-i I rilann U Pain at Menlo Pnrk-An ,u Blind reraona-The A1rnphone. We mnko tho following extracts cou corning nome of Ediaou's recent inven tions from a New York Attn correspond cnt's interview with tho grent electri cian nt Iub homo in Menlo l'ark, N. J. : It wan 6 o'clock. Col. Murphy and Mr. Stewart left for tho train. Mr. Fox and the writer accepted an invitation to supper. Tho profefwor lives in a neat house fronting the railroad, but a few -flops from his laboratory, llis mansion 18 substantially furnished. Everything is iu perfect order, for a thrifty house- wuo lioius mo reins. Alter a bountiful meal, wo returned to the laboratory. lue professor exhibited the drawings lor a ntue machine that he had invented for the measurement of voltaic currents of electricity. One of his surprising uiscovenes is an ink mat must prove blessing to the blind. He threw a white powder into a bottle and poured a little water on it. After tho bottle was well shaken he dipped a pen into tho mix ture, and wrote the word "Boston " on Uiflerent sheets of letter paper. The writing dried in a few minutes and raised itself on the paper the same as let! era in books prepared expressly for the blind Xhe color of the writing wbb a clear white, and it looked as though it had been cut and pasted upon the letter paper. It varied in height according to the sizing of the paper. If the surface was smooth and polished the letters were bold and clean cut. They were t asod so much that a blind person ac customed to reading books with the fingers could easily decipher the mann script. With tho aid of the rack used by William Trescott in writing Lis "History of the Conquest of Mexico," and the uso of Edison's procuration. blind men and women could correspond . neirly as readily as other persons. The professor says that he shall continue his experiments until he finds the paper oesi auaptea 10 tne use of the ink. Even while waiting for the ink to drv on one of tho sheets, he made a singular discovery. He held the sheet te the b.azeof a lamp. The word "Boston" turned a deep red, and finally became as uiucK anu Burning as eoony. un remoV' ing it from the blaze and looking at it on the surface, the ink changed to a color restmbhng the under side of a mushroom. The paper differed from that previously used, and the letters but -1" l.-l !1 - .1 m. Biignuy nagea ine suriace. The mix ture acted upon the paper like an acid, It ate the impurities in the sheet, and . left the word "Bcston" as transparent BB giasB. But a more surprising discovery was made. The ink seemed to act different ly on different words, and it is possible that Mr. Edison may find a wood on which tho ink would stand out so much that artists could use it in drawing de signs on blocks, and stereotyped plates could be taken - without sending the blocks to a wood engraver. Such' a dis covery would almost put an end to wood engraving. - In answer to an inquiry concerning his ear trumpet, the professor said he had received hundreds of letters from deaf persons. He had not yet perfected the machine, and could not say when he would do so. He needed suoh an n strument himself as much as anybody, - for he is terribly deaf, and he should drive away at it as fast as possible. The megaphone was not in the labor a- , tory. This wonderful instrument has three funnels, modelled after a W. The two wings are funnels with tubing lead ing to each ear. The centre is a mouth piece through which the operators talk. The instrument is simply an atmos pherical telephone. With megaphones conversation can be carried on through a distance of from one to two mileB and more. "Do you see that house?" said Griffin during tue alternoon. He pointed to a cottage more than a mile away. ""Well, ' they were talking with megaphones be tween the laboratory and that house the other day, and every whisper was heard." We were standing on the veranda, which commands a view so quietly beautiful that Mr. Edison says he saw none that rrtrpassed it during his Western tr n "Take that clump of woods away off you- uer peyona tne grain stack, and vou can hear every whisper that is uttered," said urimu. "ihe instruments are pointed .iireotly t each other like two caDnons. I f a bte flies between them you con hear Lis humming. A whisper is audible a . aousand feet without using the Bpeak- :::g trumpet, and the noise made by . ttismg through .grass may be heard at much greater distance." The outside funnels are six feet eight i'lehes long and twenty-seven and a half Kihes in diameter at the larger end . i . . -. . . uese lunneie are eacn provided with a iible ear tube, the end of which in toed in the ear. The speaking trum- s in the middle aoes not differ materi- ..-y from the ordinary ones. It is a lit- : longer and has a larger bell month A Curious Hobby. The bibliomania of gourmandize is a ueer hobby, but the manager of the " mtinental Hotel restaurant in Phila--rd and well. He has read the Bible iphia is firmly mounted on it.and rides in cover to cover, and treasured up r'.ry word about food; and from U a kespeare's writings he collated over ree hundred extracts relating to dishes, uinly salads. A Press reporter, who id been allowed to examine this en usiast's collection, found over 10,000 Ills of fare and 500 cook books. There - re menus from every important city in ; trope and America ; bills of fare oted on white satin, when kings, 'I'smen and heroes had been enter d ; in a word, it is a collection that At be surpassed in kind. The col r knows how to make hundreds a hundreds of salada, and says that hiinple a d'sh as Indian corn can be t-d in a hundred styles. He notices Jurence in the tastes of Americans, i hiladolphian will call for terrapin or t de bcauf ; the Bostonians, although Hounds like satire to say so, do actual ' want pork and beans, when away home ; if not that, then rare roast f nems to be their favorite diet. i Western men, too, are great beef rs, and are fond o! fowl and game food generally ; Southern men i a rule, vegetarians. They are .m caw, ana can appreciate 8 n it is wbll made, Habits of Corner Plycons. Frank J. Teetera, the carrier-pigoon uuier vi j.roy, was in town with i number of birds, for the purpose of put uuk mem 10 iriai nigutp. in company wnu. tMiugo wiuaru ne scut nine of them off on the Mohawk River bridge at the foot of Genesee street. The birds took flight handsomely, some rising until lost w sight and all striking a bee line for Troy. Mr. Teeters and Mr. Richardson of Green Island several days ago let two viiim (ju iu mis ciiy on a trial match. The day was hazy, and tho birds failed to get the proper direotion. The conse quence was that they returned eventu 1 1 a ii ,i any io tue ciry. une was lound on Fayette street, and died soon after from exhaustion. The other was found near Bagg's Hotel, was injured while being captured, being mistaken for a wild pigeon, and also died. Inasmuch as tho flying of pigeons through this latitude is likely to continue, it may bo well for all to note the following characteristics of carrier birds, so that they may not be unfortunately mistaken for those of other specimens. The carrier pigeon is always of a uniform color, never mot tled. There are broad white circles around its eyes which are hawk-like in clearness. The nose from the head proper to the beak is unusually broad. Carrier pigeons also bear the names of their owners on their wings, but the other characteristics mentioned should enable all to tell them at a distanoe and thus do them no harm. Mr. Teeters says if the weather is not hazy any match for the distance of a hundred miles should be successful. Misty or rainy weather does not obstruct a bird's vision so much as hazy weather, when it is almost always nonplussed, ne thinks that the faculty possessed by the bird to find its way back to its native cot is due almost en tirely to its memory of places. Young birds aro trained by taking them further and further away from home until they have finally, as it were, nremorized a long distance. Birds that have once reached Troy successfully from Utica can the next time be taken to Syracuse. T -' At .J. . ii ou rising irom tne latter place they can see Utica then their flitrht to ' Troy is probable. If they cannot see Utica, or some other place thev remem ber, they circle round Syracuse, and if mey sun jaii to recognize any land marks, eventually return to that city, bewildered, and often exhausted. At such times they fall a prey to evil-disposed persons, fand perhaps often to well-meaning people who think they are bagging some game by capturing them. As the best of pigeons are apt to go as- A. r m V iry, any one nnaing tnem can do no greater favor to the owner than by sending them to him immediately, C. O. ju., grooming to me aaaress on their i v . . wings. If everv one made it a point to do this, an impetus would be given to a praiseworthy sport. Utica N. Y.) dxeraia. The Sew Carpet-Bug. the fourth volume of "Entomo In logical Contributions by J. A. Lintner, extracted from the " Thirtieth Annual Report on the New York State Museum of Natural History," will be found, among other articles, one upon the new carpet-bug, the ravages of which have since 1861, caused much alarm in this country. Not satisfied with devouring the fibre of the carpet in spots, cases are cited where entire breadths have been cut across as if bv scibors. In 1876 this insect was very abundant in Sche nectady, and on careful investigation it was determined bv Mr. Lintner to be AnthrenuB scrophularice, a near rela tive of the small A. mustBorum. which has been for many years the pest of publio museums, although much the ess destructive of the two. The larva in its adult form is about three-sixteenths of an inch in lencrth. and the adult is very lightly colored in ban of black, white and soarlet. Tho best place for detecting these insects is hdou the edges of carpets where they are nailed down. Professor Lintner thinks that should it become as abundant as some of its allies, it is difficult to conceive how we can indulge in the luxury of carpets in our homes. Even now, where it is established, nothing but a frequent overhauling and shaking will prevent its ravages. The ordinary remedies of camphor, pepper, turpentine, tobacco, carbolic acid, etc, aro of no avail. Ote method will probably be to introduce into the rooms certain plants of which these insects are fond, and which will attract them, and then to knock them off into boiling water after they have collected upon the flowers. Professor Lintner refers, in this connection, to the long catalogue of injurious insects received irom Europe, and to the com paratively small return we have been able to make. Among the more im portant species he mentions the Hessian Hy, the cheese midge, the house fly, the Croton-bug, the grain weevil, all the destructive moths, the asparagus beetle. etc. Of the very few of our r ative pests which have been transmitted to Europe, tho most obnoxious is the potato-buy. Paper Statistics. Or the 1,300,000,000 human beings inhabiting tha globe, 360,000,000 have no paper nor writing material of anv kind; 600,000,000 of the Mongolian race use a paper made from the stalks and leaves of plants; 10,000,000 use for graphic purposes tablets of wood; 130. 000,000 the Tersians, the Hindoos. A 1 m Armenians ana Dynans-have paper made from cotton, while the remaining owu.wu.uuu use tuo ordinary staple, lhe annual consumption by this latter number is estimated at 1,800,000,000 pounds, an average of six pounds to the person, which has inoreaned from two and a half pounds during the last fifty years, lo produce this amount of paper, -00,000,000 pounds of woolen rags, besides great quantities of linen rags, straw, wood, and other materials, aro yearly consumed. Tho naner in manufactured in 3,960 paper mills, em ploying 90,000 male and 180,000 feaaale lalxrers. The proportionate amounts of the different kinds of paper are stated to be: Of writing paper, 300,000.000 pounds of printing paoer. 900.000 000 pounds; of wall paper, 400,000,000, and 200,000,000 pounds of cartoons, blot ting paper, etc. What a lot of hat stores there am in tuis city kept by one Prioe. JV. Y. Mail, TIMELY TOriCS. The famous Viennese surgeon, Baron Itokitansky, whoso death was recently announced, is declared by a local paper to nave aissectea u,uuu oorpses. The Rev. Owen Djrsey, of the Trot estani Hipiscopal church, writes tha muinns at umatia ageucy are gooc farmers, living in frame houses, and that they raise better w.heat than the whites. Mrs. Simon Reiss, notwithstanding her great ago of 105 years, worked iu the harvest field recently at her home in Lehigh county, Pennsylvania. She bound up ten shoaves, and tells her friends that ehe expects to attend the county fair next fall if her own Bheaf isn t garnered meanwhile. The Naval Register just issued shows the total number of officers in all branches of the navy and marine corns. active and retired, is 2,007. In addition to this number thero are at thA naval academy, and who hope to be officers mime any, kn cadet midshipmen and Bovemy-iuree cauet engineers. Despite the immense vield of iml.l in California, it is now shown that her tillable soil produces more actual wealth than her richest mines, npr crnin ami her fruits exceed in value the best of her piacers. uer grape crop this season will be so very large that preparations are making to convert 1,000 tons of grapes into raisins. A new idea, verv original and Mt.rmo. ly l ansian, has just been started. It is that of a floating restaurant on Mia Seine, plying between the capital and Saint-Germain. This establishment is installed on board a prettv littl BAtmr it has two decks, one of which is fitted np as a covered saloon with every ac commodation, and on the other is fixed a tent, which shields the voyager from buu huu ram. A yonng man pleasant,! v snnknn nt oy his acquaintance as " Jimmv Groan. ougn is a ciers on the steamer Helena. pijing on tne upper Missouri. He is a great-grandson of Sir James Greenough. ut xiugmuu, ana a iew aays since re ceived a letter from his mother in Pitts purgh, Pennsylvania, saying that she had come into possession for him of A5U0,000 from Sir James's estate. nevertheless the river-loving James says he will serve out his season in buffeting the billows of those Western waters. New Gmnea until lately has been an 1 A. 1 " . uiniosi unknown country, it has not been fully explored, but missionaries of the jjondon Society have obtained footing on a coast previously shunned Dy aii vessels, ana have won tho con fidence and good will of a people hither to supposed to be the most bloodthirsty and treacherous of savages, and are giving their serious attention to the evangelization of the island. Two of the dialects spoken on the coast have been reduced to a written form and printed, and twenty South Sea Island teachers are helping the missionaries in teaching the natives. Where Tin Ores are Found. Tin is one'of the earliest metals known which is contrary to what, not many years ago, was the general opinion of scientific men. The researches, how ever, which, within the last twenty years, have been instituted with regard to the earliest races inhabiting Europe, have conclusively shown that weapons and implements of bronze (an alloy of tin and copper) were probably the metallic articles earliest in use, after those composed of copper alone, and before the introduction of iron. In tho curious "lake dwellings," discovered in Switzerland, not only bronze imple ments, but bars of pure tin have been discovered. The proportion of tin varies from four to twenty per cent, about twenty per cent being the most common. The principal present sources of tin are, first, Cornwall, where it is now almost exclusively procured from the mines In stead of washing, or "stream works;" second, Saxony or Bohemia, in small quantities, and exclusively from mines; third, Banca and other islands of the Malay Archipelago, tho Malay Penin sula, as well as parts of Hindoetan and Burmah; all the productions from these (now furnishing the greater part of tin commerce) known generally as "Straits tin." being derived from steam works; fourth, New South Wales, Queensland, and other parts of Australia, together with Tasmania, Spain, Bolivar and Mex ico, also furnish (or have lately done so) some portion of the tin commerce. Greenland. Janan. Finlnnd Miliaria Iceland and Madagascar, and some other localities, have also yielded tin in greater or less qnan titles. coal Trade Journal. A Bold Bank Bobbery. The Sedalia (Mo.) Democrat has the following particulars of a robbery at the "l 1 - 1. 1 - 1 . joucoruia nuns, wnicn occurred at Con cordia recently: Concordia is a town of abont fifteen hundred inhabitants in La fayette county, on the Lexington and Ht. Louis railroad, thirty miles from Seda lia. Tho principal banking business of an mat part or ijafayette county is done by the Concordia Havings Bank, of which j . ix. Jjonoeiener is president and A. Ficker cashier. During the afternoon, about 1:30 o'clock, three men entered the bank. One of them asked the cash ier, who was alone in the bank, to change a ten-dollar bill. While he was chang ing the bill another man jumped over tne counter and caught the cashier by the arm and placed one hand over his mouth. They then took what money was in 6ight, and putting a pistol to the nnnu:AH.. i 1 i.n i - a i. uunuioi o unui, ioiu mm w open me sale. Ho did so under fear of his life, and the fobbers took all the paper money in the safe between 83.000 and 84.000 refusing to take the silver, of which there was between $2,000 and $3,000 iu the bank. During the robbery, a gen tleman named Sodeman was near the bank, and one of the robbers, who was guarding the door, called him to advance, instead of which he turned and ran. The robber fired at Sodeman, but missed him. Then they mounted their horses and galloped off in a southerly di rection. The whole robbery occupied about ten minutes, A Terrible Earthquake. The Earthquake of Jamaica, in 1692, is one of the most dreadful that history has to record. It was attendod with a hollow rumbling noise like that of thun der, aud in less than a minute all tho houses one side of the principal street in the town of Port Royal sank into a fearful gulf forty fathoms deep, and water came roaring up where the houses had been. On the other side of the street the ground rose up and down like the waves of the sea, raising the houses and throwing them ioto heaps as it sub sided. In another part of the town the street cracked along all its length, aud the houses appeared suddenly twico as ir apart as tuey were before. In many places the earth opened and closed again, so that several hundred of these i . . ... upeumgB were to do seen at the same time; and as the wretched inhabitants ran out of their tottoring dwellings, tho earth opened under their feet, and in some cases swallowed them np entirely; wuue in otuers, tne earth suddenly clos ing, caught them by tho middle, and mius crushed them to death. In some cases these fearful openings spouted up cataracts of water, which were attended uy a most noisome stench. It is not possible for any place to exhibit a scone of greater desolation than the whole island presented at this period. The thundering bellowing of the distant mountains, the dusky gloom of the sky. and the crash of the falling buildings gave unspeakable horror to , the 3cene. Such of the inhabitants as were saved sought shelter on board the ships in the i t . .... . uaroor, ana remained thero for more than two months,, the shocks continuing wnu more or less violence every day. When, at length, tho inhabitants were enabled to return, they found the whole face cf the country changed. Very few of tho houses which had not been swal lowed np were left standing, and what had been cultivated plantations were converted into large pools of water. The greater part of the rivers had been choked np by the falling in of detached masses of the mountains, and spreading ver the 'valleys, they had changed what was once fertile soil into morasses. whioh could only be drained by cutting new channels for the rivers; while the mountains themselves had changed their shapes so completely that it was con jectured that they had formed the chief seat oi the earthquake. A Romance of Three Thousand Miles. The Halifax papers contain the fol lowing: "At Victoria. B. C at St. John's Episcopalian Church, by the Rev. Tercival Jenns. John L. Lord, of New Westminster, B. 0., to Isabella, eldest daughter of Robert Brander. N. 8." The young lady in the case had made the acquaintance of the gentleman by means of photography and correspond ence. She left Halifax for her new home, and arrived there safely. She had not seen her intended since she was child at which time he. too. was a resident of Halifax. After making him self a comfortable home in the far West the gentleman yearned for a wife, find opened a correspondence with old friends in the sister province. Shortly after the Halifax yonng lady bade adieu to her father at New York. While she was on htr way to San Francisco, a young 1 viy boarded the train who was also bound to British Columbia, and, singularly enough on a Bimilar errand to meet and maray her lover (a lawyer), whom she had not seen for ten years. The two young ladies became fast friends, and together embarked from 'Frisco for Vic- toria, British Columbia. Here they were met at the steamer by the respect ive bridegrooms to be, who it transpire 1, were intimately acquainted, and had met, without previous arrangement, from different points, each to meet his intended bride. The young lady who entered the train between New York and San Francisco was bridesmaid to the Halifax bride, while her lover was groomsman, and the father of the groomsman gave the bride away. The Thursday after the marriage chronicled above the other pair were united in wed lock. Toronto Globe. A Famous Guide. Pike, the famous guide of the Yose- mite Valley, has recently run down to San Francisco, for the first time in twenty-six years. He was born in Ten nessee, but crossed the plains soon after the discovery of gold in California, being one oi the few survivors of the ill-fated party that first attempted the perilous passage of the Death's Valley route. He was an associate of Peg-leg Smith, who amputated his own leg with a hunting knife, taking np the arteries and dress ing the stump without assistance. This operation was necessary inasmuch as he naa received a wound from a poisoned arrow in a skirmish with Indians and illustrated an important principle now familiar to every college student that of sawing one's own leg off short. Pike first visited the Yosemite in 1852. the year after its discovery by white men. and he has remained in those mountain solitudes ever since, this being his first excursion. During recent years he has pursued the occupation of guide with thrift and profit. In ascending Mount Whitney, however, he contracted a bron chial affection and lost his voice so that he cannot now speak above a whisper. He has been commissioned by hotel pro prietors in the Yosemite to visit Oregon lor the purpose of procuring new varie ties of plants and trees for the valley. Some time ago an Indian burial ground was discovered on the Genesee itiver, seven miles irom iieifast, near the former site of the old Indian council house of the Six Nations. Within these graves were placed, at the time of burial, brass kettles six inches in diameter, coarse cloth, pieces of buckskin, beads and paint, probably vermillion, gold and copper rings, some with stone set tings, halves of bells similar to sleigh bells, pieces of hollow brass, each of which contained a thong of buckskin, a bracelet of blue beads with a triangular pendant of agate, a stone pipe with a stem three-fourths of an inch in thick ness, and iron knives badly rusted. Mr. Letchworth is having a collection of these Indian relics made, to be deposited in the museum upon Glen Irish, and whioh will contain whatever is historic and pertains to the Indian domain oj the once powerful Six Nations. Vtiea (N.Y.)JItrald. Roundabout Ways of Hearing. There is a passage from the cavity of the drum of the ear to the throat, known as the eustachian tube. Its main pur pose seems to bo to regulate tho pressure of air in tho cavity; but, under certnui circumstniioes, it serve to convey sound to tho inner ear. Writers on phj Biology record instances in whioh persons who coma not hear through the external ear wore enabled to do so through the mouth. Another roundabout way of hoaring is by moans of the teeth. A simple experiment illustrates the trans mission of sonorous sounds by the teeth. and also shows that solid bodies convey feeble vibrations better than the air. TiAV A wntli. tun.a ilnvnvnril nn a tahlp and stand so far from it that you cannot uear tne ticking, jnow, let one end of a wooden rod rest on the back of the watch, and grip the other end with the teeth; closo the ears with the fingers to exclude other sounds, and the beat of the watch will be distinctly audible. Other sounds may be convoyed in the same manner. If one end of a very long rod bo placed on a piano and the other held between the teeth, one can distinguish the tune played though hia ears bo stoppod. That the sound is transmitted better through solids than through tho air is shown by tho old ex pertinent of suspending a pokor or an iron oar ivy a cord held by the teeth If tho iron bar be struck the sound wi.'l appear louder than when heard in the ordinary way. Engineers, when they suspect a leakage or other mischief iu sido the cylinder of a steam engine, sometimes put a small pieoe of iron be tween their teeth, press it firmly against the outsuio of the cylinder and olose the ears, when tho sounds produced within become clearly audible. Journal of Uiemistri. . Awakps to America at Taris. The cable announces tho prizes won at' Taris in fliteen olassosof the American section. E. Jk T. Fairbanks & Co. receive in Class 15 the highest and only award to any scale manufacturer. Whpn wr Demoralize th Ntomnrh By exoeKHHH or imprudence iu eating, can not hope to tuoupe the ronnoqiipncnii for any great length of time. Tho mont robuiit digeB tion raut enoouuib to abused of that important function, lint suppoiting that we have been foolish enough to enfeeble the Btomach, it the damage irreparable? By no means. The dys peptio has only to do two things to itiHiire his ultimate recovery. First, he shouW adont an eaitily digextible diet Hi cond, be should uoe witn rocnlHntT and nersititence Hoatotter's Stomach BittrH, the leading gastric invigorant of the ae. ' The multiform symptoms of dys pepsin, and the almost invariably sttendtnt diBordnrs, biliousness and constipation, will assuredly cease to persecute the sufferrr if the above advice is attendod to. Who that has suffered the torments that chronic indigestion inflicts will nbgloot to take ad van t ere of a remeJy which, if the most positive evidence of the medical profession and lhe publio is to be received with dnecrcdenoe. is an absolute sno. cillo for the complaint. f'na the Truth OTfrtnke l.lo t Investigation discloses the fact that the lad reported in the Associated Press dispatches, abont August 10th. to have died in China o-n after two weeks' use of some repulvd remrty for oorpnloncy, had not taken Allan's Antl Fat, bnt had used a preparation put np bva tegular physician in Lnzerne, Pa. Allan Ant -Fat is manufactured in Buffalo. N. Y., by tne nnder oigned. We have alreadv tnlil inn mm bottle of it. It has therefore been taken by thousands, and we challenge proof that It h is ever harmed any body, miles the reduction of obese persons from 20 to CO pounds, leaving them healthy and strong, is considered a mis fortune. Furthermore, we horebv offer r nun reward for cvidenoe sbowins that it contains poisonous or injurious insrredientB. We also offer 5,000 if we cannot prove that it has re duced numbers of persons as stated herein, and always without injury. It is said a lie will out travel the truth any time; bnt we trust that those newspapers that have misled the publio "7 saying mat phvsioians attributed theladx's death to the use of Anti Fa', which is onlv nut up by us, the term "Anti-Fat ' being our trade make), will correct the false impression they have oonvoyed, by publishing this refuUtion. 11U1AN1U MEDICINE CO., . Buffalo, N. Y. Gaps made in the flesh by abscesses and nloers speedily disappear without leaving a car, when Henry's Oarbolio Salve is the agent employed to heal them. Thit standard article cures the worst sores, eradicates cutaneous ernptions, rclioves the pain of burns, banishes pimple and blotches from the skin and has proved to be eminently successful in remedy ing rheumatism and soreness of the throat aud chest, bold by all Irngginta. Tho ilnnll ,.,. I, Some people don't know that they are being swiudled every time they buv an inferior. snort-weight, baking powder. It would be far oeuer to Duy and une tho old re habl . Doolev'a Yeast Powder. Every package of the Dooley Fowder is warranted absolutely pure, and smouy mil woigbt. Hold by grocers. lww yj. j. van moss, or Jonesville, Mich., writes that he has used two boxes of Grace's Salve on an ulcer on his foot and it is almost wtll. lie wants two more. Price 25 cents per box at the arug stores, or sent by mail postage paid for So cents. Buth W. Fowle 4 Sous, Boston, Mane. If there is anything iu this life that will give one a ioreiasie or nell, as some represent it. that thing U Neuralgia. It is the refinement oi loriuro. uut mere is a simple and inexoen sive remedy for it. Johnson's Anodyne Lini ment snuffed up into the head will give instant reuei. Pure rich blood gives us health, lonir life and a "green old age," but how few pay any atten- uuu w wo biuwj ui moir uiooa r 1 arson s Purgative Pills make new rioh blood, and taken one a night for three months will change the CHEW " The Celebrated "MATtlBXEHH" Wood Tag Plug lOBacco. Pioneer Tobacco Company, New York, Boston, and Chicago. The For upwards of thirty years Mrs. WIN8LO W'B Duuiuisu siuur nas neen used for ohildren with never-failing suooess. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind oolio, regulates the bowels, oures dysentery and diarrhoja, whether arising from t ething or other Cannes. An old and well-tried remedy. 25 eta. a bottle. To cleanse and whiten the teeth, to sweeten the breath, une Brown's Camphorated Sapona ceous Dentifrioe. Tweuty-tlve cents a Hottle. IMPORTANT NOTU'K.-Varmeri, fami lies and Other can purchase no Remedj equal to Dr. TOBIAS VENKTIAN I.INIMKNT for tha oar oi Gholert, Diurrhoe, Dyaeutery, Oroup Oolio and Be. ickoeea, Ukeo internally (it ia perfectly hannleaa' ae path accompanying each bottle) and alerually' or juhiomo Khnuuiatiam, Headache, Toothache, More Throat, Cute, Burn, Swell lima, Bruiaoa, Motquito biua. Old Korea, Palna in Limbs, Hac and OheaL The VKNKTIAN LIN1MKNT was introduoed I in 1M7 aud no one who baa uaed it hut ooutiuutta tniin mn ...,..' atatum if itwaa Ten Oollara a bottle they would not he without it. Thoutanda of Uertinoate can Da imbkI pea. Mur tue unuot, Bpeaklna; or Ita wonderful fluratiwa nn.rt... l hold hy the Orusgiats at 4U Cts. Depot 44 Ian i T" """ a -. rw tu..u.iU.rr WIS...:.. .(, .yHU,. j. a-i ..l',ia, an, . .i.tZ SAPONIFIED Is the Old Reliable Concentrated lye FOR FAMILY SOAP MAKING. Dlraotlona aomrnipanyln nnota oan for making Hard, Roft and Toilet Hoap iiIi UIt. IT IU rill.l. Wr.KIHT ANlt STHlt.VGTir. Tha market. Is flood a I with (coeallnrl) OonoMil rated l ya, which is adulterated with sslt and rosin, ami mi i makt ftoap. am nvr THK APOIMIFIEifl MADE BT TIIR Pennsylvania Salt Manuf g Co., PHILA OKI. PIMA. Baown's BaonowtAt, Tboohfs. for oona-hs and enlds Agents ft'&x circular. l ft par day guaranteed. msLoca llox ftaw timeaoo. (fl0 a day to A mt to aell a llonsehnld Article fpif Address Hnihrv IM'Par Vn., Marion. Ohio. $350 A ItlO.NTII-Aarntii Vnnifl-3 brat selling artfolea in the world ; one aamtile frtt. Atjilraaa JAY 1IKONSON, Detroit, Mich. WANTED Men for oup ymr, to bfKl work nt otH'P, Hitttti y t:ur. I.Uriiiiyr flint dawn. MMlTOft,l,AMl VuWKH,'lriWHAT!,tino. 1: ORT ril'NTFK (N. V.), iMIMTAKY I iiw I I III I niiiiiiniirninnri,a,jn, inrtpal. Limited to Mft hoyw. Twrnm rnoflffrwr. $7 A PAY to AawntaoanTasalnx for the Plrralde Vlellar. Terms and Out tit Krea. Address P. O. VUIK KHY, Angnsta, Main; ORGABS retail prloa PltfSOonly MIA. PIANOS retail prloa ("MO only I3A. Ureal bargains. HKAITY, wash 11 tilngton, N. J $10 to $1000 Invested In Wall Ht, Htooki makes fortune every mont.n. nook sent free einlaining everything. Address BAXTER 4 OK Bankers, 17 Wall HI., IV. Y rjYWJI A D The ehoioeat in the world Importers I I i i nrinea- ltraeat Onmnanv in Anierina Staple artiole pleases everybody'! rade oontlnnally increasing Agents wanten everywhere neat Induce ments dont waste time eend for IMronlnrtn HOH T WKUJI, -lit Veaey Ht.. n Y., f. It Itoi HUT, S I fl 5 C9K P" Agantsl is a!-. ..11:.. lr va-v I sellingonrPlnrArt II U V UI ttluKtrated ivVA- n s-. hy mall en Uatalogue a J lLltll flUU application la J. 11. BnVKORIVH RONS, Manufacturing Ptihttahars, 111 141 mi rranann nireet, Dutuio, niaas. isaiarHianeq nearly nny years. vou -fVitr; Going to Kansas HMid for iW GuiU, ffWInff full and ritlUnl Inform tion in rcnrt to th i lhfit, Mont Froduoti-v and BMt-!xoatd Farming Landi in toe htato. AdUrott 1. E. LOCKWOOD, 0Vn:"LiT,??lV:.- PK0F. BCHEM'3 Illustrated HISTORY OF The War in the East, or conflict between Rt'ssi and Tprkkt ia thefttxtbook tor lr qsNfi. Ha iMlitotavo Iuiki lli anvritmtinf BTTI.K HCKNKa. Kortr -aaea. (lenxtaia. eto . hnd is the only oomplet work puhliahed. II no rival. Hell at sight. Prioa M:).tH. Terms nnequaled. Attrnt M'oef ft. Address it. H itM)lNPKKI A .. N..w York. HOLIES IU THE VEST Excursion! to Lincoln, Nebraska. Leave Naw VnrU nnft ja t'n.ln.J ika Third Turaday In cvrrv .Month until llrrrm. brr. Eionrsion fin. tii will Inare TT!C"I A JKPT. I7lh. Faro 11I.01H hnll regular K atrs. Kaat traine and Hrat-clm.a BjunmnMl.iiii. guaranteed. For deaoriptivs Lind Uirculara, Inloiira. lion aoout Tickets, etc., send aMreae nn Pnalal (lard to ri.l.n ,'llllll(K,:l7 llrnmlMn. Nt-w Vorh. Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. NTH'' no GRACE'S SALVE. JoxaavrLLa. Mich.. Deo. 7. 1H77 ; 1 sent yon 60 ots. for two hoses of (Iraoe's Naive. I havs had two and have need them on an ulcer on my toot .and It ia almost well. Koapeotfully jours, O. J. Vati Nass. Price 2li oenta a hot at all drnggiatr., or sent hy mall S reoeiot of !t.ft cents Hn.n.ntil l al.'TIl IV FOWI.K iV NON. Mi liarriaon Ave.. Hoaton. Mass. Paints Ready for Use For Farmers and Manufacturers The ara nniftirm In ahititM n.i tUm mIm bImm tm matobfrd. Any one oan paint with them. Tufty faava ry so potior oovnrinc pniprliB,and do not. like the to- .lllKl Datttnt DaintH. Contain tithir waUr. h.n.nnr alkali. ThAM painta are in Ijiiiutd Form, and ara aold in Gallon (Jana and HarraU. 'I hey ara also pot np in mall cans of ona to ftvm u.iuntin. Hni for MfnntiU nwA , ahowinic diitHmnt ahadHa. V. W. DkiXOK A OO.. oor. r niton and William ttts., New York. 5 EST flOODS AT lAlrTFItT PRirc. I"w. OV AAtcturm. 3 Jtuuht, X&c. Ciacut-AHs Faag. Outfits Wantsd. tlGICHUSlClLGlSIHIIT. 1 TJfiO. J. 11 A It BACH, tvoryoasa Musician. ) StK) t'UbertSt., Philad'a, Pa. BOSTOH TRANSCRIPT, Daily and Weekly. Quarto, BOSTON, MASS, T 1 '"". Cheapest and Best Family Newspaper In New Kngland. Kdited with speoial referenoe to tb rjned taat and requirements of the home oirola. All tha foreign and local news published promptly, nails Transoript, t O par annum in advance. Weekly " (i oopiss to ona address,) ti7.AU par annum in advanoe, SENT FOR SAMPLE COPY. NOW TO BfTTHCM la lb. belt ran of tneiiate. !rr"j i ""iV "' cu':' "' "Kawaas Pa . OOO. OOO stead.' add,... 8. J. t.ilm.r., , -r. h""sa. k.uTat PENSIONS ark PA id every soldier disabled In line wVOCSIIs of any kind, ls or V. y.li'i1- ,or ,"a of 1.1 MiH. JtOl T Ulschaige lnr Wound, Injur Ins or Kuptiire, Btr ru., Hi.iv. I.i.al llm.e. Olttcrt'a' Ae.oui.t iKf'K" KtU-KKli. bend? - r a 'oy or Aeti su r r..elf,H, ) OI TV ANIW t. f. TM3IIXGM at CO., C. & CLAIM AOT S and PATENT A 1 T' S V, WsMlUutvu, ii. sj. lPIfPll to $6,000k. ff .oETH THQMASV fGL0GIS Y VKHEP GOOD if