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Caution.None Genuine but those bear

Popular

The Ausable Horse Nails, now so largely use nd leading horseshoers in the United States and he end of a rod, and then cold pointed, thus imit can be done by machinery, which consisted in inting them cold by hand. They are made from Decially for the purpose. Their reputation has b use, the preserving of the wall of the foot, being en driven in the foot, and are less liable to p ched.

They have been awarded first premiums and he in Philade phia in 1876, and World's Fair in P Samples and prices on application to

AUSABLE HORS

Warren Street

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Chrysanthemums

are steadily growing in favor. Their culture is easy their value in the garden or for decorative purpose great.

We have the best.

Our collection of chrysanthemums is the largest and finest in the country. Our show in the Madison Square Garden in 1890, our prizes in 1891, attest the truth of this. We will send our catalogue of

New and rare

PLANTS AND SEEDS containing 100 original ful page photographic engravings, together with on package of prize chrysanthemum seed, for twenty-fiv cents, to any one naming this paper.

Pitcher & Manda,

UNITED STATES NURSERIES Short Hills, N. J.

It will pay you if you have any money to inves either large or small sums, to send fo pamphlet "Investment vs Speculation Free to any one mentioning this pape

Boston, New York or Denver.

37 YEARS IN FULTON STREE H. B. KIRK & CO

DO NOT SELL

Mixed or Compounded Goods
PRICE ACCORDING TO ACE.
No other house can furnish
"OLD CROW" RYE WHISKE
Sold by us as uncolored, unsweetened. Sc
Agents for

The PLEASANT VALLEY WINE C
Sole Agents for the Inglenook Wines.
Send for Catalogue.
FULTON ST. - 9 WARREN
roadway & 27th St., New York.

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IF

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the Fifth Avenue stages lose money, where does the money go? They are always crowded; generally jammed to their utmost capacity. They certainly do a good business and their expenses are microscopic. The omnibus itself is probably worth about eight dollars, and the company's horses must cost them nearly twelve dollars a pair. They wouldn't fetch that at an auction, but an auction is not a fair test. The deafening rattle of the crumbling window sashes is no expense to the extravagant stockholders. As nearly as we can figure it every omnibus must pay for its own cost about twice a day and leave a handsome profit besides.

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Celebrated

Classique Corsets

The

Most Perfect Fitting
In the World

In

Exclusive Shapes & Materials.
West 23d Street.

ASK YOUR CROCER FOR
The Celebrated

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Chrysanthemums

are steadily growing in favor. Their culture is easy their value in the garden or for decorative purposes great.

CHOCOLAT We have the best.

MENIER

Annual Sales Exceed 33 MILLION Lbs.
Write for Samples. Sent Free. Menier, Union Sq., N. Y.

Charles Hauptner, Haberdasher.

One of the principal cares of a well-dressed gentleman is his linen. I make shirts a specialty. I guarantee the fit of every one that leaves my shop. It makes no difference whether you live around the corner or in Alaska. A few simple measurements are all I need. My address is

1280 Broadway,

New York City.

Our collection of chrysanthemums is the largest and finest in the country.

Our show in the Madison

Square Garden in 1890, our prizes in 1991, attest the truth of this. We will send our catalogue of

New and rare

PLANTS AND SEEDS containing 100 original full page photographic engravings, together with one package of prize chrysanthemum seed, for twenty-five cents, to any one naming this paper.

Pitcher & Manda,

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It will pay you if you have any money to invest either large or small sums, to send for pamphlet "Investment vs Speculation. Free to any one mentioning this paper

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IF

A ROUGH ESTIMATE.

the Fifth Avenue stages lose money, where does the money go? They are always crowded; generally jammed to their utmost capacity. They certainly do a good business and their expenses are microscopic. The omnibus itself is probably worth about eight dollars, and the company's horses must cost them nearly twelve dollars a pair. They wouldn't fetch that at an auction, but an auction is not a fair test. The deafening rattle of the crumbling window sashes is no expense to the extravagant stockholders. As nearly as we can figure it every omnibus must pay for its own cost about twice a day and leave a handsome profit besides.

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TIME'S CHANGES.

Husband: DIDN'T I TELL YOU, OLD WOMAN, I HAD A SURPRISE FOR

YOU?

Wife and Mother: YES; BUT I WOULDN'T HA' RECKERNISED JIM. HE HAS SUCH A RERFINED AIR ABOUT HIM, AN' HIS MUSTACHES MAKES SUCH A DIFFERENCE!

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Published every Thursday. $5.00 a year in advance, postage free. Single copies 10 cents. Back numbers can be had by applying to this office. Vol. I., bound, $30.00; Vol. II., bound, $15.00. Back numbers, one year old, 20 cents per copy. Vols. III. to XVII., inclusive, bound or in flat numbers, at $5.00 per volume.

Rejected contributions will be destroyed unless accompanied by a stamped and directed envelope.

Subscriber's wishing address changed will greatly facilitate matters by sending old address as well as new.

THE

HE decisions of the Court of Appeals in the election cases were of great and particular value as illustrating the ability of the court to rise above partisanship, and weigh questions of law without perceptible regard to the political consequences that may follow. In the decisions handed down, Republican judges record convictions unfavorable to the interests of their own party, and Democratic judges dissent from opinions that help their own side.. There is no partisan line to be drawn in the matter at all. The people of the State have reason to congratulate themselves that they have a tribunal where 8-to-7ism has no hold, and to which election disputes may safely be referred.

*

*

T seems to be about time for Col. Thomas C. Platt to go

IT

and get his political remains out of the last ditch and have them decently straighted out in an ice-box. Col. Platt may not feel that he has done with politics yet, but it looks very particularly just now as if politics had finished with Col. Platt. Such melancholy comfort as he can get from contemplating the wickedness of the conspiracy by which Hill and the Democrats stole the state, no merciful person should seek to interrupt. Of course, with the Court of Appeals feeling as it does, it is awkward to make any vociferous complaint, and that makes the trial all the harder to bear.

THE

*

HE enthusiasm with which the remission of the sentence of Commander McCalla has been received has been of the sort that finds its most adequate expression in addled eggs. The Commander's fault is one which would have been thought no very serious blemish a century or two ago, but contemporary opinion has little patience with brutality. We may not be as tough as our great-granddaddies were, but, take us in bulk,

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NOBODY but a reformer and a

son of a reformer would expect sense of Sophomores. Mr. William Lloyd Garrison, son of the eminent abolitionist, has been making the wilds of New England resound with his complaints of the D. K. E. Society of Harvard College, because of certain holes burned in the arm of one of his sons. Mr. Garrison avers that the Harvard D. K. E. brands its neophytes, and that it does its branding with cigars; and he insists that that is not a fit use for cigars to be put to. In support of his opinion he adduces the circumstances that his son's sore arm developed into a case of blood poisoning. So Mr. Garrison has written to Dr. Eliot, desiring him to constrain his young men to wiser conduct, and Dr. Eliot has replied that nothing on earth can make young men behave sensibly unless they see fit.

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FOOL

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DR

R. ELIOT has had experience and doubtless speaks according to it. He says that nothing but public opinion can really

regulate his young men's behavior. Here's some for them, then. One great trouble with Harvard's D. K. E. for some years past has been that its affairs have been kept about as private as those of the Union Club, of this town. Its customs have been published up and down the streets of Cambridge, Boston, and all the contiguous districts. Its powers and privileges have been perverted to various misuse, including amusement of the young ladies of the district known as the Back Bay. Gonuses have abused the brief authority with which it has clothed them, and some disagreeable results have followed. But when is a man to make an ass of himself, if not while he is a Sophomore, in college? Let us not expect too much of Sophomores. Fold your ears a little, Harvard D. K. E.'s, and have your branding done by a lighter hand. That's all.

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