1
THE PLATT8-HTRGH REPUBLICAN, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 14. 1888. DUFFY'S PURE ; MALT WHBKEY 1s\£&t >. tli VI, .*r,t T'I r i W 1 V r r «"4 : •.I. i % i«.- a, 11 »".>.••! i. B""KS, I. 1. • iK-. - I', il •» I I'lTTtR, In JINK lb«nK«, J 4-- r.<«>Ks, I.tiilbu I .ii-VIKO BooKB, I\.'IE B'>'"K?, KEI EirT BOOKS, IIKAFTS. TKAIIM? P A . B E A:ST> LINKS, INKS OF AIX KINDS, ASTTHINB AHD EVERYTHING r'UP.TAISITfG TO A F irst-Cus* Buok & Stationery Store At P^ab^isberB* at'd Manufacturers' Priw*. TO Tvlargaret Street, v. -,n--" r T'»K :sr.T. A PRtfcSE I N V E S T M E N T . Tortilita Gold and Silver Alining Company. ,TOS. H. RE ALL, Pit-fcirtnut. Capital Stock, $1,000,000. In 500 000 Shares of $2 each, Kiserf on Twelve Mlnrs. a Mill, Two Mill SHet. liiitl Mil fillure deveUipmeuW arid add.tinn*. Z>". '."> shares f'rpft-rri-d Dividend of 2.1 p e r rri,i [•. r aiini ,«T v.hii-h 50 0'i0 onlj are lor ........ ,...r..f $-. B Y P R I V A T E SFBSCBIPTION. Rf>r:,lt' ir ev mu 1— main 1<> Kxpress, 1. .I'.. i.'!ii.-h.. r P.--t . finf tiroer. M JOS- H RtALL, ;?wi r .' Hr-f1\ctv New V..rl{. r 4> t iii. j.r<-'•» ?l . I', "••'u, Mass. w. e. POPE, M. D., Eeesc-ville. IT. Y". TftEATS ALL Rectal Diseases WITH THE BRINKERHOFF SYSTEM! Piles, Ulcerations of the Rectum, Fissure, Fistula, Puritis, or Itching Piles, ('fia>ultntion free. i-.i i- n i. !e. N. 1 d f,.r Circular. Grand Trunk Eailw'y OF CANADA. urn- ~&.4h$je of oars between PLatU- i.urjru and Chicago, via Montreal. *•'.<> -"r.nrtest. Direct asd Cheapest !•.••' I." I " Detroit and Chicago, A.*:JO ALi, f OINTS ^vSfcT. Fiiii^s'&N CARS or-f x>A"sr A N D S£«jiT £2?a£SS TXAIBTS. PK'-V M.MJiCAL T.. CHIIAOO YnTHOT/T . HAMJE. Lwve K o ! i t r 4 a I . Q o i n E Ws«t •• V\ r x r U i ' . H S o . 2 , a t 8 55 A.M. I)2ilj, « V . .-1 - ! • • I . i j M«HI KXfKii^ SiO. 4 , a t S 25 P.M. ". t > * .1. '*-> ll..-.'.it-l. [.(KltKO svelte-*-*. No. 6. at 11:50 I'.Jtt. !• . > >• J; .4? Mrfl'lr.l * . -~ - i I...11 is n..t..le with Delaware & j; - |. c v. i (. •> s ir.i.r.s vi.t Montreal. . . » :.- ,r,ii L j Klo.Ui'.iirj'h, Ma RouseB t' ,,i :»'.'. ; ' ... i.i , ui.il T ". p. ni.,niaKe close . ,.-••• vt; l. l>At ,-.;,l M'jUT fcXPRtSS tr ii' • .e.i. •'••¥ K I'.UI-H; i * ~ rf.i.i,- ve i.— i r ; ihri<>.|/ti Eruni Platts- t* i r^ti. ;*'• 1 ii-i t au'ijrirt t'.i «. .i^c*i;u ituusf ex- it ,'.:. till I.. --,' t i \ D-Ti. itsri yr tss -liK^ra -'.Arrlert on I .-- Itaiit. ,' r f^.-u.-r p j . r t i c u l . r s <tj 1-1} to GE<i; B. ! • - . tTi.i 'u.^H^^l.^er Vgerjt. iitr.ieiisuary. >". ^'. ti h>•••:., iTrn'l SUn«i'.;, il...itire;tl, *" -'. ' :.• • it •,.•!,era. i'a-st-tiner A|.rirrit,Moii- t • f ..: •r r >*u .1 e ,i ; '.1-rr.iilerl L o c a l A g e n t : «. D. (rUBTIS, Agent, U. £ H. C.CO., /' L A T Tz£ CK U H, Jf. T. CtKTfiiL VLRMONT E. E u. i L. CI'iUMDX. O N ANI> A n t E Ut"l. 30Lh, 188T, ana mtll runber notice, ir*tii» will leave Rii'^t-S fu.,i I a»f..l,uws: 7 10 V. M«— \IaIL.,urnve:ttCr,ainp:alri7:!9; at itu .-rs.liiti.-iii.i.,7.o3. Aluocrs Forks, 1AV, Ai'"ia. 7 '•">; blleiiDurfc'i. 6:13; Cherntms«> S ;.. .•ii..triu i rj.t . H4*; iLtloue, H:15; N0I« TT .•••!.10 i'; ()icaerjsburp,U:3'i A. M. Connec- •ti i. j-to^iensburt; with GraitdTrunk E'y;at >' iivri,.^ with Si., w.o.K. R , rora.ll poinCB T s o J> TI.-EXPRtSS. arrive CliaiaplalB T . . . .. I M , ,rn r.i[r , fnir..":41; •'t , ->"Ts Porks, :.'^. i.t .T ^. ^ ..-; Iiil^tit>urtrh, «:25: Cherti- • . - i," 4i, i :..*'-.iug;iy, a;0--: Malme, 9.28; .v-irtvujd.l-' li A.M.: o'irtleusburg.lli'iSOl-.M. (JOIMi L-.AST. LEAVE •>-ilH5Nr'rtC'RO S 4-! V. M.-hX.fUI.-.'^.for all stations on <.)-•>. :. '..R. K.arrive Reuses Point 9:4RA.it. K l I C »1 —HAIL, tr.tin ror all stations: on O. &. L. i . It. It.; arrive Kousrs Point 5:50; e ,riiie.-laK.t ttutises I'mnl with D.<& U.C.Co.; Strrit-e i>ut'lliuri,'li T a i t . M . h*!>ress .•.,iiuei-tl...i.s at Ocdeltslinrg Willi O rar,,I Trunk itsilwav , Norwood wltliR..W.A O.K. R„fvrall p.lnt's West. .f. v,. HuBiRT. President. S. W.cr%l.MtNOS. Sra'l Pass'rlwnt. OUT OK XHK OLD 1STO TU JS >'KW. Tli. ——— - v_,' ^y A.K* School or SHorth»ud ud Typ«writl»s i< estfcbli-tiert In H« N e w Bu[ldlcr.COLX,lCGlC PCa.CK< *3 *5 and 87 North Pearl St., the b*»t •tructurei devoted to buslneM ••ducalton In Aincrlei. Bverythlnel»»uperb. Comn*rd»l, Niorthand, rypewrltluK, eractical Bnfllitb, ikurt pD««*lal Ctminanihlp <Sep»rtBkeDt», wivli jijinuastlt' drills, when desired louttnmen j»n<l vroiu-u preparetl lor buslne««. Many a^-isieu to |it.i,itlon». N».w eatalofue and »peelineii» of peiiukaiiKliip rree. AddreM CABS *.LX JC CAKB AMT. A Ibfcny, •. X. Two Houses for Sale. T HE Hos*e,No.«« Oak «Ua«t—with half as acre of ground—» laet Iron! by *•« f«*« de.fi>. »nd -A ( oa<i B»rdeli. Xh« hCIM« l a a •torv and a bair hlghaad nearly ••», with outcalldiBjc*. . AE«o,cb« DCV two sad » fealf ftt4k«y Hick houw. ou Galitfriua IUMI, two 4o«n iMMtk •! ti>« Tocuuu) kwie, IBUIU* > r i a —»rtWra •tyi* and eoHvaniaut t-r<Mgb«wt. Larg* M and jooa loeatiou. Both will be sold at a Bargain. !„«»,• W».mms*r, a* hia Mark* Ma*, ly i w » ^ " ••• *•**"! H*»at. Brick for Sale. •ff.l, SPHINI DEPARTMENT. No. 335S oritsR rjjOBJ,»:>t, By F HWUT, England- BLACK. f « ^%^ 85^35 ?%%%% ^ &4 k&& v-% mm 1 ^4 -^ti# §^#l 4>M s FOR MEDICINAL USE NO FUSEL OiL i . , r \ I , t'i< > n I'r'T.f T'li >c 'r. Ihe .- *." . .1 r? • i ' -PA 1.1 - v: n i ' k n ' ( . l r.-nl<;p; ,. ,'*.; «!'.*••, i';i, » MI the ehPst, -. -K. ...r.i-.VH t.<. f.-t erlsl|.,iaR<, thirk i T ,t ii fv.-r\ 'lie ..f th»se i< asjmp- f, tw ' Hi'rH ..r a i f-.<" .IPIUK III ,rp .-1 ii»l v 'v >• n^umrt I..TI. It is i. ,m ..i- rt»p ii ni Mir last slap**, tett ,v >-•• '"p. Ke.J lC takprt at lUe i si i.it « ,.'.w.us rer.'mmei..1 a pure ai I f r IH< I ' I ' P '"SP r. .thine Bas >.| l> t T v s I'Hre Mall Whtskej. i.rtK-i i t.jxi.-iai.. tler.ry A. Mntt I i » . sa,s" ' Unirj's t'ure Malt ! s f < P fr ..7, ' is 1 .• 1 a 'iillPratlnns ; II; .rtii.R. a. •% the?p <iialille.* (', .t re-.«n.o»en.l »i lnpuMl.-I«r«r." Books and Stationery. A. I. WARREN, | WHOLESALE A>D RKTAXL I BMRsCLLER, STATIONER,! AJ?D NEWSDEALER. I M H...•_._.•§,_. w'w.iTa. White to play and mate In three mOTei. No. 1259. OIIRCKIR POSITION'. By S.T. RKKU.Pittsbnrgh, Pa. BLACK. _ •m ii ii l '"m a@ii©« ; i^ 1 a > . v< '/ i ^ •sm^z & - M ,„, /JtB '""~'S--M ^ « '^^t& a sa®a i 1^ 2o in 11 22 ii 15 ffBiTr . Black, to play and win. SOLUTIONS. Ho. 1257. 14 18 7 3 23 H 19 28 16 19 27 23 A PICTURE. 23 32 3 7 32 27 Drawn. There comes to me amid the toil and fret Of the 1. uj. busy day a picture sweet, TTitliiint ^ hieb life would n^ver be complete. I7n iarki-ncd by the shadow of regret, A 'i.-ar old fashioned fae" that charms me yet, ST.! us l'n.:.i snul unsullied by deceit. ];.'••.. i.rii? happy hours which fled too fleet, f r .v..I. 1 Willi memori-s I would not forget. rncli'- ,,i: p tin miiTT caovas of the past. M> trie »t In -ml, pr.ved by unsehish test; Vi h...se ciiara^t.-r m aoblest mold was cast. WII-KP nn-ni'irr hnlds rav heart while life shall lwt: Heath cl dn.ip.1 Ii- a long ago, as it was best, I\r s < U't. iir^l s.-ul f-'tmd sweetest rest. —f irtrles H .ward Pratt in Boston Transcript. &8$k liORRY'S ADVENTURE "Il.'-l r.irk" ii situated on the bank of the Arka.isas rivpr about two miles from Little Hii.'k. Si'tne years ago there dwelt a family c..iisi---tkigof Ualcom G-rey, his wife and one Si in. 1J years of age, named Robert. They had ODP shxve named Sam. T*or short the biv was called Eobby. One day in August, B. .bby, will., had been to visit his uncle Job Sa.-I:.-tt. starti-d o:i his homeward way. He had to jias-s through a stretch of forest un- bn >k"ii for eiyht milrs. Ho left his uncle's b"Use about 4 o'clock. It was a beautiful aft* rnonn, the rays of the sun had hmted the forest, making tt uncomfortably hot. The boy l.irrr'.-.'.lnd on. whistling a merry tune, anon stopping to try the virtue his new jackknife. given him by his Aunt Poll}-. The paroquets flitted, -through the openings in th" for..st. or rested, a dozen or more at a time, on oome dry limb, projecting from the trunk t.f **>me aged, yoc^au tree, chattering ami twitUTiuj; at Bobby as he halt«l to look up at t hpm far above his head. They did not seem to fi-ar him in the least, but turned tlv'ir littk- heads sideways and looked down- v.ard- with intiuisitive eyes at the boy. as if wo-iik-ruig why he did not proceed on his ji.'.i.i..'\- and leave them to settle down on t':t a jicrch, apparently their resting place f-.r th nijrhr. Li.!,! .\ trud^ed joyously on. after satisfying lus eurn i:-ity. laufrhing gleefulh- to himself, and bidding the paroquets good night, which the hrtle creatures acknowledged by ruffling their pluiuapro and keeping up a ceaseless chattering until distance put an end to the sound and a turn in the cart path hid them from view. The dusky shades of night began to fall and filled the forest with somber shadows. The httle fellow quickened his pace that he m;g!»t be able to get out of the W.KKIS before ni^ht *-t in in earnest. It grew dark very fa>t aielolij. ets could be discerned only alittl.- way in advar.ee. Bobby hurried on, but the aci-umjianimont, tho merry win •tic. had c-a.-J, and he walked silently aLied. ir.-.iuently stopping to listen to some u:iu ual sound reverberating through the forest, a falling limb from some aged tree, perhaps; Bobby's heart quickened its pulses at the sound, and he jumped nervously aside as Siime night bird flew in close proximity to his face »ith w hirring wings. He was not a coward; he had been in the forest before, and hi- had been startled by similar sounds, a n l k*' lid nut apprehend any danger unless byvume wud In-ast lurking around, which was not lik.- ly. he thought, as none had been s.-en in tile forest for a number of days, hav- ing lx---a driven across the river by the hun- ters and their dogs. The owls commenced, to hoot, to-hoo, to^ liool The katydids uttered their mournful lay, Katy did, Katy didn't; and Bobby toiled on, more slowly now, because of the increas- ing darkness. Sullenly there came a sound from the forest in "the direction he had but recently passed over. He stopped irresolute, as if his first thought was to flee: he listened with a fast beating heart. In a moment it eaniG again, seemingly nearer than before, and long drawn out: "Ooh—ou-ooh^ou— ou:"' Bobby did not wait for a repetition of the blood curdling cry, but turned and fled in tho direction of the clearing, -winch was now near .±1 han.I; terror lent strength to liis sturdy- little legs, and he picked hia feet up and put tliem down faster than he ever did playing •I spy" with the boys at "lied Pork." He re:v-hed the edge of the forest in an incredi- bly «hort time, regarding the distance ho had to run—a httle over a mile. He bounded into the clearing, and, after a short run, discov- ered a cabin, which had been formerly occu- pies by tho slaves when engaged in burning the lo,rs of the fallen trees on the cleared land. As he ran quickly toward it, ho was star- tled again by that fearfid cry ''ooh—ou-ou- IKI'.I—' u-ou," resembling ;hc shrill voice cf a frightened child. Bobby had lived too long near the forest to bo mistaken in the terrible cry, and he fled onwards, in mortal terror, to find a place of eatery. Xlashing brs&thJessly up to the ca.bin, through iLe underbrush, he discovered it in a stat<- of decay, the door off its hinges and held, only by the leathern, deer thongs which hail been their former fastenings. Evidently there -was no safety for the boy there, so thought Bobby as he looked in dis- may in tbe darkness around him. Stumbling through the underbrush ho came across a half of a hogshead turned upon its side; it had evi^ dently been used by the former occupants of the cabin to catch rain water. The thought struck him at once that this was Ids only chance of taftty from the pursuing brute, whose howls he now heard in close proximity, npparently at tho edge of tho forest. Grasp- ing the huge tub firmly by its edge he essayed to end it o\ er towards him, but as it had lain a long time exposed to all weathers and soaked by the rainfalls, it had become sodden, and it was only after repeated efforts, tbe howls of tho animal approaching nearer aad nearer all the while, that be could move tbe thing. Terror tent him strength acain, however, and he succeeded in {Hilling it over partially, and squatting himself beneath tin opaoing aa ha held it tipped partly over hefinallylet go with hi* bands aad tbe hogihcod GUM down with a thud; and for the tuna being be-was safely ensconced beneath it; none too aoon, for a« it came dowu eaoompa—ins bun in Egyptian darkneaa, he heard a aeratehktg out- aide bis prison house, then a sniffling round the edge of the upturned mb,aud he knew that bis roe bad tracked, him and scented out hi* hiding place. The Imiteranround and rand the tub in a circle, sniffling and growling, the fetid »ieam from tbe creature's breath entered be- neath the tub where it bad lodged on some small shrubs, and it made Bobby sjek with the stifling stench. Nothing cteassssd, »tow- •ver, at tye stale oi the eiege, Bobby U- thougbt him of his new Jacfckalfe; «r»wiaa; tt forth from his pockM a»Ml opening the baade, he cut the twlgi away that best lus incksjore aad seaaa osjhskss, essi Asa rtatsil store evenly aad asrnsrj the sttr within oaaaad by the *T*^ ornt» thrust In his pa* nncter tt* rim of tbe tab, the brRTP little fellow -uwd his knife with effect. Th" animal finally enlsrgpd U* bole so tha-t it -wcnild admit h& head, and tbe strong odor of his breath filled the inside of Bobby's rrtrnat nod almo< smothered him. He mad" a thrust with his knrfo. but tbe brute .{tuclcly withdrew hi? head, so that the t-k.tr did not t a k e *nTeot* Becoming embold- cno.1, thf trnitp thrust W ImA still funlier in and turned upon his side in bis endeav. -s to wiggle hi.« shoulder in also Bohbj in forfmE orouiid inside tbe tub. had four.-' a stoppi r. or tiung, that protruded through * •» bung b-'Ie. t<» this he now rlnng with 1- h ban.ls »«>t)i all hi« might and forced the edg« if the tub down on th« nrrtc of tho animal, -w-ho snar-li-<i lad pn»sbcd bis ja.-**^ ir, a. -terri- ble manner Seeing that the brute would surflv pffect an entrance if something was n. .t i\< .no quickly, Bobby let go of his hold on the protruding stopper with one hand and with the other he tried to drive the sharp knife blade into the animal s upturned eye. but missed his mark and strtiek his cheek hone With a convulsive struggle, the brute tried to baric out. but the brave boj* aimed a second blow at the shining mark—the brute's eyes shone like two balls of fire in the dark- ness—this time with better success, for the sharp blade penetrated the eye to tho brain. Despite its desperate and dying struggles to escape, Bobby, who had left the knife stick- ing in the wound, held the tub clown with all his remaining strength, and the struggles of the brute grew fainter and fainter, and finally ceased altogether. It was a long time—it seemed an ago to Bobby, before he dared to ease up the strain on tie upturned tub, but his desperate exer- tions began to tell upon him. tmd he finally relinquished his hold upon the stopper nnd fell back completely exhausted and uneon- scious. How long he remained thai he never could tell, but upon returning to conscious- ness he found that the brute was dead. It was only after repeated efforts that ho could raise the tub far enough to allow his exit, but at last he accomplished the difficult feat and he crawled out more dead than alive. It required a deal of rubbing of himself and stamping of his cramped limbs, Wore he could gain locomotion. He was not far from home, and as soon as he could get Us bear- ings, which required another long period ou account of the state he was in. he set out in that direction, stumbling and sometimes fall- ing, he managed to reach home. All the lights were out in the house, his father and mother having retired for the night, think- ing their boy was going to stay another night at his uncle's. Bobby pounded on the door a long time bo- fore he could awaken any one. At last there was a stir within, and a candle was lit. In another moment or two, a voice inside an- swered the summons on the door by inquir- ing: ""U"ho dar?" "Me!" answered Bobby. At the sound of tho voice tho door was quickly unbarred, and Sam's woolly pate ap- peared in the aperture. "Gorra mighty, if it ain't Bobby! whar on de sun hab you cum?" Sam did not finish the sentence. As tbe faint light of the candle fell upon the nearly fainting boy, he quickly drew him inside and called up 5Ir. Grey and wife, who were won- dering who Sam could be conversing with at such a late hour as 1 o'clock in the morning. What a sight met their eyes as they came out of their bedroom into the old kitchen. Bobby, with hands and face scratched and bleeding from their contact with the briars and shrubs, his clothes torn in many places and covered with dirt. It Was some time be^ fora he could gain sufficient composure to give an account of what had befallen him. Bobby was undressed that morning and put to bed, and hot clothes were applied to his aching body, but he did not fall asleep until 3 o'clock, and his mother kept watch by his bedside until he awoke late in tbe day. In the meantime, Mr. Grey, accompanied by Sam, started for the clearing. Arriving there they found things as represented by Bobby, and the animal, a full grown pan- ther, was shouldered by Sam and Mr. Grey and they marched back in triumph. Ho measured fuliy six and a half feet from tip to tip. Bobby was the hero of "Red Fork,'" and for many days the spot was visited by in- quisitive neighbors to see for themselves where the mtrepid youth fought and killed the tawny savage brute.—S. Frank. Blaudiu. in Tankeo Blade. REVIVAL OP SNUFF TAKING. The Story that Conies Across the Atlan- tic^—Practice in Colonial Times. The report comes from Paris that the prac- tice of snutl taking will be resuscitated dur- ing the coming winter by the dandies of the French capital. The young men are hunting up their ancestral snuff boxes and studying old family pictures in order to acquire tho graceful style of taking a pinch practiced by tho old court gallants. Pawnbrokers and dealers in antiquated articles have realized very large sums for snuff boxes that have lain on their shelves for forty or fifty years. Most extravagant prices have been paid for snuff boxes that belonged to mem- bers of the old nobility. Several jewelers are engaged in making snuff boxes of an- tique and original designs. In many club rooms ornamental vases, filled with various kinds of snuff, stand on the tables or man- tels. In colonial times, during the revolutionary war, and for many years afterward, the use of snuff was very common in this country. Kearly every gentleman carried a silver snuil box, which was often inlaid with gold. At the entrance of the senate chamber, in the national Capitol at Washington, are large receptacles for snuff, at which members of that august body once filled their boxes on liaising into their seats in the morning. Many can remember tho time when tho snuff box was passed around in social circles every few minutes, and when it was as common to ask for a pinch of snuff as it now is to ask for a light for a cigar or for a chew of to- bacco. Poor people generally used snuff be- cause it was cheap, or, more properly, be- cause "a little went a good ways." The use of snuff became general in all northern countries, especially in Scotland, Holland, Sweden and Jforway. In Iceland nearly every person used large quantities of snuff, which was kept in an ornamented horn. The practice was, and perhaps is, to insert tbe "little end of the horn" in tho nostril and to thump the large end so as to discharge a portion of the contents. The host often walked among his guests and performed this office as a mark of hospitality. Sometimes servants or members of tho family were in- structed how to handle the snuff horn with grace and dexterity. Before the invention of friction matches considerable difficulty was found in. lighting cigars and pipes, but the snuff box was always ready to bring forth. Forty years ago there was scarcely a grocery in the country that did not keep several kinds of snuff, and the name of one Scotch manu- facturer was known throughout tbe civilised world. The use of snuff has been steadily declining in almost every country in the world during a period of fifty years. Various reasons may be assigned for its gradual disuse. So far as deleterious effects are concerned, snuffing to- bacco is open to the least objection, as the amount of nicotine taken into the system is very smalL This method of using tobacco is also attended by the smallest expensetothe consumer.—Chicago Times. The Banjo's Bmceessw. "Women are -worse than the ancient Atheni- ans in their love for a new thin.. What they love and Swear by one season they wiU aban- don the next, and nothing that is old, from a bonnet to a carpet,todsfa w in their eyes. There is the banjo. Three years ago every other girl in tbe eountay had one strung by a yellow ribbon about her neck and was thrum- ming the strings and singing darky melo- dies with all her might and main. Moat of them never learned to play at all; they took a lesson or two, learned the scales and frag- ments of about three tunes, and then it lan- guished until they would read in the London letters of how Notica Yznaga saved a dull evening and delighted the Prince of Wales by throwing herself into tbe breach with her banjo, and.jbwMthe yoang women took to earnest stndy again; for about three Weeks. ButH has gone to bopstasV Hs^W lss*. be- yond.revivah Itasss?easso;%ainudohn. So wM nepenttss Shi is without one. With Uae or copper colored ribbons, instead of yellow, it » iW&^r&*g"* pearl. She scadies ssswhwasly sssder the tutelage of thensetweqoe, dark eyed Italian, Signer Ricca, sad leers- free* hisa how to Signer Riccsv, rrssri era „—-r-'-«- «*sla *—1 bit of twtefc. shell, with which the etrasf* are .wept To ue thoressjkly good forsa, the young woman snatoal he* to area hsreslf with a vtnacesa, iM»h asaasss sat s«sSSTSs»»nt UMofactated by tbe aimudolhi asafcar ia ordinary to bar Baajssty the eassssi «f Italy, and these tojra cosee s»»J*a, SsSSaS a t tjsW^aanea luxurious oaas eotsis^sswassd SBsvsIrM eVsV e^slsiam es- rs<her lew ewagsm, and STuMi MmmZi* of •*•*"£« snsstoBB-asas* ftassa* ia^V^BB** s*sssssl ihjSJI Aasajfc ^ n 4*£ WHERE SHIPS OLOAft i Bitlieii Cards. A GREAT RESERVOIR FULL OF THE WORLD'S WEALTH. A. 1>«*I> I»t» «K« Mil* mt WarcKomna That IJne (he Water IVont of ItrooV- lTH—Wow th* 9Sonern fm-rrm nf .Ala.ltfla Aw FTrted. The most prominent object that attracts tbe attention of tbe passenger on the Fulton, Wall or South ferry is tlv& jkrag lin<* of -ware- houses that stretches along tbe wat< r front of Brooklyn. Back of these •warebou.^es rises the bluff upon which tbe leaders of Brooklyn society have built their residences, and to which they have given the name of Brooklyn Heights. In the mansions luxury reigns. In the storehouses commerce masses all that it can command to fill the lap of luxury. The piers extend out to the channel, several hun- dred feet in front of the storehouses. These are all of brick, and vary from SOU to 600 feet in depth. They stretch in a practically continnous line, broken only ly the f Try slips, for live miles, beginning with "the Em- pire stores, above the great bridge, and ex- tending beyond tbe Erie basin. Tbe buildings are not absolutely fireproof, but their walls are so thick that a fire cannot spread from one to the other. The ceilings are low and the ground floors nro dark. Iron shutters are the rule. There are 7,000 feet of them altogether. There is an appearance of I great solidity about the buildings. They were ; evidently built to withstand the assaults of time, and to hold secure what is given them to keep. Not a particle of ornamentation is to be discerned from one end of the long line to the other. The object for which these buildings were erected is not display, but se- curity. Here are the riches of the metropo- lis awaiting its order. WHEN THE snirs COMH HOME. When the ships of the merchants come in from foreign shores they unload their freight upon the piers, and it is rolled back into the deep recesses of the cavernous depths of these immense warehouses. If the merchant wants money he takes his warehouse receipts to his bank and puts them up as collateral. If ha wishes to deliver or ship the goods, his re- ceipt commands their production on demand, and they come forth, as the water spouts from the pipe when the faucet is turned, or the light answers to the touch of an ileetric button. Great archways let in the stout Percherons witb^buge drays, which cart away hogsheads and crates, bags and bundles, bales and boxes, in an almost endless procession. As these carry away goods, gangs of longshoremen roll on. the piers other goods that have been hauled up out of the holds of sailing vessels and steamships. From the tops of the slender masts float the flags of nearly all nations, least of all in number being tho Stars and Stripes. The red nag, with cross of St. George, is most numerous. The tri-color is prominent, a s i s also the red, white and black of Germany. Others are the black, yellow and red of Belgium; the red, with white cross, of Denmark; the yellow, with red stripes, of Spain; the blue stripes, with yellow cross and cross in corner, of Sweden; the white, blue and red stripes of Russia; the yellow, red and blue stripes, with seven white stars on the blue, of Venezuela; tbe red, with yel- low cross, of Switzerland; and, most rare of all, the white and blue stripes, with whito and blue cross, of Greece. The private flags of the owners display strange devices, some having tigers, lions, crosses, letters and thf like. The piers present a busy scene. An army of custom house inspectors and weighers in their white caps calmly survey the scene of which they are indisputably- the monarehs. A glance at the labels on their caps enables one to easily distinguish them from tbe la- borers. The latter are stalwart, with brawny arms, broad chests, bronzed faces, and sturdy limbs. As they trundle the boxes, bales and bags down tbe piers they dump them in little spaces chalked out for different owners. Pools of molasses and a carpet of sugar grains waste enough sweetness on the air totoneup the flapjacks and coffee of the whole Sixth ward. rROat STRANGE CLIMES. The weighers' assistants knock off the boxes from great chunks of what looks like sawed oft elephants* legs. It is crude rubber that has just arrived from South America, and has just scraped acquaintance With rep- resentatives of the same kin from Australia, Central America and Africa. The finest comes from Para, in 410-pound boxes. When cut into it looks like canned meat. As bags of coffee by the hundred are rolled down the piers from the ships, other bags of pungent aroma slide down With a loud swish from the upper stories of the warehouses, through along, steeply inclined chute of can- vas. This is so strong and coarse, and tbe de- scent is so sharp, that a laborer who essays an easy passage finds himself in need of a new seat to his trousers at the bottom. The deep keel ships from Calcutta and Ma- nila bring huge quantities of jute butts, bam- boo, hemp and cutchlike tar, used in brew- eries. The Mediterranean line brings fruits and skins, the Jamaica ships bananas, the Rio de Janeiro vessels coffee and rubber, co- coa ahd hides. Odors float about of tama- rinds, cinnamon from tbe East Indies, cloves, allspice, vanilla beans, bananas, oranges, lemons, codfish, guano, figs, raisins, mace, tea, sugar and chocolate. Here is cochineal in ceroons made of skins, also indigo. Hogs- beads of molasses spread over acres, and sugar in mats, boxes and hogsheads fills ware- house after warehouse- Men besmeared with tar stir up with huge paddles great caldrons of boiling pitch. A team of horses jogs lightly along with a load piled to a great height It is cork with the bark on and looks like saw logs. Another truck follows with bales of codfish, and an- other with" hides heavily coated With lime. Over a great pile of rock salt the bowsprit of a ship, rising and falling With tbe billowy tide, swings its flapping sail to and fro like the trunk of an elephant. In the warehouse opposite a black cat meanders over a great pile of sulphur, while a group of 'longshore- men play penny ante on the planks. There is one picture that is very pretty. The importers of oranges and lemons have arranged their fruit for inspection by buyers. The boxes are piled in tiers that rise from tho floor of the Wharf to tbe top of the ware- house. The covers of the boxes are hare been removed and the boxes laid upon thcir sides. The fruit is wrapped in pink, purple, white, red and striped paper. Circles have been cut out from the wrappers, so that seg- ments of the oranges and lemons contribute their bright colors to the great rainbow. It is a sight worth crossing the river to see. A great ship, with bowsprit extending far over tbe wharf, has a sea serpent for a figure- head. Another has a dragon, one a female, another a sailor boy. Here is a general, there a goddess, here a mermaid, there a' seahorse. There is an endless variety of strange devices from strange climes.—New York Sun. California Mummies. There is in Son Francisco a collection of newly found mummies, forming one of the most remarkable discoveries ever made in America, The mummies differ from Egyp- tian ones in that they are generally quite naked, only a few having a loose covering, and they have evidently undergone no pro- cess of embalming. Tbefleshis so thoroughly dried that it rwmiibl— parchment, a a d t h e corpses are very light Tbe mumraiet wen fount by a party of gold seekers in one of the numerous branch— of the Sierra atadre mountains, near the Gila, in Ajiaooa, One day the gold sashrrs discovered a. cave, the entrance to which wis closed with a kind of cement, very hard to break. Forcing an en- trance, the men found tbemaalret in a kind of ante-chamber, thirty feet long, hewed out of the living rock. This led into a large hall, in which were lying a number of dried up corpses. The discoverers at once set to work to transport the'nunimiee to tbe nearest railway station, in spite, of tbe opposition of tbe Apache Indians, who soon heard of tbe discovery and considered tbe remains to be those of their gods. All the mummies were safely removed to Ban Francisco, where they excite great infest in srientuV drdea.— Chicago Herald. Doriiif the raasnrer went, in the year, I noticed that many of the the Jew ejssvter hi On* tad ia ware marked a i t l I-W, REWITT Jt MOBKY, Attoraejs and Counsellor! at KCJE3KVIIXX, X. V. H. S.BKWrrr. X. T.Hawrrx. F.A.MOEBT. D. 8. * FRAXK McMAST£RS, A TT0R5BT8 ANOCyTOSBbhORS AT LAW. Office o*-er Mcliattie's stort, Harg-aret Street, nattsboTgh, !«. Y/. Special attention given to business in Sur- rogate's Court, I). S. MCJU8TERS, VJ. 8. Commtetioaer. TKASK XclASXfcKS, Justice ol tbe Peace. August 11,1*87. WILLIA3I V. 8. WOODWARD, " A TTORSBT ASD COC^SBTXOR AT LAW, •nd United States Commissioner. Otuee 2S"o. 33 M.-*rjf<vret street., (over Levi's cigar s t o r e ) , P U t t s b u r g b , >*, T. JOHN R. COTTRILL. SIALISIK WATCBEf, Jewelry •teif-Tern,, CLOCK a. SilvetWare^e riattiourfti W1IT8LOW C. WATSON, A TTOR^i£S AHD COCX3EI.LOK AX LAW. Special attention giren to business in Surrogate's Court. Office over McUattie's store, lately occu- pied by Corbin * Uobie, Margaret Street, riattstmrgh ,u. T. Hr"*'"^"^ Palmer, Weed, Kellogg * Smith, A ITOBNETSASDCOO-8KI-I.OR8 ATLAW Office. Weed AMooers' Block.Cllntonat riattaburgh.S.T. PeTBB 8.PALMBU. 8. A.KBLLOQO. atHTB If. WBBD. ' WS. EBHBST SMITB . January 1.1SS5. Beckwith, Barnard * Wheeler, A TTOKHETS A COUNSELLORS AT LAW Flatteburgh, Clinton County ,N. Y . Offlce first door east of Trinity Chureh, FLATTSBURGM, NKW YORK. Q.H.BBCBTWITB. H. E.BAmXABD 8.L.WHBBLKB. JAMES TIEKNEY, A TTOBNtY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. and Notary Public,otBce 34 KargaretSt., over Hageity & Piatt's] Plattsburgh,Clin- t o n C o . , N . Y . KOYAX. COKBIN, A TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Plattsburgh, S. Y. Office in the Bailey Block, Bridge street, second floor. HENRY S. JOHNSON, A TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Plattsburgh, N. y. office, Winslow'sBlock: Custom House S quare ,opposlte the rostOfflcc K1L.EY & CONWAY, A TTORNEYS AJ.D COUNSELLORS ATLAW Wiuslow's Block, itriiikerhoU Street T. F. COliWAT. Block, Plattsburgh, N. V. JOH>" B. K1LKY. CLARK A HATHAWAY, TTORSEYSASDCOUS9KLLOESA11AW L Office Clinton Block, Plattsburgh, K. Y Wil 1 attend to Causes i n all the Courts ol the State and United States. Special attention tven to Collections and settlementof Estates n Surrogate's Court, A c , A c . Gso.L. CLARK. F.F.HATHAWAT. WILL L PATTISON, A TTOBNET AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Clinton Block,Plattsburgh,N.T. At West Chazy on Tuesday and Frida of each week. HENRY P. GILLILAND, 2nd. A TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW and Justice of the Peace. Office in Court House Basement,Plattsburgh, X . Y. A. 6. CARVES, PLATISBURQH.S. T. Dr. E. C. I O W , HOltEOFATHIC FHISICIAK FLATTSBUBGH. 5. Y. jg/T^ Office and residence corner of Brinker- hoff and Oak Streets, south of High School Building. DR. FRANK MADDEN, (LATK OF BBOOK.LTN, S . T . ) O FFICE AND RESIDENCE 97>4 Margaret street, 3d honse north of Cornelia street. Office hours, 8 to 10 A. M., 4 to 7 P. *f. G. D. DUNHAM, M. 1). OFFICE: 3* Margaret Street, (over Hagerty A McCaffrey's.) PLATTSBURGH, X. T. Office Honif; 8 w».30 A, M, , l to 3 r. M, and 7 to9r.ii. DR. BROWNE, THE DENTIST. Corner Margaret and Bridge Streeta, PLATTSBCRGH,«N. Y. Dr. J . F . BAILEY, DENTIST, PLATTSBUBOa.S.r. OfficeCastoiu House Square .Low's building w ITHERILL HOUSE, PLATTSBL'RGU.lf. Y. r.T.HOWKtL, .... Proprietor r iist-CUss in all Appointments. Free Ouiuibus to- and from the boats and ears. riUMBKULAND HOUSE, PLATTSBURGH #. F. Having renttca and refurnished the Well known Cumberland House, the proprietors •OMcitfke patronage of their old rrieude and the public generally. Special indueements are offered to Local Custom. Ah L having been added to the dining room,parties who Hay desire- more privacy than is possible at the public table can be aeeomnicdaied, while at the same time avoiding theinconvenlencies arising from a separate dining room. Ladies visiting town unattended, will find this ar. Inngement especially desirable. _ COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS w i l l find at the Cumberland House the best of aeeomsaoda tlons, a LAROE AMD COSVBMIEXT SAMPLE BOOM having been fitted np with anentranea dlreetf rom the street. Carrlageseonvey guests to and from eaeh train free of charge. GEO. S. CORBtJI, Proprietor, A LBION HOUSE, -**- Two doors south of the Witherlll Honse PLATTSBURGH, K, T. O E O E S E T A P P A H Proprietor. This Honse has recently been thoroughly repaired, and refurnished with the most im- proved furniture. It is centrally located and affords all the conveniences o f a first-class Hotel. BOARD BY THE DAY OR WEEK on the most reasonable terms. Goow barbs artel •tabling for horses, fublic patronage is cor- dially solicited. 23t£ TTARRlNQTON HOUSE, •*-*" PLATTSBURGH, N.T. a. W. HARRINGTON, - - Froprietar This House, at the corner of Marion Street ahd Protection Avenue, is most centrally located, being in tbe heart of the business portion of the village, and convenient to Post office,Telegraph and Telephone offices. TERMS, ai.oo PEE DAY. QLAYBURGH HOTEL. CLAYBVRQH, K. T. AUDI DAKKAH, . . . . Proprietor. This honse has been refitted throughout and Is In line condition. a. daily-Stage from this house connects with the Chateaugay Railroad at Cadyville. Terms reasonable. The pubiie are invited to call. 24tf rpHB CENTENNIAL- HOUSE, s A it AXAC, jr. r. PKltttY * MAS9ETT Proprietor*. This bouse Is situated at Pickett's Corners, has recently been refitted and put in excel- lent condition for the accommodation of traveler*. Transient visiiors should not fail to patronise this bouse. Special inducement to Commercial Travelers, and prices to suit the limes. 4Stf QOMMERCIAL HOTEL, KKMSKFILLM, AT. T. I.MeQUIKB, Proprietor, Being new and centrally located, the Hotel presents great attractions to business men, and ne palna will be spared to secure Its repatatlon as a first-class hotel. A liberal naetonage Is respectfully solicited. Partloalar attention given to Commercial Travelers. Livery In connection. O. H.W. Telegraph oaee ia house, a tastes to and rrosn an traina and boats. wwriTHERILL'S HOTEL LIVERY TV STABLE. 0 B.COOLBT # CO., Proprietors PLATTSMUMGH, V. t. Parties ta want of a Good Turnout, either for buajaees or pleasure, should call at Wlthosfll's Hotel Livery Stable, where the* will aad wr—la «f Brery BtwertBtlra, AHD A* UAMIAIU PBIOM. rBvesTSBSBCEww and la Rood order. O. B. COOLBT 4k CO. "I3X0H S.H0N3HJ UM Warn sttjstorstan PE>AEI, tssHtoiOMtee. > mrtifi, jr. r. CUB. BEt R A t a a s UPWARDS. atBsB*otolM.stoe*B aadtteaOrtswa••Cats) i Baoseelltd eery toe. TBOJIAa J. FREVm, nrptlete*. THE EAST SIDE OrooarT tod ProTiiion Store. J* is r ATIVQ MM-at hie BUatBteiket isf&w AHD QrwddlspLroI F A X C T &OOD8. muminateoCloeks.SilTeTand Plated W art i' welr T ° r all kinds. Opera Glasses. Spy Glasses Spectacles.«c..*c. DKALEKIN FORKIGK AND AMERICAS WATCHES AND CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILTER WARE, Ac, Ac. CLOCKS, WATCHES and JEWELRTrepair ed by experienced workmen, on short notice ahd at the lowest terms. 20tf JOHN FOLEY'S eiLEBRATXD GOLD PENS 21.. 3h£E3-5rElH. , S JEWELRY STORE. Bridge Street, PLATTSBTJKGH, N.T. INSUBI WITH HAGERTY & PLATT, PLATTSBURG H . N . Y . Students entered the Tioy Business College in Oetober. This is the largest number that ever entered in one month, and coming most- ly from Troy and its vicinity, speaks well for the popularity ol this most prosperous school. Young men aiid ladies are ht^e qualified in the shortest lime to take positions as book- keepera, stenographers and telegraphers, a great many of whom are helped to pood positions. For new catalogues and tbe best specimens of permanship, address. THOS. H. SHIELDS, Prln., J3 Third St. Troy. X . Y . BIGELOWS Photo Parlors, •end of Bridge street, PLATTSBURGH. N . Y . £. K. BROMLEY, Livery Stable. Good Ttirnoixts alwaYS in Readiness. Also, a large lineof Carriages, Phaetons and Harnesses, both n e w a n d second-hand, for sale cheap. North Side of Court House Park, CORKIER O* E1VEK STREET, PLATTSBURGH, N . Y . RANSOM'S LIVERY STABLES! T HE UNDERSIGNED HAVING purchased the entity Livery outfit of Mr. RiCHAttU STAVK, respectfully announce that he willcohtlnue the businessatiiisold stand OS COUKT HOUSE SQUARE, where be will he glad to Welcome the former patrons and all his friends desiring Good i,ivery Turnotats. Especial attention paid to Summer ano Pleasure Travel, and parties carried to ths Lake* and Mountains-at reasonable rated and first-classstyie. H. B. RANSOM. PlattsDurgb.N.Y J. D.WILKINSON. Gunsmith & Locksmith. •reeeh aad Hassle Loading Kites. GUNS. GUN MATERIAL AND METAL LIC CARTRIDGES Repairing ofeverydoecriptioBdoaclBt he bsttmsBUr. Corner of Bridge and -Rivexsvrcete—hpone flight cf stairs, t'LA.TTSBtJRGB S Y . Read! Drown Drown Drown Drown Drown Drown Drown O m p an-1 SPP what PROWN ia doing in the T.tUJp Sb--re R^nml tho Cf>rm-r, TO^ITTC; ii ,-.-•!»•;- rV^f <-?pnt«* Hivm! Spwr.l Frrnrh Ca'f an,l p.->ns;r.la Kid. (Vn- crr==. Button, ivrol T>rp«s B.«it*. 1= now PmpToyipg six £T>rn1 workmpo. making up C*"*! Iratbf r in!' 1 ){FII'« v\<i Ihvs' Is this month rnakips: »Hr;rp purchase of Fashionah'e vui I? the o n l y sb*^<?r«5irs in town wiiii sella UIP far-famnl "Waverly School Shoes. I* the Olrlfst Dralcr ari'i Maker of Boots anii Shoe's in PIftUsburgh. In? bf*-n thrre timrs through Pro. nr-,1 sells Cheaper than cvrr before. Sells gooil, fresh RUMwrs Cheap, ltubbrr? of old stocks and lots at Bankrupt Prices by PK"W>-, Is gelling rcatTv arcl has on ham! the roost inviting bill of Shoe-ware for (lid Patrons and Xew Customers that has filled his store siurin.z the forty-two years of his making and selling Footwarc, hence all who see eaa say ; "How beauteous are thrir feet" who buy shoes in the Little Store Round the Corner, No. 3 Clinton street, Reed"s Block. Aoril 15.1887. F. H. GRAVES, DEALER IJf Family Groceries, Teas, Coffee?, Sugars, Spices, Syrups, Molasses, Canned Goods* &c, &c. No. 4 Standrsh Street, PLATTSBURGH. flf^^Produce taken in ex- change for goods at market prices. JOHN COLLINST At the Chasm, has I bis day,' Been opening G'OUS both fresh and gay. He has rrceivtd neiir every kind, That you in any stove can tind. And as I purchase by tbe Bale, I am determined to ictail y o r B E U J r P A T a mile lower Than ever have been hao before. Sow with my friends I mean to live, And to them splendid bargains give. I would not live to raise your passions. For high prices here are not ot fashion; My friends and buyeTS one and all. It will pay you well to give me a call. You are sure to find me every day. from the Chasin House, cross the wav- The following articles will by taken in ex- change for goods: Butter. EsTss, Fruit and Vegetables. CASE WILL, NOT BE REFUSED. Ausable Chasm, July 27th,1887. 31tf 6E0. N. WEBB Has the Largest and Most Com- plete Assortment of STOVES Of every style and description T I N W A R E . Hollow "Ware, WOODEH WAKE, Glass W are, Household Furnishing Goods ; Plumbing Materials. * c , * e . Brer ofteredin this market; at prices that cannot be u ndersold by any establishment. Special attention given to Plaabing aad sll kinds of Job Work. No. 17 Br i d e e S t r e e t yLATTSBUKGH K.T. ANOTHERJ3HANGE. Oyster House and Bestaarant. The popular Oyster Bouse and Restaurant At No. 2 River Street. PLATTSBURGH, K". T. formerly conducted hy |A. P. GAUTH1ER, ass been purchased by HENRY CARDAI.Y, Formerly of the'Wltherin House. PLUMBING. THOS. COSTELLO, Bumbsr, Steam & Oas Fitter, HAS OPENED A SHOP AT Ifo. 94 Margaret Street, Opposite the Xew County Cleric's Offlce, PLATTSBURGH, X. T. Where tie is prepared to do ALL Knsos or WORK in bis line. A line of Wrought Iron and Lead Pipe. Bran and Plumbing Goodi, ALWATS ON HAND. tW Give him a call. !Ttf f: He will be pleased to s*rve all its old cus- | tomers, and as many new cues as will favor \ him with a call. I steals will be furnished at all reasonable I hours of the day and night. I OtSTERS AVILL BE A SPECIALTY and il f u r n i s h e d a t a l l hours. f: This house has four large BILLIARD 3 TABLES in connection with 1t. I Thepublieareeordially invited to call. jlTOuSy, 2To. 52 Bridge St., PLATTSUtJR&H, N.> MANUFACTURER OF L. FACrA!* & BOH, BAKERS and CONFECTIONERS. W EDDINGS ASTD PARTIES SUPPLIED with every requisite at short notice. lee Creast aad Water Ices. SJf* Oat cf town orders promptly attend* [ L. FAGAN & SON, stiver Bt.. east side Court House Park. i Belfast Ginger Ale, '• Leinon, i _, fc> tra~vvb> erry. S ax 4 s aparilla. Soda, Birch. Beer, &c, ^Bottler of Dobler's Celebrat- ed LAGER BEER, Nichols & Go. LEGAL NOTICES. pirFfT'SIRF UIF I ("Ye -- - l . . , V* T >* AT THE OLD STAND, A '.= i r T f r*--«-Y..-»e f r a* -»>»ai-> a- if » F -\ -** Vr*- * r » " No. 62 Margaret Street, ' f T , r* " "fa *>i 1*T KEEP ALWAYS COMPLETE ON HAND STOCK. COTTPIKTT^n OF A •» -* t t* i '!- =.- • 4 a' ,""' r \ H«s r i* X * f n.-xc 1 x t K 7H «3. T - ' A rsy .v«J J»T» FASCY 4 STAPLE GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS Fresh Roasted Coffee, TEAS. SUGARS^! A>"P FRESH CANNED GOODS. Kosendale Coment and fresh ground Nova Scotia Plaster. ' -• w --• * K- Ai^>» i i .-• t it .• ->»t -. .- '*'-• i- • - k^ s Srii ' 8 » T •V'l 1' ) *' *• a « i i ' -r i I f 1 is' I »'"« a' i » n . ar Tw '. *« «r- i a . » -h*y 1 t' +* « WIGHOLS k CO. *M Undertaking Establishment, No. 34 Biver Street. East Side of Court Home Square, Weclaimto have the most complete estab- lishment or the Ttlnd in this section of the State,with a very full assortment of COFFINS, CASKETS, AND FINE TRIMMINGS, Including the finest and most elegant styles ever kept In this vicinity, as well as goodi of medium and moderate price. A Separate Hearse for Children. Tunerals attended and every branch of this service will have our careful and prompt attention. All are invited to call and examine our goods and equipments and learn our prices and verify our assertions by personal Inspec- tion . We shall continue our former eitenelve CARPENTERING & JOBBING BUSINESS, and shall be pleased to execute all orders for Building or Repairing oi every description, by contract or oxhex-wise. CKAUVIN & FITZGERALD. EL'ZSBE CHAUVIN. WJI. iTIZGEKALD GRAND OPENING o- o- FOB 1888. -o -o lr» i i H'tiT A j... r.&t. f ,». I.I. ^-»^ ,* , "sal'?, »•'; >|mrg Ji-o *i^*.-rlb*»,i as *- ! >v, ."-It* i -s* a- 1 •» i' 11,11 T » l ^ -- *\ -*- t - a'«* a^ »-*- a'|*r*" >T*»* ri'-i*t '^-'"l B*»£lT- trcs.t»i i *>rj-T« , >- r»n "Irj; #a»t R. PRESCOH&SON, KEESEVILLE, N. Y. ARE OPENING THEIR Winter Trade WITH TUB LARGEST STOCK OT [QLBClQDtaQi iTersstored la northern Jf ew York. 200 Ash & Walnut Suits. 100 Painted and Grained Suits, ircso'tnrt f I- t \ I^II-PT« ni'i t'-".»i 1 ra*t*<->t t> i it t.'tt:, lire f sa: 1 '..» M-irrt-tr^rtM>r<'>d«. th#>r, rnnn'T'e «•• 'U TU» »ty «r*a rivls, VH»!IWKHttllrtT»lt««r-.|«t.,l!|»«Mtlll» •'f«^t»il i i*. II.WTJ.-W r.-TtH-n th» «--*>** l i n e ><t sail i.-t - i l r e t ^ >s.-««>n r -1R t.. »»i«. j a«-» »••? ! Bi'itiiji^, t->ar,iainire iwvt tv *»>« t '»»»l >r tber«-aT^„t t.an-t Virejaiifioi ^*. «an-.e pr.-nilse» hoiyt<<r -T^i;rar.t(..| t y * r i„n Barker ai.lRi.ih hl«wi!». ».,..- f .Av, :,j»^s K»»»s<.. .--t. V- .th.it th* forr^. .t g ,v«. rlh<^l im-e-1 >-t w.w ^,-ij.iM l T i,,-.rt.m T T?i'nias.Tow (*^. f f i w . l . H t1»« tlm*i. r ?a« 4**~r3.«e. l'aK-1, I>ec4>mf x>r I4'>i, »H»r ^ „ iAMritLL U<WK\. B»-fer»t>. 3 J . 3 ? . H B V I I T , flairttiff'a \i»orr»<>, hfmPvl.V.S.T. WTT QHKKrr.r-S SALK-JU- virtue of an"*V- C eentlon issned out of th«* County r.virt *>f Clinton County.Sew \"..rk. t.< tne dlreci?.! an«l delivered agai ji*t thp chatlPls, lands and tenements «,f .Sidnev Howes, 1 have selxed upon anil taken all itio right, title and Imvr- f-sl -which thf said Sidney Howes halt a t h e -nd day of October, !Wv.or has slm-e acquired in audio the follovrlue dpsenl»«l t>remt«es which I shall expose for sale and sell at pub- lic auction to the highest bidder f.,r cash a* the law directs at thp front tfoor«ir th? <*«.Tut House in tl» Vllla Ke of flattshnrsh. Cllnun County, New York, on the 3Istday.it Jar.n- ajy,18«8, at ten o'clock In tbe fomu-i-a t»f that nay. Tlie said premises are descTllfi a* follows: "AH that certain piece or parr*! of Jar.tl situate,iyincand beluir. In the tuwn if Ai- jonatformerly Chary Clltiton Counly.lS T„ knewn and detcribed asm part of Lot num- ber seventy sin T6i It txniiir. the south rast iiuanerorsald lot Ko.Xf.In JJusrvilie Pat- ent so palled In said town containing slity- twoandune half acres of latd ts> tte sains more or less. Bated Dec. 10.1W. .. J.J.KIT7PATR1CK, Slw. Sheriff of Clinton County. C ITATION FOR JUDICIAL ^TTLEMliXT. The people or the Statw of New VorV, to Louisa Currirr, who rrsldrs at, Won-rgtcr, Massachusetts; CornellM M. Dandmw, who rfsl'les at Belmont, Tram ounty, DaXotai Mary Ceo, who resMes at Whitehall, AVash- i n a t o n «-c>OTity, Sev TTor*; S>el!» Lsfave, Joel M Dsndrow and Miruai'l C. Danarow, who reside at 1'IaitahurRh, Clinton coursty, New Tor*; Edmund K. Dandrow, who resides in. New VorkCity, New York; At)ram Oandrow, who resides In Troy, New IfOTk-.; GeoTgr. C. Dandrow. who resides In Lowell, Hastsehu- s«-txs; Benjamin l>»nJrow mxi<l Annie rnn- drow, who reside In Malone.FranlcHnsonaiy, Sew Tork; AViward Mlcer^ Mary Miner and Lucy Miner, all of whom reside at Lacoiie, Province of Quebec, Canada; and Henry W. Gulborcl, who resides In JMattsburg-h afore- said, and to all persons Interested In the estate of JOKL I>, DANDROW, laws of Flatls- btirgh.Cllnwn county, KewTork. deceased, as creditors, legatees, uext of kin, or other- wise send greeting; You and each of you are hereby cited and required personally to he and appear before our Surrogate of the county of Clinton. New York, alhis office In rMauiburgh, on tne Ufa day of February, lim, at ten o'clock In ths forenoon of thalclay, then and thereto attend the judicial settlement ol the accounts of Michael C Da^flrow, as Edmlnlstrator of the said Joel 1). iiat.drow. deceased, AnO if any oftliept-rsou* interested be un- der the age, of twenty-one years, they are required to appear by thetir guardian ir inejr have one.or if they havenoi>e,lo appearand apply for one t o b e appointed,or. In theevfnt of I heir neglect or failure i o d o so, a guardian will be appointed by the ^urroRate to repre- sent and act forthem In the proceeding. In tesUmony whereof, we have caused the seal of our said Surrogate's Court to *e here- unto affixed. -Witness. Hon. D. r. Doble. Surrogate of said county of Clinton, at Flattsbuieh. theSMday of December, one thousand eight hundred and eightv-seven. Ir,. s 1 D. r. DOBnc, SurrcRale. AV.C.AVATSOX, Att'y for P etitloner. B3w7 KOK JCD1CIAL BKriLEMEM. •eople of the Stale of New "York, to C 1TATI0X The peo Louisa Currier, who r*jtfrits_at Worcester, A L L OK New anil Desirable Patterns, WHICH WE OSMTKR AI J'KICKS IBAT DIH COMPJCtf IIOK. A.LSO, LABGE STOCK OF PARLOR FURNITURE In Jutes, Haw Silks and Hair Cloth- Doors, Windows, &c. A LARGJT¥TOCK. Boors of every style. Windows of every size. Mouldings of every pattern Blinds of all kinds. Trim, Glazci al Priifl COKSTANTLY OS HAKD. SOLD CHEAP FOR CASH AA j . A. HAGAB'S, Clinton 8t PLA'XTSBCKGH.N.T. WALL PAPER! Window Shades! A FULL STOCK OF WAIL PAPER -iSO- "Windcrvv Shades, IN THE LATEST STYLES, hasjust b^ei.rei eivca at Horiiick's Fiirniture Store. ON BKIDUK STKKJ5T, GJEO.W. S.OB.S1CK.. izeuu ALSO- C. W. M. JOHNSON, Civil Engineer, Surveyor p AXD !| I8ARAT0QA QEi'SER SPlUNCr! A WATEB. t AID 1EAL ESTATE AGEBT. ALSO, NOTARY hCBLIC. LAV»S SOCaaT A>o SOLP OK COMaiSSIO* Oidarasollelted and promptly atteadedto. PLJ.rT8BVRGM,X. T. H.K.AVE BILL, Jr.. CiTil £aclaeer, Surveyor ANP V* K A . T J G t H t T S S M A 2sr . Pt,A TTSB VUVJu. Jf. J Kennedy & Murphy's Ale \ and Porter, by Barrel !; and Half Barrel. I JOHN WILSON & SON, JThe Old Beiiabie Paint, jrs, \ Are out this spring witli| a full force | ak1Uedas*islants,*Tia ready to attend, Oentral Market, P.MQSEEFE, froorietor. CarstarofBrldwa i.si'i'lvsrStTssti PLATTSB'CIiSH, H. V. t t rjS*OMEitS-wllls.lwayjip3^i^J:t.hl»J«arket \j aeholeeseleeiionaadiullsupplyoi rKKSK AS1> SALT HEATS, *>ltKSH ASH SALT FISH, POCLTKY JtNO OAKK, 0YSTEHS IN THLIR oEASON, WHOLK SALKASUEKTili. ^ „ , . ^ „ Ki-RLY \'EliKTABLr.e, BCTTfcK, K«GB CHKLSL.&O-, 4 L . So pains will uesparedtosulr customers. Prices as low a s t h o lowest. i-aclcases delivtrcdiaanypart of thevll- IAKV-»i thou t charge. as.litr«invite<i to s-all Massachusetts; Cornelius at. iJandrow. who resides at Belmi.nt, Traill eojimy, Dakota; Mary Deo, who resides at "Whitehall. Wash- ington county,New York: Delia l.afave, Joel B. Dandrow and Michael C. Dai.iirow, who reside at Flatt&burgh. Clinton county, NTesr York; Kdmund K. Dai drow, wh,* resides In. New York City,New toik: Abram l>u.dtbv, who resides In Troy, New York; George C. Dandrow, who resides in Lowell, Massachu- setts; Benjamin Dandrow and Annie Dan- Qrow, who resldein MaloTie-Kranklincounty, New York; Kdward SUner, Marj Miner, ar,d Lucv Miner, who xealde atLacolle, C*i:aaa; "William n. Dandrow, or rhiimrtnt, Colum- bia county, New York, as alleged as- signee ol an alleged creditor, to wit, Joel B. Dandrow.aiid to all persons interested i n t b e estate of LOU8A DANDBOW.late of Ptaus- bureb.Cllr.ton 4.tiutity. New Y»<rk, deceased. as creditors, next, .r km, ur otherwise, seniJ greeting: You at d each of J<.J are herel.y cited and required personal!) Xif and appear before eur Surrogate of th* county ol Clinton. New ) ork, a t U s orSee, In Plattsburgh. on the 23th day ol February, IKK. at ten o'ct-K-k Jn t h e forenoon of ihatday.theuanri there to attend tl.e judicial settlement of th«!t a c c o u n t s of iiicLael C. Pandrow, as aaailnlstnsuir of th« said Louisa Dandrow, deceased. And irauy of tli« persons imeresttHl be un- der the age of twenty-one years, they are required to appear by their guardian il they have one, o r If they have none, to appear si>l apply for one to be appolnted.ox, in the e w t t oftl'eirueelect or fallujetodoso.aguardian will ht appointed by the surrogate to repre- sent and act lor thern in the pn.cenlllip. In tesilniMiiy wbereot. we have caused tho seal of our said Mirr- gate's Court ti be here- uiito affixed Witness.H«'», It.V D( T.ie Surr< g-«te«.f Mtld county ol Clinton, at Plattsburgh. t t c £ i l >lay or Decemtier, > < f thousand eight hundred and eighty seven I f- s-l D . F . DU1SIE, hum- tXe. W. C.WATS..K, Att'y for I'euti.jlier. E3w~ T nt; 1T.OFI.F. 4.1" T H E - I M 1 «,{• Nfjr UK, to liirl^ t'ltiiSbl'*, JHU>HI- }h iaiet.l't.,>.h. t.. i'.-n <..., r, v . . ajj.-rert 1.. (<,n-. residing in rnei.t '.r^L, < ,ttT..r. Co , N. Y ; Aut.es 11. t. .••, rrsM4i<» in L; et,turgh, < lini- u t'i, , N. \ . ^i-rii. W. *iru.s» f *-r,resid- lhti lu JEdeh' trjti. Ciihi.h r,j .r,.Y.,« live hUrriri|>n.i>. renl iir.ir in Ashlji.) ,'i, A-Uta- bUa < •• .tibio: /;pba Siaifieid, whi se jiaie •.•f xro'.tlfi.vr' l*s iiuktiuwrj—tl.e -widow, heirs Ji 1 ?«Xt of kla of sThPHl:\ iiltM-UUL, deeeasel,=etl greetlne \\her«.tS.l.l.l.B <.. e.tl-exe. '.t..ii»i.,,J, ..f-aid-'ej heti «»jrn.»ree, l-.»s Is'elj »| j , ,-.l to i.ur b^rr- i;at<- s t ...,rt . 1 t h e * u^ty . f CHi.fu t-, i. t\r- .4 .'«t<i. jna»r««e. t IT, wiUU.kMrlaUi >; I > lulu rtai ,tid lejsniai e»tat--. .ii.lj ]iii,tnl a a t h - l i»t w.ii j.i.,1 trata- Hf-T.t «if - ll<1-'rj lr||l,,i tlrf, 1,-Slri.f I . « , - IjiUli. In »-vl J tn. ii.t> , ie.ejw.l. ll.erefjie, j.uai.d r». h i j-airr l.« rt-ty cHel.tt. 1 re.juirelti. 11- 41 J j|ie»r Irf. ID oarsaiilsiur. a^t« »iv.a.h> t-^i L * . I j.» •!.« oEl.T ut ut - . t o iJ. »f . f tkr- i«i/iit.lj »jf I ,11.- u.u,lsU.i>ili,^:e<.J 1 itlslM^h in mi if..r U« eniii.iy «.f < ,ii.i.,jj, , ii the :_iri ' , , . r Jai-oarj, lbfs. at I 1 t.-.-j. .-k in the i .ret, . . t that day, to axtei-d tt r- jxi.huti-uf the said last will al.d UstjOi.ei.1. AI..1 vx i.t.N <-t (i.«- j-er* i.s ii.'«-jeste-l t><- %\f ~ i*» f the ni-'i* ...f t>M-i t} ..' f> >rar*. 11 rj nm mii'iirtd 1^ ajij.r^i . >,- tA,-c-,r i;,.iti iL*.z* if vi.ry d i r t " »t!\<il l l t l . r j » l » r ti,i'!,^,l.< t y T S r S " ! i,l-i-.j tor l.e « . t-e.lj.j_. ii.tr.t. -X «iU.e<»nt ot ' 1 >-u i ••; r. ' T !»l ,xr » . .T . s -., » jj.ar- 1 a»» »).. b " .'1 !• iii.*« 1 < j il.. •• tit- „a'r l-ii%\i, - s*t.t it-1 iittit I1..-B1 )., tl.^ fr -.i-e-lij ^ lole-.'.irn- i.J _l.i-te- f. * e La\e .-»,t,*.l tli« Se.il. t .tir Ha'. 1 - - U „<ircsl".,uti| t e tele. Ui.ti.ariXe-l. \.»<i.e-^ Ila.lll' D.<I Ir. S>.r- r.-jate . I t o - s v 1 .. xttj i < it.t ...ittm %iiii2e it 1'itlt.i ir.d, It. sail I.LI.IJ, 1 ,M lob d a , >f *•• ..tuber.ole I,. , u 3ao>l eSglil ti.'.iilMn! ltl,M) «.»r. t . is * 1* JK X>«,B2t.. IJAT Sjtt j>^!e f AT SHORT NOTICE, TO OttOKKS VOK Go to HEATH'S forji Marble Work, as I shall sell at reduced rates for the next f, •ixtj dmy§. Do not forget the place. Ettabliahed since T 837. E. H. HEATH. In Tirittj m a»»-» Slut Henss Painting. Carriags PamtiBgr. Soat Fainting, Si^a Paiatins;. Ornamental Painting:. PAOer Etngiar. Kalsantiaiaff, Olauas;, BceoratiBf;. 6r*_*te, } All varst dons with Thoroughness _a« M«~ . tMStah.aad at Maderat* friees. | aar SUa-M ralntaand rreparad Kaaaaaara* ; aVtlifSMSMi to aay ?»rt of U e ultlage. j t__a*e«rdersat il COStMKLlA itTKSI-IT, 1 PLATTMBVMUU X. T. ! "0* ••»*•* a lacfs aa-t stU ajajtaf JttAftMlM* TAMCt htm aii (Msi. 8QUULEB4B0M ta ss>i*sjasir-s4ai-Mrraa«* sAaa.alehartiiallsvaaafa a , ' m sassaa-sr A«ae* •»- ,%« at lasts at*# la At'*r It»rtt}c»'»" extmrseriCA lu tL4 tlistt 0s» |U-4»»- _t»p'ic*U..a» f wr |>-;«fll>i ia I th» L'ai!*- BUt«* »«"4 l"«#«a v>«n- trM«, li-» n»b.iJ^r« U tt« N .«u'»-.0 s Mar t fa - 1 eotttlau* to&C1 *- *Q*tt:S-^» f(xraai«aULa»«*su.t'-ii*-ra-rt*. »rx^- . ^SlZVt-Z • « * - ra.«A »"«-- «»d . -M«st« ia Caa«4*. Ku«uttva^ Fruftcc, ifsmssr T^" •" k -" "»a"J^ Tli«>r«p«n- TIII iiTi-i'T'f aaA thMr Ucil.Uti. tn via.nr- 'Irawiaas aaa .t-^isiitu-s prspsnd sail t ti ia taVr-Xset OSsss «a short »^.uc* Tswa. «rr •la-n-ii'i ]iaehafs*l<-r<sa-ivBaU«aaf ia(xi<rf a« atasriasa. Adrica suit <»* _ . l.\lTStS»STiw*CATa«SlSt-A ... . kvck kas .rjir T.S M^^l.nriT tJ. ta* «M vmA«««t£al ~ i tt sash a aMtaa SMSS sawatas Tat aa.»»»~r.Sl» N O- ii JOTICK.-Bv i t - l e l . f l ' l . t l r l». 1 ,e. s..j. ».•! c'-i.l. n.. !.i.t> t, i..rl»!.«ii) giVe'i. J.i-r.ir.' < li ^t-ilA-A.t'i^lil OerSioT.a I a.-*11 JI .-.ai s.^^iub!i.rlt\aUlH<.ILHjiA\ latr.f i-.iitt^t-'.i,;!.. 1.. s . L i i*..iit.i> . ..1^^-ea.Nr^. t l a t tor) are rehire.! I.I ext-tt t t'.e ta—e»'Ut tt.^ ". u.-bei=t.t.e:r I t j U.r ..ti. t!l«r ut li>> ..ft ."»• tif l.ti »r* Jtrlt.cy, M 1 .1*1 t!»«-*lll<->.v f 1 l a t t a b ^ I , . : ^.-. fl ~et*X--i lUti 1st JJLJ v i J u J , 1 I'ated.l't-.i: 1"- *^ -* **vV r '. Ci. L L I ,a> i.X .-.--.I ttOTKC. A\ !• .".sU ill « > lAludliui'lt.l'ut.r >*X- .». j , < i .'.tj , N. r.. L i «? Is her.-'j t.»ei. — •« tin ii I .»*, tti-iliit.il IS havlig . au_> .ifean.sl Ji'«\ ii Wli-> \, lite ui y<i .. 1.. »al I . . ul.lj, de..eased tL«.l tbt) ate reij iiri-<l t. r**.rrlt the »»twi- w i t h lie »..!.i Ur» Iier«..f lilLe ...bwnl < tat .it U.e offiic t.I M inaiww C. W _t»i..t., it, f.atts- hui|.ti, fii'l u i-t'iti), '«* \a*, v u v r beior - i t' IHti d»> of J J' e iwss. l'aitd,-c»i VitrKibrr. p*~ « J l t M X H s MlLKOJv, li^ nUs.iN. Adi^- E-lsurauats, l^n-t- 'm iS'-Vlll llo!, , .iti N.. \ . l,i . l S I-. . i * t--i*li ii*r VTOlltl. Hv i> i -it. . t t .• betel > i-t.rt.^ (it. S t - . i * t--i*l! ii*r . « J lia.lii,. ^.»ii.!,»i, .ii St llilitiHi hJtl LI *'«» tj,VU)la lmi iiio'l i »v. ."* .«sa«»e<i, that thei iile t.-i^'.tril i • e_; - I li..e sjlutf wjTlttt,e .-i.i-1-ris vi-«-*r^-T tv vt-tn »^x«s*-iii^» at Lis i.-»Mei.ve 1U M. h u j LT Jails, ott .1 Le» fore tr.t *,ir, Jay . ' M«u-_ isas. ll^b-d, Al,'u»l .). 1»».' .Kn.3 JAitkiM h.k,LLY, AvtiaaVislcr. aaaa«a»atea ta wis aw. ias-kanai asMtaw, »»*»- Jk ••s1llo>.U». «»«•-»- -at " ****> laisaliss^asA«siea »J»«.*I •sMsts_isaMBaM*.aaaMsMSMt ft » O T i O s S . - B \ »u<Ser ..f 1'avl-) ¥ _ I r v g a i c v»f tl Alsehav.-urdlti. *-. .St,(S N t rotate v,f tlintiiacjj.ity voters tt bervty t.' last, t J in s a a t u j i lalUiS ,iJJ«ttBSt M«»«a.IIUS rmtMA^i !»«.«..< tUtu-iiul Av.»atl--.tu S4id luuUV iloJTas ed, that vhej arc j<, t iltel t.i cthibtt tl* w,i with tb.- v..«.-b>«» ther..• I t*i >be sub- arrtlrr* at the v B t «.f t'«. AhsaMt- MM*e -Ntiii «*wfijl-ii.j io Kiese«tli« In »aiii .-- ^tity mvvci t i t a t e , ^ii ^ t ttct.-io tliw 1*1 U*> ^l JvtU, lot's. Dotted, KeeseviUe.N.Y., Dee 231.1**;. UKOK«K H KL%k\ kS. M.SV %. THWM.s, ami Adtututsuahjis. il VIOTI*-se.--It* *««-» «f David V. Dotia.Sttr- £\ R k-kte Ml « JlMlvth w u e t y . n o n c e is hereby iriv«n »cc*ir4lu»- ii<l»w,iii»tl p«r»oiis havix.- Satis agsliatlisXsUN «. MkwiTr, late »u« to»-n .1 ***iu. iu »atd eouniy. d*«?ca»<d. that theyar« re«olr«-M «»bibH lh« aasa* with Use v-outliers thsrmt to *1» »ijhae*lhe«a it thecltt-. a M Jfc K . H e w t t M n **• vllla«. ol U.£M*r'Mv, in said »»u»t» and s»f*t<f,«» •» h«i«i- «h«l-Hh v«ai ol ^reU.las*. 4) .tcd,Sc^«-wrHa.t« i ^ ^ ¥« 1» MltwTrT* , Kswwtsswe, ae.,et Sfiissa sOsassait. dee'*.

1 I.I. A. I. WARREN, | a > - NYS Historic Papersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031979/1888-01-14/ed...jackknife. given him by his Aunt Poll}-. The paroquets flitted, -through the

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Page 1: 1 I.I. A. I. WARREN, | a > - NYS Historic Papersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83031979/1888-01-14/ed...jackknife. given him by his Aunt Poll}-. The paroquets flitted, -through the

THE PLATT8-HTRGH REPUBLICAN, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 14. 1888.

DUFFY'S PURE ; M A L T WHBKEY

1s\£&t

>. t l i

VI, .* r , t

T ' I

r i W 1 V

• r r

«"4 :

• . I . i %

i«.- a, 11 »".>.••! i. B""KS, I. 1. • i K - .

- I', il •» I I'lTTtR,

I n J I N K l b « n K « ,

J 4-- r.<«>Ks, I . t i i l b u I .ii-VIKO BooKB,

I \ . ' IE B'>'"K?, K E I EirT B O O K S ,

I I K A F T S . TKAIIM? P A . B E A:ST> LINKS,

INKS OF A I X KINDS,

ASTTHINB AHD EVERYTHING r'UP.TAISITfG TO A

F irst-Cus* Buok & Stationery Store A t P^ab^isberB* at'd M a n u f a c t u r e r s '

P r i w * .

TO Tvlargare t S t r e e t , v. -,n--"rT'»K :sr.T.

A PRtfcSE I N V E S T M E N T .

Tortilita Gold and Silver A l i n i n g C o m p a n y .

,TOS. H . RE ALL, Pit-fcirtnut.

Capital Stock , $ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 . In 500 000 Shares of $2 each,

Kiserf on Twelve Mlnrs. a Mill, Two Mill S H e t . l i i i t l Mil f i l l u r e d e v e U i p m e u W

arid a d d . t i n n * .

Z>". '."> s h a r e s f'rpft-rri-d Dividend of 2.1 per rri , i [•. r a i i n i ,«T v.hii-h 50 0'i0 o n l j are lor . . . . . . . . , . . .r . . f $- .

B Y P R I V A T E S F B S C B I P T I O N .

Rf>r:,lt' ir • ev m u 1— m a i n 1<> Kxpress , 1. .I' . . i.'!ii.-h.. r P.--t . finf t iroer. M

J O S - H R t A L L ,

; ? w i

r.' H r - f 1 \ c t v New V..rl{. • r 4> t iii. j.r<-'•» ?l . I', "••'u, Mass.

w. e. POPE, M. D., E e e s c - v i l l e . IT. Y".

TftEATS ALL

Rectal Diseases W I T H T H E

BRINKERHOFF SYSTEM!

Piles, Ulcerations of the Rectum, Fissure, Fistula, Puritis, or Itching Piles,

('fia>ultntion free. i-.i i- n i. ! e . N . 1

d f,.r Circular.

Grand Trunk Eailw'y OF CANADA.

urn- ~&.4h$je of oars between PLatU-i.urjru and Chicago, via Montreal.

*•'.<> -"r.nrtest. Direct asd Cheapest !•.••' I." I "

Detroit and Chicago, A.*:JO A L i , f O I N T S ^ v S f c T .

Fi i i i^s '&N C A R S or-f x>A"sr A N D S £ « j i T £ 2 ? a £ S S T X A I B T S .

PK'-V M . M J i C A L T.. CHIIAOO YnTHOT/T . HAMJE.

L w v e K o ! i t r 4 a I . Q o i n E W s « t

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* . -~ - i I...11 i s n..t..le wi th D e l a w a r e & j ; - |. c v. i (. •> s ir.i.r.s vi.t Montreal .

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- - , ' t i \ D - T i . i t s r i yr t s s - l i K ^ r a - ' .Ar r l e r t o n I . - - I t a i i t .

, ' r f^.-u.-r p j . r t i c u l . r s <tj 1-1} to GE<i; B. ! • - . tTi.i 'u. H^ l. er Vgerjt. iitr.ieiisuary. >". '.

ti h>•••:., iTrn'l SUn«i'.;, il...itire;tl, *" -'. ' :.• • it • , . •! ,era. i 'a-st-tiner A|.rirrit,Moii-t • f ..:

•r r >*u .1 e ,i; '.1-rr.iilerl Loca l A g e n t : « . D . ( r U B T I S , A g e n t ,

U. £ H. C . C O . , /' L A T Tz£ CK U H, Jf. T.

CtKTfiiL VLRMONT E. E u. i L. CI ' iUMDX.

O N ANI> A n t E U t " l . 30Lh, 1 8 8 T , a n a m t l l r u n b e r n o t i c e , ir*t i i» wi l l l e a v e

R i i ' ^ t - S f u . , i I a » f . . l , u w s : 7 10 V. M«— \IaIL. ,urnve: t tCr,a inp:alr i7: !9;

at itu .-rs.liiti.-iii.i.,7.o3. Aluocrs Forks, 1AV, A i ' " i a . 7 '•">; blleiiDurfc'i. 6:13; Cherntms«> S ; . . . • i i . . tr iu irj . t . H 4 * ; i L t l o u e , H:15; N0I« TT .•••!.10 i ' ; ()icaerjsburp,U:3'i A . M. C o n n e c -•ti i. j-to^iensburt; with GraitdTrunk E'y;at

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T s o J> T I . - E X P R t S S . a r r i v e Cl ia iapla lB

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(JOIMi L-.AST. LEAVE •>-ilH5Nr'rtC'RO

S 4-! V. M.-hX.fUI. - . '^ . for al l s t a t i o n s on <.)-•>. :. ' . .R . K . a r r i v e Reuses Po int 9:4RA.it.

K l I C »1 —HAIL, tr.tin ror al l stations: on O. &. L. i . It. It.; a r r i v e Kousrs P o i n t 5:50; e ,riiie.-laK.t ttutises I 'mnl with D.<& U . C . C o . ; Strrit-e i>ut'lliuri,'li T a i t . M .

h*!>ress .•.,iiuei-tl...i.s at Ocdelts l inrg Willi O rar,,I Trunk i t s i lwav , Norwood w l t l i R . . W . A O.K. R„fvral l p.lnt's West.

.f. v, . HuBiRT. President. S. W.cr%l.MtNOS. S r a ' l P a s s ' r l w n t . O U T OK XHK O L D 1 S T O T U JS > 'KW. T l i .

——— - v_,' ^y A.K* Schoo l or SHorth»ud u d T y p « w r i t l » s i< estfcbli-tiert In H« N e w Bu[ldlcr.COLX,lCGlC PCa.CK< *3 *5 and 87 North Pearl St . , t h e b*»t •tructurei devoted to buslneM ••ducalton In Aincr le i . B v e r y t h l n e l » » u p e r b . C o m n * r d » l , N i o r t h a n d , rypewrltluK, e r a c t i c a l Bnfl l i tb , ikurt pD««*lal Ctminanihlp <Sep»rtBkeDt», wivli jijinuastlt' drills, when desired louttnmen j»n<l vroiu-u preparetl l or buslne««. Many a ^ - i s i e u to |it.i,itlon». N».w e a t a l o f u e a n d »peelineii» of peiiukaiiKliip rree. AddreM

C A B S * . L X JC C A K B A M T . A Ibfcny, • . X.

Two Houses for Sale. THE H o s * e , N o . « « Oak «Ua«t—with half a s

acre of g r o u n d — » l a e t Iron! by *•« f«*« de . f i> . » n d -A ( o a < i B » r d e l i . X h « h C I M « l a a • torv a n d a bair h l g h a a d n e a r l y • • » , w i t h outcalldiBjc*. .

A E « o , c b « D C V t w o s a d » fealf ftt4k«y H i c k

houw. ou Galitfriua I U M I , two 4o«n iMMtk • ! ti>« Tocuuu) k w i e , I B U I U * > r i a —»rtWra •tyi* and eoHvaniaut t-r<Mgb«wt. Larg* M and jooa loeatiou.

Both will be sold at a Bargain. ! „ « » , • W » . m m s * r , a* hia Mark* Ma*,

ly i w » ^ " • • • * • * * " ! H*»at.

Brick for Sale. • f f . l ,

SPHINI DEPARTMENT. N o . 335S

oritsR rjjOBJ,»:>t, By F H W U T , England-

BLACK.

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FOR MEDICINAL USE NO FUSEL O iL

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f, tw ' Hi ' rH ..r a i f-.<" . I P I U K III ,rp .-1 i i » l v'v >• n^umrt I..TI. It is i. ,m . . i - rt»p ii ni Mir last slap**, t e t t ,v >-•• '"p. Ke.J lC takprt at lUe i si i.it « , . ' .w.us rer.'mmei..1 a pure ai I f r I H < I ' I ' P '"SP r. . th ine Bas

> . | l> tTv s I'Hre Mall W h t s k e j . i.rtK-i i t.jxi.-iai.. tler.ry A. Mntt I

i » . s a , s " ' Unirj's t'ure Malt ! s f < P fr ..7, ' i s 1 .• 1 a ' i i l lPratlnns ;

I I ; .rtii.R. a. •% the?p <iialille.* (', .t re-.«n.o»en.l »i l n p u M l . - I « r « r . "

Books and Stationery. A. I . W A R R E N , |

W H O L E S A L E A > D R K T A X L I

BMRsCLLER, STATIONER,! AJ?D NEWSDEALER. I

M H...•_._.•§,_. w'w.iTa.

W h i t e to p l a y a n d m a t e In three m O T e i .

N o . 1259 .

OIIRCKIR POSITION'. By S.T. RKKU.Pittsbnrgh, Pa.

B L A C K . _

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ffBiTr . Black, to play and win.

SOLUTIONS.

Ho. 1257.

14 18 7 3 23 H 19 28 16 19 27 23

A PICTURE.

23 32 3 7

32 27 Drawn.

There comes to me amid the toil and fret Of the 1. u j . busy day a picture sweet, TTitliiint ^ hieb life would n^ver be complete. I7n iarki-ncd by the shadow of regret, A 'i.-ar old fashioned fae" that charms me yet, S T . ! us l'n.:.i snul unsullied by deceit. ];.'••.. i.rii? happy hours which fled too fleet, f r .v..I. 1 Willi memori-s I would not forget. rncli'- ,,i: p tin miiTT caovas of the past. M> trie »t In -ml, pr.ved by unsehish test; Vi h...se ciiara^t.-r m aoblest mold was cast. WII-KP nn-ni'irr hnlds rav heart while life shall

lwt: Heath cl dn.ip.1 Ii- a long ago, as it was best, I \ r s < U't. iir^l s.-ul f-'tmd sweetest rest.

—f irtrles H .ward Pratt in Boston Transcript.

&8$k

liORRY'S ADVENTURE "Il.'-l r.irk" i i situated on the bank of the

Arka.isas rivpr about two miles from Litt le Hii.'k. Si'tne years ago there dwelt a fami ly c..iisi---tkigof U a l c o m G-rey, his wife and one Si in. 1J years of age, named Robert. They had ODP shxve named Sam. T*or short the biv was called Eobby. One day in August, B. .bby, will., had been to visit his uncle Job Sa.-I:.-tt. starti-d o:i his homeward way. He had to jias-s through a stretch of forest un-bn >k"ii for eiyht milrs. Ho left his uncle's b"Use about 4 o'clock. It was a beautiful aft* rnonn, the rays of the sun had hmted the forest, making tt uncomfortably hot. The boy l.irrr'.-.'.lnd on. whistling a merry tune, anon stopping to try the virtue o£ his new jackknife. given him by his Aunt Poll}-. The paroquets flitted, -through the openings in th" for..st. or rested, a dozen or more at a time, on oome dry limb, projecting from the

trunk t.f **>me aged, yoc^au tree, chattering

ami twitUTiuj; at Bobby as he halt«l to look up at t hpm far above his head. They did not seem to fi-ar h im in the least, but turned tlv'ir littk- heads s ideways and looked down-v.ard- with intiuisitive eyes a t the boy. as if wo-iik-ruig w h y he did not proceed on his ji.'.i.i..'\- and leave them to settle down on t':t a jicrch, apparently their resting place f-.r th • nijrhr.

Li.!,! .\ trud^ed joyously on. after satisfying lus eurn i:-ity. laufrhing gleefulh- to himself, and bidding the paroquets good night, which the hrtle creatures acknowledged by ruffling their pluiuapro and keeping up a ceaseless chattering until distance put an end to the sound and a turn in the cart pa th hid them from view. The dusky shades of night began to fall and filled the forest wi th somber shadows. The htt le fellow quickened his pace that he m;g!»t be able to get out of the W.KKIS before ni^ht *-t in in earnest. I t grew dark very fa>t aielol i j . ets could be discerned only alittl .- way in advar.ee. Bobby hurried on, but the aci-umjianimont, tho merry win •tic. had c -a . -J , and he walked si lently aLied. ir.-.iuently stopping to listen to some u:iu ual sound reverberating through the forest, a falling l imb from some aged tree, perhaps; Bobby's heart quickened its pulses a t the sound, and he jumped nervously aside as Siime night bird flew in close proximity to his face » i t h w hirring wings. H e was not a

coward; he had been in the forest before, and hi- had been startled b y similar sounds, a n l k*' l id nut apprehend a n y danger unless byvume wud In-ast lurking around, which was not lik.- ly. he thought, as none had been s.-en in tile forest for a number of days, hav­i n g lx---a driven across the r iver b y the hun­ters and their dogs.

The owls commenced, to hoot, to-hoo, to^ liool The katydids uttered their mournful lay, K a t y did, K a t y didn't; and Bobby toiled on, more s lowly now, because of the increas­ing darkness. S u l l e n l y there came a sound from the forest in "the direction he had but recently passed over. He stopped irresolute, as if his first thought was to flee: he listened wi th a fast beat ing heart. In a moment i t eaniG again, seemingly nearer than before, and long drawn out: "Ooh—ou-ooh^ou— ou:"'

Bobby did not wait for a repetition of the blood curdling cry, but turned and fled in tho

direction of the clearing, -winch was now near .±1 han.I; terror lent strength to liis sturdy-little legs, and he picked hia feet up and put tliem down faster than he ever did p lay ing • I spy" wi th the boys at " l i ed Pork." H e re:v-hed the edge of the forest i n an incredi­bly «hort time, regarding the distance ho had to run—a htt le over a mile . H e bounded in to the clearing, and, after a short run, discov­ered a cabin, which had been formerly occu­pies by tho slaves when engaged in burning the lo,rs of the fallen trees on the cleared land.

A s he ran quickly toward it , ho w a s star­t led aga in b y that fearfid cry ''ooh—ou-ou-IKI'.I— ' u-ou," resembling ;hc shrill voice cf a frightened child.

Bobby had lived too long near the forest to bo mistaken in the terrible cry, and he fled onwards, in mortal terror, to find a place of eatery. Xlashing brs&thJessly up to the ca.bin, through iLe underbrush, he discovered it in a stat<- of decay, the door off its hinges and held, only b y the leathern, deer thongs which hail been their former fastenings.

Evident ly there -was no safety for the b o y there, so thought Bobby as he looked in dis­may in tbe darkness around him. Stumbling through the underbrush ho came across a half of a hogshead turned upon its side; it had evi dently been used by the former occupants of the cabin to catch rain water. The thought struck him at once that this was Ids only chance of taftty from the pursuing brute, whose howls he now heard in close proximity, npparently at tho edge of tho forest. Grasp­ing the huge tub firmly by its edge he essayed to end it o\ er towards him, but as it had lain a long time exposed to all weathers and soaked by the rainfalls, it had become sodden, and it was only after repeated efforts, tbe howls of tho animal approaching nearer aad nearer all the while, that be could move tbe

thing. Terror tent h i m strength aca in , however ,

and he succeeded in {Hilling it over partially, and squatt ing himself beneath t i n opaoing aa ha held it tipped partly over he finally let go with hi* bands aad tbe hogihcod GUM down with a thud; and for the tuna being be-was safely ensconced beneath it; none too aoon, for a« i t came d o w u eaoompa—ins b u n i n Egyptian darkneaa, he heard a aeratehktg out-aide bis prison house, then a sniffling round the edge of the upturned mb,aud he knew that bis roe bad tracked, him and scented out hi* hiding place.

The Imite ran round and rand the tub in a circle, sniffling and growl ing , t h e fet id »ieam from tbe creature's breath entered be­neath the tub where it bad lodged on some small shrubs, and it made Bobby sjek with the stifling stench. Nothing cteassssd, »tow-•ver, at tye stale oi the eiege, Bobby U-thougbt him of his new Jacfckalfe; «r»wiaa; tt forth from his pockM a»Ml opening the baade,

he cut the twlgi away that best lus incksjore aad seaaa osjhskss, essi Asa rtatsil store evenly aad asrnsrj the sttr within oaaaad by the

*T*

ornt» thrust In his p a * nncter tt* rim of tbe tab, the brRTP little fellow -uwd his knife with effect. Th" animal finally enlsrgpd U* bole so tha-t i t -wcnild a d m i t h& head, and tbe strong odor of his breath filled the inside of Bobby's rrtrnat nod a l m o < smothered him. He mad" a thrust w i t h his knrfo. but tbe brute .{tuclcly withdrew hi? head, so that the t-k.tr did not take *nTeot* Becoming embold-

cno.1, thf trnitp thrust W ImA still funlier in and turned upon his s ide in bis endeav. - s to wigg le hi.« shoulder in also Bohbj in forfmE orouiid inside tbe tub. had four.-' a stoppi r. or tiung, that protruded through * •» bung b-'Ie. t<» this he n o w rlnng with 1- • h ban.ls »«>t)i al l hi« might and forced the edg«

if the tub down on th« nrrtc of tho animal, -w-ho snar-li-<i l a d pn»sbcd bis ja.-**^ ir, a. -terri­ble manner Seeing that the brute would surflv pffect an entrance if something was n. .t i\< .no quickly, Bobby let go of his hold on the protruding stopper with one hand and with the other he tried to drive the sharp knife blade into the animal s upturned eye. but missed his mark and strtiek his cheek hone With a convulsive struggle, the brute tried to baric out. but the brave boj* aimed a second blow a t the shining mark—the brute's eyes shone like two balls of fire in the dark­ness—this t ime with better success, for the sharp blade penetrated the eye to tho brain. Despite i t s desperate and dy ing s truggles to escape, Bobby, who had left the knife stick­ing in the wound, held the t u b clown w i t h a l l his remaining strength, and the struggles of the brute grew fainter and fainter, and finally ceased altogether.

I t was a long time—it seemed an ago t o Bobby, before he dared to ease up the strain on t i e upturned tub, but his desperate exer­tions began to tell upon h im. tmd he finally relinquished his hold upon the stopper nnd fell back completely exhausted and uneon-scious. H o w long he remained t h a i he never could tell, but upon returning to conscious­ness he found that the brute was dead. I t was only after repeated efforts that ho could raise the tub far enough to a l low his exit , but a t last he accomplished the difficult feat and he crawled out more dead than alive. I t required a deal of rubbing of himself and stamping of his cramped limbs, W o r e he could gain locomotion. He w a s not far from home, and as soon as he could get U s bear­ings, which required another long period ou account of the state he was in. he set out in that direction, stumbling and sometimes fall­ing, h e managed to reach home. A l l the lights were out in the house, his father and mother hav ing retired for the night, think­ing their boy was go ing to s tay another n ight at his uncle's.

Bobby pounded on the door a long t ime bo-fore he could awaken any one. A t last there was a stir within , a n d a candle was lit. I n another moment or two, a voice inside an­swered the summons on the door by inquir­ing:

""U"ho dar?" "Me!" answered Bobby. A t the sound of tho voice tho door w a s

quickly unbarred, and Sam's wool ly pate ap­peared in the aperture.

"Gorra mighty , if i t ain't Bobby! w h a r on de sun hab y o u cum?"

Sam did not finish the sentence. A s tbe faint l ight of the candle fel l upon the nearly fainting boy, he quickly drew h i m inside a n d called up 5Ir. Grey and wife , w h o were won­dering who Sam could be conversing w i t h a t such a late hour as 1 o'clock in the morning.

W h a t a s ight m e t their eyes as t h e y came out of their bedroom into the old kitchen. Bobby, w i t h hands and face scratched and bleeding from their contact w i t h the briars and shrubs, his clothes torn in m a n y places and covered w i t h dirt. I t Was some t i m e be^ fora he could ga in sufficient composure t o g ive an account of w h a t had befallen him.

Bobby was undressed that morning and put to bed, and hot clothes were applied t o his aching body, but he did n o t fal l asleep until 3 o'clock, and his mother kept watch b y his bedside unti l he awoke late in tbe day.

In the meantime, Mr. Grey, accompanied b y Sam, started for the clearing. Arr iv ing there t h e y found th ings as represented by Bobby, and the animal , a full g r o w n pan­ther, w a s shouldered by S a m and Mr. Grey and t h e y marched back in triumph. Ho measured ful iy s ix and a half feet from t ip to tip.

Bobby w a s the hero of "Red Fork,'" and for many days the spot was vis i ted by in­quisit ive neighbors to see for themselves where the mtrepid youth fought and killed

the tawny savage brute.—S. Frank. Blaudiu. in Tankeo Blade.

REVIVAL OP SNUFF TAKING.

T h e Story t h a t Conies Across t h e A t l a n ­tic^—Practice in Colonial T i m e s .

The report comes from Paris that the prac­tice of snutl taking will be resuscitated dur­ing the coming winter by the dandies of the French capital. The young men are hunting up their ancestral snuff boxes and studying old family pictures in order to acquire tho graceful style of taking a pinch practiced by tho old court gallants. Pawnbrokers and dealers in antiquated articles have realized very large sums for snuff boxes t h a t h a v e lain on their shelves for forty or fifty years. Most ex travagant prices have been paid for snuff boxes that belonged t o mem­bers of the old nobility. Several jewelers are engaged in making snuff boxes of an­tique and original designs. In m a n y club rooms ornamental vases, filled wi th various kinds of snuff, stand on the tables or man­tels.

In colonial t imes, during the revolutionary war, and for m a n y years afterward, the use of snuff w a s very common i n th i s country. Kearly every gentleman carried a si lver snuil box, which was often inlaid with gold. A t the entrance of the senate chamber, in the national Capitol at Washington, are large receptacles for snuff, a t which members of that august body once filled their boxes on liaising into their seats i n the morning. Many can remember tho t ime when tho snuff box was passed around in social circles every f e w minutes, and w h e n i t w a s as common t o ask for a pinch of snuff as i t now is to ask for a l ight for a cigar or for a chew of to­bacco. Poor people general ly used snuff be­cause i t was cheap, or, more properly, be­cause "a litt le w e n t a good ways ." The use of snuff became general in al l northern countries, especially i n Scotland, Hol land, Sweden and Jforway. I n Iceland nearly every person used large quantit ies of snuff, w h i c h was kept in a n ornamented horn. The practice was , and perhaps is, t o insert tbe "little end of the horn" in tho nostri l and to thump the large end so as t o discharge a portion of the contents. The host often walked among his guests and performed this office a s a mark of hospitality. Sometimes servants or members of tho fami ly were in­structed h o w t o handle the snuff horn w i t h grace and dexterity. Before the invention of frict ion matches considerable difficulty w a s found in. l ight ing cigars and pipes, but the snuff b o x w a s a lways ready to bring forth. Forty years ago there w a s scarcely a grocery in the country that did not keep several kinds of snuff, and the name of one Scotch manu­facturer was known throughout tbe c ivi l i sed world.

The use of snuff has been steadily decl ining i n almost every country in the world during a period of fifty years. Various reasons m a y be assigned for i ts gradual disuse. S o far a s deleterious effects are concerned, snuffing to ­bacco is open t o the least objection, a s the amount of nicotine taken into the system is very smalL This method of using tobacco i s also attended by the smallest expense to the consumer.—Chicago Times.

The Banjo's Bmceessw. "Women are -worse than the ancient Atheni­

ans in their love for a new thin.. What they love and Swear by one season they wiU aban­don the next, and nothing that is old, from a bonnet to a carpet, tods f a w in their eyes. There is the banjo. Three years ago every other girl in tbe eountay had one strung by a yellow ribbon about her neck and was thrum­ming the strings and singing darky melo­dies with all her might and main. Moat of them never learned to play at all; they took a lesson or two, learned the scales and frag­ments of about three tunes, and then it lan­guished until they would read in the London letters of how Notica Yznaga saved a dull evening and delighted the Prince of Wales by throwing herself into tbe breach with her banjo, and.jbwMthe yoang women took to earnest stndy again; for about three Weeks. ButH has gone to bopstasV H s ^ W lss*. be-yond.revivah Itasss?easso;%ainudohn.

So wM nepenttss Shi is without one. With Uae or copper colored ribbons, instead

of yellow, it » i W & ^ r & * g " * pearl. She scadies ssswhwasly sssder the tutelage of thensetweqoe, dark eyed Italian, Signer Ricca, sad leers- free* hisa how to Signer Riccsv, rrssri era „—-r- ' -« - *» «*sla *—1 bit of twtefc. shell, with which the etrasf* are .wept To ue thoressjkly good forsa, the young woman snatoal he* to area hsreslf with a vtnacesa, iM»h asaasss sat s«sSSTSs»»nt UMofactated by tbe aimudolhi asafcar ia ordinary to bar Baajssty the eassssi «f Italy, and these tojra cosee s»»J*a, SsSSaS at tjsW aanea

luxurious oaas eotsis sswassd SBsvsIrM eVsV e ^ s l s i a m es- rs<her lew ewagsm, and

STuMi MmmZi* of •*•*"£« snsstoBB-asas* ftassa* i a ^ V ^ B B * * s*sssssl ihjSJI Aasajfc ^ n 4 * £

WHERE SHIPS OLOAft i

B i t l i e i i Cards.

A GREAT RESERVOIR FULL OF THE

WORLD'S WEALTH.

A. 1>«*I> I » t » «K« M i l * mt WarcKomna

T h a t I J n e ( h e W a t e r I V o n t o f ItrooV-

lTH—Wow t h * 9Sonern fm-rrm nf .Ala.ltfla

A w FTrted.

The most prominent object that attracts tbe attention of tbe passenger on the Fulton, Wall or South ferry i s tlv& jkrag lin<* of -ware­houses that stretches a long tbe wat< r front of Brooklyn. Back of these •warebou.^es rises the bluff upon which tbe leaders of Brooklyn society h a v e bui l t their residences, and to w h i c h they have g iven the name of Brooklyn Heights. In the mansions luxury reigns. In the storehouses commerce masses all that i t can command to fill the lap of luxury. The piers extend out to the channel, several hun­dred feet in front of the storehouses. These are a l l of brick, and v a r y from SOU to 600 feet in depth. They stretch in a practically continnous line, broken only l y the f Try slips, for live miles, beginning with "the Em­pire stores, above the great bridge, and ex­tending beyond tbe Erie basin.

Tbe buildings are not absolutely fireproof, but their walls are so thick that a fire cannot spread from one to the other. The ceilings are low and the ground floors nro dark. Iron shutters are the rule. There are 7,000 feet of them altogether. There is an appearance of

I great solidity about the buildings. They were ; evidently built to withstand the assaults of

time, and to hold secure what is given them to keep. Not a particle of ornamentation is to be discerned from one end of the long line to the other. The object for which these buildings were erected is not display, but se­curity. Here are the riches of the metropo­lis awaiting its order.

WHEN THE snirs COMH HOME. W h e n the ships of the merchants come in

from foreign shores they unload their freight upon the piers, and it is rolled back into the deep recesses of the cavernous depths of these immense warehouses. If the merchant wants money he takes his warehouse receipts to h i s bank and puts them up as collateral. If ha wishes to deliver or ship the goods, his re­ceipt commands their production on demand, and they come forth, as the water spouts from the pipe when the faucet is turned, or the l i g h t answers to the touch of an i leetr ic button.

Great archways let in the stout Percherons witb^buge drays, which cart a w a y hogsheads and crates, bags and bundles, bales and boxes, in an almost endless procession. A s these carry a w a y goods, gangs of longshoremen roll on. the piers other goods that have been hauled up out of the holds of sail ing vessels and steamships. F r o m the tops of the slender masts float the flags of nearly all nations, least of a l l i n number being tho Stars and Stripes. The red nag , w i t h cross of St . George, i s most numerous. The tri-color is prominent, a s i s also the red, whi te and black of Germany. Others are the black, ye l l ow and red of B e l g i u m ; the red, with white cross, of Denmark; the yel low, w i t h red stripes, of Spain; the blue stripes, w i t h ye l low cross and cross in corner, of Sweden; the white , blue and red stripes of Russ ia ; the ye l low, red and blue stripes, w i t h seven whi te stars on the blue, of Venezuela; tbe red, w i t h yel­l o w cross, of Switzer land; and, m o s t rare of all, the whi te and blue stripes, w i t h whi to and blue cross, of Greece. The pr ivate flags of the owners display strange devices, some having t igers, l ions, crosses, letters and thf like.

The piers present a busy scene. An army of custom house inspectors and weighers in their white caps calmly survey the scene of which t h e y are indisputably- the monarehs. A glance at the labels on their caps enables one to easily distinguish them from tbe la­borers. The latter are stalwart, with brawny arms, broad chests, bronzed faces, and sturdy limbs. As they trundle the boxes, bales and bags down tbe piers they dump them in little spaces chalked out for different owners. Pools of molasses and a carpet of sugar grains waste enough sweetness on the air to tone up the flapjacks and coffee of the whole Sixth ward.

rROat STRANGE CLIMES. The weighers' assistants knock off the

boxes from great chunks of what looks like sawed oft elephants* legs . I t is crude rubber that has just arrived from South America, and has just scraped acquaintance With rep­resentatives of the same kin from Australia, Central America and Africa. The finest comes from Para, in 410-pound boxes. When cut into it looks like canned meat.

As bags of coffee by the hundred are rolled down the piers from the ships, other bags of pungent aroma sl ide d o w n With a loud swish from the upper stories of the warehouses, through along, steeply inclined chute of can­vas. This is so strong and coarse, and tbe de­scent is so sharp, that a laborer who essays an easy passage finds himself in need of a new seat to his trousers at the bottom.

The deep keel ships from Calcutta and Ma­nila bring huge quantities of jute butts, bam­boo, hemp and cutchlike tar, used in brew­eries. The Mediterranean line brings fruits and skins, the Jamaica ships bananas, the Rio de Janeiro vessels coffee and rubber, co­coa ahd hides. Odors float about of tama­rinds, cinnamon from tbe East Indies, cloves, allspice, vanilla beans, bananas, oranges, lemons, codfish, guano, figs, raisins, mace, tea, sugar and chocolate. Here is cochineal in ceroons made of skins, also indigo. Hogs-beads of molasses spread over acres, and sugar in mats, boxes and hogsheads fills ware­house after warehouse-

Men besmeared with tar stir up with huge paddles great caldrons of boiling pitch. A

team of horses jogs lightly along with a load piled to a great height It is cork with the bark on and looks like saw logs. Another truck follows with bales of codfish, and an­other with" hides heavily coated With lime. Over a great pile of rock salt the bowsprit of a ship, rising and falling With tbe billowy tide, swings its flapping sail to and fro like the trunk of an elephant. In the warehouse opposite a black cat meanders over a great pile of sulphur, while a group of 'longshore­men play penny ante on the planks.

There is one picture that is very pretty. The importers of oranges and lemons have arranged their fruit for inspection by buyers. The boxes are piled in tiers that rise from tho floor of the Wharf to tbe top of the ware­house. The covers of the boxes are hare been removed and the boxes laid upon thcir sides. The fruit is wrapped in pink, purple, white, red and striped paper. Circles have been cut out from the wrappers, so that seg­ments of the oranges and lemons contribute their bright colors to the great rainbow. I t is a sight worth crossing the river to see.

A great ship, with bowsprit extending far over tbe wharf, has a sea serpent for a figure­head. Another has a dragon, one a female, another a sailor boy. Here is a general, there a goddess, here a mermaid, there a' seahorse. There is an endless variety of strange devices from strange climes.—New York Sun.

California Mummies.

There is in Son Francisco a collection of newly found mummies, forming one of the most remarkable discoveries ever made in America, The mummies differ from Egyp­tian ones in that they are generally quite naked, only a few having a loose covering, and they have evidently undergone no pro-cess of embalming. Tbe flesh is so thoroughly

dr ied t h a t i t rwmiibl— parchment , a a d the corpses are very light Tbe mumraiet wen fount by a party of gold seekers in one of the numerous branch— of the Sierra atadre

mountains, near the Gila, in Ajiaooa, One d a y the go ld sashrrs discovered a. cave , the

entrance to which wis closed with a kind of cement, very hard to break. Forcing an en­trance, the men found tbemaalret in a kind of ante-chamber, thirty feet long, hewed out of the living rock. This led into a large hall, in which were lying a number of dried up corpses. The discoverers at once set to work to transport the'nunimiee to tbe nearest railway station, in spite, of tbe opposition of tbe Apache Indians, who soon heard of tbe discovery and considered tbe remains to be those of their gods. All the mummies were safely removed to Ban Francisco, where they excite great infes t in srientuV drdea.— Chicago Herald.

Doriiif the raasnrer went, in the year, I noticed that many of the

the Jew ejssvter hi On* tad ia w a r e m a r k e d a i t l

I-W, REWITT Jt MOBKY,

Attoraejs and Counsellor! at K C J E 3 K V I I X X , X . V.

H. S . B K W r r r . X . T . H a w r r x . F . A . M O E B T .

D . 8. * F R A X K McMAST£RS,

ATT0R5BT8 ANOCyTOSBbhORS AT LAW. Office o*-er Mc l ia t t i e ' s s t o r t , Harg-aret

S t r e e t , n a t t s b o T g h , !«. Y/. Special a t t e n t i o n g i v e n to b u s i n e s s i n Sur­

rogate ' s Court, I). S. MCJU8TERS, VJ. 8 . C o m m t e t i o a e r . TKASK X c l A S X f c K S , J u s t i c e o l tbe Peace .

A u g u s t 11,1*87.

WILLIA3I V. 8. WOODWARD, "

ATTORSBT A S D COC^SBTXOR AT LAW, • n d United S ta te s C o m m i s s i o n e r . Otuee

2S"o. 33 M.-*rjf<vret street., (over Levi 's c i g a r s t o r e ) , P U t t s b u r g b , >*, T .

J O H N R . C O T T R I L L . S I A L I S I K

W A T C B E f , Jewelry

•teif-Tern,,

C L O C K a . SilvetWare^e riattiourfti

W 1 I T 8 L O W C . W A T S O N ,

ATTOR^i£S A H D COCX3EI.LOK A X L A W . Spec ia l a t t e n t i o n g i r e n t o b u s i n e s s i n

S u r r o g a t e ' s Court . Office o v e r McUat t i e ' s s t o r e , l a t e l y o c c u ­

p i e d b y Corbin * U o b i e , M a r g a r e t S t r e e t , r i a t t s t m r g h , u . T .

Hr"*'"^"^

Palmer, Weed, Kellogg * Smith, AITOBNETSASDCOO-8KI-I.OR8 ATLAW

Office. W e e d A M o o e r s ' B l o c k . C l l n t o n a t r i a t t a b u r g h . S . T . P e T B B 8 .PALMBU. 8 . A.KBLLOQO. a tHTB If. WBBD. ' W S . EBHBST SMITB . J a n u a r y 1.1SS5.

Beckwith, Barnard * Wheeler,

ATTOKHETS A COUNSELLORS AT L A W F l a t t e b u r g h , C l i n t o n C o u n t y , N . Y .

Offlce first door e a s t of Tr in i ty C h u r e h , FLATTSBURGM, NKW YORK.

Q.H.BBCBTWITB. H . E.BAmXABD 8 . L . W H B B L K B .

JAMES TIEKNEY,

AT T O B N t Y A N D COUNSELLOR AT L A W . a n d N o t a r y Publ i c ,o tBce 34 K a r g a r e t S t . ,

o v e r H a g e i t y & P i a t t ' s ] P l a t t s b u r g h , C l i n ­t o n C o . , N . Y .

K O Y A X . C O K B I N ,

ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, P l a t t s b u r g h , S . Y. Office i n t h e B a i l e y

Block, Bridge street, second floor.

HENRY S. JOHNSON,

ATTORNEY A N D COUNSELLOR A T L A W Plattsburgh, N. y . office, Winslow'sBlock:

Custom H o u s e S quare , oppos l t e t h e rostOfflcc

K1L.EY & C O N W A Y ,

ATTORNEYS AJ.D COUNSELLORS A T L A W W i u s l o w ' s B l o c k , i tr i i ikerhoU S t r e e t

T. F . COliWAT.

B l o c k , P l a t t s b u r g h , N. V .

JOH>" B. K1LKY.

CLARK A HATHAWAY, T T O R S E Y S A S D C O U S 9 K L L O E S A 1 1 A W

L Office C l i n t o n B l o c k , P l a t t s b u r g h , K. Y Wil 1 a t t e n d t o Causes i n a l l t h e Courts o l t h e S t a t e a n d U n i t e d S t a t e s . S p e c i a l a t t e n t i o n t v e n t o C o l l e c t i o n s a n d s e t t l e m e n t o f E s t a t e s n S u r r o g a t e ' s Court , A c , A c .

G s o . L . C L A R K . F . F . H A T H A W A T .

W I L L L P A T T I S O N ,

AT T O B N E T A N D COUNSELLOR AT L A W , Cl inton B l o c k , P l a t t s b u r g h , N . T .

At W e s t Chazy o n Tuesday a n d F r i d a o f each week.

H E N R Y P. G I L L I L A N D , 2nd.

ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW and Justice of the Peace. Office in Court

House Basement,Plattsburgh, X . Y.

A . 6 . C A R V E S ,

PLATISBURQH.S. T.

Dr. E. C. I O W , HOltEOFATHIC FHISICIAK

FLATTSBUBGH. 5 . Y. jg/T^ Office a n d r e s i d e n c e corner o f B r i n k e r -

hoff and Oak Streets, south of High School B u i l d i n g .

DR. FRANK M A D D E N , (LATK OF BBOOK.LTN, S . T . )

OFFICE AND RESIDENCE 97>4 Margaret street, 3d honse north of Cornelia street.

Office hours, 8 to 10 A. M., 4 to 7 P. *f.

G. D . D U N H A M , M . 1 ) .

OFFICE: 3* Margaret Street, (over Hagerty A McCaffrey's.)

PLATTSBURGH, X. T.

Office Honif; 8 w».30 A, M, , l to 3 r. M, and 7 t o 9 r . i i .

DR. BROWNE, THE

DENTIST. Corner Margaret and

Bridge Streeta, PLATTSBCRGH,«N. Y.

D r . J . F . B A I L E Y , D E N T I S T ,

P L A T T S B U B O a . S . r .

OfficeCastoiu House Square .Low's building

w ITHERILL HOUSE,

PLATTSBL'RGU.lf. Y.

r . T . H O W K t L , . . . . P r o p r i e t o r

r iist-CUss in all Appointments. Free Ouiuibus to- and from the boats and

ears.

r i U M B K U L A N D H O U S E ,

PLATTSBURGH #. F.

Having renttca and refurnished the Well known Cumberland House, the proprietors •OMcitfke patronage of their old rrieude and the public generally. Special indueements are offered to Local Custom. Ah L having been added to the dining room,parties who Hay desire- more privacy than is possible at the public table can be aeeomnicdaied, while at the same time avoiding theinconvenlencies arising from a separate dining room. Ladies visiting town unattended, wil l find th i s ar. Inngement especially desirable. _ COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS w i l l find a t t h e Cumberland House the best of aeeomsaoda t l o n s , a LAROE AMD COSVBMIEXT SAMPLE BOOM having been fitted np with anentranea dlreetf rom the street.

Carrlageseonvey guests to and from e a e h train free of charge.

GEO. S. CORBtJI, Proprietor,

A LBION HOUSE, -**- T w o d o o r s south o f t h e W i t h e r l l l H o n s e

PLATTSBURGH, K, T. O E O E S E T A P P A H P r o p r i e t o r .

T h i s H o n s e h a s r e c e n t l y b e e n t h o r o u g h l y repaired, a n d refurnished w i t h t h e m o s t im­p r o v e d f u r n i t u r e . I t i s centra l ly l o c a t e d a n d affords a l l t h e c o n v e n i e n c e s o f a first-class Hotel. BOARD BY THE DAY OR WEEK on t h e m o s t reasonab le t e r m s . Goow b a r b s artel •tabling for horses, fublic patronage is cor­dially solicited. 23t£

T T A R R l N Q T O N HOUSE, •*-*" PLATTSBURGH, N.T. a . W. HARRINGTON, - - Froprietar

This House, at the corner of Marion Street ahd Protection Avenue, i s most centrally located, being in tbe heart of the business portion of the village, and convenient to Post office,Telegraph and Telephone offices.

TERMS, ai.oo P E E DAY.

Q L A Y B U R G H HOTEL.

CLAYBVRQH, K. T.

A U D I DAKKAH, . . . . Proprietor.

This honse has been refitted throughout and Is In line condition.

a. daily-Stage from this house connects with the Chateaugay Railroad at Cadyville.

Terms reasonable. The pubiie are invited t o c a l l . 24tf

r p H B CENTENNIAL- HOUSE,

s A it AXAC, jr. r.

PKltttY * MAS9ETT Proprietor*. This bouse Is situated at Pickett's Corners,

has recently been refitted and put in excel­lent condition for the accommodation of traveler*. Transient visiiors should not fail to patronise this bouse. Special inducement to Commercial Travelers, and prices to suit the limes. 4Stf

QOMMERCIAL HOTEL, KKMSKFILLM, AT. T.

I.MeQUIKB, Proprietor,

Being new and centrally located, the Hotel presents great attractions to business men, and ne palna will be spared to secure Its repatatlon as a first-class hotel. A liberal naetonage Is respectfully solicited.

Partloalar attention given to Commercial Travelers.

Livery In c o n n e c t i o n . O . H . W . T e l e g r a p h o a e e i a h o u s e , a tastes t o a n d rrosn a n tra ina

and boats. wwriTHERILL'S HOTEL LIVERY TV STABLE.

0 B.COOLBT # CO., Proprietors PLATTSMUMGH, V. t.

P a r t i e s t a w a n t o f a G o o d T u r n o u t , e i t h e r for buajaees or pleasure, should call at Wlthosfll's Hotel Livery Stable, where the* will a a d

wr—la «f Brery BtwertBtlra, AHD A * U A M I A I U P B I O M . rBvesTSBSBCEww and la Rood order.

O. B. COOLBT 4k CO.

"I3X0H S.H0N3HJ UM Warn sttjstorstan PE>AEI,

tssHtoiOMtee.

> mrtifi, jr. r. CUB. BEt R A t a a s UPWARDS.

atBsB*otolM.stoe*B aad tteaOrtswa ••Cats) i Baoseelltd eery toe.

TBOJIAa J. FREVm, nrptlete*.

THE EAST SIDE

OrooarT tod ProTiiion Store. J* is

r ATIVQ M M - a t hie BUatBteiket

isf&w AHD

Q r w d d l s p L r o I F A X C T & O O D 8 . m u m i n a t e o C l o e k s . S i l T e T a n d P l a t e d W a r t i ' w e l r T ° r a l l k i n d s . Opera G l a s s e s . S p y Glasses Spectacles.«c..*c.

D K A L E K I N F O R K I G K A N D A M E R I C A S

WATCHES AND CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILTER WARE, A c , Ac.

CLOCKS, WATCHES and JEWELRTrepair ed by experienced workmen, on short notice ahd at the lowest terms. 20tf

J O H N F O L E Y ' S eiLEBRATXD

GOLD P E N S 21.. 3h£E3-5rElH.,S

J E W E L R Y S T O R E . Bridge Street,

PLATTSBTJKGH, N . T .

INSUBI WITH

HAGERTY & PLATT, P L A T T S B U R G H . N . Y .

S t u d e n t s e n t e r e d the Tioy B u s i n e s s Col lege in Oetober. This is t h e larges t n u m b e r t h a t e v e r entered i n one m o n t h , and c o m i n g most­l y from Troy a n d i t s v i c in i ty , s p e a k s w e l l for the popular i ty ol t h i s mos t prosperous s c h o o l . Young m e n aiid l a d i e s are h t ^ e qualified i n the shortest lime to take positions as book-keepera, s t e n o g r a p h e r s a n d t e l e g r a p h e r s , a great m a n y o f w h o m are h e l p e d t o pood p o s i t i o n s . For n e w c a t a l o g u e s a n d t b e bes t s p e c i m e n s o f p e r m a n s h i p , a d d r e s s .

THOS. H . SHIELDS, Pr ln . , J3 Third S t . Troy . X . Y .

B I G E L O W S

Pho to P a r l o r s , • e n d of Bridge s t r e e t ,

P L A T T S B U R G H . N . Y .

£. K. BROMLEY, L ive ry S tab le . G o o d T t i r n o i x t s a l w a Y S

i n R e a d i n e s s . Also, a large lineof Carriages, Phaetons

a n d H a r n e s s e s , b o t h n e w a n d s e c o n d - h a n d , for sale cheap.

North Side of Court House Park, CORKIER O * E1VEK STREET,

P L A T T S B U R G H , N . Y .

RANSOM'S LIVERY STABLES! TH E U N D E R S I G N E D H A V I N G

purchased the entity Livery outfit of Mr. RiCHAttU STAVK, respectfully announce that he wil lcohtlnue the businessatii isold stand

OS COUKT HOUSE SQUARE, where be wi l l he glad to Welcome the former patrons and all his friends desiring

G o o d i , i v e r y T u r n o t a t s . E s p e c i a l a t t e n t i o n p a i d t o S u m m e r a n o

P l e a s u r e Trave l , a n d p a r t i e s c a r r i e d t o t h s L a k e * a n d M o u n t a i n s - a t r e a s o n a b l e r a t e d a n d first-classstyie.

H . B . R A N S O M . P l a t t s D u r g b . N . Y

J . D . W I L K I N S O N .

Gunsmith & Locksmith. •reeeh aad Hassle Loading Kites.

GUNS. GUN MATERIAL AND METAL LIC CARTRIDGES

Repairing ofeverydoecriptioBdoaclBt he b s t t m s B U r .

Corner o f B r i d g e a n d - R i v e x s v r c e t e — h p o n e flight cf stairs,

t 'LA.TTSBtJRGB S Y .

Read! Drown

Drown

Drown Drown Drown

Drown

Drown

Omp an-1 SPP what PROWN ia doing in the T.tUJp Sb--re R^nml tho Cf>rm-r,

I« TO^ITTC; i i ,-.-•!»•;- rV^f

<-?pnt«* Hivm! Spwr.l Frrnrh Ca'f an,l p.->ns;r.la Kid. (Vn-crr==. Button, ivrol T>rp«s B . « i t * .

1= n o w PmpToyipg s i x £T>rn1

w o r k m p o . m a k i n g u p C*"*! Iratbf r in!'1 ){FII'« v\<i Ihvs'

Is this month rnakips: »Hr;rp purchase of Fashionah'e vui

I? t h e o n l y sb*^<?r«5irs in t o w n

wiiii sella UIP far-famnl "Waverly School Shoes.

I* the Olrlfst Dralcr ari'i Maker of Boots anii Shoe's in PIftUsburgh. In? bf*-n thrre timrs through Pro. nr-,1 sells Cheaper than cvrr before.

Sells gooil, fresh RUMwrs Cheap, ltubbrr? of old stocks and lots at Bankrupt Prices by PK"W>-,

Is gelling rcatTv arcl has on ham! the roost inviting bill of Shoe-ware for (lid Patrons and Xew Customers that has filled his store siurin.z the forty-two years of his making and selling Footwarc, hence all who see eaa say ; "How beauteous are thrir feet" who buy shoes in the Little Store Round the Corner, No. 3 Clinton street, Reed"s Block.

Aoril 15.1887.

F. H. GRAVES, D E A L E R IJf

Family Groceries, Teas, Coffee?, Sugars, Spices,

Syrups, Molasses, Canned Goods*

&c, &c. No. 4 Standrsh Street ,

P L A T T S B U R G H .

flf^^Produce taken in ex­change for goods at market prices.

JOHN COLLINST A t t h e Chasm, has I bis day, ' B e e n o p e n i n g G ' O U S both fresh and g a y . H e h a s r r c e i v t d nei ir every k i n d , That you in any stove can tind. A n d a s I purchase by t b e B a l e , I am determined to i c t a i l y o r B E U J r P A T a m i l e l o w e r Than ever h a v e been h a o before. S o w w i t h my fr i ends I m e a n to l i v e , A n d to t h e m s p l e n d i d bargains g i v e . I w o u l d not l ive to r a i s e your pass ions . For high pr ices here are n o t ot f a s h i o n ; My fr iends a n d buyeTS o n e a n d a l l . I t wi l l pay you w e l l to g i v e m e a ca l l . You are sure to find m e every day . f r o m t h e Chasin H o u s e , cross the w a v -The fo l lowing ar t i c l e s w i l l by t a k e n in e x ­

c h a n g e for g o o d s : Butter. EsTss, Fruit and Vegetables.

C A S E WILL, NOT BE REFUSED.

A u s a b l e Chasm, J u l y 27th,1887. 31tf

6E0. N. WEBB Has the Largest and Most Com­

plete Assortment of

S T O V E S Of every style and description

T I N W A R E . Hollow "Ware,

W O O D E H W A K E ,

G l a s s W a r e ,

Household Furnishing Goods;

Plumbing Materials. * c , *e .

Brer ofteredin this market; at prices that cannot be u ndersold by any establishment.

Special attention given to

Plaabing aad sll kinds of Job Work.

No. 17 B r i d e e S t r e e t

yLATTSBUKGH K . T .

ANOTHERJ3HANGE.

Oyster House and Bestaarant. The popular Oyster Bouse and Restaurant

A t N o . 2 R i v e r S t r e e t . PLATTSBURGH, K". T .

f o r m e r l y conducted h y | A . P . GAUTH1ER,

ass been purchased by HENRY CARDAI.Y,

Former ly of the 'Wlther in H o u s e .

P L U M B I N G . THOS. COSTELLO,

Bumbsr, Steam & Oas Fitter, H A S OPENED A SHOP A T

Ifo. 94 Margaret Street, Oppos i te t h e X e w County Cleric's Offlce,

PLATTSBURGH, X. T. W h e r e tie i s prepared to do ALL K n s o s o r WORK i n b i s l i n e . A l i n e o f

Wrought Iron and Lead Pipe. Bran and Plumbing Goodi,

ALWATS ON H A N D . tW Give him a call. !Ttf

f: H e w i l l b e p l eased to s*rve a l l i t s old cus -| t o m e r s , and a s m a n y n e w c u e s a s wi l l favor \ h i m with a ca l l . I s tea l s wi l l be furnished a t a l l r e a s o n a b l e I h o u r s of t h e d a y and n i g h t . I OtSTERS AVILL BE A SPECIALTY a n d il furn i shed a t a l l h o u r s . f: Th i s h o u s e has four l a r g e BILLIARD 3 TABLES i n c o n n e c t i o n wi th 1t. I T h e p u b l i e a r e e o r d i a l l y i n v i t e d t o c a l l .

jlTOuSy, 2To. 5 2 B r i d g e S t . ,

P L A T T S U t J R & H , N . >

MANUFACTURER OF

L. FACrA!* & BOH,

BAKERS and CONFECTIONERS. WEDDINGS ASTD PARTIES SUPPLIED

with every requisite at short notice.

lee Creast aad Water Ices. SJf* Oat cf town orders promptly attend* [

L. FAGAN & SON, s t i ver Bt . . e a s t s ide Court H o u s e P a r k .

i Belfast Ginger Ale, '• L e i n o n , i _ ,

fc> tra~vvb> e r r y . S ax4s a p a r i l l a .

S o d a , B i r c h . B e e r , & c ,

^Bottler of Dobler's Celebrat­ed LAGER BEER,

Nichols & Go. L E G A L N O T I C E S . p i r F f T ' S I R F U I F I ("Ye -- - l . . ,

V * T >*

AT T H E OLD STAND, A '.= i r T f r*--«-Y..-»e f

r a* -»>»ai-> a-if

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No. 62 Margaret Street, ' f T , r* " "fa

*>i 1 * T

KEEP ALWAYS COMPLETE

ON HAND STOCK.

C O T T P I K T T ^ n O F

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FASCY 4 STAPLE GROCERIES

AND PROVISIONS

Fresh Roasted Coffee,

T E A S . S U G A R S ^ ! A>"P

FRESH CANNED GOODS.

Kosendale Coment and fresh ground Nova Scotia Plaster.

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W I G H O L S k CO.

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Undertaking Establishment, N o . 3 4 B i v e r S t r e e t .

East Side of Court Home Square,

Weclaimto have the most complete estab­lishment or the Ttlnd in this section of the State,with a very full assortment of

COFFINS, CASKETS, AND FINE TRIMMINGS,

Inc luding t h e finest a n d m o s t e l e g a n t s t y l e s e v e r k e p t In t h i s v i c i n i t y , a s w e l l a s g o o d i of med ium a n d m o d e r a t e pr ice .

A Separate Hearse for Children. T u n e r a l s a t t ended a n d every b r a n c h of t h i s

s erv ice w i l l h a v e our careful a n d p r o m p t a t t e n t i o n .

A l l a r e i n v i t e d to c a l l a n d e x a m i n e our goods a n d e q u i p m e n t s and learn our pr ices and verify o u r a s s e r t i o n s b y p e r s o n a l Inspec­t ion .

W e s h a l l c o n t i n u e our former e i t e n e l v e

CARPENTERING & JOBBING B U S I N E S S ,

and sha l l b e p l e a s e d t o e x e c u t e a l l o r d e r s for Building o r Repair ing oi e v e r y d e s c r i p t i o n , by c o n t r a c t or oxhex-wise.

CKAUVIN & FITZGERALD. EL'ZSBE CHAUVIN. WJI. iTIZGEKALD

GRAND OPENING

o-

o-FOB 1888.

-o

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l r» i i H ' t i T A j . . . r . & t . f

, » . I . I . ^-»^ ,* , "sal'?, »•'; > |mrg Ji-o *i^*.-rlb*»,i as *- ! >v,

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- s * a - 1 •» i' 11,11 T » l

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*\ -*- t - a'«* a^ »-*-a'|*r*" >T*»* ri'-i*t '^-'"l B*»£lT- trcs.t»ii*>rj-T«,>-

r»n "Irj ; #a»t

R. PRESCOH&SON, KEESEVILLE, N. Y.

ARE OPENING THEIR

W i n t e r Trade WITH TUB

L A R G E S T S T O C K OT

[QLBClQDtaQi iTersstored la northern Jf ew York.

200 Ash & Walnut Suits.

100 Painted and Grained Suits,

i r c s o ' t n r t • f I- t \ I^II-PT« n i ' i t ' - " .» i 1 ra*t*<->t t> i i t f» t . ' t t : , l i r e f s a : 1 '..» M-irrt-tr^rtM>r<'>d«. th#>r, • rnnn'T'e «•• 'U TU» »ty « r * a r i v l s , V H » ! I W K H t t l l r t T » l t « « r - . | « t . , l ! | » « M t l l l » •'f«^t»il i i*. II.WTJ.-W r.-TtH-n th» «--*>** l i n e ><t s a i l i.-t -ilret^ >s.-««>n r -1R t.. »»i«. j a«-» »••? ! Bi'itiiji^, t->ar,iainire iwvt tv -» *»>« t '»»»l • >r tber«-aT^„tt.an-t V i r e j a i i f i o i ^ * . «an-.e pr.-nilse» hoiyt<<r -T^i;rar.t(..| t y * r i„n Barker a i . l R i . i h hl«wi!». » . , . . - f .Av, :,j»^s K»»»s<.. .--t.

V- . th . i t th* forr^. .t g , v « . rlh<^l im-e-1 >-t w.w ^ , - i j . i M l T i,,-.rt.m T T?i 'nias .Tow (*^. f f i w . l . H t1»« tlm*i. r ?a« 4**~r3.«e.

l'aK-1, I>ec4>mf x>r I4'>i, »H»r „ ^ „ i A M r i t L L U<WK\. B»-fer»t>. 3 J . 3?. H B V I I T ,

flairttiff'a \i»orr»<>, h f m P v l . V . S . T . W T T

Q H K K r r . r - S S A L K - J U - virtue of an"*V-C eent lon issned out o f th«* County r .v i r t *>f Clinton C o u n t y . S e w \"..rk. t.< tne d lrec i? . ! an«l de l ivered agai ji*t thp chat lP l s , l a n d s a n d t e n e m e n t s «,f .Sidnev H o w e s , 1 h a v e se lxed upon anil t aken a l l it io r ight , t i t l e a n d Imvr-f-sl -which th f said S i d n e y H o w e s h a l t a t h e - n d d a y of October, !Wv.or h a s s lm-e acquired in a u d i o the fo l lovr lue dpsen l»« l t>remt«es which I s h a l l expose for s a l e and se l l a t p u b ­lic a u c t i o n to the h i g h e s t bidder f.,r cash a* t h e l a w directs a t thp front tfoor«ir t h ? <*«.Tut H o u s e i n t l » V l l l a K e o f f l a t t s h n r s h . C l l n u n County, N e w York, on the 3 I s t d a y . i t Jar .n-ajy,18«8, a t ten o'clock In t b e fomu- i -a t»f that n a y . Tlie sa id premise s are d e s c T l l f i a* fo l lows:

"AH that cer ta in p i e c e or parr*! o f Jar.tl s i t u a t e , i y i n c a n d beluir. In the tuwn i f A i -j o n a t f o r m e r l y Chary Clltiton Counly . lS T „ k n e w n a n d de tcr ibed asm p a r t of Lot n u m ­ber s e v e n t y s i n T6i It txniiir. the s o u t h r a s t i i u a n e r o r s a l d lot Ko .Xf . In JJusrvi l ie Pa t -e n t so palled In said t o w n c o n t a i n i n g s l i t y -t w o a n d u n e ha l f acres o f l a t d ts> t t e sa ins more or less .

B a t e d D e c . 1 0 . 1 W . . . „ J .J .KIT7PATR1CK, S lw . Sheriff o f Clinton C o u n t y .

CITATION FOR JUDICIAL ^ T T L E M l i X T . The peop le or t h e Statw of N e w VorV, t o

Louisa Currirr, w h o rrs ldrs at, Won-rgtcr , Massachuse t t s ; Cornel lM M. D a n d m w , w h o rfs l ' les a t Belmont , T r a m o u n t y , DaXotai Mary C e o , w h o resMes a t Whiteha l l , AVash-i n a t o n «-c>OTity, S e v TTor*; S>el!» Ls fave , J o e l M Dsndrow and Miruai'l C. Danarow, who reside at 1'IaitahurRh, Clinton coursty, New Tor*; Edmund K. Dandrow, who resides in. New VorkCity, New York; At)ram Oandrow, who resides In Troy, New IfOTk-.; GeoTgr. C. Dandrow. who resides In Lowell, Hastsehu-s«-txs; B e n j a m i n l>»nJrow mxi<l A n n i e r n n -drow, who reside In Malone.FranlcHnsonaiy, S e w T o r k ; AViward Mlcer^ Mary Miner a n d Lucy Miner, all of whom reside at Lacoiie, P r o v i n c e of Quebec, C a n a d a ; a n d Henry W . Gulborcl, w h o res ides In JMattsburg-h afore­sa id , a n d to a l l persons Interes ted In t h e es ta te o f JOKL I>, DANDROW, laws of F l a t l s -btirgh.Cllnwn county, KewTork. deceased, as creditors, legatees, uext of kin, or other­wise send greeting;

You and each of you are hereby cited and required personally to he and appear before our Surrogate of the county of Clinton. New York, a l h i s office In rMauiburgh, on tne Ufa day of February, lim, at ten o'clock In ths forenoon of thalclay, then and thereto attend the judicial settlement ol the accounts of Michael C Da^flrow, as Edmlnlstrator of the said Joel 1). iiat.drow. deceased,

AnO if any oftliept-rsou* interested be un­der the age, of twenty-one years, they are required to a p p e a r b y thetir guardian i r inejr have one.or if they havenoi>e,lo appearand a p p l y for o n e t o be appo inted ,or . In t h e e v f n t of I he ir neg lec t or fai lure i o d o s o , a guardian wi l l be appo in ted b y t h e ^urroRate to r e p r e ­s e n t and a c t f o r t h e m In the proceeding .

I n t e sUmony whereof, w e h a v e caused t h e seal of our sa id Surrogate's Court to * e h e r e ­unto affixed.

-Witness. H o n . D . r . D o b l e . Surrogate o f s a i d county o f Cl in ton , at F l a t t s b u i e h . t h e S M d a y of D e c e m b e r , o n e thousand e i g h t h u n d r e d and e i g h t v - s e v e n .

Ir,. s 1 D . r . DOBnc, SurrcRale . A V . C . A V A T S O X ,

Att 'y for P et i t loner . — B3w7 KOK JCD1CIAL BKriLEMEM. •eople of t h e S t a l e o f N e w "York, t o C1TATI0X

T h e p e o

Louisa Currier, who r*jtfrits_at Worcester,

A L L OK

New anil Desirable Patterns, W H I C H W E OSMTKR A I J'KICKS I B A T

D I H C O M P J C t f I I O K .

A.LSO, L A B G E STOCK O F

PARLOR FURNITURE I n Jutes , H a w Si lks and Hair Cloth-

Doors, Windows, &c. A LARGJT¥TOCK.

Boors of every style. Windows of every size. Mouldings of every pattern

Blinds of all kinds.

Trim, Glazci a l Priifl COKSTANTLY OS HAKD.

SOLD CHEAP FOR CASH AA j . A. HAGAB'S,

C l i n t o n 8 t PLA'XTSBCKGH.N.T .

WALL PAPER! Window Shades!

A FULL STOCK OF

WAIL PAPER - i S O -

"Windcrvv S h a d e s ,

IN THE LATEST STYLES, hasjust b^ei.rei eivca at

Horiiick's Fiirniture Store. O N B K I D U K S T K K J 5 T ,

G J E O . W . S.OB.S1CK.. izeuu

ALSO-

C. W. M. JOHNSON, Civil Engineer, Surveyor p

A X D !|

I8ARAT0QA QEi'SER SPlUNCr! A WATEB. t

A I D

1EAL ESTATE AGEBT. ALSO, NOTARY hCBLIC.

LAV»S S O C a a T A>o SOLP OK COMaiSSIO* Oidarasollelted and promptly atteadedto.

PLJ.rT8BVRGM,X. T.

H.K.AVE BILL, Jr..

CiTil £aclaeer, Surveyor A N P

V* K A . T J G t H t T S S M A 2sr .

1» Pt,A TTSB VUVJu. Jf.

J Kennedy & Murphy's Ale \ and Porter, by Barrel !; and Half Barrel.

I JOHN WILSON & SON,

JThe Old Beiiabie Paint, jrs, \ Are o u t t h i s s p r i n g wi t l i | a fu l l f o r c e | a k 1 U e d a s * i s l a n t s , * T i a r e a d y to a t t e n d ,

Oentral Market, P.MQSEEFE, froorietor.

C a r s t a r o f B r l d w a i . s i ' i ' l v s r S t T s s t i

PLATTSB'CIiSH, H. V. t trjS*OMEitS-wllls . lwayjip3^i^J:t.hl»J«arket \ j aeholeeseleeiionaadiullsupplyoi

rKKSK AS1> SALT H E A T S , *>ltKSH ASH SALT FISH, POCLTKY JtNO OAKK, 0YSTEHS IN THLIR o E A S O N , WHOLK

S A L K A S U E K T i l i . ^ „ , . ^ „ Ki-RLY \ 'El iKTABLr.e , BCTTfcK, K « G B

CHKLSL.&O-, 4 L . So pains will uesparedtosulr customers. Pr ices a s l o w a s t h o l o w e s t . i -ac lcases d e l i v t r c d i a a n y p a r t o f t h e v l l -

IAKV-»i thou t charge. as . l i tr«invite<i t o s-all

M a s s a c h u s e t t s ; Cornelius at . iJandrow. w h o r e s i d e s a t Belmi .nt , Trai l l e o j i m y , D a k o t a ; Mary D e o , w h o res ides a t "Whitehall. W a s h ­ington c o u n t y , N e w Y o r k : D e l i a l .afave, J o e l B . D a n d r o w a n d Michae l C. Dai . i irow, w h o res ide at Flatt&burgh. Cl inton c o u n t y , NTesr Y o r k ; Kdmund K . Dai drow, wh,* r e s i d e s In. N e w York C i t y , N e w t o i k : A b r a m l > u . d t b v , w h o r e s i d e s In Troy , N e w York; George C . D a n d r o w , w h o res ides i n L o w e l l , M a s s a c h u ­s e t t s ; B e n j a m i n D a n d r o w a n d A n n i e Dan-Qrow, w h o res lde in MaloTie-Krankl incounty , New Y o r k ; Kdward SUner, Marj Miner, ar,d Lucv Miner, w h o xealde a t L a c o l l e , C*i:aaa; "William n. D a n d r o w , or rhi imrtnt , Colum­b ia c o u n t y , N e w York, a s a l l eged a s ­s i g n e e o l an a l leged creditor, to w i t , Joe l B. Dandrow.a i id t o a l l p e r s o n s in teres ted i n t b e e s t a t e of L O U 8 A DANDBOW.la te o f P t a u s -bureb.Cl lr . ton 4.tiutity. N e w Y»<rk, d e c e a s e d .

as creditors, next, .r km, ur otherwise, seniJ gree t ing :

You at d each of J<.J are herel.y cited and required persona l ! ) i« Xif and a p p e a r before eur Surrogate of th* c o u n t y o l Cl inton. N e w ) ork, a t U s orSee, In P la t t sburgh . on the 23th day o l February , IKK. a t t e n o'ct-K-k Jn t h e forenoon of i h a t d a y . t h e u a n r i there to a t t e n d t l .e judic ia l s e t t l e m e n t of th«!t a c c o u n t s o f i i i cLae l C. P a n d r o w , a s aaa i ln l s tnsu ir of t h « sa id Louisa Dandrow, d e c e a s e d .

And i r a u y of t l i« p e r s o n s imeresttHl be u n ­der the age of t w e n t y - o n e y e a r s , t h e y are required to appear b y the ir guard ian i l t h e y h a v e o n e , or If t h e y h a v e n o n e , t o a p p e a r s i > l a p p l y for o n e to b e a p p o l n t e d . o x , i n the e w t t o f t l ' e i r u e e l e c t or f a l l u j e t o d o s o . a g u a r d i a n wi l l ht appo in ted by t h e surrogate t o repre­s e n t a n d act l o r thern i n t h e p n . c e n l l l i p .

In tesilniMiiy wbereot . w e h a v e c a u s e d tho sea l of our said Mirr- gate 's Court t i be here-uiito affixed

Witness .H«'» , It.V D( T.ie Surr< g-«te«.f Mtld county o l C l i n t o n , a t P la t t sburgh . t t c £ i l >lay or Decemtier, > < f t h o u s a n d e ight h u n d r e d a n d e i g h t y seven

I f- s-l D . F . DU1SIE, h u m - tXe. W. C.WATS..K,

Att'y for I'euti .j l ier. E3w~

Tn t ; 1 T . O F I . F . 4 . 1 " T H E - I M 1 «,{• N f j r UK, to l i i r l ^ t'ltiiSbl'*, JHU>HI- }h

iaiet . l ' t . ,>.h. t.. i ' . -n <.. . , r, v . . ajj . -rert 1.. (<,n-. r e s id ing in r n e i . t ' .r^L, < ,ttT..r. Co , N . Y ; Aut.es 11. t. .••, rrsM4i<» in L; e t , t u r g h , < lini- u t'i, , N. \ . i-rii. W. *iru.s»f *-r,resid-lhti l u JEdeh' t r j t i . C i i h i . h r,j . r , . Y . , « l ive hUrriri|>n.i>. renl iir.ir in Ash l j i . ) ,'i, A-Uta-b U a < •• . t i b i o : / ; p b a S i a i f i e i d , whi se j i a i e •.•f xro'.tlfi.vr' l*s iiuktiuwrj—tl.e -widow, he ir s Ji 1 ?«Xt o f k l a of s T h P H l : \ i i l tM-UUL, d e e e a s e l , = e t l g r e e t l n e

\ \ h e r « . t S . l . l . l . B <.. e . t l - e x e . ' . t . . i i » i . , , J , . . f - a i d - ' e j heti «»jrn.»ree, l-.»s I s ' e l j » | j , , - . l to i.ur b^rr- i;at<- s t ...,rt . 1 t h e * u^ty . f C H i . f u t-, i. t\r- .4 . ' « t < i . j n a » r « « e . t IT, wiUU.kMrlaUi >; I > l u l u rtai , t i d l e j s n i a i e»tat--. . i i . l j ] i i i , t n l aa t h - l i»t w. i i j.i.,1 trata-Hf-T.t «if - l l < 1 - ' r j l r | | l , , i t l r f , 1,-Slri.f I . « , -I j i U l i . I n »-vl J tn . i i . t > , i e . e j w . l .

l l . e r e f j i e , j . u a i . d r». h • i j - a i r r l.« rt-ty c H e l . t t . 1 r e . j u i r e l t i . 11- 41 J j | i e » r Irf. ID o a r s a i i l s i u r . a^t« » i v . a . h > t- i L* . I j.» •!.« oEl.T ut • ut - . t o iJ. »f . f tkr- i«i/iit.lj »jf I ,11.-u . u , l s U . i > i l i , ^ : e < . J 1 i t l s l M ^ h in mi i f . . r U « eniii . iy «.f < ,i i . i . , jj , , ii t h e :_iri ' , , . r J a i - o a r j , lbfs. at I 1 t.-.-j. .-k in t h e i .ret, . . t that d a y , t o axtei-d tt r- jxi .huti-uf t h e s a i d l a s t wi l l a l .d UstjOi.ei.1.

AI..1 vx i.t.N <-t (i.«- j -er* i.s ii.'«-jeste-l t><- %\f ~ i*» f the ni-'i* ...f t>M-i t } ..' f> >rar*. 11 r j nm m i i ' i i r t d 1 ^ a j i j . r ^ i . >,- tA,-c-,r i ; , . i t i iL*.z* i f v i . r y

dirt" »t!\<il l l t l .r j » l » r ti,i'!,^,l.< t y T S r S " ! i , l - i - . j t o r • l . e « . t - e . l j . j _ . i i . t r . t . -X « i U . e < » n t ot ' 1 >-u i ••; r. ' T !»l ,xr » . .T . s -., » jj .ar- 1 a»» » ) . . b " . '1 !• iii.*« 1 < j i l . . •• tit- „ a ' r l-ii%\i, -s * t . t i t - 1 i i t t i t I1..-B1 ) . , t l . ^ f r - . i - e - l i j ^

l o l e - . ' . i r n - i .J _ l . i - t e - f. * e L a \ e . - » , t , * . l t l i « S e . i l . t . t i r Ha'. 1 - - U „ < i r c s l " . , u t i | t e t e l e . U i . t i . a r i X e - l . \ . » < i . e - ^ I l a . l l l ' D.<I I r . S > . r -r . - j a t e . I t o - s v 1 • .. x t t j i < i t . t . . . i t t m % i i i i 2 e i t 1 ' i t l t . i i r . d , I t . s a i l I . L I . I J , 1 ,M l o b d a , >f *•• . . t u b e r . o l e I , . , u 3ao> l e S g l i l t i . ' . i i l M n ! l t l , M ) « . » r .

t . is * 1* JK X>«,B2t.. I J A T S j t t j >^ !e

f A T SHORT N O T I C E , TO O t t O K K S VOK

Go to HEATH'S forji Marble Work, as I shall sell

a t reduced rates for t h e next f,

•ixtj dmy§. Do not forget the place. Ettabliahed since T 837.

E. H. HEATH.

In Tirittj m a»»-»

Slut

Henss Painting. Carriags PamtiBgr.

Soat Fainting, Si^a Paiatins;.

Ornamental Painting:. PAOer Etngiar.

Kalsantiaiaff, Olauas;,

BceoratiBf;. 6r*_*te,} All varst dons with Thoroughness _a« M«~

. tMStah.aad at Maderat* friees. | a a r SUa-M r a l n t a a n d r r e p a r a d Kaaaaaara* ; aVtlifSMSMi to aay ?»rt of Ue ultlage. j t _ _ a * e « r d e r s a t i l COStMKLlA itTKSI-IT, 1 PLATTMBVMUU X. T.

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