{ title: 'The Port Jervis union. (Port Jervis, Orange County, N.Y.) 1888-1924, May 21, 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/sn91066174/1888-05-21/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-05-21/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-05-21/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-05-21/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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t m p o a f JB S w s o i t t f w « o s , M o S B A t m s m s , M A t a , issi. ^AKIH^ POWDER Absolutely Pure. Tblfljpowder n e v e r v a ries. A m arvel o l beauty atrengtb and w holesom eness. More economi- ■sal than, t h e ordinary Kinds, a n d cannot b e sold In c o m p etition w ith t h e m u ltitude of low peat, Eihort w e ight, alum , or phosphate powders. S m only in c a m . ROYAL BAKINO POWDER Go., 106 W aU s treet, H .Y , A Noted Divine Says: fott’s Pills ARE A SPECIAL BLESSING. S o l d E v e r y w h e r e . O ffice, 4 4 M u r r a y S t., N . X . T utt ’ s P ills are sold b y T. E, Anderson, 95 PlKe street. B R A IN . n e r v e ] AND LIFE-GIVING TONIC PLEASANT AND AGREEABLE TO THE TASTE, lots on th e stom a c h an d Uver, Increases tht ippetlte, assists digestion, builds up the weak irall a n d broKen-down. U seful I n D y s p e p s ia Coss o f A p p e tite , Head<tc1ie, In s o m n i a , G en Ita l ity ,: sows Frostration and JExitaustio tul to the stomach, and can be used by thi lellcate lady, infant, the aged n r infirm. Po: people with sedentary habits and over-worKe< » e n It Is a valuable tonic. $ 1 . 0 0 per Bottle. For Sale by all Itruggists. C hebby M alt P hosphites J s sold b y T. E . A n d erson, 95 P ik e s treet. iCARJEKSL n CURE 'Sick. Headache and relieve all the troubles Ind- dent t o a bilious state o f the system, such as Dii:* ainess, Hausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in the Side, A c . While their m ost rem»r& 5bla SnccesB has been shown in curing SICK Headsche,y et Carter’s Little Liver P ills are eqnallf vsluablo in Constipation, curing and prerentlEB Shi* annoying complaint, while they also correcl all disorders of the stomacli, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only c u isf HEAD fcpticeiees to those wh* plaint; butfortu- ndhere,an<‘ ‘ se little pUl pvillnotbei without them'. But after a ll sick h ei ACHE Is-thebane of eo many lives that here is where w* make our great boast. Our pills cure it while others do n ot. Carter’s Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or burze, b u t by tbeir gentle action please all who use them, in vials at ~o cents; five for il. Bold by druggists everywhere, or sent by mail. O A K T E K M E T > ICH ^E CO ., Plow Y o r k City* C arter ’ s L ittle L iver P ills are sold b y T. H. Anderson, 95 Pike Street. S.OWFXJU & CO. Fs»3paper Adv. ^Bureau, 10 Spruce street, N. Y. THE P.COXs^'oTs. FO B . L A D I E S an d C H I I iD B E K . S D P E l t l O R IN F I T . ST Y L E A N D W E A R . 1|Itc Wttttm. MONDAY, MAY 21, 1B88. PUBLISHED HVKBY^EVEISINH tX O E P r fjUN F ebd Proprietors. OFFICE, FARNUM BCILDINO, PIKE 8TRKEX Haze sii Sent by mail for f 5 a yea : k T bi -S tatk 8 U ni OUR A N NU A L S . A reaction sets in occasionally in favor of certain classes of flowers. It is in vain for US to say we will not yield to this. Somehow we catch the spirit of it as we catch measles and whooping cough. It is in the air. Dahlias and hollyhocks came back to favor within the past few years and will hardly again loose ground. Sweet williams and pinks have great favor, but never quite hold their own, be cause they are not quite annuals nor quite perennials ; so before one knew it hie pinks would all be dead. Annuals make considerable trouble, and I do no, wonder people often say, I will not bother with them any more. Yet there are so many of them we miss when we do not have them, that for sheer lone liness we go back to raising them more freely. I don’t know as asters ever were out of favor. I guess not. If any flower without odor holds firmly on people’s af fections it is the aster. The zinnia is luite as fine in form and color but brutally tifiE. The aster is lovely in form, in col- ring unsurpassed, and it has the advan tage of great variety in hue and shape. Stocks, however, are not so generally raised, but are truly the finest annual, all in all. The newer varieties are not only early to bloom, but bloom all summer and then all winter. 'There are stocks that do finely for many successive years, such as the Bast Lothians. I find many of the single flowering planis very elegant for the conservatory and for cut flowers for winter. They are rather subject to aphis, but otherwise are easily managed and very ■ Snapdragon is not strictly an annual, but it is well to sow it every year and have new plants constantly on hand. It is grand for its profusion of bloom, unique mingling of^colois.land its odd forms. B a lsa m s I d iscard n o t f r o m a l a c k o f a p preciation of the individual flowers, but th e sm e l l i s un e n d u r a b le. Dwarf cockscombs are truly fine where you want bright spots of color, or bright continuous borders. Dwarf convolvulus is lovely in color and profusejmbloom. It makes a m at of bloom of cerulean blue and white with a golden center. Why is not the old-fashioned blue lark spur one of our best ? I keep it for old acquaintance sake; but also because of its rich, strong colors and because it will grow and bloom when sorely neglected. The newer sorts are much improved. Give them a corner. There is no mignonette at all superior to t}ie old sort—that is, for fragrance, and that is all we want of the mignonette. We must have it, and lots of it Have you a bed of forget me-not ? Then don’t forget it any longer. Give it a damp, cool spot. It will sow itself and mostly take care of itself. The white is pretty—blue is prettier. Pansies, of course, everybody must have. There are some fine sorts, but the dealers lie terribly about pansy seed. I think it is the worst lied about of all seed. Most that is sold is very poor stuff. The Tri- mardeau, if genuine, is fine. The latest strains of petunias are mag nificent, and the best old sorts are still in valuable The double hybridized of best dealers gives flowers equal to the finer carnations. Phlox Drummondii can never bs dis pensed with. Sweet-scented sorts are coming into our lists and will soon control the assortments. This flower is one of great refinement — the sweet williams among annuals. Sweet peas are also universal favorites, and I am glad to see that many new sorts are being sent out—some of them exqui site. Am 'mg the best are Crown Princess, Butterfly, Fairy Queen, Invincible Scarlet, Painted Lady, Tricolor. The Trorie fium is one of my favorites. I can never get too many of them, because they are fine every way. The foliage is very clean and dense and rich. The flow ers are of the richest hues and are glori. ously perfumed. But beet of all the odor is of a spicy sort that gives heaT.h. The strong, sweet odors come from fleshy plants and are not healthful ; but you will find the tropro-ilum or na'^turtium flowers are always grateful to the sick. The dwarf section is always pretty for beds, hut the tall growing are beat for screens. The hybrids of Lobbianum are fine for ’printer. The Pearl, a new white variety, Is said to be one of our best nov- Verbera grown as an annual is most easily managed. The plants that are kept through are generally more or less rusty and unsatisfactory. If sowed early in the beds, when they are wanted, the result will bo all that one can ask for. Of our less common annuals you will do well to try Golden Bartonia ; Mexican Ag- eratum (can be kept over if you choose) Olarkia of several aorta and very n e a t; Eachecholtzla, eapeotally Rose Cardinal ahd tiid double flowered ; Godetia, especi ally Lady Albormarle and Satin Rose, Princess of Walts and Whitiuy ; some of the finer lupines, as Meuziesii, President Cleveland and Pilf su j ; Nemophia of eev- eralhues ; Schizirithus.lluweraufsupL'rior beauty, but rarely tailed. All t’oe c dors are fine, and ruu irora rose and white through crimson to orange and purple. Viscaria, especially Oardinalis of a ma genta hue and cerulean blue. In the Eastern Slates it is best to sow most of the annuals ia the beds where they are to remain, thinning as needed— provided the beds are well prepared and clean. In the Wesiern States, where the sun bums with fewer clouds, I would rec ommend cold frames or boxes. When the plants are transplanted make the earth firm, and put a handful of fine manure about each one as a mulch. It is for the sake of their companion ableness that we love these old home pets. They are less grand and stately, but very sweet and delightful pets. Those of us who begin to get gray hairs like to have about us such flowers as remind us of old times and the old time folk. Among the newer sorts there are varie ties of amaranthus that are very charming. Tricolor Splendens is probably best. Scar let larkspur is another welcome flower ; and I hope the blue sweet pea is all it promises to be. For tall center pieces or back grounds the best annuals are striped maize and ricinus in many varieties—the two best are Africanus and Borboniensis, Most of the annuals are to be grown mod estly in quiet little nooks and corners.— B. P. Powell in N. T. Independent. To our surprise, the other day, we found one of the best butter makers in this county putting cream just skimmed into the churn. When we asked him if he did not know that the most of that cream was wasted in the buttermilk, he replied, “Yes, I’ve read that was so, but I never took much stock in it.” It is said that it took 250 pounds of lead to kill a man in the late war. It takes about 10,000 pounds\ of type to convince some men that other men’s experience is worth anything to them. This man had never set his buttermilk away for 6 hours and churned A NOVTEE IN S C R I P T I O N , Fordham, the jockey, selected for the inscription on his coffin : “ It is the pace that k ills.” E. A. Huganir of Hinsdale, N. Y., said : “ I received more help from Dr. Tutt’s Liver Pills than from all others I ever used. ” The rapid pace or baste so FE K S O N A D . sing appearance, desires acquaintance of some nice young man, Whom She would advise, if troubled with dyspepsia, to use the great blood purifier, Sulphur Bitters. A J D V IC E 'N O JYIOXSIKKS* Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth ? I f so send at once and get a bottle of M b s . W inslow ’ s SooTHiNO S veup foe O hil - oeen T bkthiko . Itsvalueis incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer im- medliatelv. Depend upon it mothers, mistake about it. It cures dys- ■ ‘ the m tary and diarrhoea, regulates itomach and bowels, cures wind colic, softens thegums,reduces in f l a i ^ a t i o n and ^ives tone and energy t( SI eb . W in s l o w ’ s S oo : iothewholei stem. iTHING B v e UP fo b to the ae o f the Card o f T h a n k s . ing 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 dys peptic symptoms and assume that they will sooa disappear of themselves; but Velveti Cream. J S S ' SiS: ni-ss,s>>ftyoutMuU-fTi‘ct and fine flinsn. Harm- rllSSllSili&sS.'a- low BUin, ail blem lslies and imin'rrectioiw. SI. “ ROUGH ON NEURALGIA. \ SL'KJ. Drug. “ ROUGH O.N RHEUMATISM,’’S1.50. Drug. “ ROUGH ON ASTHMA,” $1.00. Druggists. ROUGH o ^^GORNS softcorns 15c. R0UGHoHT00THAGHPg(5c 4 TWW, and safest _____ ______ _______ jrthena and quiets the nervous system, curing) Nervous Weakness, Hysteria, Sleep- A € 1 1 ^ ^ ^ A I l T f f k R A m E . R l c p y ^(lound RAPiO QROWme VINES FOR TEE VE R A N D A . I am often a^ked to recommend some quick-growing vine for use about veran- ---------------- jming tho» resulting from impure oi isbed blood. A LAXATIVE. promotesaregular habit.' Itstrenrth- ens the stomach, and a ids digestion. A DIURETIO. Home ivtdence Ho other preparation has won .sncce.ss at U.W ^ SaLsaparraa. In das and porches. There arc several g o o d . ones which will produce a dense shade! as it has been for years. ll.<-loading m edicine Wood, lud toning 'Stein. Tills “ good i produce after the middle of June or the first o f ! for purifying the i July, but I would not advise any one to strengthening t h e sy> depend on them year after year, because ® some of the hardy \vines are so much more p e o p i e satisfactory. Plant a bitter sweet, or an American ivy, or a honeysuckle, or a cle- mails, for future use and pleasure. While L O W e M it is growing you can depend on some of the annuals or other rapid growers for shade. One of the best is the old morning glory, with its pink and blue and white and pur ple flowers. It is difficult to imagine any thing finer than a tangle of these vines covered from daylight till 10 o’clock each day with their myriad blossoms. In rich- ________ mdies for diseases oT the kidneys. It can be relied on to give Ick r elief ar\* ----------------- quick r elie f and speedy cure. For The NERVOUS The DEBILITATED The AGED. raauMiOiIe biiiiei] full partionlars. Frit* $1.30: 8oM k WELLS, RICHARDSON BUBIINGTO: ;0., Prop’s P a in e ' s C elery C omeound is sold b y T. R. A n d erson, 95 P ik e street. CAPITAL m BtJSmESS $100,000. James P. Mead & Co., and Bond Agents. 2S:i3::Ta-2>^.A .:tT, Mortgage, Loan 14 years’ e x p e rience in S o u thern and W e s tern K a n sas. Over $8j000j000 invested and not a dollar lost, paid for taxes or insurance. These loans are made only after a careful personal examination of the premises in each and every case. W e loan one-third the appraised value of property offered as se curity. EEFERENOES :—Meriden Rational Bank, Meriden,Oonn.; Silas B. Terry, Banker, Waterbury, Conn.; Whitney & Wilcox, Bankers, and Walby & Olay, Bankers, Adrian, Mich. The above bonds are for sale and examination at the office oi E wd . C. B b ien b , 19 Front S t., Port Jervis, who is appointed sole agent for this section. Taxes paid for non-residents. ISaugdwly kCHICHESTEKS ENGLISH^ ENNYROl .DIAMOND BRAND -------------------- --- ------- TER’S ENGLISH TAKE NO OTHER. This is the T op of the G enuine P earl Top Lam p Chimney. All others, similar are imitation. T his e x ac t L ab e l is on each P earl T o p C h im n ey . A dealer may say and think he has others as good, ___ B U T H E H A S N O T . Insist upon the Exact Label and Top. Fon S ale E verywhere . M ade only by GEO. A. i^AGBETH & GO., Pittsburgh, Pa. T YOBUM THEATRE, J U N E W YORE. CONVENIENT TO GRAND CENTRAL DEPOT. Fourth Ave, cars to 23d St. and 4th Ave. B A N I K I . F R O H U A N . - - M a n a g e r . Curtain rises at 8.S0. Saturday Matinee at 2, The Regular Dramatic Season, X l:ie W i f e , A new Play by D. Belasco and H. 0. DeMllle. Prices—All reserved—Bcc., 750., f l ,and$i .60 The Illinois Watch Company Guarantee their 15 jeweled ADJUST]^ WATCHES Stand the Railway Test. FOB SALE BY ALL FIRST-CLASS JEWELERS. tBlfWMKa&S Snoiulliivliilimn $26PBB WEEK INDEMNITY FOR ACCI DENT. 60 CENTS PER MONTH. BOTH Also agent for t h e N ew York Life Insurance Oompany and several flrst-clasa nre insurance companieB. Office, Bt. J o h n ’s Block, Front street, Office hours - - 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. ------ ^DAVID BBNNET.------ * W .A .3 iT T E S I5 FOR FU L T O N ’S BOOK, “ Why Priest’s Should fed.” Sent t o any address on r e c e ip t o f price,$1.60. S e lle r s & C o., 1 9 8 T r e m o n t S t r e e t, B o s t o n . WALL PAPER! Cali at NO. 7 P I K E STREET > - P h and e x a m in e our stock,vzhlch is n e w and com p lete. A ll kinds o f t-1 t - P-4 P A P E R H A N G IN G . KALSOM INING and i-^ P A IN T IN G l-P prom p tly executed b y exper ienced w orkm en. E. B. STIDD. WALL PAPER ! WARRANTED. .gent, w.nsed eroryi rorywliere. Emuir< N E W INVENTiON in LACING W. S. A. CORSET Itli self-adjusting:^ .11 bo ch a n g e d j tight to loose-fitting la !ouds, without re« e N E V E R R E Q U I R E S N E W D A C E S or S T E E L S L a c e s w i l l n o t SH O W T H R O U G H t h e D R E S S . N e e d s no b r e a k in g in . T h e h e a l t h i e s t , b e st.fiit. u ^ ^ ' i n g an d m o s t com f o r t - ’ a b l e C o r s e t m a d e . , Cho SELF ABJUSTIMG COSSET CO., iSi 120 FRANKLIN ST., N.Y. D, Holbrook, SEAL ESTATE AGENT. Port J e m s , N. Y. OFFERS FOR SALE AT REA8( PRICES THE FOLLOWING: House and lot. Main street, 44x128, house 7 rooms. House and lot. Main street, & rooms. Excel lent property. House and lot. Main street. A very choice reEldence with all modern Improvements. Bouse and lot, Ball street, 60x100, 9 rooms, good location. House and lot, Ball street, 40x100 o rooms. Good dwelling,Brooklyn,lot 50x100,houses rooms. Large double house, ren ts $20 m onth, a t a bargam. House and lot, Front street, 60 feet wide, 6 rooms. Pretty place. Brlok house down town,$5c0 down, balance monthly. other houses In all parts of Port Jervis, Good farms with stock, tools and crops 1 A U lnfom Office oTOt Lek^ Dra^$i Port J e rvis N . Y. HAENESS C H E A P . A Set o f Carriage H a rness com p lete for $7.50 and upwards. I f y o u w a n t a Sot o f F a c tory H arness, either m achine or hand sew e d , I w ill sell it to you a t less than N o w Y o r k prices, at th e sam e tim e g ivin g yo u the benefit o f iny c-xperlence. A A good supply c o n stantly on hand. B u t if y o u w a n t a Set o f our “ Old Stand by,” m a d e o f the best oak tanned leather, and hand-sewed b y m en that are practical m e chanics, g e t our ow n m ake. They are tho cheapest. B e p a l r in g D o n e a t S h o r t N o tice. Call and see goods a nd get prices b e fore pur chasing elsew h ere. T. A. COLLINS, 33 FRONT S treet , P ort J ervis , N. Y. ness of color and delicacy of texture, they are quite equal to the finest hot-house flowers, and if we could grow them in our green houses they would he wonderfully popular. Imagine them trained along the rafters, or hangmg from the posts in that careless way characteristic of them when growing in the garden. It ia not to be wondered at that the artists, who have an eye for the beautiful, and who recognize it wherever it is found, love to paint these delicate blossoms. They are poems in color. To grow them well you must have a rich soil made deep and mellow for the roots to spread far and wide in, and you must give them strings or bushes to climb — They continue in bloom till frost comes. Another pretty vine is the scarlet flower ing bean. Its foliage may be a trifle coarse, but the brilliant color of its clus tered flowers, as seen among the green leaves, makes you forgetful of the fact. It likes a stick or bush better than a string support This summer I saw it growing on a trellis along with a white clematis, and tne effect was fine, because of the contrast between the flowers. The ornamental gourds will soon cover a large surface with their great leaves, and on this account are desirable, hat they are so coarse that I would not like to plant them about the house. They.will do better for covering a summer house where shade is considered more than beauty. But they are most satisfactory when seen from a distance, and in general effects rather than in individual ones. Where a screen is wanted very early in the season, and one is not particular as to what it is made of, these plants will satisfy better than anything else that I know of, because of their remarkably rapid growth. They develop as fast as the traditional “ Jonah’s Gourd,” of which plant they may be distant relatives. A plant known mostly by the name of “ Wild Cucumber” is much used to ___ the west, because of its rapid ind pretty foliage. I ' lamed in the catalogue 3, though it is possible that some lemhave seed of it for sale under a e that I am not familiar with.th. It has that of the inch more puts out of the name that I am not familii a leaf shaped something h :den cucumber, but very mu< iLcate in color and texture. It tendrils 'er -they come in contact*with, and i ten goes to the tops of small trees b e middle of summer. It has a cluster c feathery white flowers which are really pretty. They are succeeded by fruit about two inches long by an inch across, thickly covered with spines—miniature prickly cucumbers in appearance. They fall off when they ripen and deposit their seed in the ground. Next spring young plants come up in great quantities about the old one, and once planted you will have no trouble about keeping them, for they will take care of themselves. Last season a new variety of hop from Japan was introduced into this country, and I have seen it growing in several gar dens the present summer. It seems to be a grower as the gourd, and is much prettier, but I do not think it would prove as de sirable for covering large suifaces, judg ing from what I have seen of it this sea son. But this has been such a dry season that no plant has had a chance to show what it is capable of doing, so it would be unfair, perhaps, to judge it by what it has done in our dry, parched soil. It is catalogued at Humulus Jsponicus.—Oi Country Rome. A F a m ily G a thering. Have you a father ? Hav< Have you a ’e you a mother? ^hter, sister or a ; taken Kemp’s isam for the throat and lungs, the f\ for the cure of coui lave you a £ irother who 1 or daugl not yet throat a guaranteed remedy for the cure of coughs, colds, asthma, croup, and all throat and lung troubles ? Is, so, why ? wl pie bottle is gladly given to yc any druggist and tbe large size 50 cents and $1. ou tree costs only No one knows better than those who have used Carter’s Little Liver Fills what relief they have given when taken for dyspepsia,* dizziness, pain in the side, constipation dnd disordered stomach. P O O R B U T H O N E S T . Charlie Fullivan is a poor but hon< Iiiih lad, who, while \walking down Was 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. Ordway & Co.,. proprietorsoprietors of Sul- pr o Bitters, who gave him a lib and also gave him six bottles for biB mother, who h Sulphur Bitters been a terrible sufferer iumatism, and who returned many blessings after being cured by their use.— Weehly Word Q'he action of Carter’s Little Liver Pills is pleasant, mild and natural. They gently imulato the liver, regulate the bowels not purge. They are sure to please, y them. Backache is almost immediately relieved by wearing one of Carter’s Smart and Belladonna\\ Backache plasters. Try one and be free from pain. Price S5 cents, [oofl. mil tonin g and “ good lowpr of streiigfh abroad.” volume to print all I.ow fll people have said iu favn r of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Mr. Albert E stes, living at East Pine Street, Lowell, for 15 years byJ.^ Cojnpj iployed as boss carpenter by J . W . Bennett, Bsident of the Erie Telephone Cotnpauy, liis leg. carpenter by J. president of th e Erie Telepboi had a large running sore come o which troubled him a take Hood’s Sarsaf less in size, and Jos. Dunphy, 214 Cen tral Street, Lowell, had sw ellings and lumps on M s face and neck, w h ich Hood’s Sarsapa- 3 H T S H P H i ' i l l H rllla com p letely cured. Mrs. C. W . M arriott, w ife of the First A s- P r a i s e H o o d ’s sistant Fire Engineer of Lowell, says that disorder and sick headache, w hich nothing years she w a s troubled with stomach relieved. The attacks came on every ; ight, w h e n she w a s obliged to t a k e her bed, ad w a s unable to endure any noise. She took H ood’s Sarsaparilla, and after a tim e the attacks ceased entirely. more m ight be given had M any more m ight n t h e reeommendat lople of Lowell, who know us, w e ask y ou to tr; Hood’s Sarsaparilla Soldby all druggists, gl; slxfor,$5. Preparedoaly by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, LoweU, Mass, 100 D o s e s O n e D o llar H ood ’ s S arsapabid lerson, 95 P ike street. A is sold by T. R. A n - ^The Best and Purest fi^edicine^ E'V E H M A ----- •ill drive the Hui A D E . Ban and smooth. Those! P im p le s an d B lo tch e s ! ‘ which mar your beai [I They never fail to cure. S are sold by.T. R. Ander- H U M P H K E Y S * UOMEOPATHIC ---- w e.5 ---- veterinary SPECSFIOS That the diseases o f domestic animals, H oksss , C attle , S heep , Doss, H ogs and P ocltey , aro cored by H u m p lir o y s ’ V e t e r in a r y S p e c if i c s , Is as true as that people ride on railroads, send messages by telegraph, or sew w ith seivlng machines. It is as irrational to bottle, ball, and bleed aniTnalg In order to cure them, as it Is to take passage in a sloop from New York to Albany. Used In the best stables and recommended by the U . S . A r m y C a v a lr y O fficers. PAGE BOOK on treatment and care of m estic Anim a ls, and stable chart m ounted on rollers, sent free. 5 F e v e r s . C ongestions, Inflam m ation, t S p i n a l M e n in g itis, M i l k F e v e r . B . B . —S t r a i n s , L a m e n e s s , R h e u r a a tia n i. C . C .—D i s t e m p e r , N a s a l D i s c h a r g e s . D . D .—B o t s o r G r u b s , W o r m s . E . E .—C o u g h s , H f e a v e s , P n e u m o n i a . E . E . —C o lic o r G r ip e s , B e l l y a c h e . G . G .—M i s c a r r i a g e , H e m o r r h a g e s . H . H . —U r i n a r y a n d K i d n e y D i s e a s e s . I . I , —^Eruptive D i s e a s e s , M a n g e . J . K , —D i s e a s e s o f D i g e s t i o n . P rice, Single Bottle (over 50 doses), - .6 0 S o l d b y D r u g g ists; or S e n t P r e p a i d ou R e c e i p t o f P r i c e . Humphreys’ Mc.-i. f!o., i09 Fulton St., N, Y. H um phrey ’ s H omeop . athic S peciph !Old b y T . A . Anderson, 95 P ike street. ? C arpet T alk W h a t do I thin k is the cheapest to buy ? I f y o u w a n t a parlor carpet buy a heavy velvet. T h ey a r e s o f t and noiseless 'o the tretd. I have them , perfect beauties, ts i ^ o r w ithou t borders, a t $1.10 p er yard. N e x t in order, f o r your library, sitting or dining room, buy a five fram e body brussels. There is m o re w ear in them f o r tbe m o n e y In vested than any other carpet y o u can bu y . I have them in great variety f r o m Sl.OO to $1.40 per yard. N o w com es the R o x b u ry’s and A lex. Sm ith & Sons Tapestry Brussels. I b a r e an im m ense stock o f these goods, m a n y o f them having beautiful borders to m a tch, and I can sell them to y o u from CO c e n ts to $1.00 per yard. For y o u r sleeping room s and your dining and s it t ing r oom s i f y o u do not w a n t a brus sels I h a v e the H a r tford and Low elis 3 ply.s and e x tra super ingrains in a great variety o f ;erns, together w ith th e cheap Kidderm ln- grades from 25 c ents to 75 c ents per yard. C 7 p ieces, regula d u c e d n o w t o $40. Chamber suits form e r ly $30, now $25. Carpet lounges form erly $10, now $7. Augustus B,Gooda?e OBAjfOE S q u a r e & P i k e S t ., P o r t J e r v i s . r price $50, r e suits f(