mmm* - NYS Historic Papersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031163/1882-01-11/ed-1/seq-1.pdf ·...

1
iGREDnoBS. rder <Sf &e Surrogate of the. >, notice is hereby g*y? n .™ «a hjS against Francis Light- **« 5f -Sene<», Ontario qonnty, ~~f •eased-, to present the same, •< e«i3fj to the undersigr' ~" dwelling hffliseijB the before the atfth day of ^ ' FRANK M- DOB&f._ Administrator^,,. tate of New Y/ortej by" th and Independent, neva, N. Y./Catteltte Rati- liaHitchcoek.Grand Rapid*3i R.' Gray". Geneva.' '». ¥;' ra, N. Y.; William H. Gray, \ 0. Chesehoro,24 West 12tb y- Caroline Barnes, Cleve- i. Gray, M«rrill f Wisconsin, Chicago, Illinois), who ftffl s, nest of bin. legatees, or ate of Joshua Gray. late ol ontaiio County, deceased, j, are hereby cited person >--fore our Surrogate Of oar t tie Surrogate'a office in the ud county of Ontario, on the . D. lb&J, at lu o'clock in 1 mere to atterd to tneflnai of the accounts of Charles J. the last will and ttBtament fieri of. we have can«ed the. inr said Surrogate to be here- Babcock, Surrogate of saic idais.ua, the 7th day of Nov Ear of our Lord one thousand tdeighu-ooe. f h. e. BABCOCK. j. y. Surrogate. 9nOv6iV- t'ounty of Yites —Henry > rl. again.-t . Lury A. Grav, ijiia Hitchcock and LewR husband ; Lyman R. Upay, Biam H. Gray and Caroline d defendants: You arp here- i\Ver the complaint in this a copy of your answer on ;> wHhm twenty days after summons, exclusive of the to case of your failure to gmeiit will i)e tiken against the redef demanded m the sired in tne connty of Yates. >f Koveinher, 1881. IA"*, Plaintiff's Attorney, We Adorns, Geneva, N. Y. cock, William U. Gray and ;he foiegoing -umoi ma id fublkj'.lou pur-uant to *n « C. Dwigtit, Ju.-tice of tne ed tne L9 h day of Novem- vlth the complaint in this )! the cicrK 9f Yates couji- •i. 1881. JOHN K. BEAN, 'a attorney, Geneva, N. Y. THE .^TAIK OE -NEW race ui uod injjj and mde- "i, Jes.'e Newell, Jonathan lor, Betsey Pa.ruer, Lewellyn •u, Wilson ?idw ill, Lucreun hell, Jtt.-,n Ntwi.Il, Enos T. Mil.imuii, CttieD ililliinan, Maria biuomm^dale, John y. LiarraoD Bickley, James . M. i ormick, W illiam W. VUcox, Adeline Farnham, -T U»rj')W, Isiac barrow, • phine K..binsou, Mary E. -.JW, Kerhando Darrow, Dan- !> 'tier Uurrow, Ueorge V\, v :n Invt-r. I) a vid Windovtr, Uu^trun,;, Ophelia Harris, Kii.-ts, Lhristuina Watson, .•i Cwlweli, Louiaa Mdllimaii, Alice Mhlitnan, and Victoria i*v aLd next to kin of >t a , lljuu w:i of i eneva, m Ontario L "»J. <>reeting. i are. hereby cited and re- •e and appear i.efore our t.-y ul Ontario at hta Lffice in < .mny on uie 4th day of Feb- \ mk m lb. afternoon of that •c'.f and probate of tne last ii r-a.ii .jtreused, wuich relates |oi.ai..-i..tc„iiu ^ presented for " :au 11 .iluiiuiau, a legatee Ler.oifa Ljt, Ahe:eot We have ransed the A our aa id bui.o-ate to be u. ]•. buDcmb, Surrogate of said anda.uua, ih e Tta dav of Ue- irtr ot our L^ro on,, thousand ^Ld t-.^htj-une. t- i'. b.iu(.l'CK, surrogate. o_n(EDrrt>Ks7~ order of ^ e Surr.it-ateor ihe ?.',^" : '"' '" t -*' r '''> iitven to 'aim- <iriiuM^.,.„ U ei K. Will "' '•<-n>-xj, 'int.ri., Omntv. .'";*•',' " P r >-'-u'tti? same tier, .-r, t„ the iin.Krvigned tie ..rujr -ore r,f (;e.,ree H ; ju„: [i ;:,r j ' N - Yju ° ; -d. ivM. '•KdKliEH. MYERji JAN'. WILSON-, Admmisua:drs, 4e. 0_CREDITORS. "" .order iiii.ie by the Hon. Wil- itario County is ,f gti ^ lh r l»»l, notice ishirH.,Birtu . mtely doini; business m the tano.onnty,Nj;t., u.auhev ea: their vouchers therefor Tf-Znl-4?" lVii *»***• iJili»ri"-Kla(r i. rthebene- at I.W pta.. e of tr.„*?g2t genera street, u, Geneva, if istday... \u,, : ^, a,ij| .- ''tOK.,K U \ <f£V:i 8tn'."'n.i ' S, .",f;.' ( , '. e ; IOPLFR I38BED 1841 See •^T'* NEW SOUK. tr stronger, ^ j ^ n ay other a m d l '-ure the best r 3 *« ore for ^easossa ator rh^« BD cy. and* ««"* t;.m "a 'eqirenc, -abnte , ag f'ftnemor?' 8 *' Uaei- Jr^-J^-VW?' ^$«< w "tct we ••&; »*s ^^"^t.-jr AMES MALETTE T E B M S : t)n* year's subscription, in advance ADVERTISING RATES. "One inch or lees, inlengtn of colnm-,'3 weeqaaij One Week ... .. ..... »..„..,., ..'^lOoJ Two Weefas. » ..... 155 ThreeWeefe"* ^. FonrWeeks. .... 880 "BraMoaae.. »^ »*- ^ « . * < » ^«rj»MthB-.. .: , .: {R8fJ Six MonthB..... SCO T^eJre-Meattat i .; E U_ POEEOLOSDEE- T, Ontario County, Samttel )avid Wetdmau and others : L inent ot toreclot-ure and sale i action at a Bpecial term Of i-.d at the coai t house, in the la .N. Y., on the 14th day of ae Uou. Jaines L. An^rle, day tntere.1 in tne Olerk's aty, t, the undersigned, Btierlff sell at public auction, at the le town and village ol Geneva, k.„ on the ;ilsl day of IJecem- :& in the iorenoon, tljfe mort- le said judgment diri&ted to therein de:-ciibed as follows, ir parcel ol laud bitaaxe In tho utariu county, JiuW York.oa street in i-aljd village, bein^ fty-eight in Coil's meadow in d. village, as allotted by David d on ttje west by Elmstreet, on lbtr nfty-uine, on the south by en, and on the east by a line nth and south hues straight rtr. ot it ui!-tant just oue hun- est line of the west sldewalK being ufty-seveu feet in Iront le same property conveyed by to the parue.-, of the nist part a)tb day of December, I860, 10 county Clerk's office, on rary,l-.|jl,iu label Viiol Deeds, H81. —7t. i. bACON, Sheriff. B. SMITH, Depu-.y sheriff. ntiff in fercon, Geneva, N. Y >i? THE si'ATE OF NEW ry F. Ko»e. U. .Norton Rose, dward L. Kose, John Kose, arah H. Wtbtams, Arthur F. , liugn L,. Kose, Charles .1. ill, tleiiry K. siU, John C. ~ Nicuon.-.. Jane K. Ciaggett, i, Oswald J. C. Rose, Robert \. ltose, Frederuk 1>. Kose, athanue N. Al. Hose, John tuzLiusrb How, Arthur Urant i Koce, beiug tbe hetrs-at-law Henry Hose, late of the town «mnty of Y^tes deceased : C. Si.l and arluur P. Rose, I certain insti uuienls puiport- aud tesiament aud couicila Henry Rose, deceased. Lave i rogate's Court ot the county r lied pen:ion placing tor the l-ilrumente wnich said lnstru- the 4Lli djy of November, .-.ugust, ls74. and the siKth day lapec.i.e.y and rtlate to real Now, ttierelore, you and each } Hied and cited'to be and ap— ; iiefore tne said surrogate, at ui and tor the said County .cay ot February uex'., at lu >uii'ol that day, to attend the *aid instrument purporting ud testament; ana lha- if any :reoied be under the age of .v are riqukedto appearand lardiau Lo oe apnoiuied, or in L4iect or lai.ure to do so A be api-oinied oy thesur3- 1 act lor tucm in thepioceed- 'i hereof. We have caused the in..- aaid surrogate to be here* am d. Briggs, Surrogate of LU- village ot Fean Van, the mbjr, lis.. LLlAM Al. JOHNSON, V ot Ibe SUir~gale's Court. I^^ifcpai TWO WOMEN. A granclma sits in her-gteakarm- chatr: Balmy sweet is the soft fepit&g-alri: Through %e latfeed, Ulac-siadowed pane" Ana she catches the gleam ot a woman's dress, As it flutters about in the wilftd's oaress. " That chilrfis glad as the day Is long— Her loverls coming, her life's a song i" Up from tbe orchard's flowery bloom Moats fragrance to the darkening room Where grandma dreams ail a> tender grace And a softer light steals Into her face. And once again she is young and fair, And twimng-roses felled nxrJi. Once again, blithe as the lark above, . She is only a girl, and a girl in love! The years drop from her their weary pain; She is clasped in her lover's arms again I •' Tthe |ise faint giimmersof daylight die; Stars tremble out iifete^purpW sky; *» •> Ere Dora flits up the garden path, Sadly afraid of grandma's w*ath. With rose-red cheeks and flying hair 8he nestles down by the old-arm chair.. " Grandma, Dick says, may we—may I—" The faltering voice grows strangely shy; But grandma presses the little hand: "Yes, my dearie, I understand! " He^may have you, darling I". Not all in vain ^o^andma«drqam she was young again! She gently twists a ehinlng curl; "Ah, me 1 the philosophy of a girl I "Take the world's treasure—its noblest, best>- And love will outweigh all the rest!" J Ana.thrpugh the casement the naoonligtitcold Streams on two heads—one gray, one gold; - • —Washington Post. * /I m£l> H- Vs§2! f THE WIDOW'S PLOTS. '.. It was in the town of Cork that M>. O'Daly kept his "Commercial School for. Lads.''? That was how the sign reacts aaid tQ_thj3 s e a ^ of learning little Robin Redburn was one day bronght by his anxious mother. . '•' The child hasn't been away frdm- bbnle before," she said, "and I suppose you'll find-him troublesome. He don't like being parted from his brother, but I think I shall send Richard to Mr. McGregor's classical acaderay." Mr. 0*baly and Mr. McGregor'.i«p,t the rival schools of the day in Cork. Mr. O'Daly's was the largest, but Mr. McGreg- or's was the most exclusive. ' Mr. O'Daly gave his boys one through session from nine to three. Mr. McGregor gave his a recess at twelve o'clock, from which they returned at two and staid until. five." Mathematics were thorough at.'- Mr. O'Daly's. Latin was the chief thing at Mr. icGregor's. \ The doctor's boys and the lawyer's sons ent to McGregors, but O'Daly had the eat manufacturer's children. Ainorrgst these little Robin Redburn,' very Bhy and very unhappy, took °his seat. He wanted to go home to his mother—to see his brother, to be petted and comforted. But he hid his woes and did very well for a day or two, although herconld. not manage histefems except in solitary ~ (Kmnriement, to which Mr. O'Daly consigned him, not as a pT/niahment .hnt for tho sake-, of necessary quiet. One-day the Widow -Mclionghlra; -who lived next the school-house, complained to Mr" O'Daly that young Redburn had climb- ed up in her plum trog. gnd,, stolen ,-her ,, plums. Mr. O'Daly hated •' Eobin . up *, and * ordered hirn_.io hold orxt^nsfriglitihandL.-^ "What for, Mr. O'Daly?" roared Robin, overcome by the frightful injustice of this proceeding, for never in his life had he been moreZobedienfc and well-behaved. .." What for, Mr.OTDaly? iThaven't done anything. All the boys know I haven't dpne anything." "Ye haven't done anything, eh?" said Mr. O'l&alyj sarcastically. "You're a fine boy, anftye, and a modil to your mates? But • it's-only.jnat- to thim I should' tell them . -what.I'm flogging'ye for.. More, betoken ye ate ivory; one of old Widdy McLoughlin's. plujms-. .off. her tree, 'which was. thriving. Off"wi£h your jacket. VOhVtMr. O'Daly, how could I get ont?" criMjJb^r'Robin. " The door was locked." yThat ye'll explain to me," said Mr.- O'tJ.aly,, Melding his lash unmercifully. "A dacent'woman is Mrs. McLoughlin"—whack —^a&irlshe makes an honest penny by her plttrM^—whack.—"A hapojth a piece she .getsior them "—whaek—"and there's forty haporths* in your stomach. "—whack—" in- stead^'of in her pocket "^whack-i—"aao she'll give me no peace until it's, paid"— •whack, whack, whack. "There, I've done with ye... fnt on your jacket j niver stale, again.'While ye live." Poor Robin, more dead than alive, rushed to his>seat- and hid his face in' his arms. MeJMiwhile, Master Spratt, tie oldest boy ja^ school, arose in his desk and' signified his^ I desiie to speak. "WeH, Spratt, what is it?" asked Mr. dys I" School ojienerl nexty.d«y .-M^osuat The factioiLSM^M hwk^iftet *yglit drirm. iah by-the ^ay. Mr. O^Otlj had a new cane, niesly wax^d, upon his desk. Redburn was there also^ and a solemn ceremony took place. Mi> f O'Daly called. Hie boy to the ^ put (Jpe of those small' chunky bibles which prevail uj schools uponJt, bid. tbabqy lay. hfe hanA ugor/it Ind%fc4 S ^ m , oafh id tellithe trutib, and then ^nestionea him: ?'•'Where^nsrere yot^ bid, yisterday from twrtve to tr o ?" " In thai classasom, 1 ^ replied little ReoFi .. "Wfien^fea^otfich^T#ai»s4^y'B-^*P tree, thin ?'* asked Mr. O'Daly. "IfineTc^feclimbed the plum treej" said poor little Redburn. |-Never? Yjm'rB OT pfttfalM- roared the pedSgogue^ - i. (, _ I But Redfifirn repeated: 'JHever! 1 ? .. ' ... , ' . Spratt, Dijnsten, aU the other boys, were put on oath. Five of them swore to seeing Redbnrn in thefcree.^* a great nttebertto thei* -factaat Spratt never ntfKthe 1 dkss-rboin door. Sprajt swore that Redburn did not comeoutoftfheTrooiri by -that''door. And» after the examination Redburn was consign- before, i - At two o'clock, however, something hap- pened. -\' ' ,. [ t The widofe appeared at the,, door, and re- quested- to^speak to Mr. O-'Daly. Mr. O'Daly wentgont to her at once. He shut the<dooi*^ an^"loeketl at her. " Well, w< > |aar4'iJie said, "what is it ye're after? Do ?ye want more money or yer pound of fle« > ?", - , Mrs. McLf ughfiri had- never read'Shakes- peare. . ' ' " I niver aU«3 no one for mate,' or "any- thing but msqnst jews*" she said, " bnt if ye want to catch Mrl Whal's-his-name in my trees;' now's ^ionr time. He's" at" the gteen apples^, •$ ' "He's locked fast, woman," said poor O'Daly. "Here'sthe kay." . But he followed her, and there, in the tree, he saw tbe bine! jaeke^ and brass but- tons, the white collar and the yellow curly head of hair %at belonged - to Robin Bed- burn. ; Scarcely believing his eyes, he lifted np . his voice and rolled aloud:. "Redburn I" "Yes, sir," "aid.theboyiroitt; the:trae. "Come dov^ >,",said Mr. O'Daly. " Come down this mir. jte/" The boy obeyed. * " m flog , you, you rascal," said Mr. O'Daly. •••! • "Then jny :'»ther will 'flog yon,"- replied Master Bedb^in. "Oh, the ii jpudenoe" of the craytherl" cried O'Daly, sowing' the boy by the collar and pushmg'hlpr. before him. " I'll flog ye WJBIL but first^fcare'lFbe a=oonfessloa before : your mates," a£d info ' ttie'tschooEroom he pushed Master^Bedburn, awakening a tu- mult in the school, for a boy who could ear cape through a window of % that size, set •abdut with'spiked, was a 'wonderful fellow indeed, and evfejy eye had been .upon .the door. ' i lO'Daly. " There's but the one door to the room edBurn was locked in," said Spratt, ""and tier© was no other way of getting out; the ado^H® too- high and too small "'for anyr ng but a cat, and there's spikes on it fait a minntjg master, I sat J>y the -idoor, itbmy legs across it; fror&-tye ; minufeyou ^nt Redburn in, until the minute you took. . out, doing that problem I failed in." tTtfj&the'widdy andl^e boys have* Been 'arc rtt-^ Waii''a^mmuTe. Dunstan, ?^bo»Ba here4" \l whom, and Spratt ther^ was a sort of feud, as"ffiey were the leaders of gtrftfe u y t o the-qesk. - "^ '?K S W&B yott tokt" me the w e-lith," said Mr. O'Daly. "N Ividerioe." t'WelLIshonldnH PO'Dtdy-" said Dunstan. but you wouldn't believe bt^tbliflieti-uth. Bedbi lor an hour and a half, form-iky the window .Ksher,^ Pope iuius and threw them bete are five of us; ^*"wh*o slowly-repeated ipnm never left rid I saw him conn jjilQudmoBt of t 5'Daly listened in l a v e flogged the ;conklriotbe,qn}t»fO-|njuft ! ,j ehed the door of the clkss-room and injtsjnarketB,andlessclothiiig/«^n* chfldren. ^tt^i^onfrfterwalr^^cou^ '^ 'le, in their best-aarapw^nd rOautifhta. in town to attend the bulT-igfit, * J aiid sitting about on-the stone benches of ifi^TOnny. tittle plaza,jja motionless content. .y-'contrauous procession of sandal-shod feet touffied along the sidlelralkv-under theta-ches of Qi&poHiiks i gayljy a^ess^^orsemeM,in ^raided leather jacfeelte arid tight trowsewregs fclazing with' buttons, paced their barefooted ponies through the -streets, often with a friend accommtidaied, behind. We sat in the keep stone jwmdpw^seat of the hotel, looking $ut on iHe''bright yet strangely listless throng, and partook of fees handed in at the window by a street' vender, who,- having Served us, passed on-down the ^street, Jrail- fcg behind him the diminuendo repetitions of his long, musical cry " IftSg-tie/" . The rehnrmng stagb fromMJreliaJliaaf'nOt irrived; there .were., bad,. very, bad roads ihead, and no rarthet' effcSM" wSs*"iriade to hroceed that-day* *<1j inot to^yf'fb-mor- fow," is" a Merifcan proverb. Possibly the driver did hot' care fiS turn (Ids. back on a >ull-fight. A prajeMoTbi ot toreros, in their jrilliant costufSes; "upliftihg a huge garland i >f banderillas and accompanied by a band, jaraded.; the streets. Wd could Bee the fig. n^s^distinctly f but we heard the -music— he thrilling dance music of the country. As ;m invitation to theforaj, nothing could iave been better. It did not perceptibly Stir therfoungers on the stone benches ; they weri already convinced; but I," who* abhor- red the thing, and wpuld not go in the capi- tal, fell suddenly under thy spell of the senseless, intoxicating music, and begged X to take me-.tb the'jbhl&figh't with the rest of the town ! It seemed all the town did not go, for^we were obliged,, an reach- ing the entrance, to press through a crowd (that " smelled to heaven ") 6f humble Ma- ravatians, who remaiited out because of their Extreme poverty, not from any lack of taste for tHe popular amusement.* We mounted a perilous wooden ladder to the scaffolding surrounding the arena. The entire struc- ture had been reared without aid of nails or saw; the timbers showed the shaping blows of the ax; and were lashed together with It may hot have been Bevel that sickness arffl death* mr-Tamid' the beautiful hammocks that border the great river f ready.to seke-jrppn every : victim-that dares invade- fba£ lc^ely^doihani- ~ - '"' "*• It is generally reported that all groves north of Palatka were totally destroyed by frQM-Tast'Wm\erorHvere J mkteriaHy injured; In.reply I would, say that upoq .these^groves to-day there is maturing an abundant crop of frtrit. "there w&i nd g^r^knfeK^4S? . periee% *~ composed, - Maiter^ ^ stoo^A>lfore^3in<a\esK, m.n U'ifftly.^actuiuiy almost, "afraid '<rf uhim,-' holding*- his- "Now spake the truth," he said. "Were you up the"=phnn tree in the widdy's garden yesterday?*" t ••"Yes, Ijyaa,** rer^Ked^Bedbpin.. , . . " DSVou'at^ the plumbs ?" "Every one .<5f them," said Redburn. *' I ean pay for the^i, I've plenty of pocket mon- ey. Here, how|-jnuch is itrf-andheJlunged his-hands into l^s pockets. " That's not fte question now, though'it's forty half-penc« *' said Mr. 'O-'Daly. Tell-ns how you gotouj fef Bchool. n " By- the dooi * replied the boy. "Did SprattUetyou out,?" asked Mr* O'Daly. _ i '• . ' ' ' .' A• r. ' :.; "Idpn?tknoijwho i burn. "SehqOT was o'clook." *^ " School is n||er out until five, said Mfc- O'Daly. p- "You'd better'askJfr, : Mfi^isgof, repKed Redburn. ,, » ^ -. .« «•-•>, . ; , . « § ropes of maguey. particularly safe, but was quite in keeping with the-performSAice we- had come to see, which resembled the scenes in a Roman arena as. this rude amphitheater did the Col- osseum. The city authorities sat in the place <j>f the Cassars; from the stall befow, the band played the national airs, to accompany a dance of clowns, which wag interrupted by (iries of " Toro! tora /" from the specta- tors. In the great blme arc. of sky above the densely packed seats, the buzzards mounted, wheeled, and sank. One_ , mountain-peak looked, down at us dispassionately from a long way off. It was a very vulgar horror. Of all the figures' im : the arena, the bull seemed by farthe noblest. In the'pauses Of his charges', {he faced his throng Of perse- cutors with a.large-eyed bewilderment, paw- mg-the'dust and taking, quick'-breaths of' ex- citement The space was too small for any— tiling but butchery; there was little - stall shown jn defense by the men—not even very fine horsemanship. *lfhe sriritless,'blindfold' ed horses* were -watitioaly Bacxifitjed-^absos! -£ Jutely thrust upon the bull's horns. In less ji$an ten mhlutee'dne>was wounded to death. .[A put his h^d"Tjef6re A my "eyes^ and, indeed, I could not have looked, for I was seized with an uncontrollable fit of nervous crying. 'No neifveg, flot trained tyi for gen- erations, could have stood it,—the cries, the music, the peril,—for, wretched burlesque as it'wdsl the simple faot of «death f was^be- fore out-eyes.' We went outf igno'miniorisiy, 'With all the dark-eyed- wonfen around look- ing at. us a with fixed curiosity.—Gent/wry j£-^. "*^».* iJ?** ^^aL«-"-~ ... put , | saia Be4- iPwas two Gregory InJirtoBtlirMkerl Ml. bit of a Scpt^Jim^^h^t.ine.o-ji |sohpol? Robin Redburm -ihe impudence -in ye 1 and the badneee in' %e. .passed" me .anderstand.- ing.'" "•'..'.] ". - "My name;&n^Eobin-^-i<?s Ejchardi'" re-, plied the'boy|•> '•= ', t . r . . . > '' GpdifprgiRftiya ft^gftsped "Mr* -O'Daly. "MT-0'Da|jr;'*;^ i lpirat^ xismg, '"if 1 may speak, tiatattn'iBedbrimTafc alL" - "It's S a t a ^ ^ ^ . i ^ ^ h e ^ . n ^ Sit". O'Daly. . - - rr . . . . . . . . "May!have.tjte kejr^^askedSp.ra*^. '" Whafs the good of *kays when; lads .can get out by kayholes ?—Yis,'' «aid Mr. .^ -. ^>^a^ I---. - .1 - / • But Spratt took the key, unlocked the dpor t and from the daas'xoour walked Robin Redburn. „ The-school uttered a universal howl, and some^ of ^ha mQs^. superMtio|is^eirLw|thQut ^ekp4^.ti4%^<ytr|r*Saed Ih'ellJ^atfqju "Twin brothers, Mr. O'Daly, he said. Tve" heard Redburn say ( he b^ad r ,pne .at_ Mc Dunstan, another larg§ boy, b**#«^:^^ s ^Koitrf^ioiw!-ifc -nome it' noon, ou know." k "through the window, "fie called to him and turned his poclets in- neither fruit nor stonj9*'were there. .arfatea»B.*w \«r* V+* boys being questioned, swore •that Spratt had never left the door. ^ielass r at the window swore to-, seeing was, asked to point out- the, ! on B^ed^nrn^bae*.' ' •' ducks, Richard Trere, as everybody »f twin-brothers, •i, everybody in- them and been, suatgifii^Bftjin the pays," the nurse Richai-d r w^re a their father than he knowing- thim AatlitreA whini degrj: ^however whether Tm aontg or failing to do asked, when they were ten years old. •aid toher hutband. noble «xpr*ssk)B, tone; and.Richardis Bktet&Sm taeB a .. f .- . -... ^ tJlEATMENT OP A HOTEL SWINDLER. . ' - - . * - > _ > - . . ' . I Thereds-a man in New York-whose dinner could not ha*e digestddiveryiwell pV afforded -him much solid comfort He dined at a ho- tel and took his meal in good style. After laying in ailitferal supply ofiwfeaBhe! fancied, ajad running up a suibstantial account Ma •check was handed hinil. Instead of paying dpor in an unconcerned manneif^WithViut be<- stowmg the Customary'attehtion'on the offl- c|al"whbiH^'htthe.re«QiptjOfl custom. Had •the greedy and welkfed person, been roind- 4l<oto fMm? Wo^fec&VeV-^are-^t' on r^mstonfe dutS*,«ltlrki»g in j wait; fpr L jnstj such patrons as hims.elf^ his course would ^vebeendifferetit As it waB^his - passage" tp ttie sfiSet. became; %.yei*-{. diffierent affair from what/he »hadi intended it-to,^>e- In- Btisad ofeibeing ffdMwed quietiy-itaichudkle ii>vdr having swikdlea'the' h6tel' out sof ihe- price : bt rns' 'dafSer Tie 'was. brought jfo ia* "hatt- by^oi i tae^t6btj'f^*^''>n8^ }o give ah ^account of. hunpejtf,. His stammering apologiesididhim.no good! and- only; seryjed- to stimulate his captor to make a conspicu- ous example of,him, CaUnjg.to. his^aid 5 ariother employe of the house i'the detective oaused the wretch to - *' walk Spanish " to the lTO^8jy^at;.^ch^fii]|^lie : *icked a^in' into : tbje stree^ramid.Hae appj^use.pf .the.bysiau,d- ers, who by this time were informed as .to " vhyand whereforie of the transaction, demoralized manner the detected'and " dMer-iou,t?i&nd#oJaltfie Spave- slunk away with a view of reach- ing a^ place where the gaae of,his/el|owgnen wpul^jno|bfllso/co^pi^ously,"darectep ?t hnn.. It would have been quite as legal to hive had this fellow arrested, and convicted of! swindling the'hotel, but the moral effect telline mopl^orel. ^thusljopsting-rhwinto,the-s^t was~fgr ^^rrf'•^fe*•aK)ugb*-f m b r e impressive*on t&e bystanders than a. year's imprisonment hot jail would have been. : ?; r £ .•"'•!if a ; 'O .•*. •- Arl ABSENT-MINDED HORSE THIEF. Henry McEarian4t ) , f been krfged nxthe r^^htlary &d%*to eervfe * *lrm ol'five years for horse Stealing. McFarland is a prominent" citizen of D^rs^SJikmnJ^, and a o p H p ^ o ' effect I t is «-«d ««nt-nima*a&esB£*na in &ty& m-Sb&kg* rpie-off r*Wm^fc$0^g$&& *&* info another xounty ,\axu£ offani^him^or sale, "|a|4-,.!' i #f^rSw ^Pffl^i^^^'W^fr t'S animal was »covere^T^r~Mprland e^^-^Hh-^WulraboT^ri^^l^ idei§4£fc OfThOji'yin i Mme to thrcjr stones We.gtini*a^n,.4nd fa a tin can last Monday morning I" <iitti'i*d W h lti(if tM pwled. H* ore* «exi yotr,lo' B^conunoxt ey« cafld not see this great •arietyof charms, and; mi«W|Ws^w'e» eon- rtJBt^rbdng.raadeif&%^&^..^ Really tari^**»*HW«^ «>P^- gings, which were the ehief oprisideratkrnB T4» "Book o» «•* TKoJaua*-—David iwb^,wi&i»amis*bff* *r*«* Urn of tbe o r f c W manuscript of the "Book JeMph ttaMH iMtt Wt tU phtee or JSepttmiam*. It Ii, w n d « t o i ) d '-*; *|^tteJfr"b^y^Kti#*ei*t y :$K'M3fi4&i&' to feori Churclull•«MMtt^S9'^ •%&*&%;•,. .ir-jsta-tiSiij-^afc F m0S&^^^^m^aii^ W - the' (Ireresoor =#01 -*ex*»a *«MO«tfT« •'"si*-^" . . . . - ^ $:}?> "<Sa* p^Boeinan seeing a micseiBind 1wt*3f«*rJg««ator Secfidn receives less injury "from 'fro&s than *i^tf6riB**rarffier"soiffi: atSRragh' 'tnis'lait wmterwasagamstuB. But 1870, 1871, -187V 1876, an^|87g jvorkMmofeid&nage'tp. us miihange, "viuusia, Marion, and Sumpter bounties than Jpor^jthfe eastern fshore of the St. John's, north of Palatka. Now, as regards the much-talked-of "frostline," it at once strike's Hfteiligent men as a myth. If it were possible to per- manently; establish a "zero- Jine" then a "'frost line " would: follow as a matter of Course. The "zero line" varies with the yearg from Mississippi to Ohio.' So "Florida's "frost line" wanders up and down the latd- tudes frbm Oarnaveral on the south to the Garolinas On the north. Hence the ; absurd- ity of "talking of a "frost line " r being geo- grapically fixed. After seven "years' of con- stant residence immediately on the banks pf the St. John's River, I can pronounce it as healthy as any other section of the state. Neither myself nor any member of my family has had chills, fever,- or malarial or bilious fevers and with, any exercise of discretion in choosing location and common sense in fol- lowing the laws of health; I feel safe jm-say- ing good health may be enjoyed-upon the banks of the St. John's Riyer. With pa- tience, capital, and much labor any one who will can have a beautiful as well as a profi- able home in all of the orange growing sec- tions of Florida^and, as remarked above, with proper exercise of judgment, there is no state healthier than Plorida, and no sec- tion of Florida is healthier than the St. John's River country. Nor is there more inducement, naturally, offered to embark in the business of orange growing than upon this river. Nervous and Female Bjsea»o» a specialty D&fa. ? ebar"rwit*ai-£uaM«>i.:i~ . . ..atflaS;®.-' TKi»BsaXTKAe*aB-WITaBD^'FAt*«Ltt W>F^35diri«on'B: t bi^rodncir^^;'L«ciJ^iJH,! Also^OAa.mminiit<ged a»n»iUk.• Tltxzpartite- Io&dltt' NEW GEOGEEY -ANI CHANGES IN NEW YORK SINGE 1839. Wshen I was a boy, writes the New York correspondent of the TJtica Herald I often passed an hour ih attending the police returns, and when I now occasionally look in upon such scenes, the-idea painfully occurs how muoh misery this spot has witnessed during the interval Well, as for misery; New York is full of it, and the larger the city grows'the greater the concentration of crime and mis- fortune. - Looking back on the past, it seems strange 1 to think that we should then call New York large when it was so emalk at least wtien'TSoiffDarea' wjth itfrp'resenf di&ensionfl:' Union square was'tben (1839) just laid out, bpt now if is'the centre of fadbiPnkbler trade. At that time many considered New York a finished city. "There Was indeed but little prospeet-of increase, since the panic of 1836 had prostrated every interest "Op-town lots were utterly misjdable,arid Several large es- tates which have since become worth mil- lions were then hardly receiving enough rent to paytaxes. 1 xemeniberrf hat store* in Wall street, also a tailor shop, a tobacco- nist, and a <%ir,cb-_ ; ,Wall street wasj then^a very smatt M&fcw&&<A fiM te Ip.'&ent 1 ' i m ^ n t e , i n r t h l f i n a ^ d a T c i S t o ' r n o w 'ret quires twenty acres. At that very time, how- -ever, a far-sighted journalist described the future, and placed his prophetic .vision, on record. That man was the senior "BenrjCft, and in a copy of the Herald, issued in 1839, '-the prediction appeared that in a 1 few years all below Canal street would be occupied by tne jobbing trade; and also thakUhion square 'would be the centre of the city. Bennett lived toseeMifs words fulfilled. He also saw a corresponding ohange in his own fortunes. Ajfctj^.iim^his.pa'per-.wasstruggluig 'foria mere existence, but he lived to see it occupy abuading^oriB'a^mfiHon.' 1 PAlJVCE|ANP|j5LEEPlNG^CAR3. -; The New York correspondent of the Ufaca. Herald'-writes: *Ae'Wa'^* ; .iSleeping Car Company is also extending its operations, anjlappears,to,hav^ a-jgpod Tmderstaaduig jnth Jayljlould. its cars" are now running on' the Wabash route, and it will soon. have. the fcon Mountain Road, ita sleeping and palace cars now number nearly 2,000, and'it" is gradoalty crowding ihe Polmari concern S the track* Ha"-nng-the Gotad vJattonage, also that of Yanderbilt, ii certainly has a wide -range--of • Operation. 'The- business is' conducted wflih great precision.. Each con* jjuctor is required to send in a daily report, and also one ; at £he end of-the- Jiionth,-.jand • every^ofetail f is under" close attenfionl The ' -demand for such accommodations is con- stantly on the..increase,' ahdi'fw-lhe ^country, gets ridher the^caveling 'pubEe-' & ready 'to* apind mere for comfort and elegance.i. Web-_ |t^ W^gn^/fettrjjwenr ttrk "m|M^^U|. i have made hnn ileia of w'aahingj3whioh| -- -sat oui cenfrS, q anioir2^ in ^0)treaty isaAiaemaO. aW Summed'.by'^^ept^! jimmensersyitem/has^gro : wn|i •hicli. oecurred.tH^Erfl^! early oonnectiornwith the Gi ^ ^ reatfer; you see what c ^ttddea^- 5 -Anothera^ii'who western part *of' ! ithl'^^"ha^ l^.^samp idea as early *s t Wagner, "suihe didEnpt attempt to linake.%i|lle#^^»'^l ohai^{otniakmg:afoutune.^ f^jj_ -;.;!'.,; ***** {. ^;H* * -' -. Oae to&t~£r'ti»de£ I>'aEla.*trlMt Provision Store, 63 SENECA ST., GENEVA, N. Y .HASXIirS & FARES" Won d resnectfullv announce that they have jn> retnraed-fToni New York with their pur- . chases -of a new and complete i ' stock of FRESH GROCERIES. We are now open and ready for eiill from friendf We shall aim to keep a fall snpply of TEAS, COFFEES, SUGAB8, SYRUPS, SPIOES, EXTRACTS, CAItNED GOODS. COUNTRY PRODUCE, OURKD HAMS. Ac And in fact every article usually kept In a An- class Grocery House. We particularly take pr'de in our eligible loca- tion, large and airy store, high ceilings, and the convenience of access and for display of goods? We have both served many yfars ' behind the counters of Geneva merchants, and are fully CUL versant with the businew in which we are et. staged. Cur Goods are Fresh, And were selected with great care, the canned goods being tbe productions of this spring and consequently pure and rich in flavor. .We ask a share of patronage. Goods delivered to any oart of the village free of c artage, UenevaJaly 1st, 1881. HAS KINS &NARE3, 8jnJytf JOHN Q'MAi.LEY Has on hand a fall snpply oi Rochester Vacuum Oil Company's CELEBRATED MACHINE OILS. -r^or Mowers, Reapers -and General Machinery I ALL SIZES OF FRUIT JARS, Mason and Improved Gem, at wholesale and reta Choice Family Groceries & Provisions | Fine Cofiees; Teas & Spices, SKfTNES, LIQUOR, TOBACCO & CIGARS Large Line of Yankee Notions in Stock. : FOREIGN RANK DEAFT3, Rmtroad and Ocean Tickets ' to and from all points* at' 14* Exchange Stroet, .- - - ' Geneva. N . Y 1 ' c . 801tmetf ^irst-01a$^taiindry All Laundry. Work dt>ne tn the bait style and at •lowest-cash, rates; - G. M. RICHARDSON, 58 SENECA %T-$BET, <JEKBr*tA,~ N . Y . mrm STAIKH -h , - mmm^mmmmlismmsmiSf^mimmsmmmsmsmm CO^ -ATSB I ,YARD (formerly rnn? by issed I4t0*my haarte,il an* yard and SoftJ at'the lowest prices.''. Ctrders left at 8, ™ * * ofjlce, SmltifWock, 1 frdtsfej Fj^A^-^lf^fJSiirXC^Lj' . , v ' " ' " iuneSS Ii R PAEJIJ:.. fHTBPa sohatahtty on hamd and for sale i r d - a n d 'Soft- C fl ^ qsmnel <?o»l Cai-rn^* P l a ^ ^ . *Water "jpiWe, Ac I A MERRELL & CO., .««»*•» -- •"• A 1 fJeaUtrJiri)- ] GRAINS, tarC^SM PAIS FOB GJUINS.** '•••}* ,.; .,V" '...-^:'M .'-,.' 49r;Tar& and" Elevator on -Bast Jackson Street . omrieBX, . • i, ; : ,'"'-C r i W Smith'Kock, Lindefi Sftffet; Geni •it .. ii. Jnstreoe«T*d »rjd|for«»Ifr by [ iy - •• .-,• \ • • •_ -.•ry .>>• can be had at --;^_. - ;'^. - Or rTfll be'procure at once by the smbicriber^ »*faH lto» ef-MMSerj iM j. w. sitiiBL'*'c6- . Cloths,Jfcci^'JWiaS 8en«casstt.Vfi8neY»^H', ,Y..: . : J -i.y;v B f?y??,:..- MiJtJUwmti 1 *,. Qmmku 1NSUBANCB A^0) r nBAE' B8TATB ^Agency. Oflice. Smith block. Linden S t °. Aian/ ' .\ • J>. a. ^AckENsiosB, VNoJamr 'MiyjGomgfcws, AT LAW, H Smith's Bir^,{npstairgy Geneva. ;N. Y. lja ^ . , q*fAgRLK»rfl. "SBMP[ 1 P > ATTORNBY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. yfflce.'No.l Smith Block, (up -atil*xB»i '^nlyT» GEJIKVA. N. Y. y$***rrr*'* MASON ft BOSS, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW (oflice over First National Bank,) Geneva. N.Y. tfBANois O. MASON. '' ABTBUB P. Rosa. iiJtebr>- ^_ GEORGE h, BACHMAH, ATTORNEY AND GODNSICLOR.AT LAW. Practices in'aU«porta. (Special attention elves ' to Coliccndiis, Conveyancing, and 'the foreclo, * ur.esi • JaortgageB fo connection with genen , OfflceflMtdobrwestoi Geneva -Nation. 8«in'eca Stfeetl'Seneva'.' h .'IT. • 28noy , ALBKRI, J. ^JtA^XZi k." D rt HOkO^O^THiC' PHYSICIAN .ANB StIRGEOlf Residence land-b'fnc'6 north 'side of Park, 2 floor* east-iter,Upx'.»t - . .. . ; .,. _. DR: lk;B» J0SUI80M* . - i p Y S i e i A N ANa.S"aRG«QSI,&BSEVA,OEFICK oAt N68.-6B and 68 Seneca, Street, up stairs Calls' Niijhl call* 'promptly -'attended; charges reas- aable. calls at same place,. practice, al Bank. HEIiLIB L. SE1THYX. D«, P HYS1GIA.N-. .lOfflce at.Np. ll"f,Malu neva. north of M. E, Chflreh.- Stree, Ge Xljan . o£b. *e. FLOOD, it', D,, PHYSlClAir& •SURGEON, "No.' 39 Geuesee at., Geneva, Ni" Y. Thirdlhorige-above- the Park, on east aide. . , , . , lgmar , ,DR. HEBSERl" JE. EDDY, OFFICE NO. 14, RESIDENCE NO. a, ljaina .' -nrumrit St., Geneva, N.Y. DK. s, 9. covsai, [Successor fo Bfddy * Covert.] OFFloa ANC 'RESIDENCE 139 MAIN STREET Special attention paid to diseases of the eye and ear, tjans- GENEVA. N.T. .,. ' ' " " B. K. B^5fN6LDS, IIKNTIST—No.8 Smith Block, (np Htalrs,)Sene-t .sitreet Geneva. N. Y. I5mn . MITCHELL °h.. P1C0T,' M. D„ r*Hi8IUlAN AND sUKGEUA, 194 SiALN «T., .Geneva, N. Y.; two dqors ucTtb oi Trinity Ohnrci 'isn'- ' MISS CTJIttMlNfi, PROFESSOR OF-MUSIC, (cerHncatedfrorAtte Society of Arts,, London,} gives- leuDna in Piano jmd Harmrjny at ll High Street Address ; ' 2fVbam ' Bo* 69Z. Geneva E.M.. MAYNARD, - fRUSSES, SUPPORT'ERS. ELASTIC HOSIERY. jShoiflder Braces, Suspens'orlest Surgical •Inrtru- inents, &c, &c. Call at Drugstore, 18 Seneca Street or address 8dec B M. MAYNAR®, Geneva, N. Y. "Dealer in. B; AS! COFFEES, SPIGES, SYRUPS; MOLASSES, RAISIN CXJRRANTSJ NUTS, CANDIES AND FRUITS OF ALL KINDS IN THEIR SEASON. . ^ ±5 ,: SiSdi^EOA, .ST., GENEVA fCLlttR- SflEEl, BROOKLYN, 695 aM 1,337 Bnniwir, tit'W Wrf Arenne, K e ? M atiior, Lecturer, Medical Electrician, Patentee and So\e Manufacturer of the Wonderful '«; 99 BEL *T. V; Consultation at the- above d e s i g n a t e d . C h a m b e r s with Mr. WILSON o r h i s qualified male or female Assistants, without charge, from l O A . M . t o 8 P . M . '•"TO THE INVALID PUBLIC—Ho>y to g# w.ell when slelc, and ho* to keep well when once in * health", are questibfis of the utmost Importance." "Millions of dollars have been expended in building colleges in which menraighrbeinstructed in the divine art of healing cut off prematurely,? white pther millions, of sufferers have dragged through an existence of extreme misery, througitti^-bltroderiurgSnd criminal experimenting of these creatures of the schools. and millions of lives have been xtreme Is this condition of things to continufralways ? Medical empirics may answer, Yes; and their unenlightened dupes, the great body of human sufferers, may doubt and despair, but Nature and Applied Science ahswer, No. " Nature, as a Mis- tress r is gentle ami holy ; to Obey is to Live.*" Magnetism., her Prime Minister, -as entered ae field against the .learned quacks, and diseased and suffering mortals now have an opportunity -to receive her gentle ministrations. - By a h ppy inspiration, Mr. WILSON, an accomplished Electrician, and a student who had made . himself thoroughly .familiar with the entiWrange'ofbelts and pads before devised for conveying electri- city, discovered the secret of impatling; Ele,ctro-Ma§rnetism by the most natural, agreeable and effica- cious of methods', and gave thi^ practihal demonstration and application in h.s wonderful invention, the ." WII.SONIA " MAGNETIC CLOTftlN© The best attestation of this fact is the history " WIL- SONIA" has made in Brooklyn, New York and vicinity during the past few months. MR. WILSON is the Friend of the People but the Enemy of all ft Poisonous Drugs. AIM, from all the other varieties of New England Granites, a fnh stock of which we nave constant j on hand, making fine assortment from Which to select. We make a specialty of SbtjLPTURE; Figures ot life slue or half life size in Granite and - bronze, and of lettering in all its forma, raised or sunk. •. STEAM. POLISHING WORKS With the latest improvements. PoBessing th beat of talent, and every mechanical appliance , for (jarrytoK on the bnBme»e,we can offer the beet mriucements to patrons and isatisfaction guaran- teed. . JffiSTIM^LTaiS ITTJBNISBCBll) For any work I» Granite. We are represented in Geneva and vicinity bj W.G.POTTER, ho will-in the future keep a LARGE AND YAK- ED ASSORTMENT of onr work constantly on hand, thus enabling purchasers .to see the work'in- tead of ordering from "drummers," in which they are so often deceived. Any orders entrusted to; Mr. Potter for onr execution will receive onr V\ rly and careful attention. W .H. MlTCHELl,. GBO. H. MlTOHEtL. rdryt) •-•'* rJ IT HAS BEpifFOR A LONG TIME a recognized fact that if yon wanted " c 4 GOOD L£MP QBIMNEY k. 1TBB PIECE 0V ! FRENCH CHINAj' Or a first rate quality of IvS I'K'^i 4C 99 N. B.^f you suffer from any form, of disease you have yourself or your.doctors .to blame: for 5 roof of -which send for pamphlet containing'thousands of testimonials obtained in Brooklyn and New ork, amongst the people with whom I am dding m;- good work, and not like the venders of quack nostrums, who send you to the ends of the earth for references. Wear the "WILSONIA* TAKE MEDICINE AND DIE. ' MAGNETIC CLOTHING, and live healthful lives, and when yoa die , let your death be'natural, not by drugging DRUGS: -A NEW- STOCK OF DRUGS -AMD- Medicine^, —AT- tfo 18 Seneca St.* Geneva. imnr?w'?efefii a M ^ * ? I ' %t^fi*r3&"ws'8mi "Meafctodsi-' of |the' >>• S - - Iiighe8Korder;of J eaiceaendy.i. v - 1 .. , The .yery. heajt u for inevHctad -iBrirpdsfts ibeimarWti^ojaft&tb, ' BStxhemicsk.eaeential.oils, etc.. especlally|df bed for the description; j^eparfemenfe L..U Si.5 1 have placed'the entire manageraent of the store ta&n^aaarMorVi' - ~ ^ ' - - - .».- i'' •' i wBIcTifa a'*n«JeIerititi&anty that"' H will' econ^ HafiSa&tv '••'• ' " ' ' :•" •>• ' '' 5 ' FtKST'CllASS D^TO. ; STOR^ ' in eviBr>respec4 For. Brashes, .<a6w). JLuminous a-Ca.teliSa.teiS, Odoir Oases. &c. and see, ^whstt' 6 !., you purchase or not. No trouble to show these goodfc W H O ! I S ONACQUAI "" El^^MIWC..THtS 'WrAP.; THAT THE Earthern Ware, Yon could find them at IBLIPFs uiiOCKERY sTouB' •ti.^ENEOA ST .... '„-E-£.v^ i. nti ar pi i,. s t ua+ are ®"As Low as the Low Inferior F'T specialties mere ere fine ^ICKL- i.ATdD. GRAXirB IRON TEA POTb '- that are beautiful and cheap. HRE CLEVELAND LAMP, ' One of the novelties that is bound to supercede - everything in market. Kipp's Crockery Store has alwaya been head- qrar tera for every article-In the honse-keeping •* line, and its present manager will aim to have in ' stock every.article that may be called for, -which ' will be affarded al low prices. iSinnetf N. Y. C. _ c ( '.' Cash Highest Price PAID BOB . S OLD IKON. Get Price Before Selling Steam Engines ^Bailers of all kinds and fizet on hand or nude to orde / H]BI>^LIKS ofaDkiiidaoflron Work AontproinRtlyAt } t - r $2 T O $ 6 P E R D A Y . IRON KETTLES From. One and one-half Barrels to Three Barrels Ji 4dectf W. B. PUNNESi. atdSdcmfry;! treflCtedSHee^eganVStote" i " ". ". Si -i iTSO. U are nowpreriar«4,to furnlah tie puWltiw la^Wa^care^y^a^cSSdittcklt NEW AND FRESH Drugs & *, uut Glaw.Bptaee, %. J - " ' t* Lr % JMUOM 7 ) ^Atkuuon'a, and Gdeting'» Ee*i j.t Aunat-in^Bulkr * - •1 ! -*li-*>9*' «>• x Jhwhrshteajare -all **e4»>o* ; . . OarPrtgrarMon "\^d t. Mi is In f-Mted* jBftjatGfO^,,c«JH«LL,*li perfiateH atja. rSftUe drupst, *ad|o«iV»^oml-rriV 4 WrrS^«_ ^ . W l n a t r a a o a t aafWartoty auuuMr. 'l)esMotues(tAemDitalo£|OT^.SUuirt s A^ifc at^i,hqur*oftheday - - -- jticViuid iMrdca:^ TVBII ArarTeSe*»<OT'fltorr«»» '3Kand|lefM Ir»nJBrW«»fpanMJe, ville,(ilkalc^sa i PeljUi,.Mon.r«e^i34»e*Jtoli • Molnes.toDidten>la«nyi"W&"*rsetw™W-_.» '., &H^^ftTfrr^Wrru*OT;-*rlo*>SipWtff ", r*wefi^«i^*&^3^^i^--i»i.»,«- trac"k"^ia"iwiai , rt^^Ji*' i , a tVbatf^n. pr»kse j .•&SBMfflm~~ our magplneei.i J'hrougli BxpfemJSMm^^aS meal, as eoort as is Served in any first-cti ippr¥dii^»g'"are"fact ppii! prefHsp^arntesapi "wm eiftrre.' '1t2u'lss*iEwj.? y ™ " ^ r j S o ^ ' ' ^ ' ^ » r o W a t o a M e «>p!B»-lio«tdfo(ftpri-.»ta*»»l^ ' Jtans»s-Ci, iSecti^us.bej n,con- „-., .JBJ v.ii ia ••• connections of ' IN mmtofl&wmt rnwijrOT-aiw'A'i ^gp^^i^t^L^.^M.S^and-ft, ,mn t -@^ i ?il J t*}*W5 1 l^J*«^^Hr^I?^*fr'^«^.L _«* nt ««.» w * ivBIeK owns, ana;or«ratfi>» th.!fiomft line , Atto8*T^* wtthilJ, Cenurl-B. . ; _ . The Soho ol Book Dsed in the School! can he fonid at SMITH'S BOOKSTOEE *rS'- W. A. MEBRICK, has removed 1> n EXCELSIOR FLOUB. FKBD A.VBMEATSTORRto ^^ - Str*<>t, an4 hopes by .close attention to the wants of his patron-* and fair dealing to retain ail his otfakd gain some new ones, W. A. HBRRICK. Annary 4th, 1883—ly ' W .K. BENNETT, Washrngtcn Street, Genera, Few jork. # Practical ttachlnts^ EISIGKEE AND MODEL BUILDW, TLHAL MACB3NSRT R«PAIBl5I>. ^^m^mm^M :iacR.B. aiPNeb.*- -«en of the bowel*. ntol*^Tfy^ea-«*oir--** Infactaa3dnd*V ^" JOBBING BONlrf SATISFACTOBILT ifc . - F.rHorTeErMiiier Prrp^redby •r*i Accordimrtp theiteaehlEga of Ttte M|j»b»rEBe*|«. ••> BR- HfIi»WpB»MWTBOtBH*. .K="*«SL For^olie^Sooriar, "pi.*--,^.- ,^Nawli@B^*^-i%.'"X \ mm mj%& •^ c. ssm •ffi£!&&-"^ #'*£££&• '?&* "mmm* . j&j&i»i -I i>m

Transcript of mmm* - NYS Historic Papersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031163/1882-01-11/ed-1/seq-1.pdf ·...

iGREDnoBS. rder <Sf &e Surrogate of the. >, notice is hereby g*y?n.™ «a hjS against Francis Light- **« 5f -Sene<», Ontario qonnty, ~~f •eased-, to present the same, •< e«i3fj to the undersigr' ~" dwelling hffliseijB the before the atfth day of ^ '

FRANK M- DOB&f._ Administrator^,,.

tate of New Y/ortej by" th and Independent, neva, N. Y./Catteltte Rati-liaHitchcoek.Grand Rapid*3i R.' Gray". Geneva.' '». ¥;' ra, N. Y.; William H. Gray, \ 0. Chesehoro,24 West 12tb y- Caroline Barnes, Cleve-i. Gray, M«rrillf Wisconsin, Chicago, Illinois), who ftffl

s, nest of bin. legatees, or ate of Joshua Gray. late ol

ontaiio County, deceased, j , are hereby cited person >--fore our Surrogate Of oar t tie Surrogate'a office in the ud county of Ontario, on the . D. lb&J, at lu o'clock in

1 mere to atterd to tneflnai of the accounts of Charles J.

the last will and ttBtament

fieri of. we have can«ed the. inr said Surrogate to be here-

Babcock, Surrogate of saic idais.ua, the 7th day of Nov Ear of our Lord one thousand tdeighu-ooe. f h. e. BABCOCK. j . y . Surrogate.

9nOv6iV-t'ounty of Yites —Henry > rl. again.-t . Lury A. Grav, ijiia Hitchcock and LewR husband ; Lyman R. Upay, Biam H. Gray and Caroline

d defendants: You arp here-i\Ver the complaint in this a copy of your answer on

;> wHhm twenty days after summons, exclusive of the to case of your failure to gmeiit will i)e tiken against the redef demanded m the sired in tne connty of Yates. >f Koveinher, 1881. IA"*, Plaintiff's Attorney, We Adorns, Geneva, N. Y. cock, William U. Gray and ;he foiegoing -umoi ma id fublkj'.lou pur-uant to *n « C. Dwigtit, Ju.-tice of tne ed tne L9 h day of Novem-vlth the complaint in this )! the cicrK 9f Yates couji-•i.

1881. JOHN K. BEAN, 'a attorney, Geneva, N. Y.

THE . TAIK OE -NEW race ui uod injjj and mde-

"i, Jes.'e Newell, Jonathan lor, Betsey Pa.ruer, Lewellyn •u, Wilson ?idw ill, Lucreun

hell, Jtt.-,n Ntwi.Il, Enos T. Mil.imuii, CttieD ililliinan,

Maria biuomm^dale, John y. LiarraoD Bickley, James . M. i ormick, W illiam W.

VUcox, Adeline Farnham, - T U»rj')W, Isiac barrow, • phine K..binsou, Mary E. -.JW, Kerhando Darrow, Dan-!> 'tier Uurrow, Ueorge V\, v :n Invt-r. I)avid Windovtr, Uu^trun,;, Ophelia Harris, Kii.-ts, Lhristuina Watson,

.•i Cwlweli, Louiaa Mdllimaii, Alice Mhlitnan, and Victoria

i*v aLd next to kin of >ta,lljuu

w:i of i eneva, m Ontario L " » J . <>reeting. i are. hereby cited and re-

•e and appear i.efore our t.-y ul Ontario at hta Lffice in < .mny on uie 4th day of Feb-\ mk m lb. afternoon of that •c'.f and probate of tne last ii r-a.ii .jtreused, wuich relates |oi.ai..-i..tc„iiu ^ presented for " • :au 11 .iluiiuiau, a legatee Ler.oifa Ljt, Ahe:eot We have ransed the A our a a i d b u i . o - a t e to be u. ]•. buDcmb, Surrogate of said anda.uua, i h e Tta dav of U e -irtr ot our L ro on,, thousand ^Ld t - .^htj-une.

t- i'. b.iu(.l'CK, surrogate.

o_n(EDrrt>Ks7~ order of e Surr.it-ateor ihe ?.',^": '"' '" t-*'r'''> iitven to 'aim- <iriiuM^.,.„Uei K. Will

"' '•<-n>-xj, 'int.ri., Omntv. .'";*•',' " Pr>-'-u'tti? same

• tier, .-r, t„ the iin.Krvigned tie ..rujr -ore r,f (;e.,ree H ; ju„ : [ i ; : , r j ' N - Y j u ° ;

- d . ivM. ' • K d K l i E H . MYERji J A N ' . WILSON-,

Admmisua:drs, 4e.

0_CREDITORS. "" .order iiii.ie by the Hon. Wil-itario County is,fgti ^ l h r l»»l, notice ishirH.,Birtu . mtely doini; business m the tano.onnty,Nj;t., u.auhev ea: their vouchers therefor Tf-Znl-4?"lVii *»***• • iJili»ri"-Kla(r i. rthebene-at I.W pta..e of tr.„*?g2t genera street, u, Geneva, i f istday... \ u , , : ^, a,ij|.-

' ' t O K . , K U \ <f£V:i

8tn'."'n.i 'S,.",f;.'(,'.e;

IOPLFR I38BED 1841

See

•^T'* NEW SOUK. tr stronger, ^ j ^ n a y other a m d l

' -ure the best r 3

*« ore for ^easossa ator rh^« BDcy. and* ««"* t;.m "a 'eqirenc, -abnte , ag f'ftnemor?'

8*' Uaei- Jr^-J^-VW?'

^ $ « < w"tct we • •&;

»*s

^^"^t.-jr A M E S M A L E T T E

T E B M S :

t)n* year's subscription, in advance

ADVERTISING R A T E S . "One inch or lees, inlengtn of colnm-,'3 weeqaaij One Week... . . „ . . . . . » . . „ . . , . , . .'^lOoJ Two Weefas. » . . . . . 155 ThreeWeefe"* ^. 2 » FonrWeeks. „ . . . . 880 "BraMoaae. . »^ »*- ^ « . * < » ^«rj»MthB-. . .: , .: {R8fJ Six MonthB..... SCO T^eJre-Meattat i .;

E U_ POEEOLOSDEE-T, Ontario County, Samttel )avid Wetdmau and others : L inent ot toreclot-ure and sale i action at a Bpecial term Of i-.d at the coai t house, in the la .N. Y., on the 14th day of

ae Uou. Jaines L. An rle, day tntere.1 in tne Olerk's

aty, t, the undersigned, Btierlff sell at public auction, at the

le town and village ol Geneva, k.„ on the ;ilsl day of IJecem-:& in the iorenoon, tljfe mort-le said judgment diri&ted to therein de:-ciibed as follows, ir parcel ol laud bitaaxe In tho utariu county, JiuW York.oa street in i-aljd village, bein^

fty-eight in Coil's meadow in d. village, as allotted by David d on ttje west by Elmstreet, on lbtr nfty-uine, on the south by en, and on the east by a line nth and south hues straight rtr. ot it ui!-tant just oue hun-est line of the west sldewalK being ufty-seveu feet in Iront le same property conveyed by to the parue.-, of the nist part

a)tb day of December, I860, 10 county Clerk's office, on

rary,l-.|jl,iu label Viiol Deeds, H81. —7t. i. bACON, Sheriff. B. SMITH, Depu-.y sheriff. ntiff in fercon, Geneva, N. Y >i? THE si'ATE OF NEW ry F. Ko»e. U. .Norton Rose, dward L. Kose, John Kose, arah H. Wtbtams, Arthur F.

, liugn L,. Kose, Charles .1. ill, tleiiry K. siU, John C.

~ Nicuon.-.. Jane K. Ciaggett, i, Oswald J. C. Rose, Robert \. ltose, Frederuk 1>. Kose, athanue N. Al. Hose, John tuzLiusrb How, Arthur Urant i Koce, beiug tbe hetrs-at-law Henry Hose, late of the town • «mnty of Y tes deceased : C. Si.l and arluur P. Rose,

I certain insti uuienls puiport-aud tesiament aud couicila

Henry Rose, deceased. Lave i rogate's Court ot the county r lied pen:ion placing tor the l-ilrumente wnich said lnstru-

the 4Lli djy of November, .-.ugust, ls74. and the siKth day lapec.i.e.y and rtlate to real Now, ttierelore, you and each

} Hied and cited'to be and ap— ; iiefore tne said surrogate, at

ui and tor the said County .cay ot February uex'., at lu >uii'ol that day, to attend the

*aid instrument purporting ud testament; ana lha- if any :reoied be under the age of .v are riqukedto appearand lardiau Lo oe apnoiuied, or in L4iect or lai.ure to do so A

be api-oinied oy thesur3-1 act lor tucm in thepioceed-'i hereof. We have caused the in..- aaid surrogate to be here* am d. Briggs, Surrogate of LU- village ot Fean Van, the mbjr, l is . . LLlAM Al. JOHNSON, V ot Ibe SUir~ga le ' s Court.

I ifcpai

T W O WOMEN.

A granclma sits in her-gteakarm- chatr: Balmy sweet is the soft fepit&g-alri:

Through %e latfeed, Ulac-siadowed pane"

Ana she catches the gleam ot a woman's dress, As it flutters about in the wilftd's oaress.

" That chilrfis glad as the day Is long— Her loverls coming, her life's a song i"

Up from tbe orchard's flowery bloom Moats fragrance to the darkening room

Where grandma dreams ail a> tender grace And a softer light steals Into her face.

And once again she is young and fair, And twimng-roses felled nxrJi.

Once again, blithe as the lark above, . She is only a girl, and a girl in love!

The years drop from her their weary pain; She is clasped in her lover's arms again I • '

Tthe | i se faint giimmersof daylight die; Stars tremble out iifete^purpW sky; *» •>

Ere Dora flits up the garden path, Sadly afraid of grandma's w*ath.

With rose-red cheeks and flying hair 8he nestles down by the old-arm chair..

" Grandma, Dick says, may we—may I—" The faltering voice grows strangely shy;

But grandma presses the little hand: "Yes, my dearie, I understand!

" He^may have you, darling I". Not all in vain ^o^andma«drqam she was young again!

She gently twists a ehinlng curl; "Ah, me 1 the philosophy of a girl I

"Take the world's treasure—its noblest, best>-And love will outweigh all the rest!" J •

Ana.thrpugh the casement the naoonligtitcold Streams on two heads—one gray, one gold; - •

—Washington Post. *

/ I

m£l>

H-Vs§2!f

THE WIDOW'S PLOTS. '.. It was in the town of Cork that M>. O'Daly

kept his "Commercial School for. Lads.''? That was how the sign reacts aaid tQ_thj3 s e a ^ of learning little Robin Redburn was one day bronght by his anxious mother. .

'•' The child hasn't been away frdm- bbnle before," she said, "and I suppose you'll find-him troublesome. He don't like being parted from his brother, but I think I shall send Richard to Mr. McGregor's classical acaderay."

Mr. 0*baly and Mr. McGregor'.i«p,t the rival schools of the day in Cork. Mr. O'Daly's was the largest, but Mr. McGreg­or's was the most exclusive. '

Mr. O'Daly gave his boys one through session from nine to three. Mr. McGregor gave his a recess at twelve o'clock, from which they returned at two and staid until. five."

Mathematics were thorough at.'- Mr. O'Daly's. Latin was the chief thing a t Mr.

icGregor's. \ The doctor's boys and the lawyer's sons ent to McGregors, but O'Daly had the eat manufacturer's children. Ainorrgst these little Robin Redburn,' very

Bhy and very unhappy, took °his seat. He wanted to go home to his mother—to see his brother, to be petted and comforted. But he hid his woes and did very well for a day or two, although herconld. not manage histefems except in solitary ~ (Kmnriement, to which Mr. O'Daly consigned him, not as a pT/niahment .hnt for tho sake-, of necessary quiet.

O n e - d a y the Widow -Mclionghlra; -who lived next the school-house, complained to Mr" O'Daly that young Redburn had climb­ed up in her plum trog. gnd,, stolen ,-her , , plums. Mr. O'Daly hated •' Eobin . up *, and * ordered hirn_.io hold orxt^nsfriglitihandL.-^

"What for, Mr. O'Daly?" roared Robin, overcome by the frightful injustice of this proceeding, for never in his life had he been moreZobedienfc and well-behaved. .." What for, Mr.OTDaly? iThaven't done anything. All the boys know I haven't dpne anything."

"Ye haven't done anything, eh?" said Mr. O'l&alyj sarcastically. "You're a fine boy, a n f t y e , and a modil to your mates? But

• it's-only.jnat- to thim I should' tell them . -what.I'm flogging'ye for.. More, betoken ye

ate ivory; one of old Widdy McLoughlin's. plujms-. .off. her tree, 'which was. thriving. Off"wi£h your jacket.

VOhVtMr. O'Daly, how could I get ont?" criMjJb^r'Robin. " The door was locked."

yThat ye'll explain to me," said Mr.-O'tJ.aly,, Melding his lash unmercifully. " A dacent'woman is Mrs. McLoughlin"—whack —^a&irlshe makes an honest penny by her plttrM^—whack.—"A hapojth a piece she .gets ior them "—whaek—"and there's forty haporths* in your stomach. "—whack—" in­stead^'of in her pocket "^whack-i—"aao she'll give me no peace until it's, paid"— •whack, whack, whack. "There, I've done with ye... f n t on your jacket j niver stale, again.'While ye live."

Poor Robin, more dead than alive, rushed to his>seat- and hid his face in ' his arms. MeJMiwhile, Master Spratt, t i e oldest boy j a ^ school, arose in his desk and' signified his^

I desiie to speak. "WeH, Spratt, what is i t?" asked Mr.

dys I" School ojienerl nexty.d«y .-M^osuat The

f a c t i o i L S M ^ M h w k ^ i f t e t * y g l i t drirm. iah by-the ^ay. Mr. O^Otlj had a n e w cane, niesly wax^d, upon his desk. Redburn was there also^ and a solemn ceremony took place. Mi>f O'Daly called. Hie boy to the

^ put (Jpe of those small' chunky bibles which prevail uj schools uponJt, bid. tbabqy lay. hfe hanA u g o r / i t I n d % f c 4 S ^ m , oafh id tellithe trutib, and then ^nestionea h i m :

?'•'Where^nsrere yot^ bid, yisterday from twrtve to tr o ?"

" In thai classasom,1^ replied little ReoFi

.. " W f i e n ^ f e a ^ o t f i c h ^ T # a i » s 4 ^ y ' B - ^ * P tree, thin ?'* asked Mr. O'Daly.

"IfineTc^feclimbed the plum treej" said poor little Redburn.

| -Never? Yjm'rB OT pfttfalM- roared the pedSgogue^ - i . (, _ I

But Redfifirn repeated: 'JHever!1? .. ' . . . , ' .

Spratt, Dijnsten, aU the other boys, were put on oath. Five of them swore to seeing Redbnrn in the fcree.^ * a great nttebertto thei*

- f a c t a a t Spratt never n t f K t h e 1 dkss-rboin door. Sprajt swore that Redburn did not comeoutoftfheTrooiri by -that''door. And» after the examination Redburn was consign-

before, i -At two o'clock, however, something hap­

pened. -\' ' ,. [ t

The widofe appeared at the,, door, and re­quested- to^speak to Mr. O-'Daly. Mr. O'Daly wentgont to her at once. He shut the<dooi*^ an^"loeketl at her.

" Well, w<>|aar4'iJie said, "what is it ye're after? Do ?ye want more money or yer pound of fle« > ?", - ,

Mrs. McLf ughfiri had- never read'Shakes­peare. . ' '

" I niver aU«3 no one for mate,' or "any­thing but msqnst jews*" she said, " bnt if ye want to catch Mrl Whal's-his-name in my trees;' now's ^ionr time. He's" at" the gteen apples^, •$ '

"He's locked fast, woman," said poor O'Daly. "Here 's the kay." .

But he followed her, and there, in the tree, h e saw tbe bine! jaeke^ and brass but­tons, the white collar and the yellow curly head of hair %at belonged - to Robin Bed-burn. ;

Scarcely believing his eyes, he lifted np . his voice and rolled aloud:. "Redburn I"

"Yes, sir," "aid.theboyiroitt; the:trae. "Come dov^ >,",said Mr. O'Daly. • " Come

down this mir. jte/" The boy obeyed. * " m flog , y o u , you rascal," said Mr.

O'Daly. •••! • "Then jny :'»ther will 'flog yon,"- replied

Master Bedb^in. "Oh, the ii jpudenoe" of the craytherl"

cried O'Daly, sowing' the boy by the collar and pushmg'hlpr. before him. " I'll flog ye WJBIL but first^fcare'lFbe a=oonfessloa before :

your mates," a£d info ' ttie'tschooEroom he pushed Master^Bedburn, awakening a tu­mult in the school, for a boy who could ear cape through a window of % that size, set

•abdut with'spiked, was a 'wonderful fellow indeed, and evfejy eye had been .upon .the door. ' i

lO'Daly. " There's but the one door to the room

edBurn was locked in," said Spratt, ""and tier© was no other way of getting out; the

ado^H® too- high and too small "'for anyr ng but a cat, and there's spikes on i t

fait a minntjg master, I sat J>y the -idoor, i t b m y legs across it; fror&-tye ;minufeyou ^nt Redburn in, until the minute you took.

. out, doing that problem I failed in." tTtfj&the'widdy and l^e boys have* Been ' a r c r t t - ^ Waii''a^mmuTe. Dunstan,

? bo»Ba here4"

\l

whom, and Spratt ther^ was a sort of feud, as"ffiey were the leaders of gtrftfe u y to the-qesk. -

" '?KSW&B yott tokt" me the w e-lith," said Mr. O'Daly. "N Ividerioe."

t 'WelLIshonldnH PO'Dtdy-" said Dunstan. but y o u wouldn't believe

bt^tbliflieti-uth. Bedbi lor an hour and a half, form-iky the window

.Ksher,^ P o p e iuius and threw them

bete are five of u s ; *"wh*o slowly-repeated

i p n m never left rid I saw him conn jjilQudmoBt of t

5'Daly listened in lave flogged the

;conklriotbe,qn}t»fO-|njuft ! ,j ehed the door of the clkss-room and

inj ts jnarketB,andlessc loth i i ig /«^n* chfldren. ^tt^i^onfrfterwalr^^cou^ '^

'le, in their best-aarapw^nd rOautifhta. i n town to attend the bulT-igfit, *Jaiid sitting about on-the stone benches of

ifiTOnny. tittle plaza,jja motionless content. .y-'contrauous procession of sandal-shod feet touffied along the sidlelralkv-under theta-ches of Qi&poHiiks i gayljy a^ess^^orsemeM,in ^raided leather jacfeelte arid tight trowsewregs fclazing with' buttons, paced their barefooted ponies through the -streets, often with a friend accommtidaied, behind. We sat in the keep stone jwmdpw^seat of the hotel, looking $ut on iHe''bright yet strangely listless throng, and partook of fees handed in at the window by a street' vender, who,- having Served us, passed on-down the ^street, Jrail-fcg behind him the diminuendo repetitions of his long, musical cry " IftSg-tie/" .

The rehnrmng stagb fromMJreliaJliaaf'nOt irrived; there .were., bad,. very, bad roads ihead, and no rarthet' effcSM" wSs*"iriade to hroceed that-day* *<1j inot t o ^ y f ' f b - m o r -fow," is" a Merifcan proverb. Possibly the driver did hot' care fiS turn (Ids. back on a >ull-fight. A prajeMoTbi ot toreros, in their jrilliant costufSes; "upliftihg a huge garland

i >f banderillas and accompanied by a band, jaraded.; the streets. Wd could Bee the fig. n^s^distinctly f but we heard the -music— h e thrilling dance music of the country. As

;m invitation to the fora j , nothing could iave been better. It did not perceptibly

Stir therfoungers on the stone benches ; they wer i already convinced; but I," who* abhor­red the thing, and wpuld not go in the capi­tal, fell suddenly under thy spell of the senseless, intoxicating music, and begged

X to take me-.tb the'jbhl&figh't with the rest of the town ! It seemed all the town did not go, for^we were obliged,, an reach­ing the entrance, to press through a crowd (that " smelled to heaven ") 6f humble Ma-ravatians, who remaiited out because of their Extreme poverty, not from any lack of taste for tHe popular amusement.* We mounted a perilous wooden ladder to the scaffolding surrounding the arena. The entire struc­ture had been reared without aid of nails or saw; the timbers showed the shaping blows of the a x ; and were lashed together with

It may hot have been

Bevel that sickness arffl death* mr-Tamid' the beautiful hammocks that border the great riverf ready.to seke-jrppn every : victim-that dares invade- fba£ lc^ely^doihani- ~ - ' " ' "*•

It is generally reported that all groves north of Palatka were totally destroyed by frQM-Tast'Wm\erorHvereJmkteriaHy injured; In.reply I would, say that upoq .these^groves to-day there is maturing an abundant crop of frtrit. "there w&i nd g ^ r ^ k n f e K ^ 4 S ?

. per i ee% *~ composed, - Maiter^ ^ stoo^A>lfore^3in<a\esK, m.n U'ifftly.^actuiuiy almost, "afraid '<rf uhim,-' holding*- his-" N o w spake the truth," he said. "Were you up the"=phnn tree in the widdy's garden yesterday?*" t

••"Yes, Ijyaa,** rer^Ked^Bedbpin.. , . . " D S V o u ' a t ^ the plumbs ?" "Every one .<5f them," said Redburn. *' I

ean pay for the^i, I've plenty of pocket mon­ey. Here, how|-jnuch is i tr f -andheJlunged his-hands into l^s pockets.

" That's not fte question now, though'it's forty half-penc« *' said Mr. 'O-'Daly. Tell-ns h o w you gotouj fef Bchool.n

" By- the dooi * replied the boy. " D i d S p r a t t U e t y o u out,?" asked Mr*

O'Daly. _ i '• . ' ' ' .' A• r. ' :.; " I d p n ? t k n o i j w h o i

burn. "SehqOT was o'clook." * ^

" School is n | | e r out until five, said Mfc-O'Daly. p -

"You'd better'askJfr, : Mfi^isgof, repKed Redburn. ,, » ^ -. .« «•-•>, . ; , • . « §

ropes of maguey. particularly safe, but was quite in keeping with the-performSAice we- had come to see, which resembled the scenes in a Roman arena as. this rude amphitheater did the Col­osseum. The city authorities sat in the place <j>f the Cassars; from the stall befow, the band played the national airs, to accompany a dance of clowns, which wag interrupted by (iries of " Toro! tora /" from the specta­tors. In the great blme arc. of sky above the densely packed seats, the buzzards mounted, wheeled, and sank. One_ , mountain-peak looked, down at us dispassionately from a long way off. It was a very vulgar horror. Of all the figures' im: the arena, the bull seemed by f a r t h e noblest. In the'pauses Of his charges', {he faced his throng Of perse­cutors with a.large-eyed bewilderment, paw-mg-the'dust and taking, quick'-breaths of' ex­citement The space was too small for any— tiling but butchery; there was little - stall shown jn defense by the men—not even very fine horsemanship. *lfhe sriritless,'blindfold' ed horses* were -watitioaly Bacxifitjed-^absos! -£

Jutely thrust upon the bull's horns. In less ji$an ten mhlutee'dne>was wounded t o death. .[A put his h^d"Tjef6reA my "eyes^ and, indeed, I could not have looked, for I was seized with an uncontrollable fit of nervous crying. 'No neifveg, flot trained tyi for gen-erations, could have stood it,—the cries, the music, the peril,—for, wretched burlesque as it'wdsl the simple faot of «deathf was^be-fore out-eyes.' We went outf igno'miniorisiy,

'With all the dark-eyed- wonfen around look­ing at. us a with fixed curiosity.—Gent/wry

j£- . "*^».* iJ?** ^^aL«-"-~ . . .

p u t , | saia Be4-iPwas two

Gregory InJirtoBtlirMkerl Ml. bit of a S c p t ^ J i m ^ ^ h ^ t . i n e . o - j i |sohpol? Robin Redburm -ihe impudence -in ye1 and the badneee in' %e. .passed" me .anderstand.-ing.'" " • ' . . ' . ] ". -

"My name;&n Eobin- -i<?s Ejchardi'" re-, plied the'boy|•> '•= ', t . r . . . >

'' GpdifprgiRftiya ft^gftsped "Mr* -O'Daly. "MT-0'Da|jr; '*;^ i lpirat^ xismg, ' " i f 1

may speak, tiatattn'iBedbrimTafc alL" -

"It's S a t a ^ ^ ^ . i ^ ^ h e ^ . n ^ Si t" . O'Daly. . - - rr . . . . . . . . " M a y ! h a v e . t j t e kejr^^askedSp.ra*^.

'" Whafs the good of *kays when; lads .can get out by kayholes ?—Yis,'' «aid Mr. •

. ^ -. ^>^a^ I - - - . - .1 - / •

But Spratt took the key, unlocked the dport and from the daas'xoour walked Robin Redburn. „ The-school uttered a universal howl, and some^ of ha mQs^. superMtio|is^eirLw|thQut ^ e k p 4 ^ . t i 4 % ^ < y t r | r * S a e d Ih'ellJ^atfqju

"Twin brothers, Mr. O'Daly, he said. Tve" heard Redburn say( he b ad r,pne .at_ Mc

Dunstan, another larg§ boy, b * * # « ^ : ^ ^ s ^ K o i t r f ^ i o i w ! - i f c -nome it' noon, ou know."

k "through the window, "fie called to him and turned his poc le ts in-neither fruit nor stonj9*'were there.

.arfatea»B.*w \«r* V + * boys being questioned, swore

•that Spratt had never left the door. ^ielassrat the window swore to-, seeing

was, asked to point out- the, ! on B^ed^nrn^bae*.' ' •'

ducks,

Richard Trere, as everybody »f twin-brothers, •i, everybody in-them and been,

suatgifii^Bftjin the

pays," the nurse Richai-drw^re a

their father than he knowing- thim AatlitreA whin i

degrj: ^however whether T m aontg

or failing to do

asked, when they were ten years old.

•aid toher hutband. noble «xpr*ssk)B,

t o n e ; and.Richardis

Bktet&Sm taeB a . . f . - . - . . . ^

tJlEATMENT O P A HOTEL SWINDLER. . ' • - - . — — * - > _ > - . . ' .

I Thereds-a man in New York-whose dinner could not ha*e digestddiveryiwell pV afforded

-him much solid comfort He dined at a ho­tel and took his meal in good style. After laying i n ailitferal supply ofiwfeaBhe! fancied, ajad running up a suibstantial account Ma •check was handed hinil. Instead of paying

dpor in an unconcerned manneif^WithViut be<-stowmg the Customary'attehtion'on t h e offl-c|al"whbiH^'htthe.re«QiptjOfl custom. Had •the greedy and welkfed person, been roind-4 l < o t o fMm? W o ^ f e c & V e V - ^ a r e - ^ t ' on r^mstonfe dutS*,«ltlrki»g in j wait; fprLjnstj such patrons as hims.elf^ his course would

^ v e b e e n d i f f e r e t i t As it waB^his- passage" tp ttie sfiSet. became; %.yei*-{. diffierent affair from what/he »hadi intended it-to,^>e- In-Btisad ofeibeing ffdMwed quietiy-itaichudkle

ii>vdr having swikdlea'the' h6tel' out sof ihe-price: bt rns' 'dafSer Tie 'was. brought jfo ia* "hatt-b y ^ o i i t a e ^ t 6 b t j ' f ^ * ^ ' ' > n 8 ^ }o g ive ah ^account of. hunpejtf,. His stammering apologiesididhim.no good! and- only; seryjed-to stimulate his captor to make a conspicu­ous example o f , h i m , CaUnjg.to. his^aid5

ariother employe of the house i'the detective oaused the wretch to -*' walk Spanish " to the lTO^8jy^at;.^ch^fii] |^lie :*icked a^in' into : tbje stree^ramid.Hae appj^use.pf .the.bysiau,d-ers, who by this time were informed as .to " vhyand whereforie of the transaction,

demoralized manner the detected'and " dMer-iou,t?i&nd#oJaltfie Spave-slunk away with a view of reach­

i n g a place where the gaae of ,his /el |owgnen wpul^jno|bfllso/co^pi^ously,"darectep ?t hnn. . I t would have been quite as legal to h ive had this fellow arrested, and convicted of! swindling the'hotel, but the moral effect

telline m o p l ^ o r e l . ^ t h u s l j o p s t i n g - r h w i n t o , t h e - s ^ t was~fgr ^^rrf'•^fe*•aK)ugb*-fmbre impressive*on t&e bystanders than a.

year's imprisonment hot jail would have been.

: ?; r £ .•"'•!if a ; 'O .•*. •-Arl A B S E N T - M I N D E D HORSE THIEF.

Henry McEarian4t ),f been krfged nxthe

r ^ ^ h t l a r y &d%*to eervfe * *lrm o l ' f ive years for horse Stealing. McFarland is a prominent" citizen of D^rs^SJikmnJ^, and

a o p H p ^ o ' effect I t i s «-«d

««nt-nima*a&esB£*na i n &ty& m-Sb&kg* rpie-off r*Wm^fc$0^g$&& *&* info another xounty ,\axu£ o f f a n i ^ h i m ^ o r

sale, " |a |4 - , . ! ' i #f^rSw ^ P f f l ^ i ^ ^ ^ ' W ^ f r

t'S

animal was » c o v e r e ^ T ^ r ~ M p r l a n d e ^ ^ - ^ H h - ^ W u l r a b o T ^ r i ^ ^ l ^

idei§4£fc OfThOji'yin i Mme to thrcjr stones W e . g t i n i * a ^ n , . 4 n d fa a tin can last Monday morning

I" <iitti'i*d W h lti(if

t M p w l e d . H * ore* « e x i

yotr,lo' B^conunoxt e y « cafld not see this great

•arietyof charms, and; mi«W|Ws^w'e» eon-rtJBt^rbdng.raadeif&%^&^..^

Really tari^**»*HW«^ «>P^-

gings, which were the ehief oprisideratkrnB

T 4 » " B o o k o» « • * TKoJaua*-—David

iwb^,wi&i»amis*bff* * r * « * Urn of tbe o r f c W manuscript of the "Book

JeMph ttaMH iMtt W t t U

phtee o r JSepttmiam*. I t I i , w n d « t o i ) d '-*; * | ^ t t e J f r " b ^ y ^ K t i # * e i * t y:$K'M3fi4&i&'

to feori Churclul l •«MMtt^S9'^•%&*&%;•, . .ir-jsta-tiSiij-^afc Fm0S&^^^^m^aii^ W - the' (Ireresoor =#01 -*ex*»a *«MO«tfT«

•'"si*-^" . . . . • - ^

$:}?>

"<Sa* p^Boeinan seeing a micse iBind 1wt*3f«*rJg««ator

Secfidn receives less injury "from 'fro&s than *i^tf6riB**rarffier"soiffi: atSRragh' ' tnis ' la i t wmterwasagamstuB. But 1870, 1871, -187V 1876, a n ^ | 8 7 g jvorkMmofeid&nage'tp. us mi ihange , "viuusia, Marion, and Sumpter bounties than Jpor^jthfe eastern fshore of the St. John's, north of Palatka.

Now, as regards the much-talked-of "frostl ine," i t at once strike's Hfteiligent men as a myth. If it were possible to per­manently; establish a "zero- Jine" then a "'frost line " would: follow as a matter of Course. The "zero l ine" varies with the yearg from Mississippi to Ohio.' So "Florida's "frost l ine" wanders u p and down the latd-tudes frbm Oarnaveral on the south to the Garolinas On the north. Hence the ; absurd­ity of "talking of a "frost line "r being geo-grapically fixed. After seven "years' of con­stant residence immediately on the banks pf the St. John's River, I can pronounce it as healthy as any other section of the state. Neither myself nor any member of m y family has had chills, fever,- or malarial or bilious fevers and with, any exercise of discretion in choosing location and common sense in fol­lowing the laws of health; I feel safe jm-say­ing good health may be enjoyed-upon the banks of the St. John's Riyer. With pa­tience, capital, and much labor any one who will can have a beautiful as well as a profi-able home in all of the orange growing sec­tions of Florida^and, as remarked above, with proper exercise of judgment, there is no state healthier than Plorida, and no sec­tion of Florida is healthier than the St. John's River country. Nor is there more inducement, naturally, offered to embark in the business of orange growing than upon this river.

Nervous and Female Bjsea»o» a specialty D&fa.

? ebar"rwit*ai-£uaM«>i.:i~ . . ..atflaS;®.-'

TKi»BsaXTKAe*aB-WITaBD^'FAt*«Ltt D» W>F^35diri«on'B:tbi^rodncir^^;'L«ciJ^iJH,! Also^OAa.mminiit<ged a»n»iUk.• Tltxzpartite-

Io&dltt'

NEW GEOGEEY - A N I

CHANGES IN NEW YORK SINGE 1 8 3 9 .

Wshen I was a boy, writes the New York correspondent of the TJtica Herald I often passed an hour ih attending the police returns, and when I now occasionally look in upon such scenes, the-idea painfully occurs how muoh misery this spot has witnessed during the interval Well, as for misery; New York is full of it, and the larger the city grows'the greater the concentration of crime and mis­fortune. - Looking back on the past, it seems strange1 to think that we should then call New York large when it was so emalk at least wtien'TSoiffDarea' wjth itfrp'resenf di&ensionfl:' Union square was'tben (1839) just laid out, bpt now i f is'the centre of fadbiPnkbler trade. At that time many considered New York a finished city. "There Was indeed but little prospeet-of increase, since the panic of 1836 had prostrated every interest "Op-town lots were utterly misjdable,arid Several large es­tates which have since become worth mil­lions were then hardly receiving enough rent to paytaxes . 1 xemeniberrf hat store* in Wall street, also a tailor shop, a tobacco­nist, and a <%ir,cb-_;,Wall street wasj then^a very smatt M&fcw&&<A f i M te Ip.'&ent1

' i m ^ n t e , i n r t h l f i n a ^ d a T c i S t o ' r n o w 'ret quires twenty acres. At that very time, how--ever, a far-sighted journalist described the future, and placed his prophetic .vision, on record. That man was the senior "BenrjCft, and in a copy of the Herald, issued in 1839,

'-the prediction appeared that in a1 few years all below Canal street would be occupied by tne jobbing trade; and also thakUhion square

'would be the centre of the city. Bennett lived toseeMifs words fulfilled. He also saw a corresponding ohange in his own fortunes. Ajfctj^.iim^his.pa'per-.wasstruggluig ' for ia mere existence, but he lived to see i t occupy abuading^oriB'a^mfiHon.'

1 PAlJVCE|ANP|j5LEEPlNG^CAR3. -; „ •

The New York correspondent of the Ufaca. Herald'-writes: *Ae'Wa'^* ; . iSleeping Car Company is also extending its operations, anjlappears,to,hav^ a-jgpod Tmderstaaduig jnth Jayljlould. i t s cars" are now running on' the Wabash route, and it will soon. have. the fcon Mountain Road, ita sleeping and palace cars now number nearly 2,000, and'it" is gradoalty crowding ihe Polmari concern

Sthe track* Ha"-nng-the Gotad vJattonage, also that of Yanderbilt, i i certainly has a

wide -range--of • Operation. 'The- business is' conducted wflih great precision.. Each con*

jjuctor is required to send in a daily report, and also one ;at £he end of-the- Jiionth,-.jand • every^ofetailfis under" close attenfionl The '

-demand for such accommodations is con­stantly on the..increase,' ahdi'fw-lhe ^country, gets ridher the^caveling 'pubEe-' & ready 'to* apind mere for comfort and elegance.i. Web-_ | t ^ W^gn^/fettrjjwenr ttrk " m | M ^ ^ U | .

i have made hnn i l e i a of w'aahingj3whioh|

-- -sat oui cenfrS, qanioir2^ in ^0)treaty isaAiaemaO.

aW S u m m e d ' . b y ' ^ ^ e p t ^ ! jimmensersyitem/has^gro:wn|i

•hicli. o e c u r r e d . t H ^ E r f l ^ ! early oonnectiornwith the Gi ^ ^ reatfer; you see what c ^t tddea^- 5 -Anothera^i i 'who western part *of'!ithl'^^"ha^ l^.^samp idea as early *s tWagner, "suihe didEnpt attempt

to l i n a k e . % i | l l e # ^ ^ » ' ^ l ohai^{otniakmg:afoutune.^ f^jj_ - ; . ; ! ' . , ;

***** {. ;H* * -'

-. Oae to&t~£r'ti»de£

I>'aEla.*trlMt

Provision Store, 63 SENECA ST., GENEVA, N. Y

.HASXIirS & FARES" Won d resnectfullv announce that they have jn>

retnraed-fToni New York with their pur- . chases -of a new and complete

i ' stock of

FRESH GROCERIES.

We are now open and ready for eiill from friendf We shall aim to keep a fall snpply of

TEAS, COFFEES, SUGAB8, SYRUPS,

SPIOES, EXTRACTS, CAItNED GOODS.

COUNTRY PRODUCE, OURKD HAMS. Ac

And in fact every article usually kept In a An-class Grocery House.

We particularly take pr'de in our eligible loca­tion, large and airy store, high ceilings, and the convenience of access and for display of goods? We have both served many yfars ' behind the counters of Geneva merchants, and are fully CUL versant with the businew in which we are et. staged.

C u r Goods a r e F r e s h ,

And were selected with great care, the canned goods being tbe productions of this spring and consequently pure and rich in flavor.

.We ask a share of patronage. Goods delivered to any oart of the village free of c artage,

UenevaJaly 1st, 1881. HAS KINS &NARE3,

8jnJytf

JOHN Q'MAi.LEY Has on hand a fall snpply oi Rochester Vacuum

Oil Company's

CELEBRATED MACHINE OILS.

-r or Mowers, Reapers -and General Machinery I

ALL SIZES OF F R U I T JARS,

Mason and Improved Gem, at wholesale and reta Choice Family

Groceries & Provisions | Fine Cofiees; Teas & Spices,

SKfTNES, LIQUOR, TOBACCO & CIGARS

Large Line of Yankee Notions in Stock.

: FOREIGN RANK DEAFT3,

Rmtroad and Ocean Tickets ' to and from all points* at'

14* Exchange Stroet, .- - - ' Geneva. N. Y 1 ' c . 801tmetf

^irst-01a$^taiindry All Laundry. Work dt>ne tn the bait style

and at •lowest-cash, rates; -

G. M. RICHARDSON, 58 SENECA %T-$BET, <JEKBr*tA,~ N. Y . m r m STAIKH • -h , -mmm^mmmmlismmsmiSf^mimmsmmmsmsmm

C O ^ -ATSB

I ,YARD (formerly rnn? by issed I4t0*my haarte,il an*

yard and SoftJ at'the lowest prices.''. Ctrders left at 8, ™ * *

ofjlce, SmltifWock,1

frdtsfej Fj^A^-^lf^fJSiirXC^Lj' .

, v' " ' " iuneSS

Ii

R PAEJIJ:.. fHTBPa sohatahtty on hamd and for sale

i r d - a n d 'Soft- C f l ^ q s m n e l <?o»l

Cai-rn^* P l a ^ ^ . *Water "jpiWe, A c

I A MERRELL & CO., . « « » * • » - - — •"•

A 1 fJeaUtrJiri)- ]

GRAINS, tarC^SM PAIS FOB GJUINS.**

' • • • } * , . ; .,V" '...-^:'M .'-,.' 49r;Tar& and" Elevator on -Bast Jackson Street

. omrieBX, . • i, ; : , ' " ' - C r i W

Smith'Kock, Lindefi Sftffet; Geni •it

.. ii.

Jnstreoe«T*d »rjd|for«»Ifr by [iy - •• .-,• \ • • •_

-.•ry .>>• can be had at --;^_. - ; ' ^ . -

Or rTfll be'procure at once by the smbicriber^

• »*faH lto» ef-MMSerj

iM

j . w . s i t i iBL'*'c6-

. Cloths,Jfcci^'JWiaS 8en«casstt.Vfi8neY»^H', ,Y..: .: •J-i.y;vBf?y??,:..- MiJtJUwmti1*,.

Qmmku 1NSUBANCB A^0)rnBAE' B8TATB ^Agency. Oflice. Smith block. Linden S t °. Aian/

' .\ • J>. a. AckENsiosB, VNoJamr 'MiyjGomgfcws, AT LAW, H

Smith's Bir^,{npstairgy Geneva. ;N. Y. lja ^ . , q*fAgRLK»rfl. "SBMP[1P>

ATTORNBY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW. yfflce.'No.l Smith Block, (up -atil*xB»i

' nlyT» GEJIKVA. N. Y.

y$***rrr*'*

MASON ft BOSS, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW

(oflice over First National Bank,) Geneva. N.Y. tfBANois O. MASON. ' ' ABTBUB P. Rosa. iiJtebr>- ^_

GEORGE h, BACHMAH, ATTORNEY AND GODNSICLOR.AT LAW.

Practices in'aU«porta. (Special attention elves ' to Coliccndiis, Conveyancing, and 'the foreclo,

* ur.esi • JaortgageB fo connection with genen , OfflceflMtdobrwestoi Geneva -Nation. 8«in'eca Stfeetl'Seneva'.' h .'IT. • 28noy

, ALBKRI, J. ^JtA^XZi k." D r t HOkO^O^THiC' PHYSICIAN .ANB StIRGEOlf

Residence land-b'fnc'6 north 'side of Park, 2 floor* east-iter,Upx'.»t -. .. . ; .,. _.

DR: lk;B» J0SUI80M* . -ipYSieiAN ANa.S"aRG«QSI,&BSEVA,OEFICK oAt N68.-6B and 68 Seneca, Street, up stairs Calls'

Niijhl call* 'promptly -'attended; charges reas-aable. calls at same place,.

practice, al Bank.

HEIiLIB L . SE1THYX. D«,

PHYS1GIA.N-. .lOfflce at.Np. ll"f,Malu neva. north of M. E, Chflreh.-

Stree, Ge Xljan

. o£b. *e. FLOOD, it', D,, PHYSlClAir& •SURGEON, "No.' 39 Geuesee at.,

Geneva, Ni" Y. • Thirdlhorige-above- the Park, on east aide. . , , . , lgmar

, ,DR. HEBSERl" JE. EDDY, OFFICE NO. 14, RESIDENCE NO. a,

ljaina . ' -nrumrit St., Geneva, N.Y.

DK. s, 9. covsai, [Successor fo Bfddy * Covert.]

OFFloa ANC 'RESIDENCE 139 MAIN STREET Special attention paid to diseases of the eye and ear, tjans- GENEVA. N.T.

.,. ' ' " " B. K. B^5fN6LDS, IIKNTIST—No.8 Smith Block, (np Htalrs,)Sene-t .sitreet Geneva. N. Y. I5mn

. MITCHELL °h.. P1C0T,' M. D„ r*Hi8IUlAN AND sUKGEUA, 194 SiALN «T., .Geneva, N. Y.; two dqors ucTtb oi Trinity Ohnrci 'isn'- '

MISS CTJIttMlNfi, PROFESSOR OF-MUSIC, (cerHncatedfrorAtte

Society of Arts,, London,} gives- leuDna in Piano jmd Harmrjny at l l High Street Address ; ' 2fVbam ' Bo* 69Z. Geneva

E.M.. MAYNARD, -fRUSSES, SUPPORT'ERS. ELASTIC HOSIERY.

jShoiflder Braces, Suspens'orlest Surgical •Inrtru-inents, &c , &c. Call at Drugstore, 18 Seneca Street or address 8dec B M. MAYNAR®, Geneva, N. Y.

"Dealer in. B; AS! COFFEES, SPIGES, SYRUPS; MOLASSES, RAISIN

C X J R R A N T S J NUTS, CANDIES AND FRUITS OF

ALL KINDS IN THEIR SEASON. . ^

±5 , : SiSdi^EOA, .ST., G E N E V A

fCLlttR- SflEEl, BROOKLYN,

695 aM 1,337 Bnniwir, tit'W Wrf Arenne, K e ? M

a t i i o r , L e c t u r e r , M e d i c a l E l e c t r i c i a n ,

P a t e n t e e a n d So \e Manufacturer

o f t h e W o n d e r f u l

' « ; 99 B E L *T.V;

C o n s u l t a t i o n a t t h e - a b o v e d e s i g n a t e d . C h a m b e r s w i t h M r .

W I L S O N o r h i s q u a l i f i e d m a l e o r f e m a l e A s s i s t a n t s ,

w i t h o u t c h a r g e , f r o m l O A . M . t o 8 P . M .

'•"TO THE INVALID PUBLIC—Ho>y to g# w.ell when slelc, and ho* to keep well when once in * health", are questibfis of the utmost Importance." "Millions of dollars have been expended in building

colleges in which men raighrbe instructed in the divine art of healing cut off prematurely,? white pther millions, of sufferers have dragged through an existence of extreme misery, througi tti^-bltroderiurg Snd criminal experimenting of these creatures of the schools.

and millions of lives have been xtreme Is this

condition of things to continufralways ? Medical empirics may answer, Yes; and their unenlightened dupes, the great body of human

sufferers, may doubt and despair, but Nature and Applied Science ahswer, No. " Nature, as a Mis­tress r is gentle ami holy ; to Obey is to Live.*" Magnetism., her Prime Minister, -as entered ae field against the .learned quacks , and diseased and suffering mortals now have an opportunity -to receive her gentle ministrations. -

By a h ppy inspiration, Mr. WILSON, an accomplished Electrician, and a student who had made . himself thoroughly .familiar with the entiWrange'ofbelts and pads before devised for conveying electri­city, discovered the secret of impatling; Ele,ctro-Ma§rnetism by the most natural, agreeable and effica­cious of methods', and gave thi practihal demonstration and application in h.s wonderful invention, the ." WII.SONIA " MAGNETIC CLOTftlN© The best attestation of this fact is the history " WIL-SONIA" has made in Brooklyn, New York and vicinity during the past few months.

M R . W I L S O N is t h e F r i e n d o f t h e P e o p l e but t h e E n e m y o f all ft

P o i s o n o u s D r u g s .

AIM, from all the other varieties of New England Granites, a f nh stock of which we nave constant j on hand, making • fine assortment from Which to select. We make a specialty of

SbtjLPTURE; Figures ot life slue or half life size in Granite and -

bronze, and of lettering in all its • forma, raised or sunk. •.

STEAM. POLISHING WORKS

With the latest improvements. PoBessing th beat of talent, and every mechanical appliance

, for (jarrytoK on the bnBme»e,we can offer the beet mriucements to patrons and isatisfaction guaran­teed. .

J f f i S T I M ^ L T a i S I T T J B N I S B C B l l )

For any work I» Granite. We are represented in Geneva and vicinity b j

W.G.POTTER,

ho will-in the future keep a LARGE AND YAK-ED ASSORTMENT of onr work constantly on hand, thus enabling purchasers .to see the work'in-tead of ordering from "drummers," in which they are so often deceived. Any orders entrusted t o ; Mr. Potter for onr execution will receive onr V\ rly and careful attention.

W . H . MlTCHELl,. GBO. H . MlTOHEtL. rdryt)

•-•'* r J

• IT H A S B E p i f F O R A LONG TIME

a recognized fact that if yon wanted " c

4 GOOD L£MP QBIMNEY

k. 1TBB PIECE 0V

! FRENCH CHINAj' Or a first rate quality of

IvS

I'K'^i

4C 99

N. B . ^ f you suffer from any form, of disease you have yourself or your.doctors .to blame: for

5roof of -which send for pamphlet containing'thousands of testimonials obtained in Brooklyn and New ork, amongst the people with whom I am dding m;- good work, and not like the venders of quack

nostrums, who send you to the ends of the earth for references.

Wear the "WILSONIA*

TAKE MEDICINE AND DIE. ' MAGNETIC CLOTHING, and live healthful lives, and when yoa die , let your death be'natural, not by drugging

DRUGS:

-A NEW-

STOCK OF DRUGS - A M D - •

Medicine^, — A T -

tfo 18 Seneca St.* Geneva.

imnr?w'?efefii a M ^ * ? I ' %t^fi*r3&"ws'8mi "Meafctodsi-' of |the' >>• S - - Iiighe8Korder;ofJeaiceaendy.i. v -1 .. , The .yery. heajt u

for inevHctad -iBrirpdsfts ibeimarWti^ojaft&tb, ' BStxhemicsk.eaeential.oils, etc.. especlally|df

bed for the

description; j^eparfemenfe

L..U S i .5

1 have placed'the entire manageraent of the store ta&n^aaarMorVi' - ~ ' - - -

.».- i ' ' • • ' i

wBIcTifa a'*n«JeIerititi&anty that"' H will' econ^ HafiSa&tv '••'• ' " ' ' :•" •>• ' ''5 '

FtKST'CllASS D^TO.;STOR^

' in eviBr>respec4

For. Brashes, .<a6w).

J L u m i n o u s a - C a . t e l i S a . t e i S , O d o i r O a s e s . & c .

and see, ^whstt'6!., you purchase or not. No trouble to show these goodfc

WHO!IS ONACQUAI " " El^^MIWC..THtS 'WrAP.; THAT THE

E a r t h e r n W a r e , Yon could find them at

IBLIPFs uiiOCKERY s T o u B '

•ti.^ENEOA ST . . . . '„-E-£.v^ i .

nti ar pi i,. s t ua+ are

®"As Low as the Low Inferior

F'T specialties mere ere fine

^ICKL- i.ATdD. GRAXirB IRON TEA POTb '-

that are beautiful and cheap.

HRE CLEVELAND LAMP, ' One of the novelties that is bound to supercede -

everything in market.

Kipp's Crockery Store has alwaya been head-qrar tera for every article-In the honse-keeping •* line, and its present manager will aim to have in ' stock every.article that may be called for, -which ' will be affarded al low prices. • iSinnetf

N. Y . C. _

c

( '.' Cash Highest Price

PAID BOB . S

OLD IKON.

Get P r i ce Before Se l l ing •

Steam Engines ^Bailers of all kinds and fizet on hand or nude to orde /

H ] B I > ^ L I K S ofaDkiiidaoflron Work AontproinRtlyAt }

t - r

$ 2 T O $ 6 P E R D A Y .

IRON KETTLES From. One and one-half Barrels to Three Barrels •

Ji

4dectf W. B . P U N N E S i .

atdSdcmfry;! treflCtedSHee^eganVStote"

i " ". " . S i -i iTSO. U

are nowpreriar«4,to furnlah t ie puWltiw la^Wa^care^y^a^cSSdi t t ck l t

NEW AND FRESH

Drugs & *, uut Glaw.Bptaee, %.

J - " ' t* Lr %

JMUOM7) ^Atkuuon'a, and Gdeting'» Ee*i j . t Aunat-in^Bulkr * -

•1 ! -*li-*>9*' «>•

x Jhwhrshteajare -all

**e4»>o*; . .

OarPrtgrarMon "\^d t. Mi is In f-Mted* jBftjatGfO^,,c«JH«LL,*li perfiateH atja. rSftUe drupst , *ad|o«iV»^oml-rriV4WrrS^«_ ^

. W l n a t r a a o a t aafWartoty auuuMr.

'l)esMotues(tAemDitalo£|OT^.SUuirtsA^ifc at^i,hqur*oftheday - - --jticViuid iMrdca: TVBII ArarTeSe*»<OT'fltorr«»» '3Kand|lefM Ir»nJBrW«»fpanMJe,

ville,(ilkalc^saiPeljUi,.Mon.r«e^i34»e*Jtoli

• Molnes.toDidten>la«nyi"W&"*rsetw™W-_.» '., &H^^ftTfrr^Wrru*OT;-*rlo*>SipWtff

", r*wefi^«i^*&^3^^i^-- i»i .»,«-

trac"k"^ia"iwiai,rt^^Ji*'i

, a tVbatf^n. pr»kse j

.•&SBMfflm~~ our magplneei.i J'hrougli BxpfemJSMm^^aS meal, as eoort as is Served in any first-cti ippr¥dii^»g'"are"fact

ppii! prefHsp^arntesapi

"wm

eiftrre.' '1t2u'lss*iEwj.?

y™"^r jSo^ ' ' ^ '^» roWatoaMe «>p!B»-lio«tdfo(ftpri-.»ta*»»l^ '

Jtans»s-Ci, iSecti^us.bej

n,con-„-., .JBJ v.ii i a ••• connections of ' I N mmtofl&wmt

rnwijrOT-aiw'A'i

^ g p ^ ^ i ^ t ^ L ^ . ^ M . S ^ a n d - f t ,

,mnt - @ ^ i?ilJt*}*W51 l^J*«^^Hr^I?^*fr'^«^.L _ « * n t ««.» w * ivBIeK owns, ana;or«ratfi>» th.!fiomft line , At to 8*T^* wtthilJ, Cenurl-B. . ; _ .

The Soho o l B o o k Dsed in the School! can he fonid at

SMITH'S BOOKSTOEE

*rS'-

W. A. MEBRICK, has removed 1> n EXCELSIOR FLOUB. FKBD

A.VBMEATSTORRto ^ ^ - S t r * < > t ,

an4 hopes by .close attention to the wants of his patron-* and fair dealing to retain ail his otfakd gain some new ones, W. A. HBRRICK.

Annary 4th, 1883—ly '

W .K. BENNETT,

Washrngtcn Street, Genera, Few jork.

# Practical ttachlnts^ EISIGKEE AND MODEL BUILDW,

TLHAL MACB3NSRT R«PAIBl5I>.

^^m^mm^M :iacR.B. aiPNeb.*-

-«en of the bowel*. ntol*^Tfy^ea-«*oir--**

Infactaa3dnd*V ^"

JOBBING B O N l r f S A T I S F A C T O B I L T ifc

. - F.rHorTeErMiiier Prrp^redby

•r*i

Accordimrtp theiteaehlEga of Ttte M|j»b»rEBe*|«.

••> BR- HfI i»WpB»MWTBOtBH*. .K="*«SL

For^olie^Sooriar, "pi.*--,^.-

,^Nawli@B^*^-i%.'"X \

mm mj%& • ^ c . •

ssm •ffi£!&&-"^ #'*£££&•

'?&* "mmm*

. j&j&i»i -I

i>m