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^ I x c f l a i l s j U n i o n . W E D j NKSDAY NOVEMBER. 14 1888 POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder — beauty, strength ------------------------- economical than the ordinary kinds not be sold in competition with the ?verl varies. A marvel o£ and wholesomeness. More dinary kinds and ei Tutfs Pills FORTORraUVER. A torpid liver deranges the whole system and produces S ick H e a d a c h e , Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu matism, Saiiow Skin and Piles. There is no better remedy for these common disea.ses than Tutt’s Pills, as a trial w ill prove. Elegantly sugar coated. Price, 85 cents per box. S o l d E v e r y w h e r e . WfHT scons EMULSION CURES CONSUMPTION SCROFULA BRONCHITIS COUCHS COLDS Wasting Diseases Wonderful Flesh Producer. Many have gained one pound jj’ day by its use. Scott’s Emulsion, is not a secret jmedy. It contains the stimulat- g properties of the Hypophos aites and pure Norwegian Cod iver Oil, the potency creased./ m. CURE iS\rV *T ’adache and relieve all the troubles Incl. ■.. .I bUiouB state of the system, such m DI je * *ii- ■ liausea.niowsiness, Distress after eatlnjf, Pai>. the Side, &c. While their most remtrfc- able .access has been shown in curing SICK Headache,yet Carter’sLittle Liver Pills *re eqnsSljf valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they alio correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only ccrc4 H E A D who ^ c e try able in so mai itiessing complaint; nutio; issdoesnotend here, and th will find these little pills vj .ys that theyy willnotillnot he willt so many ways that the w he w dthout them. But after all sick head ! our great other’s do not. Carier’a Little Liver Pills are very small exA very easy to take. One or two pills make a doie. They are strictly vi n table and do not gripe or purge, but by their g' *tl ' action please all who use them. In vials at i; j cents; live for £1. Bold by druggists every v.-hvrc, or sent by mail. C A B T B B B l i S D I C I J f B C O ., n o v x Y o r k C ity,. Tbe Toy the Child Likes Best —IS THE— “ ANCHOR^ Eeal Stone. Three Colors. A C lever P resent for child ren of all ajres. For $1.75, or S2.CI0 a pood average box. Descriptive Catalogue sent post-free on application to F. Ad. Richter & Co., 310 BROADWAY^ _______ NEW_YORI^ iIfW R I iS |R | 'MOSTHBOf other wringers, and but little more. EMPIRETfewte -Solid W hite Rubber Kolij r Wears Longest*??* EniDire W . Co.. Auburoj b. IVARRANTED. «ent» wanted e.erji THB POET jSBYlS DAILY iimON WEDNESDAY 8TSNl:^Ci, NOVEMBMt, 14 i s s i PDBLISHEU B:VKBY,^FVENlNe EXCEPT SOh PfiH§ R^^sinMo’/® ’ I Proprietors. OFFICE, FARN0M BUILDING, PIKE STREET TERMS—T he D atlt U nion will be delivered Thursday morning. Terms $1.50 per year, strictly lu advance. Orders by mall for subscription or advertising will please address TBI-STATES PRINTING CO.. P obt pening to .sec him Becrete a razor* under thh pillow. Tho room was over a wine shop, and she, on the plea of feeling unwell, said she would step downstairs for a glass of brandy, wlueh be, unsuspicious that h e had b e e n ob served, allowed her to do. The woman called the piolice, and PJailipiJu was arrested, when he candidly confessed that ho was the man who had been sean.'hed for lu vain for so long. He afterward .statwl that his action# had been simpl.t the i-esidt of a horrible mania, and that he imd e-icaped detection only by a serie.s i if the mu,) mai’velous dis^- guises that could be .suggo^teil liv the deadly cunning o f a niniiiac. CRIMES OF FRE.NCH SOLDIERS. During the “ Dragontiades'’ in France, when ice, wh« a brutal soldiery na.s allowed to live a t free quarters ou the Huguenot'., a peculiar habit of crime, if the expression may be used, grew up; and many of t he soldier.s thus demoral ized and morally deranged could net ward be trusteil alone in peacef munities. Mo.st of the crimes th« THE BRITISH GHOUL. CONTINUED FKOM YESTERDAY. T h e situation is n ot without some amusing features, and surely a little of that sort ol thing will be a relief after such a feast of horrors. The Sun correspondent above quoted writes: GRIM HUMOR OP THE CASE. “The greatest effect produced b y the series ward be trusteil alone in peaceful com- they per- uded to ueio, ouu uuei lYoa sM contrary to all the natural feelings of manhood that it is syond one’s power to conceive of any rea son for it. That was, the cutting off of women’s breasts; done ferent class. Probably the most hysteric female in existence just now is the, as arul calm and immoved London ohambermai When the London fog creeps down now i t finds lots o f park benches in the West End < which there is neither chambermaid nor s< dier. That is bey'ond all question an entire new sensation for the London fog. “A friend has assured me that peace h reigned in his household since Sept. 8, wb I terror commenced, because uot a solita mt, it came to bi Drbid appetite, a srted and Jemonis w er to conceive of i was, the cuttii done at first as a pun 10 a method of g i-atifying a the tho: enzy o ized ai the terror commenced, because uot a solitary female servant has wanted an evening out. in his household since Sept. 8, when jcause uot This effect of the murders has not done the intleman’s wife as much good as it would ive done but for the fact that she is most awfully frightened, too. Another friend, less nate, finds himself ( fortunate, finds himself deprived of the serv- nly male servant, as tho maids and cook must have their airing, and won’t go out alone. “Theories are being built up b y thousands, but they are uot worth much. I chanced to hear that of George Lewis, the best known solicitor in London. He believes the woman killer to be a religious maniac, who has sworn to root out tho social evil, and has adopted the plan in each case of nialiing bis punishmenftso awful as to deter others from evil ways. This view, I learn, is sh Risdon Bennett, an emii L lunacy, who has expre opinion that the murderer imagines himself ordained from above to kill all ba lunatic enthusiasm. CLUMSINESS OP THE POLICE. “U n til something is foimd out London is difficult task wil S escaped arrest for a long time, creating a regular panic. The viUain who threw vitriol on ladies in New Yoi ‘U n til soin6th,iiig is xoimd. out Lioucloii is going to be m ighty nervous, and it grows tjjig evident that if the murderer is taken it w ill ^hat igiar of both jing largely increased I t is used f Physicians all over the world. PALATABLE AS MILK. Sold hy all Druggists. eOTT & BOWNE, C h em ists, N.Y. be his fault. Detectives in plain cloth whom London relies, are swarming in White chapel, it is true, but as a rule they wear regular police boots and go two by two. They may readily be distinguished a block off when it’s clear. I would again advise liar disadvantages. By the lastt: returns they American to come over and prove that lere is still a detective left who can detect.” The London police labor under 'isadvantages. B y the li ler 10,940, as against 8,! in New York; but Li 3,264 0 in Paris a B y the l a s number 10,940, as against 8,230 ~ “ adon contains three times as many people as New York; is spread over six times the area, and yet the very poor and the lowest criminal classes are as crowded as in New York and their !. A f the tricts are v a stly more diffleu considerable portion of the older part of city of London is b uilt on the most irregular and confusing lines. Dark alleys, small one str . narrow lanes raal part o f the great c ity, and it would require ,000 policem formed b y the thoroughly abandoned woman. The name of Patty Camion was one of horror to a whole generation of Americans. courts, egress, at least the wh( •egulations, which ring but one street of lanes m ake up a good y, and it would require it 60,000 policemen properly to cover lole of London. The stringent police regutations, which require the emptying of public houses a t the hour of 1, while adding to the security of those parts o f the British metropolis where such houses most abound, increase also their insecurity after that hour. \With therefore, a force of men wholly in sufficient for the fii-st duty they have in ha —^the watching of the public streets—i1 not strange that in such dark comers as Mitre square such daring deeds of violence are done after nightfall with impunity. An excited and indignant public must have a scapegoat, and London has, by com- a. auu jjuuuuu utts, ujf i: mon consent, selected for a victim Sir Charles Warren, chief commissioner of Ice. Much color is given to the common lusation by the fact that there was a serious quarrel among the police after the Trafalgar square riots, and tha Ten, chiel i color is g ven to the common gust last the force was generally remodeled. After being badgered by a corps of critics and men offering a ll sorts o f suggestions, Sir Charles has consented to the use of blood hounds for tracking the murderer, but methods proposed for their employn make it plain enough to au American i the Londoners know very little about tho nature o f that b rata OPINIONS OP ALIENISTS. Of course aU the eminent all been called on for an opinion, ant current statement as to what a lunatic is capar alienists 1 ind their 3 Industriously plied with or she became unconscious. Then the two would fall upon the victim and Hare usually- choked the poor wretch to death. The two ble o f doing without detection is enough 1 frighten the London women out of their few They report and cite 5ve that the old notions human vampires, ghouls, weir wolves remaining senses. They report and cite many cases to pro of human vampires, ghou and demoniacs were based on actual fact! that in every age there h ave been men sei with an insane desire to slay and mutilate women, that along with this there is often an uimatural cunning in concealment and that actual cannibalism is not an unfrequent ■ ” . WiUiam A. “ called “sext women were imdoubtedly p rivy to the crimes, but they invariably left the room while tha murder... were being perpetrated ( Continued, on Bixfhcolumn.') What is Catarrh One of the ino.st common diseases, and one of th e m o st n e g lected. Is c a ta r r h in th e bead. It is an inflammation of the mucous mem brane, and Is caused by a cold, or succession of colds, combmed with impure blood. It comes on so gradually that almost before a person realizes it, he Is suffering severely with catarrh. It causes a disagreeahle discharge from the nose, dryness in the back part of the throat, inflamed eyes, ringing noises in the ears, headache, and sometimes loss of sense of smell or hearing. When Catarrh in the Head Gains a firm hold on the system, it has \V dangerous tendencies, being liable to devi into bronchitis or consumption As catc is a constitutional disease, local ar>plications can do but little good. What is requiredequin is a constitutional remedy like Hood’s Sa rilla. which, by thoroughly purifyingthe bl( * the disease, affected membrai health and vigor to the whole s: suffer with catarrh, try Hood’s Sarsaparill :pels the germs of the dis soothes and builds the affected membrane, and gives lystem. If you “ I liad the worst symptoms of chronio catarrh for two years. So troublesome was it that I could not smell nor taste. I found Hood’s Sarsaparilla a speedy cure, and I am now free from this awful disease.” J. H. S ammis , Bay Shore, N. Y. “ For several years I had a catarrhal affee- t ion in my throat. I was very much benefited by using Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and would re commend it very highly to any one having asthma or catarrh.” E lias P. D evries , firm of Devries & Peterson, Omaha, Neb. Hood’s Sarsaparilla “ For severalyears I have been troubled with that terribly disagreeable disease, catarrh. I lod’s Sarsaparilla with the very b results. It cured me of that continual droi>- Continued f^om tld f d column. THE f ir s t o f t H e g r i : l •. The first of the series of sixteen murders to the detection of the murdererSi-theira^f rest and the trial, conviction and exeentiOtt of Burke. The woman MacDougal was ac quitted. Hare saved his neck by tumini king’s evidence, and his wife also was usei as a witness in the case. The murder of fiWipsSSS Mrs. Docherty was discovered by a Mr. and ■4ray, who lodged in Har« They heart T ney neara a noise as or quarr ing and fighting after they had retired c night and the next day Mrs. Gray found Ma took Hood’s Sarsaparilla with the very best conviction he made a full confession. ' X)ing In my throat, and stuffed-up feelln has also helped my mother, who has tal for run dow’ii state of health and kidney trouble. I recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all.” M rs . S. D. H eath , Putnai N. B. If you decide to take Hood’s Sarsa parilla, do not he induced to buy any other. perverted and demonized animal man. In tho last century an Austrian committed several atrocious murders of women; tho number could never be ascertained, but it was proved that he ate the most delicate glands. Greek mythology tells of the ban quet o f Thyestes and other cases, o f canni balism, and the Arabian |Nights tales are proof to the western world o f how general the belief in the possibility of such perver sions was and is among the Orientals. The American Indians have a superstition that one who has eaten human flesh, through be in g driven to it by famine, w ill never, again like any other meat as well. It is quite pos sible that a ll these barbarian notic derived from a few observed cases of this truly depraved taste. That such things h ave been is proved; but how and why man could become so morbid, so degraded, no normal mind can conceive. CURIOSITIES OP CRIME. Of murder for mere murder’s sake, with, no other circumstance of horror, the c Hood^s Sarsaparilla lOO Doses One Dollar lOO Doses One Dollar are many; and of causeless, cruel mutila- tionsjwithout killing, the cases ai’e more nu merous still. In London, in 1790, a wretch med Renwick Williams stabbed y left the theater, and so si )us were his movements that he irk some years ago, and io slyly ] ■ ‘ ley can escapi lown cases; and it is more than likely that the men or boys who sly ly pinch, ( or cut when th ey can escape arrest, are well lat i f undetected the perpetrator would go from wounding to murder. THE ONCE NOTED BENDERS OP KANSAS. America has had cases enough of cause less and motiveless killing, b u t of sexual mu tilation there is but one authenticated < and that was by a woman—the notorious Kate Bender, of Knnsas. Her v ictim s were aU men, murdered for money, b ut the corpses werei mutilated, and as the excised portions were never found, the people o f t] came to the conclusion that they were used of the heathenish ceremonies per- lughlyaban' itty Cannoi She kept a country h otel in eastern Pennsyl vania, and after murdering several persons for money, appears to have killed from mere hatred of mankind. In her case sexual version undoubtedly had much to do \wii The life o f Sophia Hamilton, who kept tel on one o f the roads from New York into Canada, was very similar. The recent cases of Guiteau and Jesse Pomeroy are familiar THE BURKE AND HARE MURDERS, “Burking” is an adjective in our language which immortalizes the infamy o f one man; and so strong an effect did his crimes 1 upon the popular mind that after the 1 of s ixty years one m ay still hear occasion of a nervous and ignorant person who Is afraid of being “killed and cut up by the doctors I” Among the southern negroes this fear a t times rises to a regular panic. W^illUam Burke was o f County Tyrone, Ire land, and W illiam Hare, a Scotchman; the latter had a wife, and the former lived with a woman named Helen MacDougal, and these four kept a low lodging house in the outskirts of Edinbm’gh. A n old man died while a lodger in their h o tel; in Au- they sold his body to the medical college for lodeled. £ 7 10s., and this suggested such a n easy w ay of making money that in a few months they murdered and disposed of no less than sixteen !ons. After tho natural death and _iosal o f the lodger Burke used to frequent the low public houses of the neighborhood. victim liquor t in he iccompanlment. Dr. William A Hammond idds that what are called “sexual perverts” e p ractically unknown in America, but in imtries where there is les.s fredom, and women in the cciie-F iA. 'I'he particulars of his cannibalism, piil ii-tierl by the French not on such a natural ba-sfa, they are often met with. Perhaps the most recent casi- of note Is that of Sergt. Bertrand of tiie French army, who wa-s arre-tfd m Par^ .-i.s a ghoul in 1847, and convicted of iligging up the medical authoi-, Mnri-l, f’annot ba even hinted at here. HORRORS OF THE PAST. D J iilippe o f I’aris—V itriol Throirlnfi: in N e w Y o rk—Murder^ in .iu s lr ia . Not many years after the case of young Philippe, in Paris, excited a great sensation. He was of excellent fam ily, ril’lght and amiable, and gave great satisfaction employer, a di'Uggist and man of science. One night he absented himself from home, and the next morning the police called to say that he had been ar rested for no less than seventeen heartless murders, the victims being women of the same class as those who have lately been so fiendishly butchered in London, It was by the merest chance he was dis covered, his intended e^fj^teenth victim.bgp- The first surcui.'^ful blood-puriflier ever offerer! to the public was Ayer’s Sarsapa rilla. Imitators have had their day, but BOOH abandoned the field, \while the de mand for this incomparable medicine in creases year by year, and -was never so great as at present. Backache is almost lintnedialely relievad Jcrsi NOW A POINTER ON 0 VERC 0 A 1 8 MAT NOl GOME AMIS8, AND TO IHE CLOSE, PRE- DENT ETITER WEO WANTS. NOl ONLY HIS 'MONEYE WORIH BET A TRIELE MORE, WE S A Y COME AND SEE ES. WE HAVE SOME REMARKABLE VALVES 10 SHOW YOE AND OCR ASSORTMENl EM BRACES ALL IH A l IS NEW AND DESIRABLE EROM IH E HIGH CLASS SA IIN OR SILK LINED GARMENl DOWN 10 A GOOD SER VICEABLE OVERGOA2 A l $ 5 .0 0 THB CONSTANTLY IIVGREASINC MZB OP VEST OPENINGS BRINGS WITH I T A DEMAND BOB JFINBR AND BETTER FIT TING WMI'IE SHIRTS. OUH NEW NOMBEBy OPEN BACK AND FRONT, IS EQUAL TO THE BEST CUSTOM MAKE, PRICE 60. Werdenberg and Sedillo, One Price ClotMers, Tailors and Furnishers, !E=ils:e S t r e e t , !F*oxt T e x x r ls, XT. 'ST- by wearing one of Carter’s Smart and Belladonna Backache plasters. Try on an I be free from pain. Price 35 cents. TheSLatest Yam. A ^Pittsburgh drummer tells this new yarn : I always carry a bottle ot Kemp's B.ilsami in my grip. I take cold easily (loses of the Balsam alwa;ys Tl ' —I ' young men, and tell them confidently ,t I do when I take cold. a dead sleep and was suffocated in the early morning. Then followed an Englishman, lame unknown, who came to lodge at Hare’s. The body, lil:e the preceding one, was sold to Dr. Knox for £10. Then came a nameless old woman who took a night’s lodging by chance in the murderer’s den. She was smothered in the early morning in the tjlJ I I I ’’Q Cures Coughs, Colds, D u I n ^ Hoarseness, Asthm^ Bronchitis, ^ 11 O Croup,Inci pient C o n - 13If s u m p tion, and relieves Consmnp- tive Persons. 25 cents. ^ i l l U I SMOKE CUBES CIGARBTTES forCa- , with a heavy feather pillow, and 1 tt thehe body( was takeniken ’o \ paid the usual sum for it. i t b t Dr. Knox, who Jiner, ana cried four 1 h to Dr. Enox, who paid £ 8 for the body, n and her grandson, a deaf mute, were the next victims. Dr. Knox paid the An old woman ai assassins £16 for the two subjects. As chance customers a t this time became rare, the reg ular lodgers were now reqnisitioni/ed, and a man known as “Joseph the Miller,^who was w e ll connected and had once possessed con siderable means, was smothered during the night and bis body sold for £10 to the omniv orous Dr. Knox. Shortly afterwards Hare fell in with a woman o f the to'wn, enticed her to his house, murdered her single handed and carried the body round to„the doctor, who gave him £ 8 for it. A cinder gatherer known as “ Effy” was in duced by Burke to enter a stable occupied b y Hare. Here she was dosed -with whisky. She feu asleep on a truss o f hay and the two illains smothered her in the usual way. For ds body they received £10. One night Burke encountered a policeman dragging a half drunken woman to the lock up. He in- aced the officer to release -her, promising 1 see her safe home to her lodgings. T1 wretch took her round to Hare’s house, whero they speedily smothered her and sold the body for £10. Their next victim was a half witted boy. And then, horrible to relate, they murdered Ann MacDougal, who had come on a visit to her cousin Helen, Burke’s pretended wife. They n ext killed ^ o poor women, Mrs, Hal dane and her daughter Peggy; then Mrs. Hoster, their washerwoman; then a country woman named Hurd, and finaUy Mrs. Doch erty. And only one o f the four fiends was hanged. Hare and his -wife managed to get out of the country alive, though bands o f the poorer sort o f people were o n the watch to kiU died irgb, man, totaUy blind. It was some years be- \DBESSING. RAVEI GLOSS: Imparts a natural finis shoes wear longer.beea.ucc u, jd au uu uxccaiue. Ladies should insist upon ha\ring it. Sold ev erywhere. B utton & O ttley , M’f’rs, 71 Barclay St., N.Y JUVEEN' Dverthrows Dyspepsia Buy a box of JO VEEN\ 25c. and mail the outside wrapper to Hamilton Chemical Co., P. O. Box 1864, New York,andj;ouwill rr--*— *‘VirFHExV” is sold by T. .Pike street. Anderson, 95 U them; they went to Australia, where s] 3d a natural death, and in 1855 ] i l death, and in 1855 ho returned to Edinburgh, a broken down old in, totally blind. I t w as some ye fore he was recognized. Meanwhile paramc brother. And there she died, at a good end apparently in perfset peace. In aU crimi- raded the streets begging, led by a sms and carrying a tin cup to receive the coi butions o f the benevolent* When he found his identity was discovered he disappeared, and was never afterward heard of. D’ Knox also gave evidence in the case, and h protestations to the effect that the idea nevt entered his mind that the subjects had die by violence appears to have been believed by the authorities, as no subsequent proceedings were taken a gainst him. Wken the woman MacDougal was released Bhe, w ith almost incredible audacity, a t once reton e d to her old ha ants. She was a t once set upon b y the people o f the neighborhood, and b ut for the fact that the police watch office, to which she ran for protection, was close a t hand, would have been lynched. She was subsequently hunted out of Edinburgh and retoned to her native place, Bedding, in gtirlingshire. From there went to Glasgow and took up her abode \with Constantine Burke, her late paramour’s nal history it would be difficult to find another case o f tw o women and two men thus totally devoid of all conscience and o f every iral sense. „ TRYING THE BLOODHOUNDS. Sir Charles Warren Iiets the Doss Chase Him as an Experiment. The London police have engaged in what looks to Americans much like comedy, that lain “testing” the bloodhounds. The corre spondent of The New York Sun gives this ac count o f it: It was barely daybreak, and the frost lay thick upon the grass, when War ren’s stalwart form showed the way to the place o f trial, followed b y a few experts, one ' holding a pair o f dogs in the leash. SIR CHARLES’ ENTHUSIASM. Sir Charles, in a fit of enthusiasm, offered himself for a quarry, and started off at a good swinging trot. He was soon lost to sight, and then different policemen crossed his track. The dogs were laid on, and worked JUST ElCEIYEl) 1 DOZEN SHOF,,*;. v'liV s BUTTON AND a N.* ’.1^% . L .sflOES SL60 PAIK. MEN’S KANGAROO AND AELTGATOB, Button and Ball at Low Figures. ^KDBBESS AND ARCTICS REPAIRED N . R . H u m v . 1 0 1 P 1 K S S T CONDENSED. TIME TABLE. Time Qf the Departure of Trains from Por Jervis—Adopted May 37tb. BASTWABD. 4.10A.M. Daily. Ciilcago Express. Stopping at Mldaletown, Goslien, Suflern and Pater son, arriving in New York at 7.07 A. M. 5.25 AM . Dally, except Sunday. Orange County E x press. Stopping at all stations to Grey- court and at Monroe, Turners. Tuxedo Park and Suflerns, arriving in New York at 9.17 A.M. 7. 42A.M. Mountain Express. Dally except Stmtlay. stopping at Guymartt, Otlsvllle, Middle- town, Hampton, Goshen, Greycourt, Mon roe, Turners, Tuxedo Park, Sterllngton, Paterson and Passaic Bridge, arriving In New York at 10,37 A.M 9.10 A.M. Dally. St. Louis Limited. Stopping at Mld- dletovTU, Goshen, Turners and Paterson, arriving In New York at 11.52 A.M. 10.25 A .M. Dally for Middletown and Goshen only! 1215 A.M . Way train for New York. Stopping at Bll stations, 218 P .M . Southern Tier Express. Middletown, Goshen, GrCTcourt, Monroe, Turners, lUffem, rrlvlng ford and £ at 8.37 P‘, M his track The dogs were laid on, and worked dogs were at fault for a 2;C5P.M. D^yrexoep^'Sunday'. ' Stepping at all sta- 42 P.M. D^aSy,°ex?eptlundayy Stopping at all sta tlonsto Scranton. 00 P.M. Dally. Limited ]^s 1 up to the work, though evidently the scent did not lie welL Finally both dogs failed, going off oa aome side scent. CONTINUED TO-MOEBOW. and a few doses of the Balsam alwa makes me a well man. ‘Everywhere I go I speak a good word for Kemp. I take told of m y customers—I take old and tell t 1 , 50 c. and $1. Sai ifldentlj 5 cold. At drug- mole boUle free SANITARY SHEiSiTHING for HOUSES. The ac-tion of Carter’s Little Liver Pills pleasant, mild and natural. They gen Flimulate the liver, regulate the bow do not purge. They are sure '' please. Try them. gm A P A R O D Y . The lightning rod agent’s motto is— “Spare the rod and spoil the property.” J. A. H. Hosack, a prominent citizen of San Antonio, Texas, says : “ Dr. Tutt’s Pills are hailed by sufferers here as a bless ing.” They don’t spoil in any climate, but do cure torpid liver, bilious fever, dys pepsia and habitual costiveness, the root of most human ills. Texan people are not alone in recognizing a good thing. Everybody uses them. E C Z E M A . ITCliHY, SCALY, T O R E S . SKIN TOR- ■ \ A 7 ’A . T ' E S 3 = H » : O . C > < I > 3 U ’ - mSTABLE TO T E L L . Yes, that was so. For years I suffered severely with scrofula; sores broke out myy body, andd I ai one-half tbal all over m body, an I am unable to tell 19 Allston street, Boston. P O R T J E R V I S , M OStTSCBLLO & IS. X T im e o f t h e D e p a r t u r e o f T r a in s f r o m E r ie S t a t io n —A d o p ted Oct,j XS» ^ NOBTHBEK TBAIKS. No. !4--l»ea7es Port Jervis at 12.40 P . M. and arrives NO. 4--L^TCfporW P. M, and arrives Montlcello at 7.45 P. M. SOUTHJEBX TEAINB. No. 1—Leaves Montlcello at 7.20 A. M. and arr.ves In Port Jervis at 8.40 A. M. No. S—Leaves StontlceUo at L39 P. M. and arrives In i Trains 1 and 2 will run dally, Sundays excepted. Trams 3 and 4 will nm Wednesdays and Saturdays j *^^oimeotlon wltb Erie trains at Fort Jervis. ADVERTISERS. A list of 1000 newspapers divided Into State and Sections will be sent on application Free . _ . ------- --heir advertising to pay I m for thorough I ______ ________ various sections | of co „ Newspaper Advertising Bureau, ] 10 Spruce Street, New York. J