FALL RIVER LINE.
Only $3.00 For First Class Limited Tickets.
Special express leaves Boston from OLD COLONY STATION week days at 6 P.M.; Sundays at 7 P.M., connecting at Fall River (49 miles) in 80 minutes with the steamers PILGRIM and BRISTOL. Annex steamers connect at wharf in New York for Brooklyn and Jersey City. Tickets, staterooms and berths secured at No. 3 Old State House, corner of Washington and State Streets, and the Old Colony Station.
J.R. KENDRICK, General Manager. L.H. PALMER, Agent, 3 Old State House.
LACTART.
(MILK ACID.)
——FOR——
Sideboard, Dining Table, Soda Fountain.
A HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY.
Lactart makes a delicious and peculiarly refreshing drink, with water and sugar only. More healthful and agreeable, as well as more economical than lemonade or ANY OTHER ACID BEVERAGE. It possesses remarkable hygienic virtues and will be found specially efficacious in DYSPEPSIA and LIVER TROUBLES, also NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, WAKEFULNESS and other ills. NO HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. See descriptive circular with each bottle or mailed on application. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS.
AVERY LACTATE CO., 173 Devonshire St.,
BOSTON, MASS.
STONINGTON LINE.
INSIDE ROUTE TO NEW YORK, CONNECTING WITH
Philadelphia, Baltimore, & Washington,
AND ALL POINTS
SOUTH AND WEST,
Avoiding Point Judith.
Via Providence and Stonington, connecting with the elegant Steamers
Stonington and Narraganset.
Express trains leave Boston & Providence Railway Station, Columbus Avenue and Park Square,
DAILY AT 6.30 P.M. (Sundays Excepted.)
Connect at Stonington with the above named Steamers in time for an early supper, and arrive in New York the following morning in time for the early trains South and West.
AHEAD OF ALL OTHER LINES.
Tickets, Staterooms, etc., secured at
214 Washington Street, corner of State,
AND AT
BOSTON & PROVIDENCE RAILROAD STATION.
Regular landing in New York, Pier 33, North River Steamer leaves the Pier at 4:30 P.M., arriving in Boston the following morning in ample time to connect with all the early Northern and Eastern trains.
A.A. Folsom, Superintendent B. & P.R.R.
F.W. Popple, General Passenger Agent.
J.W. Richardson, Agent, Boston.
COOLIDGE HOUSE,
BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON.
The Coolidge is a centrally-located, thoroughly quiet and comfortable Family Hotel, with rooms arranged in suites, consisting of Parlor, Bedroom, and Bath; having an elevator, and combining all the luxuries and conveniences of the larger hotels, with the quietness and retirement of a private house; affording most excellent accommodations at moderate charges.
COOLIDGE CAFE,
EXCLUSIVELY FOR GENTLEMEN.
Fitted up with the most complete and approved system of Broilers now in use, after the style of Spiers & Pond's Celebrated London Chop-Houses, and those so desiring, can select a steak or chop and see the same cooked on "The Silver Grill."
A Perfect Restaurant in Every Respect.
The Best Material, Cooking, and Service.
I.N. ANDREWS & CO.
THE FAIRBANKS AND COLE BANJOS.
All interested are respectfully requested to carefully examine our banjos before purchasing. GOLD MEDAL AT NEW ORLEANS, 1884, 1885. Send for our price-list of banjos, music and instruction.
FAIRBANKS AND COLE,
MUSIC MAKERS, TEACHERS, AND MUSIC PUBLISHERS,
121 COURT STREET. BOSTON, MASS.
This is the Purest and Most Effective of all Medicinal Spring Waters. Possessing remarkable Curative Properties for diseases of the STOMACH, LIVER, KIDNEYS and BLADDER.
A MILD CATHARTIC AND ACTIVE DIURETIC.
PROF. RAPHAEL PUMPELLY, Chemist National Board of Health.
[NOTE.—This analysis, with a letter of recommendation from Prof. Pumpelly, was read before the Newport Sanitary Protective Society, Jan. 12, 1884.]
PARTS IN 1,000,000
| Total Residue | 44.6 |
| Silica | 11.5 |
| Iron and Alumina | 0.7 |
| Lime | 10.5 |
| Magnesia | 1.5 |
| Chlorine | 4.6 |
| Ammonia | 0.06 |
| Albumoid Ammonia | 0.06 |
The above analysis shows a total residue of about 2.6 grains in one gallon of 231 cubic inches.
The object of the above analysis is to show the great purity of this water. Its curative properties cannot be determined by a chemical analysis. No combination of the above-mentioned minerals alone would produce the same effects. The Spring possesses a peculiarity and an individuality of its own which no one ever has been able to explain. It is one of Nature's remedies. Its medicinal effects can only be determined by a thorough trial.
Messrs. HOWARD BROS., BOSTON, April 24, 1885.
Dear Sirs,—"After many careful trials of the Simpson Spring Water in urinary disorders, extending over one year, I am convinced (despite my previous prejudices, excited by the extravagant claims made for other Springs,) that its properties are characteristic, and as clinically trustworthy as are those of terebinthina, lithia, or many other of the partially proven drugs. I have found it surprisingly gratifying as an adjuvant in the cure of albuminuria, and in lowering the specific gravity of the urine in Saccharine Diabetes its action is promptly and lastingly helpful. It is mildly cathartic and an active diuretic."
DR. J. HEBER SMITH,
Professor of Materia Medica in the Boston University School of Medicine.
Families and dealers supplied with the water in cases of bottles and Patent Boxed Glass Demijohns by
HOWARD BROS., Managers,
117 DEVONSHIRE ST., BOSTON, (Opp. Post Office.)
—OR—
GEO. W. BANKER, Gen'l Agent, 41 Platt Street, New York.