A Famous Goose. An Interesting relic is preserved In a Rlass case in the Coldstream guards' orderly-room at Whitehall. It consists of the head and neck of a goose, around which is a golden collar with the in Boriptionj "Jacob 3d battalion Cold stream guards." Beneath it are the words: "Died on duty." In 1838 a rebellion broke out In our Canadian possessions, and two bat talions of the guards were sent thither to assist in quelling it. the battalion already mentioned being one of them. Both corps occupied the citadel of Que bec, and in their turn supplied the guards which were ordered to be mounted in different parts of the town and neighborhood. Near one of these guards was a farm-yard which had suf .ered much from the ravages of foxes animals (hat were at that period a great pest to the colonists ; and as the farm in question had been suspected of being the meeting place of the rebels, a chain of sentries was placed around it. One day the sentry whose duty it was to watch the entrance to the larm had his attention attracted by an unusual noise, and on looking toward the spot whence it proceeded, he beheld a line goose fleeing toward him closely pur sued by a fox. His first impulse was to nave a shot at the latter; but this Would have alarmed the guard, and brought condign punishment on him self for giving a falsi alarm. He was compelled, therefore, to remain a silent spectator of the scene, while every step brought the reynard nearer to his prey. In the height of its despair, the poor bird ran iis head and neck between the legs of the soldier in its frantic en deavor to reach the refuge which the sentry-box could afford; and at the same moment the wily fox made a desperate grab at the goose; but too lute, for ere he could get a feather be tween his teeth, the ready bayonet of the sentinel had passed through his body. The poor goose, by way of showing its gratitude to its preserver, rubbed ils head against his legs, and made other equally curious demonstra tions of joy; mr could it ever bo pre vailed upon to quit the post, but walked up and down day after day with each successive sentry that was placed there until the battalion left Canada, when the goose was brought away with m9. a reKim(mtal pet to England. Themost remarkable thing in con nection with the story is that the goose in turn actually saved its preserver's life. Whether the former knew that the sentry was the same man or not, must of course forever remain a prob lem; but it so happened that he was on tiiat particular post about two months afterward when a desperate attempt was made to surprise and kill the unwary sentinel. It was winter time, and al though it was a bright moonlight night, the moon was hidden ever and aron by the scudding clouds which seemed to presage an approaching storm. In these,moments of darkness a sharp ob server might have noticed the shadows of several men who, unobserved by the somewhat drowsy sentinel, were en deavoring stealthily to approach the post where he stood. Suddenly he beard, or thought he heord, a stnn.e rustling sound, and bringing his mus ket to his shoulder, he shouted loudly: Who goes there?" Not a sound, save the echo o! his own voice in the distance, and the sighing of the winter wind among the branches of the trees which stood in the deserted farm-yard, re sponded to the challenge Several minutes elapsed, during which the soldier marched up and down his lonely beat followed by the devoted goose, until, dreaming his alarm unwar ranted, ho again "stood, at ease" before the sentry-box. This was the enemy's opportunity, and they were not long in endeavoring to proiit by it. Closer "and closer they stole up toward the post, the thick snow which lay on the ground completely deadening the sound of their footsteps. But just as two of their number, one on each side of the sentry box, were preparing with uplifted knife to spring upon tho unsuspecting man, the bird made a grand effort, rose Bunuuujjr un us wings, ana swept round utotuujr.uuA wiui iremenoous lorce napping us wings right m tho faces ol me woum-uo assassins. They were as tounded and rushed blindly forward but tho sentry, fully aroused to his dan ger, bayoneted one and shot the other as ho was running away. Meanwhile uie omer conspirators approached to th assistance ot their colleagues; but th oiro. repeated, its tactics, and enabled tho sentry to keep them nt bav until thn guard whom the tiring of his musket mm awmea came upon the scene and maoe inem nee lot tneir lives. When this incident became known poor um j aeoD win tne hero of the gar nson; ana the officers subscribed for ad purchased the golden collar hich me ouu aiierwara wore until the day o On the arrival of therecimpntin Lon don t.io bird resumed its old duties witl me uenuneis posted at the barrack Bates anii n, was exceedingly amusing waicu its movements as it walked piuuuiy up ana uown with the Bentrv or stood to attention " beside the box ""cu iaiu-T was saiuting a passim; officer or guard. The leathered hero was wuu itu ano cured Jor, and a circu lar bath hlled with water was always at its disposal. Children were its especial ''u'"p "-'y used to oring the crea ture all kinds of food, but Jacob would ucvri iwiciaieany uomies except when in military parlance, he was " standing easy." lor many years Jacob seemed to bear a charmed lile, but he was at length run over by a van. Every effort which kindness and skill could suggest '.j w avu whs extraordinary bird; hut it was of no avail, and he died like a true English soldier, at the post of duty, after a ' sentry-go " of no iwuive years. Ufiambcrs1 Jour- 7SUt. The Uolorudo Rush. It is all well enough to say "Go West young man," but when the advice is accepted it should be with a purpose to iocaie in some good farming country or mi it nig Bctiieiuem, ana lane a hand in uw Keuciai uuveioument. mir. majority of those who pursue tae siar of empire in il wesinraru course go to Colorado. The rush just now is im mense. People are pouring into Den ver at the rate of from 4,000 to 6 000 per wee, every train irom the East being loaded to the utmost limit of its irauuou power, rue streets of the my are inrongea with strangers. ana present the appearance peculiar to utmuayo. nearly an tne new-comers expect to secure immediate employment either there or when they reach the mining districts. Most of them are pro vided only with sufficient means to get back again, and many speedily avail themseles of the opportunity. It is like a great tide pouring into the estuar ies of the sea, only to recede when it has reached its height. There are no doubt available chances for the investment of capital in agricultural and manufactur ing enterprises in Colorado, but unless one knows just what to do the risk is hazardous. The adviceofall whowrite disinterestedly to those in the East who have employment, and who are think ing of going to Colorado, is to stay where they axe.Bociester Union. 1 A farm lioue belonging to J. L. Fen ton, bituated at Ilarristown, 111., was truck by lightning and three f the in. male were knocked enseles SUICIDES 1H THE SUMMER. Cnnse That lmd to an tnerenac of Caa In Hot Weather-Opinions of Two IV ew York Doctor. It is observable that every year, as soon as the he its of summer commence, there is a large increase in the number of suicides among men, but not a cor responding accession in the voluntary mortality of women. Why men should, or rather why they do, kill themselves more then than in any other season, and why the cause, whatever it may be, does not operate equally upon both sexes, were questions propounded a few days ago to Edouard Seguin, Sr., one of the most distinguished authorities on mental alienation and neurology in this country. He replied : It must be due, in a great degree, to what is burned in the vast furnaco called the sun. The quantity of heat we receive is certainly a very important factor in human actions. In the fif teenth century that fuct was glimmer ingly perceived, anJ tho scientists of that day were on the right track. They attributed to the celestial bodies the greatest.influence ur on the lives of men ; and while they went astray in their de ductions for lack of scientific guidance to appreciate the bearings and causes of the facts they observed, they were still so far right in their observations that they demonstrated that the great revolu tions, battles, riots and other bubblings of humanity took place in the hottest season. The heat fevers and excites men, and temporarily aggravates their conceptions of the vital importance of influences affecting their interests. Women, remaining more at home and under conditions of shelter, clothing and habits of life that render them less exposed to the depressing and exciting influences of the heat than men, are less seriously affected mentally by the tem perature. I say " depressing and excit ing," because excitation and depression go together, the latter inevitably fol lowing the former by a law of nature. Well, in the spring, under the awaken ing and vivifying influence of the sea son, men have great expectations of love, of business, of social and political successes, etc. When the time comes that the sun no Joneer shines upon them, but darts his hery beams, then the season of depression comes ; they have experienced failure, or success is at least delayed, or they foresee failure and their consciousness of either un happy condition is increased, their re actionary power is weakened by the de pression consequent upon their former excitation, ana they collapse into sui cide. If suicide was absolutely due to necessity the want of the necessities of life there would be more in winter than in summer, for now the one who cannot eat a steak can fill himself with radishes, and he who cannot buy coal tor a tire may warm himself in the sun. We do not hear that in Ireland, when the famine was at its height, there were many suicides; but you have a good many in Paris, and even here in New York, where food is not scarce, and among those who have no difficulty in obtaining it. We cannot, therefore, deem want, and the desperation conse quent upon physical want, its chief causes. No. Its causes are mental. A man lorms calculations, and they do not come to tue point ot realization. Then he wants to end the struggle nnd be iiuppier 10 go to rest," as they say. I think, too, that suicide is rather in pro portion to other forms of inaanitv. though I do not think that all suicides are Insane. But it is a form of collapse, like insanity. Nov, there aro two forms of collapse due to a cause ex tremely prevalent to-dav. That cause is the enormous influence of the element of chance in the business of to-day in other words, to gambling in all its tortus. The intense attention nnon mental combinations, inseparable irom gambling in business, is liable to pro duce insanity. The tension informing combinations and plans in which one knows that chance is a great factor, and consequently a source of deep anxiety, striken directly at the brain, and the shock produced by sudden announce ments of the failure ot those plans and combinations produces affections of the spine. Diseases of the mind arc the re sults of the first; locomotorataxy and other affections the direct consequences of the Bccond. Suicide is but one of the conclusions of the miscarriages of the figures of the laboriously-formed plan or combination upon which the gam bler of business has erected his hopes of the future. This form of suicid.l impulse which we have now had its homologue in the lioman empire. It is Know that the Romans destroyed themselves simply because they did notsucceel in the real ization of projects thi y had formed, and oue of the greatest examples of that was the philosopher Seneca. Having failed in educating a good emperor and pro duced only a scamp by his process, und having become very rich and mixed in all the gambling of the day which was much like what we have now he was tirst overtaken by paralysis, of which there is the incontestable mark in the drawing of tho mouth seen in all his busts ; and then, pursued by a nervous fear that the emperor would take away his life, he did away with himself. And now a givat many men to-day are in that plight, their brains and spines racked by the alternate excitations and depressions of gambling, their nervous systems subjected to the strain of fear ot the future, and they give way, as is very natural. That women are com paratively very little subject to such influences is the great cause why the suicides among them are, at all times, but especially in the hot weather, fewer in proportion to the whole number thanjthose of men. Dr. Jared Linslv. one of New York's oldest and most highly respected general practitioners, who was formerly for many years connected with Bellevue hospital, says that he does not remem ber ever to have known a case of an at tempted suicide in which if dpntn wai sufficiently delayed after the perpetra tion of the fatal act to permit an ex pression of a wish bvthe victim, tlicrn was not manifested an intense desire for life, a nassionate ree-ret tor i l,r. r,.ul. deed that had been done. And if there is any one tuing which the venerable doctor hates and contemns abnvn nil other things, it is a pistol, which he says is so handily used by men in moments ol depression with fatal effect beyond hone of recall. It is his hiiHf tnat suicide is seldom a premeditated act, but in almost all cases the instan taneous result of a momentary immilnn. New iork Bun. Children's Karnes In China In China the names of children urn given according to circumstances, sv. ciated with the time of their birth. If a child is born at midnight, its name may be Midnight; if the season is rainy the child's name may be Rain: if birth occurs on the birthday of some relativn mat relative's age may be the name of me new-oorn. ana so tnere are namp of Thirty, Five, Fifty, One and other numbers. Bui there are even more curious names. If the parents desired a boy and a girl is born, her name mnv h Ought-to-be-a-Boy. Miss Polly Hanson, aged fiftenn. f Lake county. Cat., is a wonderful nhnt She recently killed fourteen out of fif teen pigeons at twenty-one yards rise. Miss Hanson is the daughter of District Attorney Hanson, of Lake county. THE LIGHTJUSU FLASH. Incident! of Death anil Destruction or the Thunderbolt. A farmer living in Midland township, Ohio, was killed by lightning. Mrs. A. G. Small, of Provincctown, Mass., was rendered insensible by lightning. Her residence was damaged. In Todd county, Ky Silos King was instantly killed nnd Marion Ltudsey so injured that his recovery is doubtfnl. A little girl's face was distinctly photographed by lightning uon a win dow pane in Laurel, Ohio, during a re cent thunder-storm. Henry Davis was killed while work ing in a barn near Brown township, Ohio. The barn was also burned by the lightning stroke. While unhitching their team, Ashbel Wells and his son, of Fairview town ship, Me., were stunned by lightning, and one of the horses was instantly killed. Near Lake View, W. T., a largo pine tree was torn into fragments by light-, ning and every vestige of it entirely con sumed by the fire that resulted from the stroke. Marlon Moseley, oi Henry county, Ga., lost his total supply ot fall pork and bacon by one stroke of lightning. The hogs, ten in number, were under an oak. Lightning killed a greyhound under neath a sohoolhomo floor in Clara county, Ky., but left uninjured the twenty-five children who were silting at their desks. A demolished house and the instant death of a Mrs. Martin and her two children was the work of a lightning stroke at Priceville, 111., nt midnight. Lightning destroyed the home of Job Ennis, a Mennonile, of Winnipeg, Mani toba, killing Ennis. His wito expired from the shock the next day. Lightning struck the barn of Jacob High, near West Jefferson, Ohio, kill ing Henry Davis, who had taken refuge there, and burning the building and its contents. Lightning cut queer antics at Jasper, Mich. It struck the windmill of Nathan Shumway, completely shattering the stone pump, and, following outside, killed two cattle. Edward Sevier, of Murray vi lie, 111. was struck by lightning at Russell's Pond, nnd instantly killed. His clothes were torn from his body, and his shoes thrown a great distance. A young man nnmee" Lyers, of Otta wa, was struck down bv lightning while walking the streets during a storm. He recovered, but one side ot his face was badly scorched, and part of his clothing was burned. It was ten years ago when Mrs. Nes bet, of Guilford, Ont.. was struck by lightning and thrown from the buggy in which she was riding, but sho survived to be killed by another stroke during a recent storm. Two horses attached to a buggy in which were J. E. Haslani, wito, infant and nurse, of Perry, Ga , were thrown to the ground by a stroke of lightning, but horses and inmates escaped miracul ously any positive injury. In Geneva, N. Y., lightning struck a horse in the mouth and passed through his body, killing him instantly. The groom, Edward Burke, who was sitting near by, was mane perfectly insane, and ran about crying: "Catch him, catch him." A drunkard, of Nashville, Tenn., while wild with delirium, dug a grave and lay down in it and died. His wile, who was frantic at tho sieht, called loudly upon Heaven to take her also. On her way home sho was struck dead by a lightning bolt. The Reformed church, of Sharon, N Y., was struck by lightning while the Sunday-school association were in ses sion m tne church. No one was seri ously injured. Thelightning struck the steeple, loiiowea tno clumncy and into tho stove, which were burst into atoms. The first instance cn record of the kill ing of a mule by lightning occurred at Bard, lowa. J lie bolt struck the barn of J. II. Hurl man in the roof at the ji.nble, made a hole four inches in diam eter through the hay down into the stables, instantly killing three horses and a mule. The flash did not set the hay or woodwork on fire. During a heavy thunder-shower at Mechanic Falls, Me., a boy was sitting at the foot of a balm of gilcad tree which was struck by lightning. The tree was splintered, outline hoy was apparently uninjured. Soon after the accident he was seized with nausea, and on a physician removing the little fel low's clothes there was found upon his stomach and chest an imprint resem bling the trunk of the tree, its brunches and buds as perfect as could be drawn by the hands of a skilled artist. The Famine in the Caucasus. It appears from the Russian news papers that the famine in the Caucasus and in some other provinces of Russia is of an unprecedented severity. The Moscovskia Vedomosti reports the following case: in the village of Khoji kent, of the Elisavetpol province, an Armenian, Mirza.with his wife and four children, had been starving for sonu time. His neighbors, equally destitute, could not help him. One day, after a fruitless search for food, he returned home, where lie found his wife in tears and iiis children crying aloud for bread. In sheer despair he flung himself into the flames of a large oven, after kill in f his wife and children. Thus in a moment perished a family of six per sons. The incident is reported of ficially. A correspondent of tho liussky Cour ier writes to that journal from Baku as follows : On my way to Shemakha I met many inhabitants who were plucking up grass and eating it. A sack of grass is sold here at three rubles! As to the cattle, they perish by hundreds. J. he Obzor says: J. he governor ot the province of Erivan has received the following dispatch from the chief of the Ordubatsky district: "The population of the district are starving; they have begun to feed upon the grass." The governor has sent orders to a rich pro prietor to feed the people until the gov ernment supply arrives. The Orenburgsky Listok says: It is harrowing to look at the starving pop ulation and ruined cattle raisers of our province (Orenburg), but the sight of dying cattle is heartrending, too." The Iiusskia Vedomsti says: In the village of Nicholaevskoy two peasants were starved. The Caucasus says : The inhabitants of many villages of Elisavetpol prov ince have no provisions whatsoever; the women and children are wandering 1 in the fields and digging roots. The Smolensky Vestnik says: The peasants of the Briansky district have had no flour for some time past; they are feeding upon bran mixed with ground bark. The Saratovsky Listok says: The in habitants of the Nouvouzensky district are happy over the discovery of a new food. They collect seeds of different sorts of grass, grind them and make bread. Though very bitter it allays hunger. New Orleans papers state that from the present outlook a magnificent crop of sugar will be harvested this season in Louisiana. Some Very Old People. Mr. William II. Warren, of Warrena ville, Ohio, is ninety-eight years of age, and occupied the first lo rabin built in that city. He made Ins own garden last spring, and is in excellent health and spirits. Mr. Nellie Ligon, ot White Chapel Hill, Ky., is ninety-five years of age. She still sews on fine muslin and has no use for glasses. In speaking of her e arly life she relates many escapes from boars and Indians. Near neighbors during their lifetime, Uncle Timothy Doxsey, of Peat-sail's, L. I., nnd Zachariah Story, of Christian Hook, were born on the same day. They aro now ninety-three years of age, and both spry and hearty. , Lewis Rockwell lives in Lackawaxen, Pa., and is 103. His wife when she diol was ninety-five years old. He is not the only living niembt r of the family, but has seven brothers and sisters, whoso united ages are 571 years. Mrs. Mary Hodgins, of Lucan, Toronto, died recently aged ninety-one years She settled in that region lorty-seven years ago, when the country was an un broken wildernes, and was the only white woman thereabouts. Annie E. Potter died in the New York Baptist home for aged people after liv ing lor:? past her centennial anniver sary. When ten years of age she was kidnaped from school in India and sent in a ship from Calcutta to New York. Statesville, N. C, has two old but active citizens. J. W. Miller does his own plowing, although in his eighty seventh year. Bartlett Morgan walks in and out of town, a distance of eighteen miles, although he is eighty-four years old. The Indian chief Louis Walso, who lives at Lake George, is over 100 years old. The British governmmt has just paid him a long-expected pension for services rendered as chief of the Abene quis in the contest of 1812. The father of the Reverend William Roberson, who died recently in Bold Camp Creek, Va., did not marry until lie was fifty years of age. and livtd with his wife seventy-five years, dying at 125. The minister was in his ninety seventh year when he died. "Old Pompey Phillips," a colored man, died at Berkshire, and is supposed to have been 100 years of age. He was once a slave in Hillsdale, N. Y., nnd said ho saw Washington in 1785. He leaves a daughter eighty-six years o age and a son seveaty-four. The Rev. Noah M. Wells, the oldest Presbyterian clergyman in the country, died recently in Erie, Mich., at the age of ninety-eight. H" preached in Eastern N ew York until 1825, when he went to Detroit and organized the first Presby terian church there. John Widner died in Rochester re cently just as he had finished a century of life. He was born in New Jersey, but went to Newtown, near Elmira, when seven years of age. In 1817 he was employed as overseer over fifty slaves that worked the farm of a Mr. Rose, in Monroe county, New York. Ho learned the Indian language when n boy from his Indian playfellows, and did not forjet it. Mrs. Peter King, who died recently at Otsego, N. Y., was just rounding a cen tury ot life. She was a native of Ire land, and settled in this country when there were no railroads or stages, in days when people used to go to Albany, n d istance of eighty miles, to get groceries. Her eyesight was as perfect up to the day ol her death as it had been in her youth. She was the oldest person in Otsego county. After Matilda Jackson, of Paris, Ky., had closed a century of life, she left what she called the white Methodist church and connected herself with the colored Christian church, mid was im mersed in a pond. Moses Howe, of Dracut, Mass., is now in hininety-second year. He preached his tirst sermon sixty-six years ago. On a recent Sunday afternoon he preached from the same text, and occupied an hour and a half. He has married 1,020 couples and buried 2,530 person?. A Natural Magnet. There is no counting on a shower, from whatever source, reaching Pat erson, says the Paterson (N. J.) News. About three miles cast ol that place there is a chain ol hills, commonly known as " the Preak nfss mountains." They are a spur ot the Blue Ridge. These hills contain large quantities of iron, and consequent ly are magnetic. They are, as it were, a gigantic lightning-rod. If a shower comes from the west with an impetus sufficient to drive it over the magnetic influence of those mountains, it reaches Paterson, after rallying like demoralized armies, and bursts on Paterson with re doubled fury. But it it is a genlK' shower, impelled by moderate wind, tnese mountains attract it and it follows them around to the northward as it the range of hills were a track and the shower a train of cars. The switching oil' the track of a shower in a curious phenomenon. The lightning can be seen playing with the tops of the moun tain like gigantic pyrotechnical grass hoppers. The thunder reverberates, and tho black and green clouds roll and writhe like immense serpents angry with bung mol sted. The btoriu glides along the mountain tops and over into Bergen county. Not half the showers that ap proach Puterson from the west ever lcich the city. It must be a severe fct irm to overcome the influences of the magnetic Preakness mountains. Words of Wisdom. One act of charity is worth a century oi eloquence. The use of character is to be a shield against calumny. Every flower, even the fairest, has its shadow beneath it as it swii.gs in the ."unlight. The tie that binds the happy mav be dear, but that which links the unfortu nate is tenderness unutterable. Age is not all decav: it is the ripening. the swelling of the fresh life within that withers and bursts the husk. Passions are likened best to floods and streams. The shallow murmur. but the deep are dumb. Better fall covered and scarred with the wounas of glory than to surrender through expediency to what is wrong. Has it never occurred to us. when surrounded by sorrows, that they may be sent to us only for our instruction, as we darken the eyes of birds when we wimi tnem to smgr He is but a weak man who cannot twist and weave the threads of his feel ing, however firm, however Btrained or h .wever strong, into the great cable of purpose, by which he lies moored to a point ot action. The " Union of the Titans " is a new society just established in New York city. Each applicant for membership must be at least six feet in height, and also very much of a gentleman." Old people enjoy the beach, young ones don't ; rot when applied with a strong hand.-. Waterloo Observer. Science says that one pair of herrings ooUiU a took ih Atlantic in ft few years. Charcoal and Its Uses. Charcoal, laid fiat while cold on a burn, causes the pain to abate immedi ately; by leaving it on for nn hour the burn seems almost healed when the burn is superficial. And charcoal is valuable tor many other purposes. Tainted meat, surrounded with it is sweetened; strewn over heaps of de composed pelts, or over dead animals, it prevents any unpleasant odor. Foul water is purified by it. It is a great dis infectant, and sweetens offensive air if placed in shallow trays around apart ments. It is so very porous in its mi nute interior, it absorbs and condenses gases most rapidly. One cubic inch lo fresh charcoal will absorb nearly one hundred inches of - gaseous ammonia. Charcoal formB an unrivaled poultice for malignant wounds and sores, often corroding away dead flesh, reducing it to one-quarter in six hours. In cases of what we call proud flesh it is inval uable. It gives no disagreeable odor, corrodes no metal, hurts no texture, injures no color, is a simple and safe s weetner and disinfectant. A teaspoon ful of charcoal, in half a glass ot water, ofien relieves a sick headache; it ab sorbs the gases and relieves the dis tended stomach pressing against the nerves, which extend from the stomach to the head. It often relieves constipa tion, pain or heartburn. There are so many snakes about the lakes in Hickman county, Ky., that it is dangerous to fish there. Clergymen, lawyers and authors And Halt Bitters a pure and sate invigoi-ant. The average yield of potatoes in 1879 in the United States is stated to have been only sixty-nine bushels per acre. The aged and inrlrm are strengthened and acuities brightei nl hy Malt Bitters. Talk about a bull in a china shop, why, we've seen a cowhide in a school room! New Fork News. Why snlTer sleepless nights when yoarBaby i not well? You can buy Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup at all Drug Stores lor a quarter oi a 10 lur. Sixty cars of iron ore per day is the regular shipment from the Iron moun tain in Missouri. In Fajwtter form. Vegetine put np in this torm oames wlthia the reach ot au. Br making the medicine, yoiirsuli you can, from a fiOo. package con taining the barks, roots and herbs, make tiro bottles of the liquid Vegetine. Thousand will gladly avail themselTCS ot this oppor tunity, who have the conveniences to make the medicine. Fall directions in every pack age. Vegetine In powder form is sold by all druggist and general stores. If you cunnot buy it ol them, enolose nlty eents in postals stamps for one package, or one dollar for two packages, and I will send it by return mail. H. R. Stevens. Boston, Mass. Are Toil N ot ln-oml Ilrnllh t 11 the Liver is the source ot your trouble, eon can find nn -ibsolute reint-dy in Dr. Sl.lt roup's LivEit iNviooKATon, the only vegeta ll caihurtio whieli acta directly on tho Liver. Cures all Bilious iliTfascs. For Book address Uit. Saxfqhd, 1G2 Broadway, New York. Dr. C. R. Shootiiioiui, the well-know anrai surgeon of Rending, I'a., ofTors to send by mail, tree olohrrge, a valua'ilo little book ondeatnes and disomies of the r-ttr specially on running r.r and onttirrb, and their proper treatment giving references and testimonials that will latisty the most hkepi ioaL Address as above. a'h Voltaic Krlt t o., KinraiiHil, Bftok. W;tl send their Klectro-Voltaic Belts to tha amicted upon 30 days triBl. See their aJvajr tiuiiuunt in this paper beaded, " C Days Trial." Lyon's Heel Slillenpi-a Ke") lioota and shoos HtruiM. Sold bvno and li.ir Iwarodealem. O. GiTnKKT'8 Starches are always pure. A rAHl,-To !lwhotr lufTrinx from th trronj fln 1 trrllflcri'linn of youth, nervous wetness, mi !y tleray l'-it uT nu'.lmn I, etc.. I will si-u I u 11-t-ijk-tiuit will curt .Vo-.t. FHKH OF VIlARtlK 'Una crtut lemedv wn di-cmv.-e;! !y a ni'.siwury I ri Somli Anif-rliu Seixl nseif '' wl -m-. , 1.. iba Km. 10SKHU L IN MAN, Stol.im I) AVu York IMm, lnuuhern, Wlvn anil Ittolhrrs. K. MAltOIIISrs CTKlll.VliC'ATlini U-.,N will pint lly.lv cure l-'uluan W'eakiKw. .M failing of Hit Womb, Whiten, (.'hrnuit- lull iiiunalloa or lUenttlon ol tin- W umli, Iiit-Mciitnl llriuoi rhiuie or KlooUinu, Painful Suiipriwil mi l lin-KUlur Mi-iwliiutlnn, 4c. An old and ri'i.al.ie rvuivly. Sena poslal otni lur a mninhlct. with tr.almont, i-iirra mid ccMHUoImi from iihyclan and rvilk-uUl. to lloH AliTIl A r.AI.I.AKl) Cnd. X, Y THE MARKETS. MIW TOBK Beef Cattle Med. Natives, live wt . . CRVfa Calves Choice and Extra (4,(a bueep...... I3,ta) Lauiba in 14 bogs Live..... 04 4 IlresRfHl e.'Va Floar Fx. State, Rood lo fancy. ... 4 55 (1 Western, Rood to fancy 4 70 4 7 Wheat No. 2 Red 1 2H 1 No. 1 White 1 20 ,41 Rye State u.1 Barley Two-Rowed State 3 i Corn Ungraded Western Mixed .... 61 14 Southern Yellow 68 ot Oata While State 45 Mixed Woeteriu H'J 4 Bay Retail (trades (15 t 1 Straw Long ltye, per cwt. ......... 1 us (4 1 Hopa State, 1H7H U7 (4 Pork Mean, new 11 05 (411 (191 07 H 04 S .'. no oi .10 27 111 75 65 M 47 43 OS 10 10 DO iia uity steam owl (46 Perroloum Orude OSXQVIX Iltflnrd Untter State Creamery 16 ( Diary 14 4 Western Imitation Creamery 15 (4 Factory 12 (4 Cheese State Factory 12 4 Hkiuia t'5 (4 Western 10 4 Kstat State and Penn llJt'Gt Potatoes, Early Boss, State, bbl... 1 25 19I BUFFALO. 23 20 17 IS 14 10 14 50 T8 O.i 45 43 70 Floor City Ground, No. 1 Spring.. 6 25 Wbeat No. 1 Hard DulutU. ...., 1 24 Corn No. 'J Weatern ...... 45 Oats State 43 Barley Two-rowed State...... U bobtoh. (4 s) Beef Cattle Live weight Bhoep 15 4 06 (6 (A 06 V 1108. Flour Wisconsin aud Minu.Pat.... ( 60 (4 8 25 Corn Mixed and Yellow...... (4 a 67 49 14 63 05 (4 J 61 (4 61 35 at 374 uata Kxtra White Eye State.... Wool Washed Combing fc Delaine, Unwashed. " " WATEBTOWM (VASS ) OATTLI MABKIT Beef Cattle live weight... 06 06 10 05 25 26 92 X 89 23 13 07 H tsnecp., (16)4(4 CJ (4 05 14 Lamb bs Hoca. PHILADELPHIA. Flour Penn. choice and fanoy ...... 4 00 Wheat Pennsylvania Bed 1 iOco 1 Rye State 91 Corn State Yellow 6JX4 Oats Mixed !9 (4 Hotter Creamery extra 22 (4 Clieeeo New York Factory IS (4 Pet rolenm Orude 07 fiMWK Refined Baby rrizes, $000. An eminent banker's wife of , N. Y., has induced the proprietors of that great medicine, Hop Bitters, to offer f 600 in prizes to tbo youngest child thatsayi Hop Bitters plainly, in any langunge, between May 1. 1680. and Julv 4. 1881. This is a liberal and interesting offer, and everybody and his wife should send iwo-cent stamp to tne Hop Bitters Mii .Co., Rochester, N. Y., U. S. A., for circular, giving full particulars, and be gin at once to teach the children to say Hop Bitters and secure the prize. The Brnasev family in England must. nexh in W. IT Vanrlprhilr hn alrnnaf the largest holders of securities, other .1 1 , . . i mi , Minn rrni psiato, ia uiw worm, llicir father left them over $30,000,000 in tier. sonal property, nnd they do not own more then $73,000 a year real estate. Vegetine. IN POWDER FORM, 0 CENTS A FACKiUE. Dr.W. ROSS WRITES: Scrofula, Llvtr Complaint, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Weakness. H. R. iters, Bottom I hsrs bean nraotltriiit meilicine f or twenty-flTi years, and an a ismeriy lot Bcrofnla, Ltver Oomiilnint, Dyspepala, nbenmn. tlsm, Weakness, and all Dlnrane of the M!ov1, I bars nerer found its equal. I bsve sold Vhoetins far aeren years, and liavo never bad one linttle returned. I would heartily recommend It to tboai in need of a blood purfAer. Da. W. HOT I, Drn(fg!t, apt. 18, m. Wilton, tows. Vegetine. ONE PACKAUE IN POWDER FORM CURED SCROFULA. HOW TO REDUCE YOUR DOCTORS' BILLS. M Bancs St., East Boston, Mass.,1 Sept. 80, 1879. ( Mr. B. R. STiriifS Dear Sir: My little daughter Stelia baa been afflloted a long time with Scrofula, suffering everything. I employed different phyal -c um in Kaat Boston, but Ibey helped ber none. I bought eome of your Powur.n Fobm Veoztimb, aii l iuy wife steeped it and gave It to the child a cordiug to the directions, and we wore aurprised In afi rtuighta time to see how thcohlld had gaiued In fleeh and strength. She Is now gaining every 1uy, and lean cheerfully recommend your remedy to be Iba best we have aver tried. Beapeotfally yours, t. T. WEBB. Yegetine Is Sold by all Druggists. MALT BITTERS TRADEMARK DUMCATH FEMALES. Ktirslnir Mntliem, Sickly Chii lri-n rnr. Hn I ii i other remedy or preparation it limit all umip iuh e with this nmti ulem I-'ihid Mkdi iwE. MAI.T lilriKllS enrich the hloo I. perfict dlts tlitn, Mmmlutc the liver and kidneys, nrri-st ulcerative we:i..ness!'B. purify and vitalix-? every fun- tlnn an..! procesa of the female system, and cure Neuralitla. Ihttcria, Nerv mnes. Indlixcstlnn, dyspepsia and lK-adacii- Prepared liy the nIAl.T nii'lEHS COMPANV from Vnf rmrtitet Mnll tml Hoi, and Mil everywhere. MALI l.ilftKS UOM I'A X V, 1108Ii.il. Ma-s. 'KIN ) DISEASES. Itching nmuurs. Scaly Krup tlorjs, Scalp Aitectlutis, Salt Ktieum, Pfr.rliiHts, Si-ti! I IUn ', I'lcf-ra anil Son's Infill! 'y-nn-1 by the Ccth.'cha tiKui'.m:. which have prrinrintKl inirm K oi nailing uiipraiicjeii in in -1 ml hlKtory. Send for Il'mtnttet. !: uit.se, contain;!:-. Instiinoninlg from every part or the Tnioii. Prepare! i.v W fe ft Putter, Chemists, Uoston, Muss. Sold by l)ru;' jlsla. HUNT'S REMEDY TUB GREAT Kidney and Liver Medicb, CCHKS nil Diseases or the Kidneys, Liver, Kindlier, und I riniii v Orgum, j Driiy, Gravel, Uiiilii-ti-s, lti-lght' Ilange, I'nins in tho Hack, Loins, or Side; Ketentlon or Noiiretention of Urine, Nervous Diseases, Female Weaknesses, Kxceases, Jaun dice, liiliousness, Headache, hour Stomach, Iy sponsiu, Constipation & l'ile. HUNT'S REMEDY crnrcs wiiKN- all ottiku medk-intts i AIL, as it acta directly aud nt once on the Kiilu.-yx, I.lver, and Itowels, restorin;; tin m to a healthy action. HI NT'S KK.MKDV is a safe, euro and speedy cure, and hundreds linvu been cured hy it when plivaiciana and friends had (rivii them up to die. Do not delay, try nt oaco HLXTd liliMUDV. 8cnd for pamphlet to XVM. E. CLARKE, Providence, It. I. Prlc-s, 73 cents nnd Sl.a.1?. Lareo sire the cheapest. Ask your druggist for HUNT'S HIS 1 BUY. Take no other. "BEATTY' OF WASUISGTO NEW JERSEY, 14-Stop ORGANS Stool, Hook Mualc, boxed A ahlpped only New Piania ttlU5 to Sl .A'iO. Before you hivnnln trument be sure to see his Mid-aumiufT otter iUwtmtnl. tree. Address PAX iKL F. liEA'f i'Y, Washington, S.J. fftPV "PAT! KKCKIPTfwttt fab JWM- JL X IJm directions to mak od equal to those io)d for $2 to $i, for one-1 bird th money) and Reeipu for SO kinds of Ink, nil cetorv, It Oct, by re tura mail. AddJBM H. BUtiSOJt, P.M, Alvarado, Teue. A'l DM lti. Frtini'i mid florae men For $1 will aend a complete Hook that telle you bow to cure every diu aae that horses are subject to. Bind stanip for refcremea and 1 st of over 2m Keclpoe to P. P. Lvmcm. liojt 418, Sa at ob' -i Springs, N.Y. Ayenta wanted. n C AT T? Splendid lnvctment ft5H lUll Pillili Acrfs, ChPtvuw-ke Itay. Iveiit Co. M i. Mich 1-aim: 20,ouu beaiiiiK Treet, Ao.uuO Iterrles: fluent fish Int.'. bathing; g od opening tor Hotel. Iaiiy heals, cars. Will pro-luce over $2oooj Uils year. A bargain. So, I tenant J. POLK, Atty.,WUmliitjton,Del, 1. W W tK K. Ilff nt 'mrisvnmfnl urtA inart-r. y u i.-m of FrtM M toni. Ksrcaitl rmikiU discovtrv l miileiil matouic tmblfiinon tbe fuuntUtlooi of Cl i-Mtrn't NftMlls io ErvpL Oratphiclly illnstmcd with jroipsTtQi, new HUittrsMo.1 cilfKue. nd Urnu, KbidJlNLj 4 CO .Iwonk PuUi.hcrts lat Brvnlwy, Nn Yvrk. ON 30 DATS' TRIAL srs m saad aur Kactro-Toltals Baits and att Electric AiipUaaces upoa trial for au days to thorn aOik tuo with Mm ,Ut and Uta s srerawi natmn Alao of the Liver, lLliiJieya. Hhaumatlsui, Paralyaka, ' AilOma Vottmis Mm .,lWrsh11.1rIlch VOUNC MEN iTwas1. niflilh. livery iira.luate truaraiiteed a DHylnn situ stloii AU.i ea It. Vafentine, Managar, JanesvlUs. Wis. $777 A TEah end expenses to acenU. Outilt Free. AOdrM i O VICKKKY, Augusta, Maine UAMTm Aru mrrwhm U ul Te, CqsTm, bklnc VVHI1 I fcU P''Jr,FvtritlSiuti,M..hynipl,ll.fiiiiillrf. bu im. rwri a it.lt VS., 101 MKD, St. 1XUI N BXT OF Kim, of Great Ilrltsin, Ireland, tc. A Knulatryof au.uooKaniea. Heir, wanted. Price ft. UARWOB A CO.. 911 lUiiiniii K,. V hiL.teltihia. Pa. etc n son Pr day at home. Sample, worth rne 3 10 AUdrets Siwaoa 4 CoT, Portland, Maine, BTB- Rout final,! w Sewing lladilne Needles Oc. per 20 ftnlMMiM fBMM VUltln. 41 A BlfSBl. WltB I vcb. siflma , to, i- n $72 A WEEK. $ a day at home easily made. Costly Vulut free. Address 'lava 4 Co., Augusta, Mains, MALT AND HOPS g r if Important to the Fair Sex J U vTVKV 'vT' I ft 1- ES4- 111 TUB GRRATKNGMHH RRMFDT, enre Lotoom, hta,(oT whitflB,) Tainful Menntnition, Ulceration, Ova rian P'BOMRfi, Absent Mfmstrnntion, all diabases, known i f nn. ale weaknoBn, Thry hnvn boen unnd in England iot jenTH m n rmrifKiioai ana rtijminnna' pin. roia dj bu Onijrfflsts evorywhere. Price $M) per box orni boxei (or $it,W, tent by mail froe of rxwtnirn, Boonmly scaled, tiik uny mi liiriNK :., i Mechanics' Hlook, lptmit, Mich. wholesale Agents for U. H. WTamphints sent frea O. N. CRITTKiNTON. Wholesale Aont. l.ew York. NTN U-NO 111 ' vsHr.yrtl FRAZER AXLE GREASE. FOIt H4LK BY ALT, OHil-K-H. Awanlal Ms ME UAL OF HOSOR at the Ontmntal a4 Porn KrnfufititynM. Chicago. FRAZER LUBHICATOR CO., New York. ?hat Everyli ody Wants ! WHO HAS NOT HEARD AND READ OF IT I Wot tlio Followlng;i PnAftistHTRO, O., May It. Hevrs. J. N. Ha nan k Co (Minm: Permit me to ay that for several weeks I (mfTercl with a severe cough. I first UM'l Dentc'it Couh Itiilami. ami a CUT that several other preparations, each of which I pave a Fair trial, which availed me nothing. For the succeed imr st i davs I used no nrdklne. Hy that time I was timunht in the first stages ot Consumption. My cough being more severe than ev.-r, I then eomtrvrtcrd using AI LION'S J,ITNU B1jMAI, which has fiectually cured me. I consci entiously believe it to he an excellent medicine, and can as-tire you that It wilt afford me the hl;:hp:t ponlMe gratl flciition to commend it to any person v.m mav refer to m. Yours truly, Jt'KWl'UN Mb'KPJIY. For Bale by all Mvdft'lne Denier. For One Mnnth S)t fT it Yetr'n tob fc-ntttu to the Lrftl 11- luiirrti"!, s-iifi pact) Btory l-aper, TiikAVii Lv Cau, I.K- th N. V. Ledger Cora pfttiion, tr, 1'enotlBvl notim for Awkual tutr tA, cr:bffi Irn, A pooa yt 2 ' Imni-e to tret wifc or nnl.snii. Nothing in 111 olumn to orTiind the most f;L,tiilinii. rnr n w.imii, Ail'ireu, T. Q, 1MOKMOW, I'cm.iMHiB, V,h A 157 Deubotn ttW Gakaft 111. RED RiVEIS VALLEY 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands bat 1a n World, foreaJ bj th 11 Panl, Minneapolis & Manitoba E.R. CO. Tbn dollars pur aera allowed thaaatttar for brut C and oulUvaUoo. 'or particular aipl, to D. A. McK.INl.AY, l-nrt Cammlwliiiii-r. ft. I"l, Minn. The Koran. A oiirioNtly to every one, ami a ueceaaltr to nil HtiKlimls or llttttiry or Itrliuloni TH K KOKAN OK Molf A.MMKI); translated fiom ths Arabic by tscine Saie. KoriiH-ily puhl shed at $2,78; ew, beautiful Type, uet, cloth-bound edition; pries 111 ee.itn, ;iitd tt cents Tor postme. Catalogue of many (Standard works, rcuiarkah.y low in price, with extra terms to c ui!, tree. S.ty win-it you miw this advertisements AMFKICAH HOOK f.XCllAfttsE, 1 1 ll'unc HUll'llNg, IN. If Is the 14 Orlplnnl ' Concentrated Lye anrl Reliable Fnmll j Simp Maker. Uirei lions ai-company eaiiiC mi for niakmii IIhi-iI, Kurt ami Toilet snni qnlikly. It Is full ui'iuht ami Biii-iKtli. Ask yuur grocer for rj.VO.M VI t .11, uuil take do oltierr. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO., Phila. PETROLEUM Grand Medal at Priilaiielpiila Ba post Mon. MUE JELLY Mm Bifiial M l-arki BapuaiUOB. Tka weBderfol autxtawe is a.-kaowle1ce4 by phyav siaiia tkroutthi.at Um world to be the beat mneily day oovered for the curs of Wunnila, Ruma, "- if Sum ntMrs, Pilfa, Catarrh, (rhllblalia, c la ardal that every aua nay try it, it l, put up m lfi and !V ceol seules for bouerhold use. Olibun if from your aragiua. a-djM WW 1b4 K savsrtor t. aayttua- yes kaw ivm ft Tn!"1!' VI r--.-!r f r I'm rli-l-.ly l!!-v.-v!"l, ,-ti.1 only GRANT'S npOTR It dfscrihea Itoyai Pa'acs, liare ('ui-iositli o, Wealth and Wi n lcTn ot tin- ln iic, ;:iii, a, J: p in, etc. A mi liui pt'oplc want it. Thi: the b st iin...f yuur lif to make mvitvy. Itewareof ciitchp nuy ' iimt ttiona. Send for ctreu:aritcintatni)); a full U s. liptiou uf tue work and extra teima to A,' ut. Addicss National. Pl'Ui.isii.nu t'o., Piiila Iclphta, Pa. Vhe Creat Komecy I-or 1 K LIVER THE BOWELS(and the KIDNEYS, These frreat oirans are the Natural elt nnseniof tlu'hysum. If tJu y woik Will, hcnltb le cr f cot, if they Ixvumerlotrireil, dreiulful dit-a-si-H are develoH?d tH?enuK thf bll in Ni.-oned with the humors that should have been exixdled naturally. Kl PN E Y-WORT retort the natural action, amf turn oiT tno diseru Tnousand have been cured, and all may le. For sale by nil lirureriftta. 11 REWARD STtSKSZ lilmd, Ituhinfcf, or tllcrtt-d I'ilt-M tliat lt-ltiiiM'i Tilo Hiinr4ly fadtttocurd. Gives iiLuiitHimte relief, cun-i caaae of luna; etjindinff in 1 wtM-lt, una ordinary oaaa infldaya. r.AHTinN " vriutpcr hilt vritttnl Dr. J. P. Miltrr't tin s wn w awn wfiien ye.HO fot in bhtrka l'H aSones and rtmtiirm. i'titttL Ik I Knit's C.1,4 riy alldruKKib Propr..B.W. coz. Tenth and Arcb. Su., lWada.,'p! S.-nt )v iniil lw .1 V Mim a u UNITED STATES Patent Brokers and Inventors' ASBOOIATIOW. Patent Rights sold at PrWats Sale and by PuMte Aaa Hon. Patau la obtained and Searches mads en Um Lowed! Terms. Correspondence solicited. Circular, seat sat bpbUcbUosv -4. WSI. CB1WSU1W, Hasuar, 3B Arch Wtreet. PUff.A lFLPHI A. EI -CARS SODA b tae beat la ths Wort. K Is ahsorately pare. U to 0M best for Medicinal Purpoeea. It 1, the seat for Baktas saA all Pasally Uses. Sold by all Druggists aad ttraoarsT fEWN'A SALT WUFACTURIN8 CO., PWaf. Tikis Claim-Uuaa Kaia,ailisbel IMS, PENSIONS. Slew Law. TVmaaada af -'" u aa to AiaoBanra ai ----- 1 Aadreat, wl suaoa. H KUBSa Bl t.BSBaaa fq Prswsr WBshlBs,.. , a TRUTH MJCTXi lias will sW a C , ariU iof BA. kaiahi. sLm af . aju) U.k W a... Ud r.Hl aMtan f a, fulBf. hV I wkaf ,,. sliU A. aM. Hi.! JaU mt V lsea ait. . iWBa, M aaa. fM Be 4.a $66 A WKKK In your own town Term, anu 6 trjtttt Ky! mm Awn l JTjrfl rv.ysSSrsf J f HAT I SHALL I I "i7f" .FT I SAP0MIF1ER NATRONA