i r~** r lnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031163/1885-03-04/ed-1/seq-4.pdfThere is hope in my...

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*&-'Zt!iJ 'If'- m s. *«•, -Hfcs*S.. -'L M I /* . 'tmimmsiir?- TBATEXJBK'S ©tJIBE. 'Seneca L-ske. Steam Navigation.'Coinpltty \: jn effect Get. 1st, 1884 GOlMe SOVTB X,eave Geneva, T 47 A-M. ArriveatWatldns,r "© " <A>JCHS 1BTH ueave Watklns, 81I5PJI. 'Arrive at Geneva, 10 ** Boat leaving Ueneva at T.*» t. M. and Watfcln at 1*:18 p. a. caniea C. & Mail d Express, •stop on Signal only. " W. .DUNNING, tftip't' itttTfiri!iiiirr"'ii*iftlri; ABM iff f pirffliaifti «•*- ,-( ' : t#*-* ; Nirw YoBB. CBNTBAL, & H. K. ft. H. AUBURN Bti&NCH. '- aoisaEAST. STATIONS. eoZNo WEST. A.M. A.J1. P . M . P . M . 4.H. P.M. P.M. AJI. 6ua i-.w.zio, S 40 Rochester ( » 4 i u^6 7 45laao 625 t>3a T42 6GQ 6 02 107 717 723 b<tt> t>42 8 50 905 9 US 918 937 9S7 414 419 42* 430 440 low 10 ID 360 ssi 402)10 20 1033 10 43 1060 1100 110a Cau'dalgua j 8 85 1 15 Chauinville Shonaviue CUtt'n Sua Phelps Oaks Cor. WeetX 625 015 687 653 J 83|12 OS 6 4 812 1231 80o,ia ssr 754,U£) IW'lSli 740113 lo U18 1041 luSi> 10 » 10 2o 101' lOOo 730| 9 45|44S|1116i GENEVA j ?8»,120U,6iSO,1006 T141143|fi , J0 9*6 745 7G3 8J6 8 SO 9Sg p.m 2 20 700 1005 1012 10 SO U02 iVX. 1>U{T00 445 900 500 610 625 556 100 645 1183 1140 1163 1216 A.M. 115 CIO 10 80 Waterloo Seneca Pis Cayuga Auburn Syracuse Albany New York 701 665 fl« 6% P.M. U ao 680 11 A . 0 0 1 0 0 0 1131460' 935 436| 920 4 05, 8 60 IP.K. 3 00 ? 46 A.M iffii 100 1A.M. .8610 80 NOBXHKBN CENTBAL KAILWAT On and after Monday, August Jl, 1884, trains will leave and arrive as follows: soma BOUTS. ^ A. M. PJk P.'M. Stations. 8 80 9 46 948 958 10 Oi 1013 1087 1127 P.M. 1225 400 414 413 428 485 44* if* 554 0 55 7 60 > 80S 880 910 1000 /Btai /Canai 'Canandalgua. HopewelL Lewis Stanley. Balls. Beliona. Peon Yan. Wstkins. eOXKS NOBTH. A.M. P. M- P.M. a 35 100 8 16 12 45 12 40 12 S3 12 27 1218 12 06 1115 817 8 la 805 7 69 7 61 7 3b 0 47 • 00 10 26 746 740 7 81 718 82& Ehnlia, -SPXNOEB MBJUO, Qim'L Supt. CBAB. E. PSSB. General Manager. 585 GENEVA, IXHAOA & SATES K. li, OUTUWAED. A.M. P.M. A.M. STATIONS. 7 41 SU5 625 845 900 952 925 940 81! 826 886 8 45 8 51 8 57 T903 910 1000 tf£ 1040 1043 Geneva. West Payette Romulus nayt'a Corners Sheldrake NOBTBWABD. AM. P.M. PM. 960 110 1140 160 1100 1109 re a a H 934111 Bj 10 44 1255 10 64 -Farmer 1050 A.M 205 100 P.M 625 4 05i 51o| 7 00(1030 745IIII5 Covert TTumanflburg Taghanie F»"« Ithaca Bast Waverly Sayre Wilksbarre Mauch Chunk Bethlehem Philadelphia New York tStops only on signal. 729 712 7 01 6 62 T644 8-87 t6 SO 622 t616 5 57 140 485 A. Ju- lia P.M IU la I 955 I 800 L7 00 8iZ 7 57 7 47 738 729 722 t715 700 700 040 528 43t 40V 341 82b 310 265 240 223 2 U* 130 loot 625|1U20 P.M 210 A.M 12 Ou 1050 900 810 WM.STBVENbuU.8upt Havre, P FALL BBOOK OOAL L'O.'H KAXLWATS. Takes effect Monday, Feb. 2, ]68o. STBAUUBB ttEMEVA &, uuKAUfO DI?iB10M. GOINB HOBTH. 6TAT10SHti «JOlS« SOUTH. P.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. i2i 12uy d uo lv Sd.Lyonfl F. M. 6 65 11 0) 6 17 600 5 47 aS, 6 27 620 4 4 944 9 22: »1 8 5S| 8 4; 2 301 9 4.j,Geneva 156, 8 li,Dresden 1 J7, 8 27|HlmrodB 8 09 Dundee 52 Kock Str 126 1 14 105 12 58 A.M. P.M. A.M. 680;60i It J6 ! ;P. M 742,65fti " •"' 8 li.7 & 8 83 7 4-) 8 44,7 88 8 5 5 a 12 9 02 8 20 910IH26 9 3018 5 10 0019 A, A.K 865 12i| 9 46 2^0 lo40 247,1111 3 08 1182 7 38 Beading .. . 7 28 WatkiHB 1* 123'. 6 5u Beaver 0, i| 7 0«..|l2 0i| 600 Coming OOBM.NO, CClWAKZBliUK & AKTBIH DIVISION. STATIONB. P.M.P.M.A.M. A.M. P.M.A.M. 6 65 3 45 916 Arr. Corning Dep., 10 16.5 40 6 l o 8 51' 341 358 4 2^ 51!) 11 £0 1205 12 11 12 68 140 a3'i 8U.1. 7ii0 l 71.i 7 Mi 7UU| Lawrencenlle Tioga " Middlebnry " StokesdaleJunc" Stokesdale " Wellsboro j^PAMrim 10 55!6'8'547 U 2516 37 6 04 1145l7 02J626 1166;7 12'6a5 il5-|71)l643 |1205j72J|660 ^•^•^PTNE CBEEK PIVISIOK bTATIONS. A.M. P.M. P.M.I . 10 i* n -,o 5 20 Rtokesdale Junction 10 1 10 18 4 50l AnBom 1 9 :8 9 10,4 .7. B.acuwells 9 15' 8 5I!417' C] ar i un 8 2o! 7 ^5.3 20' Watervil e 1 6i)j 6 6.2 40 J' rrey Shore 7 3o 6 2 £'• \ Lii den . 7 2 5 50 2 15, Nen berry Jucction Tli s 4.12 0 Williamaport . Arril2 6u A.M. P . M . P . M 8 ?5' 12 0D3 30 6 ,2 26:3 55 1 1514 45 1 30.4 57 2 35'5 47 3 1U0 17 3 30 o40 341,665 3 66 ; 10 I 7 40 . 7 65 ! 8 47 I 9 17 ! 9 40 ! »60 '"10 151 ' HODOS UAV & BooTHERN K li Co ' eorao SOUTH. STATIONS. eome HOETH. P.M. P.M. A.M. . ,53017 20; "'» 5 44,7 37 105 6 49'7 45 I 24 6 04 7 521 18&J614 J 155,8 27 2^016 381 2 5216 5. sse^oi' i 15'7 15L9 28 B20'722i935 d 32,7 32.9 42 3 40,7 40,9 60 P.M. P.M. A.M. 802 812i 8 30 9 00 9 12 Sodus Point Wallington Sodns Centre Zurich Pairville Newark N. y. 0. Newark Outlet Phelps Junction Orleans Seneca Castle Flint Stanley A. M. P.M. P.M 10 30 6 60, 130 10 17,635 111 1012 630[ 106 H> 0216 14 1237 9 5215 u6113 28 94u|644,1203 9 81 5 40 1146 9 1fi'5U 1131 9 121507 1116 I 8 5014 54 I 8 4114 46 I 8 81)437 I 8 2OI430U030 1100 1050 1089 8PENCEB MEADE 8ni)erintendent. OVEK T H E S E A . I am looking back through the days and weeks That lie in the shadowy land of yore, ^nd a waking spirit stirs and speaks— The spirit of dead'years gone before. Speaks with a murmur of mournful sighs. In a voifce that carries the sound of tears. And. lighting: Che lamp of its passionate eyes, " * """Bd of the buried yeai The wind la blowflByip from the w. The stars are shinHljr downjojUfie sea. But the wind is bleak aSKHhe light is cold. And 'tis only of pain they speak tp me. For the wind once toyed with a silken tress. And the stars once shone on a saintly face; And how can a faithful love grow less ? Or a ne*w love take the old love's place ? The sea Is swirling np to my feet. Singing its monody soft and low: But the song of the sea is deadly sweet. For I mind how it slew me years ago. We have been parted. I and she. With many a hundred miles between. And now she was coining across the 6ea. (Oh, the sky was blue und the waves were green!) Coming—and yet she never came ! Meeting—and yet we met no more i She heard me not when I called her name. Though the dead might have heard me on that shore. Oh. love, though my eyes but dimly see. There is hope in my pathway where I tread. That over the seas thou wilt sail to me. In the day when the sea gives up her dead. NIGGER BEND TRAGEDY. DP w . " Sam Blakeley is killed I" ' A dozen men who were seated about the logging shanty smoking or playing cards started and looked about at this sjiddeu announcement Shorty, the skidder, stood just within the room swinging a smoke-begrimed lan- tern and looking straight ahead at the eroup of loggers gathered about the greasy pine table with a sputtering tallow candle in the centre. The gane of euchre came to a sudden halt. Jim Sweeay turn- ed half rqund on his stool and grinned at Ned Oakley, or Shorty, and growled. " Bosh ! What you givin' us now. Shorty?" " Rats 1" and a general laugh followed. But the stumpy skidder knew what he ^as talking about, and was not to be put down by unseemly levity. He advanced to the centre of the room, and then sever- al of the loggers could see that his bronzed face~was pale, and that a scared look filled his eyes. Shorty was net easily overcome. . Something of an uausual nature must have happened, and no mistake. Jim Sweezy crushed his cards down upon the table and wheeled squarely about as Shorty said: " It's God's tmth, boys ; Sam's dead, for I saw Mm under a tree-top not live annates ago." '•ijTir!p»4h»l*os. s e e m s to me," muttered "Hweezy. " The fellow started this aornin'to go down to Xteger Bend, and I don't see how he got back an' planked M«self under a tree. You ain't comin no cod now, Shorty. Ef you be. I'll smash every bone In yer body soon's I And it o u t " " r tell you 'twas God's truth." ~_J'Boys, Shorty ain't lyin' now. He's seen sotnethin' anyhow. Let's go out and 'vestigate." cried a huge, red-bearded teamster, who had until now sat with his back leaned against the log ribs of the shanty, smoking a brierwood pipe. He knocked the ashes oot qaioWy, and then thrust th» hot brierwood into a side pock- et of his jwomus. .' " Bob Stiles is right well 'vestigate." There was a general commotion now, and soon nearly every man in the shanty, including ^ many who had crawled into their bunks before Shorty's coming, poured into the crisp outer air, and fol- lowed the flame of the skidder's lantern to • *tree top about forty rods away. Wh*a^ffiesldade1'eaiBito_a i ha-U he had Ma lantern bleb, thus permRting every man to see the dark object that lay upa,t thagrotuid Just under » projecting limb of thejiant pine, ''It^Sam Blakeley, siureehoTishl" cried •Bbni^Holcoiab,- the scaler. «*He maist hsve come back through the woods; and got under this tree just as It fell. Poor A feeling of awe came brer that group «t rough loggers, and for a time they spoke in subdued tones, and moved about Jrith solemn tread, as though fearful of ; aisturbing the rest of their dead comrade. JPeor Blakeley's skull was crushed in, but . he was not disfigured otherwise, Sam *as quite> gentleman among the loggers. He m a ftffly educated, and withal a keen business sort of a young fellow: Oa the following day the body of the •——-.Jagg**; was conreyed to Nigger was r»nd~cbnsigned to earth. Mayaodbef toother, the latrer a wiflow, were employed to do the cooking, Mrs. Andrews' brother doing the chores about the shanty. Sam Blakeley was Mav's cousin, and be was often at the cook's shanty in consequence. Qne other had frecraently been at the women's shanty—Tbm Holcomb. the sealer. Which one was the erirl's favorite none could tell May seemed deeply mov- ed at the untimely taking off of her cousin, and her eyes were red with weeping for some days thereafter. It was learned that Sam Blakeley had been to Nigger Bend on the. day in ques- tion, and had Ret out to return to the shanty jnst before dark on that fafal day. No one'Saw him after he left Bend until Shprty's discovery of his body under the pine top. The tree had been felled just at dark, and the choppers had left it. ex- pecting to top and measure tbe same the first thing In the morning. It was a won- der with many how Blakeley came tape i n the spot where the tree struck him down. "Certainly it was not on his road home, and he had not been to either of the shanties, since the women or the chore boy would have seen him. There was something mysterious about the affair. But the sad event was soon for- gotten and camp life In the woods went on in its old, jolly, careless fashion. Snow soon came and the teams were busy for several weeks hauling the logs to the river. When the final break came sev- eral millions of pine logs were heaped against the high rollway above the roiled waters of the Muskegon, and one more act in the forest drama must he performed ere the logs were afloat in the stream. The shanties were deserted for the sea- son. Black, glistening trails wound their way through the woods where once were the smooth roads over which huge pyra- mids of pine had been hauled during the cold months iust passed. April sunshine rapidly dissipated the ice and snow, and theroBed Muskegon flowed on unvexed to the lake. A wedding at Nigger Bend Was not an everyday occurrence, and when one was announced, the boys were on the qui vive at once, visions of a-"horning bee" and plenty of liquor filled the brains of the woodsmen. For once, however, a part of the program was destined not to take place. Tom Holcomb did not propose to submit to a "sbivaree," so he publicly in- vited Nigger Bend to come to the wedding and dance all night if they choose at his expense. Since the young scaler was so liberal no one thought of troubling him to furnish refreshments of a liquid nature. Tom, how- ever, -understood what would best suit the denizens of Nigger BeDd, and so he had a keg.of beer on tap the evening of the wedding and dance. The marriage was performed by old Squire Hawke, and May Andrews was made Mrs. Tom Holcomb in short order. After the ceremony the fun commenced. People may talk and write about an Old Virginia breakdown, but for genuine, boisterous jollity nothing can equal these backwoods "shindigs" so popular among the loggers and lumbermen a few years ago. Of all the "digs" ever held in Nigger Bend the one given by Tom Holcomb the night he became a Benedict was the tie plus -ultra. Tom himself felt his oats, and danced and drank with the merriest of them. That wedding was one long remembered in Nigger Bend, so soon was it followed by a tragedy that sent a shudder to all hearts. So boisterous did the newly wed- ded scaler become that moretiuin once the prettyjaiide remonstrated with him. ->< " Don'tr. worry, May," returned iFojiri, with his merry faugh. " I mean to leaip a sober, industrious life after to-night. This is the last fun I will have with the boys, you know; let me improve it, there's a dear." May good-naturedly yielded, and the consequence was the dance continued un- til the gray streaks of dawn were seen in the east. With the stereotyped, " } wish you much joy," tbe woodsmen departed, leaving Tom Holcomb alone with his bride and Mrs. Andrews, for be it remem- bered the party came off at the widow's house. " I must leave you here for the present, May," said Tom. " I contracted with the Wards to break their big rollway. and, as the men will be on this morning, I must go at once to the rollway. I will be back to- night to supper." Kissing his new-made wife, Tom Hol- comb hurried from the house. Was May Holcomb happy ? Those who saw her the night of -the party believed that she was. Nevertheless, she was not wholly free from haunting thoughts, for the man who had met with death in the autumn under a fallen tree had held her pliuhted troth, and but for that tragedy May would never have become the wile of the scaler. When Sam Blakeley left the woods to go to Nigger Bend he Was a happy man/ for his pretty cousin had promisedto become his wife some day Sam was overjqyed, since he had all along recognized in the handsome Tom Holcomb a formidable rival. Sam had been six months dead, and May was now the wife of his handsome rival. So goes the world, in wilderness, country, or city, and so it will doubtless go on forever. Night shadows were drooping. Ten thousand frogs were singing enough, to split their throats along the bush-linedi shores of the Muskeeon.andbrothersof the same family were tuning up in the water- holes at the bark of Nigger Bend, whin May Holcomb, in robe df spotless white, walked out to the rude gate in front of the widow's bouse and looked anxiously up the road. Tom promised to be home to supper, and it was past the usual supper hour now, and he had not yet put in an appear- ance. It was the first evening of her wedded life, and the bride was anxious for-the coming of her husband. Long she stood watching different forms as they came and went down the one straggling street. "There was a big break up to the roll- way an hour ago, said a man to his com- panion as the twain passed the anxious watcher at the gate. •' That's Tom Holcomb's rollwav ? " " Yes. It's one of the worst places out. He don't get enough for the work It's a mighty dangerous plate, too." The men passed out of hearing, and still May lingered. The shadows deepened into intense darkness May was on the point of turning, when a light gleamed through the gloom far up the wagon- road. Tom was coming at last. She waited expectantly until the light drew near, and ? aused in front of the gate. It was not 'om, but a short, thick-set man who held the smoke-begrimed lantern in front of him as he came to a pause. May recog- nized him at once. "Shorty, you have come from the big rollway ? " she quickly questioned. " Yes, Mrs Tom—" " My husband ? Why did he not come ? Surely he can do nothing on the rollway after night." "N-oo."faltered the man. "Yon see, miss, er—he won't come because he can't," " Shorty, what do you mean ? " " I mean, marm, that there's been an accident, and your man's hurt." " Hurt 1 Ob, Tom 1 I must go to him at once," exclaimed May, pushing open the gate and passing into the road. A detaining hand was pressed against her arm, and a husky voice said: " No rise, marm. Tom Holcomb's killed." An inarticulate cry answered the terri- ble announcement of the skidder, and the next moment he held a white robed form in his arms, silent, in a dead faint. A big break had occurred on the roll- way and Tom Holcomb had been caught in an exposed position. A mass of logs went over him, and when the rush had ceased, a mangled mass of flesh aud bone, sickening to behold, was lifted from tbe hillside and borne to a leaf-strewn mound on the summit of the bluff. Was the scaler dead ? No, he still breathed, but it was evi- dent that life was fluttering but faintly in tbe mangled form. "Ob, my God I" Thus groaned the blood-smeared lips in husky accents. Jim Sweezy knelt quickly beside the poor fellow, and bent his shaggy head low. •' Ef you've got a word to say better speak, Tom. Mebbe your woman " " Don't. I loved her; that's why I did it I'm going to die, Jim." "I expect you be. No doctor kin help you now, Tom " A deep and awful groan interrupted Sweezy. " In great pain. Tom ? Heaven help you, old boy." Then Sweezy gazed away to avoid the anguished sight. " I—I'm not in such bodily pain," articu- lated the purple lips," but, Jim, I ain't fit to die." " None of mis, I reckon," uttered Jim Sweezy, stall looking into the gathering shadows along the edge oi the forest. " I'm worse than any Of you. Bend down low, lower Jim," gasped the dying man, in husky accents. 1'he stout woodman obeyed and bent his ear close to the pur- ple lips of the fast-sinking man. A dozen men, stout, red-shirted fellows, stood round the two forms on the ground, awed iDio silence at what they oeheld.. Mot one of those men beard the words' uttered in husky accents by the debonair young scaler, words that sent a chill to the heart of Jim Sweezy, an astounded look to. his face. This was the communi- cation that reached his ear, uttered in a voice below a whisper. "I^T-I killed Sam Blakeley, Jim! I did it with a club, and put bis body under the tree to ward off snjBpicion. It was lor her, for May, that I became a murderer 1" A gasp came at tbe last, followed by a rattle in the throat An instant later. when. Jim Sweezy rose to his feet, and turned from' the spot with white face, Tom Holcomb was dead. No one in that crew erer learned the truth, and the scaler received an honored burial, with many sincere mourners following his corpse to the grave. -." . It was not until ten years later, when May had been six years married to John Norman, that the author learned from Jim Sweezy'slips the story of the tragedy among the pines. .'.."."-' "You must keep the secret, Redwing, for May never 'spected the truth." said Jim, and I do not reveal it when 1 tell the story, guarding the real characters under fictitious names: THE VAtTTE 6 * A Glj >p K&2&, George Washington Otlrtr States* to mpared id to his con- toeyajae. ' ^ a had some- Word Beeeher gregation recently about .good name, and incii thing to say about George Washington. *';The foundation of a good name;" said the preacher, "is moral integrity. »Nd man can succeed permanently, in any de- partment of human life wbQ has not the underlying elejnent of moral eense. When the. new dog comes -to> t h e Kennel there has got to be &n adjustment between him and the other dog; , In the strife of life men have got fo be tested be- fore they get very far along- ThemenWho go through all temptatlon^and come out honest, straightforward. tjruthJEnl, kind and gentle—those are ttUr* m e n who are wanted everywhere, and tfiey are scarce. " The curse and blight tofday is that the young men believe that integrity is less safe than smartness. I deny it. Tbe world was made for hone J. men, and it has been quarreling and fi$ >ting through the ages because they are % hone9t and reliable. Washington's nj( le is probably more universally honored ; (lan any other within the bounds of titn, , save that of Htm of Bethlehem. It was not merely a human name, and if you hj^jk for reasons for the honor paid it yoi «will not find them in unusual or extraor tnary develop- ment. He was nf>t a ver*^reat general. There have been a htindrerpsreater. In the argument of widely exteaiped and com- plex affairs he was respejflpble, but he could not for a moment belBrnpared as a Statesman to Cavour. the fBher of Italian unity: to Bismarck, to BH ! -round and well-nigh perfect man. (jfadstone, upon whose brignally rich eudoyrnie.it tame an eminent edncar'on. and who has stood through the varying fortunes of that t reat empire, year in and year out, in the arkne-ss and in the light, above not only every one of the statesmen in his own Cabinet, bnt those who desire to be in it— an eminent man indeed, with a great name, which shall never go below the horizon. Y Washington had not the igifts and op- portunities which belong'to Gladstone, out he had good sense, ofte of the best foundations in the worl<£ on which to build, and he had athonjttgh loyalty to truth and honorJHe could bf trusted under all circumstancW. His patriotism was without a spark of selfishness. He,lived with good judgment and fair attainments in a stormy time, and hm was neither blown from his balance nar broken in limb 1 or branch. Standing fthus through all the years, he is a marvel of a man. All men say his life was, § model. All men say he \vas the pattern„of an honest man, Though in many special gifts he will be surpassed as times go on, yet in the union of the humble, gimple, funda- mental elements of integrity in all rela- tions of life he will never i>e surpassed. He is a good example to brigg up children on, provided children are worthy of being brought up on such an exarpple." A CAT DONATION rABTY. Mrs. bo retails "her rs. Her has been the of rats that est arrived, ey began to ' e most, the twentieth ar- ime rat poison Smith'* Though'''ul Friends Come to Her Itj jicuo. ; Mrs.Smith, of Morristowj^J Pa., is a gar- rulous, good-natured lady,, trials to all sympathizing principal grievance latel, rapacionsness of a colony took possession of the house. Figur- atively speaking the family have had rats for breakfast, rats for dinner, rats for supper and rats for a ni£ht-cap at bed- time. The rats have anpdyed the old lady by perforating her linen, playing hide and seek in her refrigerators and holding high carnivals In the pantry, so much that the burden of Jher "song and of everybody else in.the bouse was rats. All her friends, and she has many, had heard about her rat troubles when she gave a dinner party. Abouf. twenty people were invited. The firgt arrival got out-of a carriage and also took ouf a bag. "My dear Mrs Smith, how do you do? Yon are so troubled with rats and so anxious for a good eat th^t I thought I would bring you a couple, of rats. Here they are," and a bag being 1 opened a Tom and a Tabby leaped forth apd ran aronird the yard. The second guest brought a cat. The third brought a couple pf cats. The fourth brought a very jonng kitten. The fifth brought a new farfrny of kittens. The sixth brought a bag fall of back alley cats from Philadelphia, wgose appetites, accustomed to fat sewer 'rats, might be expected to result in the nnihilation of K serawny little country ra' in almost no time. The setenth gues . brought two quiet old fireside cats. The; ighth brought a beautiful Maltese. In s ;ert, every one of the twenty guests brouj H at least one cat, and generally several.«' The host and hostess sjegan to look dubious, when the tentWT On the'fifteenth "arrival" wonder which would guests or the cats. On thi rival they felt like putting into the food of the guests. Persons in want of cats ean. inquire of anybody in that part of the county. (PhiladaVphta Titoes p r Fresh Fashion •{I otes. Pink in all shades is t-1 1 Parisian pas- sion of the passing inomenj, The jersev corset cover Rds fair to re- pia'ce those of cotton or lifjjn. The newest skirts are *'fcrfeetlyplain, falling in straight lines fr« 3 the waist to the hem. Round hats grow tallej in the crown, and narrower in the brim (•* the black as' winter advances. . u. > Shoulder epaulets are sill fashlofcably employed for giving a dresifr effect as well as shortening the length .Uggween the high collar and the top of the sleeve.. Spangles and gold threadW?atber, stitch-'- ing unite tbe scraps of crazy patchwork bags* and gold fringe or tassels trim them, but tliey must be closed with ribbons for a draw-string. A new dress is made from ruby cash- mere: the skirt is'made in plaits with a short oversbirt with long pointed tunic. The,waist is in blouse shape, both waist and tunic are trimmed with oream lace; the blouse is closed with a |bronze buckle and silk velvet ribbons of ruby cqlors, and a high, standing collarjof velvet, with a ruche of cream lace. ; The new and e&gant ladies' dresses which have been brought|pnt are promi- ment through their, plain Appearance. A dark brown cashmere dre^'is made with broad plaids, winch are oordered with brown silk velvet. The VMistfrom cash- mere is covered by a cap* jf brown. bro- caded velvet, trimmed with chenille frinees and a broad embrL dery of brown and gold pearls. '—-*-1 i The latest fashionable c«prs are rpby, tannine, a lighter shade dfiruby, a dark mushroom color (like mn&tjhrd), and»isev- eral shades of green, as uSoss, tea and re- seda green. Velvets, plyjijjies and. dress goods are being made in ft|e above colors. English houses have combined these color* with India silks, which ari very good for the new plaited skirts. SaMis, merveiljeux and serge surahs, in new c«jors, aj:e largely ordered for ladies' dresses^ , • NBWYOBKBRO; EES. ' , | How They Get Btchi Bttyths and. Selling Stocks on O«rimi»»ion. In ordinary brisk times <j fe Wall street',, brokers make more moflejj- and make it - easier,than any one other s&of professional,, men. To do a legitimate&okerage bjisj- ness does not necessitoaFthe slightest risk, nor does St imply that the broker must in any way become a specuhitor. As business Is conducted on the New York . Stock Exchange, the broker simply lends ,' the money to his customer with which, to purchase stocks, and then does the buying for the purchaser; The customer makes a part payment, which iscajied margin, and that insures the brakes agaiusf* ^oss* through the depreciation pf t h e property purchased. Anerroheous |mpression pre- vails that there is no genuine transactions in stock when a purchase w sale is made in the ^Jew York Stock ]gxehange, but that the whole, is fictitious This is' true of some of the great ma e, but in the Stock Exchange the strit certificate" is bought, paid for and delM Jred, and rnav be transferred into the narri .of a customer on the company's books. Tl it is otie reason whythetransacttonsof the Jrqkmbecqxne so enormous, and why so Much capital is required tocarry on- broj- ~- " ' - A broker who buys 100 M wanna at 90 aires his chi the broker who sold it, certificate in return. I shares be pays «90JOOO fi i,otlff^ba*es, T fe5ft~^ie Idrmmhsdm® 81, t h e daily-teafe* change amotmtea- to ...,. ^^ this tie comaiissions'Were the epoSpiQUs •tim'-at $M&oO& Asr there are lvK»%int bers of the Exchange, it is plain that the < average "profit-to each Was something' rnbrp than $100. It is very easily earneC fetrtcaipital' is requu-eu*,' first to purchase. a Stoplk Exchange seat, and then to paj* in'Mu(*Ior the stock, which the custome|Ss = buy". '- ;•>,..-.''• '. ''-,•'-'•,'' '"'Li> : ': •'"; • The greatest ; trpuble,*is-to get; w% cup-; tomers. WhQe very many bjosiness «hd: professional men speculate in Walfesfcreeti^ they are careful not to' let the fact' he" kn6wtt. FW it w be gossiped thafcjtl tradesman STjecrflates:- is to imperil dtJVQr erfute|y*ruih his credit. -For a prbsesaional man it implies disregard for and neglect, ___.... -^E^m*^-^ of his regular pttnmiC In. many a Wall: : _F .^l^lTS^^lrtia^^f'iafiwt street broker's qjSce may Be seen physfe RttellTnatlSin^BeE^Iftia^aCIOTlRg, .-i. . "A • ' ~- H&frfa^f3&t™^-*Ji~tff^.f itmt&3S£*ati£mmim iminWrpVMi'iT cians, lawyers; and men who are working? on'salary for othei ! people—negleciaAg thelf patients, ortheir. clients, -or tneireiav ployem 'So it happens" that the average specnlistto r keeps very quiet about bisgani- blirig. ix Is hard, therefbre.i fqra,ibrofcer to druith up custom. To opeuly solicit ft in business houses or social gathering^: would be. to .meet rebuff at •every-hand: It is only through gaming extensiveiac-S quainlanceship and through advertising; that brokers get- new customers. But once giotten, a customer Who will trade in a few hundred shares of stock in a day, or/ even a week- is indeed a. bonanza: Every 100 shares is $&> to the broker, as already explained. Yet there are hundreds 'or speculators in the street, .who trade in. their S.000 to 10,000 shares a week. -Hosts of Wall street brokers have tijad-; ths^cam^ mand over themselves to abstain from- speculating on their own hook* when they must have, known that the market was sure to go in a given direction. , ; Theire are the men who grew rich with great rapidity. They are calm and coolheaded in every emergency, while their brother brokers are wild.-over' pro^- spectrve loss or reckless over.possiblegains. 'lhey we content to take commission and let the speculators runr the risk. - The cpOl' beaded broker hast a sure fortune: if-he will oialy avoid, speculation on his. own hook"— that as a rule, means ruin to every- one, be he broker or customer,.who under- takes it. The brokerage firms who get' the business of the big men ot the street have tbe biggest Bonanzas of all! To tsake a* successful tnovementjn stocks requires a purchase or sale, or both, of avast quan- tity of stock, for which the operator must pay commission h^ full.. In his manip- ulation of Western Union and Missouri Pacific in the last year,. Jay Gould has probably boughtand sold'twice over what equals the entire capital stock of both companies. Upside Dowu One of the most singular cases of vision on reeoid is found In the fourth grade of the Mary8vlile school, in the person of Belle Kinney, a little girl 12 years "of age. Her teacher discovered that she always read with her books upside down, and that when writing she invariably placed the copy in the same position and wrote back- ward, with the letters inverted and with her left hand Not knowing whether to attempt a correction of the habit the teacher sent for Dr. I. N Hamilton, presi- dent of the board of education, who tested her thoroughly with figures, pictures, reading and writing, and found that she was equally skillful with her books in any position, although the child had aever particularly noticed her peculiarity, but ex- pressed a desire to use her books as others do. AlSFB-JBViilltY>Si»EOiES O F l T d H I N G AKP BITBMyfl DISEASES * w yPOSHavlt,YGt?i^D. ' 'H6ZK$IA*'or Salt Bheum, wi't its aeonlzlne tuning and btiraipg. instantlyrelieved bra warm •. bath with^Cutlcura ~So3p. and $ single application of CnHcara, the greit .SMh cure This repeated ot-ittv. wit&.two or three doses of CimeuBA RE- -sbivKgj?, .the Kew Blood Purifier, to keep the bioo'd coo', the persHratibn pure dn 1 unirritattog tne'bowels open. tne. liver ani Kidneys active, wfll speedily cure.Eczema, letter, .Bute-worm. Psoriasis, Lictien Pruritus, Sca'Tea Heaa,Dandruff an,dey^y species of. Itching, Scaiy, and ftjnipiy Bninors of "the Scalp and skin, when the bes rphysiciansand&IJimown-renieaies fail. - L . Lumbaao. Bickache, #ead«qhe>"3Tflo1tache' ) , Notice jpnereby given* mat the nnaewlgnea, as {rustee-tiTtSe trusts created by fte.last wni.and ue^^nifn^Ailen Ayrsaj, :deceaaeaj by virtus of the said 'mi®^flt><&to^tatm*?t'»« tros tee" iffiefeunoeS•• >!B t sell afc pnbjfc. WctiQn_„ atiee AUCEfileAS HQTBIfl » ftE!&ES£Q, N.TiOnthe "atlj^ockWi&tforedooa <# ihat day, theibl- •-^-— deecrloecti.real estate sJl^a^Jntbetftwn-of x ^^^^mmmwmtm, NEW. TOJEfeahd* belongingto.the estate Of «ud Alien •AyronlV,fl^ceaseafvl2: . _ _• .--•_., ;about Tfie SdttaldieHiUFalrtn.containing W&Sres iff landj,lying on- the Genesee Biverm said -town,. compneing-OSta. •flats aad- upland. "9 F a r m c containing about JkB-filL- 200 acres ofiandT T h e TenEyok Fairm,containing about 190 acres of latd, TheSquakie Hill Farm will be offered for sale ai a whole or in four separate, parcels,ja<s may seem best for the interests of-sala estate, by said trustee at the time of sate, Tne other.farms will.eachte- sbld In onew-cel; ' t .,, "AU of said Jands^Ul hepnt np at aft upset price,' to he fixed bv saltt trasKej and he.Te8er s v«3,,the, right t^ withdraw.Rllsticlrlatws or parcels tMreof, wKeh~aSfnot ets^A P^fr txc^dnte. said .iip«et nrjeenpon said ssire. r Terms and cond tions of snch sale; and also the upsetpnee upoa each parcel if lahct, made known upon application tio the undersigned, at his office, 2Stitate btreet,18ostori, Mass.,'or to Mjes^rs, S rang & Doty, attorn y , etc., GetieBeo, Ntw York, b. whom more particu ar deserip ions of said prem- ises will also be furnished if desired. Datea, Geneseo, N. Y. Jany. 26,1835. CHARLES P. BuWDlTCH, STRANG & DOTT, Trustee, etc. Attorneys. 4fel.c5w Easily Satislied. " Ef I ken jes' git ter heaben," said an' old negro, " dat's all I axes. I doan kere ter march up wid er brass ban' an' make er mighty stir. I doan ax de angels to shout mur de saints to rush an' shake nan's. No, sah, I doan ax all dat, fur all I wants is ter git dar. Da needn' put dase'ts ter de trouble o' handin' roun* pies and sweet stuff. Hoe-cake sorter greased *wid er bacon rin' is good enuff for me." lArkuinaaw Traveler. ALL SORTS. A miiddle-aged farmer of Glenville, N. Y.,went to bed recently in excellent health and with perfect eyesight The next morning he awoke totally blind, though his eyes appear perfectly natural. Bio Lewis says he had no difficulty in getting into bar-rooms in any part of Iowa. The difficulty in Iowa bar-rooms is not the getting in ; it is the getting of the gen- uine Kentucky article.—ILmiisvilU CbVr rter-JonrnaL Two travelers }n Central Africa are uti- lizing tine phonograph in a novel manner. They visit the different savage tribes and persuadiet chiefs to talk at the instrument. The reaprd is preserved, to be, tajsea, to Europe for the inspection -and study of philologists, who "are to be qualified to make oi6t the languages and determine whetbeir ot not they are related to arry other kinown tongues. ' r te an excitement was created k few ago by the announcement tfhat a Pittsburg glass manufacturer had discov- ered a method 4 of spinning glass' so Sue and so pliable that it couIdTba woven into dresses, outside wraps and- garments, of all kinds. 1 There w M a great- rushJof.--ap- plicantai to see and utilize jShenoyel fabric, burwhein it was learned that glassf cloth would cbst fSO^per yard tiie' fenriosity of the pubjlic received a, set back, and there islao re"cordyet of any- spies having* been made-for glass garment 'Brovpin f,wbo has just had telephonic con- nection established between his office and house and is very much pleased with)lt>- I tell you. Smith, this telephone business Is a wonderful thing. I want you. td dine with me.this evening, 'Aad I will dotify Mrs. Brown to expect you, {Speaking through the telephone)— My friend Smith will dine with us this evening. Now listen and hear how distincly her reply Will come' bapk. Mrs. Brown's reply (coming pack with startling distinctness!—Ask your friend Smith if he thinks we keep a Hotel. Ex-Mayor Robinson of Hartford, Conn., tells this of the famous preacher, Dr. Joel Hawes; "One day he came into my office and 8aid»: "Henry, afflan was in my study this morning, and, right under, my >own roof, tolift me I hadn't preached the gospel for forty years! What would yjou have done if you had been in my place?" 1 'said 1 would' ha*C kicked him out of doors. The good old doctor—a man of peace In all respects—looked atjne with a;qnger expression for a moment, and then re- marked,, thoughtfully : 1 wish you'd been there, Hlenry 1'" t " , I : . Japanese children . have their heads shaved, with the exception of four little tufts, one before, one behind aBd'oae' on each side. They wear bright and njany colored clothes; their loose jackets-having very long sleeves, almost to' t><grb1iBd, in each of which.there-.is-a pocket. They are odd! little mites, sometimes gpmg about in 1 clogs, with then- little bald heads, shining in the- sun. Some 'Wear -Short stockings, but pot all, and these are made like a mitten, with one division for; the big toe, round which. Abe sandals of; the clog are fastened. Custom requires that these doles be removed"'before the child is taken inito a room. f '. • •'Will McfeonaM, 2642 Dearborn Street, Chicago tote^aljFacMowIeajfes:* enre of Bczeina, orSair Bh^um,'pnheaa^necfc_ facet aims,', tail l e ^ for seyente^njearSsAotabi^ to move, except on Bands andfkneesfor ope year: n >t Bblettohelp^uhs-if lot eiKhtjears^trTeahuirdwls of remedies; doctors .prononncea his case.hujieless,-permanently cored "by the CtfMoirBA BESOIVENT (blood purifier).inter- nally*: and, .CtOTODEA iaad CnaiotraA SOA<P (the great skin enres) externally. . ' Oh«B. Houghton, Esq,, lawyer; SB State strget, Boston,- reports'o caBe of Eozs Aupderhis Obv. seTvation f"r ten yeare/which-covered the pa 1 lent'* »iody arid limb', ani to whirhftll Knowu methods pf .treatment, had been applied •without ben. fit, whii>h was pompiete'y cnredsolely by the CUTWOEA B&dBiiXBsy l^avihg'a clean and Keaithy ekihv F. H. Drake B?c(., Detrf>it,"Mich„ Buffered imtc-ld .tortures - from? KozBUA'/'WhisS aphesred-dn his hands, heart ani face, and nearly destroyed his, eyes. After the mosfcic&rerul doctoring and coh- sufiatfon of, physician* failed to Relieve him, be used the Ctrnor/BA REMEDIES, and has remained so to date. • - . u. . Mr. Johh^Thiel,- Wilkesb<jie i Pa , writes: '" 1 have suffered frrnm Salt Rheum for over eight years. «t tunes so bao that Iconld not attend W my bnsineSBfsr weeksata time., ihreeboxes of Ou- TJOTJJM; and four bot-Ies-BBsoLvBiN'r: have entirely .enredrne of this, dreadfnl^diBs8se,' r •" So!d by all drnggfsfs. Price: CUMOUBA, Joe; BBsqfVEOT£.$l.j. SOAP; 25c. POTTEB-DB A *»» CHEMICAT, CQ , '^OBSOH "itass. SVrildftlr 1>T -"' Send for "How ib Cure Skin Diseases.? ' fNTTnfiTCTJRA SOAP, an exqnlsite ToUe^ Bath v \J 3JS. and Vuragry Sanative- 4- The use of Iodoform or Mercurials in the treatment of ca arrh-whether in the form of suy- poaitoritB orointmerts—ehottld be avoided, a-* itey are both lnjuiitus and dangerous, iodoform is easily detected by lis offensive odor. The only re- liaole catarrh rem'.dy ou the market to-d y is Kly'B Cream Balv, being free from all jioison ^te drugs. It has cur d tlicm-ands of chronic and acute (asef, where ah other remedies'ha, e faild. A particle applied into each noorril: no pain; agreeable to use Price fifty cents, of druggists. - TO MY FRIENDS, As you are well aware that I would not recci'mrrreud that which I did not believe to be good, I dpsire to say to all who need a good reliable, family medicine, that 1 believe oneibottle of Sulphur Bitters wil„ do you more good than any other remedy* 1 ever sat?. Rev. Cephas Soule. , «. Denmark spends $55,000 a year for agricultural teaching.» A DREADFUL DISEASE. Read,ponder and profit thereby. Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs is conced- ed by aJl who have used it to excel any preparation in the market as a complete trhoafc and lung healer. Alii persons-af- flicted with that dreadful disea&ewjrion-. sumption-will find a speedy relief and in a majority of cases a permanent cure, Tbe proprietor has authorized Wi. H, Partridge to refund the money to any paetjr who^has taken three-fourths of a bottle without re-' lief. Price50 cents and $\.\TriaTSize free. •'_ ,. A new machine for making cigarettes does the work of thirty men. . , i VERY REMARKABLE EEOOVEEVi^ ... Mr. Geo. V. Willing, of Manchester, Miohi, writes: "My wife has been 'almost helpless lot five years, so-- helpless that she could not turn over' in bed alonfe. She used two Bottles of Electric Bitter^ and is so much Improved, that she Is able' now to do her own work.'" Hetric Bitters will do aU that is claimed for thenv Hundreds cf testimonials attest their great curative powers, "Only fffty cents a bottle at A. L. 8weet*s. 1 There are 940 churches in London within a radius of twelve miles. One _. years o|r|f Md a very had "discharge? from her head and nose of-a thick* yeUowjeli matter, and was growing worse*" wja.^d two differeefc physicians prescribe" former, but without feneflt. ""We tried Bly^ Oream Balm, and much' to onr surprise in three days, there was a marked improve' ment. We continued using the Balm'and in a short tfme.the -discharge was appar- ently cured. O. A. Gary. Corn.in'gi N.'.Y. During tho year 1884, 83,051 petraona died in London, or 223 a day. ! ' WHT SHE »Wtf,T MABBV 3PK ' "Yes, I live pleasantly enough with my husband," she said;. *• but 1 believe I should have married Augustus, if sill the girls hadn't made fun of him, and said he'd be bald as a pumpkin in a year or two." Young men, take warning, and use Park- er's Hah-Balsam. Cleanses the scalb, re- Stores color, removes dandruff. ••'„ , Diphtheria has within five weeks swept off twenty-five ohildten at Fuller-- ton, Neb. * • C/lTARRH ,. ^ *'• "• i) .> That pnrej:sweetriB^. J %mS : *effedtIve American distiUition of Witch-Hazel, Amertcen Ph.e; Cann- da Fir, Marigold, and Clover-Blossom, call, d SAN- FotD'B I?Anl0AL CUBEJS'OB I.ATABBB, With one box CATTABBHAI. SOUVKHT and on • SANFoatD's IM- PBOVED InHAtER, all in one packase, may now be h ,d of aUidruggists for $1.00. Ask tor SAHPOHD'S KADIOAC\i3nBE. • ' Ci mplete Local and Conatirutional Treatment for every' form of (patarh, from a Sli p.e Uotd or Inflae 2& to loss of Smell, Tsste, and Hearing, Bronchitis, and Catarrhal Consumption, in every package. CLERGYMAN, VOCALISTS, And Public "SpeskerB without number owe their present nsefn'n -SB and PUCCOBS to SANFOED'S RAD- ICAL CtJBB for CATABBH. Kev. Dr. Wlggin says: " One of the best reme- dies for 'Catarrh—nsy, the best f< medy we have found in a Ufeume of suffering—is SANFOBD'S "RADICAL ( UEE. It e'ears the head and throat so tborougnly that, taken each » oralng on ilshiK, thero are nn nnple r -saut secretions and no disagree- able hawking tfnrhig the entire day, bnt unprece- dented clearness of voice and reypiratory oigans." ,«oid by all drng'riBiB. Price, $1.00 Poster Drag and Chemical Co. r Boston. «*ftlI f f\Ie» Weary sufferer from Rheu- Q»^»MHy matism, Neura'gla, Weak fOLT/MOa^O^ds^sk^foma^ fii Act-renS Bowels, Dyspepsia, Female r +nSlJUB fm Weaktelis, ShooUng Pains throngh the Loins and Back, try these Plastors. Placed over the pit of the stomach, lhey prevent and cure Ague Pains,Biliou« Colic, Liver c jmplaiu's, and protect the system from a "thousand Ills. 25o, , \- , , This remedy contains no injurious drugs. CATARRH, KLY ' S Cleanses the Head, Allays [nfiammation Heals the Sores Restores the Senses of Taste Smell, Hearing A quick Relief. HAV-FEVEff A positive Cure CREAM SALMras gained an enviable reputa- tion wherever kmiwn, displacing all other prep.ra- •IQUS. Aba creamy substance. A parti le is applied into each nnptril, causing no palu and is agreeable to use. Price 60 ce ils bj ~maii orat Druggists Se'd for Circular. BUT ~ROTHERS Druggists, pwego,, N Xt- .- Thousands Hastened to their Graves- By -relying on testimonials written in vivid glowing language of some miraculous cures made by some largely puffed updoe- /fcor or patent medicine has hastened thons~ . , , 'apds to their graves; the readers having flren, a f girl about nine Sklmostinsane fai>b jhat the same miracle - - - - will be performed^qn them,, that these tea rimpnials :mention, while "the so called medicine.is all.the time hastening themto their g^ave^k Although we have. age business, es of Laeka- for W.ID00 to tsthe stock bmrs 1,00ft it: In Qtlier MafAudrew f . l ^ * " f t w * * " «ein«r«nde poJi- words he gives 19ft a slate, tt D ._. times the big stock brokerage houses Jdo 20,000 shares a day, and give checks tor take checks tar 18,000,000. They need loot have that much capitel, for the sales and purchases as a rule about balance que an- other. And the total wf the ebecka receiv- ed equal the total paid out. Thin purchase of stocks is a very shnpleproceas, although to the world at large theire is aooutTli enough of the hidden to make It a deep aad faKinating mystery. ; It to notable that genuine hrokers rarely retire from Wall atreet unless itcte becAuee tbey have accumulated Urge ricliiiar' have grown too old to do: A* work. Th« reason U that it la a very -ont^lebtHg- nesa. A very Jew enstom* > wilt keep a broker going. The commhw *n» arefifirge. Tobuy and iell 100 i h ^ rf ifcck flu iMkar, charjM«41» ^Wtompr &±$gJat* * Theatrical afonager*. rBlaMyHaU.] A theflitrical manager .said a day or two ago, *>I don't know whether yonjknpwitor, not, but nearly every promiftehtsibar,tand many of! the most suct»esfvd theatres, are not run by the men whose names are printed as inanagiers, half so much as by some quiet lndividnal, who holds the" posrtfim o|fhe power behind the. ^tarone, and who is not generally known to tbe pubBc as •$&£&$.&? fiie firln. Por Vmstahee, Dan ^ohman,a quiet and unobstrusive, ^enttenmrj, iwho works night and day. is entirely responsible for tb^ vast success ot the Madison Sqyaro theatre, juBt as Theodore M^isiielprq. prietor and owner of WaUack's theatre,. j In the same way, John "Buff is the mas wfao.h«s enabled Daly's theatre to sncceeuV andBflly Connor was for. many years ifte causa oft they great success which attended John Mcpnl-~ lougb's tours. ~--. v - c ; ' i - ^'.,,--' "'-| .- I mention these.few n a m * casnalry.tbut the most pronourjeed instance of all is that of th« mother of Zotta.- Eott* 3bas 5t#p brothers; (both of WhMar»Ml»:^iMoal businseB. They-ar« ^deve^'enough young men, but .they have no more to dq with Itab- ta% bosmeas than,..'«». has herself. Mr* : Crabtree, the aged; mother of -fie fanions star, has entire control, of-the unkaoes, and is the businesB woman «t tnefwholo Crabtree family. She is extremely sharp mtafiar-. gala, andjtalacb olf; t|» jgrea* fcrtan* iirnich Lotto bw acchmulated is the retnltof the toeabosmees Insight of her mother. , OTJR BABY thrlvea'bn " EE*!sk's Food,?' write hnndreds of grateful motE^^Mothets' nillk contains no starch.- HOBe^^'PODDKOBENEiNT^ffree from starch) requires no cookThg. Jfie best fooa Inhealth,orsickness fiSiINFANTS. Thebea'tolet forDraPEraoaandlDNyALlD8.*- Hlahly'benel- aria) to nuirsrng mothers as a drink, Eor saleby the lollawing DmBdBg.f-3Wi H. PAKTKIpf®, HAVUiAHD^fc HEptTP. Mfl, ?OBRlST. [novWcSmoJ ' .*• "" j One hundred and twenty-five million 4011818' worth- was the%re sacrifice 6f 1884 ___j_j___^_ ' ^ J. WOSDERFOt; DISOOVERV. Consumptives arid all, who suffer from any affection of the Tjiroat and Lungsicau finiN? certain cure in' Ht. Kvag's Hew Pis- covery for Gonsump(ion> ' T h o u s a n d s of permanent cures ve^fy the ,truth of (this Ststoment. No medicine can show.sUjCh a record of wonderful eur<&. Tjiousapds of once hopeless Sufferers now graiefully g»s- claiia they owetheiiliyefftothisJMewpil- covefa. It will cosfyoH nothing to tove tt a Bial- JFrjee Trial^Bpttles .at A. %, Sweeps^DrpgStore, Jarge.-size, §0oand •THOUSANtlSOTOSfTHOUSANDS 1 11 of testimonaisirif the most'wonderful cures, voluntarily sent ituj, we. do not publish them,-aH they do not makd the cures. It is our medicin,e, Hgp Bitters, that make the-eures. It has never faiied aud never can. We tei^'give reference to any one for any disease similar "to" their own if de> sired, or will Tefer to any neighbor, as there is not a neighborhood in the known wor.d but can show its.cures by Hop Bit«< tere.. A.LOSING JOKE. 'ipiominent physician of Pittsburg siidtoa Sady patient who was complaining of her continue 'ed ill health, and of hi- inabDiiy to cure ber gokeingly „aid: "Try Hop.B-t>ets!" The lady took •it hi earnest aud used the Bitters, from which «be •obtained permanent health. one now laughed at 'the dootor lor his roke, but he is not so well pleased •with it, as it, cost him a good patient. FEES OIFDOOTOKS The fee of doctors at $3,00 a visit would tax a man tor a year, and in jieed of a daily »vi8it, over $1,000 a year for medical attendance alone ! Ai.d one siDgle bottle of~Hog Bitters taken in time would save the $1,000 and alt the years sickn&s. 4 (31VEN rjF BY TBJi DOCTORS. "Is it possible that Mr. Godfrey is up and at work, and enred by so simple a remedy ? " *'I assure yow }% is true that he is entire- ly cured, aud with nothing bnt Hop Bit- ters, and only- ten days ago his doctors gave him tip and said he must die, from Kidney and Liver trouble 1" • A Matter 6fA>Mk.' -: ,v '•;.. fBostoaBarsld.] A gutter barjd orjrisfatmg of five German* was tooting an e3U3^cuting tnna fa front of a beer, saloon on Druid H21aTenaetbejotker morahag. The ahisidilnt wiire, incased to thick dcihtag, and three of the cornetist«- wora mlttanii, making it impondblacfbrtbfm to sound one note withoot closing all the valve* on their tostnnneatiC The larger in- sfawmant* were incased So bags to prevsn*^ o<t^^aj»r«fromBpJr^a^th»b45»^^ ; "' "Say, Jli»i give tbUn fellers.-» ifekeirt wupaating the band. TbaTUicbr irarnedi- ataly west, down in Us poctrataad gavea ooio to «be Uttte stoir»f«flbw Wbairw ItMttrj bJowtot tba carat* wmt Mm*. •' - - to s.ut*w bandtr m»n0m4t^m,• - . .' «Oh, y^» rtplW t^ p S L r of Tnrta- blM, •• IM *hsd*srUtr» »««* potMOat trona doltfor bMk. ^-W|l#:i»«»i«-b»t^ tanaam, nf If'we had )»t >«at baad D M On, ; the'basis .pf f|ie> NpvemJ)ei: ivofe %^site(t:glBteci! jirojo^'ftaja, 6^7^68 population, ' .. J-S-';^ ..'•".'.. /%,,; . i'"*'s , 3Vtt'{ rEiebft< G$r#$ng.i.. ^ ' ^ , - "';' i! " H0SEITABC-E.,POB JtUMSPBED AWP <?|tn??tatDy" iMSfifetafia^LlaragoniTe^N, ty i Your '^imtea 3a^^^*afeaffogrdedima- ny &m<&tfti^^ rcBef, for'whichi am-,trBly grateful.i- 1 • : r - r jtoesKnijgBt7M. U., '..;-;-t '•'.;,'•:.-.>v. ; -V8flj^pn.-in|0hiejt. v. * jMkfoib;LiebM;0d,'s, JmiettddMtracfe- ofTWitetHaJ&l.: Invafi&blMn Spinajfe-J *i(atiqn andlsll of- ftupli^,. J&araljzedJ ^d,<Mp|ilevaj ^h^pHejIitt^^l^hl ";-'• . 5Hie $f*|e . : o|' "ii&pifc ^k.;^|,ie«r' MKTTIESTlJUJT. •S- Sane genuine without a bunch of green Bops on the white label. Bhun jail the vile, pb.son- ona stuff, with "Hop''or\'Bpps? m their name. :.;;• IKAGISATION". The Important Part it Plays In Mat- , tera Involving Iilfe and Death. "Boti^t a good" • many people procure medical treatment who ate not sick 3 3 '; asked a reporter of the Detroit Post of a prominent physician. "Of course they do. There's nothing the matter with half the so-called invalids.. I always keep a big batch of .bread pills made up for that class of patients. M,any a one I've got'ont of bed with' that sham medicine, and they thought m e a man r of profound learning and skill" " They fust imagine they are sick ?" •"Certainly I A woman is the qpntra- rieSt of God's creatures. If she makes up, her mind she's sick* yon can't talk her out of it. You must-administer some- thing. I had one call .me, years ago that lay in bed nine months, and she was as well as i am. On a certain day there was one of these circus and animal show com* binations passing. I had an inspiration. that beat any compound my skill could, produce. I hired the manager to let a., tame bear out of the cage ahd we, all set up. a hue and cry, the children went for the woods, and that woman took after them without even stopping to make a toilet. There was nothing under the heavens the matter with her, and when her husband came to settle, I thought for a while"he'd boot her all over the farm."- " Ever have a&y otner case of She imagi- nation ?" " Lots of them. A big hulking fellow about ten miles from the town I was .practicing in got the idea that he was go- ing-io die at just li o'clock in the fore- noon of a certain day. About 9 o'clock a messenger came. I hurried out. When I got there the crank had fifteen aninutes to live according to his calcula- tions. He did look like a man on the verge of eternity. His eyes were dim and sunken, his face had that peculiar pallor which heralds the near approach of death, and his breathing was very labored. The family ' were gathered around and weeping as they took a final leave. Something had to be done quick. There was a smart looking woman there, and I called her aside. Pointing to the clo£k on the mantelpiece which the patient was watching, 1 said: .' When I have hiso attention turn that ahead.' Then I crowded into the family group, hustled them into the next .room, sat down on the edge of the' bed, and began telling that f eilow one .of the most horri- ble murder stories you ever heard. I located it right in the town where he knew everybody, named the woman killed, went into blood-curdling details, and so completely interesested the man that he forgot about his 11 o'clock appoint- ment. When I gave him a chance to look it was twenty minutes to twelve, and he was actually mad for the time, claiming that he had been tricked.' He finally got to laughing, and we all took tiiuner to- gether. "The next day he whipped two men at a barn-raising for twitting him about the program of death that mis- carried." " Wasn't there anything the matter with him 1" ," Not a thing except what he imagined, He was sound as a bullet, but if I had not adopted that ruse he would have gone over to the majority a t 11 o'clock." " Doesn't imagination sometimes cure people who are really ill ?" "To be sure it does. Imagination has a strange and unaccountable power. I had a tunny incident that answers your inquiry. There was a giddy young widow cafied at my office one day. She was a hity-tity creature. Talked all the time she was awake, you know, and had as much laughs as she had talk. She wasn't very chipper when she came, however. She was" on crutches and accompanied.by . a solicitous companion who was brim full of sympathy. The invalid had a knee badly swollen from rheumatism and wanted to know if I could administer electricity, which always helped her. I so.on had a battery in shape. The sympa- thetic friend placed one connection at the invalid's knee: I held the other con- nection in my left hani so as to complete the circuit by touching the patient with my right hand. I drew my fingers across the back of her neck, and of course she indulged in a few little screams aud some hysterical conversation. "Doctor, that's a strange sensation. Ouch ! Haven't 1 got t bout enough ? My knee teels a great eal btt.er. Don't fill me up with that electricity. There, no, you must just quit; I've got a wnole streak o' lightning in. me now, and I' know it was all 1 needed.' The pretty" widow walked out to her carriage without a" limp, and had no trouble in being the belie or ail balls jor the remainder'ot the season. I had noticed a waggish student of mine in the next room stuliing handkerchiefs in bis ino.ath, writhing with suppressed laugti- ter, winking at me on the t>ly and indulg- ing i n a can-can whenever visible to me alone. "'What in thunder are you making such a fool of yourself about,' 1 inquired when the ladies had departed. He roared away aud pointing to the- battery sa.d, ' You might have killed that had. some creature .oy an overcharge of electricity ' 1 lookesjland joined in the hilarity >,I ttad net^sdro to hitch ou to the battery, and the widow's vivid imagination had sup- plied the currents whicn wrought so sud- den a cure." «*d s bag ktpvptfdlfat |014*)r, $emajrlcedtortfrf«endfl»dthiafaa3P.tliatr she knew Kemp.% Balsam, for the* Throat and Lui!ga ; w%|fc ^l^r^ie^nedyi JWI stopped her cough iiiBfanily-when other bad lid^SletwnWt^ ' 86 %>, prove thi . Wl W-ft^^%itt.l^tol«i «r »W Priee SO cents aroljfr. -- Trial-ajpjg free. [ "J - ABerlm.p&ys^wasfirieritheother dtyfW|a£^ -modern meao^s of practioe. i ,,, ,' r :-}' * ~: Measrav'.ponskf'ifc;" Bamie, manager* of ££ttE&«lffiatte2£ no set of men are more atrsceptible to *mxjm tovSmjnmiKait fStos-thafcSt, theb«t.our*eTef used,-^matbay- jointly acknowledge its .pjerits,^; r^ t ,-• .'. /.-.'*.---« "6^inj^ii«KSl^**3ii^- : ; »*Seai?d r -M- 8an. Pranwsco/ jOTOinftaea. " : -~'-: .wfaww- x&&tfa.jm*M.' j -'i JBvwrj fa^y ,l» « m i # o e t i a cli from import water, unripe fruit, turwhol some food* eoatagio« iSmm, e»aip*,, cholera morbw, po*dmwt «pld«v^iadfgee- ttoh and »ini bottle of Par] renden it on: NotiiBf to tSenof«» •M-. >w -: -- -* . ' •^ ^T*-.'""-'"..-' -'-'j' ^:^S^^+mJm^^£». -«»..a>-(v r i&- i*- . •,> , - » « : mmiM '-ifes^tss •iV, -•=-- .-- •••'.I:';-'--..' 't-H -•"f 4.^ » <1 OTne R o m a n c e o r rf Tombstone. "• Anything new in epitaphs^ " "Nothing particular.' I can tell you a sentimental story about one, though. J got an order for a gravestone from a nice young man, who thought he didn't have long tolive. No lungs and hardly any- thing else, you know. He picked out a verse from Dr. u Watts, to nave chiseled under his name." Same day I called on a uiee young lady who thought she was going fast. She had an idea that it would be a great comfort to select the style of her own^gravestone. We made all the ar- rangements withont much trouble until We came to the epitaph. She couldn't think of a verse to suit her At last I pulled out my note book and showed her the young man's epitaph. She was tickled with the verse, and said the young man who wanted that on his gravestone -must have been a very good young man, apd wished she had known him beiore he died. 'He's not dead yet,' I said. ' Not dead 1' she hollered. ' Where does he live i' 1 told her. The result was that when I came around with the gravestones all complete, except that the ' departed this life' date on each wasn't filled in, 1 -found that young woman nursing that young man andboth of them getting well. They invited me to their wedding six months afterwards, but I didn't go. I thought they had treated me rather shabbily , lor though they had paid me for the grave- stones they didnt use them, and I could never point to them as specimens of my workmanship."—[Chleago News. - Tlie Editors Were Xbere. Both of tbe editors of Puff were at the wedding of, Miss Mattie Seitz and Mr. Russell Stewart on Wednesday. It was a splendid wedding. ' , The hopse -tvas a fairyland of flowers and dressed people. '' The bride looked the best. So did the maids, of honor. ' The bride kissed the editors of Puff. , All of the gentlemen looked as if they wished they were editors, too. The refreshments wonld be hard to beat. * We hope to, have some more Weddings of the kind tolldok after.—{Eastern Puff. 'jAmeftb literary anecdote is related by •WflQBelm .Grimmt-Xme of she pair of famous story-tolhjrs. One 'day a little girl rang their "bell and met him in the Ball with the wards: "Are you the Mr, Grimm that writes the pretty tales.?" A- Yes, I and my brother." " A n d thatarf the defter little tail©* who married the princes;?" ".Yes, certainly." "Well," said the chad, producing the book, "it is said.here that every one who doesn't be- lieve it must pay him a thaler. Now I don^ believe that aprincessgver marrieda bailor. I haveh''t as much a s a thaler, but here Is a'groschen, arid please.say I hope to pay the rest by degreea.'*'? J u s t then Jacob came, up, and the brothers ^had an ^interesting interview with the Irfctle d a m e , but theM,couId not persuade < i^Beir*d-take away*Sb'e>£rosehen which she iadlaid on tbe table.. -% MP.. OhHdrefwr e -.eo«!fc§^i&on, K ' ' '•' - ' '•CastotlaisEOwellndiiptedtochildrenthat I Castoria cares Co' •©commend- , . .. • lo^-i.^™-**!. known to me, H. A. AKCBZRiJt.Z>., . «- Kestion, lUSo.GtfortSt.,Brc»k>yn,N.V. | \vlttOnt injurious -~jrf THa Cferitri "Coar-Asv^.. Street, IT. T; ,buti Boston Ssylns aiid Ootngs of Utile One*.. Ijrrecldie has'a-cat of which he is very fond.* The other day kitty scratched him, when be remarked r 'afovept rton*elove to haveber puisine.' ¥lmes\; - :•'/- ;•• - •*'-'. *. ,-.-'- . : - : • Perhaps the little hoy who explained to a companion the other day that "gas is melted wind " is the same one who denned dust as mud with tbe juice squeezed out. fVTimingtim ptm-t •• --. ; , '':. ""Witat wouia I do were you tot die ?" said a lady to her husband, who had just pnrchaBsed a sealskin ^acque for her. "Oh, *come off!" saidthe eight-year-old hopeful; " yon'd nmrrvtba* old, codger you kissed' when pa was asleep on thesofa.^—rBvan*. m^&r&ia- ; ! ;;. :;-.* '•-" - h -"••;'. ..^'**V5^ba^ celebrated King ate grass -V* asked the Sunday-school teacher. "^Nebucbad^eziar,*' was the 1 prompt y did.be eat grass f" Cause his; mammy cooked it in the greens!" said » little boy who had had someexperience.-~l.ycto«wnJndVp&ttdent. " Mother, kin a thing have two mothers?'* ;.-;•" HOyWaai" ,','•?::'•'-.-?•-.:• ,-- : yt.. "YesVi they kin. If one hen lays, an egg and another ben hatches itont thechichea what's hatched has two mothers, hain't ftl»F..-.-;v.---^,v;-v '-:.-•:• -,'-.-- s -"'"^. - - : ; ^IdoB't know. Don'* bother me with -inch foolish questions." , •'Mother, d'ye think I won't know any more then you do when-1 get as old as yoti w " " ' - ^ < ' -' I'" ••'• ,-j':X< /••:•• - •.'-••'• : In Great BiiUhi $81,(XW,y*W U inveit- •di&lt»M«miw>7S, An the absolute cure*, for KHeumatism, Sprains, Pain in Back, Burns, OaUs, &e. An Instantaneous Pain- reliBving and Healing Kemedy. r [continued from last wed), . . . How Watch Cases <m Hmde. A plate of SOLID GOLD 14 2-10 karats fine is soldered on each side of a plate of hard nickel composition metal, and the three are: then passed between polished steel rollers. Prom this plate th^various parts of-the cases—backsj centere, Dez;els, l ete, are cut and. shaped, by dies and-formers. The gold .is thick enough to admit of all kinds of ichasing, eiigravhig, and engine- turning. The composition metal gives it needed strength; stiffness and soluity, while the written guarantee of the manufacturers "•warramtinh eachjjase to wear twen&y years proves that it contains qM the. gold that can possijbly be "needed. "* This guarantee is given ^from aetucd results, as many of these cases have been worn perfectly smooth by years iff use without .wearing throngh the gold. DUBUQUE, IA., Deo. 14,1880. I have us^d one of your James Boss' Gold Watch Cases for seventeen years. I bought it second-hand and know of its having heen used before I got it. but do not'know how long. It looks good for ten years longeh Did not siupect it was a filled osse until so informed by a Jeweler a short time since. I most cheerfully recommend your cases to be a* they are represented to be, and more. O. MjCaAirarr, Dep. Col. Int. Rev. Zd DU. loma. Send 8 cent ifamp to Keystone Watch Case Factories, Phlta. lielphlo, Pa., for handsome Illustrntod Pamphlet ihowlng bow James Boss' vp& Keystone Watch Cases ftre made. (To &6 ContimtecUf » £*ga! Ifjdtiws, r~** NOTICE TO CEED1TOES. P TIKStlANTTO AN ORDER OF THE STJRRO- eate of the Couoty of Ontario, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against Maria LoQmis, late of the town ut PhetpB, Ontario Cjunty Stafe or Kew York, decea-e*!, to pre. ent the samt, with the vouchers therewf, to the undersigned, ad mUiistratur, at the national Exchange Bank, Sen eca Pails, N. Y., on or before the M£h day of March, 1*5. . ^ w K b a q S r Dated Sept. 22,1SS4. Admiri^ttator. " NOTICE TO oKEDiram P URSDAHT TO AK ORDSB'OJP TBESUERO- gate of the County of Ontario, nbti're is hereby give" to all persons having claims against Otis B, Ua-den.Jate of the town or Seneca, Ontario County, State -of New York, deceased, to present the i-ame, with the vonchers thereof, to the undeisigued,-e®»- cutor of the wil '" said Otis B. Burden, decease-d, at his residen' > this town of Seneca, Ontario i ounly, N. Y., on or before the 10th day of April 1885. WILLIAM. T. BEATTJE, Dated, Oct. 15th 18S4. Executor SoctSnl NOTICE TO CEEDITOES., P URSUANT TO XN ORDER OE THE STJI Kate of the t'ounty o Ont.:rio, nola e is hereby given to a; l person- hiving cairns, agams Thomas Watbinf, iate of the town of Seneca, Ontario Com ty, Si ale of New. York, deceased, to present the sam», wi'h the voUcners th(.-e f, to the nnder- pignu'i-, exi cut. r, at Li* dwelling house in the town of J rusalcm, Yates Cou.f, N Y , on cr before the 25th day of Juij, 188E JOHN E. WATKD3S. Dated, Janu .ry 19th, 1886. ., -Executor,<Sc Bf2y-an«mJ *>- "TH|E OLD RELIABLE." 25j YEARS'IN'.U8B.- The Greatest Medical Triumph.' of the Age. Indoilsecl all over the World. (SYMPTOMS OF A• TORPID LIVER» ^osaqfappetite. NansejubgWglscos; tivft. pgIamtheHftg.ri-witJiad.ullsen-: sationiiu the back part, Painunder tn p ^h^^^-^^riftfTrillnflss aftereat- 4nf?7witn, a disinolina.tlQn to exertion of pbdjr orinind, Irritability of tenrr> er,, Lo-w- spirit3,Lossofmez.:orr nth a faeliing of having: negleetod jg^ dutyt^Y-sariness. Dizjainess^Flntter- Jngof the Heart, Pots before the i>yes, Yello^rSkin.Headaohe,3Etest 1 -^asness tt^ highly colored Ur; IB» JEVABKLHOS ABE ITKHESDEl), SEBIOTO! SISBASBS wnA coou sa JJEVELOPED. TuTTfS PILLS are especially adapted to sueb cases, one dose effects au.h a change of feeling as. to astonish the sufferer. TheySnerease the Appetite; ana cause the body to Take on Flesh, thus the sys- tem islttourisltea, and by- their Tonic Action! on the JMgeSttve ©reai", »egu- lar Stools are prodnced. Price 8S gents, f, GRAtvi HAraor'VmisKESS changed to a Gwissr EwCK by a single application of this DTtfT It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of 81. ©ffica. A4 Murray St., NewYoik. PfeATT'S ASJHAt OIL? The b£3t illiaminater and in every respect the safest and most reliable Oil for family use ever made. It is folly to risk life aiNJl property "by ui?in# inferior Oil when Pratt's Astral at its present can be ribtained low prick PRATT jMANUFAGTTJEING jjrEW T O R E CITY, GO SOLE PBO PBIBTOES AND MAITOTACTU-EBES. The Astral is particularly adapted for use in Oi. Stoves, on ace oont of its absolute safety and free- cm from odoi Por sale iq Geneva by WM. MOOONNEL L. 3CBABE =VITA= SUPPOSITORIES. A POSITrnjCUIlIf^ * In IM.mtst Snuff or 4«he. fmtiqtSlxt _ J AM, *vu*t)f¥*uUif,Wt'\ AtaUdrvtgiitisortqr Ban oo neHpUipthu "VITA OO: t. WandM Oliff Bt^ H.Y ASEPTINE For the toilet, colds, catarrh, headache, hay fe- ver, sore throats, and for preserv- ing the complex- "ionitisrineqnaled OMINICOSOAP cures all skindis. ftgnranbns. For the bath and nur- sery sariative it is ling, cleaas- ngandpmi J"or sale [dntggjgtBs NOTICE TO CREDITORS. P URSUANT To AN ORDER OF THE SURBO gate of the County < f Ontario, notice is herrby fiven to all persons having claims' against Pamehas '. Hicle, iate of the town of Geneva, Ontario Coun- ty, State of New York, deceased, topre-ertthe fame, wi'h vechers thereot, t" the nud^rsienfd, execut r of his last will and testament, at his oflSco in the village of Geneva on or before the I5ih day of Aucnst 188% ' JAMBS S. SEABS, Dated Feb, 9th, 1885. .Executor. (Ill'eb6m) *)H NOTICE , T,TT'. IIA.i SEEJTOES. P FRSTJANr TO AV ORHKR OP TEfBT^rS. rogate's Conn of the., ountv o r Ontario, notice^-, is her.uy eiveu to all persons having claims against Samuel Bradhurst Clark, late of the t'Wnof^e- m va, Onta> io County, '-tat? of New Y rk,df-ceas£ d, io pr-senl the same wi'h the voucher* thereof, to the undersigned exerutrix of the last will ar>d testament of said decedent, at tbe office of Joh>i S Andrews, b. int> my piare of transaction of bm<ixiess, i,i Canandaigua in said cm- ty, o or b- fore the 20th day of May 1885. ELIZA R. <'LARK. Executjix of the wi 1 of Samuel Bradhurst Clark decea.-ed: 12nov6m* Dated November 10,1881. NOTICE TO CEEDITOES. F PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER M \DE BY Hon. Frank Rica, Bounty Judge of Ontario Connty, New York, dated January 9,1885, notice is hereby given to oil the creditors and persons having claims- against William H. StiegelT>ai( r, lately doing business at Number 212 exchange street, in-the Village of Geneva, NX, that they are r< qu r> d to present their said claims, with tbe v o u h e r s th<-ref ir ''n'y verified to the subscribfr, tbe duly ai po nted assignee of Ihe said William ' 11. S icgelmai.r for tne benefit of hi* Crrditors, st <£X~ theoificeof D B. Bafiksn'to-e in the vilag- of Gemva, N» Y., ou oHjsfore the 15th day ' f April, 18*6 K. A BARTH, Assignee. (>aM Geneva, N. Y., Juinary 10, 1885. / iHnWTt ^ ASSIGNEE'S SALE. " ' By virtue >.f an order m de bv Hon. Frank Rii e j Ontario Oiini'. Ju!p', da'e' F.-brnary 'T, 1885,1 ill -e 1 a* aucti. n t > the hi^h'-st bidder fa» cash at rhe Franklin ' <mse. >n the vil Hue of Geneva,N Y , on 'he Ut.i>.day -.F March. l-i85,.«tr-t0 o'clock A M , ail th' light ftle a,-d uler s whit b Wllliaia H -Stieg m ii< r had io a- d to tl.e fo'l, wing real < s- „ tit.-, i] .h- ihna> oi D.'-euibjr. 1884,--the date of his general n-sUiunem to me for ihe benefit of hn ere !it r-, viz: The two—to y b-ick dwellnc house and lot situ- .JZ, a'eou the no-ih fid of t'astiestree', west of Main -trpet, i,i s i d v huge of enevu.-ki'Own as the Louts Fisher proprr y. A'so the iwo-srory frame dwell- ^ ing h-n-e and lit si'yaie rn the eaptside of Elm street, o-ih of • o.t -treet, in said vilag", and new occanie- hv ..id Hn g. lnn.i-r as his residence. For par Jcnlar a pi' to the undersigned. FKEWTICK A, BAKTH, Assignee. Dated February '8, i8 5. 18feb4l \* SALE BY EECErVEB. I SPrTRSn^NCEOP AN QRDER OF THE ^D preme Ciurt o*' the State of New York, dated" January 7th, 1885 I shall sell at auction to the highest bidter on the 2d d*y of March, 1885, at 10 o'clock A. M , at the nursery offlceerounds of Cole- min, Anthony & Co., on Lewis street, west of Ma n * treet, in the village of Geneva, N. Y-, tbe following property, viz: The nursery office groun ds ab ve mentioned, containing about three acres of land, with the buildings adapted to the nursery bnsinps? thereon, and the nursery stock growing ana heing thereon. Also the farm of said Coleman, A n- ihony * Co., known as the "Mnllender Farm* situate on the east side of the Pre-Emption, in the town of Geneva, Ontario Connty, N. Y., aad t«ontaining about sixty-soven acres of land; together with the nursery stock growing and being thereon; and the nnsiry btock now growing on about twenty-fve acres cf leased-lands contiguous to the farm last above mentioned, and a part of the same nursery, and the leases, themselves, of saiBiand. That pa d Teal estate and nursery stcck will be sold in par- cels, as follows, viz: Parcel nnmber one will be the nursery office grounds with the buildings and nursery stock thereon. Parcel nnmber two will be the eaiid " Muuender Farm" with the nursery stock theron. and the nnr- sery stock on said leased lands, with the leases aforesaid. Thst each of said parcels will be sold subject to certain- mortgages thereon. FeJr partie u iars respecting which mortgages application can be made to the undersigned, on or before the day of sale. N I shall also sell at<fcbe same time and place, all of the nursery implements, horses, nursery office furniture and personal ireperty, of the S8id Oole- mafi, Anthony & Co., belonging to and need 4n con- nection with their nursery business, other than the nursery stock End leases ab»ve mentioned, except the books, book accounts and evidences of debt- Tbe terms of snie of all the above property will be cash, except that if a creditor of the partneiship of Coleman, Anthony & Co., shall become a pur- chaser on such sale he will be credited and allowed on the amotfbt of h's purchase a sum which 1i.e undersigned may ascertain wi} not exceed the per centum to which on a settlement by the receiver he wonld be entitled to-receive as such creditor. HORACE ANTHOKY, Date! Geneva, N. Y., Jan. 2^ 1886; Eeeeivei The above sale is postponed till Tuesday, March Hl_ tftftS nl.aa-motjlgeg^ - <• OrJACB ANTHONY, Receiver ^J^^ 10-h, 1885, atsam" place, H< f r NotordytotheBnfa fererwasted bytni eease does Rideel Jrooa supplement the proper wediciae sad bring back uetreng and comfort, bnt tat delicate mother wh- find in Its daily nsil j u t whatlsneeaed te cbecfca ud snpplemeo the drain made upon nature's forces. Trn Mt, mothers, and by onvinced. Recipee to Eiutuinereniuwtjeb accompany e»ch can. It does not tax (he dhteslive organa,bnt is streogthaoings Wbrthinvidids anfl children. 8old by DrugEistaT T H" PEOPI,E OF THE SrATfl! OF FEW YORK * BV THE SBACE OP «0D TREE AJTO itrBEBEHBEUT i To the B .ard of Home Missio s of the Presbyier- fon Oi urch in the United States of America, the Bfvrd of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, in ihe Ui.i'ed Statesol America, corpora- (iflnns, each having i's pifcipaj oBice at 28 Center K street, In fhe city of New York. , Anbarn Theolog- - icai sentin-ry, a o-ppra*itm havine Its principal rofBee at An'"irn, Cayuga cotnrtv, Hew Yorfe, San- ford D. Hopkins, Ltvbida Weeks, «"oi>s E. Hopkins, Minnie M Hopkins, Francis L. Hopkins, Charlei W. Hrpbins,.Harriet C. Tamer, Bwnk Hnpfc.iis, Jn'ia Hopkins Chauncey Beeche'-, Joseph Beeeher; Orpha J..Hoxie,Charles M. Bi'ChcockiMary Kader He- ry Hitchcock. B^Frank Hitchcock, Martha B: Havena Eicbard E. y. Pook, Nellie Keltoga John Eellng^, , Mead. Cyms Edward Bead, Justin Kellogg Head, Marcus Jleatl, JUary D. Peck. Gould B. Seara, Betsey Ann Pears, Benjimin P. White, John g. White. Abhy Hand, Nettie BedgPS.Naf nan Oorwith Henry Corwiihi John E. Gorvith. S'lWftTd 6 Co>- 'with, GefrgeS. Corwith, Henry N. Convith, Sarik Co'with, Phoejje R. Riley, and Mary Hfiinpstead, who are interest'd, as next of kin, legatees, or otherwise, in the estate of Ciwrit-- H. Sears, I<te of th" town f.f phelpB, In Ontario connty, New York, deceased, greeting r ' • • Yen, and each of yon are hereby cited, personally to n« and appear In our £ nrrogsje's fourt, bef re our Snrroaate of tjnr ,«omtry of Ontario, et-.tbe Surrogate's bfSee la the Tilage of Canandaigus, in jaid cotmly,of Ontario, on the «4th day of March, A. D., 1885, at ten o'clock in the forennera, then and there to attend the juihcist" settlement of toe accounts of Henry J. Peek, as the executor of the will of said Charity H. Seara, deceased. .. And the above nam. d who are infants, are here- by notified o then and there show cause why* special guardian should not be appointed to appear for them on said settle ment, oh the application of ,the petitioner. In testimony whereof, we havecaused the seat>of the said Surrogate's court . to be herennto a«»d, [i» a,] Witness, B. P. Bsbcock; Sniro«te of said county, at Canandaigua, ine 28th day-of Jannary, one thousand eight hoBdreld and ei|*hr-nve. . ; . 3^P.BAB<XK!K,8oiioiste. ., Jons 8. AIJDKKWS, Attome> for Accountant, 4febw7 Canandaigua^ X. f. 85c np. WOOLRI' CO., onUbeL A m ) BOARD for » live . . _ p r Ladis*in each eoun P. W, ktBCOJDt *Co4Pali»J'a Fli A leading London Physician B»> tabhs hes an Office in fiew York. From Am. Journal of M. d, "' Dr. A B. Me«erole,who nukea a specialty of Spiepey has with- out doubt trettedand cured mora cases than tny other living physician. His,saee«as has simply been astonishing; we have beard of cases of oyer 20 years standiaeenred by hUn. He luarantees a cure." Large Bottle anacTreattae S-tfre*. GiveP.O,andgirpresBatlttasBto t i AB. MitSKBOLa, No. M John St., New Yor*. tiaTfSOA yiKl .*%•*, •"ZisV;. ^W|WB8»

Transcript of i r~** r lnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031163/1885-03-04/ed-1/seq-4.pdfThere is hope in my...

Page 1: i r~** r lnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031163/1885-03-04/ed-1/seq-4.pdfThere is hope in my pathway where I tread. That over the seas thou wilt sail to me. In the day when the

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'Seneca L-ske. Steam Navigation.'Coinpltty \: jn effect Get. 1st, 1884

G O l M e S O V T B X,eave G e n e v a , T 47 A - M . ArriveatWatldns,r "© "

<A>JCHS 1BTH ueave Watklns, 81I5PJI .

'Arrive at Geneva, 10 ** Boat leaving Ueneva at T.*» t . M. and Watfcln

at 1*:18 p. a. caniea C. & Mail d Express, •stop on Signal only. " W. .DUNNING,

tftip't'

itttTfiri!iiiirr"'ii*iftlri; ABM iff f pirffliaifti « • * - ,-( ':t#*-*;

Nirw YoBB. CBNTBAL, & H. K. ft. H. AUBURN Bti&NCH. '-

aoisaEAST. STATIONS. eoZNo WEST. A . M . A . J 1 . P . M . P . M . 4 . H . P . M . P . M . A J I . 6ua i-.w.zio, S 40 Rochester ( »4i u^6 7 45laao 625 t>3a T 4 2 6 G Q

6 02 107 7 1 7 723

b<tt> t>42 8 50 9 0 5 9 US 918 937 9S7

414 419 42* 430 440

l o w 10 ID

360

ssi 402)10 20 1033

10 43 1060 1100 110a

Cau'dalgua j 8 85 1 15 Chauinville Shonaviue CUtt'n Sua

Phelps Oaks Cor. WeetX

625 015 687 653

J 83|12 OS 6 4

812 1231 80o,ia ssr 754 ,U£) I W ' l S l i 740113 lo

U 1 8

1041 luSi> 10 » 10 2o 101' lOOo

7 3 0 | 9 45|44S|1116i GENEVA j ?8»,120U,6iSO,1006 T141143|fi,J0 9*6 7 4 5

7G3 8 J 6 8 SO

9Sg p.m

2 20

7 0 0

1005 1012 10 SO U 0 2 i V X . 1>U{T00 445

900

500 610 625 556

100

645

1183 1140 1163 1216 A . M .

115

CIO

10 80

Waterloo Seneca P i s Cayuga Auburn

Syracuse Albany

New York

701 665 fl«

6 % P . M .

U ao

680

11 A . 0 0 1 0 0 0

1131460' 935 436| 920 4 05, 8 60

I P . K . 3 00 ? 46 A.M iffii 100

1A.M. . 8 6 1 0 80

NOBXHKBN C E N T B A L K A I L W A T On and after Monday, August Jl, 1884, trains will

leave and arrive as follows: soma BOUTS. ^

A. M. PJk P.'M. S t a t i o n s . 8 80 9 46 948 958

10 Oi 1013 1087 1127 P . M . 1225

4 0 0 414 413 428 485 4 4 * i f * 5 5 4

0 55

7 60 >

80S

880 910

1000

/Bta i /Canai 'Canandalgua.

HopewelL Lewis

Stanley. Balls.

Beliona. Peon Yan. Wstkins.

eOXKS NOBTH. A.M. P. M- P.M.

a 35 100 8 16 12 45 12 40 12 S3 12 27 1218 12 06 1115

817 8 la 805 7 69 7 61 7 3b 0 47

• 00 10 26

746 740 7 81 718 82&

Ehnlia, -SPXNOEB MBJUO, Qim'L Supt.

C B A B . E. P S S B . General Manager.

585

GENEVA, IXHAOA & S A T E S K. li, O U T U W A E D .

A.M. P.M. A.M. STATIONS.

7 41 SU5 625 845 900 952 925 940

8 1 ! 826 886 8 45 8 51 8 57

T903 910

1000

tf£ 1040 1043

Geneva. West Payette Romulus nayt'a Corners Sheldrake

N O B T B W A B D . AM. P.M. PM.

960 110

1140 160

1100 1 1 0 9

re a a H 9 3 4 1 1 1 B j

10 44 1255

10 64 -Farmer

1050 A.M 205

100 P.M 625

4 05i 51o| 7 00(1030 745IIII5

Covert TTumanflburg Taghanie F»"« Ithaca Bast Waverly Sayre Wilksbarre

Mauch Chunk Bethlehem Philadelphia New York

tStops only on signal.

729 712 7 01 6 62

T644 8-87

t6 SO 6 2 2

t616 5 57 140 485

A . Ju­l i a

P.M IU la I 955 I 8 0 0 L7 00

8iZ 7 57 7 47 738 729 722

t715 700 700 040 528

43t 40V 341 82b 310 265 240 223 2 U* 130

loot 625|1U20

P.M 210

A.M 12 Ou 1050 900 810

WM.STBVENbuU.8upt Havre, P

FALL BBOOK OOAL L'O.'H KAXLWATS. T a k e s effect M o n d a y , F e b . 2 , ]68o.

S T B A U U B B ttEMEVA &, u u K A U f O D I ? i B 1 0 M . GOINB HOBTH. 6TAT10SHti «JOlS« SOUTH.

P.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. i2i 12uy d uo lv Sd.Lyonfl

F. M. 6 65 11 0) 6 17 600 5 47 aS, 6 27 620 4 4

9 4 4 9 22: » 1 8 5S| 8 4;

2 301 9 4 . j ,Geneva 1 5 6 , 8 l i , D r e s d e n 1 J7, 8 27 |HlmrodB

8 09 D u n d e e 5 2 K o c k S t r

1 2 6 1 1 4 1 0 5

12 58

A . M . P . M . A . M . 6 8 0 ; 6 0 i I t J6

! ;P. M 742,65fti " •"' 8 l i .7 & 8 83 7 4-) 8 44,7 88 8 5 5 a 1 2 9 02 8 20 910IH26 9 3018 5

10 0019 A,

A . K 865

12i | 9 46 2^0 lo40 247,1111 3 08 1182

7 38 Beading .. . 7 28 WatkiHB 1* 123'. 6 5u Beaver 0,

i | 7 0«. . | l2 0 i | 6 0 0 C o m i n g O O B M . N O , CClWAKZBl iUK & A K T B I H D I V I S I O N .

S T A T I O N B . P . M . P . M . A . M . A . M . P . M . A . M . 6 65 3 45 916 Arr. Corning Dep., 10 16.5 40 6 lo

8 51' 341 358 4 2^ 51!)

11 £ 0 1205 12 11 12 68

1 4 0

a 3 ' i 8U.1. 7ii0 l

71. i 7 Mi 7UU|

Lawrencenlle Tioga " Middlebnry " StokesdaleJunc" Stokesdale " Wellsboro

j ^ P A M r i m

10 55!6'8'547 U 2516 37 6 04 1145l7 02J626 1166;7 12'6a5 i l 5 - | 7 1 ) l 6 4 3

|1205j72J|660

^ • ^ • ^ P T N E CBEEK PIVISIOK bTATIONS.

A . M . P . M . P . M . I . 10 i* n -,o 5 20 Rtokesdale Junction 10 1 10 18 4 50l AnBom 1 9 :8 9 10,4 .7. B.acuwells 9 15' 8 5 I ! 4 1 7 ' C] ar i un 8 2o! 7 5.3 20' Watervil e 1 6i)j 6 6.2 40 J' rrey Shore 7 3 o 6 2 £'• \ Lii den . 7 2 5 50 2 15, Nen berry Jucction Tli s 4.12 0 Williamaport .

Arril2 6u

A . M . P . M . P .M 8 ?5' 12 0 D 3 30 6 5« ,2 26:3 55

1 1514 45 1 30.4 57 2 35'5 47 3 1U0 17 3 30 o40 341,665 3 66 ; 10

I 7 40 . 7 65 ! 8 47 I 9 17 ! 9 40 ! »60 '"10 151

' H O D O S U A V & BooTHERN K l i Co ' eorao SOUTH. STATIONS. e o m e HOETH.

P . M . P . M . A . M . . ,53017 20;

"'» 5 44,7 37 105 6 49'7 45 I 24 6 04 7 521 18&J614 J 155,8 27 2^016 381 2 5216 5. sse^oi' i 15'7 15L9 28 B20'722i935 d 32,7 32.9 42 3 40,7 40,9 60 P . M . P . M . A . M .

802 812i 8 30 9 00 9 12

Sodus Point Wallington

Sodns Centre Zurich

Pairville Newark N. y. 0.

Newark Outlet

Phelps Junction Orleans

Seneca Castle Flint

Stanley

A . M. P . M . P . M 10 30 6 60, 130 10 17,635 111 1012 630[ 106 H> 0216 14 1237 9 5215 u6113 28 94u|644,1203 9 81 5 40 1146 9 1fi'5U 1131 9 121507 1116

I 8 5014 54 I 8 4114 46 I 8 81)437 I 8 2OI430U030

1100 1050 1089

8PENCEB MEADE 8ni)erintendent.

O V E K T H E S E A .

I a m looking back through the days and weeks That lie in the shadowy land of yore,

^ n d a wak ing spirit st irs and speaks— The spirit of dead'years gone before.

Speaks with a murmur of mournful s ighs. In a voifce that carries the sound of tears.

A n d . lighting: Che lamp of i t s passionate eyes, " * """Bd of the buried yeai

T h e wind la b lowf lBy ip from the w. The stars are shinHljr downjojUfie sea.

But the wind is bleak aSKHhe l ight is cold. And 'tis only of pain they speak tp me .

For t h e wind once toyed with a s i lken tress. And the stars once shone on a saint ly face ;

A n d how can a faithful love grow less ? Or a ne*w love take the old love's place ?

T h e sea Is swirl ing np to m y feet. S inging i ts monody soft and l o w :

But the song of the sea i s deadly sweet. For I mind how it s l e w me years ago.

W e have been parted. I and she. W i t h m a n y a hundred miles between.

A n d now she w a s coining across the 6ea. (Oh, the sky was blue und the waves were

green! )

Coming—and yet she never came ! Meeting—and yet we met no more i

She heard me not when I called her name. Though the dead m i g h t have heard me on

that shore.

Oh. love, though m y eyes but dimly see. There is hope in my pathway where I tread.

That over the seas thou wilt sail to me. In the day when the sea g ives up her dead.

NIGGER BEND TRAGEDY.

DP t«

w

. " Sam Blakeley is killed I" ' A dozen men who were seated about the logging shanty smoking or playing cards started and looked about at this sjiddeu announcement

Shorty, the skidder, stood just within the room swinging a smoke-begrimed lan­tern and looking straight ahead at the eroup of loggers gathered about the greasy pine table with a sputtering tallow candle in the centre. The gane of euchre came to a sudden halt. J im Sweeay turn­ed half rqund on his stool and grinned at Ned Oakley, or Shorty, and growled.

" Bosh ! What you givin' us now. Shorty?"

" Rat s 1" and a general laugh followed. B u t the stumpy skidder knew what he

^ a s ta lking about, and was not to be put d o w n b y unseemly levity. He advanced t o the centre of the room, and then sever­a l of the loggers could see that his bronzed face~was pale, and that a scared look filled h i s eyes. Shorty was net easily overcome.

. Something of an uausual nature must have happened, and no mistake.

J im Sweezy crushed his cards down upon the table and wheeled squarely about a s Shorty said:

" It's God's t m t h , boys ; Sam's dead, for I s a w M m under a tree-top not live annates ago ."

'•ijTir!p»4h»l*os. seems to me," muttered "Hweezy. " The fellow started this

aornin'to go down to Xteger Bend, and I don't see how he got back an' planked M«self under a tree. You ain't comin no cod now, Shorty. Ef you be. I'll smash every bone In yer body soon's I And it o u t "

" r tell you 'twas God's truth." ~ _ J ' B o y s , Shorty ain't lyin' now. He's

seen sotnethin' anyhow. Let's go out and 'vestigate." cried a huge, red-bearded teamster, who had until now sat with his back leaned against the log ribs of the shanty, smoking a brierwood pipe. He knocked the ashes oo t qaioWy, and then thrust th» hot brierwood into a side pock­e t of his jwomus.

. ' " Bob Stiles is right • w e l l 'vestigate."

There was a general commotion now, and soon nearly every man in the shanty, including ^ many who had crawled into their bunks before Shorty's coming, poured into the crisp outer air, and fol­lowed the flame of the skidder's lantern to

• * t r e e top about forty rods away. Wh*a^ffiesldade1'eaiBito_a iha-U he had

Ma lantern bleb, thus permRting every man to see the dark object that lay upa,t thagrotuid Just under » projecting limb of thejiant pine,

' ' I t^Sam Blakeley, siureehoTishl" cried •Bbni^Holcoiab,- the scaler. «*He maist hsve come back through the woods; and got under this tree just as It fell. Poor

A feeling of awe came brer that group «t rough loggers, and for a time they spoke in subdued tones, and moved about Jrith solemn tread, as though fearful of

; aisturbing the rest of their dead comrade. JPeor Blakeley's skull was crushed in, but

. he was not disfigured otherwise, Sam *as quite> gentleman among the loggers. He m a ftffly educated, and withal a keen business sort of a young fellow:

Oa the following day the body of the •——-.Jagg**; was conreyed to Nigger was

r»nd~cbnsigned to earth.

M a y a o d b e f toother, the latrer a wiflow, were employed to do the cooking, Mrs. Andrews' brother doing the chores about the shanty. Sam Blakeley was Mav's cousin, and be was often at the cook's shanty in consequence.

Qne other had frecraently been at the women's shanty—Tbm Holcomb. the sealer. Which one was the erirl's favorite none could t e l l May seemed deeply mov­ed at the untimely taking off of her cousin, and her eyes were red with weeping for some days thereafter.

It was learned that Sam Blakeley had been to Nigger Bend on the. day in ques­tion, and had Ret out to return to the shanty jnst before dark on that fafal day. No one'Saw him after he left Bend until Shprty's discovery of his body under the pine top. The tree had been felled just a t dark, and the choppers had left it. ex­pecting t o top and measure tbe same the first th ing In the morning. It was a won­der wi th many how Blakeley came tape i n the spot where the tree struck him down. "Certainly it was not on his road home, and he had not been to either of the shanties, s ince the women or the chore boy would have seen him.

There was something mysterious about the affair. But the sad event was soon for­gotten and camp life In the woods went on in its old, jolly, careless fashion.

Snow soon came and the teams were busy for several weeks hauling the logs to the river. W h e n the final break came sev­eral millions of pine logs were heaped against the high rollway above the roiled waters of the Muskegon, and one more act in the forest drama must he performed ere the logs were afloat in the stream.

The shanties were deserted for the sea­son. Black, gl istening trails wound their way through the woods where once were the smooth roads over which huge pyra­mids of pine had been hauled during the cold months iust passed.

April sunshine rapidly dissipated the ice and snow, and theroBed Muskegon flowed on unvexed to the lake.

A wedding at Nigger Bend Was not an everyday occurrence, and when one was announced, the boys were on the qui vive at once, visions of a-"horning b e e " and plenty of liquor filled the brains of the woodsmen. For once, however, a part of the program was destined not to take place. Tom Holcomb did not propose to submit to a "sbivaree," so he publicly in­vited Nigger Bend to come to the wedding and dance all night if they choose at his expense.

Since the young scaler was so liberal no one thought of troubling him to furnish refreshments of a liquid nature. Tom, how­ever, -understood what would best suit the denizens of Nigger BeDd, and so he had a keg.of beer on tap the evening of the wedding and dance.

The marriage was performed by old Squire Hawke, and May Andrews was made Mrs. Tom Holcomb in short order. After the ceremony the fun commenced. People may talk and write about an Old Virginia breakdown, but for genuine, boisterous jollity nothing can equal these backwoods "shindigs" so popular among the loggers and lumbermen a few years ago.

Of all the " d i g s " ever held in Nigger Bend the one given by Tom Holcomb the night he became a Benedict was the tie plus -ultra.

Tom himself felt his oats, and danced and drank with the merriest of them. That wedding was one long remembered in Nigger Bend, so soon was it followed by a tragedy that sent a shudder to all hearts. So boisterous did the newly wed­ded scaler become that moretiuin once the prettyjaiide remonstrated with him. -><

" Don'tr. worry, May," returned iFojiri, with his merry faugh. " I mean to leaip a sober, industrious life after to-night. This is the last fun I will have with the boys, you k n o w ; let me improve it, there's a dear."

May good-naturedly yielded, and the consequence was the dance continued un­til the gray streaks of dawn were seen in the east. With the stereotyped, " } wish you much joy," tbe woodsmen departed, leaving Tom Holcomb alone with his bride and Mrs. Andrews, for be it remem­bered the party came off at the widow's house.

" I must leave you here for the present, May," said Tom. " I contracted with the Wards to break their big rollway. and, as the men will be on this morning, I must go at once to the rollway. I will be back to­night to supper."

Kissing his new-made wife, Tom Hol­comb hurried from the house. Was May Holcomb happy ? Those who saw her the night of -the party believed that she was. Nevertheless, she was not wholly free from haunting thoughts, for the man who had met with death in the autumn under a fallen tree had held her pliuhted troth, and but for that tragedy May would never have become the wile of the scaler. When Sam Blakeley left the woods to go to Nigger Bend he Was a happy man/ for his pretty cousin had p r o m i s e d t o become his wife some day Sam was overjqyed, since he had all along recognized in the handsome Tom Holcomb a formidable rival. Sam had been six months dead, and May was now the wife of his handsome rival. So goes the world, in wilderness, country, or city, and so it wil l doubtless go on forever.

Night shadows were drooping. Ten thousand frogs were singing enough,

to split their throats along the bush-linedi shores of the Muskeeon.andbrothersof the same family were tuning up in the water-holes at the bark of Nigger Bend, w h i n May Holcomb, in robe df spotless white, walked out to the rude gate in front of the widow's bouse and looked anxiously up the road.

Tom promised to be home to supper, and it was past the usual supper hour now, and he had not yet put in an appear­ance. It was the first evening of her wedded life, and the bride was anxious for-the coming of her husband. Long she stood watching different forms as they came and went down the one straggling street.

"There was a big break up to the roll-way an hour ago, said a man to his com­panion as the twain passed the anxious watcher at the gate.

•' That's Tom Holcomb's rollwav ? " " Yes. It's one of the worst places out.

He don't get enough for the work It's a mighty dangerous plate, too."

The men passed out of hearing, and still May lingered. The shadows deepened into intense darkness May was on the point of turning, when a light gleamed through the gloom far up the wagon-road.

Tom was coming at last. She waited expectantly until the light drew near, and

?aused in front of the gate. It was not 'om, but a short, thick-set man who held

the smoke-begrimed lantern in front of him as he came to a pause. May recog­nized him at once. "Shorty, you have come from the big rollway ? " she quickly questioned.

" Yes, Mrs Tom—" " My husband ? Why did he not come ?

Surely he can do nothing on the rollway after night."

"N-oo."faltered the man. "Yon see, miss, er—he won't come because he can't,"

" Shorty, what do you mean ? " " I mean, marm, that there's been an

accident, and your man's hurt." " Hurt 1 Ob, Tom 1 I must go to him

at once," exclaimed May, pushing open the gate and passing into the road. A detaining hand was pressed against her arm, and a husky voice said:

" No rise, marm. Tom Holcomb's killed."

A n inarticulate cry answered the terri­ble announcement of the skidder, and the next moment he held a white robed form in his arms, silent, in a dead faint.

A big break had occurred on the roll-way and Tom Holcomb had been caught in an exposed position. A mass of logs w e n t over him, and when the rush had ceased, a mangled mass of flesh aud bone, sickening to behold, was l i f ted from tbe hillside and borne to a leaf-strewn mound on the summit of the bluff. Was the scaler dead ?

No, he still breathed, but it was evi­dent that life was fluttering but faintly in tbe mangled form.

"Ob, my God I" Thus groaned the blood-smeared lips

in husky accents. J im Sweezy knelt quickly beside the poor fellow, and bent his shaggy head low.

•' Ef you've got a word to say better speak, Tom. Mebbe your woman "

" Don't. I loved her; that's why I did i t I'm going to die, J im."

"I expect you be. No doctor kin help you now, Tom "

A deep and awful groan interrupted Sweezy.

" In great pain. Tom ? Heaven help you, old boy." Then Sweezy gazed away to avoid the anguished sight.

" I—I'm not in such bodily pain," articu­lated the purple lips," but, Jim, I ain't fit to die."

" None of m i s , I reckon," uttered J im Sweezy, stall looking into the gathering shadows along the edge oi the forest.

" I'm worse than any Of you. Bend down low, lower J im," gasped the dying man, in husky accents. 1'he stout woodman obeyed and bent his ear close to the pur­ple lips of the fast-sinking man.

A dozen men, stout, red-shirted fellows, stood round the two forms on the ground, awed iDio silence a t what they oeheld.. Mot one of those men beard the words' uttered in husky accents by the debonair young scaler, words that sent a chill to the heart of J im Sweezy, an astounded look to. his face. This was the communi­cation that reached his ear, uttered in a voice below a whisper.

"I^T-I killed Sam Blakeley, J i m ! I did i t with a club, and put bis body under the tree to ward off snjBpicion. It was lor her, for May, that I became a murderer 1"

A gasp came at tbe last, followed by a rattle in the throat An instant later. when. Jim Sweezy rose to his feet, and turned from' the spot with white face, Tom Holcomb was dead. No one in that crew erer learned the truth, and the scaler received an honored burial, with many sincere mourners following his corpse to the grave. -." .

It was not until ten years later, when May had been six years married to John Norman, that the author learned from Jim Sweezy'slips the story of the tragedy among the pines. . ' . . " . " - '

"You must keep the secret, Redwing, for May never 'spected the truth." said Jim, and I do not reveal it when 1 tell the story, guarding the real characters under fictitious names:

THE VAtTTE 6* A Glj >p K&2&,

George Washington Otlrtr States*

to mpared

id to his con-toeyajae. ' ^ a

had some-

Word Beeeher gregation recently about .good name, and incii th ing to say about George Washington. *';The foundation of a good name;" said the preacher, " i s moral integrity. »Nd man can succeed permanently, in any de­partment of human life wbQ has not the underlying elejnent of moral eense. W h e n t h e . new dog comes -to> the Kennel there has got to be &n adjustment between him and the other dog; , In the strife of life men have got fo be tested be­fore they get very far along- ThemenWho go through all temptatlon^and come out honest, straightforward. tjruthJEnl, kind and gentle—those are ttUr* men who are wanted everywhere, and tfiey are scarce.

" The curse and blight tofday is that the young men believe that integrity is less safe than smartness. I deny it. Tbe world was made for hone J. men, and it has been quarreling and fi$ >ting through the ages because they are % hone9t and reliable. Washington's nj( le is probably more universally honored ; (lan any other within the bounds of titn, , save that of Htm of Bethlehem. It was not merely a human name, and if you hj jk for reasons for the honor paid it yoi «will not find them in unusual or extraor tnary develop­ment. He was nf>t a ver*^reat general. There have been a htindrerpsreater. In the argument of widely exteaiped and com­plex affairs he was respejflpble, but he could not for a moment belBrnpared as a Statesman to Cavour. the fBher of Italian un i ty : to Bismarck, to BH ! -round and well-nigh perfect man. (jfadstone, upon whose brignally rich eudoyrnie.it t a m e an eminent edncar'on. and who has stood through the varying fortunes of that

treat empire, year in and year out, in the arkne-ss and in the light, above not only

every one of the statesmen in his own Cabinet, bnt those who desire t o be in it— an eminent man indeed, with a great name, which shall never go below the horizon. • Y

Washington had not the igifts and op­portunities which belong' to Gladstone, out he had good sense, ofte of the best foundations in the worl<£ on which to build, and he had athonjttgh loyalty to truth and honorJHe could bf trusted under all circumstancW. His patriotism was without a spark of selfishness. He, l ived with good judgment and fair attainments in a stormy time, and hm was neither blown from his balance nar broken in limb1 or branch. Standing fthus through all the years, he is a marvel o f a man. All men say his life was, § model. All men say he \vas the pattern„of an honest man, Though in m a n y special gifts he will be surpassed as times go on, yet in the union of the humble, gimple, funda­mental elements of integrity in all rela­tions of life he will never i>e surpassed. He is a good example to brigg up children on, provided children are worthy of being brought up on such an exarpple."

A CAT DONATION rABTY.

M r s .

b o retails "her rs. Her

has been the of rats that

est arrived, ey began to ' e most, the twentieth ar-ime rat poison

S m i t h ' * T h o u g h ' ' ' u l F r i e n d s Come to H e r Itj jicuo. ;

Mrs.Smith, of Morristowj^J Pa., is a gar­rulous, good-natured lady,, trials to all sympathizing principal grievance latel, rapacionsness of a colony took possession of the house. Figur­atively speaking the family have had rats for breakfast, rats for dinner, rats for supper and rats for a ni£ht-cap at bed­time. The rats have anpdyed the old lady by perforating her linen, playing hide and seek in her refrigerators and holding high carnivals In the pantry, so much that the burden of Jher "song and of everybody else in.the bouse was rats. All her friends, and she has many, had heard about her rat troubles when she gave a dinner party. Abouf. twenty people were invited. The firgt arrival got out-of a carriage and also took ouf a bag.

" M y dear Mrs Smith, how do you do? Yon are so troubled with rats and so anxious for a good eat th^t I • thought I would bring you a couple, of rats. Here they are," and a bag being1 opened a Tom and a Tabby leaped forth apd ran aronird the yard.

The second guest brought a cat. The third brought a couple pf cats. The fourth brought a very j o n n g kitten. The fifth brought a new farfrny of kittens. The sixth brought a bag fall of back alley cats from Philadelphia, wgose appetites, accustomed to fat sewer 'rats, might be expected to result in the nnihilation of

Kserawny little country ra' in almost no time. The setenth gues . brought two quiet old fireside cats. The; ighth brought a beautiful Maltese. In s ;ert, every one of the twenty guests brouj H at least one cat, and generally several.«'

The host and hostess sjegan to look dubious, when the tentWT On the'fifteenth "arrival" wonder which would guests or the cats. On thi rival they felt like putting into the food of the guests.

Persons in want of cats ean. inquire of anybody in that part of the county. —(PhiladaVphta Titoes

• p r F r e s h F a s h i o n •{I o t e s .

P ink in all shades is t-1 1 Parisian pas­sion of the passing inomenj,

The jersev corset cover Rds fair to re-pia'ce those of cotton or lifjjn.

The newest skirts are *' fcrfeetly plain, falling in straight l ines fr« 3 t h e waist to the hem.

Round hats grow tallej in the crown, and narrower in the brim (•* the black as ' winter advances. . u . >

Shoulder epaulets are s i l l fashlofcably employed for giving a dresifr effect as well as shortening the length .Uggween the high collar and the top of the sleeve..

Spangles and gold threadW?atber, stitch-'-ing unite tbe scraps of crazy patchwork bags* and gold fringe or tassels trim them, but tliey must be closed with ribbons for a draw-string.

• A new dress is made from ruby cash­mere: the skirt is 'made in plaits with a short oversbirt with long pointed tunic. The,waist is in blouse shape , both waist and tunic are trimmed with oream lace; the blouse is closed w i t h a |bronze buckle and silk velvet ribbons of ruby cqlors, and a high, standing collarjof velvet, w i th a ruche of cream lace. ;

T h e new and e&gant ladies' dresses which have been brought|pnt are promi-ment through their, plain Appearance. A dark brown cashmere d r e ^ ' i s made with broad plaids, winch are oordered with brown silk velvet. The VMistfrom cash­mere is covered by a cap* jf brown. bro­caded velvet, trimmed with chenille frinees and a broad embrL dery of brown and gold pearls. '—-*-1 i

The latest fashionable c«prs are rpby, tannine, a lighter shade dfiruby, a dark mushroom color (like mn&tjhrd), and»isev-eral shades of green, as uSoss, tea and re­seda green. Velvets, plyjijjies and. dress goods are being made in ft|e above colors. English houses have combined these color* with India silks, which a r i very good for the new plaited skirts. SaMis, merveiljeux and serge surahs, in new c«jors, aj:e largely ordered for ladies' dresses^ , •

NBWYOBKBRO; EES. ' , |

H o w T h e y Get B t c h i Bt ty ths a n d . S e l l i n g S t o c k s o n O « r i m i » » i o n .

In ordinary brisk t imes <j fe Wall street',, brokers make more moflejj- and make it -easier,than any one other s&of professional,, men. To do a leg i t imate&okerage bjisj-ness does not necessitoaFthe slightest risk, nor does St imply that the broker must in any way become a specuhitor. As business Is conducted on the New York . Stock Exchange, the broker simply lends ,' the money to his customer with which, to purchase stocks, and then does the buying for the purchaser; The customer makes a part payment, which iscajied margin, and that insures the brakes agaiusf* oss* through the depreciation pf t h e property purchased. Anerroheous |mpression pre­vails that there is no genuine transactions in stock when a purchase w sale is made in the ^Jew York Stock ]gxehange, but that the whole, is fictitious This is' true of some of the great ma e, but in the Stock Exchange the strit certificate" is bought, paid for and delM Jred, and rnav be transferred into the narri .of a customer on the company's books. Tl i t is otie reason whythetransacttonsof the Jrqkmbecqxne so enormous, and why so Much capital is required tocarry on- broj- ~- " ' -A broker who buys 100 M wanna at 90 aires his chi the broker who sold it, certificate in return. I shares be pays «90JOOO fi

i,otlff^ba*es,Tfe5ft~^ie

Idrmmhsdm® 81, the daily-teafe* change amotmtea- to . . . , . ^^ this t i e comaiissions'Were the epoSpiQUs •tim'-at $M&oO& Asr there are lvK»%int bers of the Exchange, i t i s plain that the < average "profit-to each Was something' rnbrp than $100. It is very easily earneC fetrtcaipital' is requu-eu*,' first to purchase. a Stoplk Exchange seat, and then to paj* • in'Mu(*Ior the stock, which the custome|Ss= buy". '- ;•>,..-.''• '. ''-,•'-'•,'' '"'Li>:': •'"; • The greatest ;trpuble,*is-to get; w% cup-; tomers. WhQe very many bjosiness «hd: professional men speculate in Walfesfcreeti they are careful not to' let the fact' he" kn6wtt. FW it w be gossiped thafcjtl tradesman STjecrflates:- is to imperil dtJVQr erfute|y*ruih his credit. -For a prbsesaional man it implies disregard for and neglect, ___.... — -^E^m*^-^ of his regular pttnmiC In. many a Wall: : _ F . ^ l ^ l T S ^ ^ l r t i a ^ ^ f ' i a f i w t street broker's qjSce may Be seen physfe • RttellTnatlSin^BeE^Iftia^aCIOTlRg,

.-i. . "A • ' ~ -

H&frfa^f3&t™^-*Ji~tff^.f itmt&3S£*ati£mmim iminWrpVMi'iT

cians, lawyers; and men w h o are working? on'salary for o t h e i ! people—negleciaAg thelf patients, ortheir. clients, -or tne ire iav p loyem 'So it happens" that the average specnlisttor keeps very quiet about b i sgani -blirig. ix Is hard, therefbre.i fqra,ibrofcer to druith up custom. To opeuly solicit ft in business houses or social gathering^: would be. to .meet rebuff a t •every-hand: It is only through gaming extensiveiac-S quainlanceship and through advertising; that brokers get- n e w customers. B u t once giotten, a customer Who will trade i n a few hundred shares of stock in a day, or/ even a week- is indeed a. bonanza: Every 100 shares is $&> to the broker, as already explained. Yet there are hundreds 'or speculators in the street, .who trade in. their S.000 to 10,000 shares a week. -Hosts of Wall street brokers h a v e tijad-; ths^cam^ mand over themselves to abstain from-speculating on their own hook* when they m u s t have, known that the market was sure to go in a given direction. , ;

Theire are the men who grew rich with great rapidity. They are calm and coolheaded in every emergency, while their brother brokers are wild.-over' pro -spectrve loss or reckless over.possiblegains. 'lhey w e content to take commission and let the speculators runr the risk. - The cpOl' beaded broker hast a sure fortune: i f - h e wil l oialy avoid, speculation on his. own hook"— that as a rule, means ruin to every­one, be he broker or customer,.who under­takes it. The brokerage firms who get ' the business of the big men o t the street have tbe biggest Bonanzas of all! To tsake a* successful tnovementjn stocks requires a purchase or sale, or both, of avas t quan­tity of stock, for which the operator must pay commission h^ full.. In his manip­ulation of Western Union and Missouri Pacific in the last year, . Jay Gould has probably boughtand sold'twice over what equals the entire capital stock of both companies.

U p s i d e D o w u One of the most singular cases of vision

on reeoid is found In the fourth grade of the Mary8vlile school, in the person of Belle Kinney, a little girl 12 years "of age. Her teacher discovered that she always read with her books upside down, and that when writing she invariably placed the copy in the same position and wrote back­ward, with the letters inverted and with her left hand Not knowing whether to attempt a correction of the habit the teacher sent for Dr. I. N Hamilton, presi­dent of the board of education, who tested her thoroughly with figures, pictures, reading and writing, and found that she was equally skillful with her books in any position, although the child had aever particularly noticed her peculiarity, but ex­pressed a desire to use her books as others do.

AlSFB-JBViilltY>Si»EOiES OF lTdHING AKP BITBMyfl DISEASES

* w yPOSHavlt ,YGt?i^D. ' 'H6ZK$IA*'or Salt Bheum, wi't its aeonlzlne tuning and btiraipg. instantlyrelieved bra warm

•. bath with Cutlcura ~So3p. and $ single application of CnHcara, the greit .SMh cure This repeated ot-ittv. wit&.two or three doses of CimeuBA R E --sbivKgj?, .the Kew Blood Purifier, to keep the bioo'd coo', the persHratibn pure dn 1 unirritattog tne'bowels open. tne. liver ani Kidneys active, wfll speedily cure.Eczema, letter, .Bute-worm. Psoriasis, Lictien Pruritus, Sca'Tea Heaa,Dandruff an,dey^y species of. Itching, Scaiy, and ftjnipiy Bninors of "the Scalp and skin, when the bes

rphysiciansand&IJimown-renieaies fail. -

L . Lumbaao. Bickache, #ead«qhe>"3Tflo1tache')

, Notice jpnereby given* mat the nnaewlgnea, as {rustee-tiTtSe trusts created by fte.last wni.and ue^^nifn^Ailen Ayrsaj, :deceaaeaj by virtus of the said 'mi®^flt><&to^tatm*?t'»« tros tee"

iffiefeunoeS•• >!Bt sell afc pnbjfc. WctiQn_„ atiee AUCEfileAS HQTBIfl » ftE!&ES£Q, N.TiOnthe

"atlj^ockWi&tforedooa <# ihat day, theibl-•-^-— deecrloecti.real estate sJl^a^Jntbetftwn-of x^^^^mmmwmtm, NEW. TOJEfeahd* belonging to. the estate Of «ud Alien •AyronlV, fl^ceaseaf vl2: . _ _• . --•_. ,

;about Tf ie SdttaldieHiUFalrtn.containing W&Sres iff landj,lying on- the Genesee Biverm said -town,. compneing-OSta. •flats aad- upland.

"9 F a r m c containing about J k B - f i l L -200 acres ofiandT

T h e T e n E y o k Fairm,containing about 190 acres of latd,

TheSquakie Hill Farm will be offered for sale ai a whole or in four separate, parcels,ja<s may seem best for the interests of-sala estate, by said trustee at the time of sate, Tne other.farms will.eachte-sbld In onew-cel; ' t .,,

"AU of said Jands^Ul hepnt np at aft upset price,' to he fixed bv saltt trasKej and he.Te8ersv«3,,the, right t^ withdraw.Rllsticlrlatws or parcels tMreof, wKeh~aSfnot ets^A P^fr txc^dnte. said .iip«et nrjeenpon said ssire. r •

Terms and cond tions of snch sale; and also the upsetpnee upoa each parcel i f lahct, made known upon application tio the undersigned, at his office, 2Stitate btreet,18ostori, Mass.,'or to Mjes rs, S rang & Doty, attorn y , etc., GetieBeo, Ntw York, b. whom more particu ar deserip ions of said prem­ises will also be furnished if desired.

Datea, Geneseo, N. Y. Jany. 26,1835. CHARLES P. BuWDlTCH,

STRANG & DOTT, Trustee, etc. Attorneys. 4fel.c5w

E a s i l y Sat i s l i ed . " Ef I ken jes' git ter heaben," said an'

old negro, " dat's all I axes. I doan kere ter march up wid er brass ban' an' make er mighty stir. I doan ax de angels to shout mur de saints to rush an' shake nan's. No, sah, I doan ax all dat, fur all I wants is ter gi t dar. Da needn' put dase'ts ter de trouble o' handin' roun* pies and sweet stuff. Hoe-cake sorter greased *wid er bacon rin' is good enuff for me ." —lArkuinaaw Traveler.

ALL SORTS.

A miiddle-aged farmer of Glenville, N. Y. ,went to bed recently in excellent health and with perfect eyes ight The next morning he awoke totally blind, though his eyes appear perfectly natural.

B i o Lewis says he had no difficulty in getting into bar-rooms in any part of Iowa. The difficulty in Iowa bar-rooms is not the getting in ; it is the getting of the gen­uine Kentucky article.—ILmiisvilU CbVr rter-JonrnaL

T w o travelers }n Central Africa are uti­lizing tine phonograph in a novel manner. They visit the different savage tribes and persuadiet chiefs to talk at the instrument. The reaprd is preserved, to be, tajsea, to Europe for the inspection -and study of philologists, who "are t o be qualified to make oi6t the languages and determine whetbeir ot not they are related to arry other kinown tongues. '

rte an excitement was created k few ago by the announcement tfhat a

Pittsburg glass manufacturer had discov­ered a method4 of spinning glass' so Sue and so pliable that it couIdTba woven into dresses, outside wraps and- garments, of a l l kinds.1 There w M a great- rushJof.--ap-plicantai to see and uti l ize jShenoyel fabric, burwhein i t was learned that glassf cloth would cbst fSO^per yard tiie' fenriosity of the pubjlic received a, set back, and there islao re"cordyet of any- spies having* been made-for glass garment 'Brovpin f,wbo has just had telephonic con­

nection established between his office and house and is very much pleased with)lt>-I tell you. Smith, this telephone business Is a wonderful thing. I want you. td dine with me.this evening, 'Aad I wil l dotify Mrs. Brown to expect you, {Speaking through the telephone)— My friend Smith wi l l dine with us this evening. Now listen and hear how distincly her reply Will come' bapk. Mrs. Brown's reply (coming pack with startling distinctness!—Ask your friend Smith if he thinks we keep a Hotel.

Ex-Mayor Robinson of Hartford, Conn., tells this of the famous preacher, Dr. Joel Hawes; "One day he came into my office and 8aid»: "Henry, afflan was in my study this morning, and, right under, my >own roof, tolift me I hadn't preached the gospel for forty years! What would yjou have done if you had been in my place?" 1 'said 1 would' ha*C kicked him out of doors. The good old doctor—a man of peace In all respects—looked atjne with a;qnger expression for a moment, and then re­marked,, thoughtfully : 1 wish you'd been there, Hlenry 1'" • t " , I :

. Japanese children . have their heads shaved, with the exception of four little tufts, one before, one behind aBd'oae' on each side. They wear bright and njany colored clothes; their loose jackets-having very long sleeves, almost to' t><grb1iBd, in each of which.there-.is-a pocket. They are odd! little mites, sometimes gpmg about in1 clogs, with then- little bald heads, shining in the- sun. Some 'Wear -Short stockings, but pot all, and these are made like a mitten, with one division for; the big toe, round which. Abe sandals of; the clog are fastened. Custom requires that these doles be removed"'before the child is taken inito a room. f '. •

•'Will McfeonaM, 2642 Dearborn Street, Chicago tote^aljFacMowIeajfes:* enre of Bczeina, orSair Bh^um,'pnheaa^necfc_ facet aims,', tail l e ^ for seyente^njearSsAotabi^ to move, except on Bands andfkneesfor ope year: n >t Bblettohelp^uhs-if lot eiKhtjears^trTeahuirdwls of remedies; doctors .prononncea his case.hujieless,-permanently cored "by the CtfMoirBA BESOIVENT (blood purifier).inter­nally*: and, .CtOTODEA iaad CnaiotraA SOA<P (the great skin enres) externally. . '

Oh«B. Houghton, Esq,, lawyer; SB State strget, Boston,- reports'o caBe of Eozs Aupderhis Obv. seTvation f"r ten yeare/which-covered the pa1 lent'* »iody arid limb', ani to whirhftll Knowu methods pf .treatment, had been applied •without ben. fit, whii>h was pompiete'y cnredsolely by the CUTWOEA B&dBiiXBsy l^avihg'a clean and Keaithy ekihv

F. H. Drake B?c(., Detrf>it,"Mich„ Buffered imtc-ld .tortures - from? KozBUA'/'WhisS aphesred-dn his hands, heart ani face, and nearly destroyed his, eyes. After the mosfcic&rerul doctoring and coh-sufiatfon of, physician* failed to Relieve him, be used the Ctrnor/BA REMEDIES, and has remained so to date. • - . u.

. Mr. Johh^Thiel,- Wilkesb<jiei Pa , writes: '" 1 have suffered frrnm Salt Rheum for over eight years. «t tunes so bao that Iconld not attend W my bnsineSBfsr weeksata time., ihreeboxes of Ou-TJOTJJM; and four bot-Ies-BBsoLvBiN'r: have entirely

.enredrne of this, dreadfnl diBs8se,'r •" So!d by all drnggfsfs. Price: CUMOUBA, Joe;

BBsqfVEOT£.$l.j. SOAP; 25c. POTTEB-DB A *»» CHEMICAT, CQ , '^OBSOH "itass.

S V r i l d f t l r 1>T -"' — Send for "How ib Cure Skin Diseases.? '

fNTTnfiTCTJRA SOAP, an exqnlsite ToUe^ Bath v \J 3JS. and Vuragry Sanative- 4-

The use of Iodoform or Mercurials in the treatment of ca arrh-whether in the form of suy-poaitoritB orointmerts—ehottld be avoided, a-* itey are both lnjuiitus and dangerous, iodoform is easily detected by lis offensive odor. The only re-liaole catarrh rem'.dy ou the market to-d y is Kly'B Cream Balv, being free from all jioison ^te drugs. It has cur d tlicm-ands of chronic and acute (asef, where ah other remedies'ha, e faild. A particle i« applied into each noorril: no pain; agreeable to use Price fifty cents, of druggists. -

TO MY FRIENDS, As you are well aware that I would not

recci'mrrreud that which I did not believe to be good, I dpsire to say to all who need a good reliable, family medicine, that 1 believe oneibottle of Sulphur Bitters wi l„ do you more good than any other remedy* 1 ever sat?. Rev. Cephas Soule.

, «. Denmark spends $55,000 a year for

agricultural teaching.» A DREADFUL DISEASE.

Read,ponder and profit thereby. Kemp's Balsam for the throat and lungs is conced­ed by aJl who have used i t to excel any preparation in the market as a complete trhoafc and lung healer. Alii persons-af­flicted with that dreadful disea&ewjrion-. sumpt ion -wi l l find a speedy relief and in a majority of cases a permanent cure, Tbe proprietor has authorized Wi. H, Partridge to refund the money to any paetjr who^has taken three-fourths of a bottle without re-' lief. Pr i ce50 cents and $\.\TriaTSize free. •'_ , .

A new machine for making cigarettes does the work of thirty m e n . .

, i VERY REMARKABLE EEOOVEEVi^ . . .

Mr. Geo. V. Willing, of Manchester, Miohi, writes: "My wife has been 'almost helpless lot five years, so-- helpless that she could not turn over' in bed alonfe. She used two Bottles of Electric Bitter^ and is so much Improved, that she Is able' now to do her own work.'" Hetric Bitters will do aU that is claimed

for thenv Hundreds cf testimonials attest their great curative powers, "Only fffty cents a bottle at A. L. 8weet*s. 1

There are 940 churches in London within a radius of twelve miles.

One _. years o|r|f Md a very had "discharge? from her head and nose of-a thick* yeUowjeli matter, and was growing worse*" wja.^d two differeefc physicians prescribe" former, but without feneflt. ""We tried • Bly^ Oream Balm, and much' to onr surprise in three days, there was a marked improve' ment. We continued using the Balm'and in a short tfme.the -discharge was appar­ently cured. O. A. Gary. Corn.in'gi N.'.Y.

During tho year 1884, 83,051 petraona died in London, or 223 a day. ! '

W H T SHE » W t f , T MABBV 3 P K ' "Yes, I live pleasantly enough with my

husband," she said;. *• but 1 believe I should have married Augustus, if sill the girls hadn't made fun of him, and said he'd be bald as a pumpkin in a year or two." Young men, take warning, and use Park­er's Hah-Balsam. Cleanses the scalb, re-Stores color, removes dandruff. ••'„ ,

Diphtheria has within five weeks swept off twenty-five ohildten at Fuller--ton, Neb. * •

C/lTARRH ,. ^ * ' • "• i ) .>

That pnrej:sweetriB^.J%mS:*effedtIve American distiUition of Witch-Hazel, Amertcen Ph.e; Cann-da Fir, Marigold, and Clover-Blossom, call, d SAN-F o t D ' B I ? A n l 0 A L C U B E J S ' O B I . A T A B B B , W i t h o n e box CATTABBHAI. SOUVKHT and on • SANFoatD's IM-PBOVED InHAtER, all in one packase, may now be h ,d of aUidruggists for $1.00. Ask tor SAHPOHD'S KADIOAC\i3nBE. • '

Ci mplete Local and Conatirutional Treatment for every' form of (patarh, from a S l i p.e Uotd or Inflae 2& to loss of Smell, Tsste, and Hearing, Bronchitis, and Catarrhal Consumption, in every package.

CLERGYMAN, VOCALISTS, And Public "SpeskerB without number owe their present nsefn'n -SB and PUCCOBS to SANFOED'S R A D ­ICAL CtJBB for CATABBH.

Kev. Dr. Wlggin s a y s : " One of the best reme­dies for 'Catarrh—nsy, the best f< medy we have found in a Ufeume of suffering—is SANFOBD'S "RADICAL ( U E E . It e'ears the head and throat so tborougnly that, taken each » oralng on ilshiK, thero are nn nnpler-saut secretions and no disagree­able hawking tfnrhig the entire day, bnt unprece­dented clearness of voice and reypiratory oigans."

,«oid by all drng'riBiB. Price, $1.00 Poster Drag and Chemical Co. r Boston.

« * f t l I f f\Ie» Weary sufferer from Rheu-Q » ^ » M H y matism, Neura'gla, Weak

f O L T / M O a ^ O ^ d s ^ s k ^ f o m a ^ fii A c t - r e n S Bowels, Dyspepsia, Female r+nSlJUBfm Weaktelis, ShooUng Pains

throngh the Loins and Back, try these Plastors. Placed over the pit of the stomach, lhey prevent and cure Ague Pains,Biliou« Colic, Liver c jmplaiu's, and protect the system from a "thousand Ills. 25o,

, \- , ,

This remedy contains no injurious drugs.

CATARRH, KLY'S

Cleanses the Head, Al lays [nfiammation

Heals the Sores

Restores the Senses of Taste Smell, Hearing A quick Relief.

H A V - F E V E f f A positive Cure CREAM SALMras gained an enviable reputa­

tion wherever kmiwn, displacing all other prep.ra-•IQUS. A b a creamy substance. A parti le is applied into each nnptril, causing no palu and is agreeable to use. Price 60 ce ils bj ~maii orat Druggists Se'd for Circular. BUT ~ROTHERS Druggists, pwego,, N Xt- .-

Thousands Hastened to their Graves-By -relying on testimonials written in

vivid glowing language of some miraculous cures made by some largely puffed u p d o e -

/fcor or patent medicine has hastened thons~ „ . , , 'apds to their graves; the readers having flren, a f girl about nine Sklmostinsane fai>b jhat the same miracle

- - - • - will be performed^qn them,, that these tea rimpnials :mention, while "the so called medicine.is all .the time hastening t h e m t o their g^ave^k Although we have.

age business, es of Laeka-for W.ID00 to t s t h e stock

bmrs 1,00ft i t : In Qtlier

MafAudrew f . l ^ * " f t w * * " «ein«r«nde poJi-

words he gives 19ft a slate, tt D . _ . times the big stock brokerage houses Jdo 20,000 shares a day, and g ive checks tor take checks tar 18,000,000. They need loot have that much capitel, for the sales and purchases as a rule about balance que an­other. And the total wf the ebecka receiv­ed equal the total paid out. Thin purchase of stocks is a very shnpleproceas, although to the world a t large theire is aooutTli enough of the hidden to make It a deep aad faKinating mystery. ;

It to notable that genuine hrokers rarely retire from Wall atreet unless itcte becAuee tbey have accumulated Urge ricliiiar' have grown too old to do: A* work. Th« reason U that it la a very -ont^lebtHg-nesa. A very Jew enstom* > wilt keep a broker going. The commhw *n» arefifirge. Tobuy and iell 100 i h ^ rf ifcck flu iMkar, charjM«41» ^Wtompr &±$gJat* *

T h e a t r i c a l a fonager* . rBlaMyHaU.]

A theflitrical manager .said a day or two ago, *>I don't know whether yonjknpwitor, not, but nearly every promiftehtsibar,tand many of! the most suct»esfvd theatres, are not run b y the men whose names are printed as inanagiers, half so much as by some quiet lndividnal, who holds the" posrtfim o | fhe power behind the. ^tarone, and who is not generally known to tbe pubBc as •$&£&$.&? fiie firln. Por Vmstahee, Dan ^ o h m a n , a quiet and unobstrusive, ^enttenmrj, iwho works night and day. i s entirely responsible for tb^ vast success ot the Madison Sqyaro theatre, juBt as Theodore M^isiielprq. prietor and owner of WaUack's theatre,. j In the same way, John "Buff is the m a s wfao.h«s enabled Daly's theatre to sncceeuV andBflly Connor was for. many years ifte causa oft they great success which attended John Mcpnl-~ lougb's tours. ~--. v - c ; ' i - ^'.,,--' "'-| .-

I mention these.few n a m * casnalry.tbut the m o s t pronourjeed instance of al l is that of th« mother of Zotta.- Eott* 3bas 5t#p brothers; (both of W h M a r » M l » : ^ i M o a l businseB. They-ar« ^deve^'enough young men, but .they have no more t o dq with Itab-ta% bosmeas than,..'«». has herself. Mr* :

Crabtree, the aged; mother of - f ie fanions star, has entire control, of-the unkaoes, and is the businesB woman « t tnef wholo Crabtree family. She i s extremely sharp mtafiar-. gala, andjtalacb olf; t | » jgrea* fcrtan* iirnich Lotto b w acchmulated is the retnltof the toeabosmees Insight of her mother. ,

OTJR B A B Y thrlvea'bn " EE*!sk's Food,?' write hnndreds of grateful motE^^Mothets' nillk contains no starch.- HOBe^^'PODDKOBENEiNT^ffree from starch) requires no cookThg. Jfie best fooa Inhealth,orsickness fiSiINFANTS. Thebea'tolet forDraPEraoaandlDNyALlD8.*- Hlahly'benel-aria) to nuirsrng mothers as a drink, Eor saleby the lollawing DmBdBg.f-3Wi H. PAKTKIpf®, HAVUiAHD fc HEptTP. M f l , ?OBRlST.

[novWcSmoJ ' .*• "" j

One hundred and twenty-five million 4011818' worth- was the%re sacrifice 6f 1 8 8 4 • _ _ _ j _ j _ _ _ ^ _ •• ' ^ J. W O S D E R F O t ; DISOOVERV. •

Consumptives arid all, who suffer from any affection of the Tjiroat and Lungsicau finiN? certain cure in' Ht. Kvag's Hew Pis-covery for Gonsump(ion> 'Thousands of permanent cures ve^fy the ,truth of (this Ststoment. No medicine can show.sUjCh a record of wonderful eur<&. Tjiousapds of once hopeless Sufferers now graiefully g»s-claiia they owetheiiliyefftothisJMewpil-covefa. I t will cosfyoH nothing to tove tt a Bial- JFrjee Trial^Bpttles .at A. %, Sweeps^DrpgStore, Jarge.-size, §0oand

•THOUSANtlS OTOSf THOUSANDS 1 11 of testimonaisirif the most'wonderful cures, voluntarily sent ituj, we. do not publish them,-aH they do not makd the cures. I t is our medicin,e, Hgp Bitters, that make the-eures. It has never faiied aud never can. We tei^'give reference to any one for any disease similar "to" their own if de> sired, or will Tefer to • any neighbor, as there is not a neighborhood in the known wor.d but can show its.cures by Hop Bit«< tere..

A.LOSING JOKE. 'ipiominent physician of Pittsburg siidtoa

Sady patient who was complaining of her continue 'ed ill health, and of hi- inabDiiy to cure ber gokeingly „aid: "Try Hop.B-t>ets!" The lady took •it hi earnest aud used the Bitters, from which «be •obtained permanent health. one now laughed at 'the dootor lor his roke, but he is not so well pleased •with it, as it, cost him a good patient.

FEES OIFDOOTOKS The fee of doctors at $3,00 a visit would

tax a man tor a year, and in jieed of a daily »vi8it, over $1,000 a year for medical attendance alone ! Ai.d one siDgle bottle of~Hog Bitters taken in time would save the $1,000 and alt the years sickn&s.

4 (31VEN rjF BY TBJi DOCTORS. "Is it possible that Mr. Godfrey is up and

at work, and enred by so simple a remedy ? " *'I assure yow}% is true that he is entire­

ly cured, aud with nothing bnt Hop Bit­ters, and only- ten days ago his doctors gave him tip and said he must die, from Kidney and Liver trouble 1" •

A Matter 6fA>Mk.' - : , v

'•;.. fBostoaBarsld.] A gutter barjd orjrisfatmg of five German*

was tooting an e3U3^cuting tnna fa front of a beer, saloon on Druid H21aTenaetbejotker morahag. The ahisidilnt wiire, incased to thick dcihtag, and three of the cornetist«-wora mlttanii, making i t impondblacfbrtbfm to sound one note withoot closing all the valve* on their tostnnneatiC The larger in-sfawmant* were incased So bags to prevsn*^

o<t^^aj»r«fromBpJr^a^th»b45»^^ ; "' "Say, Jli»i give tbUn fellers.-» ifekeirt

wupaating the band. TbaTUicbr irarnedi-ataly west, down in Us poctrataad gavea ooio to «be Uttte stoir»f«flbw Wbairw ItMttrj bJowtot tba carat* wmt Mm*. •' - -

to s.ut*w bandtr m»n0m4t^m,• -. .' «Oh, y ^ » rtplW t ^ p S L r of Tnrta-blM, •• IM *hsd*srUtr» »««* potMOat trona

doltfor bMk. ^ - W | l # : i » « » i « - b » t ^ tanaam, nf If'we had )»t >«at baad D M

On, ;the'basis .pf f|ie> NpvemJ)ei: ivofe %^site(t:glBteci! jirojo^'ftaja, 6 ^ 7 ^ 6 8 population, ' .. J-S-';^ ..'•".'.. /%,,; . i'"*'s , • 3Vtt'{rEiebft< G$r#$ng.i.. ^ ' ^ , - "';' i!" H0SEITABC-E.,POB JtUMSPBED AWP <?|tn??tatDy"

i M S f i f e t a f i a ^ L l a r a g o n i T e ^ N , t y i Your '^imtea 3a^^^*afeaf fogrdedima-ny &m<&tfti^^ rcBef, for'whichi am-,trBly grateful.i-

1 • : r - rjtoesKnijgBt7M. U., ' . . ;- ;-t '•'.;,'•:.-.>v.;-V8flj^pn.-in|0hiejt. v. * jMkfoib;LiebM;0d,'s, JmiettddMtracfe-

ofTWitetHaJ&l.: Invafi&blMn Spinajfe-J *i(atiqn andlsll of- ftupli^,. J&araljzedJ ^d,<Mp|ilevaj ^ h ^ p H e j I i t t ^ ^ l ^ h l ";-'•

. 5Hie $f*|e .:o|' "ii&pifc ^ k . ; ^ | , i e « r '

MKTTIESTlJUJT.

• S - Sane genuine without a bunch of green Bops on the white label. Bhun jail the vile, pb.son-ona stuff, with "Hop''or\'Bpps? m their name.

• : . ; ; • IKAGISATION".

The Important Part it Plays In Mat-, tera Involving Iilfe and Death. "Boti^t a good" • many people procure

medical treatment who ate not sick 33'; asked a reporter of the Detroit Post of a prominent physician.

"Of course they do. There's nothing the matter with half the so-called invalids. . I a lways keep a big batch of .bread pills made up for that class of patients. M,any a one I've got'ont of bed with' that sham medicine, and they thought me a man rof profound learning and s k i l l "

" They fust imagine they are sick ?" •"Certainly I A woman is the qpntra-

rieSt of God's creatures. If she makes up, her mind she's sick* yon can't talk her out of it. You must-administer some­thing. I had one call .me, years ago that lay in bed nine months, and she was as well as i am. On a certain day there w a s one of these circus and animal show com* binations passing. I • had an inspiration. that beat any compound my skill could, produce. I hired the manager to le t a., tame bear out of the cage ahd we, all set up. a hue and cry, the children went for the woods, and that woman took after them without even stopping to make a toilet. There was nothing under the heavens the matter with her, and when her husband came to settle, I thought for a while"he'd boot her all over the farm."-

" Ever have a&y otner case of She imagi­nation ?"

" Lots of them. A big hulking fellow about ten miles from the town I was .practicing in got the idea that he was go­i n g - i o die at just l i o'clock in the fore­noon of a certain day. About 9 o'clock a messenger came. I hurried out. When I got there the crank had fifteen aninutes to live according to his calcula­t i o n s . He did look like a man on the verge of eternity. His eyes were dim and sunken, his face had that peculiar pallor which heralds the near approach of death, and his breathing was very labored. The family ' were gathered around and weeping as they took a final leave. Something had to be done quick. There was a smart looking woman there, and I called her aside. Pointing to the clo£k on the mantelpiece which the patient was watching, 1 said: .' When I have hiso attention turn that ahead.' Then I crowded into the family group, hustled them into the next .room, sa t down on the edge of the' bed, and began telling that f eilow one .of the most horri­ble murder stories you ever heard. I located it right in the town where he knew everybody, named the woman killed, went into blood-curdling details, and so completely interesested the man that he forgot about his 11 o'clock appoint­ment. When I gave him a chance to look it was twenty minutes to twelve, and he was actually mad for the time, claiming that he had been tricked.' He finally got to laughing, and we all took tiiuner to­gether. "The next day he whipped two men at a barn-raising for twitt ing him about the program of death that mis­carried."

" Wasn't there anything the matter wi th him 1"

," Not a thing except what he imagined, He w a s sound as a bullet, but if I had not adopted that ruse he would have gone over to the majority a t 11 o'clock."

" Doesn't imagination sometimes cure people who are really ill ?"

"To be sure it does. Imagination has a strange and unaccountable power. I had a tunny incident that answers your inquiry. There was a giddy young widow cafied at my office one day. She was a hity-tity creature. Talked all the time she was awake, you know, and had as much laughs as she had talk. She wasn't very chipper when she came, however. She was" on crutches and accompanied.by

. a solicitous companion who was brim full of sympathy. The invalid had a knee badly swollen from rheumatism and wanted to know if I could administer electricity, which always helped her. I so.on had a battery in shape. The sympa­thetic friend placed one connection at the invalid's knee: I held the other con­nection in my left h a n i so as to complete the circuit by touching the patient with my right hand. I drew my fingers across the back of her neck, and of course she indulged in a few little screams aud some hysterical conversation. "Doctor, that's a strange sensation. Ouch ! Haven't 1 go t

tbout enough ? My knee teels a great eal btt.er. Don't fill me up with that

electricity. There, no, you must just quit; I've got a wnole streak o' l ightning in . me now, and I ' know it was all 1 needed.' The pretty" widow walked out to her carriage without a" limp, and had no trouble in being the belie or ail balls jor the remainder'ot the season. I had noticed a waggish student of mine in the next room stuliing handkerchiefs in bis ino.ath, writhing with suppressed laugti-ter, winking at me on the t>ly and indulg­ing i n a can-can whenever visible to me alone.

" ' W h a t in thunder are you making such a fool of yourself about,' 1 inquired when the ladies had departed. He roared away aud pointing to the- battery sa.d, ' You might have killed that had. some creature .oy an overcharge of electricity ' 1 lookesjland joined in the hilarity >,I ttad net^sdro to hitch ou to the battery, and the widow's vivid imagination had sup­plied the currents whicn wrought so sud­den a cure."

«*d s bag ktpvptfdlfat |014*)r,

$emajrlcedtortfrf«endfl»dthiafaa3P.tliatr she knew Kemp.% Balsam, for the* Throat and Lui!ga;w%|fc ^ l ^ r ^ i e ^ n e d y i JWI stopped her cough iiiBfanily-when other bad l i d ^ S l e t w n W t ^ ' 86 %>, prove thi . Wl W-ft^^%itt.l^tol«i «r »W Priee SO cents aroljfr. -- Trial-ajpjg free. [ "J -

ABerlm.p&ys^wasfirieritheother d t y f W | a £ ^ -modern meao^s of practioe. i ,,, ,'r:-}' *

~: Measrav'.ponskf'ifc;" Bamie, manager* of

££ttE&«lffiatte2£ no set of men are more atrsceptible to *mxjm tovSmjnmiKait fStos-thafcSt, theb«t.our*eTef used,-^matbay- jointly acknowledge its .pjerits,^; r^t ,-• .'. /.-.'*.---«

"6^inj^ii«KSl^**3ii^-:; »*Seai?dr-M- 8an. Pranwsco/ jOTOinftaea.

" :-~'-: .wfaww- x&&tfa.jm*M.' j -'i JBvwrj f a ^ y ,l» « m i # o e t ia cli

from import water, unripe fruit, turwhol some food* eoatagio« iSmm, e»aip*,, cholera morbw, po*dmwt «pld«v iadfgee-ttoh and »ini bottle of Par] renden it on: NotiiBf to

tSenof«»

•M- . >w -: -- -* . '

•^ ^T*-.'""-'"..-' - ' - ' j ' ^:^S^^+mJm^^£». -«»..a>-(vri&- i*- . • , > , - » • « • :mmiM ' - i f es^ tss •iV, -•=-- . - - • • • ' . I : ' ; - ' - - . . '

't-H

- • " f

4 . ^ » < 1

OTne R o m a n c e o r rf T o m b s t o n e . "• Anything new in epitaphs^ " "Nothing particular.' I can tell you a

sentimental story about one, though. J got an order for a gravestone from a nice young man, who thought he didn't have long tolive. No lungs and hardly any­thing else, you know. He picked out a verse from Dr.u Watts, to nave chiseled under his name." Same day I called on a uiee young lady who thought she was going fast. She had an idea that it would be a great comfort to select the style of her own^gravestone. We made all the ar­rangements withont much trouble until We came to the epitaph. She couldn't think of a verse to suit her At last I pulled out my note book and showed her the young man's epitaph. She was tickled with the verse, and said the young m a n who wanted that on his gravestone -must have been a very good young man, apd wished she had known him beiore he died. 'He's not dead yet,' I said. ' Not dead 1' she hollered. ' Where does he live i' 1 told her. The result was that when I came around with the gravestones all complete, except that the ' departed this l i f e ' date on each wasn't filled in, 1 -found that young woman nursing that young man andboth of them getting well. They invited me to their wedding six months afterwards, but I didn't go. I thought they had treated me rather shabbily , lor though they had paid me for the grave­stones they d i d n t use them, and I could never point to them as specimens of my workmanship."— [Chleago News.

• -

T l i e E d i t o r s W e r e X b e r e . Both of tbe editors of Puff were at the

wedding of, Miss Mattie Seitz and Mr. Russell Stewart on Wednesday.

I t was a splendid wedding. ' , The hopse -tvas a fairyland of flowers and dressed people. ''

The bride looked the best. So did the maids, of honor. ' The bride kissed the editors of Puff.

, Al l of the gentlemen looked as i f they wished they were editors, too.

T h e refreshments wonld be hard to beat. *

We hope to, have some m o r e Weddings o f the kind tolldok after.—{Eastern Puff.

'jAmeftb literary anecdote i s related by •WflQBelm .Grimmt-Xme of she pair of famous story-tolhjrs. One 'day a little girl rang their "bell and met him in the Ball with the wards: " A r e you the Mr, Grimm that writes the pretty tales.?" A- Yes, I a n d m y brother." " A n d thatarf the d e f t e r little tail©* who married the princes;?" ".Yes, certainly." "Wel l ," said the chad, producing t h e book, " i t is sa id .here that every one w h o doesn't be­lieve it m u s t pay him a thaler. N o w I d o n ^ believe that aprincessgver marrieda bailor. I haveh''t a s much as a thaler, but here Is a 'groschen, arid p lease . say I hope to pay the rest b y degreea.'*'? Jus t then Jacob came, up, and the brothers

^had an ^interesting interview with the Irfctle d a m e , but theM,couId not persuade

< i^Beir*d-take away*Sb'e>£rosehen which she i a d l a i d on tbe table.. - %

MP..

OhHdrefwr e-.eo«!fc§ i&on,

K ' ' ' • ' • • • - • • • • • ' •

'•CastotlaisEOwellndiiptedtochildrenthat I Castoria cares Co' •©commend- , . .. • l o ^ - i . ^ ™ - * * ! .

known to me, H. A. AKCBZRiJt.Z>., . «- Kestion, lUSo.GtfortSt.,Brc»k>yn,N.V. | \vlttOnt injurious

- ~ j r f THa Cferitri "Coar-Asv .. Street, IT. T;

,but i Boston

Ssylns aiid Ootngs of Ut i le One*.. Ijrrecldie has'a-cat of which he is very

fond.* The other day kitty scratched him, when be remarked r 'afovept rton*elove to haveber puisine.' ¥lmes\; - :•'/- ;•• - •*'-'. *. ,-.-'- .:- :

• Perhaps the little hoy who explained to a companion the other day that "gas is melted wind " is the same one who denned dust as mud with tbe juice squeezed out.

fVTimingtim ptm-t •• --.;, '':. ""Witat wouia I do were you tot die ?" said a lady to her husband, who had just pnrchaBsed a sealskin ^acque for her. "Oh,

*come off!" saidthe eight-year-old hopeful; " yon'd nmrrvtba* old, codger you kissed' when pa was asleep on thesofa.^—rBvan*. m^&r&ia- ;!;;. :;-.* '•-" -h -"••;'. .. '**V5 ba celebrated King ate grass -V* asked the Sunday-school teacher.

"^Nebucbad^eziar,*' was the1 prompt

y did.be eat grass f" Cause his; mammy cooked it in the

greens!" said » little boy who had had someexperience.-~l.ycto«wnJndVp&ttdent.

" Mother, kin a thing have two mothers?'* ;.-;•" HOyWaai" ,','•?::'•'-.-?•-.:• ,--:yt..

"YesVi they kin. If one hen lays, an egg and another ben hatches itont thechichea what's hatched has two mothers, hain't ftl»F..-.-;v.---^,v;-v '-: .-•:• • - , '- .-- s-"'"^. - - :; ^IdoB't know. Don'* bother me with

-inch foolish questions." , • •'Mother, d'ye think I won't know any

more then you do when-1 get as old as yoti • w " " ' - ^ < ' -' I ' " ••'• , - j ' : X < / • • : • • - • . ' - • • ' •

: In Great BiiUhi $81,(XW,y*W U inveit-•di&lt»M«miw>7S,

A n t h e

absolute cure*, for KHeumatism, Sprains, P a i n i n Back, Burns , OaUs, &e. An Ins tantaneous P a i n -

reliBving a n d H e a l i n g Kemedy. r

[continued from last wed), . . .

How Watch Cases <m Hmde.

A plate of SOLID GOLD 14 2-10 karats fine is soldered on each side of a plate of hard nickel composition metal, and the three are: then passed between polished steel rollers. Prom this plate th^various parts of-the cases—backsj centere, Dez;els,lete, are cut and. shaped, by dies and-formers. The gold .is thick enough to admit of all kinds of ichasing, eiigravhig, and engine-turning. The composition metal gives it needed strength; stiffness and soluity, while the written guarantee of the manufacturers

"•warramtinh eachjjase to wear twen&y years proves that it contains qM the. gold that can possijbly be "needed. "* This guarantee is given ^from aetucd results, as many of these cases have been worn perfectly smooth by years iff use without .wearing throngh t h e go ld . DUBUQUE, IA. , Deo. 14,1880.

I have us^d one of your James Boss' Gold Watch Cases for seventeen years. I bought it second-hand and know of its having heen used before I got it. but do not'know how long. It looks good for ten years longeh Did not siupect it was a filled osse until so informed by a Jeweler a short time since. I most cheerfully recommend your cases to be a* they are represented to be, and more.

O . M j C a A i r a r r , Dep. Col. Int. Rev. Zd DU. loma.

S e n d 8 c e n t i f a m p t o K e y s t o n e W a t c h Case F a c t o r i e s , P h l t a . l i e lph lo , P a . , fo r h a n d s o m e I l l u s t r n t o d P a m p h l e t i h o w l n g b o w James Boss ' vp& K e y s t o n e W a t c h Cases ftre m a d e .

(To &6 ContimtecUf »

£*ga! Ifjdtiws, r~**

NOTICE TO CEED1TOES.

PTIKStlANTTO AN ORDER OF THE STJRRO-eate of the Couoty of Ontario, notice is hereby

given to all persons having claims against Maria LoQmis, late of the town ut PhetpB, Ontario Cjunty Stafe or Kew York, decea-e*!, to pre. ent the samt, with the vouchers therewf, to the undersigned, ad mUiistratur, at the national Exchange Bank, Sen eca Pails, N. Y., on or before the M£h day of March, 1*5. • . ^ w K b a q S r

Dated Sept. 22,1SS4. Admiri^ttator.

" NOTICE TO oKEDiram PURSDAHT TO AK ORDSB'OJP T B E S U E R O -

gate of the County of Ontario, nbti're is hereby give" to all persons having claims against Otis B, Ua-den.Jate of the town or Seneca, Ontario County, State -of New York, deceased, to present the i-ame, with the vonchers thereof, to the undeisigued,-e®»-cutor of the wil '" said Otis B. Burden, decease-d, at his residen' > this town of Seneca, Ontario i ounly, N. Y., on or before the 10th day of April 1885. WILLIAM. T. BEATTJE,

Dated, Oct. 15th 18S4. Executor SoctSnl

NOTICE TO CEEDITOES.,

PURSUANT TO XN ORDER OE THE STJI Kate of the t'ounty o Ont.:rio, nola e is hereby

given to a; l person- hiving cairns, agams Thomas Watbinf, iate of the town of Seneca, Ontario Com ty, Si ale of New. York, deceased, to present the sam», wi'h the voUcners th(.-e f, to the nnder-pignu'i-, exi cut. r, at Li* dwelling house in the town of J rusalcm, Yates C o u . f , N Y , on cr before the 25th day of Jui j , 188E

JOHN E. WATKD3S. Dated, Janu .ry 19th, 1886. ., -Executor,<Sc

Bf2y-an«mJ

*>-

"TH|E OLD RELIABLE."

25j YEARS'IN'.U8B.-The Greatest Medical Triumph.' of the Age. Indoilsecl a l l over t h e W o r l d .

(SYMPTOMS OF A•

TORPID LIVER» ^osaqfappetite. NansejubgWglscos; tivft. pgIamtheHftg.ri-witJiad.ullsen-: sationiiu the back part, Painunder t n p ^h^^^-^^riftfTrillnflss aftereat-4nf?7witn, a disinolina.tlQn to exertion of pbdjr orinind, Irritability of tenrr> er,, Lo-w- spirit3,Lossofmez.:orr nth a faeliing of having: negleetod jg^ dutyt^Y-sariness. Dizjainess^Flntter-Jngof the Heart, Pots before the i>yes, Yello^rSkin.Headaohe,3Etest1 -^asness

tt highly colored Ur; IB» JEVABKLHOS ABE ITKHESDEl),

SEBIOTO! SISBASBS wnA coou sa JJEVELOPED. TuTTfS PILLS are especially adapted to

sueb cases, one dose effects au.h a change of feeling as. to astonish the sufferer.

TheySnerease t h e Appetite; ana cause the body t o T a k e o n F l e s h , thus the sys­tem is l t touris l tea, and by- their Ton ic Action! on the JMgeSttve © r e a i " , » e g u -lar Stools are prodnced. Price 8 S gents ,

f, GRAtvi HAraor'VmisKESS changed to a Gwissr EwCK by a single application of this DTtfT It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of 8 1 . ©f f i ca . A 4 M u r r a y S t . , N e w Y o i k .

PfeATT'S ASJHAt OIL? The b£3t i l l iaminater and in

every respect the safest and

most reliable Oil for family use

ever made. I t is folly to r isk

life aiNJl property "by ui?in#

inferior Oil when P ra t t ' s Ast ra l

at its present can be ribtained

low pr ick

PRATT jMANUFAGTTJEING

j jrEW T O R E C I T Y ,

GO

S O L E P B O P B I B T O E S A N D M A I T O T A C T U - E B E S .

The Astral is particularly adapted for use in Oi. Stoves, on ace oont of its absolute safety and free-cm from odoi

Por sale iq Geneva by WM. MOOONNEL L.

3CBABE =VITA= SUPPOSITORIES. A POSITrnjCUIlIf^

* I n I M . m t s t

Snuff or 4«he.

fmtiqtSlxt _ J AM, *vu*t)f¥*uUif,Wt'\ A t a U d r v t g i i t i s o r t q r

B a n oo neHpUipthu "VITA OO: t . WandM Oliff Bt^ H . Y

ASEPTINE For the toilet,

colds, catarrh, headache, hay fe­ver, sore throats, and for preserv­ing the complex-"ionitisrineqnaled OMINICOSOAP

cures all skindis. ftgnranbns. For the bath and nur­sery sariative it is

ling, cleaas-ngandpmi J"or sale

[dntggjgtBs

NOTICE TO CREDITORS. PURSUANT To AN ORDER OF THE SURBO

gate of the County < f Ontario, notice is herrby fiven to all persons having claims' against Pamehas

'. Hicle, iate of the town of Geneva, Ontario Coun­ty, State of New York, deceased, t o p r e - e r t t h e fame, wi'h v e c h e r s thereot, t" the nud^rsienfd, execut r of his last will and testament, at his oflSco in the village of Geneva on or before the I5ih day of Aucnst 188% ' J A M B S S. S E A B S ,

Dated Feb, 9th, 1885. .Executor. (Ill'eb6m)

*)H

NOTICE ,T,TT'. I I A . i SEEJTOES.

PFRSTJANr TO AV ORHKR OP TEfBT^rS. rogate's Conn of the., ountv o r Ontario, n o t i c e ^ - ,

is her.uy eiveu to all persons having claims against Samuel Bradhurst Clark, late of the t ' W n o f ^ e -m va, Onta> io County, '-tat? of New Y rk,df-ceas£ d, io pr-senl the same wi'h the voucher* thereof, to the undersigned exerutrix of the last will ar>d testament of said decedent, at tbe office of Joh>i S Andrews, b. int> my piare of transaction of bm<ixiess, i,i Canandaigua in said cm- ty, o or b- fore the 20th day of May 1885. ELIZA R. <'LARK.

Executjix of the wi 1 of Samuel Bradhurst Clark decea.-ed: 12nov6m*

Dated November 10,1881.

NOTICE TO CEEDITOES.

F PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER M \ D E BY Hon. Frank Rica, Bounty Judge of Ontario

Connty, New York, dated January 9,1885, notice is hereby given to oil the creditors and persons having claims- against William H. StiegelT>ai( r, lately doing business at Number 212 exchange street, in-the Village of Geneva, N X , that they are r< qu r> d to present their said claims, with tbe vouhers th<-ref ir ''n'y verified to the subscribfr, tbe duly ai po nted assignee of Ihe said William ' 11. S icgelmai.r for tne benefit of hi* Crrditors, s t <£X~ theoificeof D B. Bafiksn'to-e in the v i lag- of Gemva, N» Y., ou oHjsfore the 15th day ' f April, 18*6 K. A BARTH, Assignee.

(>aM Geneva, N. Y., Juinary 10, 1885. / iHnWTt ^

ASSIGNEE'S S A L E . "' By virtue >.f an order m de bv Hon. Frank Rii e j

Ontario Oiini'. Ju !p ' , da'e' F.-brnary 'T, 1885,1 ill -e 1 a* aucti. n t > the hi^h'-st bidder fa» cash at

rhe Franklin ' <mse. >n the vil Hue of Geneva,N Y , on 'he Ut.i>.day -.F March. l-i85,.«tr-t0 o'clock A M , ail th ' light f t le a,-d u ler s whit b Wllliaia H -Stieg m ii< r had io a- d to tl.e fo'l, wing real < s- „ tit.-, i] .h- ihna> oi D.'-euibjr. 1884,--the date of his general n-sUiunem to me for ihe benefit of hn ere !it r-, v iz :

The two—to y b-ick dwellnc house and lot situ- .JZ, a 'eou the no-ih fid of t'astiestree', west of Main -trpet, i,i s i d v huge of • enevu.-ki'Own as the Louts Fisher proprr y. A'so the iwo-srory frame dwell- ^ ing h-n-e and lit si'yaie rn the eaptside of Elm street, o-ih of • o.t -treet, in said vilag", and new occanie- hv . . id Hn g. lnn.i-r as his residence.

For par Jcnlar a pi' to the undersigned. F K E W T I C K A, BAKTH, Assignee.

Dated February '8, i8 5. 18feb4l

\*

SALE BY EECErVEB.

ISPrTRSn^NCEOP AN QRDER OF THE ^ D preme Ciurt o*' the State of New York, dated"

January • 7th, 1885 I shall sell a t auction to the highest bidter on the 2d d*y of March, 1885, at 10 o'clock A. M , at the nursery offlceerounds of Cole-m i n , Anthony & Co. , on Lewis street, west o f Ma n * treet, in the village of Geneva, N. Y-, tbe following property, v i z : The nursery office groun ds ab ve mentioned, containing about three acres of land, with the buildings adapted to the nursery bnsinps? thereon, and the nursery stock growing ana heing thereon. Also the farm of said Coleman, A n-ihony * Co., known as the "Mnllender Farm* situate on the east side of the Pre-Emption, in the town of Geneva, Ontario Connty, N. Y., aad t«ontaining about sixty-soven acres of land; together with the nursery stock growing and being thereon; and the nnsiry btock now growing on about twenty-fve acres cf leased-lands contiguous to the farm last above mentioned, and a part of the same nursery, and the leases, themselves, of saiBiand. That pa d Teal estate and nursery stcck will be sold in par­cels, as follows, viz:

Parcel nnmber one will be the nursery office grounds with the buildings and nursery stock thereon.

Parcel nnmber two will be the eaiid " Muuender Farm" with the nursery stock theron. and the nnr-sery stock on said leased lands, with the leases aforesaid. Thst each of said parcels will be sold subject to certain- mortgages thereon. FeJr partie u iars respecting which mortgages application can be made to the undersigned, on or before the day of sale. N

I shall also sell at<fcbe same time and place, all of the nursery implements, horses, nursery office furniture and personal ireperty, of the S8id Oole-mafi, Anthony & Co., belonging to and need 4n con­nection with their nursery business, other than the nursery stock End leases ab»ve mentioned, except the books, book accounts and evidences of debt-

Tbe terms of snie of all the above property will be cash, except that if a creditor of the partneiship of Coleman, Anthony & Co., shall become a pur­chaser on such sale he will be credited and allowed on the amotfbt of h's purchase a sum which 1i.e undersigned may ascertain wi} not exceed the per centum to which on a settlement by the receiver he wonld be entitled to-receive as such creditor.

HORACE ANTHOKY, Date! Geneva, N. Y., Jan. 2^ 1886; Eeeeivei The above sale is postponed till Tuesday, March Hl_ tftftS n l . a a - m o t j l g e g ^ - <•

OrJACB ANTHONY, Receiver

^J^^

10-h, 1885, atsam" place, H<

f r

NotordytotheBnfa fererwasted bytni eease d o e s Rideel Jrooa supplement the

proper wediciae sad bring back uetreng and comfort, bnt tat delicate mother wh-find in Its daily nsil j u t whatlsneeaed te cbecfca ud snpplemeo the drain made upon nature's forces. Trn

Mt, mothers, and by onvinced. Recipee

to Eiutuinereniuwtjeb accompany e»ch can. It does not tax (he dhteslive organa,bnt is streogthaoings Wbrthinvidids anfl children. 8old by DrugEistaT

TH" PEOPI,E OF THE SrATfl! OF F E W YORK * BV THE SBACE OP «0D TREE AJTO itrBEBEHBEUT i

To the B .ard of Home Missio s of the Presbyier-fon Oi urch in the United States of America, the Bfvrd of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, in ihe Ui.i'ed Statesol America, corpora-

(iflnns, each having i's pifcipaj oBice at 28 Center K street, In fhe city of New York. , Anbarn Theolog- -icai sentin-ry, a o-ppra*itm havine Its principal

rofBee at An'"irn, Cayuga cotnrtv, Hew Yorfe, San-ford D. Hopkins, Ltvbida Weeks, «"oi>s E. Hopkins, Minnie M Hopkins, Francis L. Hopkins, Charlei W. Hrpbins,.Harriet C. Tamer, Bwnk Hnpfc.iis, Jn'ia Hopkins Chauncey Beeche'-, Joseph Beeeher; Orpha J..Hoxie,Charles M. Bi'ChcockiMary Kader He- ry Hitchcock. B^Frank Hitchcock, Martha B: Havena Eicbard E. y. Pook, Nellie Keltoga John Eellng^, , Mead. Cyms Edward Bead, Justin Kellogg Head, Marcus Jleatl, JUary D. Peck. Gould B. Seara, Betsey Ann Pears, Benjimin P. White, John g. White. Abhy Hand, Nettie BedgPS.Naf nan Oorwith Henry Corwiihi John E. Gorvith. S'lWftTd 6 Co>-'with, GefrgeS. Corwith, Henry N. Convith, Sarik Co'with, Phoejje R. Riley, and Mary Hfiinpstead, who are interest'd, as next of kin, legatees, or otherwise, in the estate of Ciwrit-- H. Sears, I<te of th" town f.f phelpB, In Ontario connty, New York, deceased, greeting r ' • •

Yen, and each of yon are hereby cited, personally to n« and appear In our £ nrrogsje's fourt, bef re our Snrroaate of tjnr ,«omtry of Ontario, et-.tbe Surrogate's bfSee la the Tilage of Canandaigus, in

jaid cotmly,of Ontario, on the «4th day of March, A. D., 1885, at ten o'clock in the forennera, then and there to attend the juihcist" settlement of toe accounts of Henry J. Peek, as the executor of the will of said Charity H. Seara, deceased. .. And the above nam. d who are infants, are here­by notified o then and there show cause why* special guardian should not be appointed to appear for them on said settle ment, oh the application of ,the petitioner.

In testimony whereof, we havecaused the seat>of the said Surrogate's court

. to be herennto a«»d, [i» a,] Witness, B. P. Bsbcock; Sniro«te of

said county, at Canandaigua, ine 28th day-of Jannary, one thousand eight hoBdreld and ei|*hr-nve.

. ; . 3^P.BAB<XK!K,8oiioiste. ., Jons 8. AIJDKKWS,

Attome> for Accountant, 4febw7 Canandaigua^ X. f.

85c np. WOOLRI' CO., onUbeL

Am) BOARD for » live . . _pr Ladis*in each eoun P. W, ktBCOJDt *Co4Pali»J'a

Fli A leading London Physician B»> tabhs hes an Office in fiew York. From Am. Journal of M. d,

"' Dr. A B. Me«erole,who nukea a specialty of Spiepey has with­out doubt trettedand cured mora

cases than tny other living physician. His,saee«as has simply been astonishing; we have beard of cases of oyer 20 years standiaeenred by hUn. He luarantees a cure." Large Bottle anacTreattae S-tfre*. GiveP.O,andgirpresBatlttasBto t i AB. MitSKBOLa, No. M John St., New Yor*.

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