{ title: 'Richmond County advance. (West New Brighton, N.Y) 1886-1921, November 06, 1886, Page 4, Image 4', 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/sn88079199/1886-11-06/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-11-06/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-11-06/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88079199/1886-11-06/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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* Imiinuice Affeni Hoteiy Public ; a specialty. Entire chargv taken of Property, iottgages, and other papers drawn. Al^t for.the Inman Line, Hambui^-American & Anchor lines tin Mia M Tl«k«U, Dntta, ud Uoney Orders. InmiiBnes aoUcItad In th« Boyal, Commercial Union, Phenix and Westchester Ins. Com- ^paales. Iieing Agent of said Companies in this vicinity. ~ ii iF. 0. Miisg, M Bad, Stiln U, I.! p. O. Box W After May lat, will Bcniove to our Xiew Building, S Doora West of our present location. Oidots or appointments emn bo made with me by Telephoae for my Mnticea u fl-F-131 Notary or otherwise. 9200 EACH. 160 Large, Eligible Bnttding Lots at Hew Brighton, 8. L On Forest and Laurel Ares., near Bard Ave., which is the Fifth Aveniie of Staten Island, boinix dotted with palatial residences, the abode of Bankers, Brokers, and Merchants. Size of Lots, 25x142; location unsurpassed for healtbfiiliioss ; water and gas; adjacent to schools and churches; soil dry, high, and arable: 'iirisolutely no malaria; five'blocks from ferry; only 4 blocks from Depot Rapid Transit road, and proi^osed depot of the Balti- •iide and Ohio Railroad, and near the grounds of the S. I. 'Cricket and Lawn Tennis Club, which will attract thousands of the elite to this point, and will make i t the '\social centre.\ Title suaranteed free and clear; abstract and oflicial searches K\ Iwck t o 17!)S. This is the cheapest land on Staten Island. Jloney deposited in bank draws only 4 per cent, inside, of a year this investment will double in value. Ladies find ithis s desirable investment. Call a t my house any week-day or Sun- «i»y and be driven t o the lots, a s they should be seen to b e apprechited; bring your family and friends with yoa. \^his lirice 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 ou mortgage. Call on CORNEIiIUS A. HART. Owner. [lj'>2] 17 Lafayette Ave., New Brighton, S. I. E. A. BOURNE. Dealer in Beef, Mutton, Pork, Lamb, Veal A An«l ITcgetables, Tf -JERSEY Street, Hew Brighton. Goods delivered froo of charge. TELEPHONE CONNECTION. Hillyer <& Hartley, 373 Richmond Terrace, Hew Brighton Wholesale and Retail GROCERS. Dealws ih''' 1PAIRTS, QIEiS, A:M» K^MCOWARCi, CB-1-52] i»t Mew York Prices; for Cash. Dciileis in CLOYE LAKE & EASTERH ICE. The oldest ostobllshcd Ico Company on the I-ilantl. Butchers. Porter Houses, Families, tind Slilppins piomplly supplied a t lowest mtcs. Drilgrs f E.A.Brillcn, H.C .BriilGn, W.S.Brilipn. PETER Painter, Kalsomining k Paper-hanging. p. O. Box asi. West JCow Brighton. S . CD., SilMUEL nUNlZRN & Fine Custom and Rsady-made CIvOTH INQ. 142 FTTIiTDN Bet. Broadway and Nassau Street, * NEW YORK. a-*is>i All Gootla Warranted aa repreaented. Siuinicl l>iinc.ln Jumea Bnnninff. C. T. BAKKETT, President. CUM. W. KENJtEDV, Vice-Pree. and Treasurer. CnAitLES E. n£A£ , Seeretarjr. S. I. FANCY DYElG~ESTABLISHMEllT. JTm. • Barrett, Hephews A Co., 4k 7 STREET, If. v. nBAXcii omcES: aeliTerad. llMtiMtani . TU« ii • tmj- tmtgo qa««tian . Imv' we aast haJp aloag our baahfnl yotmg friaiid: yon kindly inlonn • ^ang man what the esaentials of 'culture' areT also what are proper works to readV 1 deaire t o ba a «;ood conTersa* tionalist, ba t always feel ill a t ease and am UahfoL Caa voa sOggest a Way t o sniK««fDll» Dvetcome the latter?* Kalph Waldo £m«i^ii torefizes t o •a essay on cnltnre these lines, from vhicb» yoonit laaa, joa mmy trj t o get • general notioa of what cttltnM k: -Can mien or tutori edaeat« Tbe dexnifiod -whonl we liwaiif lie muRt be masicalt Tromulott*. impreMfonal, Alire tegeatlo fQaQez>«e Of laniAcape and of ekyv, And tender to tha snirit-ioaea OI m«n'a rr maiden^s eye: Dnt to bis natiTe center fast. 8ti»ll into Futam fuse the P&at, ..Vnd the world's flowing fmtes in hi* own mold recast.' Do these lines only serve t o mystifr the subject stUl further for you? Welt that is because Emerson himself conld not exactly define calture, and if you read his essay through yon -f^ould probably be eren more in the dark. Indeed, it does not seem t o ns the wonderful work the disciples and fol- lowers of th e Concord ]>hiIoso})her thought it t o be a t the time it first ap- peared. Culture, dear boy, has come t o be a cant term* and no end of nonsense and platitude has been written and talked about it since the daj -when Kmerson made it the theme of Boston discussion. \ou want t o know what is necessary to make jo u a cnltivated man. Everything within the tango of knowl- edge. of thought, and of tasto is neccs- sarj. All good books will help you to the end. and some -which are not good may assist you in the way of compari- son. Association with cultivated peo- ple and conrersation with them are indispensable aids. The taste to dis- criminate the good from the bad in all art is essentiaL Social refinement is requisite. But nobody can know it all. Yon can learn only a very little, but what you learn learn thoroughly. Be c.ire- ful t o read the books of the mast«?rs of the I terary art, so that yoti w^ill bo in- sensibly affected by their stjle until JOU come at last to distingtiish and prefer and require the superior soVt. If you go to hear music, see to it thsit it is the music of the great artists, and take pains t o look at good picttircs, for ^adually you will find yourself learn- ing to enjoy them alone. And so in all things seek the best and reject the poor and commonplace. As to conversation, you will get along well enough in that when you become interented in what intcr(»sts cultivated people. You will forget yourself in your absorption in what . you are talking about That U th e way to overcome bashfulness, which comes from self-con scioRsness. I\emember tbat you are not so important in other people's eyes as in your own, and they are not singling you out for ob- servation. You are only one among many—a drop in the bucket of human- ity. So don't w^orry yourself about wiiat people are thinking of you, for they are likely to think of you not at all, or in the most careless way, unless you attract their attention b y your awkward bashfulness. Even then what they think is. of little 2or.33iiueuce. '\Vhat-yCu are is the essential matter. Brave it out and regard indifference with philosophy. Cultivation? That is something upon which a man must expend his whole life's effort, and when all is done ho will only have started on his quest.— iTeu? l'b^^• Sun. A ^VEEB CHAKACIEB. irwsy an<l S<8 We«t ISStli Strcct.New Tork. . fivrnlton Street. Brooklja. Ofllloe at Worfcg; Cherry Lane, Castleton. Indies* and Gentlemen's Garments, Gloves, Feathers, Cra^ . Veil8» JMCe», Ribbons, etc.. etc., Clcaried» Restored and dyed in tlie best manner^ and with uniisnal dispatch. DRESSKS CEEANED and DYED WITHOUT. RIPPING- P, 0. Box 205, West Hew Briflhton.. {SSJSSL ^onnation ipren by mail or telephone. • Packaj^ called for In ths Cumhcrl-jnti Mo iiitnin^. Meantime the darkness was falling, and the scenery along tlie road grew wilder and grander. A terrific storm had swept over these heights, aud tlie great trees lay uptoru and prostrate in every direction,\ or reeleil and fell against each other like dninkeu g'antif '-a scene of fearful elemental violence. On the summits one sees the tan-bark oak; lower down, the white oak; and lower yet, fine specimens of yellow poplar; while from the valleys to tbe crest is a dense and varied under- growth. save where the ground has been burnt over year after year to kill it out and improve the grazing. Twen- ty milc» to the southeast we had seen through the pale-tinted air the Avaviug line of Sellico Mountains in Tennessee. .\-vay t o the north lay the Beaver Creek Mid the lower Cumberland, while in front of ns rose the craggy, scowling face of Anvil Kock, commanding a view Df Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia. The utter silence and heart-oppressing repose of primeval nature w:is around us. Tbe stark white and gray trunks of the immemorial forest dead liflked us t o an inviolable past. The air seemed to blow ux>on us from over regions il- limitable and unexplored, and to be fraught with unutterable suggestions. The foil-moon swung itself aloft over the aharp touchings of the green with ppectral pallor; and the evening star ytood Imttrons on the western horizon tn depths of blue as cold us a sky of Itandiaeer, except where brushe.l by tmmtilona shadows of rose on the verge of the sunlit world. A bai wheeled ui>- vard in fantaatio curves out of his un- discovered glade. And the soft tinkle of A single cow-bell far below marked th« isvinble spot of some lonely hum-tn hsbitatioo. By-and-by wo lost sight of th« hMvens altogether, so dense and interlaced tbe forest. Tho descent of JOHNJ.KENNEY, B^lestoh & Wo^ the hack appeared t o be into a steep abjss of gloom; then all a t once we broke from the edge of the woods into • flood of moonli^t; a t oar feet were the whirling, foaming rapids of th e .fiver; in our ears was the near roar of the Mltmet, where the bow^crowned mist lose aod floated upward and away ia long tnflio g shapes of ethereal light- ness. IheCamberlaod Biver nwa and Ihibws itself over the rocka here mth m fall o t seventy feet, o r a perpendiea- Jar . deaesnt of . mty^two^ making a rntei e tet most beaatafol Niagara. . Jial hAow, Es^ Fslls drops over its Ikeeit's Bdtt Ba¥ena Was bon and raised about eighty years ago neat Sqaonkum. Monmouth C onnty» N. J . His boyhood days were passed \in learning to'read# catching clams and eels, and latching the drumming pheasants and the other denizens of forest making a good living and enjoving themselvea; Ben made several tnp s to \Sourland and wondered much about its darkly mixed population^ He put a sudden fend t o his Uving on the Atlantic seacoast; however. Shortly after his twtenty-firat birthday^ and drifted toward the Illi- nois iUver. Madam Bumor, who has been known to guess at the borders of tbe truth now and then, loudly asserted that young Ben had a house, bam, hog- pen, and wife of his own even before be could vote, and tUat for certain un- known reasons he arose on his last night in Monmouth County at tbe silent midnight hour) and after locking tbe house and the other buildings threw the keys into his- muddiest well and started for Teoria, liL He employed most of his time the first six years of his residence on the Illinois in cbopjiing Wood, building llatboats, and in boating cordwood to St. Louis. H e subsequently piloted rafts and small steamboats on the river of his choice^ He used to say that be was happy during those years, aud that it would hare been fifty dollars cash in his pochet if bad luck hadu't induced him to settle and get married in Liver- l>ool, Fulton County, 111. H e still made long trips down the river, but he carefully bur.ed hit money under sycamore tree in the opposite bottom, near Dnck Lake, b.-fore coiu}? South. A great lover of solitude and a hater of mankind, he prospected for a suitabl location, and found it on tbe sandy bluffs in Mason County, about three miles from Liverpool.' Ben Kavens might have settled on tho best land in the. county, but h e selected the very worst He explained that queer pro- ceeding by saying that he settled in the Devil's Neck desert because he tliought noboily else would b e fool enough to ever become his neighbor, lie built for himself and little family a hut some distance from a famous Indian spring, the water of which he drank in large quantities. Ho almost Avorshiped th e beverage flowing from that ceaseless source, and often said he would think thousand times about that good spring water when living in the world l>eyond tbe grave. During the first few years of his residence in the Devil's N'eck region he was \monarch of all he surveyed\ and comparatively happy. H e owned large number of hog's, which fared sumptuously on nuts, roots, crawfish, clams, and on turtle eggs. iJuring hog- fattening time he supplied his porkers with all the shovel and dog-fish they could devour, so that it became a aay- ing that ''Undo Ben^s pork tastes more like fish than hog meat.\ But he made it pay. H e worked like one beside himself. But alas! h e couldn't be nlone and have his own way; be got some neighbors and managed to lioat in hot water with most of them for nearly forty years. His family i reascd aud he'erected a larger house nearer his favorite spring. Th e fisher- man of l^evil's was a great enemy und slayer of wolves and dogs. H e killed about '-O.'. He often claimed that tlie happiest &ix days of his life were the six days that be had religion, which he lost on the se venth day by swearing a t his oldest son for swearing so miich. Uncle Ben, as he was called far and near, had six narrow escapes from lung fever. He predicted that it would some day kill him. I t did. H e invited its nivagcs by sleejiing in tho snow, tak- ing mud-baths in winter, and catching bad coMs in chasing some neighbor or dogs with a shotgun, lie was kind to all the live sto^-k which I'an with his own. and permitted them to eat salt from liis cattle-trough so tbat the horse and cattlc-thieves might find large dvoves together and wouldn't l»e apt to >teal just his own. H e fiercely de- nounced those follows who didn't l«e- lieve in hell. *'I tell jou,\ said he, \tbere is a hell, and when a person comes to die then the devils squat around and scare him to death and give him all the hell he needs.\ iJe was a great admirer of educ.itiou, doing all iu his power to have good schools in the Devil's Neck district, and coaxing his children to get learn'ng. H e was very liberal in giving, except whea it came to money, which he hoarded with • miser's caution. His last days arrived in the spring of He*^ had conquered another severe attack of lung fever, and, being rather behind with his work, started with a team and an old coHeo-pot t o the *field. He plowed with great vim, looking, however, a thousand times during a half-day toward the coffee-pot on a large stump. The passing neigh- bors thought i t strange tlUt Vncle L'en, who was a noted lover of cold water, should let his water i)ot stand in tho hot sun. He overheated himself and relapsed into the hands of bis old ene- my, lung fever, which snatched him the next day. While hunting for a bed-shoet in an old cheat the netghbora found the old coflee-pot containing $2,:-t0(>. It is still believed that consid- erable money was bnried on the farm. Ho who never liked storms be cause the devil made them, was buried on a calm day, and his grave is irraced with a handsome tombston*v— Jliinous vaper. I'noF. KICHARD a. FitocroR main- tains that most* of the meteor atreams with which tho earth eomes in contact are derived from Om earth itaelf->tbat is, thrown off by voI.-«nic action a t a ' I is •AmBBMTs nnm. , a-ftje. r. A gentleman who ha« spent die Hwsinsr abroad, said to our reporter, that the thing tbat iolpreised him most of «U wa« th« num- ber of boljda^rs One esctnint-^rs abroAd and tbe little aaxiecr the pc^e dis->laT in tb« coadnct of bosmeiw affairs. ••Mro boast hciw, b« Mid. **tbat they work for years witb- ttat a day off; in Europe that would be con- •idered a crime.\ Mr. H. H. Warner, Who -wma present attha time^ fcaid: **Thts i* the first sasimer in •cars that I hare not spent on the water. Be«n toobo^.^ ^Tben, I suppone you have been advoiis- ing extensively r \^»ot ataU. We have always heretofore closed our laboratory daring July, Aosiust and September, oat thin suauner we ba«-e kept it rmminc day and night to supply the demand, which has beau three time» ei^ter than ever before in our hUtoiy at this sea- son.\ How do you account for thisf The increase has come from tbe sai recomition of thr fxf.fUeitcr of our prtparation-K \We have been nearly ten years before the public, and the sales ore constantly increas>nf/, while cur newspaper adveriisin^ i s conitanttu di.uiinshhtg.' Whyj high scientific and medical authcri- ties now publicly coareJe that oar Warner's safe care is the only scientific spi-cific for kidney and liver disea^^ and for all tha many diseases caat»«<i by them.\ '•Have you evidence of this.'' \AbunJaaeel Onlv a few weeks a^o Dr- J. L. Stephens, of Le&anon. Ohio, a gp^cialist r wmtamO. tmv^ iariastbat. in th« ophilan the public geastallr. tha crest majoritr wete jnanofactnred to order by unpriaclpTMl Vartiesas a xosans cr d'^^^issof their wortV lea* reparations. That this Tiew of the case is to a certain tant true, there eaa be no donbt. At last, several years ac-». ^ e ca^ to the concln^oa that every inteUigent p«zson can readily discriminate between sporloas and bona fide testimonials, aad determined tota«c as*dverti»emctu»arewor tl^ tuahf hoadred^ of nsaoUdted certi^cates in our poaaea- SIOB. In deins this we pablished them as nearly as possible in the esact lanpnaffB a-»«i In- uur cor- respondents. only chasjrinc the phraseolo^. in some caae5, so as to compre-^ tlictn into a smaller sjiace than the*- would o:Lerw.5e ocra- py. but without ia the leai^t cxac..-»Talinc cr de- fctroyinr tbe meaning or the writers. ' T\eareclad to say that onr liaal concla-ioa waa a correct one—tiiai a letter recommending •n article hayiajr tm® mem finds favor wirn tbe people. Theoricrttal of every te^Jmonia! published byusisoniile incur ofii^. aa ia-prtti..n of which will pn)ve to themo-t •tei.tiral that onraj».'>ertioamadrabore.tL*tcnJv th«* facts are eiven an tliev appear tbareln, i- true. Butas it would bevery inronvenieat. if next impossible, for .ili of our frier.d«to call on n? | for tliat pirp--a^. we invite tiioi*-* who doubt i tif there besmiji. to c»>rTt--pwnd with any of ' the parties who-e name? arc >-ijned to our te^ | timonlala.anda.'kthemif we have made aav- > misstatements, so far as their kaow ledi^f ex- tends, in thU article. In other •wi>rda. if we ' have not paHi^aed their letters nearly ver- batim as po»&ible. Very respectfullx-. 1-- T. liAZETuTiNTH i Proprietor Care lor Con-iumi't nm and Pizo'* i:e=ied> ft>r fa-^arrh. ' We append a r«-«^t:nt letter, wliich l ame ii» txs. entirely unsolicued. with iK'rmLw-ioa to puhl.i.h i:.: r>t\Tov. Ohio. Jan. 12. li^ Yon may add my i^^timonr lo ilie mfnts of I*ii»o'» c'are for Ojyumi.t Ira. 1 k u severe cold la^t Febmarx. w hic.'j -<-tt\.rd on znv luttss. They beca ne tucrrated and wt-rer-i painful that I l-ad no r<-~t for twoday>a:.d niRbti^ 1 fiot a b«»ttle of !»i-.i>''.. <'urr fi«r t'«»a- snmplion. and ^^u\ relievrd bv th- time 1 iiad taken half or It. t«inceiLat time 1 lia\e k.-;.: Pisti's Cnre in the Imu'^ and n-.-it a-a *entiv». both forianir ircablo-ar.d »-rttup. tiT wtUch I can reroajiiu-nd ;t the In-t rot-u.i«-inn lever TU-ad: and iJiat a ureal dfaL. fori liavet»edat leji-t tn-.-titr utUer-«. about as many rh>s:rian-' rre-. Tip: R.R.R.'^ crizr^ Axa Tserrrrr* CoUs. Ccirsns. Sore Thmat. l' Chas, Pttmoana- Swrftmff Lamhagx laflairnnttBiS. Krawa- tism. a«3r*l3\ci. FnsHiStti. Chtt- blaias. Hsziache. TssUk ache, y^sthsa. DIFFICULT BREATMiae. mins'.f*. NOT C^E Hm-San^r r^^iw n-tMi aav -'S - -rrrER ^ira riii ^ ITelieri* a Pan*. <prn.\o*. tha Darl^ mr lAtmbm^ U Fir«( and hm xIm> Oatr TbaJ ti\ la -« exergriaUsg.tw^ alla-^ «a J rar^ C 'SS ^ ^ ft Ui- St.m a.-h, cr cStar siaafl\ \ PLo'sCure forCon»i:mi>ti.it to ffive relief in my famiiy. ba^ ntvi for the cure of narcotic, et3:.,habit.s. told that a numler of eminent scientitie medical men had b.«en eiperimeoting for years, test- ing aud analvzisf; all Icnown remedies for the kidneys and liver; for. a? you may Iv aware, the excessive u e of a'l uaro<<tics and Stimulants destroys tho-e or};an.s and unt 1 they can b? rest .red to health tbe habits cannot be broken up! Amonjj the investi- gatorii were such tnen as J. M. Hall. M. President of tbe ii^tate iicard of Health of Iowa, and Alexander >'cil, iL V., IVofessor of Sur};<ry in the Colepe of Phrsicians and Surseona and piajidentof tbe .Academy of Mo^'-incat Columbia, who, after eahan>-tiv« inquirj*, reported that there wa« no remedy known to scbocU or to srienttlic inquiry e<jual to Warner's safe cureT' ••Are many persons addit-ted to the uj« of deadlv drujrir \There are forty milllont of peapla in th9 world who use opium alone, an i there are many huudred^i of thou-sands in this count r^r* who are victims of morphine, opium, quinine and cc»catnc. Tbej* think they have no such habit about them—so niaay ] eople un- conscioui vlctl n« of these habits. They have pains and symptoms of %\bat they call ma'aria anl other di^ea-^ when in nsality it is the demanl in the sj-stem for these terrible dr.-gs, a demand that is caus.Hi lanrely by physi iaus\ pres -riptious which ctintaiii so many dan^.-rous drups, aud strong spirits and on;* that must be answered or silencetl in tbekidne^-s and liver by what Dr. Stephens says is theonlj* kidney and liver specific. Heai-^ says that m-jderate opium aud other drug eaters, if they «L-tain the kidney and liver ^ngor iv.ih that preat remedy, i an keep up these habits in modera- tion.*' ••Well does not this discovery ^ive you a new revelation of :he power of i^e cure;\ *'>*o Ar-Xor vears I hiv© trioiTo coavinre the public tbat ne-./W J «•// the disi-tixr.t ofOt^- hiioinn S'lstmi orispnat* iu some disorder <>f the kidney's or liver, and hence I have logically declared that if our specific were used, ox-er ninety pe ^ ent o: tbe e ailments , ^^ xor ^cw^-u would d;sapwan Tbe liver and kidnevs , toparr blood or lo»r ^aie of tn- trj sceiii to ab»o>b these poiMini from tbe blood ^ and become deoravtvl aad «lL'e3»ed. \When these eniiueni authorities thus pub- licly admit that there no remeily like otirs to enable the kidnevs aud liver to throw otT • failed .4ti<»llier ainu Harriet Citium OS » \Early last wla-er u.r .laushtrr wa •-virre cold m x 1 -d on h-r ; i-veral medU«ln'-s. a^n- • wh c'.i « atty sood. but ^he c- >at :nne i t • • c-1 ' ral*^ larseaaiotiut^ > f llrKii irx'x-. railed lnafamUTphr«lclia. bat h. aay snod. At thl, tin- a f r.«'oJ w •hlo.wTlt-^: «>iUi a iRi*. \Vr tri-d -or..-, and ai.a !«- Lcr ^Vc • iuJ I Aha:fl..atea»;<»'tJlnit3haW ata-ri>.er .s: a mir.ute* mre Cr*n;»«. f^ta-.-srh. H-^liBtTi. MALARIA Chills and Fever, Fever and Ague Conqusfed. B-IKWAY-S KKAHY BEUEF yot on T r-.irr» rall'Tit -I'.rc.l wJt^ f— u.- :tl rx a i:. »lr. . t I tl tSKlrttr**. waet*™* • r.-r* aun-r n,- .ti iKit \f t^d. S«r tJ-« »T talrtT .'r.^ ..r th- Uri»-i« U-Urt tam^^ «.: »i.ii-r.it»vl T-Bt. A iTi -.i^-r f-^T i e*cap*w ta-k-. Tci«ti;=M^- 1 -i '-r trjt. . ^ __ TLerr ^r-u.. .'.al nw^t^l-i rurr r-vrr ma 1 A^-.y- ai-l •• h— V aal .Lr- JI\J»\VA\~^ UHlt»T JLEtXlHw rut? little. -Said hr Amsx*^^^ DR. RAOWAY'S SMSAPABimH SESOLTEH! Xh- Cira rorc uTi-«»r mi: ru Talc--. -1. .. » r- flar I I- 1 •'•-••I.:' 11 •ett.aatl-*a- eia-. li:ail-Ta-.i4 i.-.rr p Wi. A2f-it;..B* «»f Uf Uttttic» aai Thruat. ptmnw llir l^.t^'.j. r. -t'T'oj l;ra;t n^rta ' ^ DR. RAOWAY'S PILLS The G ra' L-*'r =nJ sio-nan ftea^ir r r -.^-if a!l .1 . rl-^.-' t!r- -it-raa'-h. . IVvtr-. it. t j .li tlif lloiMd*. by Dj. TVsl HAU. V i:*L-> me to cive ii a trliU. Wf a b'tUe an I »he bt-g^a toimrroTe. and t>y th.-ua.> ol thr.»- U»:tle* T«.i*e ttrelT cured.- A Goad Name At boae li a tnwt-r of BTrracth al-rva i. Thl« 1- Tally verified by Hi>Oi!'s Snriajiarlita. ^ hlrli h a rept.Xa tloaat hemeuaeq-ial-d I'.f aarr ra-lU-ine. lit txiwell. Slaas.. here It It aiaJf. vrhoXr a-Uli' cr hoodsaretak!nr;tat tbe wme time, and the m.-t retrarkabJe licitvd tc: 1ialoalal^ i-r- frota LowcU jM-t'i-le. Tb • <lniz-il«ti tf «it ll><y BrU nur.' <>C IKx^JV •'-an.tiiarJla than <f ai: other sarsaparilla* cr U.-d i>urltt. ri. Th« •atn^ wonderful 8ucc«'»* Is e»l'-cJ a.: .dl o^i-rthei-OMtr^. tbe sup'rtor caratlvj'jMiw. r« uf Ilood i >ar<aji* rdlaWcoiue known. I'or anv aSTectx-a cau»el ly the DYSPEPSIA! ••••V r •. . 1 r > f« 'X.-^ TIi* •»mit.-itB» .-lii.« ^ -.JS-A •e.tr.m a «txtjT-»—atii-l'-abl^ar tLf^v.-r.iit. • .-Tu.-t a-.--th-tni^dttla® •cr td: 1 -Iirn—.m-'d- '-^e *aAi *» aarta -i'^c iai i-..-- t ^ —-ut-r 'l.-r T r—.. I _.. J • xta •• t J » ^ R • . Vwrk. fn • UK nr Tu <;rT it m N\ T N EBFUL the frightful etTev.-t.s of all deadly drugs and excet><ivc use of stiuiul-ints it is an admissiua of its power as ereat aa any one < oald desire; for if through its mlluenie alone tbe op.u-n, morphine, «iulnine, cociine and li juor habits < an Le overcomo, trhat high.T testi-uon al of its spe -irtc power could b • tsked for \Vou really liel:eve then, Mr. Warner, tbat tbe majority nf dteases ^-ome from kid- neyaud liver coaiplainLs r ••I do! Wh?n yoa see a person raopins . and grovel ing a bo'ut, halfdea 1 and halfalive, , vtar aXter vear, vou may surely j-ut him diiwn as bavins some kidney and liver trx-uble.\ **Tbe other daj- I was talkini with I>r. Fowler, the eminent oculi-t <»f this city, -who said that balf th.* j^t.ents who < ame to him ' for eye treatment were a:rei.-ted by a Ivan ed , kidncv di«ea.-ie. Xow many people wondtr why ia mitliUe life t'.ieir eye sl;j:bt be.-omcs : so poor. A thorou^ii course of tieatmetit ' with Warner's sa'e care is what they a:^ i more than a pair of eye j;la.s.-es. The kidney poison in the bl-xkl always attack\.tiie weuk- ; •-.•t i-art of th-» bady. with s jme it affects the j rt/rs; witliotijersthe heat: with othi-rsthe stontach or the Iximjf, or r-^ct««»i<TfiVdis4>rder i follo'vs and tears tbe»n to pieces, ' or they Jose tbe p<\>ver< of /<i '«*, swe'Jy or l>e- coTiie'i H/ of^nt tn 'tth.r fu'u-fi«n.t of tbe bods*. What man would n.t give bis all to have the vigor of youth at it m.r.andf*' \Th? intelligeut j-hysiiiaa knows that the5e ci>inplaintsa;e uuis nni'foms: they aie not the disorder, aitd tbcv arc sytiipt;>nis not of dL<-«as© of the hea I. tbe e\-e or st:jma-h, or of virility, ne .-e-sarily, I'tit of tbe kitlnev poLson • ili the bl',>o J and they may i re\-ail and no pain oc. ur in tbe kidneys.\' It is uot >tran,'e tbat tbecuthus-ia-ini which 3Ir. Warner dUpTays in Ins aT»i»re-iation of his own remetlv. which restored him to health when the doctors -yiiJ he could not live six months. shouM become infections and that the entire world sh mid pay tribute to its |K>wer. For, as M r. Warner >ayi®, th»» sales are constantly in •rt»'sing, while hii new.«paper advertisin.! is constantly dimin- ishing. This speaks volumes in praLse of the extraordinary merits oC his pre-«iratioa.-i. A naturalist Ixns satisfied bimself beyond a iloubt that the awrage cat travels a distance of eighty miles every night. Then it mu<t bi the other cat that sits on the back fencc several hours every night, loudly complaining of the high taxes or something. ...Awful tiMM of any nattire is tistia'ly avoide i b/ tho-;e wha have .oresiipht. ThoMs whorea«l tui-iwholiave foresight will lose no time in wrltio-x tu iiUlett Af2o-. I^rtland. Maine., lo learn ab-mt ivork which they cau do at a profit o.' fromS3Ui$J - • * day and live at home, whs! .ted.t Some havee%medover Js new. Capital not reinired. free. IJoth sexes. Allaic*. Particulars free. A great reward awaits every worker. Stop that coosh, thatticlulo? in the throat S op tliat Consumptive Condition! You ran be cared: Von can't afford to -wait: Ur-Kilmer's Cotxch Care (Consumption Oil» rill do it qaictelvand perroanantlv. centA. Lroa's Patent iletalUc Heel SUffeoers keer new boots and shoe^ fnim runxxing orer, Sold by shoe and hardware dealers. 3 months' treatment for SOc. Piso*s Beme- dy for Cataxrh. Sold by drosffista. SUCCESS. ECONOIffy IS W^IALTH. PAT.TESNS FREE! JUI yua wMi t,. HM- durin? The veax, bv 4.uL»?.rTitiinp li»r Hooa-s Sarsapariiia Demorest's Monthly. Jt>TaUdrasr!«t«.. «1: kI** forSa.. IV-fir-ll oatry . . . mt-dii-Inr.\ ~AU I at'k cif asr one 1* to try one Lottleof UtK-l'^ Sarsapartlla »a<l prn- tt* .jal k rSrit. It takf-« tlmeand Quaatity todraTT iti rJT'^t than acy nthrr preporatioa I ev.-r ht'ard iif. I « uiild at t If <r;lh«uz U ia th» liou*.-.\-3tiLi. C. A. ai. HrEBAtK. Chill. N. V. B€»ldt>yaUdm5?l«t« kI for«3 IV-r-^r- oal by C. I. HOOD * CO.. Aputh^-cariea. Lowvll. lOO Doses One Dollar COCKLE'S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS, M'Hi.! GHEAT EJTGUSH REMEDY Tor lJ*er. lUle. lodle'^ttoa. eti Free frr-m JSrf- cury: c«atala» only J'lir* Vfff.-tA>»le Iner«.li>-ai«. - - • hi.llfS .CUlTTKNTO.S» Sew Jp^ES PAYSthf^RElCHT S T->m Waaoa -M-ai*^ ..and I'thrrl-heTaiyai- . • -i-:; ; , •-L-Mitiftc-aau llt>aae- u :tb' Easta*- O . ! juid Hue Wt»ud- : t tin- .• '. ilj^iATiatf xS .\nn-rica. • , itd-r, etitaltnc lha .«, i-f-Ti-ti «•: arsttUi.TB tllu-ttated to ^ ,1 -i-.rniier.t ai tlaii xiatidnT. in atrr of the fis-.- roanu'arta:, d. tnaU'.ur |ian«ne daring till* T. »r rf ih'' \ ala- of ov»-r tlirre it- tiar-. W.- 1 n c:%e cmrtidrrat-ie Btt«-nttoat» tf)e«\:r-.w! i'simrrm -«. I'anwtu-v-Ji'-ta nr tmttt th.- iU'~T ia^pnrssit au-1 ta-^ »- ;< -• f tbrd^r. tv.,iiT» t-j::* T.-r It.- r-.»?rt.t KiaaVr-r;-^ Pc^t rs •••r-.TTi nr.l v. - T '\ fvrraTnly •uburriJw T*u I>.-1 oTi t.c a juira:a T't ifu tiaiesits vama. w. j^zcTDJt.s trsimn:^. 17 E. -.•iih Sold ty all Ncw.ilcsdrr' aad ri>-ia:aslt3a. jksn roitTnx: lr»a ; Bri»oi «t>«l r.-am tw^ f.T sso. ^T^KX ^OA* ^ W. L. DOUGLAS * liTilN. N- V time when the force* of OUT planet were snlBcientl.v Mtiva to gi»o them the initikl Teloei^ reininle t o cany them liejoiid tbe earth'a attiu- tion —«ame twelTe mOee • second. Comets, vhish h s mcuds ae tbe pu- enU at meteor atream^^ h e thinks mar haT« originated outside our aolar aja- tem. Hoat of the comets whose oiliiU lidonKt o OUT sTstem be -thinka oriRi- aated in the baser plaMta. Tbe son rver tiiey arc locAte Yoa at« Mttrwd fre \DON'T PAY AMPBICE!\ ciidfc^ifLM CATABHH Cleansea the AUays Tn- ft a m m^* * ^ ® \ * Seals the Sares. Saatores the •eases of Taste. •msU, Bearlsff. A FositivrCare. A partlcl\ H applied latn ra -h a t.trii an-1 is SoeU. by inaJl DR.KlLMERSii'''-'M.'H /VOUGH CURE •CONSUMPTION Oil I Crery tacrcUeat U ft* T««rtaM«: athat crawla «1sht ' !,perrrrtC:. orf^tho^ ,, isL'uon-ttulew eta^rf - U I'-iaslM.-fS i'-horu Wa-r»aiett.~ Carjp*^ Bcttoa I l-io-. ll«»y<« mfcli for IV. 1- lK.ucla»* -ho«r. ••i '' • »» V * ji^r J ..•-.•ii.r. U }oa v»nni* c^rd f . W. 1- Duuclai. ^^C- UrweWoo. Staai. , IT haanaXcn>ldBe,OidiaaortiiJnmsX>rtica Emy dn»e -TlM^r* I colds settieln •tbe aiucntis atemlmmes If OK, «irost. Bronchal Tnbra. mnA tamf^T'iamwtnm, CoQ^h. Wkat Isf sgs tnvmSm tbe Scrofula, Catanh-poisoni. Xlcro-orjam- DM. H amors, and Blood Impurities. Vboojiinff Oonahand Crnop. BEUcm •cicKi.T.cm a nxKunxnT UNRIVALED ORGANS nermaaiaup •trl.-. t S ti» »!•»•. alt«ctie «Ita roll particularm. lual.ed Sn*. UPRIGHT PIANOS. Cini-trur-t-tl .a tbe new n»rtli<*.l ««f «tr:naBS. Mi'.llaruYuM. ^eadXurdf-tcrt}«tTrCaxa1«»7t»e. •AsoM A aAnjM DRGAii AMO mad cm, movtan^ Wew Toffc^ _ SYVlaC t •pmSIMG\' •A c •ITS' IKUL Jjj i> ruM r- a . Oofate: \ uSe. PUTFORM ECMES nWniiUDeclinf^ S]«U.Sweata, Beo Uo-mer.anl •telli&piaOpM<m|«fc»i 25c, SOc, »1.00—6 bottles »S.OO. M asps to cat M asan SSdKMBUiC—lil.rl b. .u M-Hl Ur Mmr a^'^ntaaiLi !a«oPWi«sar»tndr- AM. XaaU. OrOovt. auiyw Ml llMi il fiiii ml lailii iBtM«9 tHam^ttaamX •eraiflrMae. Ckmca *tjy low f<« 4|aai^.«i(ao>