The New York Herald Newspaper, July 23, 1874, Page 11

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BONE ALLEY. THE HOME OF THE RAG PICKERS Where the Rags, Bones, Fat and Bottles Go. From Cellar to Roof—Down in the Depthy— The Toilers in Dust and Mire, Among the poor quarters of the city none are poorer than that which borders the East River, from James slip to the foot of Honston street. ‘This district includes, in 1t8 two extremes, the wretched cellars of Water street, with their ac- companiment of bucket shops, velvet rooms and “gallors decoy” dens, and the reeking tenements of Cherry, Pitt, Willett and Goerck streets. The northern portion of this squalid regton is, in a great part, the home of the rag pickers, and here Mes Bone alley. Passing down Stanton street to a point where the Bast River breaks into view with its throng of vessels, whose naked masts stand in serried ranks uke the wraiths of a perished forest of pine, one comes suddenly upon @ locality so wretched and dirty that a feeling of repulsion well nigh irresist- ble creeps over the nerves and almost drives one from the place. On either hand human beings, bent under the weight of great sacks of filthy rags and refuse, gathered irom asn barrels, are passing im the throng. These persons are of both fexes, and while some are old and feeble, barely able to totter along with the heavy load they have collected, others are hale and muscular, with bronzed faces and sturdy limbs, Oiten the eye rests upon a child, | tallow faced and attenuated, who hurries past as (funder the lash of a taskmaster, casting stealthy Glances from side to sidé from under @ brow hope- ‘eas and lowering. Tnese unfortunate slaves of a aineteenth century civilization, bearing upon their backs the castaway rags and tatters of the street, | that are to ieed the maw of the printing press, scattering thought far and wide through the World, are hurrying toacommon centre. Down very highway and byway they stagger, moving in and ont, jostling and pushing their way through the crowds. Through every street and avenue, every alley and lane of the city, they have been tramping since the ‘we sma’” hours of the nigat. | They have gianced into every nook, they have penetrated every area, they have searched every gutter, and their iron hook has explored the con, tents of 50,000 ash barrels. Converging from all directions they enter Willett street, and in the centre of tne block lying between Stanton and Houston streets they turn rapidly down a narrow lane, which is THE ENTRANCE 10 BONE ALLEY. A long, narrow lane 1t1s, paved with gray flag- stone, and clean in comparison with the filthy Streets without. Beyond rises a long dreary tene- ment house, resem»ling a barrack or a prison. Entering the lane you face the centre of its bristling front. Its windows are draped witn many colors; its walls are dingy and present but one. Along the roofare rigged a hundred lines, trom which are pendant festoons of rags. Extending along the entire front of this building is the famous alley. Swarms of children and many groups of meanly attired women are gathered upon the pavement. They 100k at you, laugh at you and criticise you. You hear their comments as you pass and are jorced to acknowledge their good nature. Tne arent stands a little way down to the left. He amiles and shows his teeth, and then he comes forward, and after a tew remarks indicative of his curiosity to know the object of your visit, he becomes obliging and com- municative. Strange a3 it may seem, he never loses sight of the fact or ceases to remina you that he has two rooms to let, which must be se- cured early, or auy opportunity to enjoy the ap- rent benefits of * residence there will, perhaps, @ forever lost. This 1 the hive whence flow in & continuous stream those bat-like bees who gather round every little heap of miscellaneous ruobish, extracting trom it sweets and multitudinous useful things. TOLLERS IN THE DUST AND MIRE, in the gloom and shadow, they bear the stains of their Occupation upon their garments, and the marks of their weary, worn lives on lip and eye and brow. They are of all European races. They have come trom the Loire and the Rhine; they have wandered here srom the Danube and the Po. There are those who have drank beer in Angs- burg and wine from the vaults of the Rbine- pfaltz. Natives of Antwerp and Leyden, of Stockholm and Onristiansborg, of Altenburg and Hamburg. There are Jews from Poland, closely cropped Ceits from Dublin and Vonnemara, and Bohemians irom the meerscbaum districts, who, in length ot locks and odor of short black tpes, would rivalthe clan at Piufs. Little bare- legged sprites come and go, tugging at the weight of weli-filled baskets or bending under the load of heavy . chattering and ‘Sing in the jan- guage of slang that is tie lingua-Franca of children ana thieves. Old women, with handkerchiets tas- tened about their heads and necks, and with heavy hob-nafled shoes that clatter up and down over the pavement, pass 1n and out, muttering un- tntelligibly. Young girls, just budding into wo- manhvod, with dark, glittering eyes and brown, bare necks, glance polkily up_at you from the sbadow oi their coarse sacks. Young men, lying at full length upoo the pavement, whisper to one another their comments apou your personal ap- pearance und probaole object in visiting their apode, and few of them come to any conclusion that would be deemed flattering by the visitor. NINETY FAMILIES live in this one butding. Each family possesses a single room. Crowded into this narrow space few of them could retain an appearance of health, Were it not jor the iact that at least seven hours of each day are spent in the open air. Ventilation ia almost unknown in any of the houses of this class; and when they become overcrowded often by invalid, aged persons and the puoiest of little ones, they become hotbeds in which pestilence generates with La uated rapidity. Some of these ftooms are, indeed, marvels of cleanliness; and such are, in most cases, but scantily furnished. Others are as full ot odds and ends asa pawn- broker's salesroom or @ curiosity sup in St. Giles. In one rear room, on the second floor of No. 3, in the ailey, taere lives a poor woman, whose lace shows maby traces of recent sickness and a few of old-time beauty. The door of her apartment was wide open as the writer passed along the ballway, and he paused Jor an instant to admire the quaint collection that littered cg wails, tables, Noor, and even tne bed its ‘antique canopy. | It a@wak>ned old memories, and, most of all, & forgotten fancy of the home 01 the aichemist, described im ‘Hudibras,”” and o melancnoly vision of Albrecht Dttrer’s. ‘The woman herseli, pale, sight aud dressed in rusty biack, wore, in the haggard expression ot her face, & look in keeping with her peculiar surroundings, and on her iorehead the augel of death had set a sign, so that the destroyer in the summer passover will not I ther, When others are falling about her | door, She seemed conscious of this forerunner | and devoutly thankful or it, and pernaps @ Knowl. | edge obtained through some unknown means of t Will Appear im connection with the sanitary | aspect of tis place byand by led to her oeing there. There are those who, growing weary 01 life, seek out dangerous places and offer up uightly prayers that they may become victims to the Wrath oi the pestilence. Certain conditions of | diet and cleaniiness being dispensed with their prayers are answered. ‘The rent of the rooms in the alley varies accord- ing to location, the sume as it does In more favored Joealities. Rooms on the ground Noor aud In front are charged for at the rate of $6 75a month. Rear | rooms on the same floor are let tor $6 60. There 18 @ gradual dimmution in the rental charged as you approach tue fourtn floor, where the lowest | Priced rooms are let at $5 50 per month. THE DAY'S WORK BEGINS | at two o’ciock in the morning, when from all these rooms there suddenly streams out through | the windows the light of lamps anu candles. There 1a a hasty, shutiling noise turoughout the bullamg; sashes are hastily raised and lowered, and through | the dark halls heavily shod feet are heard picking | their way, In the shadow of the alley hundreds of | dusky figures glide fortn from the doorway and pass in wronps or one by ohe out under the gaslignt and into the streets, They leave their bomes in the gloom and darkness and witn the first taint | Streaks Of Gawn they appear 1a distant quarters | apd in places divers, pursting With a steady and industrious, thongh 4 sometimes hopeless air, their bomble culling, By seven ovclock they come thronging back to thetr wbode, and at nine A, M. all bat a lew stragglers have returned. DOWN IN THE DEPTHS. The rooms above ground in Hone alley are used Only for the ordinary purposes ol living. Busi- ‘Ress, which begins im the street, is here resumed ony in the ceilar, whence It 18 transferred to tie {ooh ang is Anished around the corner, Under ‘he building are a dozen or more small vanits, ex- | tending beneatn the pavement, and lighted only | by the Darrow tron gratings above them. The air ‘m these vauits is impure to the last degree, and is | damp ana Shilling. there is neither Noor nor tiles to the.i, and their bea KN are slimy and cov- ered With mouid, ere, crouched upon their knees, the old and young are busy from ‘en clock 1m the motning till noonday im assorting the Contents Of their sacks, wae ha: @ be | aud woollen ri | to within a distance of ten Jeet. | crush and cripple milhens of toem in a lew hours. | &8 the locusts Would do Mm they were leit unmo- emptied apon the earth. These consist of cotton ‘age, paper, iat, bones, crusts of | bread, old bottles anc occasional scraps of ieatber and metals, They are separated and placed in hitie 3. All this work is pampetse by twelve o’clock, at which hour the bone dealer arrives in the alley to make his daily purchases, Bones are brisk at present at sixty cents per rrel. The little heaps of cotton and woollen rags are scraped together and transported to the roo! of the building, Where they are suspended upon lines. They are usually quite Poet and the object in hang- ing them up is to get rid of the foreign matter that clings to them and which wind aud rain wil! re- move, They are not suffered to remain long ex- posed, as too much heat would dry them and re- duce their weight to an unprofitable figure. On Friday or Saturday afternoons they are gathered in separate bales and bundles and carried to the ragoealers io the neighborhood or to a large warehouse in Third street, near Lewis. ‘The prices paid Vary from time to time, but are usually at the rate of about two and one-lourth cents per pound for cotton and three cents per yer for woollen. At this rate the men, women and children engaged rh an average O! about eight dollars a week. Fat is sold to the soapmakers, the usual price being about two cents a pound. Bread crusts are eagerly purchased by Long Island countrymen, who come alter them with market wagons and carry them away as food for hogs, for whten pur- Bone ener have a value of $2 50 per hundred welg! Empty bottles of every description make up no smal share of a rag picker’s daily coliection, both in volume and weight. They are carelully packed among the rags to avoid breakage, and are sold at seven to eight cents per dozen. The bottle merehant resides opposite Bone alley, and his place of business is @ curiosity. He receives mis- cellaneous collections and assorts them after pur- chase. There you will find wine bottles which have contained the choicest importations, with the remnants of their labels careful preserved; ink botties, glue bottles, muctl- @ge bottles and babies’ nursing bottles; blue bottles and green boities; the smallest of crystal Vials and tne largest and most uncouth of all kinds o1 German Seltzer jugs; patent medicine bottles, with the most astounding names o! miraculous liquids cast on the sides, These make up tne con- tepts oi the shop. Broken giass is bought here at half a cent per pound. BONE ALLEY FROM A SANITARY POINT OF VIEW. Many of the rays that find their way into the garbage barrels and the gutters are pregnant with contagion. Heediess or tnougtiess peopie have, instead of destroying them by tre, thrown them into the street. They are not cleansed by the water with which they become saturated, nor does the Gith which attaches to them destroy in- fection. It fact, the street produces precisely the condition required for the earliest possible germi- nation of whatever seeas of disease and death may be concealed in them. Selected from the grease, hones and glass, jumbied together in the sack of the rag picker, they are removed from the vaults of the cellars to the roof, tor the purpose oi drying, aod the air which ians them iceds the Jungs alike of the poor and the rich—of the factory gir! and the miliionnaire’s daughter. Oiten, in the adjoining tenements, some poor wretch dying longs for a breath oi fresh air in bis close and overheated room, and prays that the windows tay be opened to admit the breeze thar he watenes curling tne smoke from the cnimneys and rustling the clothes drying on an adjacent roof, ‘tbe casement is opened only to admit the poisonons breath of the wind that has rioted with the deadly rags and comes to the lips 01 the sufferer | w only to cool them forever, Surrounded by maiaria arising from filthy gutters, panting under a heat | that 18 simply an incandescent stencn, breathing an aerial poison, tney gradually loosen their hold on life and sink away from its noise aud fever into the quiet and chill ol the grave. THE LOCUST PLAGUE, a How the Farmers Get Rid of Them in Asia and Africa. To THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD:— For the benefit of the sufferers from the locust plague in the Northwest allow me, through the medium of your paper, to give those Western farmers some sincere advice. I have been for many years a resident of countries annually visited by this dire scourge. In Northwestern India, Mesopotamia, Syria and South Africa, I haye care- tully watched the habits of this most destructive of ail insects, as well as the manner in which the natives of those countries used to combat the re- lentiess intruder. It is @ remarkable fact that the regions mostly invaded by locusts are notoriously destitute of wocd—indeed, of fuel of any kina— yet to my astonishment I have noticed that the natives of all those districts invariably employed this very article, or rather its smoke, wherewith to oppose the invading host. As, however, their success depends upon the quantity and density of the smoke which they can produce, and wood bemg much too scarce in those regions to be burned extensively and peat and coal altogether unknown there, the inhabitants carefully coliect all the dung of their camels, horses, mules, donkeys, oxen, cows, sheep, goate, &c., mix it with chopped straw, grass or roots, shape the mixture into round cakes about seven inches in dismeter by about an inch and a half in thickness and dry them in the sun. These cakes, called “Chow- Pattee,” by the natives of Western India, constitute the principal, and im many dis- tricts only fuel, not only in india, but alsoin Persia, Mesopotamia, Syria, Arabia, Egypt, Nortn Africa and many other countries. They burn as freely as good peat, but create a dense, stufing smoke, the very thing needed to keep an invading locust host at bay, or at least to cause It to deviate in its course of westruction, indeeu, 1 have often seen tuese “Chowpattee” fires ourned with really wonderful eflect tor that purpose, Their efficacy, of course, depends altogether upon proper man- agement, as they have to be lignted beiore the locusts have arrived in the locaity which these tires are intended to protect. ‘The locusts seldom or ever take to their wings before sunrise and rarelv if ever “dritt’ (fy) atter sunset. Even if they do light on the ground be- tweem sunrise and sunset they wili always be found to be very restless, easily turbed and they will readily take to their wings (rise) again if approached by either man or beast During the night they will invariably be fouad at rest, that is to Say se.tled on the ground and feeding voraciously ; but im less than two hours they will drop into a kind Oi semi-le hargic condition, when they are utteriy unable to take to their wings. Taking ad- vantage of this comatose and temporary helpless | condition of the locusts, the inbabitants 0. the countries above mentioued drive all their camels, horses, mules, donkeys, OXen, cows, sheep and | goats over the ground covered by the obnoxtous | insects, which ure trampled to death and crippled | by the million under the animals’ feet. Let our distressed settlers of the Northwest imitate in this Matter their uncivilized fellow sufferers o! Asia | and Africa. Let them kindle brisk fires early in the morning, at least oue hour before sunrise, all ground their Jarms or flelds; or if that be impos- sible iet thein Kindle them all along that side in vhe direction of Which they expect the thvasion of the locusts. ‘he fires should not be more than 100 yards apart—the closer the better. Coal, tar, haif dried peat, or still leas expensive matter, such as | grass, sods, wet straw, green brushwood, reeds, cattle dung, bones, horns and boofa of dead ani- | mais, reiuse leather and hides, cast off shoes and | Yags--in jact, anything that will create a dense, stilling smoke and is at the same time mexpen- sive snould be freely thrown iuto those fires and & vigorous iumigation should be kept up irom sun- a ut sunset, oF as long as the locusts are “on he wing, Locusts ‘off the wing,” 4. e. settled down for the night, are prububly best destroyed iu the manner above stated. Crowds of people walking over the fields cove. ed by the locusts, will be as serviceable iu trampling the insects to death, as large herds of Ihave seen camels, horses, mules, don- keys, oxen, cows, sheep, goats, pigs, poultry, dogs, cats, gazelles, anteiopes, & @at live locusts freely, without injury to them: also seen thein die in consequence of eating dead, decayed locusts, Pigs and poultry, nowever, can | eat them in any condition, appear to relish them and actuaiy grow roiling tat on tois diet. In ail toe towns and villages on botu sides of the Persian Gulf, in those xlong the eastern coast of Arabia, in those aiong the coast of the Ked Sea and in many other places, locusts are sold in considerable quantities iN the public markets or bazaars and Constitute an importaut article of fuod for the poorer classes o1 the inbabiants. They are generally sold im the market eitter ip a pickled, salted, sun-dried or roasted state, as ley, like fish, cannot be kept fresh longer than @ few gours alter death. | have oiteu tasted them while stroliimy through the bazaars, when L hap- pened to see them eXposed tor sale just tres aud crisp from tie roust, but! hever conld “go th-m Taw.” ‘They taste ‘very much lke shrimp, but when not pertectly fresh they have an unpleasant cadaverous odor, aud are thon decidedly con- temptible food. Farmers, who jack large herds of cattle to drive them over tne locusts, or Wo hve too isolated to get a crowd of peopie together to march over them might use large, beavy stone or iron rollers (such 4s are used in smootung hewly macadamized ruads), drawn by horaes or oxen over the fields covered by locusts, aud thus 2. In driving cattle or rotlors over suea fields tne farmers cannot possibly injure their crops as much lested. ‘The eggs or larve ot tue Insect, because of their being deposited in the ground, and, there- jore, rather dificult to get at, are not 80 easily destroyed as the iully developed locust itself Deep ploughing, with & view to crash them under the Weight of the soil turned upon them, is nndoubtediy recommendabie, Woile pigs and ponitry allowed to roam Over so ploughed fields would greatly assist in the extermination of these locusts in embryo, =| All chemical nostrums must prove virtually im- | practicable, owing to their expensiveness, where- fore I honestly believe the modus operandt above described to be as yet the most practicai and ine x- pensive one to contend with the locust plague, and | Miller.—Memorandums, | volver, worth $14, and a watch, valued at $16, NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY THE CouRTS. | Charies Hudson, late Cashier of the defunct Fighth National Bank, charged with making false returns to the Comptroller of the Currency, gave batl yesterday in $5,000 to await examination. Union Adams, late President, and Maltby G, Lane and William Wade, iate directors of the bank. Shnilarly charged, surrendered themselves and gave bail each in $5,000 to await examination. Charles B. Orvis, against whom twenty-five in- dictments have been found for forgery and fraudu- lently negotiating $20,000 worth of Buflalo, New York and Erie Railroad bonds, applied yesterday for bail through his counse! in the General Sea- sions. Judge Sutherland wil! hear counsel for and against the application this morning. SUPREME COURT—CHAMBERS. Decisions. By Judge Lawrence, Wright vs, Lemon, Byrnes va, Clark, Gillies va. Cady va. Doyie, Kioppman vs. Dayton,—Granted. Biaseli v! ‘heeler.—Stay of proceedings granted on conditions, Memorandum, Chapman va, Chapman.—in the matter of Heil- field Va. Bott; in the matter of Conway.—Memor- andoms tor Counsel. In the matter, &c., Snyder.—Report of Referee confirmed. Conner, Sheriff vs. Gladdens Run Coal and Iron Co.—Motion to continue injunction granted. Bodine vs. Fora.—An allowance of $95 is granted to the plaintuf. « Hunt vs, Hont.—Referee’s report confirmed and decree of divorce granted to the piatuntitff. Groff vs, Woli.—I wish to hear Counsel on the subject 0! allowance in the case. In the matter of Ammerman.—Motton denied. Ducker vs, Loane,—Motion denied without costs, Memorandum. SUPREME OOURT—SPEOIAL TERM. H Decisions, By Judge Van Brunt. Graffe va, Levy.—Judgment for defendant. Emmett vs. Setou.-Memorandum for counsel. State of Tennessee vs. Davis,—Memorandam, SUPERIOR OOURT—SPECIAL TERM. Decisions. By Judge Sedgwick. First Baptist Church of Hariem vs, Coles et al.— | Finding and conclusions erettied, Vochverger vs, Dietrich et al,—Order of refer- ence granted, QOURT OF GENERAL SESSIONS. Convicted of Carrying Brass Knuckles. kefore Judge Sutherland, In this Court yesterday Daniel O’Connell, a Sailor, was tried and convicted of having in his possession, with intent to use, brass knuckles, upon the person of Frederick Alexander, the Superintendent of the sailor's Home. There i$ another indictment against the Hibernia “agitator? for assaulting a satior in the Hom His onor sentenced O’Connell to the State Prison Jor one year, Sent to the State Prison for Five Year: William G. Blair was convicted of grand larceny. The evidence showed that on the 23d of Jone Leonard K. Smith & Co. delivered to the prisoner acase of cassimere cloth worth $500, which was consigned to Joseoh EF. Manning, Fitchburg, Mass by the New York and Norwich Transportation Company. Blair brought pack the receipt book and What purported to ve a receipt for the box of goods, it was subseqnentiy discovered that the goods never reached thelr destination. The pris- oner swore that he delivered the box at the pler, and a man named Black signed the book. As there was another charge against him the Judge imposed a severe penalty, Which was five years in the State Prison. Grand Larcenics, George Doherty was indicted ‘or stealing on the loth of July $80-in money from the person of ‘rhomas H. Kelly. He pleaded guilty toan attempt at grand larceny. Georgiana Marr, who, on the 9th of this month, stole a watch worth $100 from Alexander A, Pier- | gon at a disreputable house in Prince street, pleaded guilty to an attampt at grand larceny. These prisoners were eacn sent to the State Prison for two years and six months. John Muller, who, on the 15th of July, stole a gold watch and chain valued at $160, the property of Leopold Geisman, pleaded guilty to an attempt at grand larceny. A similar plea was accepted from Peter Smith, alias Keiser, who was indicted for stealing a re- | | trom Robert Miller on tae 27th of June, These prisoners were each sent to the Peniten- tiary for one year. gad 4 Wellmann, who was charged with steal- ing, on the 14th of this month, two suits of gen- tlemen’s clothes, worth $75, the property of Frank Evang, pleaded guilty to the lesser grade of lar- ceny. There were mitigating circumstances which induced His Honor to mitigate the punishment to imprisonmentin the Penitentiary for six months. A Youthful Stabber. George Rose, a boy, pleaded guilty to assault and battery, the allegation veing that on the 21st of June he stabbed a boy named Matthew Carey in the wrist with a small knife. He was sentencea to the House of Reiuge. Petit Larceny. Charles Cassidy, who, onthe 27th of June, stole | ® silver watch from Daniel P. Reeve, pleaded | guilty to petit larceny irom the person. The sentence imposed was eighteen months in the | State Prison. An Acquittal. George Orni was tried upon a charge of stealing @ horse and milk wagon belonging to Thomas Mc. Murray on the Sth of thisironth. Tne evidence showed that he had no feiontous intent and a ver- dict of “not guilty” was rendered. PIFTY-SEVENTH STREET POLIOE OOURT, ExeAssistant Alderman ‘‘Mickey” Shot by His Barkeeper. Before Juage Sherwood, On Saturday night last Thomas Colby, a bar- | keeper in the employ of ex-Assistant Alderman | “Mickey” Fay, who keeps a liquor store on the cor- Fay } are all from the tenements we find that | oF transient; terme reasonable: | bank. | first.time in the present article, | of sick children on the lists of physicians attached ner of Seventy-fourth street and avenne A, asked for his wages, which Fay had previously refused to | pay. A wordy warfare followed, and Fay ordered Colby to leave his place. The latter did not com- | ply, and Fay took him by the shoulder to put him | out, Colby claims that as Fay was pushing him out of the door he struck him on the nose with his | clenched fist, causing the biood to flow in copions | streams ; that, not content with this, Fay alsothrew athim a weiss beer bottle, and failing to sirlke him, he picked up another one and followed him out on the sidewalk, with the intention of assaulting him with {t, and that, in self-deience, he fired two shots at Fay. Fay, on the other hana, says that he only pushed Coiby from the store, when he tarned round and fired at him three times, one of the shots taking effect in his cheek, where the bullet yet remains, Colby then made his escape, and Fay, alter being attended to by a doctor, went to Captain Gunner, at the Nineteenth precinct station house and entered a complaint against Colby. Detectives Levins and McGowan received instructions to arrest Oolby, and taney claim they made every effort to arrest him. He, however, appeared at this Court on Monday and asked ‘or a Warrant for the arrest of Fay on a charge of assault and battery, but did not mention in his complaint anything in reference to the bottles or the shooting. The warrant was given and yester- | bie Fay was arrested and brought to Court, where peared Colby as complainant, Mr. Nathan t appeared as counsel jor Fay, anc on his representations of the facts of tne case, corravo- rated as they were by those of Detective Levins, a complaint was taken by the Court against Co'py woe, from complainant then descended to the position of deeudant, on a charge of felonious assault and battery with inteni to ki, The com- plaint against Fay was then dismissed and Colb: Was committed for trial, in deiault of $2,000 pati. Fay was an Assistant Aiderman from the Twenty- first ward during Tweed's reign. COURT CALENDARS—THIS DAY, SUPREME COCET—CHAMBERS—Held by rig oo rence.—Nos. 11, 41, 43, 52, 64, 83, 89, 96, 104, 112, 114, 128, 180, 135, 154, 157, 170, CouRT OF GENKRAL Spastone—Held by Judge Suther.and.—The People vs, Patrick Whelan, Jelumious Assault and battery; Same vs. James | Supple, Heary Supple, et al., burglary; same vs. | Thomas Mack, burglary: Same vs. jael Kenuy and Kdward McDonald, burglar ame vs, Jonn | Henry and Michael Cronin, burglary; Same vs. Charies Ruppel. burglary ; Same vs. homas Lynch and John Welch, burglary; Same vs, Timothy Collins, James Gibbons and Robert Collins, graud larceny; Same vs. William Sullivan, grand larcen: Same vs. Frederick Henderson, grand jarcen; Same vs. Granville Ely, grand larceny ; Same Vs. William Miller, grand larceny; Same vs. Janes Brady and Charies Shalie, grana larceny ; Same vs. Mary Keenan, Rosanna Cartin, David McAdam, ec al, grand larceny; Same vs. Elizabeth Harmen, rand larceny; same vs. Patrick Conroy, and ‘atrick Hanley, 1a larceny; Same vi ‘ictor Linknardt, grand larceny; Same vs, William Mar- cus, larceny from ihe person, Same vs. fnomas Sulivan and George ‘ns, larceny irom the reon; Same vs, Charles A. Lindeau and James toner, jarceny irom the person; Same va, John | | Law- sincerely recommend it herewith to our distressed | Lohman, larceny trom the person me vs, George intmera of we Noreawest, Avaoul LoouaA Sere ang Bo ae hnreeny roma ihe persons , SVILLS, ame Ve. kara Or, BBs 1G bat! ‘ « < WHEN DOCTORS AGREE. | 874.-TRIPLE SHEET. ont—not Jones, of Nevada, but Jones, of lowa. “LEWIS VITAL BOGY." {From the Chicago Times,} It never occurrea to us, Jones has brought him What Medical Men in New York Have Bone | Jones has known him “trom a barefoot boy to an and Are Doing for the Poor. if | the United States.”* Facts in Regard to the) Dispensaries. To exhibit the magnitude of the task undertaken | by St. Jonn’s Guild im the interest of the destitute sick children of the city, and to indicate the neces- | sity watch exists for a generous pecuniary, a3 | well as moral, support of 1ts noble efforts, tne fol- lowing statement is given. The facts and figures presented Will, it is believed, redound greatly to not over well paid gentlemen, who suppiement | years of study by lives of self-sacrificing neroism, | and who, ough oiten satirized, are our first and a helping hand through lite. } To begin with, 1t may be as well to present the | $6 i rather startling fact that 200,000 persons are an- | tween Broadway and the square, 2 $6 | double, at 43 West wi 9 4, Sixth .—Room h see how all this humane work 1s accomplished, | jor tatuliles or single ventiemen. hen nnaily attended by physicians in the city of New | York free of charge, and that half a million of pre- scriptions are prepared and given to the poor | each year by these same doctors, By aud by we will | | honored and honorable man.” Jones declares him a true friend to the Mississippi Valley and the rangers and a peer of Benton, im as ‘Lewis Vital Bogy, the next President of But bear in mind, gentic Jones has toasted reader, that it was done at the rear end of a ban- qnet, and that there must be some exception to prove that tn vino veritas, a a nee with Bc ing. 2 BOARDERS W. BLOCK PROM BROADWAY, ated.—One Room and Bedroom on fourth floor, « one large third story front Koom, furni foard; no objectton to children ; privil ring . No. 686 Seventh avenue. OR THREE GENTLEMEN Breakfast and Tea at 137 Washington street, Jersey | ANTED. HAN CAN HAVE ROOMS, Oity, two blocks from ferry; private family; dinuer Sun- day; price $5. QR TO $7 the credit of a class of earnest, hardworking and | Dr) $e but it will be found worth whiie just here to con- | 7 sider how there comes to be @ necessity tor it, | ‘The tenement house population of New York is in round numbers 600,000. As the charity patients ONE-THIRD OF THIS POPULATION 18 annually prostrated by diseases largely induced | 26 bs by confinement in overheated and badly venti- lated rooms, by noxious gases rising from ill-con- | ¢), structed drain pipes and defective sewerage, an trom canses incidental to the crowding together of so large a number of human beings deprived of proper iacilivies for preserving cleanliness, both of their surroundings and their persons. The causes | handsome & they not lay by something for “a ramy day?” | |4 They would not then be forced to accept charity irom the public in general or the doctors in partic- | and airy houte; war, The auswer is here, Of these 600,000 | dwellers in tenements 100,000 are working women | and working gtris, and over 200,000 are children, | These working women and girls sew furs for four | erenees excbanued cents an hour, they make vests jor five cents each, | they make pantaloons for eight cents a pair, and they make shirts for trom filty-five to eighty cents a dozen, tained, or while STRENGTH AND COURAGE LAST. When the busy season is over and work fails, or when their health breaks down, they starve or beg, and they apply for medical aid to pnysicians at the dispensary for the poor, or die. There ts, to be Sure, another alternative, that many who are young and unwilling either to die or beg choose, | i and that last sorrowful election fills our streets | « With outcasts and our hospitals and prisons with the saddest of all haman wrecks, The men are of all trades, and get a livelihood for themselves and famines as best they may. Some are small tradesmen, who reap a harvest— plentiul or scanty as the case may be—at all sea- sons of the year. Others are mechanics and labor- ers, whose means of existence are affected by | every fluctuation that rolls the tidal wave down | from the monetary centres tnrough all the chan- | nels of manufacture and commerce, A prosperous season may bring them a rich return for their labor, anda nest egg may be laid away inthe | Aseason of disaster, or the periodical re- | currence of HAED TIMES, i They work so long as work can be ob- | PER nished double and sit was 3 AND UPWARD TO $10 PER W x Board and Rooms, at 29 AND UPWARDS PER Board and nicely farnist WEST TENTH STRE WEST TWENTIETH STRER or en suite, with or withoat private table; terms | | 2) ST STR mo Q4 | 35 ood Hoard: reasonable aga lar caer tye of disease existing to so alarming an extent have | —~ been brietly indicated, But the question may be | 3 asked, Why, if these people are industrious, do | §' ba 9 eo) ZT, NO, with flrs: class Board. to pa AST TWENTY-THIRD uare).—Handsome Room: je, with or without Board FAST TWENTY-PO HL 2K WEE Rooms, with a good table, at 168 Bleecker strce! last props in life, and are always ready to lend us | {Wo, lines of cars puss the house: five blocks west oF | references required, DSOMELY FUR. le Kooms, with Board; hot and’ bath; American y ‘0: LLEN'T Washington place, bi FOR GOOD WEEK ed Rooms, BETWEEN FIFTH with Board, —ENTIRE FLOORS LEGANT ROOM, rties. either permaneut ferences exchanged. STREE’ (MADISON is to let, singly or en STRE: SMALL private family wiil let, with Board. the choice of | oms, on second amd third floors, at very lerate prices; location central. GRAMERCY PLACE strect).—Large front r tab) ATH BYREET, WE ck Parlor. House priv 6) WEST “ FO Board, a ver ‘able se frst class In ev EAST TWENT, handsomely fur ed TLY FURNISHED double, Room, running water, ail improvements; ‘ood Board, $12 per week ‘or two; single Room, $5; also | , WITH 1 ‘ond tloor Room’; large ery respect; references exchanged, s RA OL AR FIPTH Lai $12, S14, $ 8 for sons, with agle Rooms | 184 Hanae stall, to 1et, w ” rey also Room suitabie tor two gentlemen; terms moderate. | BELOW d, 6 convenient to cars, stages and 5! terms moderate, i TWE th and sev Vibg more room (han th Rooms on second Hoor, t s, with or without Bi ces miven and req " ni Boar WEST NTH front Room, on se Bie} nciul, opposite the SLXTH AVE and ‘hirt 10 sixth’ street two gentient md floor, to UE, BETW ney require, Will let Iwo and their 1 modern convemen R MACDOUGAL,— ps Doth large and d, ac moderate rates STRE: LARGE |, With Board ; E let T STREET, it Rooms, with Bo r single gendemen ; Piscopal “College Par levated Railroad depot; | 3, Yo ley handsomely iurnished front Parlor and Pedroom and back Room and eo with private table; also hall Room, with joard. | oh first Hor, room & LU. 03 a ‘dren trom’ the bottle up. URN. Be ANDSOMELY man and wif ard tor Ia WIDOW LADY rd; has a very pleasant he SHED ROOM FOR GENTL HES A CH ne and has raised Apply at 450 West 19th st., | ady; also single Room: Address FORRES1, Herald Uptown Branch office. A for: | which must be centra. will soon dissipate their little hoard, even if the | T failure of a great banking house has not locked it up for ninety days or for eternity, Scientists | settle all these matters by the “laws of labor,” “supply and demand” and all that sort of thing, but the good people of New York never preach Adam Smith's sermons when the hungry, dying are at their doors, At this moment, when the children of the poor are suffering and every etfortis being made by | bs 0 | the charitable to care tor them, it may be well ¢ give a list of the dispensaries where physicians and medicines may be ootained withvut cost. The 1ol- the use of those who have sick children and may wish to send them on the iree excurstons, as the recommendation of any of the puysicians attaciea to the dispensaries will Le 10 the same purpose as a card trom the visitors of the Guild. THE CITY DISPENSARIES, where medical examinations, advice and prescrip- tions can be obtained, tree 01 cost, by the poor, are located in many quarters of the city. Thougn they ure thus easily accessible, and though, as has been stated, 200,0v0 persons in euch year avail them- [A numbers, doubtless, who will read of them for the | to these institutions will come large draits to the barge used as a floating hospital by St. John's Guild. In this way an educated discrimmation will be exercised in selecting the children who Will be most benefited by these tree excursions, | ay and when the little ones are returned the doctors | $) 50to$ perday; for croquet, &c. who have them in charge at their homes can note | the effects and determine the advantages of this | treatment. In this connection the followin; garies and brief memoranda of them will be of interest | ‘the New York Dispensary (founded in 1791) islocated at the corner of White and Centre | stre It has a staff of iorty-two physicians, woo annually attend 86,000 patients and give out 70,0.0 prescriptions. The Northern Dispensary is at the intersection of Waverley place and Christopher street. It has | twenty-three physicians, who bave attended dur- ing the past year 16,010 patients and issued 32,000 prescriptions. ‘The Eastern Dispensary stands on the corner of | for the sun Grand and Essex streets, it ti eighteen physi- | claus and the visits paid and prescriptions com- pounded are nearly equalin number to those of the Northern Dispensary, From the army | bei. where may be found the comf neney desired; references exchanged. | terms and location, R. E. C., Herald office. sick and | — CoRR Sree ORE W a ge BOARD AND LODGIA GENTLEMAN WANTS A SMALL, NEAT ROO) furnished, with or without Board, Where the coi taoia home can be had; giv Address » YOU tamily ow. Post office. 2. tor gentleman and exclusive bath, forts. of a NG WANTED, e price and locatio: NOME, Herald oftic: ANTED—AN UNFURNISHED ROOM,WITH BOARD, | in a private family, home; perma? Address, statin, 2 ROOM, NICELY FURNISAED, | th and Thirty-fourt streets, tor jeman and lady, with Bourd tor iady ; terms mode- eferences given, Address H, I ion A. NTED—ROOMS, “WITH PRIVATE TABLE AND for family of four or five, from Sep- | lowing will also prove valuable asa directory for , tember 1; must be wholly or mostly on second floor, | | Answer, stating terms and location, box Post office: HOTELS. —MAISON PARISIENNE, Twelfth stres nticmen at suinmer price! 38 le de hote at 6 P. M. >. | tully given on ap; lst of dispen- | jted facts relating to | §2 per ni. Ure 4’ block trom. Cirs with or without Board, tor famiites and gentlemen, by day or wees, at moderate prices. NY, aN Bayard s: r M0, per night, $2to $3 per week; GREAT REDUCTIOD IN PRICES.—FRANKFORT | House. corner Franktort and Willian | cool, light Rooms, 25 and 50 cents each; gentle selves of the benetits oflered, there are stil. great , families, m_ str men ‘and ARDS, CIRCUL the METROPU No. 218 Broad plication. — iw RANT south chea| HOUSE, 48 of Chatham yopen all night. RRE HOUsK, KE iat, i RO NGLAND HOT L, ect. — 2) light R 10 LET—AT SPINGLER HOUS the advantage of most city hotels, with fine shade, green | urass aut fountains in front, the with amis ‘The German Dispensary is at No. 66 East Aighth | alt street. It has twenty physicians ahd during the past year 13,136 ‘Yhe New York Free Dispensary for Children, lo- | cated at No, 496 hast Fitteentn street, has a stuil | fourth st atients Were treated by its staff, | pass in the square, of sixteen physicians, who last year treated 2,672 | ~ patieats, Demilt Dispensary, One of the most popular and | | widely kuown tn whe city, is at the corner of | cond avenue and ‘fwenry-third street. It has a 22,330 patients, and dealt out 52,473 preavtipsions. Bellevue “Burean of Surgical and edical Relief aft of twenty-turee physicians, last year treated | £ Ulster or Oranve count: for Oatdoor Pour’ is iocated at the hospital foot of | ~, ‘Twenty :sixth street, Kast River, and has atiached | to 1ts staff iorty-six physicians. je have at- tended 22,127 patients during the past year, and | moderate terms; the houses | furnished; gas in every roo “adtdre have issued $2,083 prescriptions. The Western Dispensary, at No, 384 Ninth ave- | nue, for women und children, nas ten physician: treated last year 1,645 patients and gave out 2,68 prescriptions, P " Tne Central Dispensary, No. 934 Eighth avenue, | mirable indy. having a pleas bas a staff of twenty-two physicians, had las: year | Hot m 5,206 patients and issued 19,604 prescriptions. The Northwestern Dispensary, corner Thirty- sixth street and Ninth avenue, has twenty-six poyaic an$ ON its staff, Who iast year attended | SL patients and delivered to them a total of | 968 prescriptions, ; rhe West side German Dispensary, No, 332 West | Fortieth street, has six physiciaus, cared lust year | tor 3,685 patients and issued 6,583 prescriptions. | Holy lrimity vispensary has eleven pliysicians and uring the yeur 2,437 patients, It 18 ate the | Bch Wh i ing Machine Co. | of itty: | —— corner Of Madison avenue and Forty-second street. The Northeastern Dispensary, ver! popes among the poor, is located at ‘No, 222 East ninth street. Attached to its staif are tnirty-iour | physicians, who have during the past year at- | telideu to 21,656 patients and issued $1,378 pre- seriptions. New York Orthopedic Hospital and Dispensary is at No. 126 Bast Filty-ninth street. It has ten phy: | sicians, Who treated last year 424 patients, | ‘The Yorkville Dispensary ts at No. 1,484 Third av: | enue. There are ten physicians there, who treated during the past year 3,640 patients, Mantattan Dispensar, way and 129th street, lt nas two physicians. Hariem Dispensary, located on Fourtn avenue, between 126th and 127th streets, has five pnysi- cians, and last year cared ior 2,671 patients and | gave our 6,5;0 prescriptions, | rhe New York Ear Dispensary and the Dental infirmary are located, the first at the northwest corner of Ninth avenue and Thirty-sixth street, the second at the corner of Third avenue and ‘Twenty-t.ird street. The former has four physi- cians and 641 patients yearly; the jatter three | BagRCAne, and 5,941 patients, From t bove it will be seen that a total of 331 physicians, a very few of whom only receive a ail compensation, devote their time and skill to rr ball Ive and health of the city’s poor. much honor cannot well be paid them. Yet hese are not the only ones. of the medical colleges lend their services in the same Work Of charity, and the grand total of those ho receive medical attendance, as Nn en jas be ady Btated, 18 200,01 and tue total of pre taripticns peepated and given way is 400,000 > can accomm: the Low qui | all particulars, MONTOSE, bi TA A via good home-like p | nw Ne I BY only thre Veak; tavle yountity f y egetables, ke.! term pe! {eietiia ‘BLOODGOOD, fnign Refers to Albert Bell, No. 4 Bible House, je staf’ of Most | avenue, le Rooms, fronting o1 net, With ot Without rear, making it as cool and nent, with road) et and Umiversity pla: COUNTRY BOARD. ASTORIA, roguet, was: firet « heulthy location; oniy 25m LADY, EXPERIENCED LN French and music, desires grounds eh oft Heraid Uptown Bi LADY HAVING RENTED Bath avenue, two hundred ate Boarders, pern best. ng Branch, GENTLEMAN weeks tor his littl vb 80, red. SARM HOUSE{EX de trees, and me Post office. NEW PARM do: HOUSE iD rence. Ap) fourteenth stree ONALTHAN BW FAMILIES with good country Board at Erie Kailway 176 BLEECKER STRERT, ine Rooms, with excellent’ Board, EW HOWERY, square.—Cleanest, best venti- house in the city; no bugs; Rooms, 35c. to 56 Warren street. rders—Ploasantly sittated about 3) sailing, surf aud still water bath to F. WHNSON, “Domestic? Sew- Building, Broadway, corner K. SON, Bast Moriches, L. I. BE location high and health | scenery and pleasant drives: vegetabie: | Rartioulars meet ihe proprietor at $i Third avenue to- Rio ARS, BILL HEADS, POSTERS, LAW forms, Bills of Lading, and every kind of Jol merciat and Theatrical Printing neatly, promptly done at AALISHM , Com- cheaply. and JLITAN PRINTING E way. Estimates chee T, NEAR ONE BLOC PLAN, ONE coms, the OPEAN 3) BOWKRY, CORNER tly turnished, for gentlemen ‘coms, 1 HA PEW DOUBLE n Union square, cheap Board; this Rouse has end large, open yards in | pleasant’ as the country 3 1 its’ ventral location to churches and places ‘of y access froin ail parte ot the city ; y stages and Fourth avenue, Grand, Thirty: ce and’ Broadway cars Be tat lass table; no mosqni- inntes by Peck si TEACHING BE: Hoard in exchange in ves, Address M. Hee, TWO COTTAGES ON yards irom the ocean, nianent or transient, on RES BOARD FOR A FEW od 7 yours, with some ad- | nt home in the country, | ore than 25 nmiiles trom the city; Address, within tree days, fiving a ferald references re: locality and office. CELLENT BOARD CAN ona farm, very pleasantly situated, ear the railroad depot within one mile of Peconic Bay. NW. WOODHULL, Jamesport, Sut TO rods from Ki city ACCOMMODATE. a farm house, 25 miles god For trait, &e. OARD IN SARATOG single persons can have good | of # home at 22 Philadelphia stree FEW FAMILIES OR ard and the comforts terms reasonable. ELS York, for a tleman, wife, grou wi hig’ st he moderat adress, ra'd office. OARD CORNWALL, YP boarders at private residence, from week; bewutital grounds and healtiy country n by Hudson River, Apply | Cornwall, ATSKILL.—BOARD AT A Pal tof the Village; g is @t the corner of Broad: | JQOARD WANTED—WITHIN 1g HOURS OF NRW and child aged 3; a und and shady: terms th particulars, : vi W SUMMER $5 to $lU per or JOHN PARR, 6i7 :VERAL MORE BOARD. at my farm house im the | lea tor health and scenery ; In House and 12s from Fgh | f Milk, CBRS, Heats, Fowl, yer Weck Address Mra | Society. Greene county, Fourth RM HOUSH, 3% MILES: eer eke single and | ce, Near Sixth avenue. _ | dan’s carriage at depot, > 80 a handsome small | B A family or | N THIRTY-FIFTH | | MEN DESIRE BOARD IN A PRIVATE | Catholic preferred; quiet neighborhood, | ‘Ywentieth street, Address J. &. LIDDELL, box AND 40 EAST ‘ cen University place and Broadway: elegant Clase ley families and single | tal eets, 250 pertect order; newly | lenty of shade and table | sg Mrs. LANGLEY, Moran's Cottages, tro hours | COUNTRY BOARD. TRY BOARD—AT FARM MOUSE NEA Kili Mountains, se mil ted on high’ ground, flae mountain ‘out fishing near by; good accommodations; hoard’ $8 per week. Address G. 8. BLOOM, Catskill, | views; NOUNTRY BOARD—IN healthy locality, ata bathing aud fishing; conve $5 per week. Address Post office, Riverhead, Le UNTRY BOARD WANTED. ASANT AND » 70 miles trot elt y 5 jent to station: terms 87 i HENRY HOWELL, box L@ TWO ROOMS 10) Co vcniensn and, tis mother, near and of cas cess to the city by railroad, mear depot good fishing pleasans drives, and where but f are tak lew adults Fi ‘Address, with full particulars, M., box AIRY ROOMS, WITH for families or gentlemen: house spiendidiy located on high ground ; fine hown. trait, €¢ le nlerate. Apply on Palisade avenue, opposite ¥ teriau church, or address box 121, Post oitice, FE BRIDGEHAMPTON, YGOD COUNTRY BOAR bd X Surf and stall water ing o1 | farm, pleasant ¢ ‘ and alts rooms: st ; terms rea bie, Address Captain AND, Bridgehatn j tons Ie terenc ‘ichardson, 507 Hudsom | (J00D BOARD AND PI Nt ROOMS ON A J Farm in New Jerse: and comfortable. ting and fishing; health ‘ le Aah, No. 8 Cornelia street quire of Mrs PR, y OOD, PLAIN TF tarm hi cary ARD WAN M thiles of city and three fen w three; whooping cough; mountain air preferred, ing lowest terms, J. D., box 191 Herald | [rryPoRT, N. J.—cooD fistung;’ terms reasomaD! ARD, Mra, SIDNEY ONG BRANCH BOARD ar 810 PER WEEK FOR i4 adults, ina private family. Addr: box | office, Long Branch, N ee pe: Sema | LORS, BRANCH BOARD—at RATES; | Li shade and ocean breezes. Apply at 46 West Twenty: fourth street, or first house on left baud side of Morris avenue, Long Branch, Take Appell’s staxe at depot. ARTIES OF ADULTS WISHING A COOL, HEALTHY jocation, good Board, very reasonable terms. with | references exchanged, address 8. B C., Brentwood, L. L | GEA BATHING ING AT CLARK Island, of Porte s Ask for Mr. Sherr Haven Ratlroad. MODERS 2 DESIRING BOARD ON A FARM AT SUF. Lirty miles by Erie Railroad, may find the at No. #8 sixth avenue, where the ne consulted this da, IRING BOARD IN TH rhs, 0 miles by Irie pplving at SUS ‘Phir an be seen this day, y SOARD NEAR THE bathing. b gentleman, wite full parce! Pax |Win dress A eonaty a yma, here utd, dg avenue, SEA SHORE, WHERB ting and dshing can be obtained, to d child of Svears, State terms'au G., box 179 Herald office. D—SOM" SMALL PAMILIES, TO BOARD private femily; terms $6 to $8 per week. Ad & SMITH, box 3) Post office, Marlboro’, Cistet h a | Jersey; terms $15 weekly. SUMMER | p Board $3 per day | A Liberal arranvement made ing a with permanent families and travelling agents, JAMS BUNY. Propriet LONGER MANAGER OR a with or employed at rsonsare notified that he 0 Contract any debts or do any act fos JAMES BUNYAN, Proprietor of Hotel Fenimore. | BATH, the has no authori: said hotel oy Ntic | 2k ant upwards tor | Sea bathing, boating, fist Greenwood s'op at door eve! | 4 —BELMONT HALL, | dhe New Brighton, Staten Island. Thirty minutes from Whitehall street, Firs: class appointments; moderate rates L, 1.—$10 PER WERK Room, with Board; splendid ny, &c.; steam cars from ou! FREACH Hor FAR ROCKAWAY, L, L, 18 NOW opened. PATRICK BYRNE, Proprietor, HO! ON THE BEACH, PERTH JQ RIGHTON : B —9 trains from Whitehall street; fare Amboy, 3 cents: groves, lawns, fruit trees; location unsur ed; terms | H. B, KE WEST POINT HOTEL isnow open. EDWARD CO2ZENS, Proprietor, NS. — WHITE | SULPHUR Is RoW open: forms $8 per week, 0 u street; epr; cs OF addrcas ws, | (owns Al J” Springs Honse Reference—Georze L. | Ro: | LE mheim, 475 Broadway. ‘ON, Proprietor, Cai PAgees rege PARK HOTEL, ON THE SHORE At Perth Amboy, N. J.—20) acres of groves, lawns gymnasium and ail the amusements; first class tamnlly hotel: 88 to $ rains by Whitehall street; tarc, y. KENT, Proprietress, WERNHICL, HALEDON, N. 14 HOURS FROM city; large house, delighttully located ; excellent ta: ble; referenge by perraission, to HG. Smedley, Esq.. 259 Broaaway. New York. N eal HOTRL, 1 HOURS T ‘trom New’ York, from Peck slip at 4B. M.: foot of Pler 27 Kast River, at 9A. M.: Sunday, at9 A. M., from | Peck slip. Wis & CO., Proprietors. AURELTON HALL, COLD SPRING HABBO! | LL, } L Ll. Handaomely ‘located; good boating, fishins and bathing, elegant drives: bles attached; Rooms en suite or singly. Address JOHN R. T:RRY, Proprie« tor, Laurelton, T., or 108 Wall street, New York. | T EBANON COTTAGE, CORNWALL ON HUDSON. = Pieasant Rooms anit good Board; on high ground} aiways a breeze; tree trom mosquitos and chills; terms Tow. Inquire at 48 West Fifteenth street, | 4 | ORIENT POINT HOUSE, ORIENT POINT, LL | on, situated ou the extreme end of Long ronting’on the sound and Gardiner’s Bay, im Mediaiely on the water: splendid. sen bathing, aeivim | and sailing: fishing unexcelled. Reached by Lony Island Railroad, trom James slip; also per steamer We | W. Coit, trom toot of Wall street.’ Send for ctreular. NYACK, ON THE HUDSON.—TWa ALMER HOUSE, suits of desirabi ALISADE HOU first class Rooms week. Address as abov IVERSIDE HOUSE, Carmansville, foot of 15 2d stroct, North River. ‘Only 40'minutes trom the Battery, . vUN ALF. Proprietor, WRENCE HOTEL, CHESTNUT STRERT, deiphia, to rent. Address box ,2,815 Philadel office. Rooms to rent, trom August 5 E, ENGLEWOOD, N. J.—A FEW nd Board, $10, $12 and $14 pes Sort SIDE HOTEL, AMITYVILLE, L. L, OVER. looking the Great South Bay; terms trom $12 to $15 per week, Mra, F KING '& SON, Proprietors. | LE eta | QEVEN SPRINGS MOUNTAIN HOUSE, MONR |) Orange county, Y.—One and @ half hours from: New York. No inosyuitoes or aque, | | tr 8 cg, HOTEL—NOW Phe an ‘ ‘at hote s . DUDLEY. | HOUSES, ROOMS, &C., WANTED. A or rent RK In this City and Brooklyn. LADY, Ri an tt AND REFINED, WISHES to r . Please address Mrs, Herald Uptown Branch office, fot first class PING, box 112 one week, | WaAxsten—to FLAT WITH | four bedrooms, dinmg room, parlor and kitehen, with all modern improvements; location not above Fit pe street. Address A. H., Post office box 2,614, New Yor! 7 ANTED TO RENT—A SMALL DWELLING HOUSE | in adesirabie neighborhood and containing all the modern convenicnees; location between Forty-sec- | ond street and Central Park, Sixth and tighth avenues; Tent not to exceed $1,500. Alldress box 22) Herald offiee: ANTED—BY A YOUNG GENTLEMAN WHO GIVES the best of references and who very seldom steeps | in his room, a smali turnished Room, tor’ $2 or $3 per | week: must have a good bathroom in the house. dress R. M., box 216 Herald omice zi TANTED TO PURNISHED HOUSE IN Brooklyn. 1 jon: the Heights: pre- ferred; will be occupied by a sinall private famuly, Ad- dress F, A., box 45 New York Postoiies, TANTED—FROM IST AUGUST, FRENCH FLAT OR snail location must be wus | cxeeptionsble Toughiy drat class; New with particulars In full, ROR. PI Fourth Wa eee AND THIRD rooms, up town, private house, adults, Address, with ‘amount of rent 0. 0. | Washington street. In the Country. ANTED TO HIRE=A COTTAGE IN A COUNTRY W | ilave, with a garden; not moge than 80 miles | trom New York; rent not more tua Few) to $800. Ade | dress K. M,, Heraid Uptown Branch i : “WANTED TO PU PRINTING PRESS — WANTED, A suaLb ‘Sig I iso Duy ty Ly to ‘gas burner also buy type opty {0 on G 322 West Twenty-second street. 4 CHES, JEWELRY, ‘LARETS,—CHATEAU LAFITTR, CHATEAU BQUIN, / Romanee Vontt, Clos de Vosnet, Macon Vieux, Bboclalty. Pure liqviors only. Sole agoute for the span- ish cherries of Gorman & Co. of London, GbO, EB. H. GRAY & CO., No.3 Park row RESTAURANTS, | QouWEIZER SCHURTZEN FEST,—HBUTE SPEISEN, warm und kalt. Getranke, kalt und eiskalt. HOLTZ, dicht am Park. Sek ES set Ke am | B* HANGE NEW, riket CLAGS Pianos ORGANS, Rr a Nt a

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