improperly .v fitted - nys historic...
TRANSCRIPT
There are 20,O0O%C<* tons of coal
msfr
CHANCESARE
m. DtvioFAVORITE REMEDY
WILLDO
YOUGOOD!
All Itoiggists sell i tAf ?i oo a Bottle.
^Can't Fool theOn the quality of the feed. Maytry to make yourself believe thatthe poorer grades of oat?, etc ,are just as good, but the fallingoff in strength and flesh willprove different.
Fcccft i
Sold by us is as good as it is pos-sible to get it. And our pricesare not higher than the ordinarystuff costs. Our custom tnili isagain rnnainir at fall capacityaod doing excellent work.
Ol S. Lawrence,M a l o a e , 353". "5T.
DR PIERCESGOLDEN
MEDICAL
DISCOVERY• :'. F O R T H E '—-
BLOOP.LIVER.UJNGS.NOTICE.—PURSUANT T%) AN ORDER OFHon. Samuel'A. Benmn, Surrogate of the
County of Franklin, and according to the statutein such case made and provided, notice is hereby
I given to all persons having claims against JuliusP Eddy, late of Malone, in said county.deeeased.
. that they are required to exhibit the same, with• the vouchers thereof, to the undersigned, admin-1 istrator, at his residence in Malone, in said\ county, on or before the 14th day of January
*Dated July 2nd. 1900.2Sw27 HENRY K. RIDER, Administrator.
NOTICE.PU R S U A N T TO AN ORDER OF W)>S.
Samuel A. Bemau. Surrogate, of the Cowatr, „ of JEra.nJii-.ii D.J«MJ- aeeerstag'-ttr-fcfcc-statTi iv irrsuc n
\ ca&e made and provided, notice is hereby givento all persons having claims against Simon D.Stevens, late of Malone. in said county, deceased.
'1 that they are required to exhibit the same, withthe vouchers thereof, to the undersigned, Ella L.
* Synionds, at her residence in Malone. in saidcounty, on or before the loth day of December
, next.*« Dated June 7tiul900., -1 24-27 ELLA L. SYMONDS. Administratrix.
Movement against our peopleis so revolting that we stop andwonder why Malone people willpatronize such a class. We cangive you better work and keepyour money circulating at home.Moral—Patronize those whopatronize you.
FORtUNE'S
4 Catherine Street.
T.
"KfOTICB*—PURSUANT TO AN ORDER OPi.K Hon. Samuel A.«eman. Surrogate of theCounty of Franklin, and according to the statuteIn such case made and provided, notice is herebygiven to all pereo*b« having claims against EltehaD. Taylor, late of Moira, in said eounty.deceased,that they are required to exhibit the same, withthe vouchers thereof, to the Undersigned, ex-ecutor, at his residence In Dickinson, in saidcounty, on or before the 18th day of Novembernext.
Dated May 7th. 1900.19*27 CHARLES H. TAYLOR, Executor.
A, W. SHISALB, Att'y, Brushton, N. Y.
NO*1©E.~PUR8UANT TO AN ORDER OPBon. Samuel A. Beman, Surrogate of the
County of Franklin, and according to the statuteIn such-case made and provided, notice is herebygiven to all persons havlnar claims against SarahO. Stevens, late of Brandon, in said oounty, de-
. oaased, that they we re<mJred to exbiWl theame, with the vouchers thereof, tor the under*
d* executor, at his residence, in the town ofJtajtaW County, on or before the ffib
ulWO..7 K. RIDER, Executor, *o.
mtMSR A CUimrxuL, Attys. / I8wS7
Their Reasoning Powers a»He Told of Them.
The late Col. Rowland Higbie, oiwhat used; to be St. Ambrose's, but b\t ie grace of the board on geographicsaroes, is now officially St. Ambrosewas a famous judge and lover of dogstnd indeed of all other arsixna]?. Longbefore aniseed' dogs were invented- inthis country Col. Higbie had his pat*of live fox hounds, and he took prizesgalore long before the Westminsteiclub began to hold yearly exhibits oi
Londonoutclassed
gow>as and ha t s , savsexchange. His horsesanything- a t t he hcrse show, eventhough they were ti'ottirsg1 n?.2'^; am":as for cats and other animals! The col-onel hardly ever slept at home, for feaithat some jealous aniinal or other mightdestroy him to prevent another over-affectionate animal from securing him
It might be expected that the colonelhad some good stories to tell of the in-telligence of his favorites. He had.Only his unexpected death preventedhirn irxnn confuting fnenVTo The coTumns of his favorite weekly. As it is.here are two of his stories, noted, downfrom his accounts of his pets. Rory andKathleen, two doe?:
"In spite of their sames," the col-on-el would preface his tale, "these twodogs were not Irish setters or anythingelse Irish. Rory was whelped on De-cember 11 and' Kathleen on March 8.They were named out of contrariness.Rory's mother,-Queen Anne, was a fa-
brought into London every year.The entire collection of coins and
medals-in the British museum consistsof nearly 250,000 specimens.
Belgium's census, taken the last dayof last year and tabulated recently,shows a population in the kingdom of6,744.522,
The;Hebrew population of Londonhas more than doubled during the last20 years. It is now estimated at 12.0,-GO)'* Charging stations for electric auto-mobiles ha>e been established at sev-eral points between Oxford and Lon-don.
ir.ix hurulret! and seventeen milliontelephone rnessaces pass over thewires in the United Kingdom everyyear.
To accelerate as much as possiblethe exiiert of Siberian agriculturalproduce to England, the Russian min-ister of comtneree has arranged fora special series of fast trains to con-vey the produce from Irkutsk to Riga.
' 1Y> are apt..la consider the Germansas slow ao-d careful people, quite dif-ferent from the swift ar.d. careless.Americans, yet the Berlin postal au--thcrities announce that no fewer than360.f;€O postal cards, without any ad-dress at all, are mailed in the Germanempire every year.
Cape Town en jay s_ a certain distinc-tion in respect to the height of itsconstables. Th-e tallest is a giant sixfe^t eight and one-half inches in
*orite of mine, the daughter of a ver* j * e i * h t - . There are five men rangingfine animal of which I had been verv ! from « x f e € ^ t h r e e i n
uc h e s t o S 1 X Jee*
fond. Shortly before Queen Anne lit"- four inches, three men between six feettered I sent her to a friend. RoderickMcFariane. who lived in Varsovie. about50O miles away, in^Pennsylvania. ThereRory was whelped, and there QueenAnne died. Rory was only ..about sirweeks old wfeen Queen Anne died. ' "'
Here, as a rule, the colonel wouldinterrupt himself to revile modernrailroads. -Xej^jthey enabled one to getfcrom St. Ambrose to 2sew York in a day.but what of that? They killed moregood dogs in a year than they wereworth.
"Rory. as I said," the colonel wouldcontinue, "was whelped1 on Deeembei31. and his mother was killed late inJanuary. Early in March I was sur-prised to see a puppy, dirty, travel-stained and1 disreputable, drag himselfup to my door and- lie down on the mat.I did not recognize the little beast, butwent to the door and let him in. To mv
two inches and six feet three inches,12 men from six feet one inch to sixfeet two inches, and 17 between sixfeJi-.and s ^ x ^ e e * o n e i^c^-
LItE ON SOUTHERN RIVERS
how the Native* Make a Living a_-Jttav£ ftg Eaay Time DqrJUig
"~"ttoe Snmmer.
£ Perhaps the dreamiest, laziest exist-ence in America-? is the life on thesouthern rivers in summer. It is at thisseason of the year that thousands ofpeople—men, women and1 children—areto be seen catching turtles, huntingpearls, collecting mussel shells, fishingon the sand bars, capturing watersnakes or dragging submerged walnutlogs from the water. Hundreds ofshanty boats, taking fish and bartering
surprise, he went at once to the old- | all sorts of goods with the natives, plyfashioned clothes press at the end oi j from one landing to another. The riverthe hall, where T was wont to keep a lot j people are satisfied with no other modeof old rugs and things, and there sat j of existence and rarely ever abandonup and beggedi. The tears came into ] its seductive charm, says the Chicagomy eyes, for that was what Queen Anne I Record,had been accustomed to do whefr she j The Tennessee river is the greatestwanted to go to sleep. I took out an old | fresh water turtle stream in the worldrug. red on one side and gray on theother, on' which Queen Anne had slept,and threw it in a corner; the puppylooked at it and'whined. I could hardlysee to do it, my eyes were so full,oftearsv but arrretHhe enrtry thecorner where Queen Anne hadtslept andthe puppy lay down and slept content-edly.
"It wasn't for several days thatlearned' all 'about the matter. Afterhis mother's tragic death Rory, whohad1 seen it. pined and moped a gooddeal. After about a week he disap-peared and it was thought that he hadbeen stolen. But no! the little fellowhad< found his way to his mother's oldhome! He had never been there; butthe wonderful instinct imparted todogs had enabled' him to find his wayover MO miles of tortuous rn»fpifl-
"No one can tell me that dogs haven'tmore than instinct."'
Kathleen possessed even more won-derful powers of instinct or reasonthan Rory. As Col, Higbie said', she waswhelped on March 8. of pure breed.She was a small animal, liver and'whitein color, and- noted at the colonel's forher exceptional intelligence. For thesame reason that led Col. Higbie to dis-pose of Queen Anne. Kathleen was to besent to a friend's place at Bremen, about120 miles from St. Ambrose. This is Col.Hig-bie's account of what happened:
"It was in 1897, in May," the colonelwould beg-in. "I had decided to accept
•fo: ideb) dealehi. Bremen, and sat down to write himof the fact. I wrote, interrupting- my-self from time to time to speak to mywife. When I returned to my letter Isuppose I must have read1 aloud what Ihad written. Kathleen, who had1 beenlying- in front of the fire, began to getvery uneasy. She got up. looked around;went to the door, scratched* at it andwould not be quiet when Mrs. Higbieordered her to stop. Finally I let heroat, and looking at mj watah remarkedto Mrs. Higbie that it was early, it wasmy habit to turn all the house dogs outabout ten o'clock, and it was then onlynine.
"Kathleen did* not return, nor did shecome back the next day. What had!happened to her I could' not imagine,nntil the day afterward, that is thesecond day after I had written the let-ter, when I got word from the dealerin Bremen that Kathleen was there!
**I investigated? the matter, and foundthat «he had reached Bremen on thetrain that left St. Ambrose at 9:30 inthe morning, and that she had been seenat the station iti St. Ambrose all nightbefore that train went. Then tne tr,uthflashed1 across me! She had hearti'meread the letter, in which I.saidi that Ishould send her by the 9:30 a. m. train.She had understood '9:30,' but nota. m., unless-she thought it meant 'im-mediately;' she had tried to get out ofthe room in time to get the train which*he thought went"at 9:30 at night, hadhung around the station all night, aodthad taken the train to the^ right placethe next day!"
To the day of his1 death Col. Higbiemaintained with, much justificationthat animals* especially dogs, bad* welldeveloped power? of reason; .and whocan deoj it, alter hearing these stories?
and the Cumberland is famous for itsprolific turtle fields. The Tennesseehas its source in the mountains andcuts its way through a rocky countryrendering it ..perfectly, clear -at normaldepthr "TiieTt urti es of Itre ctear~stre amthough smaller, are more valuable inthe markets thar the huge monsterstaken from the muddy Mississippi"There are huge turtle pens along theTennessee river, where hundreds ofthem are kept securely after being cap-tured. Some turtles have been takenfrom the Tennessee and Mississippirivers which <the native* swear wouldweigh from 400 to 600 pounds. Theseenormous catches are rare, and themoney is mad* by selling smaller ones.Washington and New York furnish thebest markets, and many "a diamond
"Chesapeake 'terrapin" ui thefamous caterers really came from Ten-nessee.
Turtle meat is as great a favoritedish'with the southerner as the 'pos-sum. The southern negro has a prov-erb that the turtle feeds on fish, chick-en, eggs, cresses and the choicest coun-try delicacies, until his own flesh par-takes of all their various flavors. Theypositively assert they can distinguishall these flavors. The small turtles arecaptured for food and the larger onesfor their shells, of which many domes-tic articles are mad*. The heaviesthauls are taken in huge frame trapsset in the swifest channel of a bayou.The negro locates a turtle sitting in
with a forked stick. They tease theturtle until he becomes mad and pokesout his head to hiss, then the forkedstick goes over his head and the turtle ishauled out of the water. The large onesare killed outright and boiled in giantpots until the shell comes off. The•hells are then scraped and polished-
The pearl hunters throng the riT«v*ry summer. Thousands of them arewading and dredging for the musse!or fresh water clam. The shells of sev*eral varieties are gathered: by the tonand shipped up the Mississippi river tethe pearl button factories. There are adozen varieties of the mussel, but onlytwo—the niggerbe>ad and the sandahcll—are valuable to the factories.Along the river are shacks in scores, inwhich the families engaged in the huntfind shelter. Outside are long troughs.filled with water. Huge caldrons aremounted »n brick foundations, aaid theshells are boiled in these. PuntSv rafts,fiat boats and skiffs are used in th«catch. A trap made of heavjr plumbers1
pipe is placed over each boat. To thepipe are strung Uses set at six-inch in-ftervals, which run fore and aft. Pour-pronged hooks made of old wire ar«fastened to the lines. The boat i*pushed out frorn^ the bank for work. ,
The fresh water dam points his noseup-etream and invariably keeps hiamouth open. He lies on the river bot-tom . waiting- for something to com*•long, when Be will* greedily seize itand never let go. The trap with thtdozen of hooks i* tilted over the «d«of the punt lying upUream and theclam* at once lay Tiolent bold upon it\as many as can get a grip on a prong*The fishermaa haula thesa is until hi*
The Democratic Record Shown How
Invitationto
WomenAll the world knows of the wonder*
fai cures which have been made byLydU E. Finkham"s Vegetable Coiri-p^nnd. yet some women, do not realizethat all that ii claimed for it is abso-lutely true.
If all suffering-women eouLrlhemadeto believe that"ilr> Pinkham can <\oall she says she can. their sufferingwould be at an end. for they xvouldat once profit by ner advice and becured.
There is no more puzzling tbir.g thanthat women %viil suffer great painmonth after month when every woman
"knows of some woman whom Mrs.Pinkham has helped, as the lettersfr,om grateful women are constantlybeing published at their own request.
The same derangements which makepainful or irregular periods withdull backaches and headaches, anddrag-gingr-down sensations, presentlydevelop into those serious inflamma-tions of the feminine organs whichcompletely wreck health.
Mrs. Pinkham invites women towrite freely and confidentially to herabout their health and get the" benefitof her great experience with the suf-ferings of women. No living personcan advise you so well. No remedy inthe world has the magnificent recordof Lydia E. Pinkham/s Vegetable Com-pound for absolute cures of femaleills. Mrs. Pinkham*s address is Lynn,Mass. .
Threo Letters from OneWoman, Showing how SheSought Mrs. Pinkham'sAM, and was cured ofSuppression of the Men-ses and Inflammation ofthe Ovaries*
" DEAB MRS. PINKIIAM—I have beenin bed a year. Doctors sify I have
"female weakness?-'I have a bad dis-charge and much soreness across myovaries, bearing-down pains and havenot menstruated for a year. Doctors saythe menses will never appear again.Hope to bear from you."—MRS. J. F.BROWN.. Holton, Kan's., April 1, 1898.
" DEAR MES. PIXKHAM—I receivedyour letter. I have taken one bottleand a half of your Vegetable Com-pound, and used two packages of yourWash, and feel stronger and better.I can walk a few steps, but could notbefore taking your Compound. I stillhave the discharge and am sore acrossthe ovaries, but not so bad. Everyone thinks I look better since taking1
your Vegetable Compound."—MBS.J. F.BROWN, Holton, Kans., Aug. 13, 1898.
41 DEAR MBS. PINKHAM—I think it ismy duty to letyou know the good that^tydm T&. PMtkhamrs Compound hasdone me. After I took three bottles,menses appeared, and I began to feelstronger and all my pain was gone.Yours is the only medicine that everhelped me. I am able now to workaround the house, something I did notexpect to do again."—MBS.J. F. BBOWJT,Holton, Kans., Jan. 25, 1899.
Three More Letters fromOne Woman, Rotating howShe was Gured of irreg-ular Menstruation, Leu-oorrhma and Backache,
" DEAB MRS. PiygHAM=rT nin svtfFer-.ing and need your aid. I have painsin both sides of the womb and a drag-ging sensation in the groin. Men-struation irregular and painful; haveleueorrhcea, bearing-down pains, sore-ness and swelling of the abdomen,headache, backache; nervousness, andcan neither eat nor sleep."—MRS. CAB-BIS PHILLIPS, Anna, 111., July 19, 1S97.
" DEAB MBS. PESTKHAM—I want tothank you for what you have done forme. When I wrote to you I was atotal wreck. Since taking your Vege-table Compound, Liver Pills'and Sana-tive Wash, my nerves are strongerand more steady than ever before, andmy backache and those terrible painsare gone. Before I took youi medi-cine I weighed lesa than one hundredand thirty pounds. I nQw weigh one
PURE HUMBUG.
Their TalkTrnntm.One of the things which Mr. Brynn is
talking most about is trusts. He neg-lects to say anything about the ice trust,but is very fierce in his denunciation oftrusts in general. He charges that theRepublican party is %he party of trusts.Democratic orators are following bis leadand, with vioimt ravings, are accusingUP Republicans of- haying enacted legis-lation whir.-b mudo it possible for truststo come into exist+noe, and with havinglaiJcd to pass laws which would regulatethem or control their powers.'The record in congrt-ss of the Demo-
cratic party shows that this argumentof Sir. Bryan is utterly groundless.Moreover, it t-hows that the Democratsthemselves are responsible for whateverfailure there was in the last congress toprovide for an antitrust amendment tothe constitution. In an address beforethe trust conference in Chicago, Sept. 10,180ft Mr. Bryan said:
"I believe we ought to have remedies inboth state and nation, and that thereshould hp concurrent reruedies. * ?._._*_.I believe, in addition to a state remedy,there must be a federal remedy, and Ibelieve congress has, or should have, thepower to place restrictions and limita-tions, even to the p-oint of prohibition,upon any corporation organized in onestate that |vants to do business outside ofthe state. Congress ought now topass *ne<h a law. If it is unconsti-
tional, and so declared by the su-preme court, I am In favor of anamendment to the constitution thatTrill give to congrresg power to de-stroy every truttt in the country.^
Here Mr. Bryan lays down for hisparty the remedy for what he calls thetrust evil. His insincerity and the incon-sistency of his party on the subject is'shown in the fact that, when the jndi-clary committee of the house ofrepresentatives brought before thatbody a Joint resolution providingfor a constitutional amendmentwhich should give congress powerto regulate trusts, only five Demo-crats voted for It, while practicallyevery Republican in the house sup-ported the measure. It required atwo-thirds vote, and the Democratsdefeated it.
Whatever legislation against iniquitoustrusts is on the statute books has beenplaced there by Republicans, and theDemocratic outcry against all corporatewealth a fed against Republicans on thescore of pNjteeting and fostering trusts isabsolute misrfcprfcseutation. The trust is-sue is a humbug second only to the otherhumbug of anti-imperialism.
BRYAN DIDN'T KNOW.
medicine is a ©ififsend to poor weakwomen. I would like to ask yon whyI cannot have a child. I have beenmarried nearly three years."—MRS. CAB-ltUE PHILLIPS, Anna, 111., Dec. 1, 1«97.
" D E O MBS. PINKHAM—I did just asyou advised me, and jww I am thehappy mother of ̂ a fine baby girl. Ibelieve I never would have had herwithout your Vegetable Compound "MBS. CABBIE PHILLIPS, Anna, 111., Jan87, 1899.
Proof that Falling of thoWomb Is Overcome byLydla E. Hnkham's Vege-table Oompound.
" DSAB MBS. PIXKHAM — When Iwrote to you some time ag-o, 1 hadbeen suffering from falling- of thewomb for many years witliout obtain-ing relief. Was obiig-ed to wear abandage all the time; also had badheadache and backache, felt tired andworn out. After taking- six bottles ofLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-pound and four boxes of Liver Pills, Idiscarded my bandage and have nothad to wear it since. I am entirelycured."—MRS. J. P. TBOTTTHAN, BOX 44.Hamilton, Ohio.
" D E A B MBS. PIFKHAM—For nearlytwo years I was unable to work. Iwas very weak and could not stand onmy feet but a few minutes at a time.The doctors said I had falling and in-flammation of the womb. I began touse Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-pound, and after using five bottles Ifeel iike a, new woman.*'—MBS. P. N.IU.AK£, Confluence, W. Va.
You-ought to see the bargains on oar'odd aod endr> table. Reaper fchrna you
could steal them. HOIT & HASKELL.
His Prediction as to Values Inderthe Single Gold Standard.
In 18W> Bryan made dire prediction asto what would happen in this country orin any country which refused to increaseits stock of currency by the free coinageof silver. He said, in his MadisonSquare Garden speech, accepting—thenomination:
"Any legislation which lessens theworld's stock of standard money increases the exchangeable value of thedollar. Therefore, the crusade againstsilver must inevitably raise the purchas-ing power of money and lower the moneyvalue of a!l other forms of property."
Since that time Japan, Russia and In-dia have adopted the gold standard, ye-
instead of the "money value of all otheiforms of property" being lowered therehas been a general increase, notably so inthe United States. The official reports
that horses in the United States, whichnumbered over 15.000.000 in 1896 andbut iS.oOO.OOO inj.900. bad increased invalue from $500,140^86 to 1^03,969,442.or more than $l0d,000.(XK). The value ofsheep in the United States on Jan. 1,1900, was double the value of this animalat the date of Mr. Bryan's speech. Tak-ing into consideration all farm animals,their increase in value in the four yearswas almost $500,000,000.
Either Mr. Bryan was mistaken in histheory of government or he said what heknew was pure demagoguery. In eithercase, is it safe to elect him president?
Voliy
Need
ForCutsBurnsBruises ;
CrampsDiarrhoeaAll BowelComplaints
It SB a eure, safe and qnick remedy, •
There's O M L Y O N E
Perry Davis'.Two sizes, 25c. and 50c.
FRUITSQHHER "VEGBTABLHS
—IN GREAT VARIETY AT—
A. J. Nicholson's,West Main St.,
Also a full line of fresh Bread, Cake,Doughnuts, Cookies, Pastry,
Confectionery, Etc.
If your appetite ia a little off callaround at-the store or telephone us andsee if we cannot help you out. You willbe smrptised to know how far a littlemoney will go toward huyiog somethingJresh and palatable for the table.
ICA.akes short roads.
XL.End light loads.
QREASET ^ I ^ P b o d for everything
that runs on wheels,* Sotd Everywhere.
Made by STANDARD Oil* CO. A
Improperly.V Fitted
With Glasses are better
not fitted at all.
GOLD STANDARD AND PRICES.
Bryan Said T&ey Would.MIf we hare a gold standard, prices are
as certain to fall a? the stone which isthrown into the air." (Prom a speech ofWilliam Jennings Bryan at Newton, O.fAug. 8, 1896).
The gold standard has been in force"since Bryan made this assertion. At thattime, according to official reports of thebureau of statistics, wheat was 68 centsper bushel. On June H, 1900, the highestprice for the same grade of wheat, in thegame market, was 92̂ 4 cents per bushel.The highest price of corn on Aug. 8,1S96, was 30% cents per bushel and onJune 21, 1900, it was 47% cents. Messpork on Aug. S, 1896, was $8.75 per bar-rel; on June 21, 1900, it was $12.50 perbarrel. Beef, in the New York mar-ket at the date of Mr. Bryan's nomina-tion, was $9 per barrel; on June 21,1900, it was $12 per barrel. The factsdo not agree with Mr. Bryan's prophecy.
Is a man whose solemn public utter-ances are so wide of the mark a safeman to be president?
AX INSTRUCTIVE PARALLEL.The following para'lels were made by
Bamuel Gompers, president of the Ameri-can Federation of Lab*. ?:
Since Aoguit of thisyear we tare beea inthe (T«*t«tt t&dostrialdepreadon thi» countryha* ever «rperi«nced.It i t no exagf«r*tio& t*gar that nwr* thanS, 000,000 • ! ettr'feUowtoiler* thNBgfcotit t*weoontry w witfeout em-
and tare bees
The reviral of indu*-try which we bav«trl>DMMd within the pastyear is one for ymcrmlcongratulation. ft •**beyond quettion tha^the 'wafes of the w-gaalsedb l
Sainuel GompemLerby G t t
manyboon ofreduced omaintained.
is •
f l b
Our Methods are Right, •Onr Customers Pleased,.-. Onr Wort Warranted.
Don't forget that Hoit & Haskell areselling all t&n shoes and Oxfords at cost.
oBean*!*
l
ITORZA.
Monaghan & Rice keep a fine stock ofbath tubs and fixtures and plumbinggoods of all kinds constantly on hand,andshould always be consulted before lettingcontracts for such work.
Ladles of JIalone and Vicinity.^ I have received a certificate of generalagency for Fsaoklin, St, Lawrence andClinton.counties for Baird's non-alcoholicflavoring powders and spices for flavoringcakes, candies, ice-cream, paddings, &c.Jhej are made from the pare fruit juices:they are in every way superior to theliqaid extracts and warranted. Shall bepleased to show them at any time, as Ihave a stock on hand. Will give you acall soon. Respectfully,
MBS. L. P. CHANDLER,19m6 31 Pearl fit., Malone, N. Y.
.__ • .•!••» for 8*ie ,On Franklin street in Maloce village,
nicely located for home, contain** one andtoe-forth acres of land. Thi? lot is wideenough on the street for two Sne buildingtots. Tot farther InformHtum, inquire ofJamea Jordan at Malone Junction, or atthis office, 3&'
Pompa! PDMpe! rutnpnl' Ac Fell's, I have several kinds. When
Hen « $3 and |3.50 tan shoes are going0. HOIT & HASKELL,
m Malone, X. Y.
^ • - . • • V -