{ title: 'Richmond County advance. (West New Brighton, N.Y) 1886-1921, October 16, 1886, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-10-16/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-10-16/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-10-16/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-10-16/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Historic Richmond Town (digitized by The New York Public Library)
z. Tto^i \ ! * Uimnm Mttmii Votaiy Pablic. ll'llilltjOaUifediic m inM)eiBlt]r. Entira duage taken of Property. ' pi ' Deeds,'Mortgage^ aiid.other papers drawn. - ^ t for the Inmui Line, Hambai^g-American & Anchor lines fmtk^mlat t tUMa. Dnita, aad Uam^OUitm . luimnnce aoUclted In the Bojat, CMMMtdal Union, Fhenix and Westchester Ins. Com- puia^ being Agent of said Companies in this vicinity. lliMI% M SW, Slila MLT JTay tuUl Benrnve to our JTew JfuiMinff, of our preaetU Ijoeatton, , be made with me by Telephone for my services as MoUty or otherwise. Iv 160 Large, Eligible Bnflding Lota »t Hew Brighton, 8. L iOn Forest and Iianrel Ares., near Bard Are., which i s the Fifth jATenue of Stnten Island, belns dotted with palatial residences, ithe abode of Bankera, Brokers, and Merchants. Size of Lots, location unsurpassed for healthf nlness ; water and gas; iadjarent to schools and churches; soil dry, high, and arable: jabsolutely no malaria; five blocks from ferry ; only 4 blocks {from Depot Rapid Transit road, and proposed depot of the Balti- more and Ohio Railroad, and near the grounds of the S. I. .Cricket and Lawn Tennis Clnb, which will attract tbousnnils of jthe elite to this point, and will make it the \social centre.\ ' ^TlMisKuaranteed free and clear; abstract and ofhcinl searnlies I igobrnk to 1708. This is the cheapest land on Staten Ishjnd. 1 Money deposited in bank draws only 4 per cent, inside, of a lyear this investment will double in valne. Ladies find jtlils a 'desirable investment. Call at my house any week-day or Snn- • 'A«y and be driven to the lots, as they should be seen to be I appreciated ; bring your family and friends with yon. \\his iprice will be kept open only a short time. Any person who buys more than two lots need pay only half .cash down ; balance can remain on mortfjage. Call on I CORNELIUS A. HART, Owner. ,[1J62] 17 Lafayette Ave., New Brighton. S. I. K. BOURNE, Oenler in Beef, Matton, Pork, Lamb, Yeal I And Vegetables, '77 JZRSZY Street, Hew Brighton. j^Ooods delirered free of charge. TELEPHONE COXNECTIOJf. Hillyer & HartleyT 373 Richmond Terrace, New Bria^'^'- ^^ _ I Wholesale and Retail GROCEgSr Dealers in [in-6a] At New PricM. for Cash. . E. A. B •iiCLpYZ: T ilXTO^^\ Dealeie In & so:^rs, EASTERN ICE. li^ -' • The oldest established fee Oompany on the I'ltand. - I iNltebsn, Porter Hoi^, FamlllM, and Bhtpping promptlT supplied at lowost rnte.«. 'Orders recEffedJ 117 Telephone at Reslilenee. IVmall.Boi.lM.W ^.'SSa^n.} E.A.Briilm, H.C.Brilton, W.B.Eiiilpn. PETER GORMAIS^, Painter, Kalsomining h Paper-hanging. p. O. Box 351. West i<ew Brighton. SilMUEL niJNCAN ?!Be Custom and Ready-made GLOTH INO. 142 mTDH > NEW 17 Korth Klfctalll StMCt. riillnilelpllla U North CliarlcB Street, ItalUmo-n. YORK. and with nnasnal dispatch. PESO. »Mid dVed WITHOUT RIPP F. 0. Box 205, Wiit Haw BrlghtoB. to^ncuo.. I Riven by mail or telephones Packages called for /Telephone IConncc nmuMW MOM. rjar. IM Jreay vtaM Wkm tm^ Another TW T ooi . _ r has been made in the lohe- land i Uestsnd^earieat comer of the Delta plain ofXowe r EsTpt. In the land where prertona exploreni have found ouIt the monuments of an extinct futh and the graTea of a dead nation, Mr. Flinders Petrie has lighted upon the ruins of a rt^ ^ palaee. Tl» fortunate finder of Norcratis haa now been work- ing nun a vast monnd called Tell De- fennehp which historians have long identified with the Pelnaiae Daphnai of the Greeks and the Tahpanhea of the Bible. Here he has diacoTerad the ruins of that Terr palace to which, a s recorded in the Book of the Prophet Jeremiah, Johanan. the son of Kercah, followed by all the captains and the remnant of Judah, brought the i daughters of Zedekiah, then AU Ooodm Warranletl as represented. Samuel I>iincen Jumes Jninnlns- « T . •ABRnr, Fieatdent. OHAS . W. KENNEDY, Tice-Pres. and Treasurer. CHARLES E. UEAU Secretary. FANCY DYHNG~ESTABLISHME«T. lamtt, VephewB ft Co., BBAKcii orrices: WRKsaraaiSS'\^\\'''''^ at Wfflf I Ctwrry Lane, CasUeton. ' and Glciitlenien's Garments, Gloves, Feathers, Crape Ribbons, etc., etc.. Cleaned, Restored and dyoil in - •• DRESr— ssus iJ.KENNEY. ft GouttUor, Brtstitpni the fugitive , then a de- throned captive in Babylon. This flight of the Hebrew princesses took place about 585 B . C., da th's bouse in Tah- Biix KTi t Conld yon inform a conatant reader 3f your valuable paper where he would be most likely to obtain a good, dnr- ible wild fox which could be used for Beadleston & Woerz, filPIRE BREWERY ! Ales, Porter, and- Lager Beer. SMiMKB MoBURNET, A^emUfmr Kiehtntmtl Co, Qepot: Br^way, near Rich- mma^ Teroce. West Brighton. OLAIEHGE M. JOHHBON; klWil of Ua-ab-Ra, wbon the Hebrews called Hophra and the Greeks Apries. The i^Imraoh received the fagitives kindlj. T o the mas* of the Jewish immigraota he gave tracts of land; to the daaghtera of Zedekiah, his former allj, he as* signed this royal palace, which the Bible caUs \P panhes. .Altbongh this part of the Delta is now a wilderness, half marsh, half des- ert. over which no traveler ever passes, it was at the time when these events took place a rich pastoral district, fer- tilized by the annual overflow of the Nile. In the midst of mad swamps hnvo long been observed some groups of ruins, to one of which was attaclied the name of the Ga.stle of the Jew's Daughter. Hearing tliis from his na- tives Mr. Petrie at once perccived the interest which must attach to the place, and the intelligent labor which he has bestowed iipon it has met with a suita- ble reward. Not only the architectural stmcture, but its history also has been rescued from oblivion. The building was at first a strong- hold, quadrangnlar, lofty, massive, like a castle keep. It contained sixteen square rooms on each Hoor. both the outer and partition walls being of enormous strength. It is, of course, impossible to ^ess of how many sto- ries it was originally composed, but it is of its fallen stones that the mound is made. This stronghold was built by Psammeticus I., as is proved by the deposits marked with the royal name and title.s, placed under the foundation walls. There were found also the liba- tion vessels, specimens of ores, bricks, the bones of tho ox and the bird sacri- ficed at the time, and a series of tablets with inscriptions. The rooms in the castle were lined with slabs of fine limestone, covered with hieroglyphics, figures of captives, and the like, deli- cately carved and painted. These are now splintered and ruined, as the castle , was burned as well om battered down, and very few objects of value were therefore to be recovered. But the basements remain in very perfect con- dition, and in the basements were tho kitchen, butler's pantry, and scullerv, and these domestic ottJces bccome of great interest when they form part of an Egyptian palace 2,.'150 years old. The kitchen of Pharaoh's* hoitse in Tahpanhes is a big room, with recesses in tho thickness of the wall, which served for dressers. There were four- teen largo jars and two large Hat dishes, standing unharmed in their placcs, amid the general destruction. A stone corn-crusher, a large iron knife, weights, and three small iron spits were found in this room. In the butler's pantry, <iiljoiaiug, were no wine jars, but hundreds of jar-lids and plas- ter stoppers, some stamped with tho royal ovals of rsammeticns, and some with those of Necho, his succcssor. Tho empty jars, with quantities of oth- er pottery, mostly broken, were piled in a sort of rnbbish closet outside, and next was a small room, sacred to tho scullery maiil. or dish-washer. It con- tained a roccss with a sink, a bench to stand tilings upon, and recesses in the walls by way of shelves. The sink waa formed of a large clay jar with tho bot- tom knockod.out and filled with brok- en potsherds place<l on edge. The water ran throngh this, and then intc more broken pots below, placed one in another, all bottomless, going down t6 tho clean sand below. Tho potsherds were clogged with fish bones. In other chambers were found num- bers of early Greek vases, ranging from 5D0 1$. C, to COO H. C., some very finely painted with harpies, sphinxes, dancers, and the like; nearly all, how- ever, were broken, but somo can be mended. A sword handle, some scale armor, bronze rings, amalets, beads, seals, and eapeciiUly two rings, en- graved with the titles of a priest of Amen, have been found, and many small tablets with inscriptions. . Mr. Petrie has looked diligently for the stones which Jeremiah bid among the briek-work, and nome unhewn stones have been dug oat from below the surface, but to identify them posi- tively woald, of course, be impossible, unless the prophet had -preTionsly in- scribed them, which is anlikely. Egyp- tian inscriptions say that Nebuchad- nezzar did oome to Tahpanh«s and spread out lus pavilioQ on tbftt very spot, as foretold in Jeremiah's prophet cy.^ut they say that he was defeated. Babylonian inscriptions state that ho conquered, and determine. truth ia hard to tiiciJE iikini secnr* ofi* that would not bite i* would tickle m* most fb death. Yon know, perhaps, that I am of English orifcin. Some of the best aad bluest blood of the oldest and most decrepit families in England flows in my veins. There is no better blood extant. We love the exhilarating sporta of oar ancestors, and nothing thrills us throngh and through like the free chase across country behind the flee- ing fcx. Joyously we gallop over the sward behind the yelping pack, as we clearly scent high, low, jack, and tho gi-me. My ancestors are haughty English people from I'iscataquis Coanty,Maine. For centuries our rich, warm,red blood has been mellowed by the elderberry wine and huckleberry juice of Moose- head Lake; but now and then it will assert itself and mantle in the broad and indestructible cheek of our race. Kver and anon in our family you will notice the slender, triangufar chest, the broad and haughty sweep of abdo- men, and the high,iutellectnal expanse of pelvic bones, which denote the true Englishman; proud, high-spirited, soaked full of calm disdain, wearing checked pantaloons and a soft, fiabbv tourist's hat that has a bow at bot£i ends, so that a man cannot get too drunk to put it on his head straight. I know that here in democratic America, where every man has to earn his living or marry rich, people will scorn my high-born love of tho fox chase, and speak in a slighting manner of my wild, wild yearn for tho rush and scamper of the hunt. B y Jove, but it is joy indeed to gallop over the sward, and the cover, and the open land, the meet and the cucumber vines of the plebeian farmer, to run over the wife of the peasant und tramp her low, coarse children into tho rich mold, to \sick\ the hounds ux)on the rude rustic as ho paris greens his potatoes, to pry open the jaws of the pack and return to tho open-eyed peasant tho quivering seat of his pantaloons, returning it to him not because it is lacking in merit, but be- cause it is not available. v\h, how the pulses thrill as we bound over the lea, out across the wold, anon skimming the outskirts of the moor and going home with u stellated frac- ture of the dura mater, through which the gas is gently escainiig. Let others rave over the dreumy waHz and the false joys of the skating rink; but ^v e me the'maddening yelp of tlio pock in full cry as it chases the speckled two-year-old of the low-born rustic across the 0])en and into the pounJ. Let others sing of the zephyrs that fan the white sails of their swift living yacht; but give mo a wild giillop iit the tail of very high-priced hounds and six weeks at the hospital with a fractured rib and I am proud and happy. .\ll our family are that way. We do not care for industry for itself alone. We are too proud ever to become slaves to habits of industry. We can labor, or we can let it alone. This shows our superiority as a race. We havo been that way for hundreds of years. We could w'ork in order to be sociable, but we would not allow it io sap tho foundations of our whole being. I write, therefore, to learn, if i)os- sible, where I can get a goo«l red or gray fox that will come home nights. I had a fox last season for hunting purposes, but he did not give satisfac- tion. lie was constantly getting into the pound. I do not want an animal of that kind. I want one that t shall always know where I can put my Jiand upon him when I want to hunt. Notliing can be more annoying than to be compelled to ko to tho pound and redeem a fox, when a party is mounted and waiting to hunt him. I do not care to vouch for the gait of a fox, whether he lopes, trots, or paces, so that his feet are sound and wind good. I bought a light-red fox two years ago that had given perfect satisfaction the previous year, but when we got ready to hunt him he went lame in the oH* hind foot and i rawled under a hen honse back of my estate, where he remained till the hunt was over. \\1iat I want ia a young, flealess fox of the dark-red or' iron-gray variety, that I can depend upon as a good road- ster; one that will come and eat out of my hand and yearn to be loved. I would like, also, a tall red horse with a sawed-off tail; one that can jump a barbe<l wire fen<-o without mussing it ui> with fragments of his rider. Any one who may have such a horse or pipless fox will do well to communicate with me in person or by letter, inclosing references. I may m found during tho summer months on m y estate, spread out under a tree, en- gag^ in thought. E. Fitzwiluam Nye . It rnmwm^ U%m tke LttU* •!•• • WUm ta a Kavtoas Baak. Probably the moet protane man in this conntiy is Unde John Bobinson* of circus fame. His vocabulary is some- thing terrible whea he is excited. Bis •otce is stentorian, and in comparison with it the bellowing o! an Angry btdl ta like* the cooing of a turtle dove. I n describing the old man's i>eculiari^, a eanvasman once said: \He kin ease a bine streak in. nine langaages An* aevef turn a hair^\ He had about $15,000 of hard-earned savings on deposit in : Cincinnati bank, and the instant h< heard there waa trouble in financial circles he started for Third street to get his money. It happened that the bank, like moat others at the time, was in no condition to stand a ''run,\ and ito President, an oily-tongued, suave man of the world, with his board of directors, waa on band to receive depositors and assure them that \every* thing is all right.\ \In a few days the storm will blow over.\ \Do not be WnSSCTsel tmi^T r«conuneiidi2ic ads favor with Andrew Cabxeoie , the Pittsborgh manufooturer, states that daring last year 74,000more tons of Bessemer steel were produced in the United JStates than in Great Britain; that more j^ards of carpet are made each year in i'Lila- delphia And the Ticinity than in all England, Walea, aad Seotland; that the echool librariea alone in this conn- try contain 12,000,000 more books thaa all the pnblio librariea of Europe com- bined; and that aU the Stata and city debts of the Union added together, rating them according to valuatkm of proper^, do not amoont to one^fifth of the city debt of Manchester, England, or to one-tenth of the debt of Birminc- ^'ei^OoTe^araellU Father—And you say Willie June hit yon on the head ? Bertie—Yes, pa; but just wait until I get a good chraoe at him, I'll par- lyzehim. Father—Oh, Bertie, you muim't show sQch a belligerent spirit I think if yoa*d fait him as hard on the head as he hit yoti, it would make things even. Ton most learn to govern yourself, my aona-^-Tsd-Bito. The Klm4 ef SIrekr He Hai. \Joe it^e a shame your boat got left in the race. Yoa came ont third?** \Yes Bill. Fergy had the Tale stroke.** 'And Fetters?* *'He bad the Hamrd stroke. \An d yoo?\ \Well. I had a snastreke.'*—Pliifa- detpMa CmiL 5e l a Mistake, .bwomio i thing is all right.\ \I n a few days t storm will blow over.\ \Do not unnecessarily alarmed, my dear sir. We must accord each other mutual confidence,\ etc. He had made good progress in allaying the excitement, and had for the moment stepped into h s private office, when \Uncle John,\ red and perspiring, pushed his way through a knot of waiting business men, and then followed the President into his sanctum. \Ah good-day, Mr. Kobinson; glad to see you,** said the ofiicial, who al- most blanched white with apprehen- sion as he thought of Mr. IJobinson's voice and gentle ( 2) manners. *'Ves, you are glad to see me,** re- sponded Uncle John, in his most sar- castic tones; \just as ^lad as though you had run a nail into yer foot. I want none of yer compliments, but I do want my money, and I want it right now! I want it wuss nor the man in Texas wanted a pistol. Hand it right out, and no —— foolishness about it.\ The President hastily close<l the door leading to the bank, but Uncle John instantly opened it, saying: \No you don't come any honeyfuglmg over me. I'm hotter'n a lime^kiln, and I want air, and I want my money. Leave the door open, 1 ain't s lyin'. anythin' that's treason. I'm only askin' for my own, an' I'm going to have it.\ In vain th<j President exertetl ail his pacific efforts. John would listen to him a moment, catch fresh breath, and then, in louder and louder tones, demand his money. He swore and ripped and tore until the air grew blue and sulphurous. The President glnnce^l out and saw a group of wondering people assembling at the front' door. He saw that he must act instantly if he would avert the threat- ened disaster, so he called to the pav- ing teller, \Mr. Smith, let ilr. Kobin- son have his money.\ ^fr. Smith's knees almost rattled as he wondered il he had enough funds on hand to meet Uncle John's claim. Fortunately he had a few thousand more. Mr. Kobin- son took his money home, and for sev- eral nights kept it in his bed. The bank at last had to close its doors, and tLen the great circns manager chuckled as he thought that once more his brag and bluster had served their purpose.— Philadeitthia ^Teicw. A WHITER in TrutJi (London) relates that when \Unser Fritz\ was a guest at tho Tuilcries during the exhibition ol isr>7 he wished to see tho interior ol the forts around Paris. But as they were in a miserable state of defense, il was arranged to evade complying with his wish. He, however, managed in this wise to do without an order of ad- mission : For some mornings he made early excursions to distant place!>i, ac- companied by a French aid-de-camp who was placed at his disposal. One morning, on his way to the Bicetre .\sylum, ho sai<l to the officer: ** What if we run up to the fort beside it?\ The aid-de-camp did not see the harm, and took him not only into it, but into all on the south side of Paris. With his well-trained eye the Crown Prince saw the military poverty of the land, and the exact defen<iivo capacities of the lino of works. FmaaoiD ia the name of a new ma- larial for pipe joints that haa autde a sonewhat remarkkble record. Joints made with H ha> reaistcd a water preasnra of from eb to 200 ponads per sqtmve ia^ and u steam preMore of 75 It hac^ a tensile Lido's gfandms, baeomiog iiapaHsnt with her aoisa, said to her: \LuGTye e are a mistake; yoa slMold hava hmm abc^.**. liOlawMves y tbo^htfallor f^ auant^ tte i^vdy an^^ For a laaa tfias westMdilr retoeed topoW llaht*ettinonlals.lieU*Tiii«ttst.lathee|»inloa of the poblie se&eraUy. xhm cnat majeritr WOT* mannfactnyd to order by unprincipled parties as a m«ansor diipocincof their worth- less prvparatloas. That this view e( tba cat* is to a certain tenttroe. therveaa lie so doobt. •t last, several years aeo. we came to the concltxsioa that •very IntalUccst perwa can rssdily discrtmlnat* betwwa sprarions and bona flde tstlmonlala, aad determined toiuw as advertisements a lew of the many homlreda ot TtneaHrtTwl ccrti£catee ia our poeeee- slea. In doias tills «• published them ae nearly mm poeeible in the ex»ct lanKoace csed by our cor- reeoondente, only chenglng the pbraeeolocy. casee, eo aa to compresi them Into a space than they wcmJd otherwiee occxx- py. bat without In the least ezasseratlsc or de- etroyinc the meaning or the writere. eare clad to say that onr final conelasi«a wae • correct one—uiat a letter r«o u^artlch^bavinc tnte merit finds Theoricinal of every teetiisonialpablished by ns ia on file in our office, aa inspection of wUcb will prove to the most akepUcal that oar ansertion mad« aboTe, that only the facts are piven ae ther appear therein, is true. Botaaitwonldbevery inconrenient. it not impossible, for ail of oar friendeto call on as for that parpose. we invite those who doubt (If there be sach), to correspond with any of the parties whose names are signed to our tes- timonials, andaskthemif weharemade any> misstatements, so far aa their knowled^ ex- tends. in thL^ article. In other words, if we bare not published their letters aa nearly ver- batim aa , ProprtstorPieo'fl Care ferConaamptioa and Pizo'ii Kemedy lor Catarrh. tVe append a receot letter, which came to ne entirely nnsolicited, with permiasion to nnbliah it: D av T os , Obio, Jan. 12. IBM. Yoa may add my testimony as te the merita of Pieo*e Cure for Consamrtion. I took a eever* cold last Febmary, wLicb etettled on my Inns*- They became alceratcd and were m > palnfnl that 1 had no re»t for two days and ntrhta. 1 cot a bottle of Mso's Caw for Con- enmption. and was relieved by the time I Lad takes half ot it. Since that time I have kept Pleo*e Care In the hoa»e. and oseltaa a j-re- lever need: asd thai is saying a creat deal, for I have nsed at Iea«t twenty others besides B>innt «it TTi«Ti V ph>fiician«» jn-ef^crii'tiotis. roneumption haa never failed myfamilv. A. J. GRUBB. 37 S-pringfield St. Wtfk Md W mv PeteJiaee nn eoerfmne of meny — Utttstodty fks re<*t«t warm weatSer • we^ Ton may toe weak aad ttred la wltboBX *ppeate «»d wltxwit ewny. ttam. stm Beee Hee6'# Sarsapertna to btild »P aea ywbedy.poray aad Qotekea the stasctia aad ftctoretae io*t appetite. Ibisp^aUer dae wffldoyoaawO. *n«MalmcatrompletetyrBa dewtt.«ad ensSV Tiiiii jiaii iiiiili I isrrtli I'trr-n- ^ todletoypbyelelana. Xha«* takem eayttMe wbiat mm as mach benefis as BtMid^ »e«ea farma.whl^ lestored m* to liemlxh aad-rlcae. X recommend tt to any ta»alid wbow •2r«taa * trsted. Itwfflietmadtbesjstcmaadsiveaewms.'* —KeLiA5oBta.Feoria.in. •T>BtlB»ths somnwT otratbs 1 lia*e mm^ wbas debilUaSed or ran dcwa. J ha** takra Keoe% Hood'e Sareaparilla S«ld tf an droccl^t*. S!: six Xtn Sy c.1. SOOX> a c«x, Apotaeeariefc I^a^U, Mtm lOO OOSM One Dollar Hea and Women of r* ^ cb«>mct*ri moneyatbom*. Caritzalv* Sarrllof^ te«e. Sample Washer sent f n* oae — Bettim at our expease if not eatisfacuiry. waah 15 Shirts io 30 minute*, or no eaie. •erfect \Waaber erer in-rented. Sells oa iti merits. Will posillvelr wssb ColUre aad without rubbi ox. Clotbee are placed In AboQow •ia wtteel which r-«ol*#e in a eouaxv LuiiieA boQer : steam penetraiea the rct>e*, thoroocWy claaasiagthem. Write for tceUmonials and leeee C. L. FK&SIK. ratvetM. 17t Court fit.. WELL DRILUN6 rnrtabie HsTWi*v*cr3Ia<;aiae**r« Gttaras*«*4 tv drtl! t»irMr with Xtrnymmmr naa say oUi«r. bpf>e»*liy ad-^rt-d t-drtin»c w-Bs ta rock as to l.eM feet. Kknnw* mnA SJ* MaaMaSea tASeeyeraa^wnbenrm-r-tua^aadtMl* S»Ti ho»ln>— far mlntrr or f tb» aM—l liaagTaitoroTw iti tb^ twtH i w SMd^SMWA £Saai«t<vUluatrat<n!Catak>ciM S. Ail IMS. pierce Well Exravatar Ca.. Xew Tvefc. WEAK, MEIIYOUS AND DEIIUTATEO MEN and Women seeking health. [Strength and energy, should avoid Drugs, Secret Medi- cines. etc., and send for \The Review,\ or \Health and I Strength R^ained,\ a large Illustrated Journal, publi^- ed entirely for their benefit. STRENGTif REGAINED: It tresis OQ health, btrlene. pbTMcsl roltnte. aad i leal subjects, and Is a cvmplrteent^clopsKliaot taloT tion for sufferlnf homanity afllloM :ib ehfonic. nervous, exhaostine auJ p^nluJ r— Kvery enbject tbat beats on healtii aod hatmsn tiWSS- aUiuc per&oa should have it. ^^ WW ^ PI k IK Nu similar wurk has ever been published. £«cry W WS IKO rlmbKe^aUiucperMashouldhaveit . Touiro Aim msDix aged itcir, Md other* wh o premature decline < -• ->el, nmi tt before~<Soctorlnc\«'rlnr.-»tl»tin mt^.icn etc.. are e^pecUlly benefited^ e aj>pa&nre!t «it say diKLiltitlna. le or mrdicaJ treaimenx at aay Mdofraanael. xe^lt'beT ** ' and you wilt eave time, a , .. -practice medlciDe,\andi>oIauonttheoDly safe, simple and effectiveroad to health, vlcoraoaooou*^ Belts and all csratlee appllanwa are treated ^y^ : all wfateb ars bofos. Belts on iblrty days trial eavad nsrvoos^ebmty sufferers and others by the advice eive^ Tilt KEVIXU is now la yearoCptabllcaUon. ^nplet* spectxaea copies maUed FltHi;, addrsss. aaminc this paper. ^ Puhllmhrnrm RKVICW, 1164 Broadway, Mew York. Apply BOW or preeerro onr addrMi. as yoa may xtr^. see this poUc^ asaio- h ^ICKER'P COCKLE'S ANTI -BIUOUS PILLS, THE aaaaT EHOIOSH REKXDY Tor BIl., I NO LADY Jons Boyle O'Beillt , having been requested to send, for publication in Miss Cleveland's JAlerary Light, a1>ont two thotisand words at a cent a word, with a promise of better remuneration in ftitore, waxes indignation at thia at- tempt to get abont $6 wortli of work for $1 cash, and sends the following ro- plJ to the publishers: cannot see why you should appeal to the charity of literary people for the benefit ol your magazine. If your letter is not ap appeal for cbaritv, it ia a humilia- tion and a disgrace to the literary pro- fession.\ . }t<»ally BSAU- IFtrl* without. a LEAR , WHITB oScPiiEXiosr. TM. Wrtw; »«»«DED nRSTjMManM KST IlLDI fa TDIM \Mn- fu:i MfTtn tcm tM>MT.Mff»l«.«-«. r «OOK AGEVrS WAJ By John IS. Gough, Mr.A. Fneiref; SOS WUnat Street, St. \Loula .Mo., suffered for two years with Ittmba^o. and was confined to bis bed for eereral months. ]fe waa entirely cured by the use ot St. Jacobs Oil. which be says is also the beet ctire for sprmlas and all otJiM paias. M R . ATKixeoir estimatee the aaaaal loae of property la the Uaited s»taCea by flra a» f lOQ.- m>.oah the cost ot maintaiaina fire issuance comiMinies at t3S,<no.0BD( and of fire-extifiguisb. ^^^^liancee at f«JW».fW). a total of flCQ,. Mim. F. W. Inctuun. 473 W. Madison MffseC. Chicaso. IlL* rwwBmends Red Star Coach Care,.a few doees of which cava bsreatliers- UeffromaTlolcBtcold. Pnes,aoeaU. Tm rabbit seeme har»leH eaooth. h«t I m baa beea tbe dleturber of nations, la Halico- land be ia eaUnc hla way to th« Genaaa Oce«B. aad in Aastraiiabehaeaiada thecooa. try a aetworkafbolas. M«i—>»*s Parioanaa •aavTOsrac.taeaaly BTcparattoa of bMt ooatalalac its eatlrs i^Tsaggsg&ieasa: in. to tM«tUi aod H ts I tb« Uly ft*. nart-T-n >1.-1., ,te. It fr»*U»» sliftBdiL and tubM ot Uw sr.is.srcitirjfi'i.'ir 5reu S^bT^isadStr^r ~ rad Uamew Ilealen. ^oalMui s is tas art l« M tbs b«t aad • •ewrtal dlwrooBt to the 3 _ CUBE DI»IC~. —- • , t. cm. Um, te . TI..IIM Bn on. maA iat^m ^ I. BOWK 134 1 m attaagaav&gg H AF \TS HORN s Sbad2•- • •