OUR LITTLE FOLKS. The Uliils' Tarty. Ths birds bats a party one britrht summer's flsy 'Twi held In a meadow of nowly-mown bsy, Close by an old orchard, where apples of June Kept the throats of the choristers sweetly la tone. A heriVs of wild roues this meadow concealed From the fnrmors at work In a neighboring floM; While the hum of the Does and the murmuring brook, Made a paradise quite ot this sweet little nook. The first to srrive wns the Oarrler-dove, Who brought the regrets of her friends In the prove, The Tioutcra and nuns, who had serious reason lo give for thus slighting the Dall of the season, Then camnthe Cock Robin with sweet Jenny Wren, The Blsrkblrrta, a faintly party of ten, The Thritf-hes in blown, and the Jaybird in blue With wild Bob-o-linlium who makes such ado. The King-bird and suit next arrived, I am told, With the Oriole dressnd all in velvet and gold; While ihe Cardinal thought it no shame to be seen In humble attendance upon the gay queeu The sweet Meadow Lark was the hostess that day, H manners so gentle and temper so gayj Tnougli 'tis whlxpered discreetly, half earnest, half fun, That her gi acs were learned at the court ot the sun. In strutted the Peacock, a vain, gandy bird, And rendered himself by his airs quite absurd. But the Daws in a co nor just whispered together, And soon the poor croature had scarcely a feather. In a bower of ivy screened off from the day, The Owl and the Bat dozed the morning away; Whilo the Woodpecker's tap and the Cat-bird's wild scream Failed to rouse the dull souls from their Indolent dream, Neath a wide-spreading locust the banquet was spread. Whose olusterlnz bloasom a rich odvff shed, Where, seated on couches by Nature designed, On the sweetest of berries they merrily diued. (But alas for the plans of the children of clay I The farmer that moment remembered his hay.) The dessert had bcon placed, and in bumpers of dow Many toasts had been given, when over there flew A pert little BpaiTow whom nobody knew. Farmer Scedwcll," he cried; " ladles, fly for your lives 1" Then into a sheltering thicket he dives. The birds gave a flutter, and off they all flew Without even bidding their hOKtess " Adieu lk I.auih s. Uaomer. Children Under the Snow. Far away tip in the north, on the ehoros of that great frozen ocean lying beyond Europe and Asia, you may sometimes catoh eight (as I did once) of a huge, gray, pointed thing, standing all alone in the midst of the snowy plain, just like an immense pear with the stalk upward. I should have been puzzled had I not seen a thin curl creeping from the top of it ; but that let me into the secret. This queer-looking thing was a Snmoiede tent I The tent of a Samoiedo is almost as f implo an affair as that of an Arab. All you have to do is to plant a dozen long poles m the ground, slanted so as to let their tops meet ; cover this frame work with reindeer skins, leaving a hole at the top to let out the smoke ; pile the snow high up around the lower part to keep off the wind the "house" is com plete. But, outlandish as it looks, this little burrow is worth something in a red Russihu frost, which freezes the very breath on one's mustache ; so I go right up to the door (which is simply a thick skin hanging over a hole in the side), lift it, and step in. The inside is certainly warm enough rather too warm, in fact, being almost as hot and choky as a bake-house. There is a firo burning in the middle, the smoke going anywhere to every where; and beside it sat three things one can hardly call them human figures one a deal larger than the other two. There being no light but the glare of the firo, it is not easy for me to see where I am going ; and the first thing I do is to stumble over something which seeuis niku u bum uug, unusually lull. But it is not it is a child, wrapped or rather tied up in a huge cloak of deer skin, and rolling about tho floor like a log. In these out-of-the-way places, where a man may go for days without seeing a human face except his own, people call upon each other without waiting to be introduced, and my sudden entrance does not seem to disturb my new friends in the least. They greet me cordiully enough, and bid me welcome in Russian, which most of the Samoiedes speak a little j and, seating myself on a chest, I look about me. As my eyes got U3t;d to the half-light, I see that the group by tho fire consists of a woman and two little girls, mullled in skins from head to foot. Papa is away somewhere with his sledge and his reindeer, leaving mamma to mind the house r.ud take care of the children. Funny little thiugs they are, with great round heads, and dark-brown skins, and small, restless black eyes, and faces a3 if somebody had sat down upon them; but, queer as they look, they have learned to make themselves useful already, for they are hard at work stitching their own clothes. They are not a bit shy, and in another minute I have them scrambling up into my lap, and wonder ing at the ticking of my watch, which I take out to show them, while they clap their hands and shout, 'Pa i,pai I" which is their word for "good. The tent is not a very large one, but every inch of its space has certainly been made the most of. The floor is carpeted with thick sheets of gray felt, and littered with chests, sacks, baskets, bark shoes, and bits of harness; while hanging from the tent poles, or thrust into the folds of the skins that cover them, are a perfect museum of things of every sort caps, pouches, fish spears, knives, hatchets, whips and last, but certainly not least, the face of a baby, which has been thrust into a kind of pocket in the skin, like a knife into the sheath. I stoop to stroke the little brown face, while the round e"es stare wondenngly at me out of the folds of the skin. Meanwhile the lady of the house (or rather tent), hospitable like all Ka' moiedes, hastens to set before me some black bread mixed with bark, and a lump of terrifically strong cheese, made of reindeer milk. The reindeer supplies the Samoiedes with plenty of other things beside cheese; indeed, almost everything that they have got comes from it in some form or other. They eat reindeer meat, they drink reindeer milk ; their fish-spears are tipped reindeer horn ; their clothes, and the very tents in whioh they live, are made of reindeer skin; the needles wherewith they stitch them are of reindeer bone, and the thread of reindeer sinew; and when they wish to move from place to place, it is the reindeer that draws them along the Samoiede would be as badly off without his reindeer, as the Arab with out his camel.-- Wide Awake. About iuidnic t. iubt after an acci dent in the Consolidated Imperial mine. .Nevada, the wile ot Matthew Wu me was found on hr way to the works. She aid Bbe had been awakened just before by her husband, who came all mangled to her and told her he had been killed m the mine, fcha cot up, dressed herself and started to ascertain the truth ot what she was only too well convinced was true. There had in reality been a ieavmi accirii'nt: Mr. Winnie wa in deed killed, and the tiembling woman want back to her childven ttud hor deao kttt homo. Will Education Held Subsistence I An education, yes ; but what sort ot an education f A bricklayer's eduoatiou, an artisan's, a farmer's, would, indeed, help him to earn living. A college education would give him a social ad vantage, but it would not, in itself, in crease his chance of earning a living ; it would rather diminish it. For, an way pointed out in an interesting paper lately published in this magazine, our colleges do not, like the French and German universities, instruct a young man in the bread-winning pursuits ; the American colleges are, on the contrary, iustitutions for general culture. I do not take up the question here of tho amount ana value of the culture they supply. The point for us to note is that the educated young American who has not a special education as a bread-winner is worse off, as to his money pros pects, than the young American who hwi no college education at all. Dig he can not, and to beg he is ashamed. Two of the professions at least are fatally over crowded. The United States, with a population not greatly larger than that of the German empire, graduates every year five times as many physicians ; for the German empire limits the nnmber of its doctors, and we do not limit that of ours. Very many of our physicians not only wait years for practice( but never get into practice at all. It is much the same with the profession of law. In both professions there are prizes for a few, and failures, more or less com plete, for tho many. The engineer ing, mining, and other scientific professions offer a somewhat better chance, and public life, almost neglected as a profession, will attract a better class of young men from year to year. But upon none of these, save in favored and exceptional cases, as where a son suc ceeds to his father's practice, can a young mnn depend for a fortune, or even for immediate support. They, too, offor a certain social dignity. But as a rule it is the laborer, artisan, or tradesman that has the better chance of supporting himself ; it is the educated man that has, more frequently, to wait before he can pay his way. If, therefore, we edu cate our sons, it is all tho better reason why we should provide, not indeed for their independence, but some aid during the years which they are likely to spend in waiting before they can achieve their position. it is to be remembered, too, that these years of waiting may become, with such aid, years of scholarly or scientific accomplishment, if not of money making ; years of strengthened prepara tion ; years that might introduce and brighten a career, instead of wasted years that cloud or spoil it. T. M. (Joan, in Harper a Mayazme. The Warning. In the summer of 1798, when sooiety in Ulster was completely disorganized, Door woman, too weary to go fur ther, was set down with her baby and a lartre trunk at the inn door. A night s lodging was requested, and the tired traveler placed herself by the fireside while supper was being prepared. Evil looking men moved about the room, and she saw them cast many glances at the trunk, which was unusually large for a poor woman to possess. A good detd of whispering in Irish took place, which she, being a Derry woman, could not understand ; but the host, as he sharpened knives upon the board, seemed to nod toward her in a threaten ing manner. A cock just then strutted np to her, plucked her dress with his beak and ornvinA lniirlljr " Wvinof Viin neck, the villain 1 ' said the host to the servant girl. The bird flew up to the rafters out of harm's way, but as soon as the commotion was over he came down again, and once more crowed and plucked the traveler's gown. Much alarmed, the poor woman rose up, and said, as calmly as she could : "I'll go a wee piece along the road to look about me. Please take care o' my trunk, an' I'll be back before the supper's ready." No one attempting to detain her, she left the inn with her child. Walking quietly until out of sight of the black lake and gaunt firs, she began to run wildly along the road toward the gap. A party of yeomanry met her when she was almost exhausted, and to them she told her story. It was a time when all houses were liable to be entered and examined. The inn was thoroughly searched ; papers were found implicating the host in tbe rebellion, and human remains, as well as clothing, silver and other valuables, discovered on the premises, showed that travelers had been made away with there. Tho woman was conducted to her destina tion by the yeomanry, and did not re turn to Derry until the troublous times were over. She lived to tell her great grandchildren how the cock had saved her life. Belaravia. Telegraphic Disease. Shoemakers who work in narrow and over-heated rooms and in bent and constrained po sitions are subject to consumption ; the students having too much brain-work and too little out-door exercise, tends to dyspepsia; the farmer's wife, with farm cares added to her family cares, tends more than any other class of per sons to insanity ; the clergyman even has given his ministerial name to a throat-ail, a disease that is caused by bad (locution, undue exposure after speaking, and especially to spiritual, parochial and personal anxieties. These re among the old-fashioned diseases. New employments bring new ailments, and among these is "the telegraphic dis ease." Of course, it is only a small percentage of persons that show the morbid tendency of any employment. High health, based on a vigorous consti tution, will, with a modicum of care, stand a very great amount of impru dence and exposure. The tele f,ruphio disease comes mainly to females of a nervous organiz ation the very class that is most apt iu telegraphy. The cause of the disease is close, unvarying attention. There is no room for automatio work. This acts steadily on a single part of tho brain, aflects it injuriously, and causes palpitations, vertigo, wakeful ness, weakness of sight, and, later, de pression, loss of memory, etc. There are two courses open to persons em ployed at telegraphy who find them selves thus affeoted. The first is to abandon the business. No present ad vantage can compensate for nervous disease. The seoond is to use their leisure hours so as to give complete rest to the exhausted portion of the bruin. Company, amusement and en tertaining books are specially healthful in this disease. The patient should also retire early, bo as, if possible, to secure an abundance of sleep. As an aid against wakefulness, divert the blood from the head to the feet, by heating the feet in hot water just before retiring. Good, nourishing, easily digested food is also necessary, with oat-meal and unbolted wheat-meal as part of the daily diet. Strong tea or ooffe should not be nsed. Earning Tier Own Living. Two large cities full of people are as tonished at the statement that a wealthy and intelligent Brooklyn girl haa left her home and old associations with the intention of earning her own living by hard work. This astonishment is so un complimentary to the spirit of young la dies in general that the particular lady in question may be regarded as a proc tical defender of her sex. Why a rich lady, more than a rich man, should de vote life to doing nothing is more than anyone can explain. Thousands of ladies already are devoting their time and means to worthy enterprises merely for the sake of having something definite, to do, and if one of the sex chooses to adopt downright hard work and to live on the proceeds ot her industry, itisnobody's business but her own. If more women Who need fear no wolf at the door wore to do likewise they would be the wiser for it and the world be better. A great deal of the unnecessary injustice and suffering in the world oomes of the ignorance of the well-to-do classes about the lives of those who are socially beneath them. The merchant, even he of well-trained muscles, who spends an hour or two in rolling barrels, or moving heavy packages, learns exactly how it is that his men do not sometimes move as lively as ho would like to have them do; he may even learn why the same men sometimes slip around the corner and invest a port of their small earnings in whisky. If the Brooklyn girl referred to goes into shop, factory or domestio service, and with her earnings makes ends meet, she will never afterward make unnecessary trouble when shop ping ; she will not wonder why girls look pale and dress badly ; and she will be unlikely to have trouble with servants when she has a household of her own to manage. After she has tired of her ex periment, and returns to the enjoyment of her own or her father's bank-book, her money will go twice as far as before, and whatever it buys will be thorough ly enjoyed. If, later, Bhe marries, Bhe will not be likely to complain if her hun band does not earn as much as she may desire to spend, and she will not run the slightest risk of ruining the said husband by extravagance. Not even for the sake of learning so much, to devote mouths r years to common, steady labor ; so the world has no immediate prospect of being regenerated by woman s knowl edge of how her sisters live. New York Herald, Dirty Old Pipes. Yes, it is true, as you remark, that Mr. Carlyle has been a diligent smoker of clay pipes lor sixty years, and has done, notwithstanding, a vast amount of ex ceiient worn, it would ill become me to speak of him or his writings, except with profound respect. But, my dear editor is he a cheerful man ? Has he been generally a happy man ? Do his later works show a better hope, a more buoyant spirit, greater faith in man and in his destiny, than those of his early manhood? His lriends tell us that he has been a prey to indigestion all his days, and that he is the farthest possible from being gay or jocund. His last not' able utterance, entitled " Niagara and After, sounded to me like the cry of an- siinir, and as to his comments upou the late war of secession, was there anything ever written by a great man more per verse ? I am glad you approve of good dinners. I have the honor myself of eating 365 ot them per annum, and leap years 3bb. I believe in a generously nourished and totally unstimulated life. At the same ti'm T 1mm TiAvnr lionn . .441 er, not being able to live up to my best conception. It is the coming man who will not drink wine. I am not he, as you know. Goethe drank freely of the light wines ot his country, as all the Germans do, but ho was free from the taint of tobac' co. He had a particular dislike of it, Voltaire, temperate in all else (except work), was a snuff taker, and had one of the prettiest smin boxes in Europe, Both of them, I think, would have been better and happier if they had managed their bodily affairs a little better. Allow me, then, still to advise students, jour nalists, and all who labor with the brain, to throw away their dirty old pipes, put theii cigars into the stove, never buy any more, become absolute teetotalers (or as near as they can), take a good dinner in tho middle of the day, and rest as many days in seven as they can afford, but always one. James Par ton's letter to the Boston Herald. John tiny and Gen. Cass. In years gone by there dwelt in Washington John Guy, a oharacter in his way, in connection with whom Col. Forney tells the following anecdote : Ouy kept the National Hotel in Washington, and among his guests was Gen. Cass, then Senator from Michi gan. Guy dressed like Cass, and, though not as portly, his faoe, including the wart, was strangely similar. One day a Western friend of the house came in after a long ride, dusty and tired, and, walking np to the office, encountered Gen. Cass, who was quietly standing there. Mistaking him for Guy, he slapped him on the shoulder, and ex claimed, "Well, old fellow, here I ami The lost time I hung my hat np in your shanty one of your olerks sent me to the fourth story ; but, now that I have got hold of you, I insist upon a lower room." The General, a dignified personage, taken abaok by this startling salute, coolly replied : "Yon have oommitted a mistake, sir; I am not Mr. Guy; I am Gen. Cass, of Michigan," and angrily turned away. The Western man was shocked at the unconscious outrage he had committed ; but before he had re covered from his mortification Gen. Cass, who had passed around the office, confronted him again, when, a seoond time mistaking him for Guy, he faoed him and said : " Here you are at last I I have just made a devil of a mistake; I met old Cass, and took him for yon, and I'm afraid the Michigander has gone off mad." What Gen. Cass wonld have said may well be imagined, if the real Guy had not approached and res cued the innocent offender from the twice-assailed and twice-angered states man. The Eagle and Cat. It is well known that eagles some' times carry off hares; they are also said to be exceedingly partial to the flesh of dogs, and occasionally they pounce upon poor grimalkin. Une in the North of Scotland suddenly came down upon a oat, and bore it away to her nest. The injuries inflicted by the clutch of the eagle, and the unusual mode of traveling, so confounded poor puss that she exhibited no signs of life, and was accordingly left for dead by the eagle with heryoung ones. But soon after the eagle had left the nest the oat revived, and, having killed the eaglets, made a hearty meal of one of them. She then made a harried re treat, and effected her escape without further injury. A TERRIBLE CBIME. A Tragedy Which Fosnemeai All the Elemental but Krone of tbe Mystery of the Charley Boh Case. , From the London Times.) Particulars of an atrocious crime, committed a short time ago, and pub lished in the English papers, has espe cial interest to those who made the Char ley Boss case a study, as the confession of the murderer shows that in this, as in the American case, the object of the criminals was to obtain a large amount ol money as ransom. William Marianus DeJongh, clerk to the Minister of Colonies at The Hague, confesses to murdering a schoolboy, Ma rius Bogaarat, son of a former Secretary General, now living a retired life. The murderer laid his plans cunningly, and, before securing the boy, had written a letter to the father, asking for 75,000 guilders, or $30,000, for the surrender of his son, but how and where the ransom was to bo paid was not clear, though it is supposed DeJongh had accomplices. The confession of how the murder was oommitted was told by the prisoner to his sister, to whom he was devotedly at tached. DeJongh wept bitterly while giving an account of his motives and the circumstances under which the murder took place. On Sept. 23, before he committed the crime, and before he had even posses sion of the boy, he wrote the letter re ferred to, demanding the ranBom on a certain date. The Tetter was written in the Cafe St. Hubert, from where he went to Williams Park, where Mr. Bo gaarat resided. It woe 2 o'clock in the afternoon, and Mrs. Bogaarat had just left her house and driven to Hehevmgeu. DeJongh went to the Bheinish railway station, and, having directed the letter, he put it into the postoffice letter-box at the station. lie lett and toon a cab, but, as the cabman was asleep when DeJongh entered the vehicle, he did not notice his face. DeJongh drove to tho school, and asked for young Marcus Bogaarat, a fine-looking boy, 13 years of age. "Do you know me?" he asked of the boy. "To be sure," the latter replied ; "I have often met you in the park." "Now, your mamma wishes me to fotch you from school," said DeJongh. "Did she not, then, go to Schevin gen ?" inquired the lad. " YeB," replied DeJongh, seeing that the boy knew his mother's intentions, " but she told me she would, on her re turn, wait for us at a peasant's house on the Downs near the town." The boy then fetched his school arti cles, asked permission to leave school, and accompanied DeJongh in a cab. When they arrived on the Downs, the murderer sought a quiet place, where he threw the boy on the ground, and bound his hands and feet with a cord bought that morning. "Remain here," he said to Marcus, " till I return with the money I have de manded from your father. Stop your crying if you do not want to be killed." He covered the youth with his coat, and intended to go, but the boy cried so loudly that he returned, fancying he heard footsteps. DeJongh took his sword out of his walking-stick, and killed the child, stabbing him seven times in the breast. In a very agitated stato of mind, the human fiend fled to Schevingen, washed his hands at the sea shore, and returned to tho Hague, altor having thrown away the sword-stick in a little channel by the roadside. DeJongh was arrested on the Downs, whither he returned pnrlv t.Vin following Tnorninrr, Vint, ofttr being confronted with the coachman and other witnesses, was liberated. He was arrested afterward on his own con fessiou, and, after tho avowal of the crime, his sister asked what motives he had for the horrible deed. " I saw our father die in poverty. As for myself, could make my way in India, but I had a placo in the same office where father worked, with no better prospects than he had. What would be my mother's lot and yours ? I wished to Becuro to her a comfortable old age, and, when heard, from a family who are acquainted with his circumstances, that Mr. iso gaaiat was a very rich man, I was seized with a desire to constrain him to give me mnnflv bv Rt.pnlino' fttvav his onlv son. I did not intend to kill the child, except in oase he should possibly become my accuser. My only motive was my wish for money. Nobody assisted me at the time or at the murder. The oase has created an unparalleled excitement in Holland. The greatest anxiety is experienced les there should be a flaw in the title lo property vet a flaw in the title ot health- a cough 01 eold is disregarded. Dr. Bull's Cough Syrnj removes all such at oncej One strange discovery of the redout deeu-sea dredeine off Rbode Island wa a worm inhabiting a quill like a goose auill. The ouills were about a f ot Ions? and won after beine taken out of the water grew so hard that they could be and were used for pens. They stood up in the mud at the bottom of the sea The worms inside were opal colored and when taken out of their strange tenements clist.pned and nrescnted rather urettv aDoearflnce, so far ns color was concerned, lney were rasou up by thousands and none of the sciontiuc men ever heard ot them Deiore. Rheumatism. Kheumatism is a disease ol the blood, 'ihe blood in this disease is lound to contain an excess ot fibrin. Vegetine aota bv oonverUDB the blood lroin its diseased oon dition to a healthy circulation. One bottle ct Vegetine will g.Ve reliol; but, to effect a per mament cure, it must lie takon regularly, ana may take several bottles, especially in cases ot long standing. Try it, and your verdict will be the same as that of thousands betore you, who say! 1 never fonnd so much reliei as Irom the use ol Veceline, ' wnicn is corn. pounded exclusively ol barks, roots and berba. Tha Vnltnln II.. 11 f a . Marshall, Mtch., Will sand their Kltciio-Volia c ilol'B lo the ufflicted unon 20 days' trial. See tbeir adver. tisemeut in this paper beaded, " On 30 1 lays1 i rial." Bralartai levers can be prevented, also other miasmatio disease, by occasionally using Dr. Siin'ord'i Liver Invigorator, the oldet general I'amilv Medicine, whien is recom mended as a cure for all leases caused by a disordered liver. Eiht v-pago book sent tree, Address iJr. Kauloid, 162 Broadway, n. l. Dr O. J5. ribocmaVer, the well-known aurai surgeon ol Heading, Pa., oitrs to Bena Dy man, treeot charge, a valuable little book on deal, ness and diseases ol the ear specially on ruu mnir ear and catarrh, and tbeir proper treat. ment trivinc relerenoes and testimonials that will satisfy tbe most skeptical. Address as above. Get Lyon's Patent Hucl Stiffeners applied to those new boots belore you run tnera over, Logan (Ohio) Hooking Sontinel.) Hocking Talley News. In the absence of anything startling ot terrlfio polities and the exploits of the army worm excepted news from this delightful valley will not prove nerve tingliDg. However, an Item of very great importance to many people is oom municated by Mr. F. Harrington, whole sale and retail druggist, of Logan, who thus writes s Mr. A lux. MoClurg, Union Furnace, states that his wife had been nfflicted with rheumatism for the last twenty-five years, being unable to waik without canes or other help the most of thai time; has now used two bottles ol St. Jacobs Oil, and walks not only about the house, but also in the fields, without any helps. Three American young ladies fit an inn in the village of Limpeler tilled in the column ofl tho register headed "Occu pation" with the words, " Looking for a husband." Saginaw Daily News. Mr. George Schick informed our re porter that he had been suffering with rheumatism in his feet so badly that foi weeks at a time he would be unable to leave his bed. Ho tried various i erne dies without relief, and concluded to use St. Jaoobs Oil. It acted like magic; in two days he was entirely cured. The micrometer caliper, now comina Inlo mp. determines tho thickness of papor or nay thing else to the 10,000th part of an inch. Arousing Its Headers An alarm ol the at miitnigbt is a slartlinj thing, but not half so staviling to many who hear it as wonla be the suii'K.n Kiiowioi;e oi their own dHii!;eroii9 physical oomliti'in. Thousands of thousands are hurrying to theh craves becntisp tin y are carelessly indifferent to the ineidious inroads ot dlsnose and ths means ol euro. It is the mission ol H H. Warner Co., Ttith their Snlo Kidney and Liver cut e, to arouse men to n sense ol then; danger and then cure them. Mtmphii Appeal. ""French emigrants nre beginning io come to America in numbers. till EAT HOUSE MEOICirSE. Dn. tobias' VKVivru v nonsB uximknt in pli.t bottles at 1 rents: 32 yntirs est ih'lslieil. ltlth best In ihe world lVr the eire of t'nlle. OM Seres. Sprains, )iiilss. Sure Thrmls, etc. TOISIAS' OL'MJrnoN POW11KKS ao warranted to cure Distemper, Fever Worms, B ts; Rive a flue coatj lni-re ise Ihe njipetitp und e'eans; the urinary ortian.-i. Certified to l y C-1. li. MeDiiidel, owner of some of the fastest rilnnini horsps In the world, mid l.mio others. SJircnls. Soid by drug gists, ijepot ft Murray Street, New Yort. iitUBtiters, Wives nnrl Mothers. Da. MAItCHIal S t'n.lUXiit'Al'UUl.KJlIN wllloort tlvely euro Female Wcalui is. su -ll ns Fail ng of thl Womb, Wtottes, Chrmvc liilltiiiiiiiiUon or Ulceration ol ttie womb, luel.leniiU lielnnrrnnae or MoouniK, rauinu Suppressed and Ureu'ar Wensl.u itlon, Ac. An old ant re mi. e remedy. 8' n-l p -f-t-u eard fnr a pamphlet, wit! t ea-nienl, iu:e(i atrl e-r tiL-.it s from pliys clns snl patlen l, to HOWAUTII i llM.LAUD, I'noa, K. X DOlu oyail wrufKHis ver uuut. THE JTAKILKT5. HEW TOBB (initio Med. Native, live wt.. 00 a 01 & 05 05 (rs 0lJ44 05 s 09 01), 06 05 09 Calves Good to Prima Veals Sheep Lambs Hogs l.lve...... ...... Dressed Floar Ex. State, goodlo fancy 4 re (3 6 00 Western, good lo fancy 6 10 Wheat No. 2 Ued J 18)4( 1 19X 17 (4 1 18 So. 1 une...... i Rve State Barley Two-ltowtd Btate Corn Ungraded WeBteru Mixod.. 1 0 (it 1 l'4 75 (, 75 68ie 69 6 4 65 U Souuiern neiiuw Oats White State . 5 .. 40 .. 95 .. 90 ,. 13 .15 Oil 61 Ct 1 IS a us (415 60 allied western flay li ime Straw Long ltye. per owt HopB State, 1SSJ Pork Mess T.a,.i mtv At e.'iin. ...... 65 9 BBS Petroleum urnuo vi " Butter State Creamery 2J (4 31 uciry j V9 Western Imitation Oreamery 18 (4 21 Factory l'Xl 2d Cheese Stato Factory 10?i 4 14 tmUlB I'O (9 jui? Western li (4 H,V Ebbs State and Penn 25 (4 27 Potatoes State, bbl 2 Oil i 50 llttv urounrt. Ho. I HprincD 00 (91 0 78 Wheat No. 1 Hard Uuluth ., 1 I fii 1 Kitf Corn No. 2 Wostorri 41 4 4'J Oats Htate '; 37 Barley Two-rowed Btate .0 (4 Bd BOSTON. Beef Cattle Live weight ,. 04 V! 05 V OV, Sheep 04 M 4 L,elnU9 m;va Hone ttiiA 0' Hour Wisconsin aud Minn. Pat..,. 7 0U (4 8 50 Corn Mtsi dan.! Vellow 61 (4 69 Oats Extia While, new 41 (4 48 Bye Sta'.o 1 OS (4 1 07 Wool r.i ucii (jomniHo; a ueiaiue,, aq (9 ou Uuwjs'acd. " as u Box MMTKltTO'.v:: (UAB ) OATTLS MABSBT Beet Cattle iivo -aoiglit 02 (A 01K Sheep WJi4 05)4 Lambs 03)4 4 05 4 Hons 06.(4 05X PHILADELPHIA. Flour Penn. good and fancy 6 6 & 6 81 Wheat- No. 2 lied 115 a 1 15 Kyo State 93 14 98 Oom Utr.te Yellow 61 '4 61 Oata Mixed 16 "44 87 lluttcr Creamery Extra. K a 93 Cheese Kow York i'ull Creim 1:1144 13 a" Pelrolenm Ornde OnvoanTM Battue! ! Vegetine WILL CURE RHEUMATISM. Rheumatism Is a Disease f tbe Blood; to Cure Ithcuniutism it. must be treated as a lilooil Disease. Rev. "WM. T. "WORTH, Recommenls VEuxnE for Ilhcuiu.it ism mil Sciatica. Fill River, Mass., A! ay l.'t, 1879. Mr. H. R Stevesj tear StrVor some ye.irs I have been, at tin h. much trou u!el Willi a'Mt i utLu.j of lilieum-itUm. 1 '. specially tillered to: 'tires from thitc i. ly the alvioe or friends wlio knew the beneil s conferred by Vkoeti.se, 1 began its U6r, uul since that I: mo 1 have hail no u-titckii tho e I previously suffered. Fur soaie time p.itsl L have had no rettrn .f the trouble, except occasional' y a faint intimation, whleh dinappeared upon taking few dosei of the Veoeti.ne. 1 rtido take pleasure In recording my test innny in favor of it excellent effect in abaiin,' an Inveterate Sa t Jtheum, and I count it no Bun. 1 pleas ure to have 1" en tin s made free. ltespjcu'ui.y, WM. T. WORT1T, Pastor Fir&t M. E. c hurch. Vegetine Has Relieved and Cured Sufferers ol Klieuiimlisiu by tlio Thousands. III.AD THIS: If you have Kheumatism tako the Medicine that will Cure You. Buixeb SniicOf Jlvninos Co., Kn . 1 May iy. l7; Mb. . R. Stevens: Dear Sir Having in onrfami'y received great heLtflt fro.u the Vkgltim. inanufdLtuied by you, I th' iviii 1 would fc.ve you the fa-'-ts of ihe cuse, hoplnc it uvStii me 'ft the eye of aoine fii'uVrinx one, who mUiii tr.i.be relieved. I have a grjndchild about ten years of nue.wno, two years ao or over, had a severe attack of rhfUiu itm, and for two ion; ye.i'S wasunier ilie ca"e or asoi.da phyBklan as we have in this county, an J yet all tiiib t ine grew worse, till w yave her up, and th ogi.t the i. urt die. Sh wn much defo ined, and we were told hy a docto- that, if felie bve', she would a' wayn W dei'o,m"dj btit, thanks io Vegetine, she is to-day irfertiy well, and as straight as uti arrow. Last December we abandon ed all hope of the doctor doiu am tiling for her. and commenced using VBGETi.NB(acojrdtnB' to your directions. When the first bottle was Used up we could no see m'-ch lmprovementi but we eoutiQiied on lha second bott e, aud could see some ch Wise tor pood. She took six butt es, and, thaak God, a c mp ete cure was t fleeted iu every respect Yours tiuly, G. I4UUGES3. Vegetine is Soid by all Druggists. New IAf tar those Worn Oat by Disease. lAbor, Care, tirlef or Old Age. HALT BITTSRS, prepared without fermentation from Halt, IIom, OausATa and Ibox, are the richest Nourish ing Agent in the world called " Bitters" (or the Weak, Convalescent, Overworked, Kervoua, Melancholy and Sleepless. They feed the Body and the Brain, regulate the Stomach and Bowels, cleanse the l.lver and Kidneys, In crease the Appetite and enrich the Blood. For Consump tives, Delicate Females, Nuising Mothers, Sickly Children and the A ted, they are vastly superior to every other preparation ot malt or memcine. b ue. Beware nf linitutioi.s tmilarly named. lxKk for the C( U1US as above. Sold everywhere ixxik for the COMPANY'S bliiNA- Mll Witters CviWHUiti 9toji, Mayss, t V TO, (Vv FOB UMF1M Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. Ko Proration on jarth equals St. Jacom Oil, as nfr, turr, simple and cheap External Remedy A Trial entails but the comparatiTely triflinff outlay of SO Cents, and erery one suffering vlth pain can haye cheap and positive proof of its claims. lJlroctlons In Eleren Languages. fiOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS ITS MEDICINE. A. VOGELEIS, & CO., Diiltiniorr, M1., XT. 8. A. CATARRH. Lis- . . nt s ra nuv svoaiw; so. Ts receiving tbe IndorsemenT ot ihn mm-rer, the diURgii an 1 pM'rtk'tu, Never hn an at title of iiiitb met liet-n piotl'ief for the treatment of inthninal dippus- af tlits iicvh -fadlnc It A I M, xiil U u'kf.ily nekn-w e.ie i Mr Di'Mit: an that is t:niTii M' it 1m appht-alit tc eitsy nii'1 p eits:it, ijou-r.,; ltn, Hit Is sooOnnu, t is f r-t ftp-isMinc .he useef yvw icrs. 1 quiua a'; i ffini lMce ifh n the reach of al 50 ernt. Un iecpt . ti c. ins, win mil a pH'kao tree, beud for c;tu.ar, wiuatuu un "rn'ri ton. Kl-VS CKKAM HALM CO., Owcpo, N. T, N'KW YOt.K M.-Kp.Mnn HobbliiH; Hall Rukel;a s. u..u;''i- n: vv . n. tunieJie m ft i o.j I). M. Buyer Co.; l.uae.le, ANrsli Gardner, and utlieis. SYUAcrsn. n. y.-o. w. suuw 4 Co.j Mooia k nub. ua!ii; Nf'iy 1:, ivtter c uo. I'Hll.Afir. miA-Smlth, KHoe Co.j Johnston, ITollo w .1 y n k o. riMr Is the 8 A FKS U'.iHB'y.p.U )u-iilK tho lit. 1 i.itlliul hint tesof 1 nek i!iown; does NoT STA1M w !-h.l., ami Is tHM pp led. It is a BiatmarJ nicim atlon an 1 a Imvoi! oneviy well at p'lhitfMt' l ft ;or Lady or tientleum' S'lid by Din prlti. un I ulied bv Hntr U:es Depot. t I Wn intiiM ,N.V. (.'. N. Cltl'i rKN lUX, A;4( EI -CAE" SOBA t. tt. h.nt In th Wo'li. It Is shsnllllclv nuro. Tl Is I bit for sle.lli'tnal lurpties. II is the best lor linkup nua all r sAUiy Lses. Bum (jy an imigiiiis aiu uiulcib. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phi'a PETROLEUM Grand Medal at Phila delphta Esposttlou. JELLY Silver Mc"ll! nt Purls Kxpostllon. This wonderful subst ince Is a-fen -wle-'ged by phy- td-i;!!. thr.iitiniit tht word to lie t 1C btht retiieiiv f.,vftii.i for the cum of Wounds, bo tn. Hheumatism Skin Oi use-. Piles, Cat Trh (J.:!. bains, Ac. In order ft,:n . vt-rv on.' tuav t ? it. it is tmt u io l ' hii-1 J i cei h .it'pa tar hf.iisfhold uu. Obtain It fioin Your druu'ulBt, sod you wii: fluU It superior to anything you have ever Used. BEFORE BUYING OR RENTING AN ORGAN 3nd f.ir onr LATEST Illustrited Cataloode frapp. 4lo), with KEWEsr stvles. nt $M an'l upwar .; or ouurttr. sn.l up. Sentret. MSON I IIAMI.I.V OKliA.S lo , 14 Tieinont St., HUSTON l 4tt E.it 14th St, hEW VUK Hl Wn ssU Avo (JHH)AUO. QN 30 DAYS' TRIAL. We will sent', our Electro-Voltaic Helts and other Electric Appllancsupon trial for 3t) days to those Afflicted with Nrrvuua VUity and diMatnaf a fxr$onal mAxtre. A so ot the l.lver, ki dn-ys, lUieuniatiaiu, Puralyalb, etc. A turr cure yuarantt edorno pay. A-uh-eto Vo' tiUcfcltCo.,WstrwhalMfllch. Do Your Own Printing Prw..-s ami oullltsfroin .;1 to (?."JO!. (ivr J,0j0 stj'lts of Type. Cstalogui' an I -. iluri p Ire list ir. e . II. ii on', Kit. s'.iilailelriii'it. P. UOllACK iVATliKb 1'O.iIiU li'vvuy, N. V, TEAS.: Choicest ta the world Imports1 prices I argeat Company In America 6tap.e I article ph-aM'B everybody 1'ra.le con- tlutia ly lucr, ai-liu Agents wanied everywhere best Inducements duu't uuste time send for CUrcu ar. UdM T WKI.LS, 411 Vesey St., N. Y. P. O. Ho 1?. WAHfTEls Agenu everywhere to sell oar good bv sample, to fumi.les. We give attractive preaenui Ind llrst-class goods to your ciwtomers; we give you good .'..nisi we prepay all express chirKesi ws furnish outfit Sice. Write for partlcu r. . . .. I'KOI'i.K'S TKA CO.. Box 60a St. Lonls. Mo. OXlV SIX HOSTns MOK within which time to obtain s patent for 640 acres of choice 'C'Xjis Kind for $Ito. Net I i be pild for until patent ll eeitjuu. Send your ad;!rtssi.np ntil for pirtlcuiaig, to K. Lowr.ii.lieiK'rdl Alauu.'zer Weatelll 1 uu.l Aucluy, Fe.iso River City, Uardeliriu County, N ortlm est Texas. Torso mas on ou, tf ! ws.nl tout 1 sot HeuWcks, flaw. Iu Biskeis, usexr (tesrtr. e ksir oa) ka'd hsadt, ay U ibeo, trHlbts iA latujMfi It hair an tai. eTsa'i is kvwutjei. bat irui only BIX Mats for th Ifawf..'.. YOUNG MEN Loam Tolenraphy and earn Io tolrti a inoiilh. Evtrv tradvuitu pii.iraut.-od a paving situation. Addn ss Y ALENT1 X I-: HKOS-, lanaers, Jaiu-bv ilie, Win A MOHTni AGEXT3 WAKTKD! 7li lest Selliog Artk iu the world, a Bamplfrw. Jat Hrt0.m.yo-t Uctioil, AlUU. 777 A YKAH and epensrs toatscuu. (IU tilt Free. Add I ess r. o VICKKKY, Augusta, Maine. Hi. K5HNTS, free. Kend address foi particulars. F. TKIKtr, Si.) School Btreet, Boston, Muss. AI.l-FWS Brain Kood-cures Nenrons Debility k Weakness of Uenerstive Orirans. VI all diuijclbia Bend for Clr'l'r to Allen's Pharmacy, 11111 First Ave.,N r. S2000 IN OLIUlven Away. Bcnd-ct stamp for particulars. Address 1'H) SlKSSSNGKa, lewisuursu. I'li'oo c.".,. w sToiftifn lffmblte?nr1 lis 10 lo UO tin va, Nh.v till sJai-ctt L'i! . J . toi ujiitt, l.ubunun Ohlu. bond r. r rK'ilS S.JJIPtK COPV of tit, UfctHi'V MitiE Jul 11 A I, I. O. NKW.MAN, Chicago. III. A FEW AEfT Wanted Salary 1 ,200 s your. Adrtreosii vi Hehr, BIU'tisburg,Prry Co., "a Ol CI Ol Ci f 1 1 1 ST fl' Consumption Is also plb U U VLlrV V. tUeli.stcoiiKhliie.llcloe. flTTT Hint se ling oor KuMier Htainpssnrt Mnlo WEdi. (jjuiples Free. Cook lllasili, Cleveland. . lt77A WKKC. ' Outfit Ire $11 a day at home easily made. Costly AddieS iulis Co.. Autiusls. ilaiiie. SRfa?fl psr say as hems, aasiples wort at bee 1 yfifllSTADORO'S II PRTBT flC"jrr3ll New OI'OANS, S40, 81."i(I,iiii. A um uhte.' O M'Iiik. 1-fCUilil I! tnd fNSTtl'MHTS at ItAlUiAJNS. A:i-..N'1'.3 lUtv'mL'lt III... ....14. .. a. A I til 1 I I.' 1' r. a IP? . i n rr-irT""" ' ' ""' " xml mi IS W.-X&YKiar .ainKr g ,.; j s w - " 7 - --,,, i i i i A THAT ACTS AT 1MB SAUK UJtK R THE LIVER, Ji THE BOWELS, v and the KIDNEYS. j TJiit combined Miion gives it won- f'S rkrful potocr to cure all awares. Pi nmuMontniinn these areat organ to become domed or torpid, and iinto thebhod that should be expelled M BIDll,llt S.hS, i'll.r S, t'O.YVUI'ATlUa, I 1WSEASKS, 1 T.JU1.K AVUAK. wisoniiEUH. 8w cn.usinn free action ot these ornam' andra'.or."g their pouer to throw off disease. ft Why linTO sleepless nights V ?i rallh. It U a dry, wqetablt compound andtj t t . i ni nol bIk ntaof Mcd!elneF ? ? lid it of your jjrugrjim, " " ' i,nn Tiruanlfi for vou. rHce, $1.00. 17SM.S, EICIUEDCOiT A CO.. PfoprieiOTt, i a'iii.rndno.tn.U.) BarUnBton,, F Psre-s- ' , ... SIS.' - TAUe fc;juui ttverded the MEDAh OF iwniut ai vie l hicaoo FRAZER LUBRICATOR CO. NewYork. 0 RIVER VALLEY 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands bast la th World, tor stls s th St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba R.B, CO. Tton ilnan pur cm llowfd tkMtlAr for brak 'mj svul ouiursvUoo. for psvrUcultsrt tpplj t D. A. ri.oSCIKi.AY, TiStnd CemnilMiuner, ttt. fnul, nlan, Literary Revolution. 3sTEBV!"r,Q e.nti, fmmcrly $1.00 to $1 .211 net i Wbia I O 1 M.i.au uy'a Life o( Kie.ltl :ck ilie Grtttv. 11. .arlyle's Life of Hotieri Huri.s. 111. Im umrtin Life or Slurv yur-cnof Scots. IV. Thos. llu-'he-' .Maiilmess f" O jS PJ f vi formerly ti.SO r C.'hi.at. O k IM O .m li: I. Arnold's Liglit i fAKla II. (iolnsiuitli's Vliar of Wukellclil. III. baron Mmidmllsi-irs Travels arid SurprMnix Adventures For M .V CKiVTS: Uuiu nil's Pllisrim's Progress. Illuatrated aitaloirue sent f n e. A&1EHICAN nlKIK LXCII.A M.K, .lotiu B. AMell. Manager. Tllbune Building, New Yorlt. CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. representinR the choleest snle.-teil Tortoise-shell sna Amber. The lightest, handsomest, sn4 strongest known. Sold by Opticians Jewelers, Male by BPENGBB O. M. CO., HI Miil.ien I.sne, New Tort. Is the " prlRfml " Cnntratid f .ye an-! R'llaiVe Painlly B'iap MakiT. Dire t. iia rti-nninpany each Can (or making 11 irrt, Hi'U ana Tollft honp qnkklv. It is full v.vl'.'.lit aii'i stri-ii4th. AsU your grocer tot HXVOXl VI fc.il, aud take do otherr. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. ThU Ciitlm-Hou Katablished 1805. TVew T Ji w Thousands of soldiers and F.nsions dHti hack to discharge er death. heirs entitled. Time limitttL Address, wiui sainp, (iKOUUIii E. 1 l"MOV, P. O. Drawe- ilJo, tVmslilnprtoilt 1 1831. FREE. 1881. Tho I.l.US i ll VIED "GOLDEN PKIZE"' tor 188 1 ii mw i eaiy Tnis elegant, book con tains about 200 flue engravings. A specimen copy will be sent t ee to any one in the United States, on receipt of a Miruu-ctjut su.inp to prepay prnlnga on the b-jrilr. Agents ws'ited. Addiess F. GI.E CO., 46 SunruiT Street, lSnpton, Ma . OAKIIST. V. BKVl'TVS ORGANS! 14 STOPS, Sl'B BASH OCT. COUPI4KH, SI0HLYS65. bmit un Ti Inl Warranted. Oatalogus Free, Address DN1F.L V. UKAT1Y. Wiuhtnj'on, N. J. KJNCYCLOPEDIAse STIOUETTE; BUSINESS This Is the cheapest and only complete and reliable w 01 k on Ktlquelte and business and Social Forms. It teds how to perforin all tiie various duties of life, and bow to apica to the best advantage 00 all ocuu'.ons. Agent Wanted. Send for circulars coi:tcloli s a full de ription of tue work and exira terius to hen s. Address .VtTiONALl'uai.lmaoCo., Plilla lelpbia,!'. Also &ALAN Y permontk. All EXPENSES RgadTauccd. VV At. t promptly id. SLOAN Mail k Co. atl tieurge ht. tlaclnnall, O. A t PAGE lions OP WOMiFHS foraSnt stamp. iU Au dress U. Hii k CO.,UVf t Canal .St., New York. ffift A WJfFIK Inyoui own town. Tennl and XS2S " Cm. Aiiajua u u. aUuast A Cow Ful Uali Vi hy SurTer unions pains nn m r i ., WliytnrartitoduiCi files. Constipation IKS W!' fiiu-Ucnodovcrdlsnrderert hi liners JCT w i.v ..!, n.rtniN nr nick headaches) ft (3 ... t i --i - r era ,-RAZER AXLE GREASE. ( s f MV rSIIKO, YOU THAT IS OUST f 'H7ERSMU I Vf HAT I SHALL I , I or DO AFTER THIS 1- V CREAit tai- r 1 - llilP PENS DNS. V.