'""TWHJwpp-r n DAILY CAP 6 fNEW YORK NEWS LETTER t 1TAX JOTXKS'AX BAISM. OBEOOH. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1904. vit Vnv cLar, j v vAfV f mation eaneermiic the ew man ien reassumlog rapidly its aatarnnal gai- on Kybsit" Mountain,, and even tke ety and animation after the dallest of lip of the stable help are sealed. It the maimer, with one or twe exemp tions all the theatres are now open. Kot only It New York filled with visiter who eme en pleasure bent, but buyers are here in snaseally large numbers. The eetleok for a lively and nrotperoas rotten it said td be exceedingly favorably, in tpite of the fact that the presidential cam paign is about to be opened in earnest. One reason tor the naore cheerful feel fng is the improvement in the steek market. Last year at this time teear itles were at a much lower level, and with fortunes impaired by the great Ftamp, economy mw being practised even by the well-to-do. This fall there is apparently a great surplus for luxuries, and tire heart of the theatrical manager, the Jeweler, flor- That the negro is a streag parUsan, especially la this presidential cam paign, is sbowa by the determination of practically the entire eeagregatioa 1st and inerebaat is being made clad. , . ., , , , . . .t 6 6 1st Etiiseepal ehBreh to effect the re- ... . ...,, , moval of Dr. S. Timothy TJee as pre- A floral garden which will be filled i ,,, ,. .. -v i i. ,A. , , , , ,, , lidding elder of the Greater Aew lork with roses, rare shrubs and foliage Is' ., . ?. ... . ,, -c v . v. i r. . MHSiriCl OI lae j. jh. r caurcu, niucu is reported, however, that Mr. Rocke feller will spend" $1,000,000 on the new residenee, wbieb will be the most magnificent seat in this esmntry. A $3,000,000 amusement park on the Harlem ship canal, greater than the combined attractions at Coney Island, is the latest thing proposed for Goth am. Plana for buildings have been drawn, and the landscape architect oral work is under way. An effort will be made to eclipse Earl's Court, in London, the fataoas amusement re sort. It is aanoaaced. that the new place will opts aest Jm. ing in time will be 3.33 hears a day, r 193 hoars a week. Allowing fer the class who will that travel the cus tomary two weeks anneal vaoation, their fifty weeks of daily travel will be shortened by 9993 hoars, erMl.fi J days of 24 hoars. Aa the average bus iness day doer not exceed eight hears, this saving woald represent 198.7 bus iness days in every year. If the time of these 10,009 habitctal travelers be worth 50 coats aa hour, each one will have gained by the saving la time de veto! to travel 16 eents a day, er In roaad aambers (37.24 per year of 9S6 days. The aggregate money advantage to 10,000 people ia the ordinary busi ness year sfceald be 4872. 1M. If a million people should travel by the sabway daily, each passenger making an average gain of five minates, the aggregate saviBg, figured oat em the samp basis, woald amount to $41,590 per day, or $12,450,000 per year of business da vs. now teing laid out on John IX Rocke feller's estate at Poeantico Hills at a cost of 30,6oo. The plans of the gardens there really are three gar dens, connected by a terrace and odd atone steps were drawn by John D. Boekefeller, Jr., for his father, after Ideas furnished by the latter, and when they are completed there will be nothing like tbem on any private ewtate in the country, with the possi ble exception of those on George J. Gonld'a Georgian court. The gardens aro about 300 feet square, anil each is sank below the level of the main' drive leading to the stable. Barrett radfng Jhem are waifs made of cobblestones, arranged in nrtistlu shape. Mrs. John D. Keekefellor, Br., and her day ghter-ia-law, who is .the daughter of Senator Aldrich, of Rhode Islam), have a mania for Jaek roses and Apieriean Beauties, and Mr. Rockefeller has arranged f$t the pur chase of some of the finest of these is this country as well as in Europe. All of the Rockefeller servants have been instructed to give out no infor- includes all the churches of that de nomination in Greater Sexr York ,and on Long Island. This condition of things is due to the fact that recently Dr. Tiec wrote a letter to a Brooklyn newspaper, declaring tnat he wouifi support Judge Parker, and that there was no good reason why negro men shonld vote for Republican candidates in the ensuing election, ur. lice's OYSTER COCKTAIL FACTORY Building: Up a Business in the Succulent Bi valve Charles Hellenbrand, the pioneer Salem restauranteur, has built ud a large trade in oyster cocktails. He ran a booth durinc the state fair and sold as high as 100 dozen per day. He sup- letter created ranch ef a sensation I plies nearly all the Salem saloons with among the colored people, as he is next the eocktails that cheers but never ine in authority to Bishop Arnett. brlates. He is also shipping them to Silverton and other places. One Silver ton saloon last year sold as many as all the Salem saloons put together. The demand at Salem and other places is growing, and we are glad to see our old friend doing so well. A genius for figures calculates that the saving at time by the faster rate of travel in the subway will amount to the saving of millions of dollars annually t Ihe people ef New York this en the theory that time is money. llf sets forth that there are 10,000 persons who will dally go south and nerth between, say the Rector and 125th street station of the ubwayi Tbe time ilaved between theso two points is calculated at twentv -min utes daily to those who traverse this distance habitually, or two hours id each week. Thus the aggregate sav- PRANK DAVEY Notary Public; conveyancing and examining titles. Life, health and accident insurance. Room 9, Odd Fellows' building, opponito Court House. smuw raw -tM ' , nms i"tfr i jpyiT' w -" ! I !rr ?i fc-ssaa -4VU - - -saaw & " 111 JB H f X r I The Kind Our Mother Used to Take. IT Was The Best Prescription Then It Is NOW. JseE. K the old days it was some times considered fashiona- able to be delicate, pale and with an inclination to faint at the least provocation. It is different now. America is raising a strong race a race of vigorous and healthy mothers. When a woman becomes nervous, suf fers from backache, sleeplessness, a gen eral tired-out and fagged feeling, with dragging-down pains, she turns to the right remedy. She is positive she can get relief and assistance from Doctor Pierce. Backed up by over a third of a century of remarkable and uniform cures, a rec ord such as no other remedy for the dis eases and weaknesses peculiar to women ever attained, the proprietors of Doctor Pierce's Faroritc Prescription now feel tally warranted in offering to pay J500 in legal money of the United States, for any case of Lcueorrhea, Female Weak ness, Prolapsus, or Falling of Womb, which they cannot cure. All they ask is a fair a'nd reasonable trial of their means of cure. There is every reason why women should not trust their delicate constitu tions in the bands of unskilled persons. It requires a thorough medical education to appreciate and understand the wom anly organism. When a woman has ills and pains that she cannot bear when life seems dark for any woman, she should confide her troubles to a physi cian of standing in the community, or one who has a national reputation. Cer tainly it would not be the part of wisdom to confide in an ignorant person without medical education simply because she was a zvniait. There is every reason why she should write to some great specialist, one who has made the dis eases of women a specialty for a third of a century, like Dr. R. V. Pierce, founder of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. All cor respondence is held sacredly confiden tial, and he gives his advice free and without charge. Sl.VGLB AND MARRIED WOMEN Very often find that it is repugnant to their feelings to consult their family physician. In euch a case they r.- perfect confidence in Dr. Pierce V has made such a success in the'tn?0 ment of woman's diseases, for htSn give you the very best advice possiM and without cost to you. To growbM tiful, healthy and happy should betl8" desire of every woman. It is then domi ble to hold a husband and make hom" happy and bring contentmect to it Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription H. the mother health to give her child? 1, cures nervousness, nausea and sleen'w ness. It makes the body comforts and the mind content. It gives phytic!) vigor and muscular elasticity so that tt baby's advent is practically painless. I write you to let you know I rectitM vour kind and ever welcome letter i3 vour kind and fatherly advice," wra, Mrs. Ida Martin, of Berry. Kv. "I i!r menced your treatment the next J after receiving your letter some moai ago, and followed your advice as clofcS as I could. Am glad to say I ami betttr health than have been for yejn Believe I suffered from every disu.. that any over-worked, run-down wonmi could. Was not able to do anythit could not get one good night's sleep had heart disease of the worst type. disordered liver was one great troublt . and, passing through change of ttft, i seemed to cause me excruciating pia m breast and shoulders. I had no apr. work. I took treatment from three cf 1 the best doctors in our town but grew worse every day, so I decided to write to I Dr. Pierce for advice. I took the raedi. cines just as you advised and continntd until 1 had taken six bottles of ' Golden Medical Discovery ' and ' Favorite Pre-' scription.' I know that your medicine did more for me than all the medical treatment I had ever taken." Mrs. Geo W. Wood, of Whitehall, Mich., writes: "I feel that I must let, you know how much good your ' Favor ite Prescription' has done for me. In' June, three months ago, an eight-pound I boy was born to us my first child. 1 1 took eight bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favor- ite Prescription before his birth and got ' along nicely ; was sick only a short time, and when baby was born I felt nearly aj strong as I eer did. Was staying at my mother's at the time, and when baby was one week old I rode from there to my home, a distance of about two milei. Got up the fourth day and remained up, and when baby was two weeks old I walked to town and back which is quite a distance from where we live. I also felt so strong that I sat up for a short time the very day he was iom. Baby is healthy and growing very fast and 1 1 give the credit to your wouderful medi cines.'' , MARRIED WOMEN should have a medical book handy, for knowledge is power. A standard w k is the People's Common Sense Mi l ical Adviser, by R. V. Pierce, M. D Send 31 one-cent stamps for the clolh- 'bound book, or 21 cents for the papa . covered volume. Address Dr. R. V. , I Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. I E3 3fcTTCkSSSsSSSS2S2SBS2 Gas Is An Ideal Fuel B You can't imagine a simpler, quicker , cleaner way of starting fires than the simple operation of lighting GAS RANGE. Strike a Match and Ttn a Leve That's all, and it will do yoo r work quicker, better, cleaner than any wood or coal stove. If yoa love yotrr wife get her a labor saving, feel saving, health saving Gas Range Some men possess great affection for their wives and dan j?h tcrs, but let them work to great disadvantage in the kitcnaa, when a little expended in a Gas Range would save th 4 twice the cost in comfort the first yeasr. One Otfoe Point Remember This. If you are building or contemplating doing so, no housejis modern and up-to-date unless piped for gas and wired f f trlclty. Five years from now you'll wish you had, if you don't. CITIZENS LIGHT & TRACTION CO A. WELSH, r w ' Manage. H, i m -9 f i fJPtfPWfMJntljntMMmtMMmiwwm m i!'TM',VM'l""utMk 0.ooooKXooi?i ymmnkmmmmmmgmqpqm