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THB FORT JBBTIS DAILY tTSION, ttOH PAY SYBNIHS, JULY 9,1888. “Sltticrtt. MON DA.Y. JULY 9, 18S8. PaBLlSH E D EVEIiY^EVENING EXCEPT SON f S bd } Eaitors and P roprietors. OVEIGE. FARNUM BUILDING, PIKE STREET TERMS—T hk D aily U nion will he delivered by FEEDING PIGS. We are asked to lay down certain prin ciples for feeding pigs Well tke preva lent way of feeding pigs is to begin to stuff them with coni as soon as they are large enough to eat it aud to k.>ep stuffing them until they are sent to market. If our correspondent desires to know what the common practice is that is all there is t that Sent by mail for $5 a year. T hk T ri -S tatbs U nion weekly, Is Issued every Thursday morning. Terras $1.50 per year, strictly In advance. Orders by mall for subscription or advertising will please address TKI-STATKS PRINTING CO.. P ort .J ervis , N. y . POWDER Absolutely Pure. Thls^owder never vanes. A marvel of oeau1 dtrength and wBolesomeness. More econoir 3al than the ordinary kinds, and cannot toe so: In comBetitton w ith the multitude o t low p est, short weight, alum, or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. R oya l B a k i n g P ow der <io., 106 Wall street, N. Y. Tutt’s Pills A f t e r eatin g , persons o f a bilious h a b it w ill d e rive g r e a t b e n e fit b y t a k in g o n e o f these p ills. I f y o u h a v e b e e n DRINKIHG TOO MUCH, th e y w i ll p r o m p tly relieve t h e n ausea, SICE HEADACHE a n d nervousness w h ich follow , r e s to r e the appetite and remove gloomy feel ings. ISlegantlysngar coated. Price, 85 c e n ts p e r b o x . S O L D E V E R Y W H E R E . Office, 44: Murray St., New York. W w malt ,, i P H Q S P H t T E S i BR/VIN, N ERVE f [ and life - giving TONlf: PLEASANT AND AGREEABLE TO THE TASTE, lets on the stomach and liver. Increases thi ippetlte, assists digestion, builds up the weak REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. FOR PRESIDENT, GENERAL BENJAMIN HARRISON, Of Indiana. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, LEVI P. MORTON, Of New York. anil th e p u r ity of th e hom e . T h e i l e p u t - wi^e a n d w e ll d irected efforts for t h e pro- i< tiou of tem p e rance and m o r a lity ,—R e - PrilLICAN PL-ITFORM. 1 a n d broken-dow n . U seful i n D y s p e p s ia tons P r o s tra t io n a n d Pkrhajtstioi Coss o f Appetite, H eadache, Insom n ia, Oen tral D e h ility, M a laga, Lack o f Vitality, Ner tul to the stomach, and can be used by thi Jellcate lady. Infant, the aged or Infirm. Fo; people with sedentary habits and over-worke< men i t is a v aluable tonic. $1.00 per Bottle. Foi' Sale by all Druggists. CURE :k Headache aud relieve all the troubles inch it to a bilious state of the s:fstem, such as Dl&> — •vT.^jjgea, Drowsiness, Distress aft“- ,e Side, &c. While their mos !SB has been shown in curing SICK ,yet Carter’sLittle L iver P ills a re egnaO^ _____ n Constipation, curing and preventlna this annoying complaint, while they also correct all dieorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cars# HEAD illnot De wUlisS 11 sick heftd ACHE Is the bane of so many lives thathere is where w« Hseke our great boast. Our pills cure It while others do not. Carter’s Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vi^gi table and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; five for $1. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sent by mail. C A R T E R M E D IC IN E CO., Y o r k ©Jty, GREAT PO L ITIC A L ECONOMY. la a recent issue of the Gazette it an- TKumced that the “ Sugar Tax was uq - neccssary ” and the next sentence declared it to be the “ least oppressive of the tariff taxes, for the reason that seven eighths of jt goes into the.Federal Treasury.” Pray tell us, Mr. Editor, what becomes of the remaining eighth ? Perhaps we had bet ter ask you to “ show up the books.” If you acknowledge a shortage of one-eighth it may he far worse. Now, don’t you know that nearly a united Repuolican party favors the entire abolition of Sugar tax and the payment of a bounty to sugar growers, to encourage the industry. Furthermore it has always been the policy of the free trade leaders of the Democratic party to oppose tariff re duction on sugar and tea, that they might admit manufactured articles free. Fer nando Wood, when acting as leader of the Democratic congressmen, opposed the re duction of the sugar tax, and so do M’-. Mills and his free trade assistants. They prefer that the industries of the north be stricken down by admitting the products of pauper labor free. The Committee on Ways and Means, in which the great states of New York, New Jersey and Connecti- out are unr presented and our industrii b handed over to the tender mercies of Ar kansas, Texas, Alabama and Kentucky, will find much to explain before this cam paign is over. It is no easier to get good cheese for the home table than it was a year ago. Doubtless three is plenty of good cheese manufactured, but where it goes to, the Lord and the cheese dealers only know. If good cheese was as easily obtained as good flour, a ton of it would eaten where a single cheese is to day sold and the prices would be better than they are at present. Who cares to eat poor cheese ? Who does not like good cheese ? Then why not give us some. A correspondent takes us to task for questioning the existence of the “ Hoop Snake,” assuring us that he has seen one. Well, we do not question Ms truthfulness, but all the same, we do not believe the story. It is easy to be deceived. Matthew Hale believed in witchcraft and so did John Wesley, but that does not prove it to be true. Our friend has been deceived in some wary. We should be glad to hear from any who have seen or think they have seen a “ hoop snake.” N a tu r a l F inish Has no equal for ladies .shoos. Over 10 years in the m arket. May he applied evc-ry day, if desired, w ithout the slightest injury to the finest French kid. Allow no substituting. In.sist upon h aving Raven Gloss. Sold e very where. B utton & O ttley , M’f’rs, 71 Barclay St., N.Y KOWEE.I, & CO. The lightning rod men are around seeking whom they may devour ” and the wise man is he who drives them from his premises with but little ado. Why should one waste valuable lime in listen ing to their harangues. The rods are u-eless and the money invested in them is simply wasted. —Landlady (to applicant for board)— “ Have you any children madam ?” Ap plicant —“ No.” Landlady— “ You are fortunate, for we never take families who have children. ” Applicant—“ Have you any children Landlady—“ Yes, two.” Applicant—“ Well, you are unfortunate, for we never board with families who have children.”—Weio JTor/o iiun. to it. But that is not tiie proper way to feed pigs. The aim should be not to fat ten the pig but to develop it. The legiti mate purpose is to feed to make what we call red meat, muscle. We should feed foods that are rich in protein and unless we do we shall starve the pig, however fat it may he. Frof. Henry of Wisconsin illustrates the result of feeding fat form ing foods in excess by saying that if you were to take a dog and shut him in a tight room and give him what water he wished to drk k, and what sugar he wished to cat, and what starch he wjuld eat, your dog would live comfortably for a few days, andtheu he would begin to wMne for something, he cc-uld not tell you what, even if he had language, he would only know that he wanted something. Well, he would become emaciated, his muscles would wear out and he* would die for lack of protein food. On the other hand if you took that dog aud fed him cheese and lean meat aud blood he would keep on in definitely. Protein foods can take the place of carbhydrates, but the carbhydrates cannot take the place of proteins, so that we might, with safety, pick out protein foods and get along with them but we cannot get along safely with fat-producing foods. Among the foods that can be re commended for pigs IS skim milk. This may be profitably mixed with corn-meal. Prof. Henry recommends shorts highly both because of their cheapness and their excellence. In a ton of shorts or bran, he remarks, lies about all the elements of fertility that the wheat grain has taken from the soil. The miller, he says, puts all the starch in the flour and so the pro tein is in the bran, and that fertility goes into the animal and out upon the land again. It therefore serves a double pur pose. Grass, oats, oil meal and any food of their character are good for pigs.— Western Rural. MEASLES IN PIGS. The pig is not affected with measles, ex cept as its harbors the cisticercus cellulosse, or larvaj of the tenia s-olium, which last is the taps worm of man. The cisticercus appears in the tissues of the pig as a mi nute glistening point, and pork presenting the appearance which large numbers of these points cause, is said to be measled. The symptoms of this disease, as it affects the pig, depends largely upon what organ serves as a place in which the cisticercus perfects its development. Hence, there can hardly be said to be any strictly char acteristic symptoms, the diagnosis of a case depending upon the demonstration of the presence of the cisticercus. Indeed there may be—and more often than other wise there is—absence of anything like symptoms of illness, the pig getting on with whatever discomfort it feels without showing symptoms of sickness of any kind. The disease is transmissible from pig to pig, and if the transmis&ibility stopped with that animal, the disease would be of comparatively minor import ance. Bat such is not the case. On the contrary one of the most annoying condi tions to wMcb mankind are subject, has its origin in this disease. If measled pork be eaten — either raw or incompletely cooked—tape worm results. Nor does the parasite content itself with injuring the one who has been so fortunate as to give it a growing place. Once the tapeworm arrives at maturity in the intestine of its human entertainer it sets about depositing eggs, which escaping from the body of the host, are taken up by other animals there to pass the larval stage, and if fortune favors, enter upon another round of tape worm, and tape worm generating exist* ence, infecting in this way both animals and man, the extent of the infection being almost without limit. Knowledge of the foregoing facts is important, inasmuch as it indicates the precautions to be taken to prevent the disease. Such precautions are few and easily taken. Pork should never be eaten unless it has been thoroughly cooked. Nor should it or any other flesh be fed to dogs or other animals unless it has been so cooked. Dogs and other ani mals should not be allowed to enter pig pens, or other places where the larvae of the tape worm may have been deposited. In event of a human becoming the bearer of a tape worm, it should be understood that the evacuations and matters thrown from the stomach may contain the tape worm egg, accordingly let such material be destroyed or otherwise properly cared for. It is because of a more general knowledge of the foregoing facts, and a careful fol lowing out of the indications which they present, that tape worm in man and GLEANINGS. If leguminous crops get their nitrogen from the atmosphere, the farms where beans are grown so largely and the vines fed out to sheep ought to be very rich. We do not learn that such is the case. In fact, it is claimed by some that beans prove to be an exhausting crop, and that the old bean growers are not making as much money as formerly.—Amerzean Ag- ricullurist. We have no hesitation in saying that the horse that is profitable to the farmer is the draft. The farmer has already for farm use the mares which, when mated properly, will produce them. lie has profitable work for the dam, and, except ing the service, the price of the colt is nearly all profit. Where bluegrass has been introduced the cost of keeping a colt from weaning time till he is sold is less than the keep of a steer from weaning time ti’l he goes to the butcher. —Indiana Farmer. What is the record of your best cow for the past year ? How much money did your poorest cow lose for you ? How many dairymen or farmers can answer these questions. Not one in a hundred probably, yet how can any one tell if he is making or losing, unless he knows and can figure out just these things. Don’t do business at haphazard, but get down to a system at once. It is the only safe plan to follow.— Mim'or and Faimer. “ For the farmers to form a grand pool, or, as it is termed now, a trust, will be clearly impracticable from its inherent unwieldiness and want of cohesion. The best interest of the farmers always will and must lie in the highest cultivation of the land, in economical administration of their affairs and in wisely catering to the public wants by furnishing all desirable products of the highest quality, and then in exercising their political rights and power to serve their own interest as well as they possibly can by united efforts.”— Rural World. Considerable of the high-priced, “ im ported cheese” so-called, is made in Amer ica. There is many a dollar wasted to pay for assumption, in other things, be sides cheese. There are whole kiln fulls of the celebrated “ Bath brick of Eng land,” burned in Wisconsin, and shipped by Ihe carload to great cities. When they are sold to consumers they are considered a good deal better as knife sharpeners, and to scour with, because “ they are English, you know!” Barnum made several for tunes by being well-grounded in the belief that people would pay well for being fooled successfully.— Hoard’s Dairyman. The farming of the future must be grad ually contracted in tbe number of acres. Higher cultivation, more remunerative crops. Less hard work over broad fields and closer attention to special paying crops on the fields that surround the house. More pasture, more stock and plenty of ensilage, this insures the purchase of less commercial fertilizer and the very best results from the contents of the bam yard. —Mainland Farmer, Learned scientists are devoting more time now than ever before to lines of study connected with agriculture, and it is not too much to say that a great deal of im portant work, the value of which cannot be estimated, is being performed. These, men always keep a few lengths ahead of the masses, and frequently receive little other reward for their discoveries except ridicule of the “ hook fanning”which they recommend. Scientists, like other mortals, are fallible, and their propaganda are not in every case vindicated by the test of ex periment. The same may be truly said, however, of the promulgated opinions of farmers themselves. The new agricultural science of one generation becomes the best agricultural practice of the next, and the work of the students and experiment ers is never lost .—Rational Btockman. In consequence of the continued frauds in seeds, the French Government intends to have a law voted creating inspectors of farm seeds offered for sale. The prosecu tion will be attended with few difficulties, the penalties will be severe, and the com pensation allowed to farmers injured by the fraud will be liberal. A commission is to visit Germany and study how the pure seed law woiks there.—Urn’e.'? Oe>'- mantown Telegraph. The best foundation for good morals is good health. The man who respects him self sufficiently to keep his exterior in a wholesome condition is likely to be, by that same self resptc', restrained from polluting his inner man. We never knew any young man to be thoroughly wicked, who took care of his body. One of the FLORIDA AS A SUGAR PRODUCER. The enormous consumption of sugar in the United States, and the immense amount paid to foreign cou’itrie?, for it makes its production here a matter of vital interest. How best to accomplish this, whether by encouraging the beet and sorglmm sugar interests by bounties, whether to maintain protection on imported sugar to stimulate Lom’siana’s sugar business, or whether to pay a bcuntj on it, are questions that have for years commanded general attention. Kansas is trying to solve the question by paying a bounty of 2 cents a pound on all sugar produced m the State, and, as told in a leceuL ict-t.- from there published in the Jouimal of Commerce, this has caused marked activity in the establishment of sorghum sugar mills. In that letter it was stated that the f.-ctories contracted for the sorghum cane at :$1,50 per ton delivered, and as the avera ,e yield was 10 tons per acre the farmer received $15 an acre, which was menti -ned as a profitable busi ness, These figu: es are in every striking contrast with ti e results shown in the cultivation of su,. .r cane in South Florida, For several yo rs it was claimed that South Florida iu he neighborhood of Kis simmee was th<. finest sugar producing country in the w;;rid, surpassing even the West Indies, an i two or three years ago Mr. Hamilton I) ston and other Philadel phia capitalists determined to test the matter. The c dtivation of the cane in Florida was n> ihing new, as that had been done for generations, but only on a limited scale. Tuese gentlemen went into it very extensively and built a sugar mill at a reported cost of several hundred thousand dollars. So successful were they that $60,0C0 worth of new machinery has been ordered for increasing the capacity of the mill, and a railroad is now under construction from Kissimmee through the sugar district, simply to open it up and afford adequate transportation facilities. The St. Cloud Sugar Co., under which name these gentlemen inconporated their company, in addition to their own im mense cane crops, agree to contract with other growers to pay $4.80 per ton for all the cane raised, and as the average yield is 40 tons an acre this is an offer of $192 per acre. As contrasted with $15 an acre in Kansas the difference is remarkable. There is no doubt but what the country of which Kissimmee is the center is des tined to become a wonderful sugar pro ducer. The advantages for the cultivation of cane, its great saccharine strength and the absence of killing frosts, added to the healthfulness of the climate, all combine to make this certain. It is a matter of interest to the entire country that this should prove true. Should Florida ever produce, as it is possible it may, enough sugar to supply the requirements of this country, it would not simply make that State enormously wealthy, surpassing the fondest dreams of its enthusiastic people, but it would retain at home the many millions of dollars which we now annually send elsewhere for mgex.—Baltimore Journedof Oommez'ce, QUITE A D IFFE R E N C E . “ A man may be good-humored and yet not be a good humorist.” There is no humor, but lots of wisdom in this state ment of A, F. Garey, business manager of the Southern Planted'and Farmet' of R-ch- mond, Va. He says : “ I have suffered with liver complaint fer : b than from all the doctors ” T btt ’ s P ills are sold.by T. R. Ander son, 95 Pike Street. To clear out Bed Bugs, m ix R ough on R ats ■with grease and smear about their haunts, and put a 15c. box of it in a pint of benzine and BED ----- • es where grease cannot be applied. For the insects from g arret to cella; will disappear. The secret is in * WATER B U Q SKtfr-rx house they must drink during the night. For Potato Bugs, Insects on Vines, etc., a table spoonful of tbe powder, well I|f| A Shaken in a keg of vmter, and H U H V f1 E w applied with sprinkling pot, spray syringe, or broom. Keep it well stirred up. 15c., 25c. and $1 Boxes.—Agr. size. See full diiec- tiuns with boxes. GROUND 6QUIRRELS, RABBITS, Sparrows, Gophers, Cbipmmiks, cleared out by Rough on Bats. See directions. Netasyayer Adv. Bmea'-'. 10 Spruce stre- t. A’. I\. B U T C H E R ’S E L Y K I L L E E ! C E R T A I N D E A T H . PU R E S T RAY .SERENE. Nurse (to father-of triplets)—Ah, sori', they be perfect little gems ! Father (dubiously)-Yes, but give me solitaires in preference to clusters every time.—iVfw Torli Sun. F O R S A L E E V E R Y W H E R E . Backache is almost immediately reiievod by wearing one of C.ut(r’3 Smait aud Belladonna Backache plasiers. Try one and be free from pain. Price 25 cents. beat omens for the future generation is the fact that quite a majority of the States in the Union have, within the last three years, passed a law making the study of hygiene, including temperance, compul sory. Ignorance is the greatest foe to good health .as well as to good mfTalr. Let every friend of humanity join in the good work of spreading abroad the gospel ot health, and the result will be a thin ning out of the jails, prisons, poor houses, asylums and hospitals, such as would as- X. , . tonish the world.— corn. We will then have healthier aud _____ „ „ ^ ______ more palatable pork, and hog cholera will until tbe blood is cleansed of impurities, soon ecome a ung o e pas . useless to attempt the cure of any dise.ase. Eheuraatism, which is traceable to an acid in the blood, has been cured, in numerous cases, by the use of Ayer’s Sar saparilla, external treatment being of no f E N l l Y M A IN E , Home Evidence No other* preparation has ■won success at to print all Lowell people have said in favor of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Mr. Albert Estes, living at 28 East Fine Street, Lowell, for 15 years •ed as boss carpenter by J . AV. Bennett, L preps home equal to Hood's Sarsi 1, Mass., ’ as been f( urifying tbe jtliening tlie me” is “ c It would equal to Hood's Sarsapari Lowell, Mass., w here it is made, it is n leading and tor nt liome ” is “ a tower of strength abroad.” lire a volume as it has been for years, the leading medicine g t blood, and toning and ig tl system. Tliis “ go( People of L o w e i I BIG MOHEY w ith th e only official lives o f Harrison & Morton Exquisite steel portraits. Voters’ C artridge Box, Protection Policy, &e., (complete. 3000 agents a t work report immense success. For best w6rk, best terms, apply quick and make S200 to $300 a month. Outfit 3.1c. HTJBBARD BROS., Philadelphia, P a. TJENSSELAER POLYFEl X \ p S T IT H T B , T R O Y , N . Y. president of the Brie Telephone Company, had a large running sore come on his leg, which troubled him a year, when be began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The sore soon grew less in size, and in a short time disappeared. Praise S ! H o o d ’s less in size, an( Jos. Dunphy, 214 Cen tral Street, Lowell, had swellings and lumj on his face and which Hood’s Sa rilla completely curec Mrs. C. W. Marriott, wife of the First As sistant Eire Engineer of Lowell, says tliat for 16 years she was troubled with stomach disorder and sick headache, which nothing relieved. The attacks came on every fort, night, when she was obliged to take her bed, and was unable to endure any noise. She took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and after a time the attacks ceased entirely. Many more might he given had we room. On the recommendation of people of Lowell, wlio know us, we ask you to try Hood’s SarsapariHa Soldbyalldruggists. g l; sixforgIS. Preparedonly by C. I . HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mds's. 100 Doses One Dollar d speedily disappear. The future pig must have more flesh and less fat. It must not be a mere lard keg. ft must be fed upon flesh-forming foods until grown and then fattened. It means thi B o o k B inder^ c o n . PIKE ANI> M.CIN STS., PO R T JE R V IS , - - N E W YORK. BDrpWRMaiS! ' host T ibm , IVARRAI tgealB wnat t other w ringers, aud costs F but little more. ,EMPIREfrel«S1 ED. orerjwbcre. Enmira W . Go.. Aubuta.W^ JUVEEN overthrows Dyspepsia Buy a b o x o f ^’•JUVEEN\ 25e. and mail the outside wrapper to Hamilton Chemical Co., P. O. Box 1864, New York,and youwUl receive F r e e 25c. worth of charming Photographs foi family e n tertainm ent—foreign views, celebri ties, etc, W h a t is“ JfrFFFV ?” , , “ JUVEEN’' is a purely vegetable and absoluteli Jiarmleas compouna o f aubstwnFiea in the of little 8u DR. BRADYS’ composed of ANDBAKE, DANDELION, GENTIAN, CHAMOMILE, PRICKLY ASH, &C. The Greatest Blood Parifler Known I Cures Eruptions and Spots on the Skin Kegulates the Bowers, Believes Pain and Cramp in the Stomach, cures Kidney Complaints, Dyspep sia, Indigestion, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, Sallowness of Complexion, and all kin dred complaints arising from a disordered stomach or a torpid and Diseased Condition of the Liver P pigb $1 pep B o i il e ; 6 fop 85 . DAUGHT & GO. PARKER’S HAiR BALSAM Cleanses and beautides tbe iialr. Promotes a luxuriant growtl^ Never Fails io Restore Gray Hair io ifs Youthful Color. HINDBRCORNS. EXHAUSTED VITALITY a bUity, Premature De- KNOW lHYSELF.r4.?S2r.S: NICHOLS’ BARK AND IRON For Thirty Years this valuable combi nation has been used a specific for AGUE and MALARIAL FEVERS, DYSPEPSiA, INDIGESTION, and all NERVOUS DIS EASES, such as NEURALGIA, SLEEP LESSNESS and PROSTRATION. It is AN UNRIVALLED TONIC, restoring tone to the debilitated System.- NICHOLS’ cians. Where other Tonn this has made a conspicuous success. Nichols Bark and Iron can be obtained at all Druggists. BfLLiNGS, CLAPP it CO., Proprietors, Boston, Mass. Neivousness, &e., should take the Mam Bitters regularly for a time. Reader,If you are enfeebled or In poor health, be sure to g et a b o ttle of this wonderful medl- ^ Prepared by DR. S. W. DRADY, Honesdaie FOR HAI-B BY ALL DRUGGISTS lno.L Bonnell, Real Estate & Loan Agent Commissioner for Penn’a and Notary Public, offers All the bunding lots on Main street and Jer sey Avenue and 7,000 acres, mcludlng a num ber of valuable farms, situate In Montague and sandyston, New Jersey, belonging to the late ■lohn R utherford. Agent for the Western Farm 7 per cent. Mort gage Ca Capital and surplus $750,000. 7 p er cent Water, Town and School Bonda Accident Insurance Co. of North America. The new Combination Business and Family Building Lots on Lands of Mrs. Mondon. Dwellings In all p arts of the ■tillage and Mat- amoraa Farms to exchange for tillage property. Money to loan on Bond and Mortgage. Hotels, F arms, Stores, Grist Mills, FoundrleE and allother p roperty belonging to a General Agency. Correspondence solicited and Inspection in- Office Farnum Building, Port Jervis, N.Y. WEAK MEN^sS€ Sciandra’s Preserved Natural Pulque. (Pronounced PuU-Ke.) Preserviig Works Apam, It is a Eatural Prodiwt, and is NOT a Patent Medicine. I t is the pure and simple Juice of the Century Plant of Mexico, unadulterated and uncompounded. KIDNEY T roubles , and is the only k n o w n specific for ‘BRIGHTS DISEASE. iJiysicians. Send f o r one. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. The Illinois Watch Company Guarantee their 15 jeweled A D J U S ™ W A T C H E S Stand tli6 Railway Test. ----- ~~'~CHAR r~~ ------------ ------------- dis HASJSB, ST1-_ _ ____ _________ JTRATB GLAND and BLAD DER, CATHETFKS AND SOUNDS, and CAN NOT BE CUBED WHILE THEY EXIST Springs W ater cure’s the KIDNEYS. DIA BETES DROPSY, BLADDER, GRAVEL AND STONE. Overwhelming evidence mailed free by ASAHEL M E p iG ^ > U R E A U PHYSICIAN storm - king 39? RANTS Cut and llla^ to Order. Spring Styles! NOW READY. All Goods Thoroughly Shrunk. Send six cents for samples and rules for measui-ement, o r give us W a i s t , H i p and I n s e a i u Measurq stating color you prefer, and vfe will try a u d please you. S a t i s f a c t i o u and F i t G u a i - a u t e e d or money refunded on return of goods. WARRANTED NOT TO RIP Send m o n ey by I Add 3 5 C ents foJ R e g istered L e t t e r. I Express C h a rge. Reference: Ex.-M a yor JNO. J. S. McCROSKERY, C a s h ier N a t. B a n k o f N e 'tvburgh. (LimitsS), N E W BU R G H , N.Y -