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' ■■ I - — — la . Vgtf- . VOLUME XXVIII. cape may city, new jersey. saturday. september 9.1882. jgg* - ' • whole number. 146§.
OAP£ MAT Oil' V . 3. 9 1 .50 a year in Advance. •MO * nil »m mriSD arrases. grrirtsional Cards. J a HUFFM AN. ATTORNEY AND COTNSELLOR AT LAW SOLICITOR. WASTER AM) EXAMINER SUPREME OOCRT COM MISS ION EH. ^MintOTAMT PCRLJIL ^ JIJ- F. DOUGLASS, ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW , SOLICITOR DC CHANCERY 4 ly Cats' M*T CITT. YY ALTEB A. BABBOWS, ~ ATTOBKE Y-AT-L A W •ouw. ncrawTOT.^ ■QB. J. F. LEAKING A SON, denttsts, JAMES M- a mLDBETHj ATTORXEY-AT-LAW SOLICITOR. WASTER AM) EXAMINER IK CHANCERY. cipiy. y.*0-4* *'**'**"■ Cards. TflKoe a vnjJAMw, abchitect and builder. WILL MAKE DRAWINGS, AND HCPERIN- . ptno> i*ND OR CONTRACT. a LITTLE, fainter'A^ND^GL^IER. qrgan8 and sewing ma- • B. F. HORNER, HIIOBjOBBAHS i SEW1S6 MICHES BRIDGETOX, S. J. ■nil*. 44 w BROS. May city. »OT , q.o to garrison's STATIOHEET, AND STORE YABETY PUR GOLD PENR BLAKE BOOKS, TOIU T PAPER POCKET CCTLERT. SHELL GOODS. FISHING TACKLE. CHEAP LIBRARIES. MINIATURE BWrBJEANrPACTCllED OK OWIK6 MARHINl^NErinRS AND OIL A » WABHDCOTON STREET. CAPE WAT. N. J. Bbos.awsttMwmat.^MdtDn.n wu«QHA8. P. PEBRY, OILS. PAIMTS & VARNISHES, PHILADELPHIA. mSll-cat JOHN M. BU88KLL, GENERAL DEALER IE dry goods, GROCERIES. BOOTS, SHOES, & NOTIONS. FLOUR FEED y-A-TXtNT MEDICINES, jtk. russell rioodyear's rubber feltVT I EG AND PACKING OO. ■OSS. CLOTHING. BOOTS A SHOES. d. p. DIETERICH. New York Belting sad Packing Compare "xttwszsass&iss? WAR^tjJV 'HlwraT «TC"T. g; ^ j y* f 2 ' .-assasr i
I For Autumn Wear. Our Bargain sections offer many lots of Clothing for men and boys, well I' adapted for Fall wear, at an average of forty per cent off from the low prices w established at our June Upset Sale. You may save the cost of a journey to the city, and perhaps much more, on a single suit of clothing. Wanamaker & Brown. Oak Hall, Sixth and Market Sts, . Philadelphia. aBLOOMSDALE URGE LATE FLAT DUTCH CABBAGE. Large, Flat, Solid Heads. Short Stems Tor a tax period •! flow, we hare W thu ran of ™>US4 w^oawratta^righn^^ Daw a, Perupjrodrta liTfw Uieta£2x*££ Net s Sicgld Qisis of 8«sd U Ealsad from Sulla, til from Sele:'.|i Eetdi. D. LANDRETH &. SONS. EOS. r. and b socth sixth street, (brtwm wvu tod CUUol BUM.) i 1mb s. w Con. d«t'A":NCI1 storeOUR MOTTO:-MQUICK SALES AND SMALt' PROFITS!" the peoples reliable store. No. 41 Washington Street. Cape May City, CHARLES NEEDLES, MANAGER. * ENLARGED STORE, INCREASED STOCK. FIRST-CLASS GOODS AND CHEAP PIUCBS ' UrtMAWiiseiii ol DryOoodalnlbteity. A oBnpMSl'u o! Ladies' and Gent's Furnishing Goods, Spring &. Summer Cloth & Dress Goods, ■uSimnnB coealke corsets. as wm— w; of PucrArucM. New pool* recrived warily. an J 4SJ tniclo rcqwlrrd nor U Rock, wul b* promptly umb'imi."'' •"Ututrrj. Pl*™' " y"uba*UM °PPom« Km- *» kst< Connection with tnj other More in the <11 v. ■ MaySWvn , CHaKLRs KEBDLKK. Mahaxvr. - FOR SILKS AND DRESS GOODS ~ h all's ' No. 26 South Second Street, PHILADELPHIA. ' ctbtcolest lumber merchant, wakv/actoikr op I®, Saik, limli, IillaR Mete, SM Satin ail Boies. OFFICE, NO. 14 KAIGHN'S AVENUE, camden, n_ 3. B. P. OOLSOE. A L.WCLPORD colson & mulford, Wholes*!* tad Retail Dom la lumber. OPHCE -A.TJD YARD, Front St., 3rd Wharf above Kaighns Ave., CAMDEN. N. J. AprillS-y : boots and shoes! LA1IM tad Wan onwtn* Stack ol (toed, CB4V Boju asd Skoa lo Ct(^ Ma; CO. style, quality and price cannot be surpassed. ONE PRICE only. * fine'wall.1 papers seassgftiaa.— ■ . eldreoge johnson. " 38 wabhinoton biuret. new boot and shoe store. wm, h. benezets
mmwmf
f^tjj^BOOT&SiOlSTOil gHL^. Caufc XlT £5IJ, H. J. .
~ ™.TRENE«;r
i &ct Jnsuranrr. MILLVILLE idtdal labiwe and fire INSURANCE COMPANY, MILLVILLE N. 3. j Actual Surplus over all Liabili- i ties, Including Re-insurance, Fire and Marine, S2I.203.S9. Rates Low. Security UngQBtiaalfi. SETTLEMENTS PROMPT AND MANAGEMENT ECONOMICAL. >w»,niu waate! wRorcaaf r,-prpwi;lr,l. F. BEEVES. Fica.. It. L HOWELL, See. AGENTS AND SURVEYORS: I n. W. Uaod. Djen CretiT I. II. Thamaa. CoU Sprlox. J.B. DMotj, DeoohTUlr, I R, P. WeataoU. Math ItearlUe. building |Hatfrial, (?tr. JEBF.MI.vnaSCIIKLLEXGEBS LUMBERYARD SckrUenterN Landinj. Cape Hap N. J„ \lhtn map « tooad St uW „i Loa.ber to l»r .TOO!?, of every aualej :o .an ior >00.000 I*LA8TEIUNII LATH. RHINO I.RS IIP ALL KINDS, PLOWING. PRAVRBTI PP. PICKKTX, , An4 la all an every tind of »-OI! IlKRO PIIOM PTLY PILLED oaiX-ly J. R. SCHKLLXXUKR. -fjAKDWABE. UOuRb. II LINOS L 5 snuTTEHs. Moulding n ^j^r.y BCM0U. SA WINGS, pal HOT-BED SASH. HAND RAILS, NEWEL POSTS, BALUSTERS : BUILDING AND HOl'SEKKKPINU HARDWARE OP EVERY DESCRIPTION. PUMPS. PUMPS. PUMPS. WMte Ltodo, Mued Palola. Ealaomlmr la'1 Uata), Tarpoaoae. Japan, oil.. Pauv, Glata. ware SpectalUv, via: Has Itme.'. Itinser.. and SLATE MANTELSHELVES. HMRY fTU^KRIiMf!-. Saints. ©Us, &r. y J. KELVIN, OOR.OP LAPATKTTR AND JACKSON STS.. Cap. May. N.J.. Dealer*. DBILZR IN paints. PAINTERS- SUPPLIES, HIT! LEAD, Mill OIL, SPIRITS OP TURPENTINE, PATENT LIQUID PAINTS, vakmshes, window i! lass, PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL. all at philadelphia p1uces S. <t. Stiff's ^tnrr. pbofit ob no pbofit fob jpaints, °OILK AND CLASH, Olid tOTflfaw*' OILS AND GLASS. OILS AND GLASS, N. C. PRICE, Practical GU aa CutUr, 27 Pmy Strrt. WUOLKKALK AND RETAIL STOIfH, DRY GOODS and GROCERIES, FEED STORE. *• ** ParT* Una. Com, Osts, Hay. Bran, Mill Feed WOOD YARD, WOOD CUT AND EPXJT.^ CEDAR 1U8TH OP Not Llnmod an Pnc«.b« aaA Praei or so Prt>- : apRicE$iooopm
I A JERSEY SUGAR FARM. How nit Old.fnshfourd Town In Cope nay Connty wau. 0 wascticn-rixo sroar— eight nrj. j dkkd AI'ltKS j'lantki) WTTII oorgj Cjr* Mat. n.^j^auc. 81 -A halt ! i dozen mile* above Chpf May, aloof; Hie j Welt Jeroey* Rsibesd, aome iweotv-Ilve j or thirty ftnnjibtnea, chiefly railier ancient one*, are atrung out along the pike. To this straggling stretch of bucolic abiding-plain the name of Bio Grande was given many years ago. Just why !. this name was tieciowrd nn one knowr, j not even the oldest inhabitant ; inasmuch ' as there are no indical i<m* of a river of even I the meat minute dimension* anywhere r j tliorougbfarc* which inU-rlaee I he green ] mewdows over to the east 'might, by a | stretch of the iniaejnaliun. he so dcootiiinI fi-rmhto personage, tlie oldest Inhahl-re-s. that not even he can recall any inei- 1 •lent or f vent which has miaieBio Grande j t "•rrflnrration, a ctrms, ! riot, nn enrth- | quake or a church "revival" within the limits of the hamlet proper. The natives have ever lived quiet, unpretentious ! lives, chiefly devoted to the Killing of | muNfill-s-s and the citring of hsins. lie. I centiy, however, a startling change liar | things prevails. Bight here, in the very I besit Of the Village, and, ind-cd. Absorb S ing almost iIh: enrire village itself, , lies au CKirnsivc sugar plan' ati ui, Jhc large*; anil | m<M puec.-s.ful ouc above the line of the aiXlAK I-BODI-CTIOX IN Till XI >1:1 II When Northern capitalists undert>»k was used in its stead. This it plsnlcd from lliecane seed, which it produces, aa beards ur hea-U. But inasmuch a* there area! least eighteen varieties of sorghum, some of which contain comparatively little saccharine matter, a great runny origi- , nal Northitn planters, after considerable with crops which could only lie utllizni " as cattle folder. Thin obstacle having been overcome, another and more inauper. - able one was met with ; for, while from manufactured, yet ovyatglisatioocaiid not Iw effected and sugar could m* flic" produced. It remaimAi'for Charles M. Hilgerl, the recently defaulting Philadelphia sugar refiner, and bis chemis-, Henry A. Hughes, afier numberless experiments, to discover certain reliable methods to secure the much-desired *Cry.ta!iz*!ion. Previously sugar crystal* hid btcn produced iu the North, hut it had ever been a matter of accident. One (Hurt might he suc- '• cessful. while the nrxt dozen attempts would prove failures. Mr. Hllgert and his chemist succeeded, however, In reducing the factor of uncertainty in production to a minimum. TJii* obstacle having been overcome, they hsAed around for a tract of land where the conditions of aoi] [| and climate wet* adapted 10 I be raising of u sorghum. Cape May County having btcn 1 strongly recommended, because of the b dryness of its toil, it was decided to settle a therein, and in 1880 a temporary sugar j refinery was constructed at Bennett's htstion, two and a half miles below Bio ■" Grande. A small piece of ground wai planted with sorghum and a floe ctop wai raised. This was passed through the vari- - oua prooeaM neccamry to sugar production, and the result was successful beyond ail expectation. Quite a large b-lrk refinery was Irnmid. „ lately constructed at Bio Grande, which was fitted up as completely as can be found outside of a Cuban refinery. To insure the production of a crop by the neighboring farmer*, a bill was passed by the New Jersey legislature offering a premium of one dollar per ton upon each too of cane produced by the farmer, and a premium of one cent per pound upon each pound of sugar manufactured by the refiner. Eight hundred acres were planted with sorghum I, seed by the neighboring husbandmen and a fair crop was realised, but the cane from only 250 acres ever reached the refinery, the balance being used by the farmers for ' cattle fodder, the preraloce of a drought having rained the corn crop pretty thoroughly. The venture ,.f 1881, while not at MUisfactory t» tad been anticipated, 3 was ao eminently profitable that imracd- . bile steps were taken UvAtng to an extension of the enterprise behae another y>*r. and it was eoocluded looofubine the work . " of production with that of manufacture. Accordingly the Bio Grande Sugar Company was incorporated, with George f). Pons aa president, James B. Scojt, a son ^ of the late Cob Tb-vnas A- So* I. as treasurer, and Charles M. Hilgert as grorral manager. Immediate measures were then taken toward accuring sufficient land for planting purposes. Farm after farm was !> purchased outright, until fifteen hundred acres in all passed into the bands of the . company, of which 1,000 acres were piseed . under cultivation. The plantation was divided into four sections, each under the charge of a foreman Just now the plan- . tatiun is in magnificent condition, a* the cane is fast approaching a ripened stage. p Much at it is ten feet high and aome is era considerably higher than tbaL At e the present time there is no cane even in a Virginia which has attained ao forwggd a state. The small lot of orange cane, especially, is in apiendid condition, and next - j year Ibis cane will he almost exclusively j | usrd in place of amber, as the latter doet a not usually grow to so large a aire. Wilh- * ; in a week, probably, the cutters will go * lntr> the fleiia, and the work of harvesting i will begin. The process of cutting is a
. - -■ — — : — ■ ■ ■ ! double one. Not only la. the stalk * 1 down, but the top. containing, Gsr Msffijji 1 . is also cut off. About the 'si of bushels of cane-arcd Vi theVK- wpro. j s ducrd as of .any cretal. Thruisands of | f « ' bushel* Will, tbdrcfprr, threshed out. ] t ; ComparalfyelTl emsll p-^tiun of this wiil i d ' lie required for repianliag next year, l et > s I a large quantity cf the seevl wiil be sold, j n j II is used in the manufacture of. starch | ! glucose; also, When ground, as a flour, ; | similar tu buckwheat, for baking purposes. , g c • TI.Z men- or Raxt racrrRX. , f e ! A visit to the refinery itself proves to . o r ho one of great interest. Under the regime | v c of Mr. Hilgert. visitors were seldom ad- ! I _ mltted, and inquiries after information!! e were sure to be fruitless. - A new order i t ,. of things now prtvaHs, however. Alt. j c Hughes has replaced Mr. Hilgert as gen- | t , eral manager, George 8. Ware is the si- ! ' „ slstsnt manager, and John H. Ncwsban | » r the chief engineer. A well, capable of ! • il holding JO.OOO gail-ms, furnishes the wa. j f „ u-r nrresaary t-> supply Jhe sevrn huge j f a loilers, which in torn feed the Dondero-.u j s . 100 imrae power engine. The pn*x-ss of j * , cane is first thrown out of a car or wagon | . on lo a "carrier,'- which rkpidly runs it !*t s I Hilgert. wlAee uofortunate transactions r ,. in f-hilsfleTpLT* compelled tim lotl-e, was I e a lirelesa worker, and the success of this I s new enterprise in 8 with Jersey is ducal- i s roost entirely to bis assiduity and pluck. I f A benighted region has been trensformesi c by him into a thriving community. Ground ! I is nowaacaof rich, waving ewne. O-m- < i- servarism and'fogvism-have jiven plafi: ' I. I.) progress. Should a dairy be combined I a with the manufacture of sugar, as is now t i! proposed, the land will literally flow with « e milk and honey within a year or two. I Hilgerpa whole soul was wrapped up in 1 this enterprise lie was a large stock- I h ddci iu tb - concern, lie put into it large I sums of money in fitting up the n-flnerj- i , with the very finest machinery and baying * I land. 'This outlay, wi'h Hie xre-at l<w< i , iucarred in his unfiwtunatc speculations i f- financUlly that lie was driven beyond the . li'-aling. But just as tlx- fields upon which he laStow-e.1 so much care and toi! were [ c n»«ut ripening, his own rashnea* prevent- i ed him from realizing in pctsoo the frui- i 5 le. sever, sine natives befeahnut speak . kindly of tlie fugitive, and it can hardly t ^ he deemevl adispaiagement of theirslurdy I _ integrity, in the light of local surr-iundings ' t turn up al Bio Grande lo-Uay, not many , _ iiands would he stretched out to Isy bold . on him lo deliver him up. - IHpeclal Correspondence. 1 I c I*ADvrujt, Col, Aug. 23, 1882. i Probably the best known and most fa- r 1 mous of all the groups of mines around i r I«cadvil)c is tlie one which gave Governor a " Tabor bis big strike- the Little Pittsburg. 8 The manner of its discovery has often hs< u I told. Mr. Tabot. who tl>en kept a store . " on California Gulch, was induced to "grab j ' stake" Gcege Honk and August Biclie, ; * both without means. By this it is meant ' 8 that be was lo furnish these men provisions and tools for prospecting for a ctr-- 1 tain length of time for a. half interest in < 0 whatever they discovered. The men wen1 > B up on what Is dow called Fryer Hill and e commenced digging. Mr. Fryer had air ready begun oprrstinns at this point, and ' the men located their claim just above his ' II shaft. Mr. Tabor has often aaid since ' * that- If he had known where the men were 1 " going to begin be never would have risked ' anything on their success, and more than * once before the ore was struck he thought ^ of withdrawing his "grub slake." But in ! a few days Mr. Fryer struck a vein and \ opened up what was called the "New Dit" 1 - corery" mine, while shortly after Mr. Tu- j 1 bur's partners found the same vein and | 1 named their mine the Little Pittsburg. In 1 B these two mioea have been uncovered the most remarkable bodies of ore yet discov- ' cred in this whole region. Mr. Tabor | ' bought out his two grab slake partoera for c $50,000, after which he took out of the , 1 mine three or four hundred thousand dol- ' lars worth of ore In five or six months and ' then sold bis claim to Chaffee and Moffstt 1 for $1,000,000. ' The first discovery bete, a short time ' 1 previous to the two just mculinoed, was , > the Iron mjne. The history of this dis- ^ ' cuvrry is the history of the la-ginning of 1 1 the great excitement here, and has already ' - been referred to in a former letter. It is , t now owned by Mr. Stevens , one of the * original diseorerera. and Mr. Leiter, a * merchant prince of Chicago. In 1878 Mr. - Leiter was traveling In Colorado for his 1 < health and while at Lcadviile early in the : - season Mr. Stevens offered to sell him a - half interest in the hole be bad dog far - $40,000. Leitber thought be oould afford r * to lose that amount, being a very wealthy ' ' man, and be took the offer. In that Iran • ' tad loo be bought at least $500,000 aa the j 1 mine baa realized more than $1,000,000 < > already. In the winter following these ' diacoreriet. Judge Pendry, or Lcaren- | 1 worth, Kanass, came lo Leadriile and hmv- ' log selected a spot on what is now called ' Carbonate Hill hail! a fire to melt off the f 1 snow .and ice and began to sink a pcrpcc- c ' diculsr ahart. Everybody in Leadrilia j ' laughed at him. They told him the top - of bis hole was far below the vein, and r that if be went down tu thu granite ha • * would find no ore. But is spite of thra^ ' discouragements and In defianoe of popu- 1 1 Ur judgment and that of experts be went f 1 on until at a depth of 88 feet he struck a \ ■ than any other diaoovery ever made here, t except the drat ooe. These are a few of 1 r the earliest and meat important discovtr- * ice, and from what I have given some idea r - mar be obtained of the value of such a 1 ' o "find." But these embrace only a small | ' 5 portion uf the mines now in operation s around Leadriile. I am ltdd that there ' i
— .-== N« As all over three hundred different Mhunes. besides many small holes not dignified with the name. From where 1 now j write 1 can enoot the Ream pipes from twenty;flvc mines producing from ten to j hundred tons of ore per day, and it 1 not lis* much as ilx-ugh Ixadville • ' was "played out" wlien. beside* aH these, . .are twing discovered daily. The j ! ispector is still abroad. The finding of carbonate ores made a ; 1 I great revolution in the business of pros. ! peeling. Previous to this the discovery j i ot rnioes was a profession or iKcaratioo j I with its well. understood and carcfallr fol- j j rales of procedure. Tlie "pro^iec j I tors" of Western tninipg regions have- 1 Tthemselve* rarely been miners. It has j not been their tqisineas lodcvchip veins of the precious mete), or to take out ore, bu ; anil I laving struck "pay-rock" they have Nor docs the professional "psosi peetor" go digging about on the mountain j sides in an aimless way hoping to make a strike, but be proceeds systematically and I in mm degree scientifically. He searches Up and down the gulches tor ''float'' or^ic-j-taehed pieces of ore that have been brokJen j off and washed down tothe stream. Uav. j take* careful note of Ihe position in which j j it lies an i the general orntour of the ' ground in the vicinity in order to deter- - have come. Then he goes upon the hill I find the out-crop, and if succcasfifl docs ihorv work upon it than is necessary to , Covered. By a systematic search like this, Stevens discovered the Iron inin^ ,1 H it"" in only a few instances has the cod of one of the Lcadviile veins been ' found, and many of ibe best mines have discovered by digging in piacrs where i there were no surface 'indications of miu- ' eral. The "prospcctof" in this camp takes pick and spade on his shoulder, and, taken into consideration all the brought to light by mines and pros-pect-boles already opened, cbnowh a spot and commences to dig "for lock." And success or failure, here or anywhere else, all luck, Very much the same as drawor blanks in a lottery. Srof. Tti- doctors saw 1 halt a bote In Hit lung lug as I x« a iKKtlr. Wttea lo niv surprise. 1 • I wore Oils topHir wrrj one slllleted with A lady .put her watch tinder her pillow, lliojdlfer night, hut oouldnT keep it there is cause it diMuibed her sleep. And there, ail the time, was her bed ticking right under her, and she never thought of that revs, halt Hnritm. Trarr. t'na^iiisst Haiiils. i'-htn ( t iiru-.^ s:i I ^all kmds^ol KAIn EnJ|<ioo. ' A little hoy who wouldn't ruD to the store for his mother until be hail a drink of water, pleaded in extenuation of bit disobedience that "even a river couldn't when it was dry. " ^:£"s\V iaat-fl' wlfl'rtMx?'ISm|nr nrew'to"**'" s'oar " u'rv-* for R. Rack CSS warrantr-1. SMITH. KLIXF X at.. WkuW-sAlvA^-ntie rmiadelplita. aad C. N. CRtrreN. "Pa," aaya the child, thirsting for "they aay that beaver* are the roost industrious of animals. What do they makqr" "Beaver hats, my child— heaver lgtti." Kvcn the patience of Job would bc- ■ poasttdr In r htni to to. h. aoi. Yet. how very will relieve pains in the I*cl. The old style Jot* pad used to reliove you of all you had about you. (Jul si I lie superseded. ^Wi assy ranch pMaaore in reoouimenduix M ™au>i5al,as,'lJa rtesp"'!!.1" lie! '5v*Ss! parttcalars see a/I r ems. to- ou For sals by H. A. Kennedy and Mirey a Wacray. Cape Way Why is llarnum's ahow like a dog's tall T Tlauae 11 follotra Forvpwngfa'a. Hklnns Men. Weirs Health Benewcr. Absolute dure nervous debility ami weakness of the generative functions. $1. at druggists. At express, $1.25, 5 for #5. E. 8. Wiua, Jersey Xlity, N. J. ' Art is long, but the artist is usually Write to Mrs. Lydia E. Finkham, 238 avenue, Lynn, Mass., for pam- . phleta relating to the curative properties of her Vecrtahle Compound in all female oxnplalnta. ly It goes against-tbe grain to gamble to . com and w heal. Dr. Kline's Grew: Nerve- itcstorer is the i marvel uf the age for all Nerve Dieraars. • AU flu slopped free. Scud to 831 Arch ; Street. Pbllads., Pa slO-ly i The heat remedy for a tent soaked cir. i ' cos audience — Bars-cm. \
^Mfdiral, (?tr. ■ - LYDIA E. PINK HAM'S VEQETABLG COMPOUTO. If all thaw rLrxrwuhUtiaar Wulliw. WPhiiicUs. UaTlt h«4 Pmcrtn It frvst, "t» J tT iJmto tbTtow 1 or ptn* cr otlowataa oaiwgs«»t»rtaa JSafo^y Ai^Msllliijm^KgjUttt '"''asrriald by aH Drwastata-hS 01 MTHE ONLYMEDICINE 11 IS EITHER LiqriD OB DRY FORI Q TEX LI7X3, TEX S0WXLS, n A ED TEX KIDEXTS. , U WHY ARE WE SICK? y * IT WILL 8URELY CURE □ kidney diseases, N LIVER COMPLAINTS, H DiaEAs». Few ale wxirarhSBL J axb XERt qca moounrrts, M Why ShEvr Billows pal" sckrsl ■ why toiwratvd with Pltva, GowsUpsUnt U Why frithUsrt eirr Jlaordared Kldaiysl y Cm KlDNEY-WOWTaad rxkwv la AmUA: Q on^rt ox Twa^Iu'ouiai!1 micx. st.hs R WELLE, BlCHABDbOX A Co.. Prap-a. ^ termncdt ; r POSiTIYElY CURED 81 V (carter's : if* 1 IVER, ^ J PILLS. ; We Mean CiireS, He' t':;ely flelietei I * nd Cow from H a.-.: holm. lit* •• Parian sad Pypt pv'a rr -r.-.i DVe tl -.rtll-ra dlstr-a* trees too heart vr-mr-.c. greet D'mor:eri Uia DevetL TL-ydi nil tt'a by I -.a:a« Josl ons - U'-UepClatsdow. Thezsrope-v-rvvxeta-lado y "CARTE " ••.iDICIKE'w.' NCW Y0K<L moorhead clayworks, CKXTABUSIIKD IHSS ) _ Ofnce & Wareroom. Ho. 11 Sootti 7tti Si, FACTORY SPRING MILLS, Vitrifi«d Clay or TerTa Cotta Drain and Sewer Pipes. ALSO'CHIMNEY TOPS. ; OUR R. R. CHIMNEY TOPS VASES AND GARDEN ORNAWKNTK LrA^!imwuwAwMFiS2?D1?-' S:

