{ title: 'The Port Jervis union. (Port Jervis, Orange County, N.Y.) 1888-1924, December 15, 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/sn91066174/1888-12-15/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-12-15/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-12-15/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066174/1888-12-15/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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111 lu ; D l / l M j W Q f g S i |[ = Superior * Strength, ^ 1 Fastness, ' Beauty, r I* J Warranted to color laore goods than any otlu dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant an t duraWe colors. Ask for the Diamond, no other. 36 colors ; 10 cents each. ^ W E L L S , R IC H A R D S O N & CO ., B u r l i n g t o n , V\ I ’ossesses many Important Advantages over all other prepared Foods. B A S / £ S C R Y F O R IT . mAUDS R E L I S H IT. flakes Plum p , Laughing, Healthy B a b ies. R e g u lates th e Stom a c h and Bowels. Sold by Druggists. a.jc., 5 0c., ®1.00. W E L L S , RICliARDSllN & CO., burlihgtoh ,VT. Baby Portraits. A Portfolio of beautiful baby portraits, printed n fine plate paper by patent photo process, sent ree to Mother of any Baby Iwm within a year, .very Mother wants these pictures; send at once, live Baby’s name and age. YELLS, RICHARDSOM & CO ,, P ro p s,, B u rlington, V t, For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, US! \ DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronze, Cjpper. Only lo Cents A MAMMOTH FARM IN SUSSEX CO.. N. J.—AN INTSRBSTINO OKTAIUBD DB- SCRIPTION OF THIS EXTENSIVE EN- TBRPRISB. {Prom the P, J. HeroUd^ There are few people especially farm ers, in Sussex county, who have any idea of the extent Of the farming operations, as daily carried on at the farm of Mr. Sutherford Stuyvesant, at Tranquil ty, a quiet little country hamlet, located nine miles from Newton, and s'x miles from Hackettstown. While Mr. Stuyyesant is the owner of the expanse of quite three thousand acres, the farm and its many ad juncts are undtr the experienced eye of Mr. John Telfer, who fills the important position of Superintendent, with a pro ficiency acquired by many years of ex perience, both in England and America. By virtue of a knowledge thus practically acquired, he is perfectly at borne with bis manifold duties, and whether sitting the attractive specimen of horse flesh, known as the “ bosses” own property, or striding over the premises giving personal inspec tion to the various branches of work con stantly in progress, he is the same self- possessed gentleman. By his kindly de portment he has made many friends among the original families of that peaceful com munity, and although having resided there but three years, is as well known as any man in that locality. It is natural for him to he a gentleman, hence his popu- The property occupied by the Stuyves- ant mansion has been in the Rutherford family for more than a century. It is lo cated on the western slope of the Alla- muchy mountain, and from the mansion an elegant view is enjoyed of the Blue mountain lang^ and the extensive scope of tillable land intervening. The large additions to the estate are of more recent date. Within the past few years the tracts, known as the Drake, Shorter and Barlow farms have been added, also a number of smaller sections of land. Almost every variety of farming is carried on. The crops this year were very fine. Clover, upon the lower lands proved excellent, while the hay crop amounted to many hundred loads. A crop of 400 bus hels of oats was gathered; while the yield of com averaged over 100 bushels to the acre. Twenty-five acres were devoted to the raising of beets and sweet turnips. The yield of these roots was simple enor mous, exceeding twenty tons to the acre, the whole crop aggregating the startling total of 20,000 bushels These have been deposited in the earth, and are removed to the large barn only when required for im- m^liate use. Twenty-five acres were also devoted to the growing of fodder, or ensi lage corn, which Mr. Telfer looks upon, when properly cured, as the finest fodder known. This is deposited in four silos, A majority of these crops were grown upon lands that four years since were un productive wastes. The system of drain age, by which so many farms in that vast acreage know as the “ Drowned Lands,” were reclaimed, made it possible to suc cessfully drain the lower lands in this vicinity and now they yield a handsome in crease to their proprietors, and add ms- tererially to the genersdly attractive ap pearance of this section. At the time it was looked upon as an expensive luxury, as it was, but the good results of the drain- age have more than recompensed the in vestment. Speaking of the crops and their gather ing, Mr. Telfer said during “haying time” last summer, it became necessary to store a certain amount of hay in a given time. To do this, the whole work ing force was brought into requisition, and from one until six o’clock in the afternoon, sixty large loads of hay were loaded, drawn to the bam, and unloaded. It was the biggest afternoon’s work ever accomplished on the farm, and for many days afterward was the talk of the neigh borhood. In reply to our question as to whose manufacture of hay fork was used, he said that of Mr. John Farrell, which was’ by odds the best hay fork on the market to-day. The reader will naturally ask “ what is done with all the grain grown on this farm?” To which we can truthfully give answer. “It is all, and a great deal mor^ eaten upon the place.” To carry on these extensive operations, and the system of permanent improvements con stantly in progress, thirty men and their families are given steady employment, seventy-five to a hundred horses are to he fed, and as many cows sustained, to say nothing of a flock of sheep of several hundred, three teams of oxen, forty cows and steers in course of fattening, a hun dred dogs in growing and training for the dog exhibitions of London, New York and Philadelphia, while in the game pre serve are more than a thousand beautiful English pheasants, which consume com by the bushel; then there were the pigs, and every farmer knows how much grain it requires to keep a pen of fat and sleek begs. To store this grain leqmres the united capacities of several large bams. The largest, however, is located a short dis tance from the residence of Supt. Telfer. Only last year this barn was destroyed by fire, caused by lightning. Before the flames had subsided, materials'were or dered and the services of a contractor se- cured for the erection of a new bam. This is now completed, and is 120 feet long, 40 feet wide, with ah annex of 100 feet, and cost over $10,000. It is pleas antly located, and has thecapacity of stor- connected with the creamery by steam, and by this steam the feed is heated for the cattle, the threshing is done and the fodder cut. The distance of the engine from the bam eliminates entirely the fire risk to the valuable buildings, and the vast amount of stock and provender con tained therein, which is no small item, as Mr. Stuyvesant carries his own insurance, not only upon all the buildings upon his landed estate, but also upon his valuable city p operties. During the night a watcl- - man makes the rounds o' Iho various barns, beeping vVilant care oi’tr every- Tne stables r the horses, of which as our readers know, many are very valua ble animals, are arranged with special cinctra as to the care and comfort of their occupants, and are kept as e'ean and sweet as if they were to be occupied by members of the human family. The same order is maintained in the even more at tractive department occupied by the hand some crove of Guernsey and grailtd cattle The cows are daily curried, and groomed by carelul attendants, and, said Mr. Telfer, “ a cross word or threat is never heard in this department,” and as the beautiful cows put out their heads for a friendly pat of the hand, you knew that fear was unknown to them. For quan tity of milk and quality of butter, Mr. Telfer thinks the Guernsey the best strain of cattle in existence. Supt. Telfer’3 especial weakness is for sheep. Leading the way to a plot of ground near the barn, he exhibited a fine herd of Cotswolds, imported last year. With their lambs sporting beside them in the warm sunlight of a bright December day. In an opposite lot was a flock of thirty Dorsets, imported the present year from Dorsetshire, England, The buck, a perfectly self possessed distinguished member of the flock, cost Mr. Stuyvesant £32, and when lauded at the Tranquility Farms, stood him in $180. He is a beau tiful sheen, and worth the money. We had quite a run over the hills in search of the Shropshire flock, also imported this year, from the estate of the Earl of Car- don, at a cost of three guineas each. They were SB pretty as a picture, and woHld delight the eye of any farmer. A ready market is found for the lambs both in the west and south, and they are sold at fancy prices. These sheep appear to enjoy our climate, and judging from the absence of fear, are perfectly at home in the country of their adoption. A feature of the farm is a well equip ped creamery, constructed especially for private use. Here is located the large engine and boiler, which in addition to the work required in churning, drives the threshing machine and fodder cutter in the big barn; a wood saw and post hole borer upon the wood pile, and turns a mill in a building erected especially for that purpose, thus saving the “toll” that would othewise go to the local miller. A commodious room is also furnished as a school room for the education of the the children and as a reading room for the use of the employees during the evenings and rainy days. It is a far bet ter enclosure than is in use in the average school districts In the two counties ; the teacher is paid by Mr. Stuyvesant, and the same generous hand supplies it liberally with American and English papers, many of them beautifully illustrated and very attractive. The reading is all of the highest order, nothing of the cheap, trashy grade of literature being admitted. In this room on the Sabbath the children are gathered and a Sabbath School held, be ing one of the many proofs that the em- ployees are treated with kindly and Chris tian consideration as immortal beings. Prom here attention was directed to the dog kennels and game preserves, both of Which were visited, the visit being made the more pleasant by the kindly attention of Manager MaeVikars, who is perfectly conversant with all the details of his bus iness. The dogs are numbered by the hundreds and the pheasants by the thous ands. Both are beauties in their way, and to see them is but to admire their many points of exeellence. Our regret is that want of space prevents a further discrip- tion of these interesting features of the Tranquility Farm. F ro m th is p o int is obtained a full view of the range of mountains enjoyed so much by the city visitors to the farm. Prom this elevation a generous supply of water is secured, which is conveyed by pipes to all the princinal buildings on the farm. During the past summer Mr. Telfer has occupied his spare moments in grad ing a wagon road on the very summit of the mountain several miles in length, which affords one of the most delightful drives imaginable. The view extends for miles in every direction. In this connec tion, we «an add that it is the intention of Mr. Stuyvesant to light the principal buildings upon the farms by electric light, an improvement which will be made in the near future, and (me that will add greatly to the already wide popularity of these celebrated farms. Every employee refers to Mr. Stuyves- ant’s residence as the “mansion.” As be fore noticed, it is elegantly locatecL Two tiny streams musically course their way down the mountain side, joining their for tunes at the rear of the mansion, and then proceed to a diminutive lake, over a dam, and down through the meadows to the stream below. The mansion is 120 feet in length and possesses points of beanty that at once attract the eye. Extensive improvements, which it is hoped to have completed by next summer, have been made during the present year at a great the interest of beauty and convenience, and an inspection of the apartments, even though yet incomplete, reminded the viewer of the handsome portraits printed in the last Harper's Bazaar of the castle of Madame Adelina PatttNicolini, so costly located in the mountains of Germany. At tine eastern exposure of the mansion is the coat of arms of the family, upon which appears in Latin the motto, a free translation of which is “ Not by Fate, Nor by Chance.” An unexpected pleasure was an invita tion from Mu Hti\vvc.sant to meet him in person. He is a gentleman probably f^r.y years of age, a pleasant, easy talker, ard by his kind manner instinctively draws one to him. His conversation was of a practical, every-day nature, and related to topics eilculated for the improvement of the farming iut( rests of this etc?,ion of the country, and for the advancement of every in d u s tr y calculat* cl fo r ih e best welfare of the people. Tee subject of the continuation of the Sussex County Agri cultural Fair I eing advanced, Mr. S tu y - vesanfc setmtd at once interested, and ex- presseu his pleasure that an effort was being matie to still retain the Newton Fair. “Why,” said he, “every farmer should exert his best efforts to sustain societies tending toward the advancement of his interests. Farmers should do more for the pleasure of their wives, sons and daughters, in the way of holidays and pleasant recreations, and thus make farm life one of happiness and contentment, and not, as it so often is, an existence of dradgeiy.” Quilling the mansion, the handsome grounds, the conservatory, which, although this was the first day of winter, was as blooming as though it was a May day, under the skillful management of the genial florist, Mr. Johnson ; the mansion stables, with theirmultiplicity of carriages and numbers of attractive horses, were viewed in haste, as the slowly sinking sun admonished us that the day was nearly gone, and thus ended the enjoyments of a day which proved as pleasant as they ■were instructive, and strikingly illustrated how prone we are to go hundred of miles to witness sights that can easily he eclip sed witlun a few hours drive of our thresh- In concluding this brief outline of the many things we saw to interest us and which were necessarily omitted from this artlcb, we wish to extend our thanks, and also those of our companion, Mr. W. W. Wooodward, to Mr. Telfer for his kind and thoughtful attentions tbroughout the day, and to his good wife for the very hospitable dinner it was our pleasure to enjoy at her bounteous table, in company with their interesting family of bright and winsome children. Our day at the Tran quility Stock Farms will not soon be for gotten, and it is pleasant to note the dis tinction shown us was not unusual. Hun dreds of visitors during the year are used just as courteously. by wearing one of Carter’s Smart and Belladonna Backache plasters. Try oi and be free from pain. Price 25 cent& A ChUd’s liOtter. D bab C ousin K atb : I was so glad to hear from you once more. We thought poor sister Sue was not going to recover. She has been coughing ail winter and pa brought home a remedy that some folks say is a patent medicine, called Eemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, and pa thinks it cured her. Dear sister iSaWell now. M aby . Get a free sample at any druggists. Visiting a poor laborer, who raised two iga every year, I asked: “Do you make a profit on your pigs, Mr. Leary ?” “No, said he^” “but it pays me to ri pigs every year.’’ I then asked: you plea'ie explain to me the pro “I will.” he replied. “When I pig cr two 1 am compelled to save a few pennies here and there and scrape ui whatever I can get to feed them, and, with the buying of the food in small quantities and tne grass and weeds collec ted, I find at the end of the year that I liavo R Cx-rtttju quantity of pork, whereas, without the pigs, I would have neither the money nor the pork.” Hero was a solution of the pioblem—the pig was a savings bank Through the agency of the pig the small suras were saved, and per haps many extravagances (to that extent) were avoided, to say nothing of the waste materials that were utilized, the man found bimscif the possessor of several hundred pounds of poik that would re quire the outlay of quite a sum if he was compelled to b-y it at the market price. What is accomplished by.keeping a pig is true of other stock. Seeping a few chickens, raising a calf, pasturing a colt or feeding a few sheep, enables some one on a farm to collect together the dollars and cents that would otherwise be lost, while at the end of the year no in(»nven- ience is experienced from any sacrifices that may have been made in attempting to accomplish the object in view. There' are hundreds of persons living in the sub urbs of Cities who keep flocks of hens and secure eggs and poultry for home use by simply adding a small expense to the scraps from the table which would other wise go to the scavenger without an equivalent. In the summer season when it is unnecessary to feed' much, if any, grain, large quantities of grass can be se- curred from the roadside for a pig, and young weeds are sometimes delicacies. The pig always pays his way in the end, if all the advantages arising from his pres ence are considered fairly in comparison with whatever drawbacks may be in the way. If two neighbors (the circumstances being equal) should endeavor to practically demonstrate the profit to be expected, the one raising a pig and the other not, when the pork barrel Is filled the neighbor who did not keep a pig will be, in all probability, no richer in cash than the other, and may also be compelled to buy a share of the pork which his more for tunate neighbor may have to spare.—?. H. Jacobs in Philadelphia Prea. DEFINITION OF A OENTIiEMAN. “Cardinal Newman says a gentleman is one who never inflicts pain,” remarks the Omaha World : “This is rough on the dentists.” True, but it is a character istic of Dr. Tutt’s Liver Pills, They operate without griping or pain. “They are the best pills in the world,” asB. E. Erode of Tamaqua, Pa., truly says. Scientifically comoounded by a physician of thirty years’ practice. ■culars fre e . B btajs :e e t, Buffalo, N. T. rices low. »100 t o ^30,000 5 h te ; fine soil; close to citif'S by road; salt w ater luxuries abundi mp to r price l is t: may 10c. J ANCHA, Annapolis, Md A PO^^lTfON Wines M Liquors for the Holidays. stive. In order H oney-m oon. “ Say, Perkins, old boy, why don’t we see you at the club any more ? Has your mother-in-law shut down on you “ No, Brown, the fact of the matter is, my home is so happy now that there is no inducement for me to leave it. You look incredulous, but it’s a positive fact. You see, my wife used to suffer so much from functional derangements common to her sex, that her spirits and her temper were greatly affected. It was not her fault, of course, but it made home unpleasant all the same. But now, since she began to take Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, she has been so well and so happy that we are having our honeymoon all over again.” He blew out the Gas.’ Last night an elderly man from up the country stopped at one of our leading ho tels and retiring remembenng he had not taken a dose of Eemp’s Balsam, be rose to get iit, and noticing the stronk smell of gas, shut it of^ and fatal consequences wereavoiddd. Did Eemp’s Balsam save his life? It has saved the lives o f many. At all druggists at 60c and $1. Sample The use of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla purifies the blood, stimulates the secretions, and imparts new life and vigor to every func tion of the body, For nearly half a cen tury, it has remained unrivaled as the best blood medicine ever discovered. Be con vinced Iby a trial. For speedy relief and cure in cases of bronchitis, take Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It controls the cough and induces sleep. FEBSONAD. A young lady of seventeen summers, highly educated, refined, and of prepos sessing appearance, desires to form the ac quaintance of some nice young man, whom she would advise, if troubled with dys pepsia, to use that great blood purifier. Sulphur Bitters. Backache Is almost Immediately relieved : :’s Smart and ;ers. Try one stmas is^almost h ere and it is a time ^ ^ y b o d y should be gay and festi %iness^ in the way essence o ap PURE WINES AND LIQUORS. My stock in this line is now complete, among which may be found F I N E O D D H E B M T T A G F , M A Y F T E D D & T A Y L O R R Y E W B I S K I B S , O DD I P O P C O R N , P I N E OD D SC O T C H A N D IR I S H W H I S K Y , J A M A l - CA A N D N E W E N G L A N D R D M , PITK E ODD B R A N D I E S , F O R E I G N A N D D o m e s t i c , i n c l u d i n g A D D T H E B E A D IN G B R A N D S . o f Including the famous B R O T H E R H O O D W IN W S , PORT, SHERRY, RETSDTNG P L E A S A N T V A L L E Y W I N E S , PORT, SHERRY, CA- BASS’ ALB, GUINNESS’ STOUT, MILWAUKEE BEER, ROBERT SMITH FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNE, IMPORTED GINGER A F o r e i g n a n d D o m e s t i c C l a r e t , INCLUDING ZINFANDEL AND OTHER WELL KNOWN BRANDS. FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CIGARS AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL AND EVERYTHING ELSE TO BE FOUND IN COMPLETE LIQUOR STORE. T. J, CARTY, NO. 7 BALL STREET. N E A R P I K E S T R E E T , P O R T JE R V I S , HOLIDAY GOODS, D . J . P i e r c e ’s D r u g S t o r e , C o r n e r S ^ r o n t a n a . E ’o ' w l e r S t r e e t s . I H A fii? Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Restore Gray Hairto Us Youthful Color. B O O K AGEWTrS W A W T E ® FDB M Y S T O B Y O F IiW Ii B y M a r y A , L tverm o ^e irown narrsuive of “ Four Tears’ PciyonalExperf. H I N D E R C O i ^ C i l S . tion. Exhaustion and all Stem- t acH and Bowel troubles. Also m the most effective cure for^ Coughs, Colds, Broncliiiis andg breathing W ifreshing \ appetite, irvous prostration, ^5oc° and $i.oo, at Drgguists. J MEMORY TATION OF THE FA NEW PRESENTATION SUBJECT.: Genuine and reliable system strongly en dorsed by prom inent men. Power of atten- ' ■ . developed; mind wandering c u red; facii- 3 f conversation and command over lan- A F I N E D I S P L A Y OF H O L ID A Y GOODS CONSISTING OF F I N E D B E S SING OASES IN A L L TH E N E W STYLE S , ODOR CASES, woman o e OHirm | CIGAR GASES, L A P TABLETS, WBISK^BROOM. HOLDERS, IN K suffering from STANDS, THERMOMETERS OF VARIOUS DESIG N S AN D FRIGES, « . m , « n OUT GLASS BOTTLES, VASES, ETC., ETO., AN D WE A R E S E L L IN G U A 1 A K i l l i THEM LOW ENOUGH TO SU IT EVERYBO DY. ELYS C a t a h r H Cream BalmL, ^ l O O O TO ANT MAN M\ Fail to Ci Not a Liquid or Snuff J l E V E A p article 1 agreeable. : 3 applied Into each nostril and is ______ Jrlee 60 cents at Druggists; by mall, registered, 6 o cents. ELY BRO T H E R S , 66 W arren S tre^, New York. CONDENSED TIME TABLE. Time of the Departure of Trains from Port Jervis—Adopted Deo. IS, WESTWAED. TRAIN S7, 6.10 a m—Way Freight, dally except Sunday. Stopping at Lackawaxen and all stations on the uonesdaleRtanch. TRAIN 93,7.10 a. m—Way Freight dally except Sunday. Stopping at all stations on Delaware Divi sion to Deposit. TRAIN 1,12.25 p. m—Day E at I ackawaxen, Calllcoon, Ha __________________ principal points west. Pullman parlor car attached. This train makes close connections at Lackawaxen for Honesdalo and all points on Brio & Wyoming Valley TRAIN 11,2.05. p. m —Delaware Valley Express, dally except Sunday. Stopping at all way stations to Hornellsvliie, TRAIN 27.6.42, p. m— Mountain Express, dally ex cept Sunday Stopping at all stations to Lackawaxen and Honcsdale. TRAIN 5.8.C6 p. m-Chicago and St.Louls Limited, dally. Pullman sleepers to Chicago. St. Louis, Cleve land, Bnllalo and Niagara Falls. Stepping a t Call!- coon, Snsqaekanna, Binghamton and principal points TRAIN 8,11.50 p. m— Chicago Express, dally. Pull man sleepers. Stopping at Lackawaxen, Calllcoon, Hancock, Deposit, Susquehanna and principal points JCASTWARD. :o Express, dally. Stop ■II a ce^^S^day. Stopi * t k ^ tn 4*, 9.25 a. m—St. Lonls Limited, dally. ^Ing at Mmdietown, Goshen, Greycourt, Turners, ^TOAIN 93, 10.10 a*, m—Milk, dally. Stopping at Middletown, Goshen, and stations on the Pine Island branch. TRAIN 6.12.15 p. m-Way, dally. Stopping at all BtatIons,wlth close connections a t Greycourt for New- TRAIN 10 xcepl Sunt 'umers, G rc.w u ,., TRAIN 80,4.14 p. m-Way, dally except Sunday, topping at all starions. with connections for New- ” iftAlN SPECIAL E, 4.35 p. m-Sunday only. Stop- pmg at all stations. TRAIN 18,6.05 p. m—Milk, dally. This train carries passengers only as lar as Goshen. TRAIN 8 . 815 p. m—New York Express, dally. Stopping at Mlddletoivn, Goshen, Turners and Pat- ___P ot Any ticket office. This style of Over coats is returning to favor. We sell them, of course, because we C . k e e p ev e r y t h in g th a t ’s fashionable, and for certain uses it is an excellent gar- ment. What we wish to em p h a s ize m o st strongly, however, is that we have a stock of men’s overcoats at $ 1 2 , $ 1 5 , $ 1 8 , $ 2 0 , .. ^ $25, $28, $30 and up- 'ijl/ ^ ward that is positive ly unapproachable for variety and ex cellence. As for price, you are welcome to bring ours back if you find you can do better elsewhere. RO G E RS, P E E T & CO., H e n r y Siede, WANTED In eacL City, Town and Village in New Y ork and New Jersey a LiveBusinessMan to introduce our SHOETIINE TELEPHONES, (Patents unassailable.) A Large Income Can 'be Realized on a Small Capital. Territory secured on favorable terms. THE IDBEIA TELEPH0M [sa perfect substitute for Electric Tele- •ones for any distance within three miles. I t ibraces new and indispensable improve ments. and ean transm it speech o ver a longe r line than any o ther mechanical telephone ever placed before the public. Send for prospectus aud full information. The fiew YorK EureKa Telephone Go.J’f li Bryant Building, Liberty and Lassau Sts., New York. \ J' © BUY OF THE MANUFACTUEER. SealskinOarments A choice and extensive assortment in STYLE, QUALITY & PKICE that cannot be beaten by any. CLOTHES, HATS AND SHOES, Broadway and Prince St. Broadway and 3 2d St, NEW YORK. FASHION CATALOGUE MAILED FREE ON AFPLICATION. The 14th Street Furrier, 14 WEST FOURTEENTH STREET, Between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, ' N E W YORK. FULL LINE OF GENTS’ FURS and COATS, ESTABLISHED OVER 38 TEARS. Send for Catalogue. EXHAUSTED PORT JRRVIS, MONXICRLLO & N. V Time of the Departure of Trains from XMe Station—Adopted Dec. 3. _______ -andarrivei 4 --L^erport'Jei^ffi’a^ 6.45 P.'M, and arrivei Menticello at 7.45 P.M. SOVTHXBK TBAHTB. No. 1 —Leaves Montlcello at 7.40 A.M. and arrivei In No. 8 —LeavM ^ntlcello at 8.50 P. M. and arrives In For t Jervis at 5.00 P. M. Trains 1 and 2 will run dally, Sundays excepted. Trams 3 and 4 will run Wednesdays and Saturdays °^oimeotlon with Brie tralna at Fort Jexvli. sen used a specific for AGUE MALARIAL FEVERS, DYSPEPSIA , IGESTION, and all NERVOUS as NEURALGIA, SLEE^^ PROSTRATION Fpr Thirty Years this valuable coml^ nation has been used a specific for / ^ U and M/i iND EASES, such ------ . ----- ,|.ESSNESS and PROSTRATION. Ittfl AN UNRIVALLED TONIC, ated SytHm. ,and women, invili#st rT o “ ' lan be obtained at all Druggists. BILLINGS, CLAPP St CO., ProprietorSi Boston; Matl^ NICHOLS’ [ restoring tone to the debilitated S y ^ ^ and children it is recommended by Physicians. Where other Tonics havelWNild this has made a conspicuous success. NICHOLS’ BARK AND IRON can be obtained at ail Druggists. VITALITY rpHESCEENCBOF ^-a-U F E , the great Medical Work of the ageonManhoodjNerv- oua and Physical De- _ bility, Premature Be- ifunuf TUVQCI cr cllne,Efrorsdf Youth, nllU II ' I n 1 dLLr Imul the untold jmiEer- ies consequent thereon, 300 pages 8 vo., 125 pre- Icriptions for all diseases. Cloth, full gilt, only $L00, by mail, sealed. Illustrative sample free to all young tad middle-£^ed men. Send' uow^ , Tfeh Gbld and Jewelled Medal awarded to the author by the Nation al Medical Association. Address P.O. Bqx 1895,Bos ton, Mass,, or Dr. W- H. PARKER, graduate of Har vard Medical College, 25 years’ practice in Boston, who may be coasHted confidentially. Office, No. 1 Bnlflnch SL Specialty, Diseases of Man. Cut this out. You may never s ee It Bcs£a.