......... ,v ~,.w- * - • " totereki^andtof* ert liii lond m- »ll" ' •#fe j: «s%*r •IT BILTl'KKT ',. ;Y •» ,- •'niMii Thano-ver. •n (rotom b»<4lMr wtttebBMKOrtMMd, a8t»ac aba vaaafMa »**!**% tall. A!) her a»il t Jkwtfteharare". \r W^afJweoodx^inbwtiiT* " <llon(H«H ware her haip? •ides, Audfctarmu» kiww botelipM. *I»ftbet«r\o ha*e hwd and lo«* ' v • •nUBMiw TO have loved a all?" On bar ks*« Her w ice ban 1* arcaMNb Inhervoioaaplain iv calL ?- j^raS PlwOiiH took d aha to the ski®*, --<•= > . 'Emm,1*1 asd Jto ten tie r 111*. "*?:*$•& Bitthe ear- that fltled her vjm • Vefied the answer In eclipse. f L ' ' Twr« bett«r never to have lov»d <* £"*i nan only to have laved and lost®: • fedeinr * keenest patttoa moved Alt the wo da. By p*-aiou t f&« bah* <klan have iyat, . • Wher- her shattered hope* aiu&l dM TMdythr n#hal re rat, Meet* of tender memoi tea. x l ,u?. '•hs^k. {Wradine oat alone at his easel, painting, and as he painted he thought. Bight years before, when he was a poor •fcpngglinft boy, just entering on that •aee which most be run by every aspir ant to art and honors, there happened to him something which neither time mor toil had ever been able to efface firom hia memory. Aa he was passing •long the streets a wreath Qf fragrant rosea suddenly fell on his head, and, looking up in wonder, he beheld, r«»oh- feg out from the embroidered draperies el an overhanging window, a child, with f*iry-hke proportions, with great dark eyes and long, ear ing black locks, who elood smiling and throwing him kisses from her enrved lips, colored like a pomegranate. While she still gazed a warm had come forward and drawn the child away, the enrtains were closed, (pud he saw the little creature no more. 1 Snch was the "vision that the artist carried BO long in his memory; in memory only, for he had no second glimpse of the child. That very day an •eoident occurred which kept him a prisoner in his room for some weeks, end when be next went out the house was empty, and a placard with great flaring letters announcing it for sale •tared him in the face from the same window in which the little white-robed elf had stood waving her hand and •oiling at him. In the course of time ether fttoes appeared there, but they Here Btrange faces, and among them lias never the one for which he looked. Now, ns Carr&dne sat painting alone, 1B thought of all this, of the struggle that had ended at length in sucoess; of hard unfriended boyhood, and of the beautiful child with her fragrant rose crown, which had seemed almost like a prophecy. That rose wreath, 4ry and withered now, was all that was left to him of the fair vision, but when that morning, in turning over an old portfolio, he had come upon it by chance, it spoko to him of that by-gone £»y just; as eloquentlv as when its blos- feptnft were fresh and full. "Eight years ago," he said, thought fully, letting the shriveled circlet slip through his lingers slowly. "She mqst rs near 16 now--if she lives. If? No, do not doubt her living presence-- Mbmewhere. i wonder where she is jjljiow, and whit she ia like at 16?" - With that, he placed the wreath be- ide his easel, and l>egan to paint. The *oe. as it grew on his canvas, presented A yount? gi-1 in the dewy morning blush cf first youth, with shadows in the great dark eyes aud a half smile about the wight curie. 1 liptt, like an embodied summer sun shower. It was thus that tfce artist pictured his ideal of the oluld woman, whose infantile look and smile for eight long years had been his own dream of love. -• Carradine had not had an easy life. J|n orphan froua his earliest years, poor •tad unfriended, he had studied hard for the means to gratify that inherent iilol- •tary for art winoh was always clamor ing to find esp' esuion in form and ool- Cring. He had;ought and he had won; but now, at 26, he stood in the place which he liad gained for himself almost . as much alone at the very heart as he liad been eight years before, when the Alibi's g ft came to him aa a prophecy.' It was not that he was friendless. Jhere were men who liked and stfiight Kim, women who would have gladly fought I.im to orget hi3 loneliness in their affection. But, though his nature responded readily to any kin tineas, tfiere was one chord, deeper til >n all, tliat remained untouched, and flrom the sweetest glances his thoughts frent l>ack to the unknown child that ftniled down on him so long ago. ^The ideal had become his great source Clf enjoyment, and a dreamy softness $»-,<l"' *V -1 r -'»»• .v evp«, as 'in« l»v Bne and tint by tkit took him back into that past, which, all lifeless ns it was, 4pemed to him, in those moments, more Tfeal than the busy present. Yet now, In reviewing that one bright vision of his memory, it was not so much tlte leveiy child that he saw in fancy as the beautiful girl whose faoe, with fuller 4epth and sweetness, looked out at him i|otn bis own canvas. Instinctively, he hardly knew why, he disliked to work on this picture in any other presence, and he devoted to it only h s hours cf solitude. So it l|iappened tb t it was nearly finished, Hhen, by some chanoe, a friend dis covered him bending over it, too ab- eprbed to notice an appro ich. As the door opened, CSarradine rose hastily, turning his easel to the wall, so as to Oonceal the face upon it. Having been parked by the intruder--one of those Cordial, well-meaning people, gxxxl- ttatured to a degree, but with little del icacy of perception--the action at onoe troused his curiosity. 'Ahl master painter," he said, with a iffh, "let us see whet is it that you ojrk at by yourself till it steals away m wyes and ears. Only one peep!" With that, he laid his hand on the frame, and, receiving no forb dding Word from Garradine, turned it around, next moment he was lond in 'But who is it, Oarradine? If it is a po trait, tell me where to find the original, and I will, if it ia a seven days' journey I" ? Carradine smiled. "If I myself knew where to find such , original, I should not be here to tell ra, my good friend," he answered urivelj. "Oh, a fancy sketch J" said the other, •aisled, as the artist had desired. "I might have *aved myself the trouble of aoiingf. No real flesh and blood faoe ev er looked like tha --more shame to nature, I sav. Of e iurae, you will ex- hit >it it, Carradine ?" "No !n answered the painter, quietly. "No!" repeated 1he other in surprise. •But, my dear fellow, yon must, or I Cfrall betray your se -ret, and you will have a swarm of visitors, worse than a §»la*ue of Egypt, let, in u»on you." Carradine hesitated. A chance word |b his friendV spe oh had suggested a yossibil ty thst made hie heart leap in ^ite of sober reason. "You are right," he said, "I shall send the picture for exhibition. It will be better so." After hisTtrtor had left him alone again, Carradine .bent long over his easel, gazing into the lovely, upturned fac<*, until it l>egan to fade into the gathering twilight. "It--it!" he murmured to himself, half unconsciously. "But it cannot be. Yet I will send it--and perhaps--" And so the pioture was sent in" due time; and it seemed almost as if Carra- dine's soul had gone with it and drawn him to follow. Hour after hour, and day after day, he sat in the gallery, scrutinizing eagerly every faoe amid the visitors whom taste or fashion had brought to look at the now celebrated artiht's last success. Every night he went away unsatisfied, and every morn ing he returned with hope springing fresh ia his heart. Still, the object of his search, what ever it might have been, doei not appear; and one day, discouraged at last, he resolved to go no more on so fruitless an errand. Shutting him self in his studio, he began to paint, but, strive as he would, he could com mand neither hand nor fancy. Finally, tired of repeated failure, he abandoned work, and yielded to an impulse which drew his steps in the customary direc tion. When he entered the small side room in which his picture hung, he found but two persons within, a young man and a g»'l- Carradine could not see the faces of these two, but, with an earnestness for which he was at a loss to account, he followed their retreating figures as they moved slowly toward his picture. But the next moment an exclamation of astonishment burst from tue lips of the younir man. "Why, here is your portrait, Leliat What does it mean? Who oan the painter be?" With that, he hurried out to purchase a catalogue. Carradine advanced quickly to the pirl. "I am the painter," he said. She turned and looked at him with one steady gaze from those glorious eyes that had haunted his vision for so many years. Then she spoke: "You panted tint picture ? and how ?" "From remembrance," he answered. " It was my only tribute to the little un known Prinoeas who crowned me once with roses. Does she, too, remember it?" For a moment doubt was in her fa ^e; but as he looked fixedly at her it van ished in certainty* A smile just touohed the bright lips. "It w..s you, then, on whom I forced my roses ? A Princess who gave away honors unasked. How often have I wondered siuce " She stopped, turned to the canvaS, and added abruptly, "But I was a child then, an. l here "Here you are a woman," said Carra dine, completing the unspoken sent ence. "Is it so hard to understand ? The same power that kept the child in my heart showed me into what she would ripen." v She did not look at him now, but at the picture, as she asked him in a low voioe, "And whom am £ to thank for such an honor ?" "My name is Hubert Carradine," he answered, and saw at onoe that it was no unfamiliar word to her. "And yours? Through all these years your S&cs has hsaat^d me '-always, but your name I never knew.** She hesitate! a to him. "You never knew my name? Then think of me still as you nave thought of me through all these years," she said, a half smile lingering about her mouth, but never lighting the great dark that was shaded by some subtle sadness. The look, the tone, transported Carra dine beyond all remembrance of place or circumstance, into the unreal realm of imagination in whioh hia wish was supreme ruler. "I have thought of you always as my life and m(r love," he said, half oon- soiously, his dreamy, deep gray eyes glowiug upon her face. She blushed suddenly, and then paled in an instant. Just then her former companion en tered the room. "Iam ' Lelia Auveroay,'" she said, hastily, "and this is Cecil Wyndham, my--my betrothed husband." Not another word was said. As the young man approached Carradine fell liack a step and looked at the two. His was a fair, handsome face, so little marked as yet by time that it would be hard for an unpracticed eye to con jecture with what lines the shaping oharacter would yet stamp it. Never theless, with one keen gaze Carradine estimated both present and future. She said a few low-spoken words to her compauion, who presently moved toward Carradine, and addressed him. "Have I the honor of speaking to Mr. Oarradine, the painter of this picture?" Oarradine bowed without speaking. "Will you pardon me for asking if it is a fancy sketch?n continued Mr. Wvndham. Partly so, but suggested by the faoe of a little girl," answered the artist. "But the likeness is so very striking," muttered the young gentleman. "I most have it at any rate. Of oourse you wilt part with it--at your own price?" "The picture is not for sale," said Carradine, quietlv, still regarding the young man with that cool, steady gaze which had already caused him to be tray a hesitation, almost a confusion, very unlike his usual easy confidence. He seemed to have an instinctive knowl edge that the artist was measuring him, and to shrink from that measurement with unconscious dread. Carradine saw Lelia Auvernay onoe more before she returned to her home in a distant town. Then he took his picture from the academy walls and hung it in his studio, where his eyes could find it whenever he looked away from his work. For hte did not give up work; y t, among themselves, liis friends pronounced him an altered man, and marveled what had caused so subtle a diff rence. Always silent, he seemed to live in an ideal world of his own; and, whatever he migrit occupy him self with, there was that in bis manner w'tt *h i|>r«»:«red to h»* •' onty a temporary diversion until the oouiing of some event for whioh he was waiting. So passed half a year, at the end of which there came a letter to Carradine. It was very brief, but it was enough to assure him of that whioh he had beeu Unconsciously expecting. The letter was from Lelia Auvernay. He Wi nt to her at once. She met him with a la ghing light in her eyes such as he had not seen there when she stood there in the gallery beside her betrothed husban l; a light which recalled the merry child who had smiled down on him so long ago. "Mr. Oarradine," die laid, "I told i moment* then jrarned you that my fortune was pone, but I did not tell you how utterly it had been swept away. I am nothing better than a beggar. Will you t Jte me for one of your students, for charity's sake ?* He looked searching!y into her smiling face. "And Mr. Wyndham?" he asked, in a low voice. She laughed without so much as a flush of emotion. "Mr. Wyndham has gone with the rest of my worldly possessions. Did I not say that I had lost every tiling? You see, Mr. Carradine, that I am not of as much worth now as my picture." The words, as she said them, did not eeem bitter. He took her hand. "Lelia," he said, "does your loss make yon unhappy?" "Do I look so?" she asked, gayly. "As for the marriage, it was my father's wish, and to gratify his dying request I consented--before I knew my own heart--" Here a quick, vivid color shot into her oheek, but she went on: "There never was love on my side; and on his--well, money is more than love --with some natures. I do not wish to blame him." Carradine'a grasp tightened on her hands. "Lelia," he said, "onoe your answer put a bar between ns when I spoke words that were surprised out of my heart. Would it be so now, if I should say them once more ? My love, my life, wul you come to me?" "Will I come!" she repeated, looking up in his eyes and drawing nearer, un til his arms folded about her. And so Oarradine found hie love at laat. ' y • Walter Savage Landor. Born in the middle of the seventh decade of the last century, Landor closed his eyes to earthly things in 18<»4. after nearly ninety years of high thinking and vehement living. Begin ning with the first work of liis nonage, which was published in liis 20th year, and ending with the last work of bis old age, which was published in his 88th year, he was- before the world as an author sixty-eight years. His life of authorship was forty-two years longer than the whole life of Keats, thirty- eight years longer than the whole life of Shelley, and thirty-two years longer than the whole life of Byron. Is his popularity to-day equal to that of either ? To this question, which cannot be shirked, there can be but one an swer, which is not that his popularity js equal to theirs, but simply, that he lias no popularity at all--that he never had any, aud (but we hope for better things) that he never may have any. Reputation he has--few English authors have a reputation that a man ef strong genius would prefer to his--but popularity none. He is a great, one of the few very great English authors, but the knowledge of his greatness is con fined to a small class of readers and thinkers--readers who do not believe that an author is of no consequence be cause his works have not the vogue of the favorites of the day, and thinkers who are drawn toward those who stimu late them to large views of life and man kind, and who reveal and recall to them the wisdom and the valor of antiquity. The mind of Landor was cast in a heroic mould, and was always moved by the deeds and the memories of great men. A citizen of England and a dweller in Italy, his sonl wa» seldom absent from "The glory that was Greece, And the grandeur that was Rome." "One need not be a scholar himself to feel that he was a great scholar, and that his works can only be measured by the greatest works of the past. But the more a scholar one is the more one wonders at such a poem as "The Hama- dryed," whioh the noblest of all the Greek idylic poets would have been glad to write, or "Menelaus and Helen at Troy," and "The Shades of Agamem non and Ipliigenia," which are worthy of Sophocles. No other English poet, not Snakspearp himself, ever grasped a dramatic situation more thourouglily than Landor the situation in the scenes last named. They are in the highest degree tragic, lofty in conception, and faultless in execution. The ideal in poetry may go beyond them--we refuse to limit its possibilities--but it has never done so in any literature with which the world is acquainted. Be sides these perfect works we should place "Thrasymedes and Eonoe"--and but on a lower plane--"A Fcesulan IdyL" The last two poems are the finest specimens of pure Idylic verses in the language. If any one doubts this assertion we would advise him to read them after reading any or all of the idyls of Tennyson; and what we have always thought superior to them, as being cast in a more natural key, two or three of the short pieces In blank verse in Coleridge's "Sybilline Leaves" --say "The Picture," or "Lover's Reso lution," "The Nightengale," or "Frost at Midnight." These poems, even the laat, which is Italian, and, in a certain sense, modern, are in the purest style of the Greek art. No English poet with classic proclivities, not Milton, not Keats, not Tennyson could have writ ten them. Classic repose and dignity characterize them and characterize all that Landor Wrote, his prose as well as his poetry. No one who has read "The Imaginary Conversations," or "Pericles and Aspasia,"*or "The Pentameron," or "The Citation and Ex amination of William Shakespeare," need be told that Landor is the great English prose writer of the century, if indeed he be not the great English prose writer of all time. His prose is as nearly perfect as any human writing can be. It is faultless in construction, massive, flexible, dignified, beautiful, packed with thought, weighty with re flection, impressive with imagery, radi ant with imagination, reminding one in its largeness and freedom and harmony of the sky, the wind and the ocean. Style in prose is nowhere found in greater, nowhere else in such perfection as in Lamlor.--II. H. Stoddard in New York ail and Express. TIDY.--Take a pretty strip of striped cretonne; cut two pieces about eighteen inches long; take a fjiece of brown, blue, crimson or buff velvet (or any color which will* contrast prettily with cre tonne) and cut a, strip of it the same length and width of the cretonne; sew the three together, the velvet in the cen ter, and embroider a small vine up and down either edge of the velvet, or feath er-stitch a vine, if yon cannot embroid er or find this too much work. Cut each of the three strips at one end (or at both ends, according to the way you fasten the tidy on the chair) to a point; hem, and finish the points with pretty ailk or worsted tassels. A YOCNG widow in Brooklyn received $18,000 insurance on her husband's life and handed it over to a lawyer to invest. He built him a house with it, and is so mean that he won't ev(p»4et 4te l|i^w in to see how it looks. PBOF. ROBXBT OniitTM, ef the Natatari- «m, this etty, was ennd of a severe attack ef rheumatism by the use of Si. Jacobs Oil. --WaakingUm, D. C., Stme. to SfMwL While a colored man and his family were engaged in prayer a kettle of Water fell over and scalded the Old mtin's wife. The woman arose with "scuffling" alacrity and howled. The old man slowly arose, and, casting on his wife a contemptuous glance, said : "Ain't yer got no respect fur de Lord ? Ain't yer got no moan humiliation den ter holler when l'se handin' u£> peti tions?" "I doan mean *to insult de Lawd," yelled the woman; "but when a pot of bilin' water falls on me, it doan make no difference if l'se gwine thr ugh de gate of de New Drusalem, l'se gwine ter squawl; does yer heah n?e?"-- Arkansaw Traveler. THE Boston Pilot says: 8t. Jacobs Oil stands without an equal. •Snrnm and Falltre. The man who never failed Is a myth. Snch an one never lived, and is neVer likely to. All success is a series of efforts, in which, when closely viewed, are seen more or less failures. The mountain is apt to overthrow the hill; but a hill is reality, nevertheless. If yon fail now and then dont be dis couraged. Bear in mind it is only the part and experience of every successful man, and the most successful men often have the most failures, • untwa Ktara Bfiua • tl nlcura. or PALLINOSICKN la car* tb* Mc Bl* i mmj oit* Iipran, [•"•'Tf lor • trial, t *11 nut ftm. Addrm Dr. H. 0. BOOT. 1H A OENTI/KMAN writes: *DE. Guywofct'A Tel- low Dock aud Sarcaporilla cured me of a .severe case of the Piles, Impure blood and general ill-health." Another gentleman writes: "Dr. Guysott'o Yellow Dock and Barsapartlla cured 'me of nervous debility, palpiptation of the heart, dizziness, night-sweats, sleeplessness, eta, etc." < < ORIGIN of a wise saying: Did it ever occur to yon why Old Solomon made the remark about there being nothing new under the sun? Well, the fact was that his numerous wives and witches kept hinting to him about having new bonnets, and he merely murmured that there was nothing new under the sun in order that they might l>e made to believe that the fall styles in hats had not yet been struck on. Chicago Times. WH are fond of boaating that in no other country in the World do men hold their convictions with so much energy as in England. True, but one may also put the proposition in another shape and say: "In no other oountry in the world is so much nonsense so fiusalf be lieved. n--E<lu- in A riio hi. The C<>n<lact»r. WINONA, Minn., Nov. 2T», 187#, I had been suffering with a severe cold for several days; was so hoarse I could notepeak shove a whisper. Nov. 16 I met one of Dr. Warner's agents on my train; he handed me a Imttle of White Wine of Tar Syrup; one hour after taking the first dose iny hoarse ness commenced to leave me. In twenty- four hours my voice was quite clear and natural, and the cold nearly cured. It is the ttrt «emedy I ever saw. llespectfuily, • <s CL W. WARBBN, Conductor, Chica>r -> and Northwestern & B. Sold by all druggists. SEVEBAL of our exchanges are devoting considerable space to the importune® of "cooking Kills." It's no nse. We don't want tfa< m cooked. The raw damsel is good enough for us.--Hartford Time*. Thr New Story. Not a tale of failure or disappointment; int. rti« nld cf thr «'iului) OI vmimc sp- Aheet It ha§ been the custom tojjpioplij ef all raole to ndm re, or pi^ttod to ad- mife, their own noses, and to endear at these that differed from thtofo. The Semitic nose has never been thought by the world at large to correspond with any principle of beauty. Yet the Arabe and Syrians speak contemptuously of the "flat-nosed Franks" and Disraeli has taken pleasure in repeating the phsase. The Africans are proud of their broad, flat noses, and some tribes endeavor, by inserting artificial objects, to increase their pet deformity. Time and careful hrecding. which did so much for the noses of the Greeks and Romans, and have helped, and are help ing, to make those of the Slav, Latin and Teuton races straight and beauti ful, have done little to modify the prom inent features of the Semitic and Tu ranian races. Most persons who have long noses are apt to be proud and boastful, arguing either that they are abstractly beautiful or that they indi cate strength of character. The nose of Tennyson as seen in his portraits is long, and may in his youthful days have been finely modeled. He seems to have thought so, for in "Maud" he sneers at the druggist's olerk as a "snub- nosed rogue," using an opprobrious term, common wherever the English language is spoken. Two hundred years ago the nose was longer than at present, if we can judge by old por traits, and even the nasal organs of our Revolutionary Fires were more pro nounced than those of this generation, giving some color to the theory that the feature had some sort of relation to individual character, nlieations and the evils attending their use; hut the new story of sugpejs, of freedom from pain and,consequently,aKpace of spots left in the fiekh. FtrrNAH's PAIKUCSS COKN EXTRACTOR givett inspiration for Sappier re- lxirts, and sufferers from corns need not hes itate to try it Hold everywhere by drug- Ests and 'dealers in medicine. Wholesale, >rd, Btoutenburgh A Co., Chicago, ItAK proposes. Ood disposes--but it takes a woman with her t air down to be Indis posed when anybody calls. MUCH distress aud sickness attributed to dyspepsia and chronic diarrhoea is occasioned by humor in the stomach. Hood's Barsapa- rilla ib the remedy. FAT--"An' is it the nixt train for Boston ye wanty Faith, that wint an hour ago, •err." P*raonal 1--To Men Oaljr I The VOWAIO BELT CO. , Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltaic Belt* and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and man ly vigor. Address as above. N. £.--No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial la allowed ** Buchn-paiba." Quick, complete cure, all annoyini r Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Dis. asea Si. Ihmggista FOB THICK HEADS, heavy stomachs, bilious ness--Wells' May Apple Piila lOo and 25a. XCNSMAN'S PEPTONIZED Bear TONIC, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It oontains blood- making. foroe-generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for Indigestion, dys pepsia, nervous prostration, ana all forms of general debility;" also, in all enfeebled con ditions, whether the result wi exhaustion, neeyous prostration, over-week, or acute dis- eajfe, particularly if resulting from pulmo nary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors. New York. Bold by dmggleta THERE was a young man so well bred That the hair would not stay on his head, But the Carboline oil Put new hair on the soil. And now with aa heiress he s wed. THE Howe Scales have all the latest im provements. It ia true economy to buy the best Borden, Selleck ACa, Agents, Chicago, 111. CORRECT your habits of crooked walking by using Lyon s Patent Metallic Heel Stiffeners. new brand, 8prlng Tob«Mh THK 1UANSIKR Of IiulJit-ro-fidrace fn in other preparations of 8ai> xaparUla and ot' er Blood Puriftern of whatever name tu HoikI'h K*r-*pari!la is the signal triumph of a mer- ito: iom article, 'lhe people are qniuk to reeotmiz* true merit, and thb in why the sale of Hood's ttano- l>arllla far exceeds all similar preparation*. One hun dred dose* $1 can only be a^vl-^d to Hood's Karsa^ pirilla. aud is an unanswer.il It- a.giUMBt as to medi cinal strength and economy. C'ATAKKH. We believe that nine-tmiUu* of ail wwrg of rafarrh are constitutional. W» also believe that a reliable constitutional remedy like Hood's tianuparilla. that itrilUk at the very roo- of the disease, will cure a very la rye proportion of all case*. In conttraiation of belief we offer evidence *h"jwii« tha ifctti'j of Hood's S a r s u p a r i l l a u p o n t h i s d i s e a s e A m o t h e r s a y * : ' M r l oy had catarrh' so badly that I could hardly keep iiim In clean handkerchiefs; he has taken one bottle of Hood'b Sar ararilla. and that tenlUe amount of discharge hax stopped " Another writes: * I have had catarrh four year*; Lost Aprii the dropping in our throat became BO troubles: me that 1 I e.mi alarmed, as it aff« cted my right lung. I took two bottles of HooU'sSarsaparillaanditcuredme. My appetite, which was variable before, is Urst rate now H. iMirtu, lowell, Mas*. HOOD'S 84K8APARHXA. •old by Druggists. ( ; si* fo- $5 Made only by C. I. BOOU & CO.. Apothecaries. Lowell. Hass. A Splendid Benrcdy for £>noir Disease*. Dr. Bobt. Newton, late President of the Eclectic Col lege of the City of New York, and formerly of Cincin nati, Ohio, used Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam very extensive ly in his practice, as many of his patients, now living, and restored to health by the use of this invaluable medicine, can amply testify. He always said that so good a remedy ought not to be considered merely as a patent medicine, bat that it ought to be prescribed freely by every physician as a sovereign remedy in all eases of Lung diseases. It is a Knre cure for Oonsump- tiesu and has no equal for all pectoral complaints. KeU Bgcr'i Uniu est Applied to flhe head relimMl (ha hstr from faUnc out. pupil roa KIEUUTBM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Soro Throat, Swell- ^ Jags and Sprains, Burns ufc i,AScaA1s, GeneralBwtily -•»; ^ Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Fretted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches* Wo Preparation on earth equate 8r. JACOW ON at a aafr, surf, simple aud cheap bUml Kemnly. A trial entails but the eompaimtivsly trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every eas Nfferiag with paiu can have cheap and positive proof ef iti claims. a Directions ia Steven languages. * •Oittf Si ALL D&uuuibTa aili DBUiBM nr KEDI0DIE. JU VOQSZJBR Jb CO.. "" l«IMsiir»gii V.m'.JU *ITTE*S Hostetter's Stomach Bitters gives steadiness to lbs nerves, induces a healthy, natural flow of bile,prevents constipation without unduly purging the bowela, gently stimulates the circulation, and, by promot'ng S fig rons condition of the physical system, promotes, also, that cheerfulness which in the truest indication at a well-balanced condition of all the animal powers. WFor sale by Druggists and Dealers generally. $66 % week in your own town. IVrms and $5 outfit free. Addreas H. H*UJE rr Is Co., Portlaud, Ma. VAIIMM learn TBL*O*> MY here ant I QUIIs£ MCn we wiU give you a situation Circulars free. VALEST1NE BLTOS., Jane^IUE, Wis, USia flfllli E.BUBNHAJL 11 Stale street, Chiosga. AGKNTS WAMTKD for the Best and Ffertest-Ml-iag Pictorial Books and Bibles Prices reduced at percent. NATIOJIAX.PO«»Jiusi»a Co., CHICAGO.111. ENCINESî Sgi writaTBB AULTMAJt A TATLOB OO. MsnsSslrl.U $72 A WEEK. $12 a day at home easily made. C >stly outfit free. Address TBUK * Co., Augusta. Maina. SOL DEiTJ: b"!S BARKER'S 6REEI CORN IUTTM3 MKHIIE liw.-J in over M com factories. Manafartarea by VOi N. Y liAHKKK, Portaud, Me. P.O. tmxC8. mmn Mai mm For information and Maps of • _ ^^9 Missouri, i ansa*. Arkansas ud T, xas, write to jtit-.N E. ENNL4, I • • •• • 4<i Curb is .. Oh «.«KU PATENTS JhUl /MSrwcMoNsand Bamlrbook on KO PATENT NO PAT. K.8.& A.P.LACKY,P»<««» A t;» >«»•• Wat-binKtna.D.C mTxirxBs «( ma. This R.Ys Sfnftr, $20 Witb II set of Allariai Frsa Warranted perfsct-Uabt naika aolst, handsome anddbnkla. Seal aa test trial-plaa whea 0--tKH Mmmfj SrgMIl i MN a*iM. S stops. Mechanical Sob Baas.oetavecoupler.t knee swells, with 9> stool aiMltl Book. oalvtS Also sent on test trtal ptaa lf ds- strsd. EWaaat MM, BiaanincaBA tone. SafaalelaMs sad eat. €*•- ra lar. «M testiaxiaials, trmu. a* ••Papas* 0a.« Third av.Otaics C E N T S FOB THBE3S MONTHS. 50 •• The new volume (nineteen) ef DllOlllT'a I LI. I! ST RATED ^1^ MONTHLT XaaAxraa f«>r 1883 ia the bestand the cheapest Amity Magazinei printe d on tha finest tinted pap- r, ri»>8« x.llj. inches. The three numbers now ready of voloma 19 weigh IX pounds and contain C10 pares of lam$. clear print. New Novelettes, 8tnrl«s, Biographies, Poetry, Travels, and valuable information oi the day and for the household. I* demand by every familv. 144 Illustrations. 0 Photo Plates and 4 Oil Pictures. W. JKNNDTGS DEMO&EHT, Publisher, IT Bast 14th Street, New York. Single copie% Twenty Cents; ytarty sobacripUoa, TwoDoHara. 600B FAMILY REMEBY! STRICTLY PURE. to the Most Delicatol Br tt* MtkM «m cojrscMPTiojr tuu Ilia CUBED when otfcer nmsilw auad Tkyaklam have Vailet im (fleet a ci WILLIAM 0. Dioass, merchant of Bowling Groan, Ya., writes April 4.1881. that he wants us to know that the Ltme BALSAM hat curat A«* nu>tKw of < 'uiMatmp- Hon, after the physician liad given her up as incunt hie. Be says, others knowing her esse have taken aic Balaam and been eared; he think* all m adttcted ehonM give it a trial. WILLIAM A. Gbabam k Co., wholesale druggists, fmrsTlllr Ohio, write ns of the cure of MATUIAB FUKMAH, a well-known citizen, who had been afflicted with BronchiM" in its worst form for twelve yearn. Iht LtJKO BALSAM cured him, aa it has many others, ofBronchitis. Asm r< i Expectorant It has No Equal. Par Sale by all Medlciaa DeaJera. U M. a » Send postal for or-t'd Catalog. HIIU.'S finill H^tir Store, 38 A 40 Monroe Chicago. tC la tO/l lM>r day at home. Samples worth $5 free. V» «• •*«! Address STIXBON & Co.. Port aui.1 .Maine. maa4laahavehaeaeared. ladM.sostraaglsmyMtl la ltsralcacy, that I will ssad TWO ROTTLK8 FRKlL t« •Mbsr with aTALlTABUi TSBAT1S8 «a this dis*asa,t Cwr with sTALlTABLB TSBAT1S8 «a this HH «SS >| satarsr. OlveBapnssasdP.O.addraaa. BR. I. A. iiLOflDll, 1U Paartau Maw York rmar/uoar. ^4. t/DPGANd CO, iNQlAHAPQUS. J/tUMMUL e RE EDrS TEMPLE OF MUSIC CHICAGO. Just l*u. llsli«l.--Tlie finest Piano aud Oiuan Cat' alogiies e \ er Issued. Cont.in valuaMe ?n<onnation for thou' iiitn i. ing to bn . Special prices and terras glvt'n when desired. OM instrumenU taken in e* chance. Catalogues mail <1 tree S-nd our namo USD'S umi or nrsis. 139 8UU Stmt, chieace, 111. SEEDS^ I will Kive you the best Seeds for the li aat money of a^ytlrm lit America or refund, western Seeds nre best. Mine take the lead. Qnrdenen say they never -- fail. I ,ised#000Ibn paper to print8000# pret ty Catalogues lUiis tr*ted with «!«»• worth or eiiKTavlran. It beats the world, 1 worth many dollars. FREE. Prir-ew below1 ali.«K.H.S1I0MWAY, Bockford. I1L FRAZER AXLE GREASE, Beat la the WsrH. Get Ike caaalae. |tr» k P - AJ YOUR ClUb 13 OI I the Mutual | _ _ _ ln*estn»« ubs otters thr sarest meausol niaku < i profits from Investtnests cf tltttutlOUwor i EacUmemrier get* the heneSt trfconibuicd AWSTADAF tht Club. Kcnorts seat weekly. lllvMeads pan aMMMhly. Club >3 paid shareholders back their money la SRAWT Ja past tlmv moatlia, still lesvtug origlaai amoani IASWSS money in Club, or retamml on demand. S)iarr«,$U)eaeh. Explanatory circularsiest fi-e«. KcliableCDrn*LKAMLAATB wanted everywhere. Address R. E. KlXDAlL A COU Oam'n Mclita.. ir> * i;s La Salle SL.CHICA«O, U. Consumption Can Bo CurOd. DR. WM. p - J "-T V ' ^ ' • • " '~T- \ - $ f If fe r S 4:: '•'wi # -*y>. FOB THK Cures CoBsnm »-nr.H,ltroiirblaIlMnioul nt*ss, Aatluua, tryup MaatMcsorttte s unfailing and intam- in enrtmr tfid will lirM motiUM. i ebftnn Um Mood la Um tmm ia thn* montSa ArSj poraoo «rbo will Ukm oao pUI IctlflilftoUwiMlBMfljl Btoniftdi. chnp or ki quire a name tnnic.^ aancb pmdiiiB tl IW - • . i » a.. M A f t l ! AM tUiUllfl! matin fi lis maka Now KtohWood ElchBiood a antirs ara- eaeb nigh health, if aaoh a thing ba possible, seat bj mail for 8 letter stampa. baiastored toamiad Sold eaiabac, or vigorant tliat ever sustained the i siue by all Druggtota, DR. K. A. RICHMOND NDMCAL 0% . Nnle Fmprietors. Ht. JoMph, ' '• '- Inc lose stamp for (Circulars. , n i C. N. P. • No.,'--«S. • VVHKK WKITXNQ TO ADV£B118£1% TT pi «ae yea *aw tha iSUTa.tfaiisai tu this paper, THE BRIGHTEST AND BEST V- * V< L THE JUVENILE PUBLIOATIONSt """ • • - .1* A SPECIMEN COPY WILL BE SENT F.1EE TO ANY ADDRESS. OOU>KN DAYS is « slxteen pase weekly. Oiled with stories, sketches of adventure, instructive matter, L everrthlng that can interest, .uti-rt.iin and tx ii fit Ivoyn atKl girls. The leading sci 'NTINS. cleivvincn aud EDUCATOR ARC engaged upon ONUITN DAIS. fflustrattaMii profits; and in the liiKheit stvTe of -t t. f v. D. P. KIUDKB. D. D.. will Rive each week a lucid and schola expoaitiimof the International Siridiy S \ o J! of the succeeding week. 1'itzti'ftum WI 1 pe-plex i deliKbt the ingenious Ixiy-t anil irirls. aa it U-,H IU the past. The U tt-'r r will continue o dispense u-»« T tatormation, and io a nswer the <iu. ri<M an i publish the N .tii<is of K)ichan<re of our young friends. In shatfc iftbt the iUKenious ixty.n and irirls. aa it Ilhh iu the past. The . irmation, and io a 'swer the iiu<jrie< an i publish the N .tirtis of Ksihanjre of our young fn -- (ioij>EN DAVH will stop at no expense t;i deterve, in a li ffher de.trree tnan ever before, the title that the ilisorilfc il>iti"g public have bestowed up 'n'it--tliat of ;hj "Prince of Juvenilis." NEW SERIAL STORIES IN VOLUME FOUR. Mfci4*<UrW> a new aeries by Or.rvr.a OPTIO. The first is entitled: w , * . Y O N H A R T ; o r , A D R I F T I N T H K W O I S L D . LOUI8 CHMW1CK t or, UOIJMi WITH THK CITRBENT, ia itOYAJ. TARR; or. LE.tKNIN(i TO UVK, is the third. JDAMK TROT (A Btorv for Oiris a* well as Boys). By HB8. X. F. tMWtMH IN A WIN I'KH CAMP. By WM. A. FORD. AN EMi'liltOlfS HON. By LIKIT. JAM. K. OBTON. IE CKUIMK OK THE SNOWBIRD. By GORDON 8TABLES. JF THK INDIAN OCEAN. By FRANK H. CONV£B8B. CAFTVRED BY CROWS. By FBANKMN CALKIKB. " HOME IN THE W LOS. By ELSIE LEIUH WHITTLESEY. VTHONY BLAKK. By FANNIE WILLL\MM. I ELTON'S HiSTKIt. By FRANK B. STOCKTON. PHIL AND HIS WANDERINGS. By FRANK H. OOMVJUHU. RAUI CasiutMoa, RALTH HAKILTOX, LODH ROCRMLIET AND other _ Besides tfie 8e ials, the following, wita ntuneroas other attractions, will appear in the N«w Tt I KNOTS AMD CoaiML6K. By an Old Sailor. FIKHIKG-TACKLB, AKD How TO MAXB IT. " rington Keene. _ BIBPS*EUOSAWP BMOoiTfriaa. AtMln.Jf4 Wo-<l. Tat. BOYS'PoPi/ntr-Rtm. ByOordon BtaMea. Bsc- a»D Bn lKima roa BOTS By W. BLHad^. THE MicanscopK, ASP Host IO Cs» IT. WlLl>UEA8T TAMEa-i AND THKIB Pci iLa. _ Anv. NTtTREswrrH EUIPUAMTS ia HAITI Luim. |» Old Hunter;. SLI.VKB AND OOLDBN PHEASANTS. ORIXEA-FOWLA4A0> PKACOC* s. AS PKTH. By Oordon STABLER. Also, Serial Stories by Writers. Besides tfie 8e ia! ah 'handsomely illustrated: WlMIEH iND'ion AMUKKMKNTS. JLKSI^JNK ITI CHESS AND CHKCKKRS. PMACII.ALHIKISIOYUCMUPAixraas. ByF.Emeric de 8t. Dalians. THAPS AND SNABKS, AND HOW TO MAKB THEM. By Wiv. A/Psrd. S.M-LL PKTS, AND HOW TO CABX FOB AXD TEACH THKM. BV Jame< Otis. FIDDLES, AND HOW TO MAXB THEM. By Horace Pe herick. TUE BOT V PioKoa-Lorr AND DOVE-COr. By a Pro- fe.^siona' Judze. IACHT, CAX OK ARD BOAT Bcnnia. By C. Htamfleld Hicks. Articles on ENTOMOLOOT. NATPHAL HISTOBT, SCUCNHFIC SUBJECTS, etc.. etc., by the beat aoihoii. ka tvtkahqg*;!) addition t this numerous array ot stiecial a tractions, there will be Short Stories and known author*. GOLDEN DAYS" IN MONTHLY PARTS. Wa alao issue a monthly part for the benefit of tboae who prefer to purchase it ia t "ft* W ± %m. W?; "GOLDEN DAYS," VOLUME SECOND, Beautifully boun l, makes one of the most attractive books ever issued. A lanfe edition, numbering into thousand J, his been S>. Id at Four Dollar» oer copy. As an iuduoeine.t for new subs nbere. this vo.uu>> and a year's subscription will be sen' to any addr ns on.receipt of Five Dollars. Hiiswiil be practically gt.U^ iiuuiui Daxa for one ye^r for only. One Dollar. A BEAUTIFUL PRESENT. We wfll prasent a bandaomely boaad copy of OOIJUEN DAV~, V^LCMK Sacown, tetany bar svwha MM vm nunc new yearfy subsrnbem, with the money iNino D.>Jiar>), m a re*i<teiwl Miaiff bar postd OS 14 «.T * **>» ' 'ir' GOLDEN DAYS," VOLUME THIRD. just enwa from the binders, and makes a superb book. A3 A CHRISTMAS PRESENT Bathing amid be better for your children. Price FOUR D<U.I^BS. sent, postaga paid, ta mm * Uillmmtlk»10lmM*aMiagt&3Siil>»c,iptimi0Hr *XtptQf Six Dollar». SPECIAL OFFER. { • m m Taafc*atg-ttani »lt»«aa< aw many boy< and girls In geWiaa snl^cr.bers to _ r them the followinK inducements: On earry Tttrre-u liar £»<*rr'p«aa wcmwl a><?triiT mmU, t» be or tkt umu nHea from tkefoUotoing rtn : ROVOHINO IT BKBIES. By Harrv €a*t!etnat». KAiiutD DICE > the milder, ny one qf the bomut bookx CAMI'INU Otrr SKHIES. By A. Stephens. JACK HAZARD SER ES. By J T. Tmwbridge. GUNBOAT SUIES. By Harry Cat lemon. ROCKY MOUNTAIN HBBIES. By Harry Ca-<tlenao«». SPOBTSMAN'S CLVB BEBIES. B Har y CaatienoiL FKANN NELSON SKKIES. t-.y Harry Castleiuot Bov TBAPPBB SEKIES. Br Harry Cas lemon. • Harrv ( „ _ By H-mUio A cer. Jr. TAXTEKEU TOM SBBIKS. By Howio A^BIUK TATTKRI B L'O)€ 8KB1ES. Second Swriav. ' > CAMPAION S£ <IES. BY H T.ut.o ALcer. 4<V PALITIC SKKIH. By HUR^UO Algvr, WThim booka are handsomely bound, and retail at tl.iS eacb. Bov who would bewillint! to pay twenty-ttve ee taor ti ty cents p'r volume^ for aseriesof flMaalk00fe>*: •Uftht easily net them bv otTerinir to ake aub^riptioas at a leas rate than three dollimi.aupplyilW theoLflir.'aM* • - • it- -w vf:,. ^ .. » i -•» 1*4*- • . . • • ; ' - i t 'I* . thein-h Ives, and thus securing the b >oks. To auy ooe sendinK us ten sutHcrioers, with the money rTMrty Dollar i, we wi^ssad thsMbtai the teu volumes, a beautiful hound oopy of UOLUEN DAYS, Volume BwoindT suissmrmn rates, eitkb for the wtcar or honthlt rut: For 1 month- : For I moatlia. Fi.-r 3 months Uc, 50a 78c, For 4 aaaatha For ( awithi..... Kor t year 8nl>scrii)tions can ><eRin wth anv aumher. Bark immhers^impgieda^tha •wsarrtsa. jj Money sbon d be- sent to aa either by Postofftca Order or ' its loss uy rtshUabsr «T-I JAMBS BLVBtMHi iSMnK>l>Mlad.ltlfehIi> • s „ IS -w ... .,. , ......j ...ito t '•