{ title: 'The Port Jervis union. (Port Jervis, Orange County, N.Y.) 1888-1924, June 29, 1888, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn91066174/1888-06-29/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-06-29/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-06-29/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-06-29/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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fEK ^'oBf JgRtlg PA itt TOioN, mpATf f0 f g M,mg,\ THEY m IT. What? Cured among others the following. They write: 849 Central Ave., Cincinnati, O., ? January 4th, 18SS. { Athlophoros Pills have cured me of liver complaint and dyspepsia. I gave ten of the Pills to a friend who is troubled with indigestion and he has iniproved won derfully. F- H. K owekamp . 16 Eosette St., New Haven. Ct„ \ February loth, 1888. j Athlophoros PiUs worked wonders in my case of dyspepsia. E mma lu. C labk . Ath-lo-pho-ros Pills are small and pleasant to take, yet wonderfully effective. Invaluable for kidney and liver complaints, dy.spepsia, in digestion, constipation, headache, etc. TheyTl take away that tired feeling giving new life and strength, USpSend 6 cents for the hcantiful colored pic ture, “ Moorish Mai((en.” THE ATHLOPHOROS CO. 112 Wall St N. Y. ATHLOPHOiros is sold by T. li. Anderson,! Pike street. BUSINESS ..CARDS. w e w i l l pk o v e that we study our customers interests. We are selling- Teas 15 Cents a-ud Upwards, Coffees 3 0 Cents and Upwards, Honesdale Made Ladies’ and Mens’ Foot Wear at Rock Bottom Prices. B alch & CbAWSON, Matamoras, Pa. ■ ADIES’ BAZAAR. T F YOU WAHT A NICE, LARGE J l . roe shad at rock bottom prices, call at L. L. BARKMAN’S CENTRAL MARKET. BUS fresh vegetables lust begin to arrive. Get ’em. Imyly A B. MOORE & SON’S J \ . » TRI-STA'TES SU TTTTHBRB SHALL I GET INSURED ? BEFORE f V deciding this question call and look at the BecuTlttes offered by the following line of Com panies: The Liverpool, Londons Globe,The imperial, the Northern, the London Assurance, the orient of Hartford, and the Washlngtot Fire & Marine of Boston, also m e and Accident Insurance and Real Estate bought, sold or rented. J. A. FISHER. Rooms 4 and 5 weatroolr Building, Fort Jer- ^ ^ L L A B O A R D ! PICNIC PLATES, CANNED MEATS ALL KINDS, QUAKER PTCKLES, AT HOAGLAND’S, - THE GROCER. J^ENTISTRY. I 3 r. T l i a d . l i ^ e a d , St. John’s Building, up-town, practices DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES, omce hours from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. JA M E S J . M ILLS. D E N T I S T . .STUS SLAbSON’S LIVERY, SALE AND EXCHANGE ----- st a b l e - n o . 222 MAIN STKBET, Adjoining the Park HoteL Horses and cam* ages let at reasonable prices \\WONG WAHLLE, No. 83 Pike St. Q P. HOWELL. ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR AT LAW Famum Building, Port Jervis. NOTARY PUBLIC AND NEW JER SEY COMMISSIONER. \ ^ I L T O N BENNETT, ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL 3R AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC, at* John’s Block' Front St., Port Jervis, N. Y y EOKLE’S SHAVING AND ] J -J * Cutting Establishment In the FARNDM BLOCK- ------- FINE BATH ROOMS ------- With hot and cold water supplied re adyfor use at all hours from the opening until the closing of the shops. L. EOKLE, Prop. jg U Y YOUR FISHING TACKLE St. JOHN’S DRUG STORE [ Up-Town ] 'UMBER! LUMBER! LATH and TO ORDEl CASINGS CUT DOORS, FLOORING, ETC., ETC., Ships by carload or in large or small quanti ties by freight. A LFRED GILMA N, O ilman ' s D epot , N. Y. CARD FROM HON. T. J. LYON. that I will be able to resume the du- others who may call upon me, upon every lecting there will be no charge for professional iiOS. J. LYON. T IVERY, SALE AND EXCHANGE J U STABLE. PiKB S tbhbt , O pposite O eangb S quabb . H . G . P O R T E E j P r o p r i e t o r , [ J. A Buchanan’S old stable.] Conveyances o every description furnished at short notice. Prices reason^ie. Telephone call NO. 21. THE HIVING OF SWARMS. la preparation for the hiving of swarms when the time for their issuing comes, while making an examination of the sev eral colonies in my apiary in the spring, I seek out each queen and clip one of her wings if one he not already clipped, find it quite an advantage to do this before young bees begin to hatch largely because then the hoes are comparatively few and the queen is generally easily discovered. Then in anticipation of the advent of the swarming season other preparations must be diligently attended to. Hives must be all ready for immediaie uso and in a cool shady place as convenient as possible to the apiary. If the apiary he large, three or four baskets will be neces sary and a good supply of cages for the queens as they issue with swarms is indis pensable. The cages I ^ s e differ from anything I have seen described and may be made thus : Take a piece of soft wood |x l inch 4A inches long and with a J or i inch bit bore a hole through it from side to side so near one end as to leave at that end i inch of solid wood and cut the stick carefully and squarely in two through the center of the hole. Then enlarge the half circle in the larger piece by boring through it (the stick) c 3 or two holes with a smaller bit and smooth out with a knife. Also form a piece of wire cloth, four inches long and about three and a half nches wide, around a piece of wood gxl inch, beat with a mallet and weave smoothly together where the edges meet, then withdraw the wood, and having pushed into one end of the wire cloth tube the shorter piece prepared as above, tack it firmly in place. Now push the longer piece into the other end of the tube for a stopper, and you have a cage always ready, convenient, safe and durable. With these preparations all made I will suppose I am set to hive the swarms in a large apiary on a warm day in the height of a swarming season. Everything likely to be needed, including heavy wire hooka for suspending the baskets, a pair of large white cotton sheets and a lighted smoker, are at hand in the shade of a centrally lo cated tree. It is nine o’clock, and a hive near by spurting forth excited bees indi cates that work has begun. With a cage in my hand I step to the side of the hive and watch for the ap pearance of the queen in front. In one or two minutes she is seen climbing the blades of grass and trying to take wing. The open end of the cage, the stopper being withdrawn, is held immediately over her, when she at once enters, the cage is closed, placed in a basket and the basket hung by its hook in. a tree out o f the sun at a place where the swarm is likely to find the queen. I then take a new hive to the one sending out the swarm, remov ing the latter from its place and turning it around, put the new hive where the other stood and change the section cases from the old hive where the other stood and change the section cases from the old hive to the new. In the meantime the swarm has found the queen and is soon clustered in the basket, when I pour the bees out upon the ground in front of the hive prepared for them and when they fairly take up their march for their new home I release the queen and see that she runs into the hive, because many of the bees will refuse to go in until she does. This is hardly done before another swarm issues. I cage the queen and arrange the hives as before, but the swarm, instead of fiuding the queen in the basket, begins to cluster at another place so I at once re move the basket and hang it near that •oint and the swarm at once takes posses sion of it. Before this one is fully hived, another swarm is in the air, and by the time I have caged its queen it discovers her absence and is already returning as I place tbeir new hive in position. I hasten the return by placing the queen at the en trance, and as soon as the bees are rapidly alighting I release and run her in. It is now ten o’clock and swarming has fairly begun. Two swarms now come out almost at the same moment and unite in the air. I cage their queens but notice that the svyarms are attracted by the com motion at the hive into which the last swarm was put and already beginning to alight-there. I push the queens into my pocket, snatch a sheet and the smoker, and spreading the former over the hive threatened with invasion, with a few puffs of smoke from the latter I drive away the fiying swarms, when they begin to cluster on a neighboring branch of an apple tree. I at once put each queen in a basket by herself and hang the baskets together where the cluster in forming. Soon one basket has its share of the bees and I steal it away and hang it out of sight in thick foliage or set it in the bee cellar. Now other swarms come out—fi ,, in pretty quick succession—so I take 'the other basket with the swarm and hang it in plain sight on a branch favorable for holding a large cluster of bees and con venient for shaking them off. Here, at tracted by the swarm in the basket, all swarms will for the present congregate. I now proceed first to cage all the queens out, and put them in baskets hung near the cluster or out of the way in the shade till wanted. Then as 1 have time I ar range the hives and hive swarms taken from the general cluster, giving each a queen till all the bees are distributed. It would make a long story to recount all the expedients at times resorted to to induce the bees to assist in making theii hiving easy, but the foregoing indicates the general method pursued. Sometimes a swarm will cluster out of reach from the ground. In such cases, if practicable, a basket with the queen is hung under the cluster near the ground and with a little shaking tho cluster drops down, the queen is soon discovered and the swarm gathers in the basket, or, if more convenient, a pole is used with a hock for the basket, pay twenty inches from the upper end. The basket is raised with the pole and held under the cluster while the latter is j irrcd off with the upper end of the pole. With unelipped queens on a good day for swarms I should be almost in despair. I never had but one (lueen superseded that I thought ivas super.seded on account of clipping, ai d she had all four wings cut short. My (lueens arc not superseded soon enough to please me. I find too many that are approaching three years in age. I am looking for a better way of manag ing swarming. Will the queen trap help? Who can give us new light ?—R. L. Tay lor in Bcc Kapers' Remew. WHAT DO YOU CALL IT ? “ Thomas Nast, the cartoonist, has had a mountain out west named after him. ” Is it called Nast’s mountain, or—? Eh ? Eh? They call things plainly in N. C. Abeructlij* A Williams, Newton, N. C., saj': “ Wei never sold a medicine of any kind that gives such general satisfaction as Dr. Tutt’s Liver Pills.” The call for aud consumption of these pills is one of the marvels of the century, Canker in the mouth can be cured ^ l y by expelling the poisonous humor JMm the system. To do this effectually re quires the persistent use of Ayer’s Sarsa parilla, together with a good, generous diet. One dollar a bottle. Six bottles for $.5. Begin at once. CURE YOURSELF. colored plates, wiill of three 2-cent staitamps Address A. P. be sent you on receipt s to pay postage. Ordway & Co., Boston AOVICE 'XO j^OXHElRS. Al'e you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teeth ? If s send at once and get a bottle of M bi W inslow ’ s S oothing S yrup for O hh d rbn T eething . Itsvaiueis incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer im mediately. Depend upon it mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures dys- the entary and diarrhoea, regulatei stom ach and bowels, cures w ind colic, softens thegums,reducesinflammationand gives tone and energy to the w h o let stem. S irs . W inslow ’ s S oothing S ybi d best female nurses and phy sicians i n t h e U n ited s tates, and is for sale by all druggists throughout theworld. Price 35 c ts. a b o ttle 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. ECZEMA, ITCHY,* SCALY, SKIN TOR TURES. le application of “S waynis ’ s O iktmbnt *** J Inrernal medicine, will cure any case of ?worm, Piles, Itch, ^ y A C O B S Q H TFME Iv M^fC fiSEAflEMEIlt IF O J E t JE*A.X 1 S . ------- CUKES -------- R lienm a tism , N e u ralgia, Sciatica, lUmUago, Bacbaclie, TootRache, Sore ~ \• Bruises, SoldbyDrnggistsandDealarsEre^wh^. iB-i O il .sold by T. R. Anderson, 95 DR.KILMER’S q c I ^ w e e d . 6 | l i s r »m (- lead sttfJKrJKE’ £ Vnii feel as tliougli water was gatherinp T IUU around the lieart, or havelieart dropsy, f You sss'Si uppojdex.v, .■'bock or sudden deatli, LADIES S S K S llT S a Uaveu (Uoss will <lo it. It contains oil and may lie used every ilay, if de.sired, without the Sir iiiii;:-' .sale everywhere. BiTa?TON Si O ttley , M’fr.s, 71 Barclay St., N.Y For The NERVOUS The DEBILITATED The AGED. A x f m e roNiG. Celery alia Coca, tha Y)rominent 1Q» gredients, are the host and safest Nerve Tonics. It strengthens and quiets the nervous system, curing Nervous Weakness, Hysteria, Sleep* fA N ^ ^ E R A T I V E . It drives out the poisonous humors ol the blood purifying and enriching it, and 60 overcoming those diseases r^uUmg from impure or impover- A LAXATIVE. ^^^ndreds of ^ tim o n ials haw bean received Price $1.00. Sold by Dragslsts. WELLS, RICHARDSON A•^'.0., Prop’s BURlINQTON.Vtf. P aine ’ s C elery C ompound is sold by T. R. Anderson, 95 Pike street. Many a man wouldn’t buy ready made clothes because he thinks they’re worth less. Refusing to in vestigate for himself, he continues to pay a tailor or a shoe maker two prices, and does’nt learn that there has been of late years a vast improve ment in the process es of making both these lines. We do a first-class shoe business, and would like to show up the merits of our Shoes along with our Clothing, whenever you feel like looking into the subject. ROGERS, FEET & CO., CLOTHES, HATS AND SHOES, Broadway and Prince St. Broadway and 32.d St. NEW YORK. FASHION CATALOGUE MAILED FREE ON APPLICATION, “ d e t e r m i n a t i o n ,” SOMETIMES CALLED OBSTINACY. CAPITAL IN BUSINESS $100,000. James P. Mead & Co., Mortgage, Loan and Bond Agents. 14 years’ experience in Southern and W estern 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. W e loan one-third the appraised value of property offered as se curity. R E F E R E N C E S :— ^Meriden National Bank, M eriden,C o n n .; Silas B. Terry, Banker, W aterbnry, C o n n .; W h itney W ilcox, Bankers, and W a lby & Clay, Bankers, Adrian, M ich. The above bonds are for sale and examination at the office oi E w d . C. B hirnb , 19 Front S t ., P o r t Jervis, who is appointed sole agent for this section. Taxes paid for non-residents. ISaugdw ly Summer Homes & Summer Music Refined temporary in^Pleasant ;^laces music books. Two books of recent publication CLASSI- C.AL PIA N IS T and PIA N O CLASSICS each $1, contain together a hundred piano pieces of exceptional beauty. ^ GOOD OLD SONGS W E USED TO SING, $1.25, contains US songs that are world favorites. VOCAL BANJOIST, $1, good assortment of songs with banjo accompaniment. rOR M IXED VOICES, looks for a social sing. COLLEGE SONGS and W AR SONGS, ich50 cents, and JU B ILEE AND PLAN TATION SONGS, 30 cents, are favorites ev erywhere. Any book mailed for retail price. Oliver Ditson & Co., Boston, 0. H. )[T 1 ON 4! C0..867 Broadway. N. Y. SICK HEADACHE J CONSTIPATION ( effectually C ured bv T a r rant’s Seltzer Aperient. SoldbyTarrant&Co.,N. Y., and Druggists everywhere. STORM-KING 399 PANTS 1 Cut and Mai^ to Order, ispring Styles! ' NOW READY. All Goods ThorongWy Shrunk. Send six cents for samples and rules for measurement, or give ns W a ist, H ip and Inseam Measure stating color you prefer, and we will try and please you. Satisfaction and F it G u a ranteed or money refunded on return of goods. Send iiiouey by I Add 3 5 Cents fol R e g istered L e tter. I Express Charge. Reference: Ex.-Mayoi* JNO. J . S. McCROSKERY Cashier N a t. B a n k o f Newburgh. STORM KINGTANTSC0.»“«'- *18 W A T E R ST., NEW B U R GH, N. ¥ il^WRINGERJf ,..^EMPIREraote XiTANAirOGY. It has long been impressed upon my mind that a striking analogy exists be tween the fundamental principles of breed ing fine animals and producing a superior quality of grain. Although much depends either case upon the materijl from which we are obliged to start and the con ditions through which we are obliged to work, still there is no patent on the pro duction of our best animals or our best specimets of grain. Like the road to greatness in this the most liberal republic on earth, the way is oren to all. The fundamental principles which lead to suc cess in improving animals or grain are first, a desire to improve, and second, a determination to accomplish the result, no matter how slowly it may come about, nor how many obstacles present them selves to he overcome. If we do not pos sess the means to buy even a pair of pure bred animals with which to start, we can use the best males within our reach, and by care and attention bring the progeny to a high standard for grades. Unless we can succeed in improving grades we have no assurance that we shall be successful in dealing with pure bred animals. Now in grain, starting with even an in ferior quality of seed, we can make rapid improvement by putting it in rich soil and giving thorough tillage until a crop is secured, from which we select the best, and again placing this under favor able circumstances of soil and cultivation, drafting the weaker plants and thus giving the better ones more room, and so continu ing. In time we shall have a gram so su perior to the ordinary produce of like orig inal stock that it will seem to be a dis tinct variety. I have never believed in the inevitable “ running out” of any kind of grain or vegetable, nor do I believe that a flock of sheep will run out ex cept in a literal sense, to pasture. ’Tis true^that a flock of sheep, if disease comes among them or dogs tear them, will de teriorate in vitality to such an extent that there is no constitution left to build on. Or a crop of potatoes, if beetles are al lowed to ravage them, may be almost de stroyed. But such mishaps can usually be prevented. We have learned to control the beetle, we can exclude the dogs ; and diseases of plants and animals can be kept in check by means which science points I remember that wishing many years ago, to start in Clawson wheat, no seed could be readily procured except that con taining a large per cent of cheat, mort commonly called chess. Not having any of this troublesome.weed or grain on the farm, I was much annoyed to be obliged to SOW a crop of it. However, I screened the seed, reducing it to a much less quan tity than I wished to sow per acre, then sowed it. The screening did not remove all the chess, but it took out the smaller kernels of wheat. We made war on the chess as soon as we could distinguish it, leaving still greater space to the wheat, and obtained a grain perceptibly better than that sowed. I continued selecting the larg est kernels and sowing a small quantity per acre on rich deeply-plowed land, well un derdrained, phosphate being applied when considered necessary, until a strain wases* tablished whose yield was much higher than the average. Again a flock of sheep drawn as culls from a neighbor’s, were soon raised, by good care and feed and the use of full blood sires, to a standard of profit ex ceeding that of any other in the township. I mention these instances to show that the methods of improvement are Some what similar and to dispossess the young breeder or farmer of the feeling that the road to success is open only to the few aud those few have already taken possess ion of the main track and are traveling on scheduled time with a set of signals known but to themselves, Eesults are within the reach of all. The wealthy may buy them ; the thinker and worker only can hold them. Usually there is no need to start with cull animals nor -with wheat mixed with chess. It is well to re member, however, that unless you can turn the penny into twopence there is little hope for you to try the dollar ; and it is far safer for you to risk the penny until you have learned to handle it suc cessfully. Then push on to larger things. In my next paper I propose to give, from practical experience, some methods by which common flocks of sheep may he bred up to a higher standard, and to pur sue still further the analogy existing be tween the improvement of animals and the improvement of grain.-^D. P. Dewey, Genesee Co., Mich., in Farm Life. Tobacco is a rich and quick-acting fer tilizer. One of its advantages is that it is epulsive to most insects, and it has a flavor and odor that even the malodorous squash bug cannot stomach. It is also said to be a good mulch to protect currant bushes from the worm which destroys their leaves. JUST MARRIED. How loving they are; this is always a sure sign. After the first year sometimes it don’t hold good. When Charles comes home to you grouly and cross, snapping and snarling, unable to relish the nict A Few Pointers. lemp’s Balsam for t’ne throat and lungs, 'hich is guaranteed to relieve and cure all cases. Prices 20 cents and $1. Trial size free. For sale by all druggists. “Try Ayer’s For Rhenmati.sm, Neuralgia, and Gout. Stephen j:.ansing, of Yonkers, N. Y., less, Ayer’s Pills hi relieved me from that trouble ahd also says: “ Recommended as a cure j chtonic Costiveness, Ayer’s Pills have from Gout. If every victim of this dis ease would heed only three words of mine, I could banish Gout from the land. These words- would he—‘Try Ayer’s Pills.’ ” “ By the use of Ayer’s Pills alone, I cured myself permanently of rheuma tism whic.h had troubled me several months. These Pills are at once harmless and effectual, and, 1 believe, would prove a specific in all cases of incipient R h e u m a t is m . No \medicine could have serv« better stead.” —G. 0. Rock, Avoyelles Parish, La. C. F. Hopkins, Nevada City, writes: “ I have used Ayer’s Pills for sixteen years, and I think they are the best Pills in the world. We keep a box of them ‘■X'\ house all the time. Thej ken so ill with rheumatism that I was able to do any work. I took f ved me in Corner, unable to do any wo boxes of Ayer’s Pills and was entirel cured. Since that time I am neve without a box of these pills.” —Pete Christensen, Sherwood, Wis. Ayer^s Cathartic Pills, v r b f a r e d by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Healers In Medicine. iiLLA is sold by T. R. An- This is the T o p o f the G e n u i n e Pearl Top Lam p C h i m n e y . All others, similar are imitation. exact Label is on each Pearl Top Chimney. A dealer may say and think he has others as good, ___ BUT HE HAS NOT. In s ist u p o n the E x a c t L a b e l a n d T o p . F or S ale E verywhers . M ade only by 3 E.A. 0 MACBETH&CO.,Pif!sbu*Pa. THE OHiAT | German R8medy.| ( truths forthe sigk . | 7ieathIy|'''$T,000 be'paidl I 5 Bilious Spellsdeueridifor acase where SUL-|I| | .)nSULPlIUKBlTTEKS|PHUR BiTTEKS Will I I _ |ifc will cure vou. fiiot assist or cure. Itiil B ulphuh B iti Id you up and )u strong and !KS are sold hy.T. R. Ander- ^ M P H K E T S * UOMEOPATHIC ---- y 0.-5— veterinary SPECIFICS That the diseases of domestic animals, H okses , C attle , S heep , Does, Hoes and P oultbt , are cured by Humpbx*.jys’ V e tevinary Spe cifics, is as true as that people ride on railroads, send messages by telegraph, or sew -\vith sewing machines. It Is as irrational to bottle, baU, aud bleed animals in order to cure them, as it is to take passage in a sloop from New York to Albany. Used in the best stables aud recommended by the U. S. Army Cavalry Officers. 1®”500 PAGE BOOK on treatment and care oi Domestic Animals, and stable chart mounted on rollers, sent free. * » OonsGstioxiSj A. A. I S p inal M eningitis, M ilk Fever. B. B .—Strains, Lam eness, R b eum 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 , Pneum o n ia. F . F .—Colic or Gripes, B e llyache. G. G.—M iscarriage, H em o rrhages. H . H .-U r in a r y and K idney D iseases. I . I .—Eruptive D iseases, Mange. J . K .—D iseases o f D igestion. Price, Single Bottle (over 50 doses), - .6 0 Sold by D ruggists; or ^ Sent Prepaid on R e ceipt o f P r ice. Humphreys’ Me:!. r,o., 109 Falion St., N. Y. H umphkby ’ s H omeopathic S pec ific s are sold by T. A. Anderson, 95 Pike street. dSR, CATHETSES AND SOUNDS, and CAN- SOT BE CUKEU WHILE THEY EXIST. 3UR REMEDIES CURE THEM CHRONIC DISEASES AND VARICOCELE, Without de- tentlon rrotn business, and the Asahei Mineral -------- - ns the I ------------- -■ V ' -