{ title: 'The Port Jervis union. (Port Jervis, Orange County, N.Y.) 1888-1924, May 19, 1888, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn91066174/1888-05-19/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-05-19/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-05-19/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-05-19/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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THE PORT JER VIS DAILY UNION, SATURDAY EVENING, M AY 19, 1888. s ^ 4 KIK« POWDER Absolutely Pure. iQ competltloQ with the maltlthde of low pestt Bliort weight, alum, or phosphate powaera. Sold only in cans. R ota p B ak ing P o w d b b C o ,, 108 Wall Street, N.Y. Tutt’S Pills F O R T O R m U V E R . A torpid lirer deranges th e w h ole system and produces Sick Headacke, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu matism, Sallow Skin and Piles. There is no better rem edy for these com m on diseases than Tutt’s Pills, as a trial w iU prove. Elegantly sugar coated. Price, J85 cents p e r box. S o ld J E x r e r y w l i e r e . TrTT’s P ills are sold by T. R, Anderson, 95 Pike street. BRAIN, NERVE] AND LIFE-GIVING TONIC lets on the stomach and liver. Increases ippetlte, assists digestion, builds up the weak ia l l and broken-down. Uselul In Dyspepsia COU8 Frostraition CHERRY MALT contains blood-making, lit sustaining properties. It is friendly and health iul to the stomach, and can be used by thi lellcate lady. Infant, the aged or Inflrm. Fc people with sedentary habtts and over-worke tneh it Is a valuable tonic. SI.OO per Bottle. For Sale t y all Druggists. 11 and broken-down. Useful In Dyspepsia ss of Appetite, Meadaelie, I n som n ia, Qen tl D ebility, M a laria, Foci: o f Vitality, Ner tra and Exhaustion. C herry M alt P hosphites ;1 s sold by T. E. Anderson, 93 Pike street. CURE Sick Headache and relieve all the troublea tact dent to a bUious state of the system, such as D1& jiinefiB, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distrew after eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their most remar* able BUCCC88 has been shown in curing SICK HeAdache.yet Carter’sLittle Liver Pills are egnsQ; valuable in Constipation, curing and prerentins this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver fcud regulate the bowels. Eh'en if they only cur»i HEAD Js+hebane of so many iivM thathere la whet^w* °°'*dle Liver Pille are very W j A'.ip. rtr f.wrt it gripe or se all who O A K T J S R M E m C I W E C O ., f-hiXTJ Y o r k City® C arter ’ s L ittle L tvlr P ills arc sold by P. E. Anderson, 95 Pike Street. B O W E tE & CO. Nnespaper Adv. Bureau, ic Spruce street, X. V. THE. P.COX F i n e S h o e s . '© T i t i a n . t^ATURDAY, M A \ li). ISSS. rUBLlSUEI) EVhUV^^EVKNINfi 1 XCEI’T SEN F kko \ Mi'i BroprlPtors. OFFICE. FAKNPM lUTIbniNO. PIKE STUEET TERMS--T ub D u l y U n io v w IU be deUveroJ carrier to village anhserlliers a Sent by mail for $5 a year. [E T ki -S t . vtes U mion - weekly, la Issued every Tliuradny morning. Terms $1.50 per ye.ar, strlotly In advance. Orders by mall for subscription or adveirtlslng please address TRI-STATES FKINTINO J eevis , N. Y. ■ ' QROWING SQUASHES. By planting early and late varieties a supply o f squashes can be had at least one half the year, as the late varieties can he kept until nearly spring. A reasonably fine soil should be selected, as a good, vigorous growth is quite es sential in securing a good growth and yield. As with all other crops it will pay to plow the soil well and prepare by har rowing and rolling until it is in a good tilth. It is quite an item to have the soil in good condition before planting the seed! IS this lessens the work necessary to keep m good tilth afterwards. The earlier va rieties do not need as much room as the larger later ones. The crookneck, bush >r scallop are among the earliest. Perfect Gem is one of the best for all purposes, but generally it is small. Essex hybrid, Gubbard and Boston Marrow are amone he best late varieties. Usually there is lothing gained in planting too many va .-ieties. The surest plan is to mike thorough preparation ahead to fight off the bugs. Various remedies have been given but in my experience the only safe plan is to use i poison. Slacked lime, soot, wood ashes, and quite a number of articles have been recommended, and when there are but few i f any bugs they will answer well enough. But with plenty of bugs my ex perience is that none o f them can be re lied Upon. Paris green or w h ite hellebore must Of course be used very sparingly. This is one objection to using them and one reason why I prefer to use slug shot. My plan is to dust the plants as soon as they are up well, doing the work early in the morning while the dew is on. After the plants make a good start to grow, thin out, leaving not over three vines to each hill, selecting of course the best and thriftiest vines. Whenever from any cause the powder gets oflf the leaves or stems give another application, put a small quantity around the stem of each plant close to the ground. Give sufiBcient cultivation to keep down the weeds and make the surface o f the soil loose and mellow. Avoid disturbing the vines as much as possible after they have started to run. It is not a bad plan after the vines have started to run to put a good spadeful of loose mellow soil on them, two or three feet from the hill. This will start new roots and will often give a good vine, even if the borer should get the start at the base o f the stem. After the vines are six or eight feet long f prefer to pinch off the ends as more and better squashes can thus be secured than if the vine is allowed to grow as it pleases. Five feet apart is sufficient for the smaller varieties, but the larger vines ihould be about six by eight feet so as to ■give them plenty of room. If the season 18 dry mulching the vines with bagasse, ')ld straw or leaves, will often secure a TO DESTROY LICE ON LIVE STOCK. A prominent authority r-aya that strong carbolic soapFud.s is one of the beet things that can be used to desUoy i>ceonlive stock. It may bo easily prepaTc.i a- d at any degree of stre nglli that may be re quired. He says t lat the soap u.'^inlly Holil under that nainc is not (-trong cno gh for the purpo-ie, end gives the following instructions; T ike one pound carbolic acid crystals, dissolve in water ; take ten pounds common bar soap, put in a pan with a little water and heat until dis solved. Take out the cork from the bottle containing the acid and set it in hot water This will cause the acid to become fluid. Add this to the soap and stir well. Set away to cool and the result is a soap at a small cost, which will be strong enough to k ill any vermin which infest domestic animals and which will cure barn itch or any cutaneous diseases to which they are liable. It is good to cleanse and heal sores, and will be found useful where the animals are hide-bound and the shin out of condition. good growth when otherwise the crop would be a failure, I prefer mulching to water in a dry season. * I that if yi a failure, I prefer you are igs away it is good crop of linst these must tempting to i My experience has been tl icceasful in keeping the buj ot difficult to secure An u gly complexion made Nellie a fright. Her eyes were all pimjdy and red. Though here features were good,and her blue eyes bright “ What a plain girl is Nellie”: they said. But now, as by magic, plain Nellie has grown fair as an artist's bright d ream; Her face is as sweet as a llower new-blown. Her cheeks are like peaches and cream. As Nellie walks out in the fair morning light, Her beauty attracts every eye. And as for the people who called lier a fright, “ Why, Nellie is handsome” ; tliey cry. And the reason of the change is that Nellie took Dr. Pirree’s Golden Medical Discovery, which rcgulahd her liver, cleared her complexion, made her blood pure, her breath sv;eet, her face fair and rosy, and removed the defects that had obscured her beauty. Sold by druggists. PERSONAL, A young lady of seventeen summers, highly educated, rtfined, and of prepos- gess-.ng appearanee, desires to form the acquaintance of some nice young man, whom she would advise, if troubled witli dyspepsia, to use the great blood puiifler, .'Sulphur Bitters. BO B LADIES and CHILDREN. mothers, - -------------------- —^— cures dys- mtary and diarrhoea, regulates the stomach and bowels, cures wind colic, softens thegurop,reduces inflammation and gives tone andenerey to the wholei i SI es . W inslow ’ s SooT n isa Brnaup TiiETHiKC is pleasant to A N O V E L IN S C B IE T T O N . FoTdham, the jockey, selected for the inEcription on his coffin : “ It is the pace that kills.” R. A. Huganir of Hinsdale, N. Y., said : “ I received more help from Dr. Tutt’s Liver Pills than from all othei I ever used. ” The rapid p valent with mosi nfinoin and niot Try t: CAi'd o f Tlianks. If the proprietor of Kempts Balsam should publi.sb a card of thanks, contain mg expressions of gratitude which come to him daily, from those who have been cured of severe throat and lung troubles .by the use of Kemp’s Balsam, it would fill a fair sized book. How much better to invite all to call on any druggist and get a free sample bottle that you may test for yourself its power. Large bottles 50 cents and $1. —A great many people disregard (ly.< peptic symptoms and assume that they will sooa disappear of themselves; but this is not thc fact and the ouiv sfi’’e rem edy for tliem is NICHOLS’ BAlUv AIv’D [RON. ASTHMA I is a disease that in tWs climate aTccts many persons It is charaoterlzed by the breathing, toualy pertectly natural, becomes difficult accompanied by wheezing and a distressed sense of tightness in the chest. Everybody affl'eted knows of the struggles they often have, and to them the folk-wing will be of in terest. In the winter ot 18?3 the town o£ Garland,Me., sent a worthy citizen, Mr. A. J. Farmer, to gor a sajanm a n . He entered upon hla c — , and one dav, being subject to attacks — is-tbma. was obliged to leave tbe Court House and seek aid at warren’s drug store. While there he said he had often been driven frim his ced In the colde-it nights In winter to sees re- lefat the open door or wlmow, while the sweat stood on hi at as it would on a hot dar in haying time. He called the disease Fhthyslc, and said no man could describe his sufterlngs. ne day he was persuaded to try Brown’s .sar- eapariila. Heh-adnofaiih In It, yet the fact stands out to-day, undisputed by all who know him, that he wa-, by the use of it, entirely eu ed, and lives a walking, healthy testimonial Of the healing power of Biovn’s Sareapullla over Aath na. In the town of Sangervllle resides Mr. F. B. Lewis, a leading citizen. He, too, has had Asthma. After various remedies had been tried, he was cured by Brown’s Sarsaparilla. l!)o not forget Brown ’a S ^rsaparlUi enters into and works on the h’o d. asthma is a blood disease. Poor blood driven into the lungs de stroys breathing powers; hence Asthma. BROWN’S SMSAPARILLA will cure all forms of b’ood diseases. Sold ev erywhere. Ara Warren & Co., Proprietors, Bangor. Ale. 5 Vale's Popular Professor of Afathevnatic’s concisely voices the univer sal sentiment invariably caused by tlto con tinued use o f the Y ale C ollege , April 1C 1888, G entlemen — I would not le without E ugene L. E d ward l Nothing else ean impart to the teeth such marked po ish, smoothness and absolute free dom from tarta proved condition,on, feeling,eeling, andndappearani appearanee and ■tar deposit now resulting in im- ti f a eorrospondingly decreased dentists bills. ITS ECONOMY. Holder ( imperishable( i cents. “ I’olts,” only need to be rei (boxedI 35 cents. Dealers or mailed. H orsey M eg . C o..I’tiea, N. V. Sold by T. R, Andenson and other dealers. :J5 cents. “ I’olts,” only need to be renewe<l. A TALL .SOI.ri) TOWER OE Best Tomatoes Tea Coots a Caa. A nUOKE.N' COI.UMN OE' THAT GOOD CORN^^S^’' 10c CAN DRIED APHLEii. IIUC'KLEUERRTEg, AND BLACK CAPS IN STOCK. S'CLgra.a: ZO©,'tes S c ^ otatic S.. HOAGLANIVS UP-TOWN. Jn the old way. I have now a number o f walls on of Fay’s Manilla Building Goods wbieh 1 invite the public to e.vamine. Call and s<‘c what I ha\ e in use; also the good.s. .Send 3 T^wo Cent f t iin p s for Catalogue and gam - which i am selling very cheap. LORENZO WOOD, 15 Franklyn St. Port Jervis, N. 108 sq feet Roofing $2 5 N ervous Prostration, Nervous \ N e u r a lgia, N ervous W e a k n e ss, £ \\d Liver D iseases, Rheum atisc ;>Bia, and all aflections of the K I Kheumstism, and restores ---------- KIDNEY COMPLAINTS P aink ’ s CET.EBY COMPOUKD quicMy restores the liver and kidneys to perfect health. This curative power, combiued trith its nerve tonics, makes it the b ^ t remedy for all kidney complaints. DYSPEPSIA P aink ’ s C elery C ompotod strengthens the ' Btomacb, and quiets the nerves of the diges tive organs. This is why it cures even the •worse cases cf Dyspepsia. B CONSTIPATION P aihb ’ b (' kleby OOMVotmD is not a cathar tic. It is a laxative, giving easy and natural action to the boweta. R e ^ lanty surely fol lows its i.-ie. P aine ’S C elery C ojipound is sold by T. R. Anders m, 95 Pike street. CAPITAL m BUSINESS $100,000. J a m e s P. M e a d & C o ., Mortgage, Loan and Bond Agents. 14: years’ experience in Southern and \Westerri Kansas. Over $3,000,000 invested and not a dollar lost, paid for taxes or insurance. These loans are made only after a careful personal examination of the premises in each and every case. We loan one-third the appraised value of pr'iperty offered as se curity. BEFERENCES ;—Meriden Nations? “Bank, Meriden,Oonn. ; Silas B. Terry, Banker, Waterbury, Conn.; Whitney & Wilcox, Bankers, and Walby & Clay, Bankers, Adrian, Mich. The above bonds are for sale and examination at the office of E w d . C. B b i b n b , 19 FrontSt., Port Jervis, who is appointr-d sole tgent for this section. Taxes paid for non-residents. ISaugdwlj ^CHICHESTER^S ENGLISH^ ENNYROm^ . D I A M O N D BRAND rblAMOND BRAND. taki This 13 the T op of the G enuine Pearl Top Lamp Chimney. All others, sifnilarare imitation. T his exact Label is on each Pearl Top Chimney. A dealer may say and think he has others as good, ___ BUT HE HAS NOT. Insist upon the Exact Label and Top. F or S ale SvcRy/zHERE. M ade only by OEO. A. METH&GO., Fittsburgh, Pa. r YCEUM THEATRE, JLd NEW YORK, CONVENIBNT TO GRAND CENTRAL DEPOT. Fourth Ave. cars to 28d St. and 4th Ave. DANIEL EROHMAN. - - Manager. Curtain rises a t 8.30. Saturday Matinee a t 2. The Regular Dramatic Season, T l i e W i f e , A new Play by D. Belasco and H. C. DeMlUe. Prices—All re.served—sec., 75c., $l ,ana$i.60 ^ 0 - E 3 : T a : S - W . A - l : T T E J r 5 FOR FULTON’S BOOK, ‘‘ thy Priest’s Should Wed.” Sent to any address on receipt o f prlee,$1.50. Sellers & Co., 19S Tremont Street, Bosron WALL PAPEE! Cali at NO. 7 PIKE STREET Is- pH and examine our stock,wliich is new and complete. All kinds o f P h PAPEE HANGING, KALSOMINING and i-P P A I N T I n :G promptly executed by exper ienced workmen. i E. B. STIDD. WALL PAPER! T//e Itimois Watch Company Guarantee their 15 jeweled ADJUST]^ WATCHES Stand the Railway Test. eUIlWRINGERSS -THE) MOST LABOR. 'PURGHASEOEAH Saves h a lf the labor ol oth e r wringers, and costs but little more. % EMPIREfKK NEW IWVEWTION in LACING S. A. CORSET with self-ncljustiugback enn h« rhangofl from m **‘^**‘ ly five B( Luces w ill not SHOW T im O U G H the D ltESS. Needs no tireakins: in* The healthioHty best-fit* iU8T and m ost comfort* ^ able Corset made* Che SELF ADJUSTING COESET CO., 120 FRANKLIN ST., N. Y. $25 PER WEEK INDEMNITY FOR ACCI DENT. 60 CENTS PER MONTH. $10 PER WEEK INDEMNITY FOR BOTH SICKNESS AND ACCIDENT, $l PER MONTH. Also agent for the New York Life Insurance Company and several firitt-olass dre Insurance companies. Office, St. John’s Block, Front street, Office hours - - 8 a. m, to 8 p. m. - ----- DAVID BENNET. ------ - D, Holbrook, REAL ESTATE AGENT. Port Jervis, N. V. OFFERS FOR SALE AT REASONABLE PRICES THE FOLLOWING: House and lot, Main street, 44x128, house 7 rooms. House and lot, Main street, 9 rooms. Excel lent property. House and lot. Mala street. A very choice re? idence wlta all modern Improvements. House and lot, Ball street, 50xioo, 9 rooms, good location. House and lot, Ball street, 40xioo e rooms. Good dwelling, Brooklyn, lot 50 xlOO, house 8 rooms. large double house, rents $20 month, at a bargain. House and lot. Front street, 60 feet wide, 6 rooms. Pretty place. Brick house down town,$5c0 down, balance monthly. otner houses In all parts of Port .fervls. Good farms with stock, tools and crops for HARNESS A Sot ot Carriage Harness complete for $7.50 and upwards. mall^inc o?hifid f .w e K w m S u ’it to j'ou at loss than New York prices, at the same time But if you want a Set of our “ Old Stand by,” made of tiie best oak tanned leather, and liaad-sewed by men tliat are practical me- clianics, got our own make. They arc the Xtepairing Done at Short Notice. Call and see goods and g et prices before pur- ihasing elsewhere. T. A. COLLINS, 93 F ront S treet , P ort J ervis , N.Y. PUMPKINS FOR CATTLE, A writer in the Mural Eome has the fol lo-wing to say on the above topic : Chemists place a lo-w feeding value on pumpkins, yet I have always found it ex ceedingly profitable to raise them for feed ing to sheep, cattle, horses and swine. About 00 per cent, of pumpkins is water ; and they are deficient in the albuminoids, their nutritive ratio being 1:18.4. Of turnips 93 per cent, is water, but their nutritive ratio 1:5 8. Nevertheless, I have always got good results from pumpkins. They seem to be just what are needei to feed with the other foods when the past ures are failing or during the -winter. Many suppose that the seeds should be removed before they are fed to cows, as the seeds will dry off the cows. I have never removed the seeds, except to exper iment, and have invariably found that the cows gave more, not less, milk when they had the pumpkins. I have tried removing the seeds and have not been able to see that it made any difference in the flow of milk. Waldo F. Brown relates that once a cow of his ate half a bushel of pumpkin seeds which he had taken out and left in a tub, and she gave for the next two milk ings an unusually large mess, and was not injured by the feed. It seems to me that that ought to be conclusive. I grow pumpkins among the corn ex cept for a few early ones. I wait till the corn is three or four inches high then make a hole at the hill with a sharp stick, drop in a seed and close the hole with my toe, I plant it in every alternate hill. Planted at this time the vines do not reach a size to interfere with the cultivation of the corn; and in cultivating the com I pay no attention to the vines. The cultivator may turn the vine upside down and it will wilt for a while, but will then freshen up and grow right along. Growing pumpkins among the com is usually condemned, 1 have always got a good crop of pumpkins, and have not been able to see that the yield of com was lessened. I have planted a strip in pump kins and then skipped a strip. But mine is unusually strong corn land; on other land it may be belter to put the pumpkins by themselves. A profitable crop can be grown on quite poor land by manuring in the hill. Good crops can be grown after clover hay or early potatoes. In your state, where the season is somewhat shorter than here, it would he well to omit every third h ill in each third row of the potatoes, or its equivalents when the potatoes are in drills, and in June plant the vacancies with pumpkins. By the time that pumpkins need all the ground the potatoes will be ready to dig. The best pumpkin for stock that I know o f is one that I have raised for thirty years. I got the seed from a Connecticut emigrant. The pumpkin has no neck and is yellow when ripe. The flesh is very soft. It is not good for pies. I have no seed for sa le; my readers may have the same pumpkins. l i V jhe Best and Purest f^edicine| I Hfnmorfrmiiyour ime, ii you are and u^e INCREASE OP FLORICULTURE. Forestand Garden gives a paper from Peter Henderson, in which he states that early in the present century there were about 100 professed florists in the United States, and their combined green houses covered 50,000 square feet of glass. There are now over 10,000 florists, occupying 50,000,000’ feet of glass, or about 1,000 acres of green houses. These stractures cost about thirty million dollars, and the plants in them are valued at twice that sum. Oae-third of the entire commercial glass structures are at present devoted to rose culture; many large growers have from two to three acres in houses occupied with roses alone, cesting from $50,000 to $100,000. More cut flowers are used for decoration in the United States than in any other country, and probably more are sold in New York than in London. Fash ions change. “ Thirty years ago,” says Mr. Henderson, “ thousands ot camelia flowers were retailed during the holiday season for one dollar each, while rose buds would not bring a dime. Now, many of the fancy roses sell at one dollar each, -while camelia flowers go begging at ten A Faimly Gathering-. Have you a father ? Have you a mother Have you a son or daughter, sister or i brother who has not yet taken Kemp ’ Balsam for the throat and lungs, tin guaranteed remedy for the cure of coughs, colds, asthma, croup, and all throat and lung troubles ? Is, so, why ? when a sa pie bottle is gladly given to you tree _ any druggist and tbe large size costs only 50 cents and $1. they nave given when tak- dyspepsia,” dizz ness, pain in the side, constipation dnd disordered stomach. POOR BUT HONEST. Charlie fnllivan is a poor but honest I i i ’h lad, who, while walking down Wash ington street, found a wallet containing checks and money to the amount of sev eral hundred dollars. Although almost destitute, he returned it to its owners, A. P. Oi’dway & Co., proprietors of Sul phui Bitters, who gave him a liberal re ward, and also gave him six bottles of Sulphur Bitters for his mother, who has been a terrible sufferer with rheumatism, and who returned many blessings after being cured by their use.— Weekly Word. The action of Carter’s Little Liver Pills is pleasant, mild and natural. They gently stimulate the liver, regulate the bowels do not purge. They are sure to please. Try them. and be free from p H o o d ’s S a r s a p a r i l l a s a peculiar medicine, and i^ carefully pro ared by competent pli.u iiiaeists-. The com ination medial remedial agents is exclusively jieeuliai- to Hood’s Sarsaparilla, givmg if. strength and lion and proportion of .Sai-sajiarilla, Dan- Mandnike, Yellow Iioek, and other is exeliisively ]ieeuliar to 11a. giving if, strength and curative, power superior lo other prepa rations. A trial will eonvinee you of its great medicinal value. Hood's Sarsaparilla Purifies the Blood creates aud sharpens the appetite, stimulates md gives■s strengthrength to st t every tlie mos ‘adaehi digestion, and gives organ of the body. It cures tliem ost severe cases of Scrofula, Salt PJieiim, Boils, Pimples, and all other affections caused by impure blood. Dyspepsia, BUir.nsness, Headache, Kidney and Liver Complaints, Catarrh, Rheu matism, and that extreme tired feeling. “ Hood's Sarsaparilla has helped me more for catarrh and impure blood than anything else I ever used.” A. B all , Syracuse, N. Y. C reates an A p p e tite “ I used Hood’s Sarsaparilla to cleanse my blood and tone up my system. It gave me a le up my system appetite and seemed to build me over.” HZ.a.Xali(, ale , Lima,JiUXct, Ohio. >. ITA. X X “ I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla for cancerous LCtct tmlmlike tone up the whole body and give lor, and it began to a t anything . It cured the humor, and seemed to ! up the whole body and g me new life.” J. F. N ixon , Cambridgeport, Mass, Send for book giving statements of cures. H o o d ’s S a r s a p a r i l l a too Doses One Dollar H ood ’ s S arsaparilla is sold by T. R. An derson, 95 Pike street. Rost” m M a s s . ^ r ark pu^lished'^ H U M P H R E Y S ’ \jJ O M E O P A T H lC ------ 3-9 y, /n — veterinary SPECIFICS That the diseases of domestic animals, H orses , C attle , S heep , D ogs , H ogs and P oultry , are cured by H u m p h ivys’ Veterinary Spe cifics, is as true as that people ride on railroads, send messages by telegraph, orse-wxvlth sewing machines. It is as irrational to bottle, baU, and bleed animals in order to cure them, as it Is to take pass£«e in a sloop from New York to Albany. Used In the best stables and recommended by the U. S. Army Cavalry Officers. 8^500 PAGE BOOK on treatment and care of Domestic Animals, and stable chart mounted on rollers, sent fi S a ' i a S ; S S r a t ? ; : B . B.—Strains, Lam eness, Blieum a tisni. C. C.—Distem p er, N a sal D ischarges. D . D .—B o ts or Grubs, W orms. E. E.—Coughs, H e a v e s, Piieiiinouia. E . E .—Colic or Gripes, B e llyache. G. G.—M iscarriage, H em o r rhages. H . H .—U r inary and K idney D iseases. I . I .—EruptlYe Diseases, Mange. J . K . —D iseases o f D igestion. P r ice, Single Bottle (over 50 dose-s), - .6 0 Sold by Druggists; or Sent Prepaid on R e c e ipt o f Price. Humphrexs’ Mc-i. r.o., 109 Fulton St., N. Y. s C arpet T alk What do I think is the cheapest to buy ? If you xvant a pai-lor carpet l)uy a heavy velvet. They are soft and noisele.ss to the trerd. I have tiiem, perfect beauties, xvitli or xvitiiont borders, a t $1.10 per yard. Next in order, for your library, sitting or dining room, buy a five frame body 'here is moremore wearear in themem foror the n w in th f th brussels. money in vested than any other carpet you can buy. T have them in great variety from $1.00 to $1.40 per yard. :bm'y’s ms Tapestry Brussels. I have an immense stock of these goods, many of them iiaving beautiful borders to match, and I can sell them to you from tW cents to $1.00 per yard. For your sleeping rooms and your dining ad sitting rooms if you d selsih a v e the Hartford and Lowells 3 and extra super ingrains in a great variety of patterns, together with the cheap Kiddermin ster grades from 35 cents to 75 cents per yard, icial sales of parlor suits this week, 1 suits of 7 pieces, regular price $50, re duced now to $10. Cliamber suits formerly $30, now ?25, Carpet lounges formerly $10, now $7. Augustus B.Goodafe O range S quare & P ik e S t ., P ort J er - vts ,