. ' S ; i Lotd of the flist _ t blood am pure aa the aenra sky. Kept pure through a thousand yeua Why, just, look at me I El I'm a real grsndM. St I'm wen SoiTie little cam English genre to fhehr cr<«a and mix play the deuce d aome British noble* hare no ] Yet In me yon see There's a real grandM. Quite m long ago Aa the lint rainbow My rac* began to be, yon may • A»d down the ages e'en to KM, ttt&ight aa the line of jxdijwifc ( h, it's plain to see I'm a real grande®, -<**• " Saueho Panza." iinnertf" : hei^feead. THE CONVICT'S CHILD. It was morning. "Is this the way, mr, to Sing Sing?" » " Tea," roughly replied a broad-faoed * ooantryman, and passed on. It was afternoon. The ohild was some what fragile in her appearance. Her bon net was of broken straw, her shoes were much torn ; the son played hotly on her forehead. She walked on an hoar long er. Is this the way to Sing Sing, sir ?" " Yes, little girl, but what are yon jro- ingthere for?" The child trudged on, her lips qniver ing, but not deigning to answer the pleasant-faced old man who had stopped the jogging of his horse to *not© her har ried manner, and who bad likad that lit tle face, anxious and sad as its expression was. The dew had fallen. Kate had fallen, too, almost. A rough stone by the way, imbedded in moss, received her tired lit tle frame. She looked so worn and tired, sitting there, her tangled hair falling on her hands that were clasped over her face. By the shaking of her frame the tears were coming, too, and she was bravely trying to keep them back. " Why, what is this dear little girl do ing here ?" The exclamation came from a pair of young lips. " A curiosity, I declare !" exclaimed a harsher voice, and Katie, looking up suddenly, cowered, away from the sight of the young lady and her agreeable- looking companion. " Whatever are you doing here, little girl ?" asked Nell May wood, moving a little nearer toward the frightened child. "Going, Miss, to Sing Sing," suid Kate. " Why, George ! this child is going to Sing Sing--ten miles off. Child, did you know it was so far off ?" Katie shook her head, and wiped away the hot and heavy tears, one by - '" Why, you little goose ! what are you going to Sing Sing for ? Have you had your supper ?" Katie shock her head. " Have you liad any dinne Again the child shook ~ " No breakfast, Whjr, George, the poor thing must be almost starved !" " I should think so," mechanically re plied her brother, just recovering "from a yawn, and showing signs of sympathy. " Look here, what's your name ?WeH, girl, you must come up to the house and get something to eat. Follow me, and well take care of you to-night somehow, and see about your going to Sing Sing to-morrow." Katie followed. What a glorious vision burst upon her view! The palatial house ; the rocks reddening in the low western sun; the shining river; the signs of luxury on every hand. Susan, give this child a good sup per; she is hungry and tired, too, I im agine. After that i will see what can be done for her." Susan wore a mild face. She looked pleasantly down at the poor, tired little one, and taking her hand, which trem bled now, led her into the kitchen. Meanwhile her story, or that brief part of it which we know, was being told in the drawing room. The sylph like figure in white, lounging gracefuily in the midst of delicate cushions, ac companied her narration with express ive gestures* and now and then a little laugh. " I should like to" know what she is g«ng to Sing Sing for," she said, lean ing languidly back. "We must look h«r up something or other to wear--a bonnet, a pair of shoes, and then maybe •we can manage to have her carried some distance. Oh! such an odd little thing." " Who is that, my daughter ? " " Oh, papa, you are come home! Why, I was talking about a little mite of a child ; she can't be more than ten years old, if that! I saw her out here sitting on a moss rock, the most forlorn object. She says she is going to Sing Sing." "I met her on my way," said the pleasant faced old man ; " she asked me about it, and I would have stopped her, but she trudged on. Where is she ? It w«as noon when I saw her." "In the kitchen, papa. Susan is tak ing good care of her, I think, and when she has had a hearty supper we will talk with her." A gay trio of young girls came in. The nettings were put up, the gas was burning brightly, and music and mirth banished all thoughts of care. Suddenly Nell May wood remembered the odd little figure, and clasping her hands said, "Oh, I've something to show you; girls!" and disappeared. Susan was picking gooseberries near the pantry in the kitchen. " Where is the child, Sasie?" asked Nel 1 Maywood. "On tiie doorstep. Miss." " Why, no, Susan, there's nobody to be seen." "No! Miss.," Sosah placed her pan down, held her apron up to catch the «fcems of the berries, and walked delib erately to the door. Why, she sat there sometime after supper. I turned and came in; she was sitting there, looking up, up at the stars, 1 expect. 1 thought she was a mighty quiet child; but she's deep, deep, Miss Nellie ; she's gone. Let me see, there ain't any silver around--I should be afraid she'd took something; they're mighty artful." "Why, didn't you tell her she might stay all night ?" Nell Maywood was peeping here and there to spy her if pos sible. "Yes, Miss Nell, and told her what a good bed there was over the woodshed; but she looked strange out of them large eyes of hers." "The poor child is in trouble," said NeH, quite sorrowful that she oould not farther relieve her necessities. " I'd have given her something to wear,' and we could have sent her to Sing Sing; and perhaps she will come back again-- if so. will you send her to me ?" "If she do, I will, Miss," answered Susan, going at the gooseberries again. But little Kate did not come bank She had been watching her opportunity to get off, and had already been gone gome time. She slept in an open field • crawled in some hay ; she would have walked all night if she had dared, bat she was afraid of the darkness. "Mr. Warden, there's a queer ease onr at my house," said a bluff-looking Jellow, meeting the warden of Sing Sing prison. " We found her last night iin some ont of-the way place, and noth ing would do but my wife must take her in. We can't find out her name, except that it is Kate, and I expect that she . wants to see somebody in prison. Bat we can't get anything out of her--where ishe's come from or anything about it." " Bring her over here," said the war den--" my wife is wanting a little girl for help; maybe she's just the one." Se Kate stood, trembling more than ever, in a few moments, in the presence , of the warden and jailer. Kate was a pretty child. Her blue eyes wore an expression of intense melancholy; her hair had been nicely combed and curled, acid some one had pat a good pair of shoes on her feet, " Well, my little girl," said the war den, kindly--for he was prepossessed in her favor--" where have you come from ? " " New York," said the child faintly. The men looked at each other incred ulously. " Do you mean to say that yon nave come to Sing Sing from New York on foot ? " "Yes, sir," said the child, frightened nt his manner; which had in it some thing of severity. " And what have yon come for ? M " To s^e my father." The child burst forth with one great sob, and for a mo ment her little frame was shaken with a tempest of feeling. " And who is your father ? " asked the warden kindly. " He is Mr. Loyd," said the child, as soon as she could speak for her rushing sobs. The warden looked at the jailer. " Loyd; there are three Loyds here-- Jim, Bondy and Dick," said the jailer. "That may not be their proper names," responded the warden. "That's so," said the jailer, "but I can try 'em all. Little one, was your father's name Jim ?" The child nodded her head, or they thought she did; she was all oonvulsed with the reaction brought on by the sud den termination of her journey. " If it's Jim he's a bad one," said the jailer in a low voice ; " he's in irons this morning for 'tempting to break jail; he don't deserve a little girl like that one, the villain. Gome, child, I'll go and find your father." He took Kate's shaking hand; with the other she dashed the tears away as fast as they fell. It frightened her al most into calmness to see the ponderous door at which the jailer applied the key, and the stillness of the stone passages ; the dimness thrown over all; the con stant succession of bars and bleak, black walls were terrible to a sensitive mind like hers. How the heavy tread of the jailer, and the tread of the warden behind him, echoed through the gloom and the space ! It was, in truth, a great tomb through which they moved--a tomb in which were confined living hearts--whose throbs could almost be heard iii the awful stillness. On,; on they went, now through that passage way and then through the other. Every thing spoke of crime--of fierce passions subdued and held in stern control-- everything from the grim face of the fe rocious watchdog to the sentinel armed. Then they turned and went up the stairs, the jailer holding the scared bird close to his 6ide with a tender clasp, the warden following. Another tramp, and at last they came to a standstill. The jailer rapped at the cell door. Slowly the figure of a man, with a harsh, hair- covered face, appeared. " Here's your little girl come to see you," said the jailer. " Little girl! hem! you're grc>en," said the man, in glum accents. " I've got no little girl, or you wouldn't catch me here." "Father," said the childish voice. It sounded so sweet, so childish, in that terrible prison. But, as the scowling face came close to the bars, the child hid her face quickly in the jailer's arm, half- sobbing, it wasn't him. " We'll try the next one." He walked farther on, and spoke more pleasantly this time: "Well, Bondy, here is little Kate; don't you want to see her ?" "Little Katie--" there was a long pause. " I had a Kate once--not a little Katie; I broke her heart--God pity me! Go on, it can't be for me." Again the sweet voice rang ont: "Father." The prisoner came np close to the bars; a youthful face, framed with light wavy hair--i face in which the blue eyes looked innocent--a face that it seemed a sin to couple with a foul deed, gazed out. It was a child's earnest, pleading, tearful eyes; a dark expres sion rolled like a wave across his brow; a groan came up from his bosom, and with a low moan -he staggered against his bed, crying: "Take her away; I can't stand the sight of anything pure like that." Kate had hidden her face a second time, as she feebly cried, " It isn't him;" so they kept on to a third cell. "Jim, here's a little girl--Kate, yoor daughter--wants to see you." A stupid " what!" came from the bed; the man had probably just awakened. "Your little girl." " And how did you leave--her, -your mother V* The question was fearfully asked, but not responded to. He gazed eagerly in the child's tape; her little lip was quivering. "Katie, tell roe, quick 1" " She died, father." A groan--a terrible groan--followed ; the man's head fell in the lap of his child, and he wept with strong cries. The jailer and the warden said that they never saw a sight so wofuL And the child tried to comfort him, till his strength seemed to be gone, aud his sobs were like gasps. AW OPRH lEl'lEK, lect ptive nature has often prevented a careful analssis of what causes them, and. as a re sult, intense suffering and final disaster have u-ually ensued. The real cause, how- evi r, has been a deraugeinent of the kidneys, and all of these troubles are, in fact, the first of tim nighwal Blandinf. When tlte people ef America beoome ao thor oughly aroused, and on a subject of audi se rious importance as the preservation of their livea and health, it ia but natural that the ones who have been largely instrumental in the ori gin of this movement should speak frankly and directly to the people most interested. It is for tlus reason that we thus come before the public and make the following revelations. Every careful observer who has sought to keep pace with the march or events has notod the alarming increase of certain peculiar phy- Oh, Katie, when did she die ? Oh, I pc^Ueii'-i' s within the past few years. Thew mv poor Mav ' mv ooor ciri I*' I !r°n,,|e'4 "aVt oome at nrtexpected moments and *««ri *i , in a most treacherous wsv. Thev have mani- Ever so long ago, I think; ever so fee-ted themselves in innumerable lorms, but many weeks, replied the child; ..." but j they have always had the ranie cause. Thev she told me to come and see you, and ' have not afflicted the minor parts of the bodv, comfort you." I but bayc S°11U direct to tue strongholds of the "Oh "this is hard- verv hard- *Tia al BysUfm? "n<* their 1?ork ha8 usually been as ways forgave^me." I The.r treacherous and " She told me to pray for you, too; she told me to ask you would you be real good after yon came out, and meet her in heaven." nuuu.v* a.™ m IHC ino n " In heaven! I in heaven?" groaned J symptoms of the ten it>le Bright'* disease, which the man, giving way in his agony. The ' has east its dark shadow over so many homes child was angel-guided. Her soft fouch ! the land and ia increas ng wonderfully aud was better for his soul's good than the °?a'inuall-v- 11 *8 ncJw conceded by the ablest fcjl, «"•>.•He had been ' £ naruened; lier little love melted down result of blood poisoning. This poisoning ia the adamant, had found the good locked ! brought about by wasted and unhealthy kid- np in his nature, and she had sent her i pyysjtnat permit the poison to remain ia the sweet smiles through its prison door. Long he sat there, his head in the lap of his beautiful, quiet child. None dared disturb him; jailer a|id warden walked to and fro. \ " Father, when you ooihe out I'll take care of you." He lit ted his head ; his eyes, red with weeping, were fastened on her face. "Mother said I might" " God's blessing on you, my preciou? darling ; you may save your miserable father!" " I will, father." The warden cleared his throat; the jailer spoke roughly to one of the pris oners--it was to hide his emotion. " You had better oome now," he added, goiug to the celL " Katie, you must go ; will you come again, my child?" " Can't I stay, father ?" ^ " No, dear; but you shall oome- and see me again." They took her gently from the dark cell; she sobbed very quietly. In the warden's room stood a pleasant-faced old man. "I have come after that little girl," he said. " She must go home with ine. I'll take good care of her; I've heard her story, and when her father comes out, if he's a mind to behave himself, I'll give him plenty to do. Beside that, I'll bring her up onoe a week to see him. What say, little one, will you go with me ?" And good old Mr. Maywood stroked her hair as he said, pityingly, " Poor child ! poor child !" Ten miles from Sing Sing prison there is now a little cottage occupied by an industrious man and his daughter. Little Katie is fulfilling the command of her dying motlier. She is taking care of him as well as of herself.--Maine Farmer. blood instead of throwing it off from the sys tem. Bur it is equally evident to all who have studied into the effects and Have Lecome con versant with the facts that a disordered state of the kidneys tnd liver produces most of the common cotnplainta and pains which afflict the human race, and they can be traced to this source just as certain ly aa can Bright's disease. To purify a stream we must go to its source, and to cure a disease we must remote the cause. R being true, therefore, that nine-tenths of all human ail ments are caused by diseased kidnevs or liver, the only certain way to cure these troubles is by treating the organs which cause them. How intimately the kidneys are associated with the entire system may be understood from the fact that over 1,000 ounces of blood pass through them every hour, being more than 200 gallons, or nearly one ton in the course of twenty-four hours. This vast mass of living fluid is sent to every part of the body, and if the kidneya are diseased the impurities that are in the blood are not removed, and henoe pass through the veins, carrying disease in some one of its many terrible "forms. The horrors of society or man about school, so to speak, looking down upon football. These, characteristics abide with him until he gets in the sixth, and the eleven, or gets a scholarship, or takes to writing poetry, or to reading about evolution, or to collecting china wherewith to furnish his study. And so he ceases to be a I o , and becomes an undergraduate, forget ting his grubby ways and barbarous rules of conduct. Bat in all stages he is loyalthe unwritten laws of his tiibe, and will endure all things rather than reveal anything lo a master.or pastor.-- London haturdny R< view. The Elder Booth. • George Alfred Townsend relates a con versation had in New York with John E. Owens, this well-known actor, in which the following occurs: " Mr. Owens, has Booth been exag gerated by the old men witnesses of his acting ? Suppose he was to play at the present day beside his son, Edwin Hooth--or suppose we could bring old Booth out of the grave and put him to play beside his son, Edwin Booth, when Ned was in the vigor of his health-- wliich could excel ?" Thinking a moment, Mr. Owens said : " I rather think old man Booth would hold his own against any of these new comers. I have seen him play, though it is a rather faint recollection to me now. He was a small man, not much over five feet high, and I have been in the theater when he was surrounded with men like John 1>. Scott--tall, splendid- looking men--aud he playing a promi nent part in the middle of them would rather inspire a smile ; but as the play proceeded he seemed to rise up, and they correspondingly to sink down, un til he looked to be the largest man on the stage. He owed much of his Oh bearing a brainless millionaire that he gave $10,000 every year in char* ity as a religious duty, the Bishop of Peterboro said that it was the largest in* snrance against fire he ever heard of. « H I E D 1 C A L D I S C O V E R Y " has been used with signal success in consump tion of the lungs, consumptive nigiit sweats, spitting of blood, shortness of breath, wtak lungj, oongus, bronchitis and kindred affeo- tions of throat and oheot. Sold by druggets. Pevzral propo rtions to improve Niagara Pails have been put forth recently. Just how the great wcndei can be " improved " is not ap parent, but the killing of a few hackmen might mtke the place mora attractive to YicitorO.-- Jforriitown Herald. 7 aCS, t WkUI. h, "Men must work and women weep, So rtius the woild awav !" But they n-.ed not weep so* much if they use CJloou. qalcJt m llM Dr. Eierces "Favorite Prescription, which «nd lurfintr ' * cures all the painful maladies peculiar to worn- ! .g &ad ^Permanent in its cures, the Bit an article that ia having a greater ceaa than any other preparation of a like mta* for the time it tu^a been before the people. M has cured, and ia atill curing to-day, men ob stinate cases of Indigestion and Dypcpaia tlMM any other preparation known. It ia guaratttedl to give satisfaction, or money will be refunded, t0t foUowin8 ailments: Liver and Kidnap Complaints, Impurity of Blood, including P)&» pies and Blotches, or other skin eruptions, I» digestion, Dyupepaia, etc. It ia not a bevecag* nor a violent purgative. Is pleasant to taka^ safe and sure in it* effects, quick in its i painful i Sold by druggists. Once in a whi'e the New Orleans Picayune j hits a ph.losophical fact in tiifl legs. "The ; bes remedy for a sting is to poultice the waap belore it gets its work in," is the latest. Tiie huge, drastic, griping. *• iekening pills are fast btiug superceded by Dr. Pierce's tive Pellets." Sold by druggists. pardner, strength to his remarkable countenance.^ maul for his age, but he'll There was a sounding of rattling irons that made the girl shiver. Dimly ap. peared the face and outlines of a well- made man--the countenance handsome but evil. He seemed not to compre hend. But as fast as the chains would permit him he came forward and looked out at the anxious face below. With a loud conclusive cry she ex claimed : " Father ! father !" and fell nearly senseless against the jailer. "Katie!" exclaimed the man, and there was a nervous twitching about the muscles of the mouth. " Whatever has brought you here ?" The jculer was calling the child to consciousness. "Shall we let her come in there?" asked the warden. Jim was dashing his hand across his face. A smothered " \es," issued from his lip^. They opened the ponderous door and put the child within. Her arms wereS outstretched, his were wide open, ana they came together with a clanking sound--together about the form of that poor little child. " Oh, father! " " Oh, Katie ! Katie !" and then there was a quiet crying. By-and-by, the man lifted the little bead, whose glossy curls were falling on his shoulder--and oh ! what a sharp rattle of chains smote on the ear--and looked in her face. After a moment's irresolution he kissed her, and then his eyes fell under her earnest, loving look. " Katie, what made yon come ? " " Wanted to see you, father," and the head was on his shoulder again. "How did you come, Katie? Never mind the noise, they are locking np; they will be here again and let yon out How did you come, Katie ? " " I walked here." " From New York, ohild?" » "Yes, father." There was no sound, save that of the chains, as be strained her closer to his bosom. How to Escape Nervousness. The first prescription is an ample supply of pure, fresh and cool air. ^The nerves will always be weak if the greater part of the day and night be passed in close, ill-venulated und overheated apartments. The nerves, more than the rest of the body, to be properly nour ished, require a full supply of oxygen. They will not endure vitiated air, wheth er the impurities come from sewers, gas lights, subterranean furnaces or the in dividual's own person, without making an energetic protest. A gas-burner consuming four cubic feet an hour pro- dnoes more carbonic acid in a given time than is evolved from the respira tion of eight human beings. Bear this in mind you who suffer from nervous ness, that when you have shut your selves up in your rooms and lighted an argand burner (which consumes about twelve cubic feet of gas per hour) you are to all intents and purposes immured with twenty-three other persons, all taking oxygen from the atmosphere. Is itawonder that in several hours'exposure to the depraved air your nerves should rebel, as far as their weak state permits, and that your head should ache, your hands tremble, and that your daugh ter's playing on the piano almost drives you wild? An overheated apartment always en ervates its occupant*. It is no uncom mon thing to find rooms heated in win ter by an underground furnace up to 90 degrees, l ights and murders are more numerous in hot weather than in cold weather, and the artificially-heated air that rushes into our room, deprived as it is of its natural moisture by the baking it has undergone, is even more produc tive of vicious passions. It is no sur prising circumstance, therefore, to find the woman who swelters all day in such, a temperature, and adds to it at night by superfluous bed clothing, cross and dis agreeable from little every-day troubles that would scarcely ruffle her temper if she kept her room at 65 degrees opened windows every now and then. Dr. Hammond, in Our Continent. The Earth's Surface. Prof. Charles S. Hastings, in a recent lecture at John# Hopkins University, gave an outline of the leading theories in regard to the physical character of the earth. Although there are a great many theories, they may be reduced to two distinctive ones. According to the first, the interior of the earth is a fluid covered with a thin crust, about thirty miles or thereabout in thickness. The advocates of the second theory hold that the earth is practically a solid sphere. Among the reasons given for sustaining the first theory, the following are, perhaps, the principal, namely : As we go down in mines, wells and other underground caverns, it has been as certained that the heat increases in a ratio of one degree for every 100 feet of descent below the sun's influence. This theory is also supported by thd occur ence of volcanic eruptions and earth quakes, and the existence of hot springs. Those who put forth the second theory also support it by two arguments. They hold that if the center of the earth were a liquid and the outer Burface a solid, the heavier portion would go to the cen ter. Again, the weight of the crust of the earth is about two and one-half times that of water; the weight of the earth is known. From this, it may be deduced that in order to make up the entire weight, it must be seven times as heavy as water at the center. The lect urer briefly discussed the two theories, and said that, if the two theories were modified, they oould be reconciled, and that this mean would probably be the true theory. The interior of the earth is most probably a fluid of the consis tency of tar. It is «""d that the poison of a bee sting may be forced out by pressing the barrel of a small key firmly for a minute over the wound. A T.rmt spent worthily should be meas ured by a nobler line, by deeds, not words. --Sheridan. On that small, low body he had a large, complete head, in which the lines and character seemed to lie in chunks. He had even power over the texture of his skin, and his eyes were glorious and black, and would shoot fire. His sob Edwin has a very fine head, and the Booth boys generally get a good, large head from their father,". " Do you remember Mrs. Booth, the which accompany most of the diseases caused f mother of these boys by disordered kidneys and liver cannot be des- j •« Mv recollection of W ia „i^ cribed in print, while the dangers surrounding ^ J8 that she n§ ! was a ruddy-cheeked, English-looking woman; but I oannot recollect the color of her hair. Booth bought a farm north of Baltimore, and it is said that he thought he was buying another farm when he got a lawyer to prepare the deeds, and moved his effects into a house, where a man carried them off. Many of tiie stories told about him are inventions or legendary. There is one thing about him I have not seen print ed. He held to every dollar he made with tenacity. Peculiar and extravagant as he was under certain conditions, he put his hand on the dollar and hung to it, and so he brought up his family much better than might have been expected of a man apparently so careless." " Was there not a little vein of lunaoy in him ?" "I think there was. His sou, John Wilkes Booth, who killed President Lin coln, had that vein pretty strongly marked. I never had much doubt but Dmtkd hose finds slow sale. It is too much trouble to pry one's toe* apart with a slick, and you've got to sit down on the floor at last to pull 'em on. component ingredients being highly soothing to the system. They derive their virtues chiefly from the rare merits of the old Burdock phurf, combined and chemically prepared with other great curative medicines. Our grandmothers and grandfathers used the Burdock root Purga^ ' the latest success. Burdock Blood. Btfc- 1 ters is a compound that is giving sach universal satisfaction that the proprietors instruct all druggists to refund money when relief is not given by its use. Sold by all droggista. Corns! Corns I Corns! Every one suffering from painful corns will be glad to learn that there is a now aud pain less remedy discovered by which ttie very xorat class of corns m y be removed enti:eiy, in a short time and without pain. PrTSAM's Pajh- Less Cons Extractor has already been used by thousands, and each person who has f.ivou it a trial becomes anxious to recommend it to others. It is the only sure, prompt and pain- lens cure for ctuns l;:io vn. Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor is to d everywhere. 'My " A little girl asked her mother, "What of a bear is a oonst crated cross-eyed bear?** The mother replied that she had never heard of such an animaL Th« child insiste d that ther sang about it at the Sunday-school. "Nov saiu the mother. "It is 'A mag I bear.'" remarked the wedge, "ia _ . it he'll hit anything that stands up at hun. He never rails back, he just comes down with a blow." "The wedgersome Trouble Saved. It is a remarkable fact to at Thohas* Eclio- tbic Oil is as good for internal as external use For diseases of the lungs and throat, and for rheumatism, neuralgia, cnek in the bac^ wounds and gores, it is tho best known ren^edy, and much trouble is saved by having it always on hand. them are even greater than the agony. An yet a person may be troubled for months with out knowing the causo of the diseases that have attacked him. Some of the symptoms of the first btages, any one of which indicates disor dered kidneys or liver, are these ; Pains in die back and around the loins, severe headaches, dizziness, inflamed eyes, a coated tongue and a dry mouth, loss of appetite, chilly aensations, indigestion (the stomach never is in order wheu the kidneys or 1 ver are deranged), a dryness of the skin, nervousness, night sweats, muscular debility, despondency, a tired feeling especially at night, puffing or bloating under the eyes, etc. If any of the following things are noticed about the fluids passed from the sys tem, it shows that the kidneys and liver are out of order : A red deposit, a scum upon the sur face, an unusual thickness or thinness, a very dark or a very light color, a burning sensation in passing, an unusual odor, a retention, or a fr« quent desire to void and inability to do bo. Tne above are a few of the hundreds of symptoms which indicate the beginning of ag gravated cases of kidney or liver difficulties, aud they require instant attention. If these symptoms are not chocked at once, they are al most certain to result in some one of the many In view of the frrqnent Ivnchings in the • Somnwest, we are inclined to" believe that tha compliment, 'Wll^o in anywhere i^hln j ninety per cent greater number who break out.--Jforristown Jleratd. t GIRD 1 hriHdtonr aet of CARDS ijr >Uect<>rs, 3c stamp. A. Q. Harnett, Rochester. It.T. A Hive of Bcea Burdock Blood Bitters Bring Back health, when the_ Body is Badlv disordered By impure Blood. Biliousness, iiflligestion, constipation, ' T, ~~~ . J' Bad disorders cuied by YOUNfi MEN 5# Burdock Blood Bitters. Price, $1.00. j Sation. addresa VALENTINE BROS . JanesTUle. Wfe. "The first and worst of*all frauds ia to cheat one's self," aaith Philosopher Bailey. We don't doubt that; but tnen the nion-y doesn't go oat of the family. The Effect of Small-Pox Overcome. St. JosEra, Mo., May 19, 1881. H. H. Warxkr & Co.: Sirs--Small-pox left me with weakened kidneys, and only your Safe Kidney and Liver Core gave me permanent re lief. -- VfnxiAM Kennedy. $225" month-- agents wanted--no !** •lllng Articles in the world; I timp!*free* 'd1ie*sJ»> Detroit Jffeife. DDRKSS Rpyaaa a m phia AR ^LSTotMAPLEWQOD Yotmir LnDA* INSTITUTE^ terrible diseases of tho kidm.vn. But, unpleas- i A I uu these diseases ! t'lat llls msane streak affected his de ating Thich ant as all the symptoms and even may be, they are as nothing compared to the last stages of the complaints. The kidneys waste away by degrees, accompanied by intense pains; the heart become uncontrollable ; the lungs are oppressed ; the eyeballs grow glassy, and the entire system ia reduced and debilitated. For weeks before death comes the sufferer looks forward to it as a blessed relief, and anything tHat can furnish even temporary help is gladly hailed. Then it is that bloating begins ; the face becomes puffy and pallid ; t.he breath can onlv be caught in gasps, speech is impossible and muscular action suspended. The patient finally sinks into a state of unconsciousness to everything except the pains which are racking him, and death comes by certain but slow de grees. There can be but one conclusion which all readers of care and judgment will draw from these facts, which is the necessity of treat! the disease in time and by that means has been proven the best and most efficient. It has been our privilege to treat more cases and effect more cures of this terrible complaint than has ever been known before in the history of the world. The wonderful sale which our remedies have attained is due wholly to the fact that thev have cured the ones who have used them. 1 he power and value of any remedy must rest wholly on a basis of worth, and here is Just where our Safe Kidney and Liver Cure has found its wonderful power and suocess. But in this connection comes one import ant fbet: It lias alwa\s been true that articles of merit are subject to imitations. No one seeks to counterfeit the bills of a worthless bank. The productions of a cracked inventor or witless writer are never copied. It is just so with a healing remedy. If it possestes no merit it will not be subjected to imitations. If. however, it has power aud value, imitations will spring up on every side. While it is a tribute to the value of this medicine that it has imita tions, still, in justice to those who are suffer ing, we feel that all should be warned againa them. There is but one known remedy that has ever been able to cure serious kidney troubles or control these great organs when on«e deranged, and that remedy is Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. There are numerous nostrums on the market claiming to be just as efficient and some winch even claim to be the same. The test of nii 'it, however, is in what has been ac complished, and we therefore sav unhesitating ly that for all diseases of the kidneys, liver and urinary organs Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure stands alone, not only in point of excel lence, bnt in the wonderful results it has achieved. In order to successfully avoid the purchase of spurious and injurious medicines, observe these facts: Our remedy is put up in dark amber glass bottles, with the Safe (our trade mark) blown to the back. A private proprietary six-cent in ternal-revenue stamp is affixed to the neck and covers the top of the cork and is of a light brown color. In the middle thereof is a Safe in outline, and on- it the picture of a negro gathering herbs. If thix sSamp :s not found on every bottle of the Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, or if there is any evidence that it has been tam pered with, and if a Safe Is not blown on the back of the bottle, reject the bottle at onoe, and insist on having a genuine one. We are led to publish the foregoing in order that the public may know and realize just where we stand. We have always sought to keep our personality from obtruding upon the public, knowing full well that the value of our remedy was the essential thing, bnt the unexampled nt-e which has been made of this medicine, and the volume of letters we are constantly receiv ing demand a personal statement from us. We are jrn-tlv gratified at the confidence wliich has been shown us, and thankful for the myriads of cures our remedy has performed, and wo pledge ourselves for the future, as we have en deavored in the past, to furnish the best and only valuable remedy that can control and cure signs on the President. He was with me in Boston during the war, and his conversation at that time was about making money in oil, and the two or three points which he stuck to down to the time of the murder. Although he is dead, and died under these repre hensible circumstances, I can say of John Wilkes Booth that he was one of the most mature boys I ever knew. From his childhood up he was manly, matured, grown. His father had a brother m Baltimore who kept an anti quarian bookstore--I think at the cor ner of Elbow lane and Calvert street. He was one of those cranky men, also, and was now and then sending to Pater noster row for books for some old book worm of Baltimore; and he was a book worm, too, and was always screwing his black eyes down at some old, letter-text. Booth left a son named Joseph, who has the business instinct. You never see him on the stage, but he is very attent ive around the box-office." (teribaldl's Wounds. Garibaldi, in the course of his ad venturous life, received ten wounds. Two wounds in the neck and throat, at first believed to be mortal, were re ceived in 1835, in Oruguay, in a sea fight against the Dictator ; two wounds in the right arm at the sea fight of Bio Plata in 1836--every officer and man near Garibaldi being killed or wounded; one wound in the abdomen, on April 30, 1849, while fighting against It is the female mosquito whioh gives herself dead away by singing ' * Moltie Darling " around a fellow's head betote she indulges m a bite. Catarrh of the Bladder. Stinging irritation, inflammation, and all Kidney and Urinary Conipiaiutw cured by " Bu- clinpaiba." $1. Drnggista. Send for pam phlet to E. & Wells, Jersey City. U. J. A man ia most anxious to learn that which he knows will make him most unhappy. This made the poet say that where ignorance is bliaa it is blasted foolishness to be wise. / Thousands of infanta and children die at this season of the year from Cholera Iufantum or summer complaint. This fearful disease can be cured by Dr. Wmchell's Teothing Syrup, which never fails to give immediate avea in the most severe cases. Sold by all Druggists. Thb ragmen of St Louis have formed a ring to keep down the price of old clothes, and lead ing citizens are so indignant that they are wearing patched garments and old hats with the brima toin off. ENCINES^^iSS writoTre - UI.TM AN 4 TAYLOR CO. OPIUM : noBrmm Treatise on tbefr _ speedy cure 8KNT FREE. D ^OWIU* .P.O.Box IS^Ofaici WA\TK1>-A well-qua] lied Atrent, Int'f (IFgait'v man, to represent our Compar y in this t< wn and •urround n* country. Bnsinera permanent nnd pitTiKir- din iy nip*motion insured. Inclose pt.ro;> for terra». lUOKETON Appliance Co, S118 State St., (Jfeicago, nt. STOCK-OWNERS or Poultry und largely increase yield of M tk anfl Butter or nnd fat.' Send for my bonk. K M. . Mil-!Ui"K, :I46 DUlwyn Stieet, Pb.ladelphta, Pa. TEAS 10 10 10 In atmcdanec.--83 Million pounds Imported last year.--Priest loin* than ever.--Apents wauted.--Doal _ _ waste time.--&-nJ. for dnujsr. ^ U»s, Good Black or Mixed, for IjL Uu, Fine Black or Mixed. f«r lbs.4 ~ • Pens cod-ijver oin, from selected livers, on tho seashore, by Caswell, Hazard A Co., N. Y. Abroiutt:iy pure and sweet. Patients who have onee taken it preterit to all others. Physicians deotar* it superior to all other oila. It is the opinion of the Atlanta Constitution; " Be* ore we hRve any real peace inthisooun- try, seventeen or eighteen psychological export* will have to be hung up to cooL" Eilkrt's Daymcht Liykr I'ilt.s are a relia ble remedy lor l>;honinesx, headache, constipa tion and liver diseases, and are the best pre ventive of fevers known. Sold by Druggists. Beechkb says: "Woman can sympathize with woman." But she won't. When a woman gets a bonnet that is ngly and unbecoming, every one of her sex who knows it is glad of it. Prkbrrve your harnem by using Uncle Sum's Harne.su Oil. whici. closes the pores, keeps ont dllKt or dampness, making it soft and pliable. Bold by Harness Makers. The Queen of Italy is said to be fond of the picturesque. Then the sight of a fat man with a long mustache trying to eat soup ought to fill her with delight. Houses, ea>tle. sht-ep and hc^x are cured of disteni|ier, coughs, enM*. levers and most other diseasos by Un.-le Sam's Condition Powder. Sold by DrogRiKts. Cbulco Black or ffllxed, for $3* .... pound sample, 17 eta. extra for postajW. Then get tip a dub. vVo»C€at £C-us in the wona,** Largest variety.--Pleases ^verybody.--OMoel Tm House in America.--No clirouio.--Huaibug.--» Straight businesB.--Valu6 for monej. -jj BOB'I WELLS, 48\e»iy SU,K.*.,P.O. Bex 1MI GOOD NEW* -- TO -- XjADZKS! Get up Clubs for CKL&- BR ATED TEAS, and secure a "Mess Scu or ficli B»sl Tot S«C (44 ?>i*cesi, our <; wn *!•» of the**? beautiful lea Seta giwn aV»f i Club for $95.00. Beware of u CHEAP TEAS " that are being advertised--the? sre danff*rc«t» and to health--slow pMsotj. Deal only nllablt Eouktr nn<l with first bands If No htm-.tms. The Great American Tea Co., Importoia r. a Bun MS, H & U YUfckY NT., K«w Vol*. MAKrHENSW An F.nirHih Veterinary Snrgwm and Cbeuifet, now srave.'ms In this connlrjt, »»>» tu»t most of tt»> Hor>* and Cattle Powders sold h»re nre w..rt:.l«® tr >-h lie •nys that Shetidun's V omiti-n Powders are hbstUntWr pure und Immense j- valu.ihlp. Xot.'nnir on e.-rth win Bialteh nalayl keSh«iid n*. C ndltw.n Powd. r». Do##, one tfasiiotinful to one p at oi food. Sol; »ve«wL'«:e or sent by njail for 8 letter •tamp*. 1. S JOHNSON * OOt, Button, Mao, formerly Bangor. Ma. [ NGSL BDT T'nE P K' '"RCAT f A M I Lv Edith--It is the easiest thing in the world to ,, ~ T i tell a man of brains from a fool, half a tquare the rrencn on tli8 Jftniculuni. Xhs j off. A man of brains never acts as if he owned S& +J ̂ FF COkC EnI hATf i l*i ',0 1D 6> * ^ :: •i N A . 3 A L f r . f • wound was not dangerous, but exces sively painful, and Garibaldi concealed his sufferings until the battle was over. On May 8, 1849, at Valletri, he was knocked off his horse by the Neapolitans, and trampled on. He received one bayonet and one sword wound, and was rescued by a band of mere boys who were engaged in the fight On Aug. 29, 1862, he was wounded in the thigh by one of the Royal Bersaglieri. second bullet, rebounding, broke t] ankle bone and remained in the woun When extracted it exactly resembled shape a cap of liberty. On Jnly 4, 186; on his birthday, Oariboldi was hit ' the whole street--Philadelphia 1Veto#. Chapped hands, face, pimples and rough •km t-urea by using Ju:ti;>er Tar Soap, made by Caswell. Hazard &. Co., New York. the Tyrol by an Austrian bnllet was a flesh wound in tiie thigh. A religious tract, called, "Put Not Your Trust in Princes," was thrown into the saloon of a simple old Oerman. He read the title and soliloquized : "Veil, I don't put some trust in Buncts. Day must pay der cash in dis shop chust der same as vite mans." Where machinery ia used the Drew Oil Cup will save 5u per cent, of oil. Write lor circular. Borden, Selleck & Co., Cuicago, 1U. Nothing but pure politeness makea a bald- headed man hft his hat onjneeting with a young P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE HISTORY" "WORLD Addr It | lady. alt the many aud teriible troubles arising from disorders of these great organs. Binoerely, H. II. Warner & Co., Rochester, N. Y. Boy 8. Though we venture to cleave to the opinion that the average schoolboy, when at school, is literally a young barbarian, it is fair to discriminate. The small boy, before his term at school, is often an imaginative little fellow, fond of reading and even of poetry. He soon gets that knocked out of him, and enters the grubby stage, abjuring sentiment and living chiefly on chestnuts, orange?, toffee, tarts, and "sock" in general. In this stage he is a good deal bullied, and i* initiated by painful ceremonies info the mysteries of the tribe. His hand is against masters and monitors, and every man's hand is ngainst him. When he reads, he reads penny novels about boy pirates. This grubby state gradn. 11 alters as the boy takes to the use of scent, and to decorating his person with gorgeous neckties in the holidays. Soon after this he either becomes an athlete, a fct ident (very rarely), or a mere ornament The Opinion of a Physician. A physician wiitirg of Dr. Ouysott's Yjbllow Dock and Barsaparitla, hav ng carefulJy an alyzed its ingredients, says: "Ifeel euthi^iastic over this great health renewer. ThtWcan be no other remedy so harmless and yet BOfcJt'efr tive. No other possible combination of xhugw will more rapidly asM*t nature in hastemjig the cure of geneial ill-health. In chronic diseases of the lungs, iivei aud kidneys eua nervous system it is etpecialiv beneficial. In its comoo- sition I was especially pleased to find Iron, Cel ery and Juniper combined with the Barsaparilla and Yelluw Dock. Iron of iUelf is 6eldom ben eficial, Lut in connection with such valuable vegetal le tonics its eff cts will at all times have a tendency to promote health and strength." A*k your druggitt to ^et it for you. Mir tiie Others Up. "Excellent sermon this morning," said Deacon Goodwin to his neighbor, as they lingered in the vestibule to shake hands with the brethren. "Well, purty good; purty good. Ain't quite up to old Parson Sloeum. He used to give it to 'em straight. He preached agin wickedness in the land." "To be sure, but this man preaches right to us, personally." " That's jest the trouble. I go to church to hear other folks pitched into. I don't want to be rankled up myself." Just then the minister passed along, and with a dubious shake of the head he cut short his remarks.--New Haven Regis ter. Mr. M. A. Coons, of Ripley, Ohio, writes: "I have been taking Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla for impure blood, weak kidneya and liver complaint 1 found it very effective. What pleased me was its mildness. Wheu 1 left off taking it there was no craving for its further use, nor was there any reaction and consequently no renewal of my complaint. I think a great deal of the medicine and recom mend it strongly." Fobtohk can take away riehe*, but not courage.--Seneca. One trial will convince you that it is the beat. Ask your dealer for the Frazer Axle Grease, and take no other. Every box baa our trade-mark. ! A tall man applied for a position as over- Bet, r of a body of men. " What do you know T* he was asked. "I don't know anything," he replied ; " bnt I guess I'm tall enough to look rOver all the men you've got 1" ft* the mv brand. Spring Tobaooa. Thxy have now brought out a garment meant to take the place of both night-gown and duster, and the heathen of will be ever bo glad. „ J tlonof ancient and modern time*, and Includ rijf a oft* tory of tbe riw* and fall the Gr*ek aud RoaMfli Brnp rep, the middle the cras«des, tem. the re: rm.ttiun. the dboovery aad the New Wortd.etc^ etc. ' * It oonuins G7 ~ nne historical engravings, and tette moet complete li tter? of the \torid erer pttbftfiX iroen und ext r& terme to AzwtBw v. NATIOKAL PUBUtBHiNO CO„ OftUUCOt'lIt c;KAY'S SPECIFIC! MKMCINk. '* TftAOI MARK Obeat Kn-TRADB WMINL GI.1BH RJ-ME1>¥. An uufmling cure i orSeminalW c*k- Hess, SpcrmHton- rhea, Irupoitnioy, und aO iliat folow aa a sequence of £©If- Abuse ; as loss o£, Memmy. Uim L&sa tode.p »»M>Bp«a*ia.« m the Back.l5»u BEFORE TAKllLQeM of vision, *TAfTiB TAUM. mature A^e, and mimy other disease thit lead in&urfy or Consumption and a Premature Grav*. I I particulars in our pamphlet, which we deeir* to send free mail to one, SpeiijBp- Modicine is so'd by all dru^ssts at $\ per ptokftc*. or •&x ptckages for $5, or w Li he sent tree bjr miil iw ceipt of the money, by addressing THE GRAY MEOSCSftf CO., BuM* II. tr On account of ooanterfeita, we have adopted tbe Tal low Wrapp«r; the only genuine. ltd will, fbr SO cenuu •nh tfc, height, , •e'.ut as<t lock ofbair, r«nd a CORfUA'T HC- TURK of* *our future baabarsd «r wife, with name, bsce ud piaee of oiectirg, and d*w> of cam***, p*yeho!fe«<- ImUt prtdictcd. returned u> all bo« satisfied- Nto fMC. L. IbittaM, M HM) n^Mn. mm: No. g WHEN WBlTIHti TO ADVEKTI^KK& please mut Mw the UvviiMliMI ia thifc puper. ESPOSIZIONE MUSiCALE IN MILANO, Sot:ft il Patroelnio di if. M. la Jt-ffitta, Palazzo Dei R. Conservatorto. « AT TNE 6REAT ITALIAN MUSICAL EXPOSITOR, iltecentlr rlo«e<t Milan, waa probibly the MOST EXTRAORDINARY COLLKCTION OF MUSICAL .INSTRUMENTS, (>ld and new, ever brought together; fully iiiuutrtiU'ig ihs proven wnieti has and pr*-*ent hitfh excellence in this department of manufactures. After exh.tu^ivt1 §881. iaas. test* and i parisonp, extend nt: through a period of several months, more (linn WO Awur<l» wrre ttt.tde ot aipk>tnr<.r>, in reoognili 11 of decrees of Fur«r-eice)ienos attained in th-« various departuients ot mu iesl art manufacture. ¥os EM&D INSTRUMENTS, including Organ* and Hanuouioma of &ll de«*&ipUQLS» and THE GRAND SILVER MEDAL, Being the only hifbaat ward la this departm«»t, waa oonf«rnd ipon the <' MASON & HAMLIN ORGANS; Their manufacturers value this extra^rdin.iry distinction the more highly because of the imp.«rt*nee «-J occasion, especially as on INTERNATIONAL MlTSlOAL INDUSTRIAL t'OMPETI TION IN A COUN TRY w PRR.RMINii\\TLY .MCSICAL. The Mason A Hamlin Organs were honored by especial exhibition before th» !i comuiond&'iou irotn their Majesties th? and Quwhi. L KXI>0>1TI0.N> tor fourteen theae Oi-gaaa ha Royal Court by CARLO DUCCI, of Rome, and w . _ At ail the ere^t WOUMI'S INUl>ThlAL i-AIMJM 1ION^ tor fourteen ye*ra theae Oi-gaaa received the II I1K8T HONORS, tk**nly American Orpins which fuM*r«c«iv*d such mi amy. t I lino U ^ fil C &"iTQ Inuring the year just closed this Compauy hava introduced improtweaeata 4# Imrn -.-itmCro Id. greater value than ia acj similar pai-iod ainoa the intvoducslou of las Amriiij Organ by them, twenty years since. pa CQHUT ro are now received from their factories dally, sssvp&ssisag capacity and azeeitaMft tLtvAN I u I V Lw anything whioh has before been produced, and certainly worthy to l>© ranfcedl wt^p •hrt VFRV rrviTRT MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS IN THE WORLD. Theyaj® In of solid VAU1VT, 4c.;»t niic^rrio,. $i*40. 833U, SMii. S3DU. S4SO. S^IU, 9*40 mad nnn|i| • n OTV1 CO bicludine. also, the moat valuable of the Teeaat Improvements. &*>>! te i® POPULAR oTlLto; OUM, public ud^privato^in plain and «!«»»»> mil.tw »t |i8li. I8W. >•» ?» •12. 984. S90. 893. 9UH. SlO^, »ll>d to 9£VO. aad •». • mil niwurilTC These Oi'gaos wld im wih or Muqr p^bmbI*. cm wUS b* noted aatU EASY PATmtN 1 5. pay* for an Oqu. a NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE, MASON * HA1LXM ORGAN AND PIANO CO, r<W Til»ir1 ttraet, BOSTOM; « KaM Utl£ (Uniai •«.). TOSK; M WakMk ~ . J