I (hancf. A word od spoken, a hand nnpresaid, A look nnwM or a thought nug aeued. And loul tht were kindred may lire apart, Never to meet or know the trntb. Nerer to know how heart beat with heart In the dim pant daji of a wattod youth. Ehe Bball cot know how bis pulaei leapt When over his temples her treaaea awept; Ai abe leaned to give him the jasmine wreath Bbo felt hia breath, and her face fluhed red With the passionate love that choked her breath, And aaddens her life now her youth ia dead, A faded woman who waita for death, And murmurs a name beneath her breatb; A cynical man who aooffa and jeera At women and love in tbe open day, And at night-time kiaaea, with bitter teara, A faded fragment of jaamine (pray. I'OK THE FARMER'S HOUSEHOLD. nnlilj of A great many suppose that beoanse au egg is an egg, there is no tlilTerence in the quality. What a mistake I There is junt as much difitrfnce ia the strength and richness of eggs as there is between poor and tender beef. Take bens that are kept in au almost starved condition and thoir eggs will be poor and weak. When poured from the shell they ap pear small and flat. But, take the same hens and feed them as they should be fed, and the eggs, when emptied from the shell, will be large and round. Every practical honuowife knows this. Not only so, but if you would raise gooj-sized, plump aud healthy chick ens, you must feed the hens which lay the eggs ou good, sound, healthy aud nutritions food. Take weak or poo eggs and set them, and a few, no doubt, will hatch; but the chicks will be weak and feeble, and, therefore, the more lia ble to pine away aud die, aud what few do livo will nevor amount to much. But, take good, strong, rich eggs, and nine out of every tun will hatch, and the chicks bo strong and healthy, and not near as liable to disease; and if from any cause you should fail to feed them, their vigorous vitality will enable them to run about in search of something to up pease their appetites. Cultivation of Ittirkvtlintt. When sown for mauure, buckwheat may be put in as soon as the grouuJ is in condition and warm enough to ensure germination. If for seed, it Bhould not be sown until the last week in J une or the llrst week in July. S-w one bushel per acre if for seed, uud one and a-half ', if for manure. The yield will rauge, in a good crop, from fifteen to twenty bushels to the acre. In threshing with the machine, remove most of the teeth from the concave, and go slow. The straw is not of much account for stock feeding, and has been alleged to be in jurious, but this is not proven. Save llit Liquid Miiuuro. The liquid yieldings of animals are worth more good authorities suy one sixth more pound for pound, than the solid excrements, and are saved with greater care by tho best European farm ers aud gardeners. All the leaks in tbe stable are not in the roof; those often in the floor are qnite as objectionable, and are tho cause of a great deal of waste. Hint lor clip Ilnuerwii'r. A tin covering for fl.ttirons when heating saves fuel and keeps the room from excessive heat. To mend broken chinaware take nlns. i ter of Paris aud mix with the white of an egg. U-se water to keep it thiuned, and apply. Ton Dysenthiiy. Parch brown a ta blespoouf ul of rice; put into a enp of cold water aud let it come to a hard boil; sweeten a little. A heavy chalk mark drawu a Anger's distance from your sugar-box and all aronnd (and there must bo no tpnei uncovered), will surely prevent ants from troubling it. FiiSGwouM Remedy. Oil of paper made by burning a sheet of ordinary writing paper upon a plate, will cure a ringworm, which is caused by contagion or some impurity of tho blood; the oil will be seen after the paper is burned in the form of a yellow spot; this Ap plied with tho finger twice a day will in a very short time cure the wrrst of ring worms. Cuors and Steaks fok the Sick. In cooking steaks for the sick, they should alwavs be cut about one inch in thickness. Beat it well with a rolling pin. This renders it tender and pre serves tho juice. Place upon a broiler and cook for seven or ten minutes, turn ing frequently. When done lay it upon a hot p'ute and season with salt and pep per aud a littlo butter. Never chop moat with a sharp instrument. It sev ers the flbiri, thus allowing the juico to escape while cooking. Deviled Crabs on Fisn. Take ! cooked crabs, lobsters or flak and pick very fine; make a mayonaise salad dress ing with plenty of mustard and vinegar and cayenne pepper, and mix with fish; also a pinch of thyme, and very fine chopped onion, and season with Worces tershire sauce; fill your shells, or crab shells, with the fish, then put cracker or bread crumbs on top, with small pieces of butter, and bake in a hot oven; if the fish is at all dry, pour on some milk before Inking. Church Music. Dr. J. O. Holland, the talented editor of Srribr.cr, in one of his discursive moods writes as follows of music as a means of worship : 'The churches are full, as a rule, where tbe music is excel lent This fact may not be very flatter -ing to preachers, but it is a fact, and it is quite a legitimate question whether a church has a right to surrender any at traction that will give it a hold upon the attention of the world, especially if that attraction is an elevating one, and in the direct line of Christian influence Congregational singing is well enough in its plaoe and proportions, but very little of the inspiration of music comes through it.' A STORY FOR CHILDREN. On a finny hill-side grew a little col ony of May-flowers. They had slept quietly through the long winter, tucked up, snug and warm, in their covering of snow ; and now the bright sun looked down on them, and the wind stirred them, and the birds called to them, and they raised their strong, hardy leaves, and lifted np their stems of small buds, and rejoiced that spring was near. A little girl came out among them. She said to herself : "I am going away to morrow. I can't stay to tee the dear May-flowers open, so I will take some of them with me, and keep them in water, and they will remind me of this beauti ful place, aud perhaps they will blos som." 'Oh," said the May-flowera, "please don't take us I" But the wind blew so that Mary ; the little girl, did not hear them, and she pulled stem after stem, till she had as many as she could hold ia her small hands. Then she looked aronnd her at the bine sky, and tho branches of the trees against it, and the soft, dead leaves flying in the wind, and tho patches of white snow in the hollows ; and away in the distanco tho lighthouse and the blue water. She said good-bye to it all, for she was afraid she might not see it again soon ; and the little May-flowers said good-bye to it, too. The next day Mary tied the May flowers together, and wound a piece of wet paper around their stems, and they started on their journey. Tho cars were crowded and hot, and Mary held the flowers very tight for fear of lowing them, and the tall people rested their elbows ou them, aud the stout ones pushed against them, and they thought they would die. But soon the paper was taken off, and the string was untied, and they were put into a vaso of watt r. The little May-flowers drooped for a time, and could not held up their heads. Mary pet them in the opeu window, aud a gay bird in a cage sang to them ; but they mourned for their pleasant home, and they did not like to stand with their feet in the water, and they said : "Let us give up in despair." Then tho bird saDg, "Cheer np ! cheer up! chirrup! chirrup 1" They did not liRten to him at first, b by and by they said to him : Whv do you say that to us 1 Do yon know that we have been taken from our home snd our friends on the hill side, where the sun shone, and tho birds Bang all around us ? Row can we live and be happy here, and with our feet in the water, too ?" But the bird said : "Cheer up ! The sun is shining on you, and I am singing to yon as well as I can, and how much better it will be for you to blossom aud be beautiful, and make some one happy, thiu to do nothing but wither aud be thrown away. Do you think I like to be here, shut up iu this cage, when I have wiups to fly? Not If this cage- door should be left open, yon would see me fly up to that chimney in a second." "Could yon ?'' said the little flowers. "Yes, indeod," said the bird. "Would yon ?" paid the flowers. "Yes," paid the bird, "and then into that tree, aud then away to the wooila somewhere. But while I am here, I i ,hiuk 1 may aB n oml be 6y." "Perhaps he is right," thought the flowers ; so they lifted up their heads aud looked up. Mary gave them fresh water every day, aud loved them dearly, aud talked to them of the beautiful hillside ; and the cheerful bird sang to them, end at last the little buds began to grow acd make tho best of it. One bright morning, just two weeks after they were gathered, the iDrgest bnd opened its petals, and blossomed into a full-grown May-flower .' It was whito, with a lovely tinge of pink, and oh, so fragrant ! Mary al most cried with delight, and she kissed the dear flower, and carried it to every one in the bouse to be admired. The bird stood on tip-too on his highest perch and flapped his wings, and Fang his best : song. I "Was I right?" said he. "Did I give you good advice ?" j "joe," said the fbwors, "you were right. To blossom and be beautiful, and make some one happy, is better than to givo np in despair and do noth ing." St. Xit h'Ati. Number Seven in the Bible. In seven days a dove was reut. Every seven days the land rested. Jacob served seven years for Rachel. Jacob mourned seven days for Joseph. On the seventh day (lid ended his work. Abraham pleaded seven times for S xlom. Tue golden candlestick had seven branches. N'aamac washed seven times in tho river Jordan. Jacob was pursued a seven days' jour ney by Laban. Every seventh year the law was read to the people. Ou the seventh day Noah's ark touched the ground. Solomon was seven years building the temple, and fasted seven days at its ded ication. Oa the seventh day of the seventh month the children of Tsrael fasted seven days in their tents. Job's friends sat with him seven days and seven nights, and offered seven bul locks and seven rams as an atonement. A plenty of seven years and a famine of seven years were foretold in I'ha roah's dream by seven fat and seven lean beasts, and seven ears of blasted corn. Ia the destruction of Jericho seven persons bore seven trumpets seven days; on the seventh day they marched around seven times, and at the end of the sev enth ronnd the walls fell. A Maryland Sketch. A writer in Harper' Magazine for May, in the course of an article on the coast counties of Virginia and Maryland says: Tue soil of Peninsular Virginia is rather kindly than rich. Certainly it has not that richness of virgin land of which it is said, "Tickle it with a hoe, and it laughs in a harvest;" but light manuring pruduces a quick return and ample crops, and that considerably ear lier than in other places north of Nor folk. There is still a remnant of the old style of farming to be seen, of which it was said that there were only three crops raised in Yirginia. jorn, hogs and negroes, of which the hogs ate all the corn, and the negroes devoured all the hegs. One of those "crops,' however, is removed from the list. Tbe "poor white" is poor very poor. The small farmers of the North cannot compare with these in absolute destitu tion of money. "Doctor," said one of them, who had slowly recovered consciousness after be- ing terribly injured by an exploding grindstone-"doctor, I reckon I'm Pret-! - Ko.ll Krt.Mr nr, ltain't T V "Yes, my man'; you are hurt just about as badly, to stand a chanco of re covery, as any man I ever saw." "Tuet's so, thet's so. Wa'al, doctor, do you know, thet ez poor as I am, an' ee much ez I need money, I I wouldn't ev bed this happen to me fer for firtn-t-fhe dollar:" Many of these poor whites are day- iur..,o. nn ih nofM.hnWna farm. 1ml work a small patch of potatoes or corn ! ou their own account, iu ground mostly I so tilled with stumps and so given to overgrowing bushes as to be useless t3 any but themselves. Ouo sometimes ., them working in their fields. Pa- f.wiiia. .in.. n, inwin l'.linB ' Afmtmn. .iron. ,nrn .n.l tbe ret ooine in regular sequencs, M iter leading the hoeing. The reach Crop. The peach trees throughout Maryland and the lower section of D.-laware give appearances so favorable that there is : every prospect for ono of tho largest crops that has been gathered on the pe- ninsula. The fact that the blossom ng is from two to three weeks later than last year lesseus the chance of injury by aDy frost or freezing weather. The statements that many orchnrds have been rooted np because of last year's failure is denied. Oal.v tho old trees ' that had ceased to be fruitful were cut down, snd the new trees coming into bearing will more than fill up tho space vacated by the old trees. Arraugenu cts are making for shipping to the West, where there will be a demand in eonse qnenco of the failure of the crop there. A large portion of the crop will go to tho drying houses and rauniug estab lishments. The failure last year lias left tho market bare of dried aud canned peaches, so that the demand must be large. There has been a geucral trim ming of trees and ou improvement in the cultivation of orchards by plowing and the nsc of fertilizers, that will doubt less reward the owners. Tho following are the statistics of the peach crop for tho last twelve years, as indicated by the number of carloads shipped over the I L?laware railroad, which, however, does not include the large quantity that reaches the Baltimore markets by steam ers aud sailing vessels : In 1 the shipments amounted to U.O.V! carloads; in If'.Sonly 1; in lsc,'. to 4,01'.; iu the crop was a partial failure, and the shipment rtacbed 2,7t7, but in 171 there was a full market, and .',001 car loads were gathered; in 172 1,001 loud?; in 1CS -"-; in 1n74 l,-tV, and in 17.1 the largest crop was gathered, amount ing to 11,072 carloads. Tiio judications now are that tho crop of 179 will be equal to this. Iu 1 7i", 2,11' csrlt.a.U; in 1S77, t 0;!, aud iu 17 only HtV), the crop being almost a total failure. Canada RcqioiiMlilc. If Sitting Bull aud his bands of war riors should be able to flank tho Cana dian monutod police and take a notion to Ewoop down upon Dakota acd the northwestern settlements, there will be a fair chanco for our people to get even with the dominion in that little matter of the fisheries awird. According to tho ruling of our authorities, our settlers would have no redress from tho govern ment for losses incurred in consequence of snch a raid. When the dominion au thorities permitted Sitting Bull to find a refnge within their borders they be came responsible for him and for all his acts. If, therefore, he should descend upon the border aud burn tho settle ments, our citizens would Lave war claims to adjust with Canada, snd our government could demand another ar bitration and refuse to permit any 1 j1 fosse to act as referee upon it. The knowledge of this on tho part of the Ca nadians will probably make them bestir themselves actively to prevent any such contretemps as an Indian raid this sum mer, and it will make them only the more urgent for Sitting Hall's return to the charge of the truly paternal Indian bureau. His Donation. Scribnr.r tells an anecdote of the days when Emerson, Longfellow, Holmes and others used to dine together ia or der to indnlge in brilliant after-dinner repartee, to the effect that one day tho club stopped at an old-fashioned tavern kept by Zack Porter, who had some ducks brought in and carved by himself, as a mark of consideration to the dis tinguished guests. The knife was keen and was wielded by a deft hand; the slices fell about the platter like a mow er's swath, until tbe carcass was bare as a barrel . 'What do yon do with the bird after that ?' Lowel asked of the landlord. 'Wall,' said Porter, with a curious twinkle in his eyes, 'when I've sliced eff the breast, an' the wings an' legs like that' (pointing to the shell i, 'I gin'rally give the carkess to the poor." Skcfoh of Slinkspenre's Life, William Winter, the talented dramnt io critic of the New York Tribune, has written an interesting account for Har per' of the "Immortal William." It appeara from the best authenticated ac counts that the bard of Avon went to school when seven years old, and left it when about fourteeu. He then had to work for his living his once opulent father having fallen into misfortune and he became an apprentice to a butch er, or else a lawyer's clerk (Ihere were seven lawyers iu Stratford at that time), or else a school teacher. Perhaps he was all three and more. It is conjec tured that he saw the players who rora time to time acted iu the (inildhall, un der the auspices of the corporation of Stratford, that he attended the religions entertainments which were customarily given in the neighboring city of Coven try, and that iu particular he witnessed the elaborate and sumptuous pageants with whioh in 1573 the l-'.arl of Leicester welcomed Quceu I'.lizabeth to Kenil worth Castle, ne married at eighteen; "Ul1 threTe elfiteat Stratford, he went up to London at His eutraueo into theatri- iwvuiy-inir. life immediately followed-in what One dubious aefonut says that he held horses for the pnblio at the theater door; another that ho got employment as a prompter to the actors. It is certain that ho bad not been in the theatrical business long before he began to make himself felt. At twenty-eight bo was known as a prosperous author. At twenty-nine he had acted with Bnrbsge Queen Klizabith , aud whde Spenier had extolled him m the "Tears of the Muses," tho envious Green had dirrKeJ him in the '( Iroal s Worth of Wit." At thirty-threo ho had acquired wealth enough to purchase New Place, the principal residence in his native town, where now he placed his family and established his home, himself re maining iu London, br.t visiting Strat ford at frequent intervals. At thirty four he was heard of as tho actor of Knowell in Ben Jouson's comedy, then new, of I'.itry Man in his Humor, and he received the glowing encomium of Mores in Wit's Treasury, At thirty. eight he had written Hamlet and A-i You .ike It, and, moreover, he was now become tho owner of more estate in Stratford, costing him X:WO. At forty one he made his largest purchase, buy ing for XJ-i'Mhe titles of Siratford, Oid Stratford, P.ishoplou and Weleorabe. In the meantime ho had smoothed the declining years of his father, and had followed him with love and duty to the grave. I). her domestic bereavements like-wire befoll Lira, and other worldly cares and duties wete laid upon his hands, but neither prief nor business could check tho fertility of his brain. Within the next ten years he wrote, among other great plays, nthcUo, Lear, Marbrth, and Coriohinits, At about forty-eight he seems to have disposed of his shares in the two Liudou theaters with which he had been connected, the l'.laokfriars and the Globe, aud shortly afterward, his work as we possess it be ing well-nigh completed, ho retired finally to his Stratford home, where he passed his last days, aud died somewhat suddenly, ou his fifty-second birthday. To Enjoy Life. Tho bcdt recipe we Luow of, if you want to be miserable, is to think about yourself how much you have not made, and tho poor proppects yon havo for the f utnre. A brave ruau, with a soul in him, gets out of such pitfnl ruts and laughs at discouragements, rolls up his sleeves, whistles aud sings and mekes the best of lifo. Tin earth was never intended for a paradise, aud tho man who rises above his discouragements and keeps his manhood will only be tho stronger and better for his ad versitifs. Many a no ble ship has boeu saved by throwing overboard its valuable cargo, and many a man is better and more humane after he has lo his gold. The Speech Writers of Washington. A Washington correspondent says: Tho 'original speech writers,' a class of literary gentlemen who rauko a living by furnishing speeches to order to mem bers of Congress, have been quite busy of late. One of these gentlemen fur nished six speeches ou tho array appro priation bill. He has already got one np on the disputed points in the legisla tive bill, aud has orders for four more. These speeches are among tho best that will be delivered r!n the bill, and, bo sides being well-filled with flowers, are stored with facts and more information than a new Congressman could gather in a mouth. Accumulation of Intercut. A Boston merchant with aturu for fig ures, nnd withal an uncommonly shrewd student of social problems, has been cal culating the growth of the immense for tune now concentrated in the hands of Mr. Vanderbilt. Presuming tho great railroad king to li70 twenty years, and reap annual harvests of interest on his present vast property no larger than the modest rate of seven per cent, would yield, he says that in 1H3, Mr. Vauder bilfs esCito will be worth S-'WO.OOO.OOO. It seems incredible, but tho figuring does not appear faulty. An Optic.! Illii.ioi!. Take three differently oolored wafers red, violet and orange place them upon a large piece of white papor, in a trian gular form; hold the paper in a strong light, and fix the eyes upon the waforn, and gaziug npon them steadily for two minnte; then tnrn them away from the wafers to a blank part of the paper, and yon will see three spectral wafers, but tho colors will be dilT jrent ; the red wa fer will now be represented by a green one, the violet by a yellow, and the orango by a bine. Alexander Stephens is the chairman of the Committee ou Weights a Del Mea nres. Comment is unnecessary. FACTS ASD FANCIES. Almost any one will get hia back up when you intimate that ho ia going to back down. Hath Green says fish have much sus taining power, lie means, perhaps, they are good to prop a gate. If we may believe the Atlanta Consti tution, it is the late frosts that have toughened spriug ohickens. Far happier are they who always know what they are to do, than they who have to determine what they will do. Stones, the counterpart of cannon balls in size and weight, are found in the bed of the Cannon Ball river, a branch of tho Upper Missouri. In the National House of Representa tives there are now IU Johns, 30 Wil liams, 15 Jameses, 11 Thomases, II) Georges and ten Josephs. Iu ono day recently 1,385 bills were introduced into the House of Represen tatives, which is the largest number ever presented at one sitting. The mouarchs of Russia, Austria and Spain ore expected to be the guests of the Emperor of Germany in June next, when his golden wedding is to be cele brated. Bishop Potter, the venerable head of the Protestant Episcopal diocese of New York, will celebrate the twenty-fifth an niversary of his accession to the episco pate in November next. As an evidence of the number of men out of employment and the liking for a littlo anthority.it ia stated that there are :l,000 applicants for positions on the police forco of Baltimore. A man in Brattleboro', Vt., has just paid to a merchant there a note ho gave his father seventeen years ago, with in terest, although the note had been out lawed and lost and the matter forgot ten. A little girl in ono of the public ccbools tbe other day had occasion to parse tho word "Angel." Coming to the gender she stopped dismayed. aud asked her teacher if "there are any men an gels." Tuero is only one object ia the world which will attract a young lady's atten tion from the handsome young man she meets on the street, and that is another woman with a hat two laps ahead of any stylo she has yet seen. When a man puts the gluo brimh in the ink, and theu sticks the pen in the paste pot while he rescues the brush, ho is apt to let them both rest while he gets up nnd frees his mind of ceitain notions iu regard to what a fool ho is. Tho New Euglaud Conferenoo look strong action against holding camp meetings on Sunday. It regards these places aB the resort of va'n and ungodly persons who want to mako a day of frolic of what ought to be a day of rest After his election President Taylor wrote to his son Richard, just deceased inviting him to come to Washington as his privato secretary. Dick refused the offer haughtily, say iug that he "wouldn't play second fiddle even to tho President of the United States." It is generally supposed that Chinese "rice paper" is made from rice. It is really made from tho pith of a tree. which grows to tho height of twenty feet, and which is also used for tho man ufiioture of artificial flowers and certain toys and fancy articles. Frank Wilson, of Yancey county, N ('., wished to go West, but lacked the wherewithal. Si he killed a goose, bloodied himself, told his brother he had killed a neighbor, collected $-200 from him and others to enable him to escape, and ran away. "Have yon given electricity a trial for your complaint, madam?" asked the minister, as ho took tea with the old lady. "Well, yes, I reckon I has. I was struck by lightning last summer and hove out of the window; but it didn' seem to do me no sort of good." When a Baltimore cook had got her kitchen Are well under way, the other morning, she was greatly frightened by cries issuing apparently from the stove, Her screams soon brought the family to tho spot, the most courageous of whom opened tho oven, when out crawled a partly-cooked kitten. A littlo five-year old child who hod just lost hor father received a ticket of reward from her teacher a fow days ago, As soon as school was out she ran home to show tbe ticket to her mother, and when she snowed it the child satdj "Motber.I havoheld the tirkeb up to the sky all tho way homo, so that my father could s?o how gcod I have been." Chilla and Kover, Fever and Aftno, a enre guaranteed iu every (?. N'jt one aliako after tho flrxt dom a novcr-faUina; and oaitive cure, l'nt np la two forma, pvwrttra ana ptlls the name ia Prof. I'aiue'a Anti-Heptie I'owdrre aud Anti-SopUe I'llla. Ujae (or a enre, one cverv two bonra ntitll twenty powdor or uu are taken ; take a liver lteoovator Pill over? night, and repeat the Anti-Heplie l'owrtirs or I'llla every Haven day, l'owdera fl.uu per box. Liver till 25 centa per box. aent by mail, ttben ordering be tnreand. alatewuctn rr Ton want powdera or pill', indole the money in the loiter and direct to Prof. YV. Paine, 269 a. MntU Htrect, PntUdelpbia, l'a. , rf.-.t Tlm.--k.fT-T. Ilrmtlntraaf. aid Mitt If f..r f;v -:.ra f.t .In.! - tM l :....ir:.l iMlttiiiMion tivmrl .f Hi- .r -I. It i.U prin. we hanrr'f. tl- I n.e k. . p. r. F-.r Men. H"". M.h-I. mi.-.. rl..i I ; ' r-, ' r..v. n, is una Kinuera It i. ii.l tl - ' 1- 'I' V nr.- 1I1 hillli pri-i .! wat.'ll. n"l In li'a'.y rn-. liii.ro ni""': "ov.'.liHk'.f 1.1 A Hi trtW I ha'" f..rl . Tl.r sOl.A Kill A I'll WATt II lau.V.1 bvli. H. Hnwera, I'rlnelpalor the ( har lesion n lllarh hrhnol. iim.I I. I.. ln f"t .r..,li d lnl.i nil the -h-nia lhro-.iirl...lit lb- "-! Knu-a. and i- d. lioe.l .i become fhe lu..t ' ii.. fiil Titn. ...; r ev. r b.i. iiu d. 'ihv SOLAKt.KAI'H WATCH lmhil a Mi.U at tho Me I rluuiie1 Y ir. at Itn"!i.n, In 1 7. . , , . Thia In no toy. but i. ina-h- on n iml'ff prim lpl.-, nnd every one wan inte.I to be aeenrnlo nnd ' reliable. We have lna.U- the price very low imp!) to lnlrvdu- e Hum nt uw, after which 111- prtco willhj nV AT( j. y(t , j, ,,, ,,,, ., nnt niitfM.- ca.-. and .nt bv mull In lnvffl..lr.-.af..rl.l. V I a. m...!r it.-pri. r l-.v, pl.i-e ,nl two f.anip if eonv. i.len! to Ii. Ijj pa; -.v.', . .'.ddr. plali.l), ,j i F. F. FRENCH & CO., Watch Manufaclurrs, Brockton, Mass. A sleepy individual asserts that it is a long laying that bag no turning. $1000 rlmllrnge AftlOOOclinllciiKC Noiieroil tl;nl 0E man ran mih H" a lug Willi till IIIK-llilM ill lN4 lilllO tllHIl THO men rim in I he old way. Till chulleiiKf applies to liny two men in Hie WOKI.I) wlio Mill nr- 't'lt it. A iiiaeliiiio i nlwayai on nhibilioii opposite new riislom house, for air-ulur utlilrt'NM, W. W . aii'M. N. i:. or.lli ami Slono (reels, Ciueiiiiintl. O. THE MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CU. Orris tii l. Aiii.f. v AaiuiiTMtNr or the BEST ASH CHKAI'KST Caliini-t or rrlor nrgsna in uw world; wmiifmof 1IK1IIKST HONOUH at KVKKY WORLDS KXPOKITION for TWKI.VK YEARS, Only Amfrlrmn Oman awanlcil anrh at any. TWO HIlllll.HT )II.UI1.1 ai l-Allin r.iwi i '"- ON to TWI XTT-ONlt Ntopw : prll-Bi, fM, f M, t'H, I jo, io. line, fiua, $iu, $ii, iao, is, uo, SIJ4, aiStianJ upward. Hul.l alao for Vmj pay- Tmi...ir Vkkt iKFrmnit OnuANH. lti-fora rur- mnls l'RII-KH ARK NOT SITB IlIMIIEM I UAH ohaliig be ur to arud fur latkkt CATAI.OOl'E witn urwpit tiyira an.i iowmi uwi inc-a. wm uro. 154 Tri-njooi Ht., HclsTON: 41 Kaat 14tll Ht. (fnlon Sqnarr), fil-.W YOUKjXMI Walwali Air., tiniUAItO. I WANT A LIVE AGENT IN K.U II TOWN TO SKI.I. MY AUTU I.KS, KO MOSEY rtKQOKED till talea ars maile. 1 will tend an outfit, with namphlrta to advrrtlie, 1)J mail, noatpald. Tbia ia a good opportunity foi agrnta to add aomrtlilug to their lucomo wlttioot rliking one cent. Write for particulars to W. II. COMSTOCK, MorrlKinwn. St. I.nwrrnre Co.. rw Vorlt r.IIMON-l-:NK ( II lilt mill ItOt Kl'liX Uuli r without ItrailuiK Table. No (l!i.-f. Library, tiutilk- or i.ri- vnlt'. Hltliup- njuiu or lMazza aliould (h without aomp of my Koi'kuiii-t'lialns roomy, to mty and dural.li. ! Try my 1'url t.ni Ito. ker.ort lid Point Comfort. V-and yon will flu.l IIkht. Solid TTj fetninpforillustiutrd rnrvl.it lo V. A. Hisi i.Aiii Moimllf, . l. RUPTURE Kt'lii-vvd and rnrr.i, without tho injury triiuaa li tll. t, by tr. .1. A. MIIKUMANN ayatriu. OflW, J.M HnndwnY. Xiw York. Ilia 1ok with nhoto- yraohre likeni-lora of bad raxt'A b.-foro anil after mro, mailad for 10 riutr. li ar vt Iraudulrut liaitator. WANTED AGENTS FOR flKNX DICK TAYUHfr? IKHiK Destruction and Reconstruction. For particular!! adilrpaa W. . II AYNF. It font Olit e Ave., Halt iutorr, .WJ CARPENTER SAWS, Or any otbfr kitul, u can flip YnnrM-lf w th our Ni w .tlm'tiiiir io (hit It will ,-ut Iti iicr than Kvrr. Tut iftli wilt all remain of mini life an hat. Ht nt fn-P on rt-t-Hpt vt t Iu uujr part of llir I'mtvtl htalca. llliptrtnl I'lrriitarn fret, liouil AgfDii wantol in rvry runntv and i-lly. Ad'lrwa K. KOTH k 1U(., NVw (Hfur.I, K. f arvvp have hmidrtMK of Iftti-r from itipn lining onr Machiiit', who a.iy tlwy wouM not tak $9 lor it II I IS BURNHAM'S ftlmnlnrd Tnrblno WATER-WHEEL W AMARUS BEST AND CHEAPin. J MILLING SUPPLIES OrrlCSt 93 South itranr St., l urk, -1W WANTED TO FOKM A CO-Oi'KR- ATI VIC UNION CIA'B In evonr town In Uie V. S for nubile bikxI. Any ner- i.i. m... will m t in. i l-l'L unll! nitmiln-ra w ill he paid Hit dollar and Lo lti" preeidi-nt. and t-utltlrd lo the f'aea-wiird. Miouid tln un-ct your approval cnt tliia out and etnd ten 3 crn! pofUi- aiau.iw furnnult. Adilrpia Cooperative Union. No. 1" Nrw Cunrch St., N. Y. Tun will not appear ayaiu in lhi jwper. FITS CURED! ! FREE!! I'pllrpay r Fnllinir )ilrfcni-N, warranted to Hot lie" of my renowned apM-iAr and a valuable J reauae aent to any unerer aeniiniK iuo ma i-oi-oflr and Kipre Ad.lre. Ilu. II. U. HOOT, 13 l'earl NtreatN. i . ry r a f f C S O (7 A DAY. AdHXTS if M MANTKII i: Kill lii-.ni. AT Hale or 1- . -male. Ronielliini; New. Hum. umb nermaaent. Tarklall Hun I'ntlrril. alaim d ou llurlap iu color. Are uiadeot Hug11 or Yarn, For Circular!, addreaa, with atalup. K. K. KKOST V .. Iliilili-I'oril, Mnlnr. SCHOOL SCANDAL Taiuphlet. fontaitu the recent aeandalou illacloa Mr it. ti.A p. il.lt.. M.ttiioIanr Hun KranciAi-o. includ- Iiiii leallmonv and corn upolideiice. Mailed on re- raipt of .) n-lilM. Artdra J. Hart, MM t in ail.. Kan l-'rmirlM-o.JIJul. ' " yV n r r y o r y LT I TI III I'l TIMM HI) to 'JS eta. per yr.l a 1 I.T 4 l:l I.I Mi for r. otim in pl ire r.t Mauler, FM.'P KOOI'IMj and MDIM;. For i-lri-ulal and Simple addreai '. J. FA V, I'jiiiden. N. .lereey flC III CrtfKl ,,'"c",nl inveeted III Wall SI. la) lit 3 IU ISUuU the foundation for aulwtantial lor linn arvi-rv WMk. all. I vlel'laall lutllivliai- ixti'i-UUk of profit" I . the New Capitalization Myeteni of ofM-ra. tlnx in Hto'i'ka. Full eiplaliatlou ou application I. Adama.ltrDWU A Co., llanam. '-H H -J nroa.i im l i n nrVrt AtiKNTX W AM'KB i me souiiit ru IU.UUU and Weetem Hlatea lor the liriliiliel Triumph "f the Al-e. t IOO lr Month and Kipi nnea. M3 Outfit tree. tiilKrr ni , V hi I UP UCM l-earn T.'le rapl.y ami ram TUUMU TILll toKM)a i.l ii. Kv- ryRradnata guaranteed a pavlnrT situation. Ad dreaa It. valelil.lie, niaoaKvr, u. --.j ... " t i ntamn n ilm. fur the new aud mi irk l-r. f AIR iLllD. of draining. J. J. fallow, ('If velnnd. (. " !K yoiir I r juKial or Hlnrekwir for Uxumiii'i iV IHAltltllK.A IIK.Tli:iM. itiaineo-ai T H XE3 rw WR6M?H WATCH ! MEATY rMTFD HI IX. I:.tl yK w. lv - .1 j" ' 0'";"l'"'-T J '"!'"'' !"' lam - a IBM -I tuiri, ..r.u ni. DR. CLARK Johnson's INDIAN BLOOD SYRUP . . mif ami II v.. i. Laborawry, t i n.oiKM.,.icw lur.vuj, utb or JCIUET CUT. f TRADE Mini 1 Tha Bafit Remedy Known to lan I Pr. vmrK .lontirHm nav.HR aiaMiciaM-ti , , 1 aVlaveloWakmHtkl,tho nn'iiicinr man of thJ lutrodi.rtion of the wonderful temeilyof "Yi" m fiat f Mrn.t'haf. JodobuimI cm. of aMiioi'lnii t'o Iowa BO ncrtnniv m m a-ti . thriHiinrly narrated In the Ac .I'or Herald of 1 ice. known, end ao nenrly parallel that but littlo me it lion of Mr. Kaatiiian'a fipcrlcncea will b ftircri uiaroof;HVp,V.cntitle.i."ScTenandN.uoWa Anioni! tho Comuochoa and Apache, of Tituch mcniloQ will he made hereafter. Sufllce it to a.y. that far acvaral year, Mr. Enatmau, whtla a cap ,ve comUed to Kathc, r"d'in. T.aa made, and i Hill prepared to pro li j" the aa materiala for Ilia auccaaaful intro duction or the roeiieiu iu"" ' ,, ' ' "r ia l'ia putu c tsiai me rem.-i.T - t, - Wakametkla, the Medicine Man . . - a - ti. tl.a. tiir-.lirina. snrl ,ion"nTl!a- be" n mken u,y. It I- ;;ho"t .loubt SM lV'tmi'fll Utoonand Hasill tha 9int ever known " "" . Thla tfrup posees vbj.v" f II art iipoit llic 'r' II nrlx upon llir li.llJM I' ll rrsnliit. " Hie ll.nfl. II purllii a III.' IIIimmI. II lilela Ilu- NT Syajlem. II pr..ni..t lllufilii. II NoiiriRliea, MreuulUrun and InTle- "u'currlcaonilieold blood nnd mnkt-a "iTiprna the porra of llio takln, and Indiu r Healthy aexplratlou. It neiitruli.-a the horeditnry taint, or poiton In the I.Io.hI.w liicta L-ene.rateeScriifiil.firynj U. aud all manner of ekin dinasei. nnd iniernal humors. There are noipirit-cuM. lined in it manufactari', nud it ran he taken by the luo-t d. llralo balm, ol bTtliaedi.iI fe.-ble, tare wij ifjuia ia Edwin Eastman in Indian Costume. Ru ns and Ni!a lEAtia Aaoso Titr abu apai lira. A neat vulumu of .HW patfe". beini! a airnple aUtement of the horrible facia t imui-cled with the iud maMincro of a hclplce larallv. nnd the captivity, tori n re. and iilliniate r-ap'r of italwornrvlvinc meinhera. I-or rale liniiirni;''utH tenerully. Price $1.00. The iuridi-nta ni tho ina-wrc, briefly narrtttt-0, nn- distributed by ng al: rui-t of charw. Mr Kiiliun.bcini.' almo-t contjtntly at ln Wet. ei. -:as.-d i:i V .llieriu and rurinthe nuiteri ula ..f wiik U the inedii ine li rorapi.ncd. the eoia biifiin fs niaiirn.-nu nt d. volvea upon Hr Jolim.n, ni.d the reuuily ha been called, aud ia known aa Dr. Clark Johnson's INDIAN BLOOD PURIFIER. Tries cf Largu Bottle 102 Pricaof Small Bottle 60 It-id the volnntary tcntimnnlala of H-r.oin who havo neon enrad by the uw of Ur. ( lark Jobnaoa a ludlaullloi.d ;rup, iu your own vicuilly. Testimonials of Corel. Xorth Carolina Tesztmontalt. RioommcndB it to all. Wako Foru.t, Collcgo, Jan. 30, 1879. PearH.r: I btve aa d tbe Indian Blood Bjrup which I pniebaaod from your Ant, W. JJ. Wingatn, cud think it a aeryiceable luedi cine; ita effect oa tbe Liver, Blood, and other way a I have hnd oooariou to uae, have been fully up to the claima of ita Agut ; and cheer fully recommend it lo tho jHt.p'eof thiati cioity. . Ii. Gill, aiagiatrate. An V. lellorit Mrdirino. Pregtonviilo. 8u k. Co., N. C, Jan. I. i"0. DearHu-: II -wing bein i filu-Ud wilb Bhen niatinm in my back and biia fr tbrne veara, I waa adTiaed to try your Ia.!ia:i Blood Byrup aud I can gay it haa d t.c me more Rood than any medioino X ovwr UU. Joel Hawkii . Ilr-medy fur ltlicnmitim. Hid dwanip, llubutuu C .., N. 0., I Oj'. 3. 178. f near8:-I waa ifU'etod Mi h Illuumatio r:u for ten yeara, aud 1 tried many re&itilie", but found none to do mo any good nut 1 1 pur chased aotne of your Indian lilond Birup from yonr A)uut, acd li&vi -i; teatcd it nijeo'.f, 1 TTould rocouimoud all aliliclt-d to givo it a trial. YWluitui Itonland. Cored when other Remediei Failed. MoaaNeok. Ilobcuon Co., N. C. Dear Sir: I waa badly afflicted, and I am Elad to teatify that your Indian Blood Hrrnp aaonred mo when every other medicine failed. I oouaidont a valuable medioino. J. SlcArthur. Another ease of IHienmatlam Cured. ,.iarhil Maxwell, of Lumberton, Itobeaon Co., N. U., wrilcathat he haa been cured of Itbenuiatiem by tho nao ol' the Indian Blood Hyrnp and would reoonunund all to give II a reaaonabio trial. V.tnioJv for rokaobe. Bnlavi!le, liupltu i)o.. N ti., fb. 30. 1879. l)..ar Mir : I wat i.n(T. rinjf Ttiy much with tho Backael-e. ami throe dues of tour Indian blood 8vrui enrtd mu. W. J. Barber. Dyapeptia and Indigaatlon and Lirer Com plaint. BonlaTille, Duplin Co.. N. O., Feb. 20, 1879. Dear Bir : I have been troubled with Dya pepaia, lirer Complaint, aud Bick Headache, for a long tram, and I tried aome of yonr yal nable Indian Blood Hyrun aud found myaelf greatly benefited. 1 beiinre it to be a good midioine. Ntncy J. Barber. For Furifying the Blood. rVnlarUle, Dunlin Co. . N. C, Feb. 82, 1879. Dear Bin I hare been nelng yonr Indian Dlood Syrup and find it a Teiy Talnable medi oine for Punfying the Blood. Bpioy E. Pickett, For Heart Dlaeaae. BenlaTille, Dnplin Co., N. C , Fob. 22. 1879. Dear Sir : I hare taken yonr Indian Blood Hyrrrp for Heart Diee, and it haa been of great Talne lo rue. I can recommend it to all fimilarl ifflict.d. Bub at a WLiiiama. i? . S if S ill RL

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