FOR THE FARM AND HOME. Sulphur for Dallies. The Dairy says that sulphurous acid is a most effective antiseptic and anti ferment, and may be produced by burning sulphur upon live coals upon a shovel or a bed of coals carried into a stable with perfect safety. It will also be found an excellent method for freeing dairy rooms and collars from the spores of mildew, which have a very injurious effect upon the milk and upon butter or cheese made from milk that has been exposed to them. In fact, from constant prevalence of these spores it might bo useful be use ful to make a practice of fumigating dairies occasionally, especially after a bad, damp spell of weather during the summer season. Kill In;; Wds u till Kerosene. After trying all ways to exterminate Canada thistle and that next worst enemv of tho farmer, plantain, says an Erie county, Penn., farmer, 1 dis covered that kerosene oil is a certain remedy. Sonic may think my method tedious, but at best w hen you wish to get rid of a patch of either pest, dili gent work is indispensable. Early or late in summer, when the ground is dry and weather settled, is the time to make the application. Take an old fruit can, solder on oner side a handle, then whittle a pine stick round about two feet long; now dip the stiek into the oil and touch the plant or thistle, allowing a few drops*to run down the stalk; it will follow on down and cover every root if enough is used, and the result w ill reward any person who has pride in keeping from lawn or field two of our worst weeds. If the thistles are very thick, a few may es cape, which you will have to kill an other year, but at worst two seasons* work will whip them ah. Fattrulug Sivlnr. It is generally conceited that there should be no standstill period in the correct system of feeding, but that growth ought to begin with young p'.gs and be steadily and continuously increased until the animal is ready for the butcher's block. While everybody nearly accepts the "no standstill" sys tem as correct in theory, most farmers in reality keep tlieir jugs during the summer months on very meager ra tions, waiting until cold weather to begin feeding with a view to fatten ing. Growers who practice the plan of making most of the summer season by regular feeding, testify to the decided advantage of this system. In very cold weather, unless the hogs can be well housed and kept at a temperature of about 60 degrees, what the aninud eats goes to keep up the heat, and the food fails to produce the same amount of fat it would in warm weather. There remains no question but that it pays to provide warm, comfortable houses for swine during the winter season in rigorous climates. The excessive fat gained by exces sive feeding of fat-producing food is objected to by many consumers, who prefer a larger proportion of lean with the fat. The Lice Stock Journal says on this subject that the hog is naturally a grass and root-eating ani mal, but in its domestication, being fed almost wholly in this country upon concentrated food, has come the habit of depositing this excess of fat. If young pigs are kept upon food that will grow the muscles and bones and develop a rangy frame they will, in the opinion of the authority referred to, possess so much muscle when half grown that a moderate length of time in fattening, even on corn, will not pile on an excessive amount of fat Pigs fattened in Canada partly upon barley, but largely upon peas—a highly nitrogenous food, yielding a large proportion of muscle—produce more lean meat than do swine fattened al. most wholly upon corn—an excessive ly starchy and fattening food— New York World. Farm and Garden Vote*. Dust with air-slacked lime to avoid worms. Oats are good for pigs. Mast make® bitter pork. Do not plow thin soils in orchards I Spread manures. Cut off the stalks of flowers when they are done blooming. One hundred bushels of shelled corn j will shrink to ninety in the bin. A burning log or any other light ; will keep away coons from cornfields. Set plum trees in large pig pens. They will not be afflicted with curcu lio. Ashes aird soots are good to kill the turnip fiv. Dust on when the dew is on. Do not dig potatoes immediately after a heavy rain. Lying in the sun heats and rots them. A Chance for Expansion. A commercial traveller dropped off the train in a small western village, and upon getting into the 'bus, was driven about three miles to the hotel. "Is this ttiwn incorporated?" he finally inquired of the hotel runner who was the only other occupant of • the bus. -No." • Whv don't you incorporate? If vou did YOU would have a town bigger i • • oO than New York." — Si/tinys. A CITY'S AMBULANCE SERVICE. How New York Provide* for Accident" nnd i'nsunlties. To some of the down-town police precincts the ambulances are called often half a dozen times in a single night. It is then that tho great crop of drunks is reaped and that nearly all the lighting and murdering is done By day accidents to workmen and peo ple in the streets engage the attention of the hospital surgeons. The ambu. lanee horses stand all day and night in a Dutch cellar ready to turn out at a moment's notice. Under the driver's seat is a little drug storo containing tho essentials in emergency treatment. Frequently the rail comes over the tire wiros twenty strokes of the bell and the number of the La \ where tho am bulance is wanted. It starts from the nearest hospital. Rarely the ominous twenty-live notes spells out the mes sage: "Send all the ambu lances in the city," as it did the day when the Riverdale blew up. Then a iace for life and death takes place from up town and from down town, | for which all other traffic must give way. The ambulance, like tho mail wagon, has the right of way every ! where. In the lighting precincts, l\x h. Sixth. Eighth, Fourteenth, all below Houston street, the hours between 11 at night and 'J o'eloek in the morning | arc usually the busiest, particularly on : Saturday nights. On Sunday mornings j the term is stretched a couple of hours 1 till daylight in honor of the excise law. In New York satan works hardest when the churches are open, and idle ness and rum are his tools. * A police sergeant's life is not a sinecure in these precincts. His responsibility is great, : and usually he is not willing to take ' chances. Too mauv fatal mistakes of * I judgment are on record. Any wound j on the head or bad looking cut is cause ; enough to discard the doorman's sur gery for the doctor's. It the "subject"' is a prisoner or refuses to go to tho | hospital, the police sugcon is sent for. ; Unconscious cases almost invariably bring out the ambulance. The single ; word, "poison," added to the message ! from head-quarters spells at the hospi tal the sentence, "Bring the stomach pump, and hurr\ up." And they hur ry. Not long since an ambulance or the way to the scene of a reported aeci dent ran over a man on Third avenue, stopped to pick, him up, and returned with two patients instead of one. Tho sick-wagon, by contrast, comes at leisure. All urgent cases are for the ambulance, and it cannot refuse them. Transfers from oue hospital to another can be made afterward. AYitli sick patients it is different. Usually they can wait. They belong, as th ( , case happens to be contagious or not, under the board of health or the de partment of charities and corre tion. if they have not the means to einpho a doctor of their own, as they seldom have. The "sick cases" come from thf tenements, the lodging houses and tin streets. If the patient has been lea* than five years in the county he is rc fused by the ambulance and the sic! wagon, and ttie emigration depaU ment's wagon comes after official d< Ir.- of sometimes many hours to take tl\ "ca-e" to Ward's Island. The recently established night medi cat service has provided a most usefv and welcome expedient in such case* by putting into the hands of the police the means of bringing immediate re lief. while insuring to the doctor hN pay. Of the twenty odd persons bene fited by the service in one month nc' one was able or willing to pay for th< help rendered, but left that to the city at the rate of $3 a c?U.— New York World. Poisoned Arrows. At a recent meeting of scientists ir* Paris, an interesting communication was received from M. AV. ,1. Hoffman regarding the methods employed by North American Indians to poison their arrow points. The Comanehes simply pierce the green shell of the "Spanish bayonet' or yucca angustifolia with tho pointv The Apaches (Uayoters, sic ) bruise up the heads of rattlesnakes with deer's ; liver, allow the mass to become putrid ) then dip the arrow points, and allow them to dry slowly. The Cliinouns (Moquis of Arizona) irritate a rattle snake until he bites himself, and then dij) the point and a portion of the wood of the arrow into the blood of the animal. A wound with one of these arrows generally proves fatal in three or four days, and its action is much more rapid if the stomach of the wounded person is empty at the time the injury is received. Another poison is obtained by irri tating bees, shaking the hive, and then killing them when in this state with small branches bunched together. The insects are crushed up in a mass with mortar and pestle, and the arrow points are dipped in the magma. It is probable that the active substance in this case consists in the forriae acid contained in the bodies of the bees. This preparation does not cause death, but induces long continued sickness. Another very active but not fatal poison is prepared from red ants. It produces pain in the pharynx, consider able swelling ol' the part injured, an I sometimes delirium. The patient re mains feeble for a month. Roast owl was esteemed a delicacy in a recent Paris menu. I.A'i EST NEWS. LONDON, Sept., 28. --The statue of Uerma nia, the national memorial of Germany, was unveiled yesterday. Alaudloul was shot dead in county Mayo, yesterday. Two shocks of oarthqunko were felt in A gram yesterday. Tho report, that Mr. Parnoll had been shot proves to be without foundation. Tho examination of O'Dounoll, who shot informer Carey, was continued yesterday, and Mrs. Carey tostitied. It. is reported that China wants to place tic neutral zone in Touquin south of the lied river, and that Prance will not accept this arrangement. Sawney Younger, Reuben King ami Isaac Evans, three young negroes, were hanged at Chatham, Ya., for tho murder of Win. Shep pard last month. Mr. John Roach, tho ship builder, has presented a bill of $21,000 to the Navy De partment for the storage of the steamer Roanoke at his yard since 1877- Tho Huntingdon (l'a.J Car and Carwhei 1 Works, Rlain Brother*. Proprietors, ban failed. Liabilitiea $200,000. Estimated as sets SIOO,OOO. Four bundled employers have not been paid for two mouths. There was snow' September 28, at St. I -mice and Cheboygan, Mich. A light snow fell at Minneapolis, Minn., but melted quickly. Snow fell heavily at St. Paul for about live minutes, and at other points in Minnesota. Tue Athletic baseball club, by defeating the Louisville yesterday secured the cham pionship in the American Association for ISSU. Each member of the winning club got a one hundred dollars siut of clothes and s:>(> in money. Tho express car of tho Pacific Express Company, near Peru, Ind.. yesterday, was broken into by throe masked men, who bound and gagged the express messenger. B rt r,ootuis, and robbed the sale of SIS,(KM. The robbers entered the express car from a passenger car. A tire broke out in John S. Hambletou's blacksmith shop, on Talbot street, in the town of St. Michael's, Md., and swept all the houses on tho west side of Talbot street, northwardly to Church Neck road. Eight horses were burned. Loss about $15,000. The Lord Bishop of Rochester arrived at Baltimore on the steamer Hibernian. He was received by a committee of prominent Episcopal clergy and laymen, and in the evening he delivered an address at Christ Protestant Episcopal Church on temperance work in England. At Albany, N. Y., the boiler of the steamer . S. Robin?on exploded, killing the captain. George S. Warner, and the fireman, Wm- Cleary, and seriously injuring Frederick Tinslar, Willard D iraiul and Melville Ryan, deck hands. Richard Vanzandt, of the tug boat Cora, lying alongside, was killed, and Captain Robinson, of the Hattie M. Betts, was blown from his pilot-house to the wharf and seriously injured. At Blue Lick Spriugs, Ky., while three brothers, Samuel G., William O. and Thomas Rogers, were taking depositions in the case of a contest over their father's will, Samuel, thinking his brothers were about to draw weapons, drew his revolver ami fatally shot Thomas through the head and William in tho abdomen. Samuel Rogers is president of the Farmers' Bank of Carlisle, Ky., William is a lawyer of St. Louis, and Thomas a far mer. I "* """ " (i iO. i iitA L NKWS. I O.n last nighS that Mr. Darnell had been shot- The report could not be verified. The K'pnMi'VM hive nominated Hart 11. lioltoi for governor of Maryland. A papal aiub . sador is on his way from it ins to Moitiealto inquire into the rapid spread ul t -jemasour/ among the adbo r ills of t' e Catholic faith. lucre ha* b.'ea rec ive.l in New York a copy of a proclamation issued by General Vgaerco, in Cuba, calling \pou all Cubans to take part in a revolt aguinst Spain. Col. George Kn ipp, the owner of the Mis soixii Republican of St. Louis, the oldest uewspapcr west of the Mississippi river, died on the steamship Peunland, which has ar rived at New York. C. J. Dewey, recently in business in Mon treal, is proved to be a swindler, and has ab ounded. llis frauds will reach at least )0. The detectives are after him, and large reward is offered for his arrest. Ho . J supposed to be in the Eastern States. David Moses, a slim, brown-eyed, good looking stripling uf twenty years, was mar ried to Blanche Gray, a professional fat woman (she is but sixteen, however), in a city museum at New York. The bridegroom weighed 120 pounds aud the bride 517. Captain J. 8. Harnsbcrgor, in his speech at Harrisonburg, Va., welcoming the Union veterani from New England, held up a pic tare of Stonewall Jackson at tho request of one of tho New Englauders, whereupon there was an exciting scene. Cheer uftor cheer was given, and the veterans of both armies waved their hats as a tribute to the deceased soldier. A tragedy occurred not far from Grafton, W. Va., which has cast a gloom over tho en tire community. Mr. B. G. Mountz, a promi nent citizen of Wed Grafton, was startled by hearing a noise in t'.io front yard, and, having been somewhat annoyed of late by petty thieving, he grasped a revolver and rushed out. On reaching the door ho noticed the dim outline of a man's form in tho yard, and, raising his pistol, lie fired. Tho man dropped without n groan. Tho report drew the members of the family to the scene, and on approaching tho prostrate form Mr. Mountz was horrified to find that he had shot his own son. The ball had entered his forehead ab >ut an inch above the left eye. The young man was a youth of much prom ise, a:ul 'he roinorso and despair of tho father at tho result of his carelessness were terrible to witnes . The family is quite wealthy and well known. LONDON. Sept., 26. —Several French uews pxpers are c inducting a campaign against King Alfonso because they believe he will henceforth bo an ally of Germany. The sea fell 15 feet at Colombo, Ceylon, at the time of the Java earthquake. The International Arbitration and .Peace Association has suggested that the United States or Switzerland act as mediator be tween France and China. Renewed anti-Jewish excesses are reported in West Hungary, and in the riots in the Province of Jekateainoslay, Russia, only three Jewish houses escaped domolition. Junius fl. and Charles B. Knnffman, well known lawyers and pension agents of Lan caster, PH., have been arrested, charged with frauds in connection with their pension business. The Hon. ''Cerro Gordo" Williams is a model "blue-grass" farmer. Hi* tobacco crop always commands tho highest prico in , the Louisville market, turning him a net profit of from $23,000 to $150,0K) a year. 'Jlio ceremony of receiving Sitting Bull, the great Indian chief, into tlie Catholic Church, which was to have taken place this week at Fori- Autos, has been indefinitely postponed, because Hitting Bull cannot, make up his miud which of his two wives lie will let go. (Jen. Butler has been renominated for Governor of Massachusetts by the Deuio crntic Convention, and alao by the Green backers. Brauchville, PH., is excited over tho re ported elopement of Rev. W. 11. Myers, n Methodist clergyman, with the wife of Mr. I Ralph price. : Tho Coreun embassy visited Governor's Island as tho guest of General Hancock. They were received with a salute and enter ! lained by General Hancock. Mr. Walker, tho colored lawyer, whom Governor Butler has mado a justice, is mar ried to a white woman, lie is said tube very popular among all classes in Charles i town. LONDON, Sept., 23.—U Douuell, who killed I Carey, the informer, was arraigned in tho London Bow-Street Police Court yesterday and bis examination was begun. Duels have beeu fought in Paris between Baron Beaufort and Viscount Aruiaud, and between two Jupunese residents of the city. King Alfonso, who will reach Paris on : Siturday, will join a hunting party on Sun day, aud in tho evening will uttend a ban 1 quit and n gala oporatic performance. i Great excitement was caused in the neigh borhood of the British consulate, New York, by tho report of two pistol shots and a hat less man running at tho top of his speed. The fugitive was pursued and captured by a policeman, lie gave the unine of Feeney, and it was learned that he had attempted to .take the life of the British consul by firing I twe shots ut him. j Gen. Sherman has fixed the first of Noveni ber as the date upou which ho will turn over the command of tliu army to Gen. Sheridan and virtually retire to civil life, although he will not be placed upon the retired list of tlie army until the Bth of February. Major j General Poi>e, now commanding the depnrt i ment of the Missouri, will probably succeed Gen. Sheridan in command of the military j division of the Missouri. A meeting of cotton-spinners, manufac turers and operatives was held at Man chester, England, yesterday, to consider the j depressed condition of tho cotton trade. It is reported that tho Marquis Tseng's ' proposals for a settlement of the difliculiu . between France and China comprised the annexation of Aunam as far as the Red river by the French, China annexing the remain der, aud the Red river to be open to the commerce of tho world. The New Orleans, Vicksburg and Mem phis Railroad is rupidly Hearing completion. I The greater portion of the grade and track work has beeu douj since tho first of tho I present year. Over 150 miles of track have i been laid. Washington fcotcs. 1 Congressmen who are dropping in anout these times to make arrangements for the winter complain that houses are very scarce ami very high. Houses within reasonable distance of the Capitol nnd the departments certainly do bring b'g rentals, and furnished ; rooms nre also high. A hundred dollars a I month is a moderate price for a parlor and a bed-room, and when it comes to renting a ! furnished house, $3,000 a year is reasonable. There are Congressmen hero who pay more ' for tho rent of their houses alone than their Congressional salary, aud yet they do not stand niuch the better for it. David Davis, even when Vice-President, livod at a hotel which, while it was popular years ago, is now j more noted for its past than its present. Senator Morton, who was popular every where, in society as well as in politics, lived at a hotel because he could not afford to do , better, and never gave dinners or anything of , the sort. Boutwell lived at a boarding-house : even when a Cabinet officer. Surgeon-General Wales, of the navy, has® recommended to Secretary Chandler that th standard of eyesight at the Naval Aoademy be fixed at 11-20. The standard has varied in the past under different systems of physical examinations, but was never so high as it is now proposed to make it. Secretary Folgor has just rendered an im portant decision with regard to the construe tiou of section 7 of the new tariff law relating to packages and coverings of imported mer chandise. He holds that the cost or value of the outside covering into which goods nre finally put for land and oceaD carringe is not to be taken as a part of or in addition to t lie value of the goods, nor is the value of tho goods to be considered as enhanced by reason of that outside covering having been put about them. I HE .MAIiEE! M T.TIM I to. ILOl'R—Pity MiIIs NVMH. . fcb'd <"< •*. to WHE V l'- Si. ithern F-.ilt/ t'H (<-' ijl CORN -S jutheru w10tv.... ' ■ Do yellow ; 4 HIE-Good • ' •" fi i * 'PS—Maryland " -7 CO lON—Middling .... l ,v << I Good ordinary.. HA V- AM. and Pa. Tbust'fCl •IM @1? 00 Sff RWV —Wheat 7 •' KOO IM I 1 'EE— Western prime ' \\i--ii Virginia l) "FFSE—New Y>r|j Stat" choice I ' T • V. -tern prime.. .... " EGGS I'M (I ) I,E A K Inferior " <" I o ti is red * • 0 b' d" K-o,e\ Id 'C <<■ I. r 00 'i t>". v COTTON - Aiiddlin-jupland !" a I'M,., FLGT'R--Southern com. to fair extra t ' ?• 5 I'd WHEAT—No. 1 white ' R ■" ' HYP—State tip (if 7d COR V- -Souths'n Yellow... ' (i VPS-White State <•' 414 Ml TTKI: St ito '-'0 (it 27 t UTM-'SE—Slate !l (l WHEAT—Pa. and South- 1 13 I '7 ern r< d I I." u) I I< RVl—iViiisylv?.->ia t0 t!3 CORN —Southern ye'low 'B '7- GATS * ID (it 38 Bl 'l t'Eli State 20 (ii ]0 fM4K.KSF.--N. Y. factory!!. H ™ L State 13 ut IS A Japanese Railway. Our fellow passengers are well worth studying. First conic the men of bus iness going to Yokohama, as is their daily custom. These men are dressed in foreign clothes, and many of them understand some foreign language, English or German. They are mostly an intelligent looking group of men. Besides these somewhat forclgnized natives, we have the real genuino native article, with nothing foreign about him excepting his hat. Hats are very generally worn, unless it is a rainy day, when they are left, at home and the wearer goes bareheaded. The Japs are peculiar. On a cold, rainy day they go about with their skirts caught up to tin ir waists, aud the water all streaming down their bare legs. Their dress must, lie saved, even a' the rost of some personal inconvenience. In the car we can see this native dress; a loose robe with no buttons, but folded over the breast and fastened with a sash. This is the drcos of the men as well as of the women. Some of the dresses are very rich indeed, being made of beautiful silk. One-half is longer than the other, which allows for being pulled up above the sash, and then hanging down in front making a pouch. This is the pocket where nearly everything is carried. At the bottoms ol' the large, square sleeve there are pockets also. Suspended from the sash is a little box and a leather wallet. Sometimes these arti- Yles sre exquisite and very costly. The box contains the toboceo pipe and tho wallet contains tip* tobacco. The box is frequently made of ivory or bronze, finely worked. Japanese tobacco is very mild. The average American would disdain to use it. Mild as it is but little is consumed at one time. The whole amount of tobacco imbibed would not be equal to one puff of a strong cigar. But the almost universal practice here is to draw all tho smoke up, expelling it from the nostrils in-j stead of from the lips. Women smoke as well as mCD. "How shall we stop tho great evil of lying?" a>ks a religious weekly. It cau'tjbe stoppe 1, but the evil might be lessened materially by abandoning the custv.m of putting inscriptions on tombstones. One ol tbe Elect. CLEVELAND, OIUO.—The Plain Dealer reports that lion. Martin A. Koran, congressman elect from Cleve land, Ohio, district, has used St. Jacob's Oil in his family and has always found it safe and reliable, and it afforded him great relief to a lame knee. The Mayor of Philadelphia lias determined to close all the pool rooms in the city. \ Saratoga man. who was cross-eyed.went West, and was so greatly scared by n cyclone that his eyes straightened, resulting in a |M*rmanent cure. "UOI.DDX MEDICAL DISCOVERY" has been used with signal success in con sumption of the luugs, consumptive night sweats, spitting of blood, shortness of breaath, weak lungs, cough*, bronchitis, and kindred affections of throat and chest. Sold by druggists. Divorce decrees were granted by Judge Gardner of Chicago at the rate of one every nine minutes on Saturday last. An onrichcr of the blood and purifier of the system; cures la-i'nde and lack of energy; such is Brown's Iron Bitterß. "Native" oysters are selling now in Lon don for a dollar a dozen and ure poor at that price. Kkintiv Men. Wells' Health Re newer restores health, wgor, cures Dyspepsia, Impotence, Sexual Debility. sl. Snu Francisco is trying to prevent the landing of lepers from the Sandwich Isl ands. STRAIGHTEN yonr boots llO greasing will last two weeks. It received first premium at the Centennial and Paris Expositions, and medals at various State Fairs. Buy no other. It is generally a cold day when an Arctic expedition gets left. Dr R. A. Davis, 200 Joraletnon St., Brook lyn, tays: "Physicians generally know no core for rheumatism and Bnghi's kidney dinase. Dr. Elmore is the fir-t 'to discover ont. His Kheuiiiatine-Goutnline really cures b •#/<." A party of Minnesota young women have gone to tho Argentine Republic to teach school and they write back that their first impressions are pleasant. A Beautiful Head of Hair, long, silken in texture, rich chestnut brown, reaching to tho ground: such a ro the effects of tho justly celebrated and widely known Car boline, the prince of all Hair Restorers. There is a tame crow in Manchester, Va., that flies all around town and sometimes as far as Richmond, and regularly returns home to be fed. FOR DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, depression of spir its aud general debility in their various fornis . also as a preventive against fever and ague ami other intermittent fevers, the "Ferro-Phosphor tted Elixir of Calisaya," made by Caswell. Hazard Co., New York, aud sold by all Drug | H been known for more than thirty-fivi m la years us the best of all Liniments, forH ■ Man and Least. Its sales today arcH ■ largM* than ever. It euros when allM ■ otliers fail, and penetrates 6kin, tendonH Hmid muscle, to tho very bone, SolUiy OPIUM HABIT Cured Painlessly. The Medicine sold for a small margin above the coat o. compounding. All caeos treated by special prescrip tion. For full particulars addrea* the Discoverer, DR. S. B. COLLINS, La Porte, tnd, >4)?ElWof?FS''' *• ths quickest, pleasanteat, yX, surest and best remedy for kidney, ot- mach, bladder and blood diseases, and only real carativo ever discovered for acuta and chrouio rheumatism. goat, lumbago, aci.vt *o / tea, neuralgia, eto. Has cn at hope less cases Brigat'e disease ami dyspepsia In S week*—all forma of rheumatio disorders in 8 to 12 weekh—relieves intlammatoiy ■■ 1 day, Can refer to handn da of rsha- I Is people cured who had triad la vain everything else. Purely t otanic, harmless, and nice to Irink. Ask yo ir druggist to get it: if he declines send to as for it—take nothing else.Elm re. Adams A 00..1U6 William sh.N.Y To Speculators. R. Lindblom & Co., N. G. Miller & Co. 6 and 7 Chamber of 56 Broadway, Commerce, Chicago New York- CRAIN & PROVISION BROKERS. Members of all prominont Produoe Exchanges in New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Milwaukee- We have exclusive private telegraph wire between Chicago and Now York. Will execute orders on our judgment when requested. Send for circulars con taining particulars ROBT. LINDBLOM A CO.. Chicago- T NATIONAL TYPE CO c Y Latest Styles. Largest Catalogue, y * Full information for 3-cent stamp. P Lowest Prices. Best Assortment.. ■ E PHILADELPHIA PA S EMPLOYMENTS—- Newark, N• J- Terms only S4O. Write for Circulars. At. KNTS WANTED for the Best and Fastest-sell ing Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices oeduoed ii per cent. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. Pnila. Pa. SEND for Illustrated Catalogue Steam Engines, Saw Mills, Traction Engines, Standard Implements. A. B. Farqubar, Pennsylvania Agricultural Works, York, Pa. CCC a week in yburown town. Terms and* $5 outfit (Tee wOO Address 11. Hallett tv Co.. Portland. Maine* OO IU *C\J Addrefa Stiwsoii & Co.. Portland, Me. C 79 ' week. $lB a day at hoineeasily made- Co-ily ■J" fc outfit free. Address TRUE Jt Co., Augusta, Me. PHIKNIX PECTORAL will cure your cough. Price 26c. Shall We Let the Child Die? A hard-hearted political economist, looking at a pale and puny child feebly gasping as it lies upon a pillow, says that the child might as well die. It is so weak and poor that its life will never be worth much anyhow. There are already a good many people in the world who are of not much account anyhow. And what's the use of adding to their number another weakling, who has but slender chance of ever amounting to anything? Now ask that child's mother what she thinks about letting the child die. About this time the hard political economist had better get out of (he way. "Let my ckild die? No I No! •'As long as there is a remedy to be found that imll save that child, the child shall not die! I'll spend my last dollar to save the child!" Well, try a bottle of BROWN'S IRON BITTERS on that child. See the poor little fellow pick up strength. He revives. lle will live. Hosts of other children have been brought almost from death to healthy life by Brown's Iron Bitters. Your druggist sells it, Delicate and Feeble Ladies. Those languid, tiresome •enaatkms. canstng yon feel scarcely able to be on your feet; that constant drain that is taking from your system all its former elasticity t driving tho bio m from your cheeks; that continual strain upon ycur vital forces, rendering yon Irritable and fretiul, can easily be removed by the nee of that marvelous remedy, Hop Bitters. Irregularities and obstructions of jour system are relieved at ouoe, while the special cauge of periodical pain are permanently removed. Nono receive ao much benefit, and none are so profoundly gratefnl and show such an interest in recommending Hop Bitters as women. Feels Young Again. "My mother was afflicted a lung time with neuralgia and a dull, heavy, inactive condition of the whole system; headache, nervous prostration, and waa almost i helpless. No physicians or medicines did her any good. ! Three months ego she began to use Hop Bitters with euch good effect that she seems and feels y >ung ajain. although ovor seventy yours old. We think there is m . other medicine fit to use in the family.'*—A Lat>y, iq Providence. BRADFORD, Pa., May 8. 1375. It has cured me of sever il d.soaae\ such as nervous arm, sickness at the tt miach, monthly troubles, etc. I have not seen a sick day in a year, since I took Hop Bitters. All my neighbors use them. MRS. FANNIE GAFEN. (.1,000 I.OST.—"A tour of Europe that cost me $3, OX) "dmemo has good than one bottle of Hop Bitten; "they also cured my wife of fifteen yean' nervous " wenkneis, aleeploesnesx and dyspepsia. "R. M., Auburn, N. Y." High Authority. Hop Bitten is not. in any aense, an alcoholio beverage or liquor, and could not be sold for use except to persons desirous of obtaining a medicinal bitten. GREEN B. RAUM. U. 8. Oom. Inter'! Rev. 80. ELOOMINQVIDLE, 0., May I. '79. Bins—l have been suffering ten yean, and I tried your Hop Bitten, and it done me more good the doctors. Miss S. 8. BOONE. Baby Saved! We are so thankful to say that our nursing baby wag permanently cured 01 a dangerous and protracted con stipation and irregularity of the liowela by the use of i llop Bitten by its mother, which at the same tme restored her to perfect health and strength.— Tha PADSII. Rochester, N. Y. * UNtl 4U CANV*HEALTH OF JIASYMPATHIZEWITHsfrS THE HOPE of7 LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VE&ETABLE COOTOUND. A Sore Car© for all FEMALE WEAK NESSES Including Eeacorrhcrn, Ir regular and ?ainfnl Mcnstruatieu* Inflammation and Ulceration of _ the Womb, Flooding, PRO LAPSUS UTERI, &c. IVPleasant to the taste, efficacious and immediate In its effect It Is a great help in pregnancy, and re lieves pain during labor and at regular periods. FBYSIi ISS rSE IT AXD rEESCRIBE IT FRKELT. nrFom ALL WEAKNESSES of the generative organs of either til, it is second to no remedy that has ever been before tho public; and for ail diseases of the ILIDXETS It is the Greatest Lrmed yin the JToria. # Jif" KIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either B©x Find Great Relief In Ita Use. LY'iHA E. PIVCHA M*9 BLOOD PUKIFTEB will erad:<*ate every vestige of Humors from the Blood, at the same time will give tone and rtrength to the gyrtem. As marvelloua in raaulta as tha Compound. tyßoth the Compound and Blood Purifier are pre j pared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Masa i Price of either, (1. Six bottles for (5. The Compound is sent by mfi in the form of pills, or of loaenge*, on I receipt of price, (1 per box for either. Mrs. Pink ham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Enclose 3 cent Stamp. Send for pamphlet. Mention ttii Paper. rarLmu E. PINXHA n*s LmEm PnuA cure Constipa tion. Biliousness and Torpidity of the Liver. 25 centb. O-Sold by all (J> a DTAMOMP DYES. °° V Best Dyes Ever Hade. MW FOR SILK. WOOL, OR COTTON. -SA DRESSES, COATS, SCARFS, HOODS, YARN, STOCKINCS, CARPET RAGS, FEATHERS, or any labrio or fa.ncy article caeily and periectly cclcrcd to any lhade. Black, Brown, Green, Bine, Scarlet, Cardinal Bed, Navy Bin©, Seal Brawn, OUva Green, Terra Cotta and 20 other best colors. Warranted Fast and Durable. Each package will color one to four lbs. cf goods. If you-liave never rv*d Dyes try these once. You will be delighted. Sold by druggists, or send us 10 cents and any oolor wanted sent pest-paid. 24 colored samples and a set of fhncy cards sent fbr a Sc. stamp. W ELLS, RICII ARDMW A CO., Burlington,Vt. GOLD and SiLVER PAINT. Bronze Paint. Artists' Black. For gilding Fancy Baskets, Frames, Lamps, Chandeliers, and for all kinds of ornamental work* Equal to any of the high prioed kinds and only lOcts. apacka,— gist, or send to 9*2 KnJcon Street. N. Y.mki ~j 9 - GIOO. OA. UD L. i. L SMITH A in.. Aynls. I'tlxllns. 111. CIUQ] C CDCC V Our agents are making 9100 vMlviru. rntc ■ per month coHeotirg small pio tares to enlarge by our new process. S**nd for circular. V. 11 Wll. LI A M S&C t >., US a Broadway. M.Y. YITI Yin return mstll. Full PmrlitlM P II 1 InNoody'a New Tailor Sy stem of A AlmJJU Dress Cutting JIOOU V A to, ClaelßaMU, o. (jAMl'Uoit xVIILK is the best l.iuiment. Price 25 cents.