obstinately deny to our prinoirles. Virtue dwells at the head of a rirer, to whioh we cannot got bat by rowing against the stream. i Envy is a vice, whioh keeps no holi day bnt is always en the wheel and working its own disquiet. Whatever ft hater mty do to a hater or an enemy to an enemy, wrongly directed mind will do us a greater in iary. Not a mother, not a father, will do so ranch, nor any other relative, but that a well directed mind will do us greater eervioo. Do good and be Rood, and despite atl that is said about this world's tagvati- tude some ono will love yoa and greet vonr coming. It Is tne mark of a low nature when a man regards money as an end, and not a means, and finds his chief delight in gloating over his gains. Employment, which Galen calls "na ture's physician," is so essential to hu man happiness, that indolence is justly considered as the mother of misery. The privilege of being a young man is a great privilege, and the privilege of growing up to be an independent man in the middle of life is greater. Do not allow yourself to speak ill of the absent one if it can be avoided; the day may come when some friend may be needed to defend yon in your t.b nance. Good thoughts not put into action 'lire like good seed thrown into the fire, ' or like blowing ont the flame of a candle to lot the smoke of reproach punish, even as the light illuminated. : Jast as soon as any conviction of truth becomes central and vital, there comes the desire to ntter it. Sacrifice is gladness, service is joy, when such an idea becomes a commanding power. ' Manufacture of Steel Tens. Steel used for making steel pens reaches the factory in sheets about two .feet long by one foot three inohes wide, and 0 004 inch thick. They are cut into bands of different widths, aooording to the dimensions of the pen required, the most usual widths being two, two and a half and three inches. The bands arc then heated in an iron box and an nealed, when they are passed on to the rolls and reduced to the desired thick ness of the finished pen, thus being transformed into ribbons of great deli cacy about four feet long. The blanks are then stamped oat frpm the ribbons by a punching maohine, the tool of whioh has the form of the pen required. The blanks leave the die at the lower part of the machine, and fall into a drawer, with the points already formed. They are then punched with the small hole, which terminates the slit, and prevents it from extending, and afterwaid raised to a cherry-red heat in sheet iron boxes. The blanks are then carved between two dies, the conoave one fixed and the convex brought down upon it by mech anism. The pens, now finished as re gard their form, are hardened by being pluogt d, hot, into oil, when they are as brittle as glass. After cleansing by being placed in a revolv ing barrel with sawdust, they are tempered in a hollow cylinder of sheet-iron, whioh revolves over coke fire after the manner of a coffee-roaster. The cylinder is open at one end and while it is being tarnt u a workman throws in twenty-five gross of pens at a time and watches carefully the effect of tne neat on tne color of the pens. When they assume a fine bine tint, he pours the pens Into a large metal basin. separating thezn one fioni another, to laminate tne cooling. After this pro cess, which requires great skill and ex perienoe, comes the polishing, which 8 effected in receptacles containing a mixture of fine sand and hydro chloric acid and made to revolve. This operation lasts twenty-four hours, and give the pens a steel-gray tint. The end of the pen, between the hole and the point, is then ground with an emery wheel revolving very rapidly. There only now remains tD split the pens, which is the most important operation, being performed by a kind of ' shears. The lower bUda is fixed, and the upper one comes down with a rapid motion, slightly below the edge of the fizsd blude. To give perfect smooth ness to the slit, and at the same time make the pens bright, they are sub jected to the operation of burnishing by being placed in a revolving barrel almost entirely filled with boxwood tAndatLCkronique JndugtrUlU, A Poetic Oddity. The following poetio oddity is copied from an old scrap-book. It is said to btve been written 200 years ago, and is as interesting for its quaint philosophy aa for the peculiarity of its construction: I had both I lent my and a to my from my and my f Of either thought i d more; And took hit word therefor; Which i had wauted long; And was not this a wrong ? Which pieae'dma wondrous well; Away guite from me lull; As) have had be fore. And play the fool uo more. I aoaght my I loot my .2 4 came my bat my and a and uiy At length wiUi I got my Bat bad I I'd aecp my The largest orange grove in Florida is that of Major II. V. Norris. He now Las grove of 11.000 thrifty orange t 'f s which bear about 600,000 or&ngea. FISifiXU Foil GREENBACKS. Ilnw a Too Yns-ehlAft t.nnk Aanttnr Con dueled Hyatrtnatri; Prralntlnn-Dlr'cr'tai-a 1'uEXlod. t, Pcllvea Bafnrd-t'he I'lon t , SVf--e y Accident, i As far back as jAnnary last the Na tional bank of Elizabeth, N. ,T., of which Mr. John Kean is president, for wt -Chief of Tolioe John Keron and Instructed him to discover if he conld who had beeri systematically robbing the bak since the previous July. Chief Keron worked hard on the oase and associated with himself the present chief of police, William D. ienklrm The only conclusion the two conld ar rive at after most thorough lifting was that the robberies trero toommitted by some one connected with the institution. The bank being a solid one, and not in the slightest way incommoded bv the toRft of the money stolen the officers and directors ttert much dis turbed at the possibffity of such UnwgB happening, notwithstanding every precaution, and nothing seemed to be left them to do bat quietly dis miss the nlrr8 upoa suspicion. These two ycang men were Edward Sherwood, the paying teller of the bank, and Joseph McGuire, the bookkeeper. Mr. Sherwood was an estimablo and Very popular young mnn, who, thrown on the world whten a mere boy, had worked his way op from office boy in the bank to the plaoe he then held. Mr. McGuire was brother to James McGnire, who was then and is still the cashier of the bank. The two young men worked aim st side by sido, and in the tem porary absence of Sherwood McGnire for the time being always took his place. They were on the most friendly terms nd thongh between them stood the dark mystery as to who was robbing the money drawer, neither was ever known to throw a doubt upon the Other's character. Mr, Sherwood had. of oonrso. from his positiou as paying teller, charge of the moneys of the bank for each day's business, and these moneys were placed as they were received in a large drawer beside the paying teller's window, and this drawer, for the o erk's convenience, was separated into several compart ments, beginning with one for one dollar bills and running up progress ively io nt'ies ana hundreds, it was from this drawer that the money was stolen always in fifties and twenties and the robbery was always committed daring banking hoars. At no other time was there money in this drawer, and at no time durinor the dav was either Sherwood or McGuire absent from that portion of the office. The two voanar men nrntAaterl that flm could not explain how the money waT abstracted, and declared their inniftas cenoa of all knowledge of it Sh(L t0 wuuu was uuuer uouus ior considerable amount to secure pane, ana alter the first oooasion failed in being alio to balanoe hi counts for the day he notified cashier of that fact, expressing his wonaer at the occurrence. The oas could make no better hand of the. nnnnt TViia mita tV. 1QH. J T' 1881, and the first money that my done, ously disappeared from the drawee $200. Sherwood's bondsmen pror: T made the loss good and expressed willingness to stand bv the voanr i low, believing him not to be guilty, o September 19, 1881, it was found at 51 close of the day that he'was $310 sle lo on November 28, 1881, he was i , short; on January 9, this year, he V ana short $180, and on January 16 heebal thort $480. His bondsmen made alntiftn It was at this juncture that ex- oi rouoe iv.eron was caned la am private life of Sherwood and Mc! was watched and soanned with cl scrutiny. Keron and Jenkins k every dollar that the two bank cle' bad in their possession, how much I spent of it, and where and with who and. in a word. " them as thev did themsolvK " nr'" they failed to find a flaw in the dailjjo lives of the two yonng men, and so rett ported to the directors of the bank wha had employed them. Then a changer" was made by the bank management, and1 a McGuire was transferred to the payinr&t teller's desk and riherwood to the book-i keeper's. This arrangement waa only? to last for a few weeks, however, until a reasonable time was given both to find other employment and in order that the two should not leave at the same time. Strangely enough, not a dollar was taken from the money drawer while McGuire was paying teller. The rob bery was then in a very complicated oondition. Mr. Charles Halsey, who was then a member of the oornmon council of the town, was made pJving teller. And then, from January 1G to June 10, there was not a ruflla on the bank directors' faoes. Everything had now quieieu aown, they thought, and I not very much harm had been done. I But again the mysterious agency was) at work, and on June 10 $350 was spirited away, and nobody could evenl begin t a form a suspicion as to how itw had been done. Not a vestige rf the track of a thief was left behind. Watch-r ful energy was redoubled. There wast nothing new to be seen around, and everything was again quiet as it had been for several months. On Monday afternoon last, however, a very strange scene ocourred in tho bank and ex-Chief Keron and Chief Jenkins were summoned. It happened in this way: Mr. Halsey was attending onstomers at the paying teller's desk, when suddenly hw attention was called to a slight noise as if somebody waa knocking lightly on the counter outside, and thinking it might be the child of the gentleman in front of him he looked over to see, bat there was no child there, lie had occasion to open the money drawer just then, and to his astonhih ment he heard therein a feeble noise and something like a rustle of a note. He closed the drawer quiokly, oomjng to the conclusion that a mouse had gone into it. When he disposed of the busi ness he had in hand he began to think the mouse might gnaw at some of the notes. He opened the drawer quickly and a very thin line snapped" before his eyes, and he beheld lying on a twenty dollar note, whioh seemed partly r -ised np from the others, a email piece of lead, about an Donee in weight. Ex amination showed that 00 one face of is rent 4 potting 4ia be nfor- fO rep- a- cL. flOTJI asta tJie lead wm a coating of gutta perch and over this Spain was a coating nl shoemakcr'a wax in a soft and pliable condition. The cashier was summoned bi '.VirnotnrM vnrn nntifloil nn.l ilia torn ,1 ,.. t!r T?rrn ft twI Jt,I,'nB a soon on the nrct. The cash was counted In ths tioney drawer and it was found that that little pie 03 of load had that morning carried away to some plaoe nn known thirteen bills, or $260 in all. Ex Chief Keron then followed the thin fishing line, and found that it had been ran through two screw rings or What sailors call 'deadpyBS," tine in the under surfcee cf the counter and another be hind the rear of the drawer. There was a space botweon the top o! the money drawer and the counter, concealed, Of course, in front. In the floor there was an old gaspipe hole, left there after some alterations in the arrrangement of the oflloe furniture. This was in such a position relative to the 'rash drawer, that lines reoved through both the screw rings conld be so worked as to drop in the lead by one movement and carry it ont again by a reverse one a bill being attached, of coarse, daring the latter movement. It was plain that the work was done from hhderneath the office, and to this plaoe nobody had access bat the janitor, George Washington Bennett, alias Aokerman. Through the flooring here was also found another hole, careful ly dug out from the ceiling, with ft space cleared Away between the ceiling and the flooring abore through whioh the line oonld pass. The two police officials at once con cluded to arrest the janitor. They waited until after the bank wm closed and then quietly took him into the directors' room, where at first he stoutly denied his guilt, but after an hoar's talk Bennett confessed that he waa guilty and explained hbw he had so long eluded deteotion. A searching in quiry revealed that he had earlisr in tho day hidden away $382, $200 of whioh he had stolen that day before the line snapped. This money has been re covered. The prisoner admitted that he felt " all was np with him' when he found that the line was broken. He told the officers that with the stolen money he had bought a yacht for $6u, a gun for 8-to, an interest in a fishing business for $100, and some society emblems, including a gold ring. He denied that he had had an accom plice, and explained tho long lapses be twepn the dates of some of the robber ies by saying he never took any money exoept when what he had already stolen was spent. Thj prison- ) A v 'ov pensation few - TT T, , the barv,!eS8rr A Partridok,) Keeps constantly on hand an rirnuT crnrit nr riiDNiniDC LLbUHiii giuun or runiu i uiil, which he sells at a great reduction Irom former prices. Why does tho tighl.trouse yonnp 1 an practice economy by walking np A full line of ,'ght? The answer is i Because by noi COFFIXS AND CASltETfet0P'Pg hc saTea rent- . . . si '" always in siocK. , TTTV ni-iTtT1 i Ji T7Sf A ,l lhe J'ouston (Texa) Tost, has used Bt. j AMMLiAi x anaa.ii,jaC(,l)S 0il with lh Rreil(est i,entflt f()r rl)eu. in all its Branches promptly attented Imiatisru, saya the (Jalvcston (Texas) News. 1. . . 1 . t . . 1 , 1 " - ill kinds, MftttrasHest, Hnrinur Btxl JKl Tyiunges, Looking Glasses, l'ictU7leef 01 air weign one pound. Frames, and various, articles to- niimnrmin trt ln montiono.l Oivtf hiin a call and be convinced. Prices niunnuKio n T-.n9t f " " Jo Whiskey i Brown's Iron Bitters is one of the very few tonic medicines that are not com posed mostly of alcohol or whiskey, thus becoming a fruitful source of intemper ance by promoting a desire for rum. Brown's Iron Bitters is guaranteed to be a non intoxicatiig stimulant, and it will, in nearly every case, take the place of all liquor, and at the same time abso lutely kill the desire for whiskey and othar intoxi cating beverages. Rev. G. W. Rice, editor of the American Christian Re view, says of Brown's k on Bitters: Cin.,O..Nov. 16, 1881. Gents : The foolish wast ing of vital force in business, pleasure, and vicious indul gence of our people, makes your preparation a necessity ; and if applied, will save hun tkeds who resort to saloons for temporary recuperation. "Brown's Iron Bitters has been thoroughly tested - fnr dvsrjeDsia. indigestion. Btttv comparing tiL , weai,ne kji' tion returns for lw5a, fness.aeDU- , 3 619.370 votes, or oon8fde7atsm. . twenty-five per cent, of the"-firting population, took no part in the choice of President, although the canvass was an unusually excitinar one. Of the total popular vote tha Ilapuhlican can didates received 4 418 053, the Demo cratic candidates 4 412.035, the Green backers 307.30G and 1-4,606 wer scatter ing. Garfield's popular vote over Hancock was 7,018. The Republican vote was 43.26 per oent. of the whole, and the Deoiooraiio 43 25, whioh shows a remarkably close division of the popular vote between the two threat parties. Buffalo Express. When a man is wrong and won't ad mit it he always gets angry. The lllackberry Trade, , Southern New Jersey supplies a large proportion of the blackberries that reach the market of rieW Tork, as well as Uiok of rhiledelphia. In the township of Ilammonton alone there are more than 1,200 seres of blackberry bushes. When in loll bloom the blaokberry fields are almost as white as a Sonthern cotton field in November. The long rows of dark green plants with their wealth of white blossoms are an enrhnatinf sight to the lover of the beautiful. The soil in whiTh thby thrive best is a light tandy loam, alWost pure sand. They are cnltivated wita the greatest care, not a weed or blade of grass being per mitted to interfere with their growth. The slightest undulating, almost level fields, are inelosed by woll kept ant! clipped hedges or arbor vit, unface nr, nemiock ana other ornamental over green shrubs. Otner fruits strawbtrries, raspber ries, p rapes, peaches, apples and pears are also grown in this fertile and gener ous soil, bnt the main crop is the blackberry. Aboht 20,000 bushels of blnckberries were shipped frolti Ham monton last year, and it was a short crop. It .is estimated by the best informed residents of the township that there will be this year, in the height of the season, fifteen car loads shipped errrv davi Thb croo ih " oltohed " ftir lioOOO bushels or mote. If til) weather is favorable it will be made. If sufficient pickers can be brought from Philadelphia and Hew tork it will be Fathered. To ship these berries will cost in freight about $80 per car Most of this crop will come to Pew Tork, to bo thence distributed through out the country. . The niekina is done mostlv bv Ital iansmen, women and children Who are brought at a trifling expense from rmladelphia, lodged in rough quar tero on the farms, paid from two cents to two cents and a halt a quart, and permitted to do their own cooking, mostly out of doors. These were the prices last year. It will probably be less this year if the crop is abundant. A family of three or four berry pickers can, It tho rates quoted, frequently make more than $5 a day. Tne best hand pick from seventy five to one hundred rfiiarts, and the others between lorty and fifty qnnrtj with ease. Tho cost of living while in the country is a mere trifle. The berry picking season is the summer festival time of the poor Italian families of Philadelphia. Lansrunxc Cannot D'Rr-rlhe It, Mr. ltobcrt Gould, bookkeeper for Walker (St Maxey, who are lumber dealers, recently aid to our representative: "About one year ;o 1 wai taken with the genuine sciatica. I 1.1. ! - t ..l i l.iploved the best physicians, but they conld ll!,:Te "ie 'Vr,lie.!no",ent. naiwi i d St Jacobs Oil and it effected a complete Jre." Kennebec Keporter, Gardiner Me. jr Mr, 0nil B. Johnson, business manager . . , Advlco ta Consnmntlre. 0n the appearanoo of the tir?t Byuiptoma aa .uorai ui.'Uiiitv, loHi or appoiire, p .nor, ctuuv lm,i. 4-..1I. .....! 1am n;.ri.U.ABf ....1 ..nr,U rouipt measurea for relief should be takoii .sumption is scrofulous disease of the lungs iereiorause tboitroatanti-acruniiaor uiok! itior and strenL'th-veatorer Dr. l'i roe's ildeu Medical Diacovcry." Superior to cod r oil as a nutritive, and nusurpaascd aa a torul. For weak lung. spittiuR of blood 1 kianrod ancctions it lias no eunal. fold ,;r1.,..;.,.u ....,.i,l iv. 11. i;Avn..)H riiplilt t on Coiisninptinn send two stamps to otU.D'S 11HPM8AUX JIEUICAL ASSOCIATION, uflAlO, H. X. 'iie silk trade of Switzerland gives employ it to 70,000 bands, one-third of whom are aged iu the ribbon branch. The products his branch reach a yearly value, of 130,000,. Iranes, about eighty-live or ninety per it. being lor export. 'imifra and Olhnr Tinan treated with unusual success bv World's rpeui-ary Mo licsl Association, Buffalo, N. Y, id atamp lor pamphlet. 'f.nnessee has twenty-five copper furnaces 1 turn out z.uuu.uuu pounds 01 oonper each r. Tho Htate also has 18,000,000 acres of nproveu land. Fits. Fits. VUm. crssfullv treated bv World'i Dispecsan lical Association. Addrtus, with stamp for upblot, HutlAio, . v. 'X frozen by machinery is now used almost lusively in (Southern cities, as it is cheaper 11 that brought from the North, except at xiard place. The retail pi ice has fallen n f i per luu, betore the war, to f l.ou. "Entirely liRlpnred." 77 (Jeouok KraitET, New Buunswick, N. J.. Bent. 5, 1881 1. II. Warxku & Co.: .Sirt - A aovere attack kidney ililliciilty entirely disappeared alter ug your Kafe luciuey ana L.ivur vare. ' John li. Inhlee. . . 'iie first appearance of cotton aa an article lomineiee was a shipment of seven bale (a Charlcaton, 8. O., iu 1757. Tessman's rEProNizED beef tonic, the only oaration of beef containing ita entire nufri it propertie. I' contains bluod-makinc, force '"ratiuff and life-sinitaiuing properties; in "able for indirection, dvepepaia, nervous ' tuition, and all forms of general debility; , in all euf ebled conditions, whother the lit of exhaustion, nervoas prostration, over lit or acute disease, particularly if resulting tn pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard t propiiotors, Now York. Sold by druggists, i-i t'em Will lluy treatise upon the Horse and bis Diseases. I. of 100 pages. Valuable to every owner ' loi-bCH. PohtttK" stam pi taken. B lit post- J by New York Newspaper Union, 150 Worth 'eet, New York. "Thonsnnds of botlles of Carboline, a deodor ized extract of petroleum, have been aold; from all over comes one universal orr, " Carboline is lhe host hair restorer ever used." Bold by all druggists, Files and Itngs. Flies, roachei, ants, bedbugs, rats, mice, gc phor, cliipmuuks cleared out by "Rough on ltats." 15C; The new circular of the Cayuga Lake Military Academy, Aurora. N. Y., is a handsome book of to pages, full of in'ormation. Maj. W. A. Flint is 1'riucipal, Henry Morgan, Esq., Presideut. Teachers want'd. Address with stamp for"p-plicatiou-lorm,'- Teachers' Ag'cy, Ciuctuuati, O. The Science of Life, or Self-Preserrattoo. a medical work for every man young, middle-kjted-or old. J 2a invaluable prescriptions. A l.I.FN'W BRA IN FOOD! Moat reliable toulo poeoively eurei N'ervuua llelilllty aud restores lat virile Wiweia. buld by drut;iii.U. 1 1 ti fur tt5. Vi.-. bv ini.il tin rtM'iii'i ' 1 rici;. JOI1M 11. A 1.1.1 . t'beiulat, 313 Av,(i ,e, v , . j i ttr tus if r i mid c.eiierauve uruHin. It S82. 0.1 Ont 'will Hitv a Trrnilne npo'n lion oi hit Dinnwiw. Book of 100 r. Vlul to tvtry ownr of horufw. PotiMr m1 S! i SO Worth .rfit. Hew fork. What a Three-Cent Stamp Wll! Do'; ff It.a nm nnil vn1ne 1n thrt world. It aeooin- plMiw what woiiltl, a fVwr years bro, liavo bi-cn Jlewned Imposslblo. ThiJnllsmnnlo plarnnl on thcnrncT of an rnvelopoTr pai knt'e commands tho tiKO of enpacloua and ovnutlfnl liwlldliitrs whori'in to fwolvo mir lotion, orden trains of ciirt fo (-mtv fhnm, and sljiri an irrmy of mm ft dollvor thorn. ItbriniTS Information from' every1 section of tho country and tiding Of plenmire a well. Hut tho ffownliiK consideration Is the fiict that a three-cent mump RCnt to A. Voori.ra ACo., Jinttimnrr; M i., with tho BTipln ant'i nnme ana addrosi. Will nroonro n copy of hT. jAr(.pOalon, dar,rt;ilete with tiilorpstlng r'iiliii(nmtter,ati( better than all, contnlnlnn rixrilie fnstrurtlorn for tho treatment and euro of thniniaiixm, nctr rulKla and all painful tflscc. es by the (me of Pt. JnconsOtu CouoertiliiRtbo efficacy of tins won derful sulwlance.tlio lonowinK mum impress me reader: Hun. Thomas !j. Jninos, Postmaster tienerutef IhoVnltcd States, when rostmni-trrof the City of New 7ork. concurred In the following testimonial from Wm. H. WiirelliK, Esq., Asst. General Superintendent Third Mvlslon MhIIIhk and lUstriliutini Department. New Vork Pimt oitiec: " 1 tuko pleasure In BdvMiiKthat the aam- pies of St. Jacobs OtLlett for distribution anions the clerks of this otrioo, have, as far ws they have been tried, proved eiiil n all that la claimed fur the Oi u Tho reports from iho several super intendents and clerks who have nstd tin till, acreo In praising it hlphly. It has tieen fotlhrt efficacious in cuts, burns, norcness and stillness of the joints and muscles, and affords a ready re lief for rheumatic complaints." Col. Samuel H. Taylor, Washington, iihi .hh.i ex roeimasier oi Cumberland, Md., was wired of rheumatism by Bt. Jacous OiL his u :JtT It Is the concurrent testimony of the public and the medi cal pfnfnmioil, tbl Hostetter's HtotnscU DitteralsamedU'Jni which achieves re. ults sis-id ly folt, - tiiofofrh and be- r- nWll. lledl'lefirttr 1 init liver disorder, it mviKorsttv the lee- siiil blunder com me. coinni'Tii nine' " plsihl.', suit hssbn.B lhe .-onVttleCi,,'; ot those reeoventm from cmceiiitnu itii. eiiiies. Moreoverltt rnuiril W the Kimul sceitir !W 11 ,11! Iilood, ami will cnmpletply clisiige the lilooil tn the entire system ill tlil'ee liiontliK. Aiiv HTson who will take one bill ewii iiium irom 1 10 u nmy no patored to Kiniiid heuit'i. if ihdi a lliliin lie lawmliln. bold evervwlicw or nent by mill! frt 8 letter tmni, fuimei'ly lliuiL-or, Mf, GOOD NEWS Crt tm Clubt r our I'kil-R Pi TKl' l KArt, ana rur a Iwauttlul 'V--. T-a m AM4 Qtti4 Tfrt Paf i (44 Pi., our own IwtMirtailud. t l.'v p.ii IV f. ii riubtor t.0H. It-war of tin o-rlltd nf thrr. Lfnullful Tcft Srtt kIVcIi tbat ai-w trlnji tnlvri!cil Ihfjr ar lUnrrniui o liealtri alnw tH.tmn, l-al unly Willi reliable Tho Cirvat American Tea To., ImpoHt-rs, P. UUj&Sbtt, II i U VfcM'.Y New VorM. 11... ....a mf.i mi'ltx Brut I. a ml If ttxani lilf. Ku L'HIltiaC. nil 1ctrlnirtttl t FRAZBR iXL E pni kiit iin fiir unilp-tiii-U myi n marked It. In iha M'Afltl. 41tt ilir ffriniliifv. Ever? MAKE HENS LAY. Au EnvMisb V!irhmry Miirretm and I'tiernijit, now tnwWiuu in tbin t ouutry, hujb thai nnt ot tha Hinw and Cattle I'ow.lei-ri H.tid lH'Hai-H wort lilcn tnuth. H ays that KliLritiim Onnlitiou PawilTTHttwabMolutft ly imr aud imiiimitM'ly vulnabl. Noiliin on earth m ill ihilVk liHtirt liiV iiko Miei liiail'l C'ointll tun 1'tiW- der. I Ht. one teiaMiH'oiirul tfxuie int ol foud. Hold fvervvrhtTr, or aeiil uv nmil for H letter tiitiij.H. I . H, JUUNSUN AiCU.,Uortion,Mu!-B.J)riiieil li Alitor, M. In abnndaiice. RJ Million pound imported luai ycjir. i rii iowrr than ever. ARenH wanted. Dual waste lime. Btiiu ior circular. 10 IbH. Good HlacW or Wlxed, for 1 irt lt.a! Fine lllack or ffllicd, for f i ?x iii! t.olceHia.U or mixed; for hi f-na for pound ample, 17 cu. e itra for postam. Tiiin Let ui a club. I'holcOBt Tea lu tho world. UweS variety -l'lea. every bodv -O debt Tea biramlit losineeii. vaiuo ior iuuki. C I V WASTB WuNfV! rinIB4aiorli. OI A If jjti wabl a l.uiartant ineustartia, fo n( rTO Ot ft hJ ftth o l.atr tn lalj W I O h-a-la of t TUh Kt.N. hrHt.Ni.nlr.N and lNVIGUIlTt th HAlK an.wufr dua l U Unn'i). 1. Tri the ircat gw-ian dioutt :,Mh i.a NfcVr U y FAlU.li. HniaOM.I SIE CtMS t rr. J. MAH. L'?.. B" loev H.-.on. Ma. vt all ImltAini. 1 iiaiiAurn n v. ar PhnnillA Atiarlhanil CntiiW'iie of ork. with l'hnnoKrupliia aliliat and illiiHtratioim, for beninui'N, ut on aopiic- tion. AildivhM, lienn ntiuan, uinnnan, u. HULLERSf k For pamphleU dflecrib. inff tia cruat Aitoiuu ( lorrrllutlii.v Attarmei4 A t J L I M A N 1 A y UUU. UO. Manapaia.m CTrari IHQNTH-AGENTS WANTED-UO best Z" V.Uig art 1i:lt'.H : "i l lie world; 1 ainil' fr4 VJm 9 Aiiilr. Joy llronxm. I)i'lr..ll. Mlrh. Cl id ft1' lrv mi .M.irriaKe. Send for ein-ular. Th unmarried inTHoiih. lis:! ll'tlwav, N.Y. AueutBalited ,uuui i.i.prin Ui il. Annocia n oi Calllorma lo Jewi lerstull "I IU. I'riiU ill.ieinl t'lm h.. U&fa E 8REAS ESPOSIZIONE MUSICALE IN MILA1NT0. Sotto il Patroclnlo di 8. Jtt. la Itegina, Palazzo Del R. Conservatorio. ITALY 1881. AT THE GREAT Hr ml I v rled t Milan, wai probably the MOST EXTRAORDINARY COTXEOTION OK MUSICAL INHTliUMENTH. uld and umw. ever brought together: f nil v IlluHti-Htinif thn irrat uttian-Hi wliirh ttu .111 irmaH ana prtiKfiii uiku exofiicufteiu uim utnriiittM.i 01 naiiuiurturu8. Alter fiiiuiiMTive cxmntiiutioaa, teMta nd comiiaribouw, eitondiiiK thmiiKh a imriod of wver urn tbn, mo Hhii A t ttrdit were mad of lutilitla and diptoutoM, in m'Knitioo nf deirnf nf nup'T-fxc-'Henfe uttiiiutMl lu tlie varioim dtiiniiuenu of muHioal art aud uianutiw ture. Kr 1U.KD INyTltUMtNIH, IududiiiK Orgaun aud Uar mouiuiiiof all description. Euruneu and Ainerlcau. THE GRAND SILVER MEDAL, being tho only highest award iu this department, was oonf erred upon the MASON & HAMLIN ORGANS. Their manufacturers value this extraordinary diBtinctlon themorehlfthlvheMUeof theiruportanreof KVwvvftvJ' INDbSTUlAr? COMPETITION IN A COl'NTKY bOPItlvhMINtNllA Ml HICAL. lhe Maann A llauihn Oivaus were honored bv eaiiee.ial exhibition Ix fore the ltoval ( ourt bv Carlo Iliirci of 'Rnie. aud waruioiuimeiidati(mfniii their M.ije.t the Kiiiu and Oueen. Atall the great "OKI I J I T It I I, EXPOSITION for fourteen year th.e OreaiVs bave received the HIGH tsT HONORS, being Un only American Organ uluch net. cut 1 ala,"'. IMPROVEMENTS. D"r,.n" tu,e yr1" J" eld thU Company have introduced improvements ot unthn iU smcsthsintroducUoaoi tU.An.caa ELkGANT STYLES f BOW ,clvJ 'rom their factories daily, snrrouwinir fn capacity and excel- fTv-T.v. .v,.!J . lf,uoe au5"u,"K "bleb has before b..eu produced, and certainly wur Ii, to be ?Drk1? ?tb th; Vr" riKK"'t """'"A- INH-nieilKaTH IN THE WOULD Thev are ill CH-e of .olid III " a I." d U00 ' ' uo,"z-u' 'tu- " " "rtu"- 330, 3tt0. f3U, 4SU, $30hl6 POPULAR STYLES, iff , lu?' ir ' thJ mmt EASY PAY Mt NTS. Th"f0ratulSrKlna 0l1 'or cah or PaymenU. or will be rented until rent A NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE, I'hUTn&hu m-ork .c. MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO., !"4Trmout einet- -SXl " Hthbtrwt '.Union Ha I tW YOJ:K; U'J W,. ., iveeu- rr-.n r-A TIMETAm.K, IN KFFKCT July 2, A.M. 7 l p. m.(.i. r a i iff iii.) 7 rojir l'lltNliurali I v 4 !War.... Parker ...Iv 4 i!7 ar...Koxliurg..lv n l(lhr. Krnnklin ..lv I". M.'A.M. 4.1! n h : ;n vi k J(i Jid:i ft 40 '1 Ml A. M. I, M. A.M. 'h J4(l jiool 1 50 1 !W trW country nieiiiy.e "-,, vt. 1 .11. .ii.., nntv. itliulfliitilllL'., A? tlie'e are ninny who are more or In prejudice nfruli'iKt projirletary rcmeilief especially on sremint of the many hum' .3111111 on the iiuirhet; However, ws are ili ned to alate Hint each prejudice does not Mint airnlnn OAHdl.lNH nil. ve 00 am hilm wonder or rrtrarie ror our mnniem, um wm o 1 i.rlm it if without n equal, il " I'l" un in nov- m .1... .if Hint. .I.M. Anil all Wfl r,j iiri.k Iii that yon rIvs I. a fall I'lJ J l'tn'. rememberlnu thai ins in tVf-i nnt np with white rpp S', (itmallj Is for human and fowl I it lleuli, nun niai wuu jouow wiiiiticr (threa slsci for anl nial th'Hli. Try a hoftUX, As Ihiwe euia Indicate, tho OH Is trsed siircoat". fully for itll di-Tii-en of the hiiman,fwl art aniwol A. MiaUo well liefo-e nlnp;. Cannot be Disputed. One of thepr'nclpal reafoas of the wonderful tnrrrr of Mef rhant's tlnriilitiR (Ml ts tbat It la V 4.t t-- maiiiifartnTed alrletlv on honoa. KM)Jt:(0 lr iTniuicioro do not, as It tlx i l r-tf- ewe with l'-o many, aflermaalnf UL-.Vti. for their nioilrine a name, dnnlo- lnh iik coiiiiivu properties ny numn unrrinr hj.ii nda, hut ue tne very bcM gwln 10 be bought In the market, reurdlep of cost. Koi Hill half a rentnry Merenant s unrg- 11 1 ill kB f - ..minvm tnl fZLS honeaty, and will emitlniie to bs so, loti)j aa time endures. Tot risr le hv all reerectahle dealers tliroiichout the Vntted States and other conntrtss. irriT ICRIIIIIOIUIIiS naio irom irw ito the present. Try Merchant's (.aniline OH Liniment for Interns. LML'wh. Sim rsimini .,-0, . m.. tf.-ewWr.1' in'""" v6i - on t mil to follow directions. Keep the oottls well corked. CURES & "nd Chilblain", l'nt ftttes, Seratrh' " or dn-aae, Cbaoi n l llaiul", Kilernal Poinnns. Sand i-rvti: I'.illEvU, (iiIIk of nil Vino." Swellll f.,'l llllU'lH, BpMlTii and nrnle, slrlugtialt, WludKau. '.Hit ((.it In Klieep, Foundered Feet, llonp In Poultry, rior aipples. OnrK (bracked Ileela. Old Sores, Kpiooife, jni Hwk, lleiiKHirlioida or I'lloa. ToolliiM'lie. Hhntinatltxs. Wpavln". Sweeney, C.orna, w hltiowa, Weakneeaof the Joints. Oontraellon of Munelee. Crainiw, f w "lleil I"ir, iHtiila. a tre, Tliruah. Caked llivail". liolls, As I'leHIl ,OUIIin. oiiiwiv, Ibnulioiie. l'o"l 1'leers, (iiirf'tinCo' a. rarcy, Criieke.l Tea a t-allou. I.tuueuasa, Horn uihii'iiit, rrowiiM-ah, gulttoy, Abacees of tne uuiter. KI.OOO frKII'l ff l forprcif of (lie exist. iv fa. enr' beltet llulment ttias ?r-iflSr "Merchant's (iaritllua Oil," or s V-'y better worm medicine ' thss U yr J, 'Mcrchsnt s Worm 1 ableta." Man. ifliuiiCTiireu vj ju. u V. vv-tjint' pon, -V 1., i . y. A. JOHN hooce, seo-y. Payne's Automatlo Engines. o Reliable. Ihuslde and FcoiintiilesT, rlirtiln A m- iMfjtru-HA H tt'i fun in-l iimcr tinn anuMlitr .r.t- j 0 .1U, not l Ued with an Automallo ihit-on. fend lorl.li tr.itedCiiloii'i"J."loi liilornitiu f iicua. H. . I'a . si. n auNs, uoi eJ. uoruiux. .-. AUkMM WAMi:i) rott THE HISTORY T?.r.U. S. BY ALEXANDER H.STEPHENS. 1 enntaiim fienflv ftrttl Fin Port roll, a nil Kw- ruMiiaa il Kniile-. owd ot r IINierleal ( a- . ami ii the ni't eomi-leio and valuable lila lor' ever i.iiI IikIih.i. It la sold by MiWriplion only, and Atrciila are wanted In pvery county. H.'nu for circulara and extra terms 1 1 Apeiit". Aildreaa, tiJLT ONAI. 1'L'BLlaUIIiO Ul., 4'Ulueiuia, rm. tlielroKiK'CHSof " v"" rittMll.ilil.Maw. VnilMfi MCW If von want tolearnTeleirra)ibyln lUUniU flir.il )frw monilia, and bs wriinof illiiailon. addieas Vsleiriun llroa.. JsnwiJJtVls. 1Alfl-Ahaudsonii set rf eanls for Sc. stamp, nll.vlor. A K It -KTT. Hocheater. N. 1 . ONE MILLION COPIES SOLD. JaTEETBODY WANTS ITt ... ETEUJBODT ITEEDS ITt KKOW THYSELF. Tin SCIBWr OF UFEi OB SELF. FKCMBRT ATlOff, Is a iMdleal tnatlse en Exhaostod Vitality, Karroos and physical Debility, Prematura Decline la Man; Is aa tndianensabls trssttss for sverr asaa. whether joaBI. Diiddls seed or old. Till MCIKM'E 09 MFKi OK, BIX.F. m ENERVATION, Is beyond aTl compariaon the most extraordinasy work on Phv aioloK'y ever uubllabed. There is notbtu whatever that the married or atuxle can either ra aulrs or irinh to know but what Is fully explained. llormuo (ilobt. TUI eciKNrB OF UFKi Olt, BBLF- TKEISERVATION, Inrtraef s those In health how to remain so. and tbs Invalid bow to become well. Contaiua ooeoundred and twenty-fiveiuwaluabta prescrlptiouaforsll forma of acute and ehronio dlMPaaea, for eae.h of which a flrsi-claas phisuiaa would charge trum 14 to SiO.- London Lancet. TUJt SCIENCE OF T.lFEt OU, SELF. fit ENERVATION, Contafns 9oO paaea. One stael enirravinfrs. Is superbly WUHU IU . . 'Jill. II HI nail 11, uiuimi. "I. . k 'I j enarval of art and beauty, wamiuted to men 1 (nil silt. It la a I beauty, every sen 1 bi e s batter obtained luedical book In every sense thus can be obt iaewhere fur double the pno or the inouey will bs refunded iu every iaatauca. Author. 'ice. c TUE tt'IENCK OF LlfEi OR, BELF. rREHEItVATlON. Is so muck mperior to all other treatises on medical ubjeabi that coiupanaou Is absolutely linposaibls. JioiUm Uwrald. THE DCIKNCK OF I.I FRi OR, BELF- P RESERVATION, Is sant by mall, seenrely sealed, postpaid, on receipt of srloe, only I1.2S (naw edition). Binall lllustrateC aamptes. 6e. aead now. The author can be coosultsd oa all diseases re quiring skill and experience. Address PEABODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, r W. II. FAUKER, I. D., 4 Bnlflsch tireet, It ton, Mesa. ITALIAN MUSICAL EXPOSITION 'alusMe of the reoent iirfprovements, ant d adapted to am 1 r