Old Fulton NY Post Cards By Tom Tryniski 11/Caledonia NY Advertise… · b ood purifier, la a...

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,, •*, 1 Imaslasl ta choice mm hundred dw*. I pa* lar buildi nf lota in aubarba OFKUMU City wUl I fcf I fT Of I |*l <T pay from 8r» hundred to one thoaeand per *• • ' l © » • g> cent, the next few j n t n under oar plan. P5 ea*i» and |& par month without interest con- r la adeairaole tot. Particulars IMI apphcaUou, Li. Baaertms A Co* iva&aa* City or »T I.aat frar r b»- railroad companies of Eng- land «*an»«i *35o,000,000. ( > • » • • Er«r <*.s>*r*Tate Anrp*noa vending »* their name and ad- dress) will receive Information that will lead .to a fortune. Bank Lewie m Ckv, See art tr Building. Kansas v 11 y, Mo. An orange measuring * foot in rirrumfeev- '•n*^' ha* been fonod m Stark*, Honda Mediocrity ^way coptws ssspes tortf «. Dob- bina't EWtric Sosvp, (lr»t made in tBSS. bw h.ea Lmiutod aum ti.au anr »oep mad*. Aak four nrnc«f for £* N>\*a'$ Electric Soap, all other Electric*, Electricity. Magnetics, etc.. 'are ludteUona. lacob: TheGpeat^-'-H REMEDY FOR P A I N • %#»^a#%j : J If you have a COLD or COUCH, ACHte or lead in* to CONSUMPTION. SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PIBECOD IJTEB Oil, AND HTPOPBOSPHITBS OF LIMB AS~D SODA xm saxjrm-vxD CTXTI^HJ »*on. x*r. Thin preparation contain* the •timui*- ting j.r utrilfi t Die HtfpopKomphilew and flnn WarwwptaM T»il /.. ir~-r Oil. Cs«d by pliriickAue a i ;ua w>>rld o r e r It is <u pmiatabie <Z* tmlk. Three Umoe as efllc*- Ctoua its piala Cod, Liver Oil A perfect Krnnislon. better than all others made For ail tittta* ot Wasting Diaemmem, Bronchitis, coysi\H PTioy, Scrofula, in<1 *»* Flesh Producer lucre u nothing like tCOTT'l EMULSION. It 1* sold by all Prugsim*. [,ei DU one by pr>>fu*e explanation >r impudent entreaty itidui'ti you to ao'epi "\ su imu ;ute. For a Disordered Liver Try BEECHIM'S PILLS. 25cts. a Box. OK AJ^X. nRUOOIKTS. COMMERCIAL FOUNTAIN PEN fee omlj f u m ' km priixj r«a la tike markef o< all tiar-J rubber jaaaot (»t out of jrd«r, i },duu ».>i-i"U r-rotu <->o« (Hi a«. Se..t complete— hU» two pen point*, ruler—ail lu a neat box for <Be. I atauip. -r urre^or liuaraoteed aa repi er«au«J r n v u « r rwXiitttle*! aaaota wan tad. W R. i BSgRO Lg f Poatmaatarv sptiafrtli©, Auaqwftanua Co. Paaaa. • V M C Paarnarvahlu 4r1U»m«tlO, Aaoruaaad, «-=w |tfeoroaa;ai/ laognt oy Mall. Ciroaiars troa, ryaat'a tailaaa, 45 T Mala «... iniiXaJu, .V If. In the eara, a>ta«(.Bir« 4 roar I a ;, buuint •napptnc Uk« ir repor of a ptotol, an catarrh, that exoeedngly dl aifrfeabhj ant ' common dmaane. fAMt-tof «ra*ll or hearing alir>i»- ' ts t> f »m tatarrlL H.w»d*» ^ a n a par ilia, tfee grraa b ood purifier, la a peculiarly tueeeaa'ni remedy fiMr eatarrto. •rliieiJ it c«r«^ t»y erartleatme from tfea Mood (fee imparity which « « , » and promotes ta • d.awwe. try Hood's SaraapwlUa "I used Hood's Sanaparilla for catarrh, and !•» cei»eti great relief and benefit from It Tbe catarrfe waa »ery dliagtwariio, eaaectally In the winter, caaatag ooaataat dlasfearge from my aoar, rtaglag aoiae* n my eari, aad palm in t e back of my bead. 1 he efTor to clear ray bead n tfee morning by bawk- and aptttinc warn patafnl. Hood's t arsaparUla fare me reUt f Unmodiateiy, while la time I waa aa> tir-ly cured, t am never wituout tbe mod c ne ia my house m I think it ta worth Its weight ia gold.* -Ma*. 0 a tiwa l«» Eighth street, J*. W., Wiife lactoa, D. C. Hood's Sarsaoarilla Sold by ail ctrugglata |11 alx for #5. Prepared Ofelf by C 1. HOOD g CX)., LowaU, Ham. IOO Doses One Dollar 1 A CENT *. Handeoui" Oo.d Plated Charm Jt Cigar aV Cutter combined. Fred Cakntt, SwjrtbmoreJPa where. Ifnot*e'aaW«rmr B. i. iIRKELY, TU ' Street, mi w ANTED—Act!te men ran emoJlOOp rmo. loaatt Nur*-ry stock. 0. D. OreeaftCJo..ifffQsjaa, K.T. •V Sm * • m • § BK l^% JT\ mat mm rnAIcn 8REI8E tM TUB WOKIaP 1 PATENTS! formattou. tu In»«atera. wrttaat oooe (or hand-book of ia- U . C U A L I . K A CO., VV f.. hi OK ton, 0 . C . - .. r ) 3RATEFUL-COMPORTINQ, EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST. 'By a tfeorooch knowi«d?e of the aatnral Mam wh oh <o»ern the jporatl as of dicestion and aaQrt- U •!>, aad by a oarerul appiic aUon of the fine prot>et> daa it - el -a l*cte-l Cocoa, Vr. Epos baa provided oar Oraakfaat taolaa wlta a dalksataty flayourad feaaa araire wnioh 'u*/ tars isa nuuu haaey Joctora' blila It la ~>r ta* JudJotout nae of soon arttoia* of diet that a ooa uitataoa may a* gr dually ooilt up on tit strong enough to raalat arary tendeoey to tusiaia Huudredi of subtle mala.Ilae are uoatlng arouad 9* r»a<ly u> ^uaoc vDsranr there ia a weak point, w* may aaoape maaj fatal abaft by Keeping oar- seiye* well rorudoJ wtth pure blood »-d a property Duurtahed frame."—"Oh* .MII ia*j /oaatta " Had** «im^iy with boiilni water c# milt. -Old ••n: v la aalf-pouad ;in*. y Onicero. labelled than: JAMES EPP3 dc CO., Homcaopathlo Cbemista, Loanox. RSQULXU. -VASELINE- FOR A ONE-DOLLAR B I L L sent ua by mall we will deilT. r, free or all charge*, to any person hi tbe r'alt d states, all of the following article*, care- t>oe [wo-uuiios bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - lOoti. t me tw.vou' ce bottle of Valine Pomade, - 15 " tone jar of Vaaeftne Cold Cream, 19" i-m« L kn ot Vaseline Cam t-bor loe, - • • - H)" one cake of Vaseline "lap, unscetite<1, - • 10"* ue Cake of Vaseline Soap, eiQUlaiteiy scented,* " One two-ounce bott.e of White Vaseline, - - 2S" O /or pusamm stamp* s*r wntffe article- at the prtem s.Asutt iM tu> aermtnt he perswviM to accept from y/cr+r iruggiM any VeueHne or preparation therefrom unl vw Icsor^ied with <r*r name, because you wm cer~ 'afUy rmcetvean imitation tchich Kas tittle or MtonM < h e . c h o u g h Hfg. Co.. «4 Iltata S t . , M. V . B«'«t ( ough Medicine. Rtx-ommended by Phyaicians irea where all elne fatLs. Pleasant and agreeable to the *te. Children take it without objection. By drutfirista. CON SUM I O N lufhen slovens ger Hdy they polish the bottoms of the pinsT-when '*:•£ i -*.:. BVA * <A t\ 7~Y A "&xe ^ive^^wBBiBBrmey 9af never tired of cleaning up 'T Two servants in two neighboring houses dwelt.' But differendy their daily labor felt; Jaded and weary of her life was one, Always at work, and yet 'twas never done. The other walked out nightly with her beau, But then she cleaned house with SAPOLIO. A tsamrdmw 3 f2m\sTta?"* *•** I*.mr, EJegler dc C*.> ASTHMA ^•m*" ^ ^•^•a^^^M^at j mm. B , M "•"mmnawamaaaaamawBwsw rorCauglw^Colrts JifeO like OB. SCHENCK'S ULNIONIC SYRUP. 6 HENS nnhtmfead. n Out* tm/y so eta a r*ar ax I FaJUtf-POULTKY. Boa tUa. Btmum. Maam. It ii plrnmiii M _ do>« not contain a uetNiaaraaythlii t* the Best Oaagfe _ w World. r-rSaleby all I Pram, f l J » par bottle Dr. Hafeamdtl Ooasaaaawfioa and its i nr*, nsaUed fi^«. Or. J. H- Sammaok dt Boa. •it*:' - —-. •1 8 HERIDAN'S IDITION POWDER K HOME, SEMD TO IS. us. h<i• . Mitiairtas .... , **f?ie-'*T : ' v '' ^ ' J Xni. NO 31. CALEDONIA, LIVINGSTON CO., N, [SUNDAYS SERMOK ONB OF KKV . DR. TALMAQBm , HTFULINO UISCOuksEA. Snbjet't: "Among- the Holy rllHs. 1 TEXT: " He came to Nazareth^ where He IMM brought up."—Luke iv., 16. , "What a splendid sleep I bad last night in a Catholic convent, my first sleep within doors since leaving Jerusalem, and all of us as kindly treated as though we had been tb« r\>pe and his college of Cardinals pass- tag that way t Last evening the genial sis- tBMBud of the convent ordered a hundred bright-eyed Arab children brought out to for me, aad, it waa glorious! This I come out on the steps of the con- look upon the mast beantflftitvfl- of all Palestine, its houses of white bMM, Guess its name! Nazareth, his- torical Nazareth, one of the trinity of places Chat all Christian travelers must see or feel that they have not seen Palestine—namely, Bethleheu), Jerusalem, Nazareth. Baby- mood, boyhood, manhood of Him for whom I believe there are fifty million people who would now, tf it were required, march out and die, whether \mder ax or down in the floods or straight through the fire. Grand old village is Nazareth, even putting aside its sacred association^. First of all. it is dean; and that can be said of few of the sDriental villages. Its neighboring town of IJfdblouf is the filthiest town I ever saw, though its chief industry is the inanufac- ture of soap. They export all of it Naza- reth has been the scene of battles passing it from Israelite to Mohammedan an I from Mohammedan to Christian, the tOCBt wonderful of the battles be- iag that in which twenty-five thou- sand Turks were beaten by twenty-one hundred French, Napoleon Bonaparte commanding, the greatest of Frenchmen walking these very streets through Which Jesus Walked for neatly thirty years, the morals of the two, the antipodes, the snows of Russia and the plagues of Egypt appropriately following the one, the doxofo- glesof earth and the hallelujahs of heaven aBSjropriately following the otner. And then « & town is so beautifully situated in a great green bowl, the sides of the bowl surround- ing fifteen hills. The God of nature who is the God of the Bible evidently scooped out this valley for privacy and separation from all the world during three most important de- cades, the thirty years of Christ's boyhood and youtb, for of the thirty-three years of Christ's stay on earth he spent thirty of them in this town in getting ready— a start- ling rebuke to those who nave no putieuee with the long years of preparation necessary when they enter on any special mission for the chnrch or the world The trouble is with most young men that they want to launch their ship from the drydock before it is ready, and hence so many sink in the first cyclone. All Christ's boyhood was spent in this vil- lage and its surroundings. There is the very well called "The Fountain of the Virgin," to __*.._. .. iBgthers side He trotted along No doubt about it; i t is been Turn vQ© it has II.. Se •»•* of rawing ive them now as then. The drawing water in all ages in those countries has been wo- men's work. Scores of them are waiting for their turn at it, three great and everlasting springs roiling oot into that well their barrels, tbeir hogsheads of wat3r in floods, floriottsly abundant. The well is sur- rounded by olive groves and wide spaces in which people talked and children, wearing charms on their heads as protection against the "evileye," are playing, and women with their stings of coin on either side of theft- face, and in skirts of blue and scar- let and white and green move on with on their heads. Mary, I almost always took Jesus the bay with her, for she had no one she could leave Him with, being in humble cir- •.'uiiuxtances and having no attendants. I do not believe there was one of the surrounding fifteen hills that the boy Christ did not range from bottom to top, or one cavern in their sides He did not explore, or one species of bird flying across the tops that He coaid not call by name, or one of all the species of^ fauna browsing on those steeps that He had not recognised. Tim set it ail through His sermons. If » man becomes a public sneaker, in his ora- tions or discourses you discover bis early whereabouts What a boy sees between seven and seventeen always sticks to him. When the apostle Peter preaches you see the fishing nets with which he had from his earliest days been familiar And when Amos deMvers his prophecy you hear in it the bleating of the herds which he had .n boy- 1 attended. And in our Lord's sermons conversations you see all the phases of life and the mountainous life sur- had in boyhood seen the shepherds get their flocks mixed up, and to one not familiar with the habits of shepherds and their flocks, "xed up. And a sheepstealer ap- i scene and dishonestly demands ' tho&e sheep, when he owns not one of "Weil,'' says the two honest shep- 'we will soon settle this matter," and loot in one direction and the I goes out in the other direction, jMtealer in another direction, calls, and the flocks of each . shepherds rush to their s, WSBSSD the sheepstealer calls and ba«suX ba^fets not one of the flock. Ho mder ^-fChost, yean after; preaching a I j J r l r ell n m l illustrating His own __jpWfd qualities, says: "When He putteth forth Big own sheen He *oeth before them. and thasheep toJow Hint, for they know His voice, dsfl tie stranger they will not follow, for they know hot the voice of the stranger." ltJ*^L < W~"" hills are teflnaced for Tbe boy Christ had often stood with i watching the trimming of -^ Clin! goes the knife andotT »eh. v T b e c h l l Christ says to the •What do yen do that for!" farmer, "that is * ^P4» hraach and it is doing nothing and is onlv in the way, so I cut it est." Then she farmer with his sharp knife from a living branch tats aad that "the other tendril. "Bat." says Christ, "those twigs that you cut knot dead, what do you do that f savs the Su-mer, we prune aha main branch may have sap and so be mora fruitful. after years Christ said te Hfa un the true viae and My Fatber ; every branch in Me that Ha take th a way, aad every treat He pur geth it, nmore fruit." Capital! had not been a country boy ia aH and bur court end our studios lived IU J 4f .... the sins of the world, folhes of the worhW and cruelties of thw'a^orH, » darkness of the world, the hemispheres! So it ot th* country boys orm and inspire and salem. And but for that annual influx our cities would have enervated and sickened and slain the race. Late hours end hurtful ap- parel and overtaxed digestive organs and crowding environments of city life would have halted the world; but the valleys and mountains of Nazareth have given fresh supply of health and moral invigora- tion to Jerusalem and the Country saves the town. From tile hills of New Hamp- shire and the hills of Virginia and the hills of Georgia come in our national eloquence the W ebsters and the Clays and the Henry W. Gradys. From the plain homes of Massachusetts and Maryland come into our national charities the George Peabodys and the William Corcorans. From tpe cabins of the lonely country regions come into our national destinies the Andrew Jacksons and the Abraham Lincoln^. From plow boy's furrow and village counter and blacksmith's forge come moat of our city giants. Nearly all the Mes- siahs in all departments dwelt in Naz- arreth before they came to Jerusalem. I send this day thanks from these cities, most- ly made prosperous by country boys, to the farmhouse and the prairies and the moun- tain cabins, and the obscure homesteads of north and south and east and west, to the fathers and mothers in plain homespun if they be still alive or the hillocks under which they sleep the long sleep. Thanks from Jerusa- lem to Nazareth. But alas! that the city should so often treat the country boys as of old the one from Nazareth was treated at Jerusalem! Slain not by hammers and spikes, but by instru- ments just as cruel. On every street of every city the crucifixion goes on. Every year shows its ten thousand of tbe slain. Uh, bow we grind them up! Under what wheels, in what mills, and for what an awful grist! Let the city take better care of these boys and young men arriving from the country They are worth saving. They are now only the preface of what they will be if, instead of sacrificing, you help them. Boys as grand as the one who with his elder brother climbed into a church to ver. and not knowing their danger went outside on some Umbers, when one of those timbers broke and the boys fell, and the older toy caught on a beam and the younger idutched the foot of the older. The older could not climb up with the younger hanging to ins feet, so the younger said: "John, I am going to let go, you e&n climb out into safety. but you can't climb up with me holding fast; I am going to let go, kiss mother for me, and tell her not to feel badly; good-by!" And he let go and was so hard dashed upon the ground he was not recognizable. Plenty of such brave boys coming up from Naza- reth ' Let Jerusalem be careful how it treats them' A gentleman long ago en- tered a school in Germany and ne bowed very low before the boys, and the teacher said, "Why do you do that 9 " "Oh," said the visitor, "I do not know what mighty man may yet be developed among them. ' At that instant the eyes of one of the boys flashed lire. Who was if Martin Luther. A lad on his way to school passed a door- step on which sat a lame and invalid child. The passing boy said to him: "Why don't you go to school!" "Oh, I am lame and I can't walk to school." "Get on my back," said tbe well boy, "and I will carry you to school." And so he did that day and for many days until the invalid was fairly was the well boy that did that kindness* I don't know. Who was the invalid he car- ried? It was Robert Hall, the rapt pupil orator of all Christendom. Better give to the boys who come up from Nazareth to Je- rusalem a crown instead of a cross. On this December morning in Palestine on our way out from Nazareth we saw just such a carpenter's shop as Jesus worked in, supporting His widowed mother after He was old enough to do so. 1 looked in, and there were hammer and saw and plane and auger and vise and measuring rule and chisel and drill and adz" and wrench and bit and aJJ the tools ot carpentry. Think of it 1 He who smoothed the surface, of the earth shoving a plaue. He who cleft the mountains by earthquake pounding a ciusel, He who opened the mammoth caves of the earth turning an auger; He who wields the thunderbolt striking with a hammer; He who scooped out the bed for the ocean hollowing a ladle; He who flashes the morning on the earth and makes the midnight heavens quiver with aurora con- structing a winiow. I cannot understand it, but I believe it. A skeptic said to an old clergyman: "I will not believe anything I cannot explain.'' "Indeed,'' said the clergy- man, "you will not believe anything you cannot explain. Please to explain to me why some cows have horns and others have no horns. "No," said the skeptic, "I did not mean exactly that. I mean that I wUl not believe anything I have not seen." "Indeed," said the clergyman," "you will not believe anything you have not seen. Have you a backbone?" "Yes," said the skeptic. "How do you know 9 " said the clergyman. "Have you ever seen W This mystery of Godhood and humanity inter- joined I cannot understand and I cannot ex- plain, but I believe it. I am glad there are so many things we cannot understand, for that leaves something for heaven. In about two hours we pas3 through Cana, the village of Palestine, where the mother of Christ and our Lord attended the wedding of a poor relative, having come over from Nazareth for that purpose. The mother of Christ—for women are first to notice such things—found that the provisions had fallen short and she told Christ, and He to relieve the embarrassment of the hous3keeper, who had invited more guests than the pantry warranted, became the butler of the occasion, and out of' a cluster of a few sympathetic words squeezed a beverage of a few hundred and twenty-six gallons of wine in which was not one drop of intoxicant, or it would have left that party as maudlin and drunk as the great centennial banquet in New York, two years ago, left senators, and governors, and generals, and merchant princes, the difference between the wine at tbe wedding in Cana and the wine at the ban- quet in Now York being, that tbe Lord made the one and the devil made the other We got off our horses and examined some of these water iars at Cana said to be the very ones that held the plain water that Christ turned into the purple bloom of an especial vintage. I measured them and found them eighteen inches from edge to edge and nine- teen inches deep, aad declined to accept their identity. But we realized the immensity of a supply of a hundred and twenty-six gal- lons of wine. Among tbe arts and inventions of the fu- ture I hope there may be some one that can press tbe juices from'the grape and so mingle them aad without one drop Of damning alco- holism that it will keep for years. Aad the more of it yon take the clearer will he the brain and the heal th ier the stomach, And here is a remarkable fact iu my recent jour- nev-I traveled through Italy and Greece and Egypt aad Palestine and Syria and Tur- key, and how maay, intoxfcatal ra**» *> you think I saw hi ait those fire great realms? Not one. We mast in oar Christianised lands have got hold of soma kind of beverage that Christ did no t make. Oh, I am glad that Jesus waa present at that wedding, aad last December, standing , at Cana, that wedding came backl Night ' bad faun on the village and its surround - l inn. Tbe bridegroom had put on his head a and DAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1890/£S"J?r££r- •1.M uio eawewM"" cry risgr "They are i I8HEIN ATRANCE? •ii" ii Body o f a M « n Removed from the When About t o B e Burled. LANDIWO, N. J., Nov. 24.-The village of Hammonton, about 12 from this place, has been thrown t by signs of Ufa appear- body of George W. Fay, one of prominent citizens, who, it was fitted last Tuesday evening. bout 10 or 18 days ago it was found •t Hr. t$,j was suffering with an ab- jaf the brain. Later on dropsy super- audTuesday evening he was pro- .ffadbr the attending physicians. ime of his death his limbs were swollen attd his face discolored. Of his family to find that oat entirely disap- *§<$&& by groomsman, aad preceded DV a nana musicians with flutes and drums horns, and by torches in full he starts for the bridVa This river of fire is met by anotlmt**!' fire, the torches of the bride and li maids, flambeau answering flambeau, bride is in white robe and her veil not covers her face but envelopes bar * Her trousseau is as elaborate as the of her father's house permit. Her ai are decked with all the ornaments or can borrow; but their own personal _ make tame the jewels, for those oriental men eclipse in attractiveness all others those of our own land. The damson in their cheek, and the diamond luster of their eyes, and the ness of the night in their long locks, their step is the gracefulness of the n At the first sight of the torches bridegroom and bis attendants over the hill the cry rings thrc home of the bride: ready I Behold the ye out to meet him •" sions approach each ^ _ _ _ , strike and the songs commingle, the two processions become one ar. toward the bridegroom's house, and meet a third proc?ssion which is made u p of tht friends of both bride and b r i d e s torn, Then all enter the house and the danoe begins and the door is shut. And all thii Christ uses to illustrate the joy with which the ransomed of earth shall meet Him Whet He comes garlanded with clouds and roboc in the morning and trumpeted by the thun- der^ of the last day. "Look' There "omes down off the hills of heaven, th< nnaegroom i Ana let us start ouc to nan Him, for I hear the voices of the judgment day sounding: "Behold the Bridegroom cometh! Go ye out to meet Him!" And the disappointment of those who have declined the invitation to the gospel wedding is pre- sented under the figure of a door heavily closed. You hear it slam. Too late. The door is shut! But we must hasten on, for I do not mean to close my eyes to-night till I see from a mountain top Lake Galilee, on whose banks next Sabbath we will worship, and on whose waters the following morning we will take a sail. On and up we go in the severest cUmb of all Palestine, the ascent of the Mount of Beatitudes, on the top of which Christ preached that famous sernion on the blesseds —blessed this and blessed that. Up to their knees the horses plunge in molehills and a surface that gives way at the first touch of the hoof, and again and again the tired beasts halt, as much as to say to the riders, "It is unjust for vou to make us climb these steeDS." On and up over mountain sides, wnere in the later season hyacinths and dasies and phloxes and anemones kindle their beauty. On and up until on the rocks of black basalt we' dis- mount, and climbing to the highest peak look out on an enchantment of scenery that seams be the beatitudes themselves arched into skies and rounded into valleys and silvered into waves. The view is like that of Tennessee and North Carolina from the top of Look- out Mountain, or like that of Vermont and New Hampshire from tbe top of Mount Washington. Hail hills 'of Gallllee! Hail Lake Gennesaret, only four miles away 1 Yonder, clear up and most coi Bated the very citv to which Christ pom for illustration in tbe sermon preached here, saying: ' 'A city set on a hill cannot be hid." There are rocks around me on this Mount of TtQ ** i tn , f'nff mnmrti %n build stin hiafaasl mil in" the world eter^w: M A%!3^ pulpit. Itoverlooks all time and all eternity, will go mad with the pent-up enthusiasm The valley of Hattin. between here and I of fifteen years just uncorked. " PRINCETON AND YALE. THE SHORT SESSION Harvard's Victory on Saturday Haa Ci a t e d E x c i t e m e n t l a t h e Coming Game. I r \ • i I. N«W YORK, Nov. 24.-With the ap- CoDgTessnien Will Find Plenty proach of Thanksgiving Day the enthusi- ' *^ - llaWmfimfl , and under his left ear a bright Spot appeared. The physicians could give no cause for these strange appearances, and his family delayed the funeral until Friday. On that day, as no other signs of life had appeared, his family were induced to have the burial take place, and the body was carried to the cemetery for inter- ment. The funeral sermon was preached and the final arrangements all completed, when the casket was opened for the friends and relatives to view the body. The face was so lifelike that the family refused to allow the burial, and insisted that the remains be taken back to the house. It was done and now the family anxiously awaits further developments. Some of the most prominent physicians of |he county and State have bren called to see the body. Many are of the opinion that Fay is in a trance, from which he will recover^ HARVARD YELLS. asm over the Yale-Princeton football game is nearing its climax. Now that the Yale- Harvard game is a thing of the past, all interest centres in the final match be- tween Yale and Princeton at Eastern Park, Brooklyn. Yale's defeat by Harvard on Saturday has made the Princeton boys confident of victory. All indications point to a larger gath- ering than has ever before attended a football match in this country, but, nev- ertheless, it is promised that there will be loss friction and confusion than has been the case in former years with smaller crowds. The committee in charge haa of Work Next Weei. 1 *? r ^ ^ - 1 lilmmmffavl5SpL"* work ~ ev * since the contract was signed with the two college teams tol train arriving from the West prepare ample accommodation for a crowd as large even as 35,000 persons. Cambridge Will Have an Enthusiastic Crimson Jnbllee To-Night. CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Nov. 24. "The first time in 15 years, and Cumnock did it,'" is the cryin Harvard to-day over Saturday s great victory at Springfield. Every one agrees that football has by this feat taken an impetus that will last and grow for years to come. Everybody is congratulating every body, and everybody is happy and hilarious. Great care and preparation had been taken, the material of the team seemed of the finest, and its discipline was perfect. If under all these favorable circumstances victory would not be won, it Was the general opinion that it never could, aud that defeat would strike a heavy blow at the interest taken in the game. Captain Cunnock's unflagging zeal and labor are regarded as prime factors in the Lake Galilee, is an amphitheatre, as though the natural contour of the earth had invited all nations to come and sit down and hear Christ preach a sermon in which there were more startling novelties than were ever an- nounced in all the sermons that were ever preached. To those who heard Him oh this very spot His word must have seemed the contradiction of everything that they had ever heard or read or experienced. The world's theory had beeu: Blessed are the arrogant; blessed are the super- cilious; blessed are the tearless; blessed are thev that have everything their own way- blessed are the war eagles; oiesseu are Hie persecutors; blessed are the popular* blessed are the Herods and the Caesars and the Ahabs. ' 'No! no! no!" says Christ, with a voice that rings over these rocks and through yonder valley of Hattin, and down to the opaline lake on one side, and the sap- phire Mediterranean on the other, and across Europe ia one way, and across Asia in the other way, and around the earth Doth ways, till the globe shall yet be girdled with the nine beatitudes: Blessed are the poor; bless- ed are the mournful; blessed are the meek; blessed are the hungry; biassed are the mer- ciful; blessed are the pure; blessed are the peacemakers; blessed are the persecuted; blessed are the falsely reviled. TO DIE IN THE CHAIR. Preparations Commenced f o r t h e Electro- cut ion of Juglgo. Sisu SING, N. Y., NOV. 24.—Warden Brush of Sing Sing Prison has begun work on the electrical appliances for the vxecution of Shibuya Jugigo, who has ] been sentenced to death during the week beginning Dec. 1. The appliances ased in Kemmler's execution at Auburn wfll 4 not be used, an improved dynamo and chair having been made. The instruments of death will be placed in position in the death chamber during the week, and will be tested thoroughly by expert electricians. The United" States Supreme Court will render judg- ment in Juglgo's case this week, and Warden Brush is of opinion thattfio de- cision of the Supreme Court of this State will be upheld. . , Bequeathed •1,000,000. BRIDGEPORT, CONN., Nov. 24.—The wile of Judge of Probate Morris B. Beardsley has been bequeathed $1,000,000 by an uncle who died in New York eity a few days ago. Shortly before his death the uncle gave Judge Beardsley a check for 4150.000. : r' Most Harvard men think that Princeton jibes and innuendoes of the past year have been fully answered, and that the crim- son's work in withdrawing from the triple league can no longer be conidered a **baby act." There is some talk of a game with Princeton after the big Thanksgiving contest, but this is by the hot-headed and enthusiastic element, and will not materialize. riiemaker'a Big Jump. CHICAGO, Nov. 24. Filemaker jumped 7 feet 2i inches at the Exposition build- ing, breaking his Friday's record of 7 feet 1, inches. D. H. Harris, his owner, is desirous that Moorehouse & Pepper match their mare Maud against File- maker. Harris says he will match the old horse against their entire stable, in- cluding Roseberry, for $1,000 a side and two-thirds of the gate receipts at any place in the United States. ABERDEEN, S. D., Nov ^4.—Reports re- ceived •indicate thai the Indian scare is becoming quite general all along the east nde of the Missouri River north of Pierre, to Mandau. Settlern are becoming very much tlarmed and are fleeing east ward, leaving most of their possessions l>ehind them They are coming into the larger towns, such as Mandau, Eureka, Ellendale, Ips wich, Pierre and Gettysburg, in large numbers. At the latter point there seems to be the most excitement, and Governor Mellette ha* gone there with a large supply of arms and ammunition, hoping thereby to quiet the alarm Telegrams were received by him from Campbell. Walworth. Potter. Hide and Hand Counties, also from several points iu the Black Hills, saying great alarm was felt and asking for assistance Other dis patches from commanders at Forts Yates and Sully laugh at the report General Ruger of St. Paul has l>e*n wired by the commander of that post, and troops are ready to march at an hour's notice if warned. Rumors of bodies of Indians east of the river add greatly to the alarm, but Agent McLaughlin of Fort Yates says no Indians are absent from the agency. It is evident that nearly all the alarm is needless and will be quieted in a short time. APPROPRIATION BILLS BSWf The PenmoE Measure Will be the Iking.!! imtml T £"aW IS IT BLACKMAIL? A V o u n g Girl Prefers a Serious Charge Against a Priest. BrmTALO, N. Y., Nov. 24—The Rev. Theophilus Koztowski, pastor of the Church of. the Assumption, No. 847 Am- herst street, was brought before the grand jury of the Court of Oyer and Terminer at its last session on a charge of rape. The complainant was Marie Miklas, a 10-year-old girl, who had been employed by the priest about eight months ago to take care of his rooms. The evidence adduced before the grand jury at that time was insufficient to indict him on the charge, and his case was thrown out. Yesterday Koztowski was arrested on a charge of bastardy, preferred against him by the same complainant, anfl he was taken before Justice King, who adjourned the case until this afternoon. The ?t torney for the defense states that it is a case of blackmail, which will be fought to the last, and that Father Koztowski is entirely innocent. TO TRY PROF. KOCH'S CURE. ELIZABITH, N. J., Nov. 24.—The Bey; James H. Corrigan, pastor of St. Mary's Church, brother of Archbishop Corrigan. ] is dying at the parochial residence, No. 15a Race street. A consultation of phy- sicians was held and they diagnosticated J his disease as fatty degeneration of the heart. _ ...... A Pittsburg Newspaper M a n t o Teat the Lymph To-9torrow. PrfSSBCRG, NOV. 24. -This city wiil probably furnish the first subject for the ferial ©* Dr. KocnVlyinph in this country lathe person of Thomas E. Hewitt, a Well-known newspaper man. Mr. Hewitt has been suffering several years from tu- berculosis, and the doctors pronounced his case hopeless a year ago. He has been in correspondence with Dr. Hare of the Philadelphia Medical Jour- nal, and Dr. Hare has agreed to try the cure on him as soon as it arrives. Dr. Hare is the man who bad Prof. Koch's article on the use of the lymph cabled from Berlin, and was the first to order a | quantity of the lymph for trial in this country. Mr. Hewitt has just been notified by Dr. Hare to start for Philadelphia to- morrow, as he expects to receive the lymph on that day or Wednesday, and wants his patient there promptly. K i l l e d W h i l e Playing. BBOOKXTK, |*0V. 84.—James and Thos. McDonough, aged 6 and 8 years, were killed by the caving-in of a sand bank on 19th street, opposite their home. The McDonoughs, in company with two other bov% were playing in a pit when the Will Settle World** Fair Trouble*. CHICAGO, Nor. 24.—All differences be- tween the World's Columbian Commis- sion and tbe World's Columbia Exposi- .._ , . _ . tion Company will probably be settled sandbank over the pit gave way and to-day. After the joint conference com- * batted them beneath it. The McDonough mittees, appointed to define the authority * boys were taken out dead while the other of the two branches makes its report, | two^seaped with slight injuries, about the only thing left for this season is to settle the fate of the bureau.system, and then adjourn. It is not probable that any decision will be reached on the bureau plan before Wednesday Bight. Indians Charge o n a Logging (amp SHAWANO, Wis., Nov. 24. — There is trouble on the Menominee Reservation. One hundred and fifty armed Indians sur- rounded the logging camp of Henry Sherry, on the 16th section near Evergreen River, and burned the camp aft^r the men had retired. Eleven horses and 14 oxen and the camp outfit for 15 men were all destroyed. The 13 white men were ail unarmed and fled for their lives. The Indians claim that the white men were trespassers, although the 16th section be- longs to the State. Fell F i v e S t o r i w t o H e r Death. JHUME^CIXT, N. J., Nov. 24.—Five-year- old Mam^Qatfaab Jell from the fifth : M"Ifcm^ifeWMnfri "t 'To''"iffflunrrTstreet* J and was instant** aiUed. Married t o a Muse am Freak. CAMDKN, ("8. J., Nov. 34.—Oapt. Clark, the life saver of Atlaatto Ci y, waa mar- ried here to Amelia Hill, the fat beauty at the museum oa Ninth and Arch streets, Philadelphia. She selected her future husband from among a large number of applicants, by letter, and Justice KersweU tied the k*o*. Miss Hill is reputed to weigh 600 pounds.. Nine Shipwrecked Seamen Rescued BALTIMORE, Md, Nov. 24.—The steamer Earn ford arrived at Sparrows' Point last night with nine shipwrecked seamen taken from the Russian barkentine Yaut- sen. On Thursday last, when 20 miles east-southeast from Cape Hatteras, the Yautsen was sighted in a dismasted con- dition and with distress signals flying. Although the sea was very rough, a boat was lowered by the Earn ford and Captain Pihlman and his crew of eight men were taken from the Yautsen. The latter vessel was bound from Philadelphia to Fernandina, Florida. A heavy gale pre vailed for some hours on Wednesday. which carried away the vessel's masts. The pumps were out of order and the barkentine was making water fast and about to sink when the Earnford rescued the men. Death of Blahop Becfcwith. ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 24.—John Watrous Beckwith, bishop of yhe Protestant Epis copal diocese of Georgia, died last night from a shock of paralysis. He was in the 60th year of his age. He was a native of North Carolina, a graduate of Trinity College, Hartford, and consecrated bishop in 1868. A Negro Klot. CHARLESTON, S. C , NOV. 24.—A negr> riot occurred at Bishopville, Sumter County, yesterday, caused by the arrest of a disorderly negro. Troops have been ordered there. .* Charged t o t h e Mala N«w YOEK, NOT. 84—The mysterious murder of Diego Polisano, an Italian living at No. 400 East 118th street, it charged to the secret society called La Troops Ordered to Move. ST. LOUIS, Nov. 24.— General Merritt, commander of the Department of Mis- souri at 2 a. m. received instructions from Washington to send troops at once to Pine Ridge Agency. He accordingly or- dered a regiment of the Seventh Cavalry, consisting of eight companies of about 800 men, under command of Colonel For- sythc, and a company of artillery, with a battery of four guns, commanded by j Captain Camp r on. from Fori Riley to the scene of trouble. The troops left by spe cial train. It is learned that every sol dier in the Department of Missouri i> in ! readiness to start for Dakota a; a mo- ment's notice. Missionaries IV'arned by the Hedskins. I PIERRE, S. P., Nov. 24.—Two Indian missionaries of the Episcopal Church. Messrs. Ashley and Carrett. arrived in Pierre last night from the Pine Ridge Agency, having l>een warned by the lu dians that it would not t>e safe fur them to remain there. A Strong Lobby ou Its TV ay to the I>la franchise meat of Mr. Mills Arrives and Speakership a a d H i s Service in the Hosts. : WASHINGTON. HOT, 34.—Nearly evary lag* to the Capital oae or mora membaas flpjr$ta Fifty-first Congress, the last session of which will convene oa Monday next. By the middle of this week the Capital CHy will have settled itself for the usual gaities and hustling which inVatiatil* accompany the short session. Work sufficient to keep th« Houses busily engaged seven hours day until springtime has been out by different statesmen who been interviewed upon their arrival At the present writing no definite can be given as to what will engage the time of the session, beyond considera- tion of the several regular appropriation bills. The indications warrant the asser- tion that the Pension Appropriation bill will be the most earnestly debated meas- ure, owing to the enormous proportions it is reaching. There are apparently many Democrats in the House of Representatives who desire an extra session of the Fifty-second ( ongress. an d believe that it is their policy to work to that end. Leading Re- publicans stand ready to encourage such a move on the part of their opponents, believing that its effect will result in great benefit to the Republican party at the next election. The silver men are determined If poaai- ble to force through a free coinage bill. They are strongly impressed with their ability to accomplish the work itt the Senate, where they will have the amTJea- ance of the new Senators from Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. There will not be sufficient strength, however, to such a bill over a Presidential veto, is almost certain to follow its although some of the strongest t o free coinage express the belief President will not antagonise measure after giving it mature ation. Representative Lodge of is of opinion that the Boas pass an apportionment bill, Senate will complete the work of jority by passing the Elections bilL Lodge also ventures the opinion that "If the Democrats gets an extra session next spring it will be the beginning of the aad for them - He thinks Mr. Mills will wia the Speakership contest. Many Repub- Pcans entertain this opinion. - •-•. OPPOSING THE MORMONS. A Strong Lobby to Work f o r a B I B f o r Their Disfranchisement. W AhHi.NOTON, Nov. 24.—The announce- ment that a strong lobby is on its way to Washington with a view to secure the enactm.-lit of legislation which will lead to the ii-fianchisement of the Mormcms,. has created quite a commotion in political c.r< les There are two bills now pending iu the respective Houses which propose t<< take the privileges of the franchise from any person aiding, abetting OT countenancing polygamy, or who may be attached to any institution that does. Friends of the Mormons hold that to i pas* either of these measures would be very unjust, as the Mormon Chnrch has sincereh acknowledged allegiance to the ! laws 0 f the United States. It di*>s not appear, however, that there will IK- an> time for the consideration of such bills during this session. . Congressman Mills a u d t h e Speakership. j WASHI>;;TO?<, NOV. 24.—Congressman I Mills who arrived in Washington late i last night, talked freely about the result j of the late Congressional elections atfd ' about the action of the next Democratic j House of Representatives. On the Speak- ! ership question Mr. Mills is somewhat i reticent, merely remarking that ha-has determined to retire from public life at the close of the next Congress, and Says that if he should be elected Speaker he would feel that his 20 years of service in the house had been rounded off with the highest possible honors; but If he fails he will not lose an hour's rest. Sudden Death of a Journalist. WASHINGTON, NOV. 24.— E. W. Baft, a well known business man and journalist, died in this city last evening, suddenly, of dropsy of the heart. Mr. Fox was born 62 years ago in Buffalo, N. Y. Be went to St. Louis in 1850 as traveling salesman for the hardware house of Childs, Farr A Co. He became in time a half owner IB the concern which under the firm name of Prat t & Fox soon built up the hardware business in the Wast. : : »'•:,.'..•,•'•.-.i. The Brotherhood o f S t . HARSFORD. Conn., Nov. 34.—The days' session of the second annual ference of the Brotherhood of St. An- drew, in the diocese of Connecticut, began in this city yesterday with a good attendance. Rev. Lindsay Baker, of St. Peter's Church, Brooklyn, N.Y., delivered the sermon at St. John's Church fat t h o morning. Mr. C. J. Wills, of St Geotge's Church, New York, taught a largo Bible class at Christ Church Chapel in the afternoon. In the evening, at the ragabgr services at Christ Church, addresses were made by Messrs. Westervelt, Wills and Sturgis. tiOSTOK, SiOvT~JML- sell desires to say thai all published in reference to on his staff, except as to general, are premature, and in many respects erroneous. ''£*&&, Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Transcript of Old Fulton NY Post Cards By Tom Tryniski 11/Caledonia NY Advertise… · b ood purifier, la a...

Page 1: Old Fulton NY Post Cards By Tom Tryniski 11/Caledonia NY Advertise… · b ood purifier, la a peculiarly tueeeaa'ni remedy fiMr eatarrto. •rliieiJ it c«r«^ t»y erartleatme from

, , • * ,

1Imaslasl ta choice mm hundred dw*. I pa* • • lar buildi nf lota in aubarba O F K U M U City wUl I fcf I fT Of I |*l <T pay from 8r» hundred to one thoaeand per • *• • ' l © » • • g> cent, the next few j n t n under oar plan. P5 ea*i» and |& par month without interest con-rla adeairaole tot. Particulars IMI apphcaUou,

Li. Baaertms A Co* iva&aa* City

or »T

I.aat frar r b»- railroad companies of Eng­land «*an»«i *35o,000,000.

( > • » • • Er«r <*.s>*r*Tate • Anrp*noa vending »* their name and ad­

dress) will receive Information that will lead .to a fortune. Bank Lewie m Ckv, See art tr Building. Kansas v 11 y, Mo.

An orange measuring * foot in rirrumfeev-'•n*^' ha* been fonod m Stark*, Honda

M e d i o c r i t y ^way coptws ssspes tortf «. Dob-bina't E W t r i c Sosvp, (lr»t m a d e in tBSS. b w h . e a L m i u t o d a u m t i .au a n r »oep m a d * . Aak f o u r nrnc«f for £* N>\*a'$ E l e c t r i c S o a p , a l l o t h e r E lec tr i c* , E l e c t r i c i t y . M a g n e t i c s , e t c . .

' are l u d t e U o n a .

lacob: TheGpeat^-'-H REMEDY FOR P A I N

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If you have a COLD or COUCH,

A C H t e o r l e a d i n * t o

CONSUMPTION.

SCOTT'S EMULSION O F P I B E C O D I J T E B O i l ,

A N D H T P O P B O S P H I T B S OF LIMB AS~D SODA

xm saxjrm-vxD C T X T I ^ H J » * o n . x*r . Thin preparation contain* the •timui*-

t i n g j .r u t r i l f i t Die HtfpopKomphilew and flnn WarwwptaM T»il /.. ir~-r Oil. Cs«d by pliri ickAue a i ;ua w>>rld orer It is <u pmiatabie <Z* tmlk. T h r e e Umoe as efllc*-Ctoua its p i a l a Cod, Liver Oil A perfect Krnnis lon . better than all o t h e r s m a d e For ai l tittta* ot Wasting Diaemmem, Bronchitis,

coysi\H PTioy, Scrofula,in<1 *»* Flesh Producer l u c r e u n o t h i n g l ike t C O T T ' l EMULSION. It 1* sold by all P r u g s i m * . [,ei DU o n e by pr>>fu*e e x p l a n a t i o n >r i m p u d e n t e n t r e a t y itidui'ti you to a o ' e p i "\ su imu ;ute .

For a Disordered Liver Try BEECHIM'S PILLS.

25cts . a Box. O K A J ^ X . n R U O O I K T S .

COMMERCIAL FOUNTAIN PEN fee omlj f u m ' k m pri ix j r«a la tike markef

o< all tiar-J rubber jaaaot (»t out of jrd«r, i },duu ».>i-i"U r-rotu <->o« (Hi a«. Se..t complete—

hU» two pen point*, ruler—ail lu a neat box for <Be. I atauip. -r urre^or liuaraoteed aa repi er«au«J r n v u « r rwXiitttle*! aaaota wan tad.

W R. i BSgRO Lg f Poatmaatarv sptiafrtli©, Auaqwftanua Co. Paaaa.

• V M C Paarnarvahlu 4r1U»m«tlO, Aaoruaaad, «-=w | t feoroaa;ai / laognt oy M a l l . Ciroaiars troa, r y a a t ' a t a i l a a a , 4 5 T Mala «... iniiXaJu, .V If.

In the eara, a>ta«(.Bir« 4 roar I a ;, b u u i n t •napptnc Uk« ir • repor of a ptotol, an catarrh, that exoeedngly dl aifrfeabhj a n t

' common dmaane. fAMt-tof «ra*ll or hearing alir>i»-' t s t> f »m tatarrlL H.w»d*» ^ a n a par ilia, tfee grraa

b ood purifier, la a peculiarly tueeeaa'ni remedy fiMr eatarrto. •rliieiJ it c«r«^ t»y erartleatme from tfea Mood (fee imparity which « « , » and promotes ta • d.awwe. try Hood's SaraapwlUa

"I used Hood's Sanaparilla for catarrh, and !•» cei»eti great relief and benefit from It Tbe catarrfe • waa »ery dliagtwariio, eaaectally In the winter, caaatag ooaataat dlasfearge from my aoar, rtaglag aoiae* n my eari, aad palm in t e back of my bead. 1 he efTor to clear ray bead n tfee morning by bawk-m« and aptttinc warn patafnl. Hood's t arsaparUla fare me reUt f Unmodiateiy, while la t ime I waa aa> tir-ly cured, t am never wituout tbe mod c ne ia my house m I think it ta worth Its weight ia gold .* -Ma*. 0 a t i w a l « » Eighth street, J*. W., W i i f e lactoa, D. C.

Hood's S a r s a o a r i l l a Sold by ail ctrugglata |11 alx for #5. Prepared Ofelf by C 1. HOOD g CX)., LowaU, Ham.

IOO Doses One Dollar 1 A CENT *. Handeoui" Oo.d Plated Charm Jt Cigar a V Cutter combined. Fred Cakntt , SwjrtbmoreJPa

where. I f n o t * e ' a a W « r m r B. i. iIRKELY, TU ' Street,

mi

w ANTED—Act!te men ran emoJlOOp rmo. loaatt Nur*-ry stock. 0. D. Oreea ftCJo.. ifffQsjaa, K.T.

•V Sm * • m • § BK l^% JT\ mat mm r n A I c n 8REI8E tM T U B WOKIaP1

PATENTS! formattou.

tu I n » « a t e r a . w r t t a a t oooe (or hand-book of ia-

U. C U A L I . K A C O . , VV f.. hi OK t o n , 0 . C .

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)

3 R A T E F U L - C O M P O R T I N Q ,

EPPSS COCOA B R E A K F A S T .

'By a tfeorooch knowi«d?e of the aatnral Mam wh oh <o»ern the jporatl as of dicestion and aaQrt-U •!>, aad by a oarerul appiic aUon of the fine prot>et> daa it - el -a l*cte-l Cocoa, Vr. Epos baa provided oar Oraakfaat taolaa wlta a dalksataty flayourad feaaa araire wnioh 'u*/ t a r s isa nuuu haaey Joctora' blila It la ~>r ta* JudJotout nae of soon arttoia* of diet that a ooa uitataoa may a* gr dually ooilt up on tit strong enough to raalat arary tendeoey to t u s i a i a Huudredi of subtle mala.Ilae are uoatlng arouad 9* r»a<ly u> ^uaoc v D s r a n r there ia a weak point, w * may aaoape m a a j • fatal abaft by Keeping oar-seiye* well rorudoJ wtth pure blood » -d a property Duurtahed frame."—"Oh* .MII ia*j /oaatta "

Had** «im^iy with boiilni water c# mi l t . -Old ••n: v la aalf-pouad ;in*. y Onicero. labelled than: J A M E S E P P 3 dc C O . , Homcaopathlo Cbemista,

Loanox. RSQULXU.

-VASELINE-F O R A O N E - D O L L A R B I L L sent ua by mall we will deilT. r, free or all charge*, to any person hi tbe r'alt d states, all of the following article*, care-

t>oe [wo-uuiios bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - lOoti. t me tw.vou' ce bottle of V a l i n e Pomade, - 15 " tone jar of Vaaeftne Cold Cream, 19" i-m« L kn ot Vaseline Cam t-bor loe, - • • - H)" one cake of Vaseline "lap, unscetite<1, - • 10"*

ue Cake of Vaseline Soap, eiQUlaiteiy s c e n t e d , * " One two-ounce bott.e of White Vaseline, - - 2S"

O /or pusamm stamp* s * r wntffe article- at the prtem s.Asutt iM tu> aermtnt he perswviM to accept from y/cr+r iruggiM any VeueHne or preparation therefrom unl vw Icsor^ied with <r*r name, because you wm cer~ 'afUy rmcetvean imitation tchich Kas tittle or M t o n M < h e . c h o u g h H f g . C o . . « 4 I l t a t a S t . , M. V .

B«'«t ( o u g h Medicine. Rtx-ommended by Phyaic ians irea where all elne fatLs. Pleasant and agreeable to the *te. Chi ldren take it without object ion. By drutfirista.

C O N S U M I O N

lufhen slovens ger Hdy they polish the bottoms of the pinsT-when

'*:•£

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BVA * <A t \ 7~YA "&xe ̂ ive^^wBBiBBrmey 9af

never tired of cleaning up 'T

Two servants in two neighboring houses dwelt.' But differendy their daily labor felt; Jaded and weary of her life was one, Always at work, and yet 'twas never done. The other walked out nightly with her beau, But then she cleaned house with SAPOLIO.

A

tsamrdmw 3 f2m\sTta?"* * • * * I*.mr, EJegler dc C*.> ASTHMA

^•m*" ^ ^•^•a^^^M^at j mm. B , M

"•"mmnawamaaaaamawBwsw

rorCauglw^Colrts JifeO l ike

OB. SCHENCK'S

ULNIONIC SYRUP.

6

HENS nnhtmfead. n Out* tm/y so eta a r*ar ax

I F a J U t f - P O U L T K Y . B o a t U a . Btmum. Maam.

It ii plrnmiii M _ do>« not contain a uetNiaaraaythlii t* the Best Oaagfe _ w World. r-rSaleby all I

Pram, f l J » par bottle Dr. Hafeamdtl Ooasaaaawfioa and its i nr*, nsaUed fi^«. Or. J . H- Sammaok dt Boa.

•it*:'

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8HERIDAN'S IDITION POWDER K HOME, SEMD TO I S .

us. h<i• . Mitiairtas

.... ,

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X n i . NO 31. CALEDONIA, LIVINGSTON CO., N,

[SUNDAYS SERMOK O N B O F KKV . D R . T A L M A Q B m

, H T F U L I N O U I S C O u k s E A .

S n b j e t ' t : " A m o n g - t h e H o l y r l lHs. 1

TEXT: " He came to Nazareth^ where He IMM brought up."—Luke iv., 16.

, "What a splendid sleep I bad last night in a Catholic convent, my first sleep within doors since leaving Jerusalem, and all of us as kindly treated as though we had been tb« r\>pe and his college of Cardinals pass-tag that way t Last evening the genial sis-tBMBud of the convent ordered a hundred bright-eyed Arab children brought out to

for me, aad, it waa glorious! This I come out on the steps of the con-look upon the mast beantflftitvfl-

of all Palestine, its houses of white bMM, Guess its name! Nazareth, his­

torical Nazareth, one of the trinity of places Chat all Christian travelers must see or feel that they have not seen Palestine—namely, Bethleheu), Jerusalem, Nazareth. Baby-mood, boyhood, manhood of Him for whom I believe there are fifty million people who would now, tf it were required, march out and die, whether \mder ax or down in the floods or straight through the fire.

Grand old village is Nazareth, even putting aside its sacred association^. First of all. it is dean; and that can be said of few of the sDriental villages. Its neighboring town of IJfdblouf is the filthiest town I ever saw,

though its chief industry is the inanufac-ture of soap. They export all of it Naza­reth has been the scene of battles passing it from Israelite to Mohammedan an I from Mohammedan to Christian, the tOCBt wonderful of the battles be-iag that in which twenty-five thou­sand Turks were beaten by twenty-one hundred French, Napoleon Bonaparte commanding, the greatest of Frenchmen walking these very streets through Which Jesus Walked for neatly thirty years, the morals of the two, the antipodes, the snows of Russia and the plagues of Egypt appropriately following the one, the doxofo-glesof earth and the hallelujahs of heaven aBSjropriately following the otner. And then « & town is so beautifully situated in a great green bowl, the sides of the bowl surround­ing fifteen hills. The God of nature who is the God of the Bible evidently scooped out this valley for privacy and separation from all the world during three most important de­cades, the thirty years of Christ's boyhood and youtb, for of the thirty-three years of Christ's stay on earth he spent thirty of them in this town in getting ready— a start­ling rebuke to those who nave no putieuee with the long years of preparation necessary when they enter on any special mission for the chnrch or the world The trouble is with most young men that they want to launch their ship from the drydock before it is ready, and hence so many sink in the first cyclone.

All Christ's boyhood was spent in this vil­lage and its surroundings. There is the very well called "The Fountain of the Virgin," to __*.._. .. — iBgthers side He trotted along

No doubt about it; i t is been

Turn vQ© it has

I I . . S e •»•*

of rawing

ive them now as then. The

drawing water in all ages in those countries has been wo­men's work. Scores of them are waiting for their turn at it, three great and everlasting springs roiling oot into that well their barrels, tbeir hogsheads of wat3r in floods, floriottsly abundant. The well is sur­rounded by olive groves and wide spaces in which people talked and children, wearing charms on their heads as protection against the "evileye," are playing, and women with their stings of coin on either side of theft-face, and in skirts of blue and scar­let and white and green move on with

on their heads. Mary, I almost always took Jesus

the bay with her, for she had no one she could leave Him with, being in humble cir-•.'uiiuxtances and having no attendants. I do not believe there was one of the surrounding fifteen hills that the boy Christ did not range from bottom to top, or one cavern in their sides He did not explore, or one species of bird flying across the tops that He coaid not call by name, or one of all the species of̂ fauna browsing on those steeps that He had not recognised.

T i m set it ail through His sermons. If » man becomes a public sneaker, in his ora­tions or discourses you discover bis early whereabouts What a boy sees between seven and seventeen always sticks to him. When the apostle Peter preaches you see the fishing nets with which he had from his earliest days been familiar And when Amos deMvers his prophecy you hear in it the bleating of the herds which he had .n boy-

1 attended. And in our Lord's sermons conversations you see all the phases of

life and the mountainous life sur-

had in boyhood seen the shepherds get their flocks mixed up, and to one not familiar with the habits of shepherds and their flocks,

"xed up. And a sheepstealer ap-i scene and dishonestly demands

' tho&e sheep, when he owns not one of "Weil,'' says the two honest shep-'we will soon settle this matter," and

loot in one direction and the I goes out in the other direction, jMtealer in another direction, calls, and the flocks of each

. shepherds rush to their s, WSBSSD the sheepstealer calls and

ba«suX ba^fets not one of the flock. Ho mder ^ - f C h o s t , y e a n after; preaching a I j J r l r ell n m l illustrating His own

__jpWfd qualities, says: "When He putteth forth Big own sheen He *oeth before them.

and thasheep toJow Hint, for they know His voice, dsfl t i e stranger they will not follow, for they know hot the voice of the stranger."

ltJ*^L<W~"" hills are teflnaced for Tbe boy Christ had often stood with

i watching the trimming of -^ Clin! goes the knife andotT

»eh. v Tbe c h l l Christ says to the •What do yen do that for!"

farmer, "that is * ^ P 4 » hraach and it is doing nothing and is onlv in the way, so I cut it est ." Then she farmer with his sharp knife

from a living branch tats aad that "the other tendril. "Bat." says Christ, "those twigs that you cut knot dead, what do you do that f savs the Su-mer, we prune

aha main branch may have sap and so be mora fruitful. after years Christ said te Hfa

un the true viae and My Fatber ; every branch in Me that

Ha take th a way, aad every treat He pur geth it, nmore fruit." Capital!

had not been a country boy

ia aH

and bur court end our studios lived IU

J 4f .... the sins of the world,

folhes of the worhW and cruelties of thw'a^orH,

» darkness of the world, the hemispheres! So it

ot th* country boys orm and inspire and

salem. And but for that annual influx our cities would have enervated and sickened and slain the race. Late hours end hurtful ap­parel and overtaxed digestive organs and crowding environments of city life would have halted the world; but the valleys and mountains of Nazareth have given fresh supply of health and moral invigora-tion to Jerusalem and the Country saves the town. From tile hills of New Hamp­shire and the hills of Virginia and the hills of Georgia come in our national eloquence the W ebsters and the Clays and the Henry W. Gradys. From the plain homes of Massachusetts and Maryland come into our national charities the George Peabodys and the William Corcorans. From tpe cabins of the lonely country regions come into our national destinies the Andrew Jacksons and the Abraham Lincoln^. From plow boy's furrow and village counter and blacksmith's forge come moat of our city giants. Nearly all the Mes­siahs in all departments dwelt in Naz-arreth before they came to Jerusalem. I send this day thanks from these cities, most­ly made prosperous by country boys, to the farmhouse and the prairies and the moun­tain cabins, and the obscure homesteads of north and south and east and west, to the fathers and mothers in plain homespun if they be still alive or the hillocks under which they sleep the long sleep. Thanks from Jerusa­lem to Nazareth.

But alas! that the city should so often treat the country boys as of old the one from Nazareth was treated at Jerusalem! Slain not by hammers and spikes, but by instru­ments just as cruel. On every street of every city the crucifixion goes on. Every year shows its ten thousand of tbe slain. Uh, bow we grind them up! Under what wheels, in what mills, and for what an awful grist! Let the city take better care of these boys and young men arriving from the country They are worth saving.

They are now only the preface of what they will be if, instead of sacrificing, you help them. Boys as grand as the one who with his elder brother climbed into a church to ver. and not knowing their danger went outside on some Umbers, when one of those timbers broke and the boys fell, and the older toy caught on a beam and the younger idutched the foot of the older. The older could not climb up with the younger hanging to ins feet, so the younger said: "John, I am going to let go, you e&n climb out into safety. but you can't climb up with me holding fast; I am going to let go, kiss mother for me, and tell her not to feel badly; good-by!" And he let go and was so hard dashed upon the ground he was not recognizable. Plenty of such brave boys coming up from Naza­reth ' Let Jerusalem be careful how it treats them' A gentleman long ago en­tered a school in Germany and ne bowed very low before the boys, and the teacher said, "Why do you do that9" "Oh," said the visitor, "I do not know what mighty man may yet be developed among them. ' At that instant the eyes of one of the boys flashed lire. Who was i f Martin Luther. A lad on his way to school passed a door­step on which sat a lame and invalid child. The passing boy said to him: "Why don't you go to school!" "Oh, I am lame and I can't walk to school." "Get on my back," said tbe well boy, "and I will carry you to school." And so he did that day and for many days until the invalid was fairly

was the well boy that did that kindness* I don't know. Who was the invalid he car­ried? I t was Robert Hall, the rapt pupil orator of all Christendom. Better give to the boys who come up from Nazareth to Je­rusalem a crown instead of a cross.

On this December morning in Palestine on our way out from Nazareth we saw just such a carpenter's shop as Jesus worked in, supporting His widowed mother after He was old enough to do so. 1 looked in, and there were hammer and saw and plane and auger and vise and measuring rule and chisel and drill and adz" and wrench and bit and aJJ the tools ot carpentry. Think of it1 He who smoothed the surface, of the earth shoving a plaue. He who cleft the mountains by earthquake pounding a ciusel, He who opened the mammoth caves of the earth turning an auger; He who wields the thunderbolt striking with a hammer; He who scooped out the bed for the ocean hollowing a ladle; He who flashes the morning on the earth and makes the midnight heavens quiver with aurora con­structing a winiow. I cannot understand it, but I believe it. A skeptic said to an old clergyman: "I will not believe anything I cannot explain.'' "Indeed,'' said the clergy­man, "you will not believe anything you cannot explain. Please to explain to me why some cows have horns and others have no horns. "No," said the skeptic, "I did not mean exactly that. I mean that I wUl not believe anything I have not seen." "Indeed," said the clergyman," "you will not believe anything you have not seen. Have you a backbone?" "Yes," said the skeptic. "How do you know9" said the clergyman. "Have you ever seen W This mystery of Godhood and humanity inter-joined I cannot understand and I cannot ex­plain, but I believe it. I am glad there are so many things we cannot understand, for that leaves something for heaven.

In about two hours we pas3 through Cana, the village of Palestine, where the mother of Christ and our Lord attended the wedding of a poor relative, having come over from Nazareth for that purpose. The mother of Christ—for women are first to notice such things—found that the provisions had fallen short and she told Christ, and He to relieve

the embarrassment of the hous3keeper, who had invited more guests than the pantry warranted, became the butler of the occasion, and out of' a cluster of a few sympathetic words squeezed a beverage of a few hundred and twenty-six gallons of wine in which was not one drop of intoxicant, or it would have left that party as maudlin and drunk as the great centennial banquet in New York, two years ago, left senators, and governors, and generals, and merchant princes, the difference between the wine at tbe wedding in Cana and the wine at the ban­quet in Now York being, that tbe Lord made the one and the devil made the other We got off our horses and examined some of these water iars at Cana said to be the very ones that held the plain water that Christ turned into the purple bloom of an especial vintage. I measured them and found them eighteen inches from edge to edge and nine­teen inches deep, aad declined to accept their identity. But we realized the immensity of a supply of a hundred and twenty-six gal­lons of wine.

Among tbe arts and inventions of the fu­ture I hope there may be some one that can press tbe juices from'the grape and so mingle them aad without one drop Of damning alco­holism that it will keep for years. Aad the more of it yon take the clearer will he the brain and the heal th ier the stomach, And here is a remarkable fact iu my recent jour-n e v - I traveled through Italy and Greece and Egypt aad Palestine and Syria and Tur-key, and how maay, intoxfcatal ra**» *> you think I saw hi ait those fire great realms? Not one. We mast in oar Christianised lands have got hold of soma kind of beverage that Christ did no t make.

Oh, I am glad that Jesus waa present a t that wedding, aad last December, standing

, at Cana, that wedding came backl Night ' bad f a u n on the village and its surround -l i n n . Tbe bridegroom had put on his head a

and

DAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1890/£S"J?r££r- • 1 . M

u i o eawewM""

cry risgr "They are i

I 8 H E I N A T R A N C E ? •ii" i i

B o d y o f a M « n R e m o v e d f r o m t h e W h e n A b o u t t o B e B u r l e d .

LANDIWO, N. J., Nov. 2 4 . - T h e vil lage of Hammonton, about 12 from this place, has been thrown

t by signs of Ufa appear-body of George W. Fay, one of

prominent citizens, who, i t was fitted last Tuesday evening.

bout 10 or 18 days ago it was found •t Hr. t$,j was suffering wi th an ab-

jaf the brain. Later on dropsy super-audTuesday evening he was pro-. f f a d b r the attending physicians. i m e of his death h is l imbs were

swollen attd h i s face discolored. Of his family t o find that

oat entirely disap-

*§<$&&

by groomsman, aad preceded DV a nana musicians with flutes and drums horns, and by torches in full he starts for the bridVa This river of fire is met by anotlmt**!' fire, the torches of the bride and li maids, flambeau answering flambeau, bride is in white robe and her veil not covers her face but envelopes bar * Her trousseau is as elaborate as the of her father's house permit. Her ai are decked with all the ornaments or can borrow; but their own personal _ make tame the jewels, for those oriental men eclipse in attractiveness all others those of our own land. The damson in their cheek, and the diamond luster of their eyes, and the ness of the night in their long locks, their step is the gracefulness of the n At the first sight of the torches bridegroom and bis attendants over the hill the cry rings thrc home of the bride: ready I Behold the ye out to meet him •" sions approach each ^ _ _ _ , strike and the songs commingle, the two processions become one ar. toward the bridegroom's house, and meet a third proc?ssion which is made u p of tht friends of both bride and b r i d e s torn, Then all enter the house and the danoe begins and the door is shut. And all thii Christ uses to illustrate the joy with which the ransomed of earth shall meet Him Whet He comes garlanded with clouds and roboc in the morning and trumpeted by the thun­der^ of the last day. "Look' There H« "omes down off the hills of heaven, th<

nnaegroom i Ana let us start ouc to nan Him, for I hear the voices of the judgment day sounding: "Behold the Bridegroom cometh! Go ye out to meet Him!" And the disappointment of those who have declined the invitation to the gospel wedding is pre­sented under the figure of a door heavily closed. You hear it slam. Too late. The door is shut!

But we must hasten on, for I do not mean to close my eyes to-night till I see from a mountain top Lake Galilee, on whose banks next Sabbath we will worship, and on whose waters the following morning we will take a sail. On and up we go in the severest cUmb of all Palestine, the ascent of the Mount of Beatitudes, on the top of which Christ preached that famous sernion on the blesseds —blessed this and blessed that. Up to their knees the horses plunge in molehills and a surface that gives way at the first touch of the hoof, and again and again the tired beasts halt, as much as to say to the riders, "It is unjust for vou to make us climb these steeDS." On and up over mountain sides, wnere in the later season hyacinths and dasies and phloxes and anemones kindle their beauty. On and up until on the rocks of black basalt we' dis­mount, and climbing to the highest peak look out on an enchantment of scenery that seams be the beatitudes themselves arched into skies and rounded into valleys and silvered into waves. The view is like that of Tennessee and North Carolina from the top of Look­out Mountain, or like that of Vermont and New Hampshire from tbe top of Mount Washington. Hail hills 'of Gallllee! Hail Lake Gennesaret, only four miles away 1 Yonder, clear up and most coi Bated the very citv to which Christ pom for illustration in tbe sermon preached here, saying: ' 'A city set on a hill cannot be hid." There are rocks around me on this Mount of TtQ**itn,f'nff mnmrti %n build stin hiafaasl mil in" the world e t e r ^ w : M A % ! 3 ^ pulpit. Itoverlooks all time and all eternity, will go mad with the pent-up enthusiasm

The valley of Hattin. between here and I of fifteen years just uncorked. "

PRINCETON AND YALE. THE SHORT SESSION H a r v a r d ' s V i c t o r y o n S a t u r d a y H a a Ci

a t e d E x c i t e m e n t l a t h e C o m i n g G a m e . I r \ • i I.

N«W YORK, Nov. 24.-With the ap- CoDgTessnien Will Find Plenty proach of Thanksgiving Day the enthusi- ' *^ -

llaWmfimfl , and under h i s left ear a bright

Spot appeared. The physicians could give no cause for

these strange appearances, and his family delayed the funeral unti l Friday. On that day, as no other s igns of life had appeared, his family were induced to have the burial take place, and the body was carried to the cemetery for inter­ment . The funeral sermon was preached and the final arrangements all completed, when the casket was opened for the friends and relatives to view the body. The face was so lifelike that the family refused to allow the burial, and insisted that the remains be taken back to the house. It was done and now the family anxiously awaits further developments.

Some of the most prominent physicians of | h e county and State have bren called to see the body. Many are of the opinion that Fay is in a trance, from which he will recover^

HARVARD YELLS.

asm over the Yale-Princeton football game is nearing i t s cl imax. Now that the Yale-Harvard game is a thing of the past, all interest centres in the final match be­tween Yale and Princeton at Eastern Park, Brooklyn.

Yale's defeat by Harvard on Saturday has made the Princeton boys confident of victory.

All indications point to a larger gath­ering than has ever before attended a football match in this country, but, nev­ertheless, it is promised that there wil l be loss friction and confusion than has been the case in former years wi th smaller crowds. The committee in charge haa

of Work Next Weei. 1 *?r

^ ^ -1lilmmmffavl5SpL"* w o r k ~ e v * s i n c e t h e contract was signed wi th the t w o college teams t o l train arriving from the West prepare ample accommodation for a crowd as large even as 35,000 persons.

C a m b r i d g e W i l l H a v e a n E n t h u s i a s t i c C r i m s o n J n b l l e e T o - N i g h t .

CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Nov. 24. — "The first time in 15 years, and Cumnock did it,'" is the cry in Harvard to-day over Saturday s great victory at Springfield. Every one agrees that football has by this feat taken an impetus that will last and grow for years to come.

Everybody is congratulating every body, and everybody is happy and hilarious. Great care and preparation had been taken, the material of the team seemed of the finest, and its discipline was perfect. If under all these favorable circumstances victory would not be won, it Was the general opinion that it never could, aud that defeat would strike a heavy blow at the interest taken in the game.

Captain Cunnock's unflagging zeal and labor are regarded as prime factors in the

Lake Galilee, is an amphitheatre, as though the natural contour of the earth had invited all nations to come and sit down and hear Christ preach a sermon in which there were more startling novelties than were ever an­nounced in all the sermons that were ever preached. To those who heard Him oh this very spot His word must have seemed the contradiction of everything that they had ever heard or read or experienced. The world's theory had beeu: Blessed are the arrogant; blessed are the super­cilious; blessed are the tearless; blessed are thev that have everything their own way- blessed are the war eagles; oiesseu are Hie persecutors; blessed are the popular* blessed are the Herods and the Caesars and the Ahabs. ' 'No! no! no!" says Christ, with a voice that rings over these rocks and through yonder valley of Hattin, and down to the opaline lake on one side, and the sap­phire Mediterranean on the other, and across Europe ia one way, and across Asia in the other way, and around the earth Doth ways, till the globe shall yet be girdled with the nine beatitudes: Blessed are the poor; bless­ed are the mournful; blessed are the meek; blessed are the hungry; biassed are the mer­ciful; blessed are the pure; blessed are the peacemakers; blessed are the persecuted; blessed are the falsely reviled.

TO DIE IN THE CHAIR.

P r e p a r a t i o n s C o m m e n c e d f o r t h e E l e c t r o -c u t i o n o f J u g l g o .

Sisu SING, N. Y., NOV. 24.—Warden Brush of Sing Sing Prison has begun work on the electrical appliances for the vxecution of Shibuya Jugigo, who has ] been sentenced to death during the week beginning Dec. 1. The appliances ased in Kemmler's execution at Auburn wfll 4 not be used, an improved dynamo a n d chair having been made.

The ins truments of death wi l l be placed in position in the death chamber during the week, and wi l l be tested thoroughly by expert electricians. The United" States Supreme Court wi l l render judg­ment in Juglgo's case this week, and Warden Brush is of opinion that t f io de­cision of the Supreme Court of this State will be upheld. . ,

B e q u e a t h e d • 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 .

BRIDGEPORT, CONN., Nov. 24.—The w i l e of Judge of Probate Morris B. Beardsley has been bequeathed $1,000,000 by an uncle who died in New York e i ty a few days ago. Shortly before h i s death the uncle gave Judge Beardsley a check for 4150.000. : r'

Most Harvard m e n think that Princeton jibes and innuendoes of the past year have been fully answered, and that the crim­son's work in withdrawing from the triple league can no longer be conidered a **baby act ." There is some talk of a game with Princeton after the big Thanksgiving contest, but this is by the hot-headed and enthusiast ic element, and will not materialize.

ri iemaker'a Big Jump. CHICAGO, Nov. 24. — Filemaker jumped

7 feet 2 i inches at the Exposition build­ing, breaking his Friday's record of 7 feet 1 , inches. D. H. Harris, his owner, is desirous that Moorehouse & Pepper match their mare Maud against File-maker. Harris says he will match the old horse against their entire stable, in­cluding Roseberry, for $1,000 a side and two-thirds of the gate receipts at any place in the United States.

ABERDEEN, S. D., Nov ^4.—Reports re­ceived •indicate thai the Indian scare is becoming quite general all along the east nde of the Missouri River north of Pierre, to Mandau.

Settlern are becoming very much tlarmed and are fleeing east ward, leaving most of their possessions l>ehind them They are coming into the larger towns, such as Mandau, Eureka, Ellendale, Ips wich, Pierre and Gettysburg, in large numbers. At the latter point there seems to be the most excitement, and Governor Mellette ha* gone there with a large supply of arms and ammunition, hoping thereby to quiet the alarm

Telegrams were received by him from Campbell. Walworth. Potter. Hide and Hand Counties, also from several points iu the Black Hills, saying great alarm was felt and asking for assistance Other dis patches from commanders at Forts Yates and Sully laugh at the report

General Ruger of St. Paul has l>e*n wired by the commander of that post, and troops are ready to march at an hour's notice if warned.

Rumors of bodies of Indians east of the river add greatly to the alarm, but Agent McLaughlin of Fort Yates says no Indians are absent from the agency. It is evident that nearly all the alarm is needless and will be quieted in a short t ime.

APPROPRIATION BILLS BSWf

The PenmoE Measure Will be the

Iking.!! imtml T

£"aW

IS IT BLACKMAIL?

A V o u n g G i r l P r e f e r s a S e r i o u s C h a r g e A g a i n s t a P r i e s t .

BrmTALO, N. Y., Nov. 24—The Rev. Theophilus Koztowski, pastor of the Church of. the Assumption, No. 847 Am­herst street, was brought before the grand jury of the Court of Oyer and Terminer a t i t s last session on a charge of rape.

The complainant was Marie Miklas, a 10-year-old girl, who had been employed by the priest about e ight months ago to take care of his rooms. The evidence adduced before the grand jury at that t ime was insufficient to indict him on the charge, and his case was thrown out.

Yesterday Koztowski was arrested on a charge of bastardy, preferred against him by the same complainant, anfl he was taken before Justice King, who adjourned the case unti l this afternoon. The ?t torney for the defense states that it is a case of blackmail, which will be fought to the last , and that Father Koztowski is entirely innocent.

TO TRY PROF. KOCH'S CURE.

ELIZABITH, N. J., Nov. 24.—The Bey; James H. Corrigan, pastor of St. Mary's Church, brother of Archbishop Corrigan. ] is dying at the parochial residence, No. 15a Race street. A consultation of phy­sicians was held and they diagnosticated J his disease as fatty degeneration of the heart. „ _ . . . . . .

A P i t t s b u r g N e w s p a p e r M a n t o T e a t t h e L y m p h T o - 9 t o r r o w .

PrfSSBCRG, NOV. 24. - T h i s city wiil probably furnish the first subject for the ferial ©* Dr. KocnVly inph in th i s country l a t h e person of Thomas E. Hewitt , a Well-known newspaper man. Mr. Hewitt has been suffering several years from tu­berculosis, and the doctors pronounced his case hopeless a year ago.

He has been in correspondence wi th Dr. Hare of the Philadelphia Medical Jour­nal, and Dr. Hare has agreed to try the cure on him as soon as i t arrives. Dr. Hare i s the man who bad Prof. Koch's article on the use of the lymph cabled from Berlin, and was the first to order a

| quantity of the lymph for trial in this country.

Mr. Hewit t has just been notified by Dr. Hare to start for Philadelphia to­morrow, as he expects to receive the lymph on that day or Wednesday, and wants h i s patient there promptly.

K i l l e d W h i l e P l a y i n g .

BBOOKXTK, |*0V. 84.—James and Thos. McDonough, aged 6 and 8 years, were ki l led by the caving-in of a sand bank on 19th street, opposite their home. The McDonoughs, in company wi th t w o other bov% were playing in a pit w h e n the

W i l l S e t t l e W o r l d * * F a i r T r o u b l e * .

CHICAGO, Nor. 24.—All differences be­tween the World's Columbian Commis­sion and tbe World's Columbia Exposi- . . _ , . _ . t ion Company wi l l probably be settled s a n d b a n k over the pit gave way and to-day. After the joint conference com- * batted them beneath it. The McDonough mittees, appointed t o define the authority * boys were taken out dead whi le the other of the t w o branches makes i t s report, | two^seaped wi th s l ight injuries, about the only th ing left for th i s season is to settle the fate of the bureau.system, and then adjourn. It is not probable that any decision wi l l be reached on the bureau plan before Wednesday Bight.

I n d i a n s C h a r g e o n a L o g g i n g ( a m p

SHAWANO, Wis., Nov. 24. — There is trouble on the Menominee Reservation. One hundred and fifty armed Indians sur­rounded the logging camp of Henry Sherry, on the 16th section near Evergreen River, and burned the camp aft^r the men had retired. Eleven horses and 14 oxen and the camp outfit for 15 men were all destroyed. The 13 white men were ail unarmed and fled for their lives. The Indians claim that the white men were trespassers, although the 16th section be­longs to the State.

F e l l F i v e S t o r i w t o H e r D e a t h .

JHUME^CIXT, N. J., Nov. 24.—Five-year-old M a m ^ Q a t f a a b J e l l from the fifth :M"Ifcm^ifeWMnfri "t 'To''"iffflunrrTstreet*

J and was instant** aiUed.

M a r r i e d t o a M u s e a m F r e a k .

CAMDKN, ("8. J., Nov. 34.—Oapt. Clark, the l ife saver of At laat to Ci y, waa mar­ried here t o Amelia Hill , the fat beauty a t the m u s e u m o a Ninth and Arch streets, Philadelphia. She selected her future husband from among a large number of applicants, by letter, and Justice KersweU tied t h e k*o*. Miss Hill i s reputed t o weigh 600 p o u n d s . .

N i n e S h i p w r e c k e d S e a m e n R e s c u e d

BALTIMORE, M d , Nov. 24.—The steamer Earn ford arrived at Sparrows' Point last n ight with nine shipwrecked seamen taken from the Russian barkentine Yaut-sen. On Thursday last, when 20 miles east-southeast from Cape Hatteras, the Yautsen was sighted in a dismasted con­dition and with distress signals flying. Al though the sea was very rough, a boat was lowered by the Earn ford and Captain Pihlman and his crew of eight men were taken from the Yautsen. The latter vessel was bound from Philadelphia to Fernandina, Florida. A heavy gale pre vailed for some hours on Wednesday. which carried away the vessel's masts. The pumps were out of order and the barkentine was making water fast and about to sink when the Earnford rescued the men.

D e a t h o f B l a h o p B e c f c w i t h .

ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 24.—John Watrous Beckwith, bishop of yhe Protestant Epis copal diocese of Georgia, died last night from a shock of paralysis. He was in the 60th year of his age. He was a native of North Carolina, a graduate of Trinity College, Hartford, and consecrated bishop in 1868.

A N e g r o K l o t .

CHARLESTON, S. C , NOV. 24.—A negr> riot occurred at Bishopville, Sumter County, yesterday, caused by the arrest of a disorderly negro. Troops have been ordered there. .*

C h a r g e d t o t h e M a l a

N « w YOEK, N O T . 8 4 — T h e mysterious murder of Diego Polisano, an Italian l iving at No. 400 East 118th street, it charged to the secret society called La

T r o o p s O r d e r e d t o M o v e .

ST. LOUIS, Nov. 24.— General Merritt, commander of the Department of Mis­souri at 2 a. m. received instructions from Washington to send troops at once to Pine Ridge Agency. He accordingly or­dered a regiment of the Seventh Cavalry, consisting of eight companies of about 800 men, under command of Colonel For-sythc, and a company of artillery, with a battery of four guns, commanded by

j Captain Campron. from Fori Riley to the scene of trouble. The troops left by spe cial train. It is learned that every sol dier in the Department of Missouri i> in

! readiness to start for Dakota a; a mo­ment's notice.

M i s s i o n a r i e s IV'arned b y t h e H e d s k i n s .

I PIERRE, S. P., Nov. 24.—Two Indian missionaries of the Episcopal Church. Messrs. Ashley and Carrett. arrived in Pierre last night from the Pine Ridge Agency, having l>een warned by the lu dians that it would not t>e safe fur them to remain there.

A Strong Lobby ou Its TV ay to the I>la franchise meat of Mr. Mills Arrives and S p e a k e r s h i p a a d H i s

S e r v i c e in t h e H o s t s . :

WASHINGTON. H O T , 34.—Nearly evary lag* t o

the Capital oae or mora membaas flpjr$ta Fifty-first Congress, the last session of which will convene oa Monday next. By the middle of this week the Capital CHy will have settled itself for the usua l gaities and hust l ing which inVatiatil* accompany the short session.

Work sufficient to keep th« Houses busily engaged seven hours day until springtime has been out by different statesmen who been interviewed upon their arrival At the present writ ing no definite can be given as to what wil l engage the time of the session, beyond considera­tion of the several regular appropriation

bills. The indications warrant the asser­tion that the Pension Appropriation bill will be the most earnestly debated meas­ure, owing to the enormous proportions it is reaching.

There are apparently many Democrats in the House of Representatives w h o desire an extra session of the Fifty-second ( o n g r e s s . a n d believe that it is their policy to work to that end. Leading Re-publicans stand ready to encourage such a move on the part of their opponents, believing that its effect wil l result i n great benefit to the Republican party a t the next election.

The silver men are determined If poaai-ble to force through a free coinage bill. They are strongly impressed with their ability to accomplish the work itt t h e Senate, where they will have the amTJea-ance of the new Senators from Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. There wi l l not be sufficient strength, however, to such a bill over a Presidential veto, is almost certain to follow i t s although some of the strongest t o free coinage express the belief President will not antagonise measure after g iv ing i t mature ation.

Representative Lodge of is of opinion that the B o a s pass an apportionment bill, Senate will complete the work of jority by passing the Elections bilL Lodge also ventures the opinion that "If the Democrats gets an extra session n e x t spring it will be the beginning of the aad for them - He thinks Mr. Mills wil l w i a the Speakership contest. Many Repub-Pcans entertain this opinion.

- • - • .

OPPOSING THE MORMONS.

A S t r o n g L o b b y t o W o r k f o r a B I B f o r T h e i r D i s f r a n c h i s e m e n t .

W AhHi.NOTON, Nov. 24.—The announce-ment that a strong lobby is on its way t o Washington with a view to secure the enactm.-lit of legislation which will lead to the i i-f ianchisement of the Mormcms,. has created quite a commotion in political c.r< les There are two bills now pending iu the respective Houses which propose t<< take the privileges of the franchise from any person aiding, abett ing OT countenancing polygamy, or who may be attached to any institution that does.

Friends of the Mormons hold t h a t to i pas* either of these measures would be

very unjust, as the Mormon Chnrch h a s sincereh acknowledged allegiance to the

! laws 0f the United States. It di*>s not appear, however, that there

will IK- an> time for the consideration of such bills during this session.

. C o n g r e s s m a n M i l l s a u d t h e S p e a k e r s h i p .

j WASHI>;;TO?<, NOV. 24.—Congressman I Mills who arrived in Washington late i last night, talked freely about the result j of the late Congressional elections atfd ' about the action of the next Democratic j House of Representatives. On the Speak-! ership question Mr. Mills is somewhat i reticent, merely remarking that ha-has

determined to retire from public life a t the close of the next Congress, and Says that if he should be elected Speaker he would feel that his 20 years of service in the house had been rounded off wi th the highest possible honors; but If he fails he will not lose an hour's rest.

Sudden Death of a Journal ist . WASHINGTON, NOV. 24.— E. W. Baft, a

well known business man and journalist, died in this city last evening, suddenly, of dropsy of the heart. Mr. Fox was born 62 years ago in Buffalo, N. Y. B e went to St. Louis in 1850 as travel ing salesman for the hardware house of Childs, Farr A Co. He became in t ime a half owner IB the concern which under the firm name of Prat t & Fox soon built up the hardware business in the Wast.

:: » ' • : , . ' . . • , • ' • . - . i .

T h e B r o t h e r h o o d o f S t .

HARSFORD. Conn., Nov. 34.—The days' session of the second annual ference of the Brotherhood of St. An­drew, in the diocese of Connecticut, began in this city yesterday w i t h a good attendance. Rev. Lindsay Baker, of St. Peter's Church, Brooklyn, N.Y. , delivered the sermon at St. John's Church fat tho morning. Mr. C. J. Wills , of S t Geotge's Church, New York, taught a largo Bible class at Christ Church Chapel in the afternoon. In the evening, a t the ragabgr services at Christ Church, addresses were made by Messrs. Westervelt , Wi l l s and Sturgis.

tiOSTOK, SiOvT~JML-sell desires to say t h a i a l l published in reference t o on his staff, except as to general, are premature, and in m a n y respects erroneous.

''£*&&,

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