rniture bargains! - nys historic...

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-*? X&&V mi. m i sr ? m § m The Kind You Have A l w a y s B o u g h t , and which has been in use foi? over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has b e e n m a d e u n d e r h i s p e r - •¥/?y~J^~ sonal Hupervision since its infancy. —<* -r *, s-tZzcSLcAS Allow n o o n e t o deceive y o u i n this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes a r e b u t E x - periments that trifle with and endanger the health of and Children—Experience against Experiment. 'All ' pei Infants What is CASTORIA Castoria i s a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and S o o t h i n g S y r u p s . I t i s Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. I t s a g e i s i t s guarantee. It destroys Worms a n d a l l a y s Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It r e l i e v e s T J e e t h i n g T r o u b l e s , c u r e s C o n s t i p a t i o n - and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the , Stomach and B o w e l s , g i v i n g healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—Tbo Mother's Friend. GENUINE C A S T O R I A ALWAYS Bears the Signature of VARIEfY. There art- two btul things about cigar- ette smoking; first the cigarette, and the second the fellow that smokes it. Scientists say that telegraph wires are better, conductors on Monday than on Saturday, on account of tlieir Sun- day rest. A Western cyclist has ridden fifty- .three'niilos on a bicycle without handle bars. Thir«, however, is not as bad as riding all day on a bicycle without looking, as many cf the scorchers do. The New York dailies receive so much abuse, that it is really a pleasure to say that not one of them approves the proposed $200,000,000 water job, which is being pushed by a lot of poli- ticians. The superstitious find something alarming in the sudden death of the second sculptor engaged in making the Dewey triumphal arch, in New York city. Both men dropped dead without warning. Any one can distinguish a poisonous serpent from a harmless one, for a ven- omous snake invariably possesses a triangularly shaped head and a blunt nose, while its tail is correspondingly blunt and stubby. Packages cannot be mailed to the Yukon country, according to an order recently issued by the postoffice depart- ment. Letters and postal cards can be sent to the Yukon territory, but there is no way in which parcels, or third or fourth-class matter, can be forwarded. Tie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUa COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. # ' I B. BORGMAN'S, \ * « GENEVA, N.Y. t I rniture Bargains! Nil to I A 3-Piece Chamber Suit % large glass, $10.00 § A Morris Chair from to to Ladies' Desks from >to to Couches in Corduroy from 4 Combination Desks "from $ Onyx Tables from | | Easels, Bamboo or Oak, fr@m # Pictures, nice line, from to to f $4.00 to 25.00 « 2.98 to 2TJ0 ft 4.97 to 5C M * 7.50 to 50. 2.50 to 18. .25 to 4.00 w w to to to ance. B. BORGHiA 429 EXCHANGE .50 to 6.50 « w w w to to STREET, fa 15? DHV-ISON. GARDEN SEEDS KINDS. ALL THE LEADING VARIETIES OF POTATOES I Custom Grinding Our mm is running constantly, and we make a specialty of CUSTOM GRINDING. Satisfaction guaranteed. Flour, Feed, Hay, Straw, etc Store 40 Castle Street. Mill Foot of Washington Street, Iu France the officer wears his uni- form on every possihle occasion. Here in the Unite<l States he takes it off whenever he is not on duty, and in Washington army uniforms are seldom seen, even in the, war department, while they are indeed rare on the streets. A Kansas milliner is at work on two honnets, which she is making from corn husks, one of which is designed for Queen Victoria, and the other for Miss Helen M. Gould. The same milliner made a corn husk bonnet two years ago which is now in Mrs. McKinley's possession. After all, it's a bit cruel to take flow- ers from their cool resting place in a vase of water, and choke them to sud- den death by wearing them in the hot streets. A good deal more enjoyment can be had out of them by letting them live in peace, and in looking at them comfortably encased in a vase of water. —Detroit Free .Press. The general tendency is for men to live longer. There is much evidence to show that in the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth centuries men of 70 were considered very aged, and that a m a n of 80 was a very rare phenomenon. If medical science, sanitation and general obedience to the laws of health con- tinue to improve, the gauge of normal age may yet rise to 100.—Boston Post. There is a project on foot in Geneva, 0., to erect a library in memory of Piatt R. Spencer, "the father of pen- manship." The new building will be of stone, and will cost $20,000. In this town of about 3,000 inhabitants Spen- cer lived in the early days of the West- ern Reserve, and in a little log school- house, which was also his home, he first taught writing. While Booker T. Washington was in Europe he received a monster petition, signed by the governor of West Vir- ginia, judges of the Supreme Court and the mayor, city council and leading white and coloied citizens of Charles- ton, inviting him upon bis return t^o visit that city, his boyhood home. Mr. Washington has accepted the invitation, and is to be tendered a public reception and banquet. Dr. Newell Dwight Hills has been giv- ing his views on millinery. Women who are thinking of their autumn hats will be interested in hearing them : " W e are not yet far removed from the sav- age," said the reverend gentleman, "be- cause woman thinks she can make her- self more beautiful by wringing the necks of two birds and setting their feathers in her hat, cocking them for- ward in the spring and backward in tlie autumn." ^...•ta Special Notice. Jimmy Hughes, the Ocean Tenor. -"4"-' "Jimmy" Hughes! is the deck- steward on the American line steamship New York. H e is attentive to his duties, very polite and discreet, and if he con- tinued working on shipboard it would only be a question of time when Jimmy would be in the master berth in the stewards' department. * B • ' But there is likely to come a revolu- tion in Jimmy's career. Jimmy is a wonderful singer, and professional sitigr ers of reputatiou say that he has the purest and most powerful tenor voice jn the world. Jimimy has heard all manner of praise on' shipboard a n d o n land, but the size of; his hat baud has not increased, and he is as modest and unassuming a chap aB ever trod a ship's deck. ! Jimmy has sung 'his way into the hearts of t h o u s a n d s oJT t r a v e l e r s on the New York for the last three years, and before that on the Campania of the Cunard line. If Mrs. George Gould and other patrons of the American line have their way Jimmy will quit shortly trying to tempt the 'convalescent with dainty bits ot food and embark upon a career where his talents will afford him an opportunity to win! fame. Mrs. Gould heard Jiirnmy sing the first time on the last trip she made to Europe' at the concert given aboard. His sing- ing was a revelation to her and to others as well, for On that occasion Jimmy was very fit indeed, and he says himself he never sang'better in his life. He followed several professional sing- ers of note and it was fthis knowledge that spurred him to doihis best. His first selection was the " Holy City." The steamship <had just weath- ered a gale, was tossing and pitching furiously and the peace and calm of the " Holy City " waa enhanced by the con- trast. Jimmy entranced his audience and be was twice encoded. He sang " Mona " a n d " Once Again " in charm- ing style and expression and none more enthusiastic in praising the sweet singer than Mrs. Geo. Gould and her husband. One of the passengers ^vas Mrs. F. A. Bell, a wealthy woman, of M a d i s o n , N". J. The day after the concert: Mrs. Bell-had a talk with Jimmy and was surprised to learn that his wonderful voice was not the result of cultivation. She declared that when she returned home she would arrange to have Jimmy sent to the best vocal teacher in the world, Mrs. Gould had been thinking of malsing the same proposal, and when she learned of the generous offer of Mrs. Bell both Mr. and Mrs. Gould asked tfi$ privilege of accepting with her the trust.of cultivat- ing the singer's voice. Jimmy has received a letter from Mrs. Bell and is expecting to hear from Mrs. Gould any day that" the arrange- ments have been made for him to give that secfion-ten; ; *rfieIekWH> <»***»••«*PS%$»*4- beamende^soartorea&ksTonows:. ' . •l' r L. loan money or asmXy&ml^onpi-M[«BlSfi!JfR;.- ^-No coiml3>city, town or YiBftgfershaQfcereaiter give any money or property, or loan its money or credit to or in aiS of any individual, asaocw- Son or corporation,,or become dfceetly or,, indi- rectly the oyfner of stock in* or bond's of, anyas- sociation or corporation; nor shall- any. snch county, city-town or village be allowed-to incur any indebtedness, eieept forconnty, city, town J or village purposes. TJhis section shall not pre- vent such county, cSty, town or village from making such provision for the aid or support of its poor as may be authorizea by law. Ho County or city shall be allowed to become; indebted for any purpose or in any manner to an amount which, including existing indebtedness, shall exceed ten per centum of the assessed valnafidn of the-real estate of such county or city subject to taxation, as jfe appeared By the assessment- •: rolls of said county or city on the last assessment for state or county taxes prior to tffe incurring of such indebtedness; and ail indebtedness in*fe£- cess of such Hmifation. except such as may now; exist, shall be absolutely void, except as herein otherwise-provided. JJo'eounty or city-whose present indebtednessjoxceeds. ten per centum of the assessed valuation of its real estate subject to taxation, shall be allowed to become indebted in any further amount until such indebtedness shall be reduced within such limit. This section snail not be construed to prevent the issuing of certifi- cates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes for amounts actually contained, or to be contained in -the taxes for the year when such certificates or revenue bonds are Issued and payable out-of such taxes. Nor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water; but the term of the bonds issued to provide the supply of water shall not exceed twenty years, and a sinking fund shall be created on the issuing of the said bonds for their redemp- tion, by raising annually a sum which will pro- duce an amount equal to the sum of the principal and interest of said bonds at their maturity. All certificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds is- sued in anticipation of the collection of taxss, which are not retired within five years after their date of issue, and bonds issued to provide lor the supply of water, and any debt hereafter incurred by any portion or part of a city, if there shall be any such debt, shall be included in as- certaining the power of the city to be become otherwise indebted. Whenever the boundaries of any city are the same as those of a county, or when any city shall include within its boundaries more than one county, the power of any county wholly included within such city to become in- debted shall cease, but the debt ot the county, heretofore existing shall not, for the purposes of this section, be reckoned as a part of the city debt The amount hereafter to Toe raised by tax for county or city purposes, in any county con- taining a city of over one hundred thousand in- habitants, or any such city of this state, in addi- tion to providing for the principal and interest of existing debt, shall not in the aggregate ex- ceed in any one year two per centum of the as- sessed va.uation of the real and personal estate of such county or city, to be ascertained as pre- seribeU in this section in respect to county or city debt. § 2. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election, in ac- cordance with the provisions of the election law. Amendment No. 3 Proposing an amendment to section two of arti- cle six of the constitution, relating to tempo- rary designations by the governor of justices to the appellate division. WHEREAS, The legislature at its regular session in eighteen hundred, and ninety-eight duly adopted resolutions providing for an amendment to the constitution, relating to temporary desig- nations by the governor, of justices to the appel- late division; and which resolution was referred to the legislature to be chosen at the next gen- eral election of senators, and direct ed to be pub- •. lished in accordance with section one of article fourteen of the constitution; and WHEREAS, Such resolutions have been duly published in accordance with law and the con- stitution and referred to this legislature for-action; therefore SECTION I. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), That section two of article six of the constitution be amended so as to read as follows: § 2. The legislature shall divide the state into four judicial departments. The first department shall consiBt of the county of New York; the others shall be bounded by county lines, and be compact and equal in population as nearly as may be. Once every ten years the legislature may alter the judicial departments, but without increasing the number thereof. There sht>U be an appellate division of the supreme court, con- " •" " -•—.:««„ in fV,n fire* rinnnrt.TYlP.n.f. the Sfec&Jary' # 6ta*e, Albany, July 3ft, l$$.-^FtarsHant to the provisions «ol sec-^1 tiom one of article fourteen of the ConstK tution of the State of New Torts, and sec- tion seven of Chapter nine hundred and nine of the Laws or eighteen hundred and ninety-six, notice is hereby given that the following" proposed .amendment to article three, or the-Constitution of the State of New York is to be submitted to" the p_eo i= •pie lor approval" at-the next .general wee* tlon to be held on the seventh daytotNo- tesiber, eighteen hundred and ninety-ntae, AMSaSTOMENT iTTTMBESR ONE, Concurrent Resolution of theUeriate<and Assembly proposing ah amendment to ar- ticle three, section twenty-six of the con- Btitution, relating to-boards s>t supervisors and devolving the ditties thereof upon the municipal assembly or other legislative b6ay o r a city iin counties -wholly Tncliuled In a, city or; wherte-two or more entire coun- ties are Included In a city. Whereas, the legislature at Its regular- session in eighteen" hundred and; •ninety- seven duly adopted a resolution, providing for ah amendment to the constitution re- lating to hoards of supervisors and de- volving the duties thereof upon the mu- nicipal assembly or other legislative body of a city in counties wholly included in a'l city or where two or more entire counties are Included.in a city; and which resolu- tion was referred to the legislature to be chosen at the next general election of sen- ators, and directed to be published In ac- cordance with section one of article four- teen of the constitution; and whereas, such resolution has been duly published in accordance! with law and the constitu- tion and referred to this legislature for action; therefore, Seotlon 1. Kes , olved (if the assembly concur), that section twen- ty-six, article third, of the constitution be amended so as to read as follows: Sec, 26. There shall be In each county, except In a county wholly included in a city, a board or supervisors, to be composed of' such members and elected In such man- ner and for such period as is or may be •provided by law. In a city which includes an entire county, or two or more entire counties, the powers and duties of a board of supervisors may be devolved upon the municipal assembly, common council; board of aldermen- or other legislative body of the city. Sec. 2. ResolvedT (if the assembly concur), that •* the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election in accordance with the provisions of the elec- tion law. State of New York, In Senate; March 3, 18flfl.—The foregoing resolution was duly passed,- a majority of all the senators elected voting 1 in favor thereof. By order of the senate, TIMOTHY E., ELLS- WORTH, Temporary President. State of New York,. In Assembly, April 22, 1899.—The foregoing resolution was du- ly paased, a majority of all the members elected to the assembly voting in favor thereof. By order of the assembly, S. P. NIXON, .Speaker. State of New York, Offloe of the Secre-?, tary of State, ss: I have oompared the pre- ceding copy of concurrent resolutioh, pro- posing an amendment to article three, sec- tion twenty-six of the Constitution, wfth the original concurrent resolution on tile in this office, and I do hereby certify that the same is a correct transcript there- from, and of the whole thereof. Given under my hand and the seal of office of the Seoretary of State, at the city of Al- « r « » e feoVirfncr HI Jiiiittcei to tfie "appelr late division.. . , ^Wnereas.Tthe legislature at its regular L session in. eighteen hundred and nfiiSty- »fj*it JXvXji attopi&fta resolutions providing 1 "<fotf 'art-amenameMrtO' the constitution; rey. lating to temporary".designations By-toe governor, of Justices to the appellate divi- sion; ana which resolution was referred to tne legislature to be chosen at the next f :eneral election of senators, and directed 0 he jJuMished- in- accordance "with, section -one .of .artiele fourteen of trie constitution; and Whereas, such resolutions- ".have been dttly published In accordance with law ' ana the constitution and "referred to, this legislature ; for action; therefore Section l*.StoB6nre&'.(i£ the "assembly concur), th&t section two of-article six of the cortstltur tiofa be amended'so as to read as follows! Sec. 8. The legislature shall divide tbl -state' Into four judicial departments. The first .department .shall consist or the coun- B up his life on the ocean wave. Jimmy loves the sea, but he loves-music better, and he will do anything to receive i n ^ ™ » ^ « ] S ^ » ^ ^ ^ f ^V ^^deiSK If you are tired and dull, can't get rested, and have no appitite, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. It enriches and vitalizes the blood. An Envious laiior. struction from a competent tutor Jimmy was born in Liverpool. His parents are Irish, and his mother w a s a singer of local reputation. The boy's voice excited comment from the time he could warble a song. H e was at the age of seven selected to sing 'the oslos in the choir of St. Francis Xavicr in Liverpool. Ho went to school in Liver- pool, and when sixteen years old went to sea on the- Campania. , Ben Davis, the London tenor singer, gave Jimmy a letter to the manager of the Carl Rosa Opera Company iu which he says: "This boy has the rinest tenor voice in the world." Those who have heard Edward Lloyd say that Jimmy's voice is purer and has a wider range. Jimmy can take UVJST and a half octavos with, ease, a n d His" high C is a wonder. H e is a natural musician and never had any in-tructiqn. He sang for Richard Croker and Thos. B. Reed, and even surprised these staid old politicians. He has received high commendation from Sir Julian Paunce- fote, the Duke of Marlborough and Chauncey M. Depew. At a request of a reporter for the Jour- nal Jimmy gave a samjple yesterday of what he can do in the singing line on the deck ot the New "Mork. His selec- tion was "Let Me Like a Soldier Fall." When the melody rang out pure and clear above the din on the steamer every longshoreman quit work and a crowd gathered in West street in front of the old Washington Market. He was loud- ly applauded, Jimmy is good looking. H e is of slight build, but strong, and has a re- markable cliest expansion. His man- ners are pleasant, and everybody on the New York, from the stoker to the cap- tain, has a good word for Jimmy, and is glad of the good luck which is coming to hi ni.—New York Journal. listing of seven justices in the first department, bany, this twenty-seventh day of July, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-nine. (L. S.] JOHN T. MoDONOTTGH, Secretary of State. The foregoing Concurrent Resolution la published once a week for three months, next preceding the next general election in oonformity to the aforesaid provisions, in two public newspapers In each county In this State representing respectively the two political parties polling the highest number of votes at the last? general elec- tion, and in one additional newspaper.In each county for eVery one hundred thou- sand people in such county as shown by the last preceding State Enumeration. JOHN T. McDONOUGH, Secretary of State. THE HUMORIST. TUF. MORVLIST. Passenger—What time do these care leave this corner 1 ' Coiidiict'n---Qu:trter after, half after, quarter to and at. It's all well enough for a man to greet bis wile witli a .-mile, bat llivrt: are times when it is hetter- to wait until the j odor ot the '' smile" has somewhat | abated.—Chicago News. A young woman who npp'icd for a position as a teacher in a school in a certain Clmriton county district received the answer ^that the school hoard had decided to '• higher a mail teacher."— Kansas City Star. " Most men, 1 ' said the platitudinous boarder, "are more amenable to ridi- cule than to reason.'' " Yes, they are more easily guyed than guided," said the Cheerful Idiot.— Indianapolis Journal. A certain city woman 1ms been in- duced to buy a small farm. She has become very enthusiastic over it; it seems an ideal pluce to spend tlie sum- mers. In describing it ehe grew quite eloquent. " It's a fine farm," she *aid, , "and there are at least twenty head of liens.'" Two little rblks went to church alone. . It was- only around the corner from their feme, and their mamma knew they would be sale. During the long sermon they got tired, and the older . one;. supposing that tiro school rules . held'good in church, led his si«ter up in front of the pulpit and said : " Plcas« may We go home?" Much, surprised the clergyfhan looked at them over his spectacles; then lie understood and said: "Certainly, my children." And the two toddled out while the congreatiory .smiled.—Columbian. " ' .%-, It doesn't always take eight quarts of beer to make a peck of trouble. " Be careful not to mistake headedness for independence Ziriimerhackle in tlie pig- says Old Dansville Breeze. The m a n w h o never borrows trnuhle sometimes gives a 1< of it to people of whom he borrows o..her things. A man's repentance is never genuine when it merely comes from the fact that he was discovered.—Chicago News. [ Two-thirds of the people who com- '< plain that the world doesn't under- , stand them ought to be thankful it doesn't.—Chicago News. The following paragraph by John I ltn.skin is full of truth : " I f y o u want knowledge you must toil for it; if food, you must toil for it; and if pleasure, you must toil for it. Tod is the law. Pleasure comes by toil and not by self indulgence and indolence. When one gets to love work his life is a happy one." - The five worst maladies that affect the female mind are indocility, discon- tent, slander, jealousy and silliness. Without any doubt these five maladies atlhet seven or eight out of every ten : women, and from them arises the in- feriority ot women to men. A woman should cure them by self-inspection and selfrreproach. Tlie worst of them all and the parent of the other four is silli- ness'—'Comhill Magazine. There is a story of an envious tailor current with the French peasantry, says Youth's Companion. He fancied that his neighbor, who received a pen- sion, for the loss of an arm incurred while fighting for his country, was bet- ter off than himself. Both men went to pay their rent on the same day. "That's a lucky man," said the tailor to the landlord. "He gets well paid for his arm." "But who would be willing to part with an arm even if he were well paid for it?" said the landlord. "I would," declared the tailor. "You!" cried the landlord. "Why, man, you wouldu't be willing to bear anything of the sort, no matter how you were paid for it." "I wish some one would try me." "Now, see here," said the landlord, who had stndied human nature, "I'll tell you what, if you'll wear even so much as a chalk mark on your back I'll remit your rent as long as you wear it on your coat so it can be seen, the condition being that you tell no one why it is there." "Agreed/' said the tailor, eagerly. "That's an easy way to pay rent." So the chalk-mark* in the form of a cross was made on the back of bis coat and the delighted tailor sallied torth upon the street. Strangers and acquaintances hailed him to tell him of the mark upon his back. Jokes were made at his'ex- pense, children laughed and pointed at him, and his wife annoyed him with questions, and with conjugal famil- iarity told h i m h e w a s a fool. The usu ally amiable man grew surly and mo- rose; he shunned men, women and children, and frequented back^ streets. Before the week was up the tailor found himself embroiled in a quarrel with his best friend, his wife bad threatened to leave Ids house, a n d h e considered himself miserable and \\t- used. Finally, one night he took off his coat and rubbed but the chalk-mark, and said : "There! I would not wear that cross on my back another week, no, not if I could have all the money there ia in Paris !" ^ —«» _—— - New Collars. No need to leel sudden attacks of cholera infantum, dysentery, diarrhoea, summer complaint of any sort if you have Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry in the medicine chest. septlw4 le Flower '• statue fund now amounts to $22,084.55, made up by con- tributions from twenty-two thousand subscribers, in sums varying "from 25 cents to $1,000. Rich and poor have alike contributed, according to their means, and the number of subscribers is the best evidence *of the popularity of the movement. The statue will be the noblest monument of Watertown. ElectioniWotice. 4 Mrs, JustwetlWVVhat's good to quiet : ft baby, uncle?' "Uncle Crusty-^-Well, cliphtheritic sore roat a n d a t Christian Science doctor aa good aifiknything ! know of! B^i A Chicago pOet sings the joy of 'eaiing corn upon the cob, when there's no one there to see." This is the corn- jealing season and nearly every genuine American is no& chewing corn from the cob in the most primitive fashion, but many of us sympathize with the poet when he exclaims.: Bnt; alas, what compensation Is contained for you and me, In nibbling corn upon the cob When other folks may see. Since the days of high stocks andcol- lars there is no eiid to the variety. Several of the fashionable women at4 Newport this year have been seen in the morning with dark linen collars and cravats on white shirt waists, in- stead of the reverse, as has been so long - the fad. These collars and stocks are of dark red^ brown or blue linen of the very fiiiest quality, and are made with the little turn over top, just as the white collars are. They are made with a tie attached of the same material, which is crossed over behind and tied in front with a small bow. These new collars and stocks are the latest thing here, and set off a white morning waist to perfec- tioh.-^-Ladies' ^lome Journal. HOOD'S PILLS cure elver ins, BM- fousness, Indigestion, Headache, laay to take, easy operate. 26c. STATE OF NEW YORK OFFICE OF THE SECEETAEY OF STATE, AlBANY, July 29, 1899, To the Clerk of the County 0/ Ontario: SIK:—NOTICE IS HEREBY UIVF.N, that, at the General Election to be field in this State on the Tuesday succeeding the Jflrst Monday in Novem- ber next (November 7th,» the following officers may b§ lawfully voted for, to wit: County awl District Offiders to be elected for said Couitiy: j A Membe- of Assemblji Two School Commissioners. A District Attorney, in -the place of Royal R. Scott. I Four Coroners, In the place of Orlando J. Hal- lenbeek, Oliver H. Wright, Watson W% Archer and Barton S. Partridge,] All whose terms of office will expire on the last day of December next. I At the said General Election there is to be sub- mitted to the people for jthe purpose of voting thereon, tne following amendments to the Con- sutution: ! Amendment HTo. 1 Prouosing; an amendment) to article three, section twenty^ix of the constitution, relating to boards of supervisors jand devolving the du- ties thereof upon the; municipal assembly or other legislative body i of a city in counties whoUy included in ai city or where two or Tnore entire counties are included in a cityv WHEREAS, The legislate e at its regular sesr sion in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven duly adopted a resolution, providing for an amend- ment to the constitution relating to boards of su- pervisors and devolving tjlie duties thereof upon the municipal assemoly on other legislative body oi a city in counties wholly included in a city or where two or more entire counties are included to a city; and which, resolution was referred to the legislature to be chosen at the next general election of senators, and directed to be published in accordance with section one of article fourteen of the constitution; and WHEREAS, Such resolut}on.haa been duly pub- llshed in Accordance with law and the constitu- tion and relerred to this legislature lor action; therefore, i Section L Emlved, (if the assembly concur), that section twenty-ax, arpcle third, of the" con^. sUtution be amended so as to read as follows: 8 26. Thiers shin be in each county, except in a county wholly included in a city, a board of supervisors, to be composed ot such members and elected in such manner and for such period as is or may be provided by law. &> » city which in- cludes an entire county, or two or more entire counties, the powers and fiuties of a board of su- pervisors may be devolved upon the municipal assembly, common council, board of aldermen or other legislative body of the city. 82. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election, in ac- cordance with the pro visions of the election law. Amendment No, 2 Proposing an amendment to article eight, section ten of the constitution, in relation to coun- ties, cities, towns ana villages, (riving or loaning money or credit and limitation of . their indebtedness. . WHEREAS, The legislature at its regular ses- sion in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, duly adopted a resolution providing for an amend- ment to the constitution, in relation to counties, cities, towns and villages giving or loaning money or credit and limitation of their indebted- ness; and which resolution' was. referred to the legislature to be chosen at tne next general elec- tion of senators, and directed to be.published In accordance with section one of article .fourteen of the*eoDrtltuUon; and WHEREAS, 8och resolutions have been duly published In accordance with law and the consti- tution and referred to this ldgialatare for action; therefore, Section L Boohed, Of the assembly concur), ments. In each department four shall constitute a quorum, and the concurrence of three shall bo necessary to a decision. No more than five jus- tices shall sit in any case. From all the justices elected to the supreme court the governor shall designate those who shall constitute the appel- late division in each department; and he shall designate the .presiding justice thereof, who shall act as such during his term of .office, and shall be a resident of the department. The other justices shall be designated for terms of five years or the unexpired portions of their respective terms of office, if less than five years. From time to time as the terms of such designations expire, or va- cancies occur, he shall make new designations. A majority of the justices so designated to sit in the appellate division in each department shall be residents of the department. He may also make temporary designations in case of the ab- sence or inability to act of any justice in the ap- (•ellate division, or in case the presiding justice ot any appellate division shall certify to film that one or more additional justices are needed for the speedy disposition of the business before it. Whenever the appellate division in any depait- ment shall be unable to dispose of its business within a reasonable time, a majority of the pre- siding justices oi the several departments at a meeting called by the presiding justice of the de- partment in arrears may transfer any pending appeals from such department to any other de- partment for hearing and determination. No justice of the appellate division shall exercise any of the powers of a justice of the suoreme court, other than those of a justice out of court, and those pertaining to the appellate division or to the hearing and decision of motions submitted by consent of counsel. From and after the last day of December, eighteen hundred and ninety- five, the appellate division shall have the juris- diction now exercised by the supreme court at its general terms and by the general terms of the court of common pleas for the city and county of New York, the superior courtiol the city of New York,the superior court of Buffalo and the city of Brooklyn, and such additional jurisdiction as may be conferred by the legislature. It shall have power to appoint and remove a reporter. The justices of the appellate divipion in each de- partment shall have power to. fix the times and places for holding special and trial terms there- in, and toassign the justices in the departments to hold such terms; or to make rules therefor. ' § 2. Resolved, (if the assembly concur). That the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the nexi general election in accordance with the provisions of the election law. Amendment TSo. 4 Proposing an amendment to article six, sec- tion seven of the constitution, relating to the court of appeals. "WHEREAS, The legislature at its regular session in eighteen hundred and ninety-eight duly adopted resolutions providing for an amendment to the constitution relating to the court of appeals, and which resolutions were referred to tne legislature to be chosen at the next general election of senators, and directed to be .published In accordance with section one of article fourteen of the constitution; and WHEREAS said resolutions have beeri duly published in accordance with law and the con- stitution, and referred to this legislature for action; therefore, Section I. Resolved (if the assembly concur,) That section seven of article six of the consti- tution be amended to read as follows: § 7. The court of appeals is continued. It shall consist of the chief judge and associate judges now iu office, who shall hold their offi- ces until the expiration of their respective terms, and their successors-, who shall be cho- sen by the electorsof the state. The official terms of the chief judge and associate judges shall be fourteen years from and including the first day of January next after their- election. Five members of the court shall form a quo- rum, and the concurrence of four shall he neces- sary to a decision. The court shallhave power to appoint and to remove its reporter,clerk and attendants. Whenever and as often as a ma- jority of the judges of the court of appeals shall certify to the governor that said court is un- able, by reason of the accumulation of causes pending therein, to hear and dispose of the same with reasonable speed, the governor shall designate not more than four justices of the supreme court to serve as associate judges of the court of appeals. The justices so designated shall be relieved from their duties as justices of the supreme comt and shall serve as associ- ate judges of the court of appeals until the causes undisposed of in said court are reduced to two hundred, when they shall return to the supreme court. The governor may designate justices of the supreme court to fill vacancies. No justice shall serve as associate judge of, the court of appeals except while holding the office of justice of the supreme cOurtj and no more than seven judges shallsit.in any case. g 2. Resolved {ii the assembly concur), That the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election in accordance with the! provisions of the elec- tion law. ' . . GIVEN under my hand and Seal of omce of the.Secretary of State,, at the.qity of Al- bany, this twenty-ninth day of July, m IX.s.l the year one thousand, eight hundred and ninety-nine. " ^OBNT.McDONOTJGa, '4augl4w' " "), "Secretaryof State. Election Notice—Town of Geneva. STATE OF itEW YOKK, ' ) ONTARIO COUNTY CLERK'S OPPICE, V CANANPSIGTJA, N. Y., August 8,1899. ) Notice is hereby-given that at the General Elec- tion to be held in this'giate on the Tuesday suc- ceeding the first Monday in November next (November 7th), the following officers for the Tbwn of Geneva may be lawfully voted for, to wit: A Supervisor in the place of Samuel McBIain. A Town Clers in the place ofJames W. Holland. A Justice of the:Peace in the place of William Merrife Ah Assessor in the place of Albert J. Sutherland. A commissioner of Highways in the placeof Chauncey Sheffield. .. ;. An overseer of we Poor in the placeof John A. Boss. A Collector in tbe place of George Black Two Constables in the places of E: P. Albright and Walter Jackson. Sour Inspectors of Election in the places of J» Grove Bappey,- Melanchton Kinney, Clarence Dean, DanieMa. Bennett All whose terms of ounce will expire on the last day December next. Given under rhy hand and Seal of Ontario Coun- ty tits 8th day of August in the year one 1L. 8.] thousand eight hundTea and ninety-nine, - - P. E. HOAG, Ontario Comity Clerk. STATE OF NEW YORK. OFFICE'OF the Secretary of State, Albany, July 27, - .... , '-section Itution or tne ottLtw MJL AI^W •*«.*»., *«.« section seven of Chapter nine hundred and nine of the Laws of eighteen hundred and nine- ty-six, liotiee is hereby given that the fol- lowing ! proposed amendment to artiole eight, of the Constitution of the State Of New York is to be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election to be held on the seventh day of Novemi bar, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. AMENDMENT NUMBER TWO. Concurrent Resolution of the Senate and Assembly.—Proposing an amendment to article eight, section ten of the constitu- tion, In relation to counties, cities, towns and villages, giving or loaning money or credit and limitation of their indebted- ness. Whereas, the legislature a t its" regular session in eighteen hundred and ninety- seven, duly adopted a resolution providing for an amendment to the constitution, in relation to counties, cities, towns and vil- lages giving or loaning money or credit and limitation of their indebtedness; and, which resolution was referred to the leg- . islature to be chosen at the next general election of senators,. anrj_,directed to be published In accordance with section one of article fourteen of the faonstitution; and Whereas, such resolutions have been duly published in accordance with law and tht constitution and referred to this legisla- ture for action; therefore. Section 1. B e - solved (If the assembly concur), that sec- tion ten, article eight, of the constitution be amended so as to read as follows: Sec. 10. Counties, cities and towns not to give or loan money or credit; limitation of In- debtedness. No county, city, town or vil- lage shall hereafter give any money or property, or loan its money or credit to or in aid of any individual, association or corporation, or become directly or indi- rectly the owner of stock In, or' bonds of. any association or corporation; nor shall any such county, city, town or village be allowed to incur any indebtedness except for county, city, town or village purposes. This section shall not prevent such coun- ty, oity, town or village from making such provision for the aid or support of its poor' as may be authorized by law. No county or city shall be allowed to become indebt- ed for any purpose or in any manner to an amount which, including existing in- debtedness, shall exceed ten per centum of the assessed valuation o£ the real estate of such county or city subject to taxation, as it appeared by the assessment-rolls of said county of city on the last assessment for state or county taxes prior to the in- curring of such Indebtedness; and all in debtedness in excess of such limitation, except such as may now exist, shall bts absolutely void, except as herein other- wise provided. No county'or city whose present indebtedness exceeds ten per cen- tum of the assessed valuation* of Its real estate, subject to taxation shall be al- lowed to become indebted In any further amount until such indebtedness shall be reduced within such limit. This section shall not be construed to prevent the is.- suing of certificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes for amounts actu- ally contained, or to be contained- in the taxes for the year when such certificates or revenue. bonds are issued and payable out of such taxes. Nor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water; but the term of the bonds Issued to provide the supply of water shall not exceed twen- ty years and a sinking fund shall be cre- ated on the issuing or the said bonds for their redemption, by raising annually a Bum which will produce an amount equal to the sum of the principal and interest of said bonds at their maturity. All eeifv tificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes, which are not retired within iive yearB after their date of Issue, and bonds issued to provide for the supply of water 5 ' and any debt hereafter incurred by any portion or part of a city. If there, shall be' any such-debt, shall be Included In ascer- taining the power of the *city to be become -otherwise indebted. Whenever the bound- aries of any city are the same as those of a county, or when any city shall Include within Its boundaries more than one coun- ty, the power of any county wholly in- oluded within such city to become indebt ed shall cease, but the debt of the county heretofore existing shall not, for the 'pur- poses of this section, be reekoned a s a part of the City debt. The amount hefe- .after to he raised >by' tax for county or city purposes, in any county containing a City of over one hundred thousand inhab- itants, or any sueh city of this state, In addition to providing for the principal and interest of existing debt, shall not in the aggregate exceed in any one year two per centum of the assessed valuation of the real and personal estate of BUCTS county Or city, to be ascertained as prescribed in this section in respect to county or city debt. Sec. 2. Resolved, (if the assembly eoncur), that the foregoing amendmertt he submitted, to the people for approval at the next general election in accordance with the provisions of the election law. . Stateof New York, In Senate, Maroh 3, 1899.—The foregoing resolution was. dttly. passed, a majority of all the senators elected voting In favor thereof. By order Of the. senate, TIMOTHY B. ELLS- WORTH, Temporary President M State «LNew York, In AMemJMjr, April SS, 1899;—^Che foregoing resolution, wasi du- -state Into four judicial departments first department .shall consist of the ty of New York; the others shall .be bounded by ooutity lines, and be compact and equal in population as nearly as.may- be. Once every ten years the legislature may alter the Judicial departments/bnt without Increasing' the number thereof. There shall be an appellate division of the supreme; court, consisting- of seven jus- tices Jh the first, department^ and of five justices in each of the other departments. in each department four shall constitute a 'qjroruni, and the concurrenOevOf three •Shall be necessary to a decision. No more than five Justices Shall sit In any case. From all tife justices elected to the su- preme court the governor shall designate those who shall constitute the appellate division In each department; and he shall designate the presiding justice thereof, wl»o shall act as sueh during his term of office, and shall be a resident of the de- partment. The other justices shall be des- ignated for terms of five years or the un- expired portions of their respective terms of office, if less than five years. From time to time as the terms of such desig- nations expire,-or "vacancies occur, he shall make new designations. A majority of the justices so designated to sit in the ap- pellate division in each department shall be residents of the department. He may also make temporary designations in ease ' of the absence or inability to act of any Justice in the appellate division, or in ease the presiding justice of any appellate di- vision shall certify to him that, one or more additional justices are needed for trie speedy disposition of the business before lC Whenever the appellate division in any department shall be, unable to 1 dispose oi its business within a reasonable time, a majority df the presiding justices of the several departments at a meeting called by the presiding justice of the department m arrears may transfer any pending ap- peals from such department to any other department for bearing and determina- tion. No justlde of the appellate division shall exercise any of the powers of a jus- tice of the supreme court, - other' than those of a justice-out of court, and those f iertalning to the appellate division or to he hearing and decision of motions sub- mitted by-consent of counsel. From and after the last day of December, eighteen hundre'd and ninety-five, the appellate di- vision shall ha've the jurisdiction now ex- ercised by the supreme court at its gen- eral terms and by the general terms of the court of ooimhon pleas for the city and "county of New York, the superior court of the city of New York, the supe- rior court of Buffalo? and the city of Brooklyn, and such additional jurisdiction as may be conferred by the legislature. It shall have power to appoint and remove a reporter. The justices of the appellate division in each department, shall have power to fix the times and places for hold- ing special and trial terms therein, and to'assign the justices in the departments to hold such terms or to make rules there- Jtor. Sec. 2. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next-general election In accordance with the provisions of the election law. State of New York, In Senate, April 11. 1899.—The foregoing resolution was duly passed, a majority of all the senators elected voting in favor thereof. By order Of the senate, TIMOTHY E. ELLS- WORTH, Temporary President. State of New York, In Assembly, April 12, 1899.—The foregoing resolution was du- ly passed, a majority of all the members elected to the assembly voting In favor thereof. By order of the assembly, S. F. NIXON, Speaker. State of New York, OfiBce of the Secre- tary of State,, ss: I have compared the pre- ceding copy of concurrent resolution, pro- posing an amendment to article six, sec- tion two of the Constitution, with the original concurrent resolution on fete in this office, and I do hereby certify that the same is a correct transcript there- from, and of the whole thereof. Given under my hand and the seal of office of the Secretary of State, at the city of Al- bany, this twenty-seventh day of July, in \he year of our Lord, one thousand eight nundred and' ninety-nine. [L. S.] JOHN T. McDONOUGH, Secretary of State. The foregoing Concurrent Resolution is published once a week for three months next preceding the next general election in oonformity to the aforesaid provisions, in two public newspapers in each countv In this State representing respectively the two political parties polling the highest number of votes ,at the last general elec- tion, and in one additional newspaper in each county for every one hundred thou- sand people in such'county as shown by the last preceding State Enumeration. JOHN T. McDONOUGH, Secretary of State. 12 & HUDSON RIVER R. R. THE f iWRvTRfteK T8UMK LIME. In eBect Sunday, £ov. 13,1898, LEAVE GENEVA—GOING EAST. 6 EC am. Waterloo^705, Seneca Falls 713, 03 Syracuse 9 05, arr New York 7 00 J> m. 9ac a m, Waterloo 0.45 ieneca Falls 954* CO Syracuse ll 25j New ydrk 6 80 pm Hijfl a m, Waterloo U 30 p m, Seneca Falls £ U 1137, Syracuse 118 I'07 pin,Waterloo 150,S ivccaFalls202,Syra- 01 cuse340,ttrrNewYr_:i5.R§9 4 atl pnt, Wa,terloo4 40. SenecaFalls450, Syra- LQ cuse630,«rrHewYork6 30am tL-A.lt» Waterloo § o5, Seneca Falls §02, Ap- P •TyburnJB40,Syracuse735 •- r Agp m, Waterloo 7Z5, Seneca Falls 723, v a Cayuga? 33, Auburn? 55 8 4 fl p-m, ..Waterloo 852, Seneca Sails 001,Au- . •HI burn 945, Syi;cause 1040, Albany 250. N e w YOrk'7 00 a m. midnight, Waterloo 1210 a m , Seneca Falls 1218, Auburn 12 5!-, Syracuse, 155; LEAVE GENEVA- -fiOlNG WEST. 6 a n am, Phelps 6 52, Clifton Springs 701, -Gan- •HJ! andaiVua 7 20, Kochester 817. 8ftfl am, OaKaCorners807.Phelps813,Clifton Utl Springs 8 20, Canandaigua S -IS, Rochester ' 9 45 9 |C" am. Through,train for Buffalo. Phelps 10 930, Clifton Springs 938, -Canandaigua 10 00, Eochester 10 56, Buffalo 12 45 p m. H CC a m , Oaks Corners 12 08 pm, Phelps 1215 .UU Clifton Springs 12 27. Canandaigua 1250, 1 '• Rochester 150 pm. ' 2 nC p m, Oaks Corners 2 34. Phelps 2 42, Clit- ZU ton Springs 2 52, Canandaigua 3 20, Roch- 6st6r 4 20. 3 A n p m, Phelps 3 54, Clifton Springs 4 03, Can- •f L andaigua 4 23, Rochester 510 7nr pm, Oaks Corners 713, Phelps 7 20, Clif- U.O ton Springs 7 30, Canandaigua 8 00, Roch- ester 900 v If) flftP m > ' 0aks Corners 1016, Phelps 10 23, IU UU Clifton Springs 1032, Canandaigua 1055, Rochester 1155. SUNDAY TEAINS—Going east—leave Geneva 9 35 a. m., 4 29 and 8 40 p. m. Going West—leave Geneva 8 00 a. m., 2 25 and 7 05 \. m. On sale at Geneva, sections 5, 6 and 7, in sleepers attached to 8:50 eastbound express. GEO. H. DANIELS, Gen. Pass. Agent H. PARRY, Gen'l Agent, 308 Main Street, Buffalo,^. Y. ^ . EDGAR VAN ETTEN, Gen'l Supt. J. P. BRADFIELD, Supt. J. «. JFOSTEB, Geneva City Office, 33 Seneca St. Pennsylvania Division—Fall Brook Distriot. s GOING SOUTH. SUMMER;TIM^ TABI,E. Took: Effect Jlay 29,1899. Beginning oh the above date.Tthe Seneca Lake Steamer "Otetiani" will make landings as per timetable below, and this schedule will be in enect for the balance of season, unless otheru w- ordered. . . * GOING SOUTH: Leave Geneva.*'. .... Arrive Eashong -. *.., .".*- Deys (fL ~ . •' Dresden -. " Wfllard.......... " Long Point (0... ...i " Highlands (f) " Lodi , .*__ " Lamoreaux (f) " North Hector.... , ..... ; " Peach Orehard(f) f Glenora (i)..._ " Watkins ....„..; ..;,.. . GOING NORTH. I&ave Watkins Arrive Glenora(f)„ ..... , ..... ,.., . " Peach Orchard (f). „,..,„* " North Hector * *' Lamoreaux .(f);.-. " Lodi, 8:10 A. : 8:40 8:50 •• .... 9.25 •• , 9:50 " .....10:00 " ...._10:!0 - ioas •• 10:40 •' 10..V, •• 11:!" 11:-J> •• 1-J-oii il Highlands (t)..,...., ~ " ' 0) ... 2 4'. 1 .. S..«i ... 3 4(J .. :iV) ... 1 !0 .- 4:25 ... 4:15 ... 4:55 ... 5:10 ... 5:25 ... 0:05 .. C:15 f.:15 51 Lyons .... Geneva- Dresden. 1 arr.. j-lv... 6 00 6 27 6 45 710 7 20 6 50 727 S02 Penn Yan Hirarods, Dundee Watkins Station.... Corning jf";.'."" Lawrenceville Tioga « Stokesdale June ... Wellsboro jf™;"' Ansonia Blaekwells Jersey Shore '916 Williamsport 9 50 am Reading, P. & R.... 2 50 Philadelphia 4 35 pm GOING NOR am Williamsport _ .'..... Jersey Shore .... Blaekwells Ansonia Wellsboro }?"".; Stokesdale June Tioga Lawrenceville coining j-f^ r j;;;;;. Watkins Station... Dundee Himrods Penn Yan }iy r ."; -Dresden Geneva Lyons..' : 6 00 •610 6 32 6 45 715 7 20 8 02 822 8 30 918 817 844 910 9 45 am SUNDAY TEAIKS—Going south and to Penn Yan —Leave Geneva 10 22 a. m. Going north leave Geneva 8 20 p. m. , Connections at .Lyons and Geneva with main line and Auburn road trains; at Williamsport with Philadelphia & Reading R. E. GEO. H. DANIELS. W. W. NORTHROP, ' Gen'l Pass. Agent, General Agent, New York. Williamsport, Pa. am 850 9 35 10 00 10 28 . 9 32 1014 10 24 10 43 1125 1130 12 00 1213 12 45 K55 12 25 100 130 2 38 315 p m 8 26 1018 p m .Hr am 720 754 912 942 1015 9 45 1005 10 28 10 45 Ulfr 1125 1217 12 38 1247 128 12 32 102 1 30 215 Pm pm 415 4 40 5 07 5 28 4 32 5 21- 5 30 5 48 6 30 6 35 702 7 15 744 7 50 720 8 00 833 9 50 10 25 pm 5 50 8 29 am e pm ; 2 85 3 13 423 4 53 5 30 4 55 515 5 40 5 55 625 6 30 7 17 7 37 7 46 8 38 7 32 7 58 8 201 8 55 p m pm 7 20 745 811 8 38 7 32 825 8 34 854 9 35 Long Point •• Willard " Dresden " D6ys(f) " Kashong , " Geneva "F" indicates boats stop on signal only, or. to land passengers. Bath and Hsimmondsport Hailroad.' Time-table taking effect Sept. 13,1899. Leave Bath 8 48 1 m, 3 08, 8 23 p. m. Arrive Hammondiiport 918 a m, 3 38, 8 48 j. 111 Leave Hammondsport 7 00, 1240 a m, 6 00 p in. Arrive at Bath 7 30, a m, 1 10, 6 30 p m. Connecting wit 1 trains on the Erie Railroad at their station, and with the Delaware, Lackawan- na & Western Ra! lroad at their station at Bath, and with steamers on Lake Keuka at Hammonds- port. C. J DRAKK, General Passenger Agent. Lake Keuka Navigation Company. Five Steamers in the Fleet. Leave Penn Yan at 6 45 a m, 10 30 a m, 1 30 p m, 2 15p m, 4 00 pm. Arrive at Hammondsport at 9 15 a m, 1 00 p m, 3 45 p m, 5 45 p m, 6 30 p m. Leave Hammondsport at 6 45 a m, 7 30 a m, 9 30 am, 130 pm, 4 00pm. Arrive Penn Yan 9 15 a m, 11 00 a m, 12 00 noon, 4 00 p m, 6 30 p m. Steamers will make landings only on signal. Sunday steamer leaves /Penn Yan at 1030am returning leaves Hammondsport at 12 45 p stops at Keuka, arrives Penn Yan 7 00 p m Steamers connect with Erie Railroad and Dela- ware, Lackawanna Si Western R. R. at Bath, via the Bath & Hammondsport R. R., and at Penn Yan with the Fall Brook R'y and. Northern Cen- tral R'y. C.J.DRAKE, General Passenger Agent. pm 5 47 625 744 818 8 50 ESTABLISHED 1882. Nebraska Loan & Trust Co., HASTINGS, - NEBRASKA Capital Paid np, $500,000. Guarantee Surplus, $136,^0 Gunnuiteed First Mor'ir: •_•• - 'id De- benti'.M'!-- bearing M mi-ai..n.l interest. Every directs:i (Ontiiv.n.i obligation of lliis company lms rrci: i>:.id prompts ly at maturity. S. SOUTHWORTII, Agent, * BANKER, 3 Seneca St., Geneva, N.Y. 1 STATE OF NEW YORK, OFFICE OF the Secretary of State, Albany, July 27, lg99._p u rsuant to the provisions of sec-ion one of article fourteen oS, the Constitution of the State of New York, and section seven of Chapter nine hundred and nine of the Laws of eighteen hundred and nine- ty-six, notice is hereby given that the fol- lowing prop6se"d amendment to article six, section seven of the Constitution of the State of New York is to be submitted,to the people for approval at the next gen- eral election to be held on the seventh day of November, eighteen hundred and nine- ty-nine. AMENDMENT NUMBER FOUR. Concurrent Resolution of the Senate and Assembly.—Proposing an amendment to article six, section seven of the constitu- tion, relating to the court of appeals. Whereas, the legislature at its regular session in -eighteen hundred and ninety- eight duly adopted resolutions providing for an amendment to the constitution re- Jiittne to ttv court of appeals, aria which resolutions were referred to the legisla- ture to be chosen at the next gefteral elso- tion of senators, and directed! to be pub- lished in accordance with section one of artiole fourteen of the constitution; and Whereas, said resolutions have been duly pubUshed in accordance with law ,and the constitution, and referred to this legiala- ture for action; therefore, Section 1. R e - solved (Jf the assembly concur), that sec- tion seven of article six of the constitu- tion be amended to read as follows: Sec. 7. The court of appeals is continued.—It shall consist of the chief judge and asso- oiate Judges now in office, who shall hold their, offices until "the expiration or their respective terms; and their successors, Who shall toe chosen by the electors of the State. The official terms or the chief judge and associate judges shall he fourteen years from and Including the first day of je/iuary next after their election. Five members of the court shall form a quo- rum, and the concurrence bit four shall be necessary to- a decision. The court shall have power to appoint-and to remove, its; reporter, clerk and attendants. Whenever and as often as" a majority of the Judges .of the court of appeals shall certify to the governor that said court is unable, by rea- Bon of the accumulation of causes pend- ing therein, to hear and dispose of the same with reasonable' speed, the governor shall designate not more "than four jus- tices of the supreme court to serve as_as- sociate judges of court of appeals. . The justices so designated shall be ifelieved from their duttes as. justices of the su- preme court and shall serve as associate judges of the court of appeals until the causes undisposed of in said court are re- duced to two hundred, when they shall return to the supreme court, The govern- or may designate justices of the supreme court to nU^vacancies. - N o Justice shall serve as associate judge of- t h e cOurt of appeals except •yhlfegholdlng the office of Justice of the juppsejaej-court; and no mote than seven judges shall sit in any case. Sec. 2. Resolved^. (If the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submit- ted-to the people for approval at the next general election In accordance with the provisions of the election law. ,^J at g,^ of ¥*? York, In Seriate, April 4, 1899.—The foregoing resolution was 3uly passed, a majority of all the Je&atdfi elected voting in favor thereof. By of del - the Senate, TIMOTHY L. Wi In effect May 14,1S99. GOING EAST—LEAVE GENEVA. 6 RR A.M. Daily, except Sunday. Local express. UU-for Hayts' Corners, (Ovid Asylum) Shel- drake, Famers, Trumansburg, Ithaca, El- mira, Sayre, Towanda, Tunkhannock, Pittston, Wilkesbarre, viaiich Chunk, Al- lentown, Bethlemem, Philadelphia, Balti- more, Washington, Easton, New York, and principal/intermediate stations. Connects for-aH points in coal regions. 9 00 a. in. Daily. Local for Variek, Kehdaia, 00 Willard'; Lodi, North.Heetor, Burdett.Sayre and intermediate points. Connects at Sayre for Wilkesbarre, and intermediate stations 1 ft M Sayre, Wilkes-Barre, Scrariton, Maucli lU.Ul am. Daily, Solid Vestibule Train for Chunk, Allentown, Beading, Bethlehem, Philadelphia, Easton, Newark, and New J York, connecting for principal stations in ' the coaLregions. If) RR a. m. Dally, for Sheldrake, Farmer, Tru- IV,UU mansbrug, Ithaca and all intermediate stations. Q-flQ P- m. Daily, except Sunday, BLACK LMQ DJAM0IUD EXPRESS for Sayre, Pittston, Wilkes-Barre, Scranton,- Manch Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Philadel- phia, Easton,*Newark, and New York, con- necting for principal stations in the coal regions. 7 Of) p. m. Daily; except Sunday.for Sheldrake, I >*-v Earmer. Trumansburg, Ithaca, Sayre, and intermediate stations; p. in, Daily, for Farmer, Tramans'burg, Ithaca, Sayre, and all points east. 1 0 0 0 a. mi Daily,. Fast»Express for Sayre, IZ.AA Maueh. Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Philadelphia, Newark, and New York, Does not stop at Wilkes-Barre. GOING WEST—LEAVE GENEVA. 3 00 a. m, Daily, Solid Vestibuled Train for 00 Rochester, Batavia, Niagara Falls, Chicago and the west, 5 10 a. m. for Manchester, Eochester, Batavia, ••*jfl and Buffalo. '; 7 KR a. m. Daily for Clifton Springs, Victor, «u U Rochester, Batavia, Buflalo.Niagara Falls, Chicago and the West. 9 An Daily, except Sunday, for Clifton Springs, *~' Victor, Rochester. 3 A K .p. m. Daily jftw Olifton Springs, Victor, «V o RbchesterySatavia, Bufialo andlntermedi- ate stations, 6 Knp. m. Daily for Clifton Springs, Victor, J u Rochester, Batavia, BuSakvNiagara Falls, Chicago and the west. •"- 7 *rp.m. Daily, except Sunday, BLACK •43 JMAMOKD EXPRESS for Roches- L1ZZIE M. HE.\.\1.;)V, •PRACTICAL EMBALMER *75 35asn .Street, Night Calls, 153 Washington St R. M. Kennedy & Son, Funeral Directors and Embalmer J.W. GALIAGHER DEALER IK 9, ter'.and Buffalo. 0 1 K p. m. to Manchester only Pullman Palace and Sleepi: trains. Dining Cars/ a la caH trains Cars on through on Day Express aitfl Lips Ho. 16 Castle St., Opposite Kirkiocd This stock embraces the Best Brandies and th« following superior brands of Rye Whiskius. Thos. Moore, Hermitage, Bellaire Jas E. Pepper and Old Crow. Price* 81.50, $2, $8,84 and «5 1 er gallon. I ' Th© Famous CEIFORWA AND KELLY ISLAKD IIS in bottles at40 cents, viz: Port, Sherry, Tokay, Angelica, Mus- catel, Glaret, Sweet and Dry Catawha. Same goods by the gallon at $1.25. Sine foreign ajnd Domestic Cigars, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco. Pure Liquors for medi- cinal and family tises a specialty. Goods delivered in the village without charge 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE of Election Notice,—City of Geneva, STATE OF NEW YORk, ) OuTAjtro COUNTY CiEnk's OFFICE. > OiNiunmaijA, NI Y:, August 8,1899. ) Notice is hereby given, tfcat, at the General Election to beheld in this State on the Tuesday sui:ceedingthe first Slonaay^ln November next (November « h ) the folltwingiofflcers for the City of Gen*v« may be lawfully voted for, to wit: A Mayor in the place ot Albert H. Herendeen. A President of the Common' Council in the place of Millard F. Blaine. A City Treasurer in the placeof Frank Mynn. A Supervisor in the placeof Herman F. Fox. Two Aldermen for the jSrirt Waid to the placet of O. J. Cammann Rose and J. IjttwrenceSlosaon. Two Aldermen for . the Second Ward in the placesofW.K. Butler and D.H.Henry. Two Aldermen for the Third Ward.in the places of W. E. Stubbs and John H. Bigby, Two Aldermen for the" Fourth Ward in the places o f C W. Fairfax an* T,K Archer. Two Aldermen for the Fifth Ward in the placei of John B. Alsop and Henry C.Manley. Two Aldermen for the Sixth Ward in the places of Thomas D. Roger* and Daniel 3. Quln- All of whose terms of offloe wJn«xj*»on the last day of December next. Given under my hand and Seal of Ontario County thlgeighthdaTOfAtutOatlntheyear I t a] one thoujand eltfrt tandwd «»d innetr ntoe ' > . : . * . " ^M%^m ly passed,; a majority of all the membejrs elected! td the assembly voting in favor thereof, fey order of the assembly,. S. ,F. KIXON, Speaker. - State qt N e w York, Office of the Secre- tary of State, ssr I hare compared the pre- ceding copy of eonourrsnt resolution, pro- posing an amendment, to article eight, sec- tion ten of-the Constitution, With o»e orig- inal concurrent resolution on file-in. this office, and I do Hereby certify mat the same Is a correct transcript therefrom, and of tbe whole -thereof. Given under my band and tbe seal of office of the Sec- retary of State, at the city of Albany, this twenty-seventh day of July* Jn the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hualred and ninety-nine. {I<. a.J . JOHN T. Mc- DONOUGH, Secretary of State. . The foregoing Concurrent Resolution is published once a week for three months next preceding the next general election to 0011/01111117 to the aforesaid provisions,, in two public newspapers in each county in this State representing respectively the two political parties polling the highest number of vote» at tbe last general elec- tion, and In one additional newspaper In each county for every one hundred thou- sand people in aUeh county as shown by the last preceding Statu lCntimB*»«M. JOHN T. McBOS< State, State MHJOH, Enumeration. Secretary of STATE OF NfiW TOHK, OFSTCE OT the Secretary of State, Albanin, July *?. 1S99-—Pursuant to the provisions of section one of article fourteen of the Constitution of the State of New York, and section seven ot Chapter .nine hundred and nine of the Laws ot eighteen hundred.and nine- ty-Six, notice IS hereby given that the fol- lowing proposed amendment to article six, Of the Constitution of the Sfate of New fork is to be submitted fo the people for approval at th« next general election to b* held on the seventh day of November, eighteen hundrtd and ninety-nine. AMfiNDSOBNT NUMBER jraJftfeB. , Concurrent Resolution of the Senate and RUFF, President. State of Ni - oor>- few fork, In Assembly April SS, 1899,-^-The' foregoing resolution was du- ly passed, q. majority of all the members elected to the assembly voting in fovpr thereof. By- order '«£ the aaseinbiyi S. F> NIXON, Speaker. State of New York, Office of the-Secre- tary of State, s s : I have compared tbe pre- ceding- copy of concurrent resolution, pro>^ nosing an amendment to article six. sec* lion seven of the .Constitution, with the original concurrent resolution on file in this office, and I do hereby certify that the same is a correct transcript there, from, and of the whole thereof. Given under my hand and the seal ot office 61 the Seeretr— '— """- -"" " fiaples Branch. * " KSAVE GENEVA. - 10.05 a. m., .Daily except Sunday. Stanley, Gorham, Rnshvple, Middlesex, Naples, 7.10 p, IBU, Baily except Sunday-for Naples ano all intermediate stations. '-, * Seneca Falls Branch. GOTNGEAST.. Si80 a in, Waterloo 8ite, Seneca Falls 855. 4.00 p. m. Waterloo 4 45, Seneca Falls 5 00. 7.10 p m, Waterloo 7 25, Seneca Falls 5 33. ' LEAVE SENEpi FALLS; ft.lO a m, Waterloo ff 25. AiTi.Geneva 9 45. 5.30 p m, -Waterloo 6 00. Arr. Geneva 6 20, 7;35 jj.m. Waterloo 7 42« Arr. Geneva 8 00: ROLLIN H. WILBUR, Gen. Sup't, S6,BethlehenV CHAS.S-LEE, Gin. Pass. Agent, Newport. A. W. NONNEMACHER, I>iv. Pass. Agent, South Bethlehem; 5a. < A. A. ALLEN, City Ticket Agent, - B o o m l , O p e r a H o n s e Block. ATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS AC. Anyone sandlrig a sketch and description m»r uieWy 1 ,jMcentaln our opinion free whether an lnroBtlonJi probably patentable. CommimKa- UonSatrioHyconndentlaL Handbook on Patents aentfree. Oldest agraricy for Becnrin^patents. patents taken: ffirongh Munn & Co. receire lf€Cfalnotice, without charge, in the c American., *ed weekly. Largest*!* Terms, »3 a i'ttl. Sold by all newsdailew. .... ^ SeiBroadway, tygyy TOfK •SSiSlofflcefa® FgU "Washington. D. C. M ealationeSf any scfehtiflc journal. J«ar: tonrmonl 1-ye [idr< hundred and ninety-nine., IL. 3,1 JOHN T. MeDONOTOH, Secretary of States : ._. 1 "The foregoing Concurrent Resolutlon.it published once a week for three months next preceding the next general ejection in conformity to the aforesaid, provisions, Intl two . *~ w ~o number of votes at the last general-elec- tion, and to one additional newspaper Hn each county for every oho hunflrea thou- —*"* """-'- ' ch county air shoTi ' McDONOTJi Crenevjt, WatBrioo/"S6iieca Falls, aiSt v Cayuga^atee ^pa.qU<m Company, Commencing at &S0 A-;jtcai^^leivSs^neya ey»- ery to/Bow;forrWaterlo6uattt3E^.E^*£-. < ~-. Leaves Waterloo at 6 iu w. Seneca Falls at 6:30_ I I h~ at. anS-every half hour" thereafter Ifor Geneva, - f up to 10:53 P.M.. ""• ••'•.•'-•" Leave Cayuga Lake Bark for the west, at >€:46- A. it. and every half fiour thereafter until 8S5 Last car leavesISeneca Falls for, Geneva at.J0:30 P.M. ••-••.-•• •"• -v ; -V»/•-,;.•-. - - Cats leavingGeneyS'at U aact iiso r,x.~ntxlT']: run to powerTionse at Waterloo. ,. " . - ^ . - -, J Last car leaves Geneva/st 10:30 £. KvXor Seneca' Palls. -• *' ." W.C.GRASjGen.'Manager.' ': I ~ V V;KJ»wpoo-;£ENfEtas.A*enfc Band people In such county a# shown By the last: preceding fttete JBnumeratfcm. JOHN V. MeUaNOTTCHEE, S e c r e t a r y of State. i'- * CLUBBING RATES We aire maMiig arrangements to club he GAZETTE for the ensuing yeai* with Several popular city publicatSons-i-Biagi azines and weekly newspapers. So far ifae list comprises The Gazettci and Bforper's Weekly, " ^ 4 25 Harper's Monthly, 4 20 Scnoner'& Magazine, * 3 2§ CJosmopoiitan Magazine, * 2 00 Eochester Union and Advertiser 1 ?$ <<Whattolat," a monthly dfe Voted, to -the Calinary Art 1 50 Albany Weekly Argns, 2 00 Kewi&>rfc Daily; Journal, 7 00 (exclusive of Sunday): Other publications will be added as we may be able to make arrangements theYefor. •*>£*' mm& '^msM Feed Davison's Onstless Oats. I^AtKCAlO^AIOTAi^BTa. * •7 AS »Jtt,Stanley 805,mati$6 MtBeiHrYah 8,28, WrftkhiaS 11, ElnHraa^S^aithporfi mm,, I-IO pni;StaBley-iia ) -B8lls44<^enn Yan ^01, - ' mtkJna252,Euiu^3«,WillStosi%*65.. « 15 pm, Stanley 6 4 5 S a l l s 6 5J>^enhJffin--7 3 3 , \ * WatSins^^.^BjorseBeaaa-SS*: : ' *" IJSAVE WftErAMBEOEX'—koEIsL .? * SO am, Elmtra -* 50, Watldhs S35, Eehn 35«i;, 7 Warn, Elmiifi ldDO, WatlMs^il?,«enn y#n> 31-3?, BallsH<58siit, Siaailey IjJtOi^-nE; aflSej '9Slr>W-X!iin>h^^,'Watldnir.^^^Bete7^' •'-'.:-ee^3,Stanley^ ean^dl^aff85"^^-• ISAWBGJHJS *0HWi«6P«Hv •7 BOanvBfae^JqgeHonaa^^evig'SS.'. •.••i Over the Ocean."""•. - Ocean.tieketsby^ the.beat transatlan- tic Hues for tele af ifew t^rk Central ticket offices. Accommodations re- served and personal attention of Hew York Central steamship agent on the dock gives facilities jiever. before offered to the public, Staterobjja in your stateroom, and otherlL.-^,-,^..,, placed in hold, without annoyance to I passenger. JPoU; iMfonhation fr»eiy given at 0ty Ticket Offloe, SoVBeneea. r street, Geneva. ^ ^ * TH^ TRIP l^tween Ifew YORK & VIRGINIA igttost; attractive and refreshing NORFOLK, W | I M A BEACH, "'•r-/./- f A N D " il^pOND, VA., j^wl^g^tful' Points to Visit. StSSfess Steamers " Hamlltonf j ^46^8011^ "Princess knnt w i Jamestown " now in service. Send for eopyof THE P^ OT - OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP » 20jan-tf York. H . B . WALKER, Traffic Mar^e.. 3. J.BROWN, Gen'l Pass AK Pier 26, Nprth River, New . G, BABBEB MS.MAl*? STREET, tn ami- « _ ESTABLISH El PUBLISHED EVEEl Sr H. PARKER, PR ^ ' OiEoeBo.Ho. 19 SeM TERMS IN AOVAI Office j » i Mail Subscribers, p«f JOB pSTfl of erery descripUon execntedl < despatch, at *he3o>« i r - h KEST. Hot with the EJUS I he| Hot with "the eyes I ^Slght and the day are Yet they-are naught Green grows the grass : Birds to my gravesid^ Only the feet I love Thrill <through my lor| Naked to God's clear ejl Since the warm yestt^l &ere> where Sje 1 jjody Here-doth the soul ab| Bred of the -heart and Child of £heir marriagH Frail was its garb of p a H God's peace enwraps i|^ When to my soul yon Missing the body so. Think not that I am did AIL of your grief I kno3 Jt ii Jny voice yon hearj mien, loving life so You ^feel no passing fear| Wfth my glad soul to Here, in this narrow bed! God gives me clearer efl A31 that I did and said lives on for paradise I 80 simple heaven is— t i f e is infc truly blest When death in speechless I Holdg wide the door ofl -^FreCG. Bowles! £00000000oooooooo< I IDMA o a a o o ,, v B O A Conspiracy That EemaB r> - o O- IF h emu punished 3Tor a Qnartf Century. jgoooooooboooooooooj ype recent trial In Marselj a=of Jules Ijmcralx f o r a n allc on Ids wife, Marie, l e d t o t b| ot the real perpetrators crime committed 25 years to tbe exoneration p f a n i n i The story of the trial, French newspaper, Is dram^ Ducraix dealt In ship's was supposed to be in c goj itences. In his defense h e ; his wife assaulted h i m w i t And he showed the unheal on his left arm, made by when he~endeavored t o w a r ! .might have otherwise been| blow. At this juncture in note was handed t o t b e <_ counsel. With permission ofl ne read the note, and asked! eused for a minute or two. lowed t o t h e eorndor the mail handed him the note and sf turned^ At his request th| "" was recalled and questioned follows: "Where were yon bora, mac "In Paris, I believe " "Were you ever in PoitouH "Never!" 'Were yon ever in Bi ittanyl "Never!" "Did you ever know or se named Jacques Saupiei ?" "Infevgrdid!" "Were you never married to that name?" J "Never!" "You swear that you were nel ried tg one" r Jacques Saupier aiB saw-or jEhew "him ?" "I do BO swear." . Counsel turned and, glancin t h e a u d i e n c e t h a t filled the coif he ened: "Jacques Saupier'" Amid deep silence and with flxecTupon him, a man svas sed Ing forXvard from the outskirJ t crowdr" He was tall, dark! shaven, with a sloping forehe a receding chin "This^way, Jacques Saupierf sel said, and the sti anger move ly-forward, with his ejes fixa the wpman. Within three or fol 0fI1erj.be stood and looked at h^ a steady, unflinching gaze. She < ed^and turned away her head, cotrnsel-i questioned her "Do you know this man?" "Xe§, yes, I do " "Is this Jacques Saupier?" "Oh, yes, I believe s o " "Is he your lawful husband?" "Xjes, yes' Oh, let me go!" "What has become of your mour, Lacrnse?" "JEfe is in prison for life—dead dead!" "^hat has this to do with the the^court asked ^ '^This woman is a criminal," ai ed the counsel, "and I ask you tain, her on a charge of a doubb der, committed 25 years ago." _ Xbe,convplaint against DucraiH dismissed, and the woman w a s 1 OVCT t o t h e police The narrative -follows fe gathered from a rep toe proceedings alre^ly mentio: Marie Rozan was the associat thief, sometimes called Crasc^a •whose real name was Lacruse. In May,>1873.' Lacruse and one | planned a jobbery at Lemans, pt ef Maine, where Pascot had one employeoLas a eoaehman. Mai companied-fhem. Pascot was a L 5nd Lacru0e,fled and abandonetfl to her fate^ She managed to -from -the neighborhood and wa. <». suffering from want and exj "Htll she reached Morlaix in Br She contlnuedron n p o n e o f t h e • ""til she came upon a comf| nomestead, where lived Henri , "•**>» h i s - v ^ i f e a n d o n l y s o n . M. ^ **hed wme'QO acres of land ad| ~ « 8 t o m e - a n d w a s i n good < •«nces, T)ein^ considered, i n f a IJealthy m a n I n t h e district T| fe JPF**' ™" ,11(rt particularly In!!t u * arned "a^ad reputatioi •^Wborhood, having twice •wafey f r o m b . l s * p a r e n t s and ^th it. H e w a s never fOnd ol *e truth of the matter being *? been spoiled in the bringing lr,* 8 « b)Bfdre *"* on tne evei *y 80,18XS, Saupier s a t i n t h e r ! n & I«oltlng u p , h e s a w i 7 <1&( t woman, standing w| *tt4 o n t h e jga t e a n d her eyes ^?aiim. - "Pier, ^pio w a s ^ tt g tou | -j£h te poor "woman wants. |^P«re«ly-encouragla b y t h j "•"^oftheoidrfla^M «Peoed the wieTcetandJmtl , * ^hmbandaiawifel «°^» «Mrtos that h e r n a l w»d teBihg howl , •—-•"Bia» t ytw drowc ««? brother ^*g in-tiie J^y o a ; « a d U«># she w^ 0 ^ •**'*** *"**» wa« pennileBs «th decent i^Jatlfld

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T h e K i n d Y o u H a v e A l w a y s B o u g h t , a n d w h i c h h a s b e e n i n u s e foi? o v e r 3 0 y e a r s , h a s b o r n e t h e s i g n a t u r e o f

a n d h a s b e e n m a d e u n d e r h i s p e r -

•¥/?y~J^~ s o n a l H u p e r v i s i o n s i n c e i t s i n f a n c y .

—<* -r *, s-tZzcSLcAS A l l o w n o o n e t o d e c e i v e y o u i n t h i s .

C o u n t e r f e i t s , I m i t a t i o n s a n d S u b s t i t u t e s a r e b u t E x ­

p e r i m e n t s t h a t t r i f l e w i t h a n d e n d a n g e r t h e h e a l t h o f

a n d C h i l d r e n — E x p e r i e n c e a g a i n s t E x p e r i m e n t .

' A l l ' p e i I n f a n t s

What is CASTORIA C a s t o r i a i s a s u b s t i t u t e f o r C a s t o r O i l , P a r e g o r i c , D r o p s

a n d S o o t h i n g S y r u p s . I t i s H a r m l e s s a n d P l e a s a n t . I t

c o n t a i n s n e i t h e r O p i u m , M o r p h i n e n o r o t h e r N a r c o t i c

s u b s t a n c e . I t s a g e i s i t s g u a r a n t e e . I t d e s t r o y s W o r m s

a n d a l l a y s F e v e r i s h n e s s . I t c u r e s D i a r r h o e a a n d W i n d

C o l i c . I t r e l i e v e s T J e e t h i n g T r o u b l e s , c u r e s C o n s t i p a t i o n -

a n d F l a t u l e n c y . I t a s s i m i l a t e s t h e F o o d , r e g u l a t e s t h e

, S t o m a c h a n d B o w e l s , g i v i n g h e a l t h y a n d n a t u r a l s l e e p .

T h e C h i l d r e n ' s P a n a c e a — T b o M o t h e r ' s F r i e n d .

GENUINE C A S T O R I A ALWAYS Bears the Signature of

VARIEfY.

There art- two btul things about cigar­ette smoking; first the cigarette , and the second the fellow that s m o k e s it.

Scientists say that te legraph wires are b e t t e r , conductors on M o n d a y than o n Saturday, on a c c o u n t of tl ieir S u n ­day rest.

A Western cyclist has ridden fifty-. three 'ni i los on a b icyc le wi thout h a n d l e bars. Thir«, however , is not as bad as riding all day o n a b i cyc l e w i t h o u t looking, as m a n y cf the scorchers do .

T h e N e w York dai l ies rece ive s o m u c h abuse , that it is really a pleasure to say that n o t o n e of t h e m approves the proposed $200 ,000 ,000 water j ob , which is be ing p u s h e d by a lot of pol i ­t ic ians.

T h e superst i t ious find s o m e t h i n g a larming in the s u d d e n dea th of the second sculptor engaged in m a k i n g the D e w e y t r iumpha l arch, in N e w York city . B o t h m e n dropped dead without warning .

A n y o n e c a n dist inguish a p o i s o n o u s serpent from a harmless one , for a ven­o m o u s s n a k e invariably possesses a triangularly shaped h e a d and a b lunt nose, whi le its tail is corresponding ly b lunt and stubby.

P a c k a g e s c a n n o t be m a i l e d to the Y u k o n country , according to an order recent ly issued by the postoffice depart­m e n t . Letters and postal cards can be sent to the Y u k o n territory, but there is no way in which parcels , or third or fourth-class matter , can be forwarded.

Tie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 3 0 Years.

THE CENTAUa COMPANY, 7 7 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.

# ' I B. BORGMAN'S, \ * «

GENEVA, N.Y. t

I rniture Bargains!

Nil

to I A 3-Piece Chamber Suit% large glass, $10.00 § A Morris Chair from to to Ladies' Desks from >to to Couches in Corduroy from 4 Combination Desks "from $ Onyx Tables from | | Easels, Bamboo or Oak, fr@m # Pictures, nice line, from to to

f $4.00 to 25.00 « 2.98 to 2TJ0 ft 4.97 to 5C M * 7.50 to 50. 2.50 to 18.

.25 to 4.00

w

w

to to

to

ance. B. BORGHiA

4 2 9 E X C H A N G E

.50 to 6.50 « w w w

to to

STREET, fa 15?

DHV-ISON. GARDEN SEEDS KINDS. ALL THE LEADING VARIETIES OF POTATOES

I Custom Grinding Our mm is running constantly, and we make a specialty of CUSTOM GRINDING. Satisfaction guaranteed.

Flour, Feed, Hay, Straw, etc Store 4 0 Castle Street .

Mill Foot of Washington Street ,

Iu F r a n c e the officer wears his uni­form on every poss ihle occas ion . H e r e in the Unite<l States h e takes it off w h e n e v e r h e is n o t on duty , and in W a s h i n g t o n army uni forms are se ldom seen, e v e n in the, war depar tment , whi l e they are indeed rare on the streets.

A K a n s a s mi l l iner is at work on two honnets , which she is m a k i n g from corn husks , o n e of wh ich is des igned for Q u e e n Victoria , and the other for Miss H e l e n M. Gould . T h e s a m e mi l l iner m a d e a corn husk b o n n e t two years ago wh ich is n o w in Mrs. M c K i n l e y ' s possess ion.

After all, it's a bit cruel to take flow­ers from their cool resting p lace in a vase of water, and c h o k e t h e m to s u d ­den death by wear ing t h e m in the hot streets. A good deal m o r e e n j o y m e n t can be had out of t h e m by let t ing t h e m l ive in peace , and in look ing at t h e m comfortably encased in a vase of water. —Detro i t F r e e .Press.

T h e genera l t e n d e n c y is for m e n to l ive longer. T h e r e is m u c h e v i d e n c e to show that in the fourteenth, fifteenth and s ixteenth centuries m e n of 70 were considered very aged, and that a m a n of 80 was a very rare p h e n o m e n o n . If medica l sc ience , sanitat ion and general obed ience to the laws of health con­t inue to improve , the gauge of n o r m a l age m a y y e t rise to 1 0 0 . — B o s t o n Post .

T h e r e is a project on foot in Geneva , 0 . , to erect a library in m e m o r y of Piatt R. Spencer , "the father of pen­m a n s h i p . " T h e n e w bui ld ing will be of s tone, and will cost $20 ,000 . In this town of about 3 ,000 inhabi tants Spen­cer l ived in the early days of the West­ern Reserve , and in a little log school -house , which was also h i s h o m e , h e first taught writing.

W h i l e Booker T. W a s h i n g t o n was in E u r o p e h e rece ived a mons ter pet i t ion, s igned by the governor of West Vir­ginia, j u d g e s of the S u p r e m e Court and the mayor , city counci l and leading whi te and c o l o i e d cit izens of Charles­ton, invi t ing h i m u p o n bis return t̂ o visit that city, his b o y h o o d h o m e . Mr. W a s h i n g t o n has accepted the invi tat ion, and is to be tendered a publ ic recept ion and banquet .

Dr. N e w e l l D w i g h t H i l l s has been giv­ing his v iews on mi l l inery . W o m e n w h o are th ink ing of their a u t u m n hats wil l be interested in hear ing t h e m : " W e are not yet far r e m o v e d from the sav­age ," said the reverend g e n t l e m a n , "be­cause w o m a n th inks she can m a k e her­self m o r e beautiful by wring ing the n e c k s of two birds and sett ing their feathers in her hat, c o c k i n g t h e m for ­ward in the spring and backward in tlie

autumn." ^ . . . • t a

Special Notice.

Jimmy Hughes, the Ocean Tenor. -"4"-'

" J i m m y " H u g h e s ! i s t h e deck- s teward o n the A m e r i c a n l ine s t e a m s h i p N e w York . H e is a t tent ive t o h i s dut ies , very po l i te a n d discreet , a n d if h e con­t inued work ing o n s h i p b o a r d it w o u l d on ly b e a quest ion of t i m e w h e n J i m m y wou ld be in the mas ter berth in t h e stewards' d e p a r t m e n t . * B • '

But there is l ike ly to c o m e a revolu­tion in J i m m y ' s career . J i m m y i s a wonderful s inger, a n d profess ional sitigr ers of reputat iou say that h e h a s the purest and m o s t powerful t e n o r v o i c e jn the world. Jimimy h a s heard all m a n n e r of praise on' sh ipboard a n d o n land, but the size of; h i s h a t baud h a s not increased , a n d h e is a s m o d e s t a n d u n a s s u m i n g a c h a p aB ever trod a sh ip ' s d e c k . !

J i m m y h a s s u n g 'h i s w a y in to t h e hearts of t h o u s a n d s oJT travelers o n t h e N e w Y o r k for the last three years , a n d before that o n t h e C a m p a n i a of t h e Cunard l ine . If Mrs. G e o r g e G o u l d and o t h e r patrons of t h e A m e r i c a n l i n e h a v e their w a y J i m m y will qui t short ly t ry ing to t e m p t the ' conva le scent with da in ty bits ot food and e m b a r k u p o n a career w h e r e his ta lents wil l afford h i m an opportuni ty to win! f a m e .

Mrs. Gould heard Jiirnmy s ing the first t i m e on the last trip she m a d e to E u r o p e ' at the concert g i v e n aboard. H i s s ing­ing was a revelat ion to her a n d to others as wel l , for On that occas ion J i m m y was very fit i n d e e d , and h e says h imse l f h e never sang'bet ter in h i s life. H e fol lowed several professional s ing­ers of n o t e and it w a s f this k n o w l e d g e that spurred h i m to do ih i s best.

H i s first se lec t ion was the " H o l y City." T h e s t e a m s h i p <had just wea th ­ered a gale , was toss ing and p i t c h i n g furiously and the p e a c e and c a l m of the " H o l y City " waa e n h a n c e d by the con­trast. J i m m y entranced his a u d i e n c e and b e was twice encoded. H e s a n g " M o n a " a n d " Once Aga in " in c h a r m ­ing s ty le and express ion and n o n e m o r e enthus ias t ic in prais ing t h e s w e e t s inger than Mrs. Geo . Gould and her h u s b a n d .

One of the passengers ^vas Mrs. F . A. Bell , a wea l thy w o m a n , of M a d i s o n , N". J. T h e day after the concert: Mrs. Be l l -had a talk with J i m m y and was surprised to learn that his wonderful v o i c e was not the result of cul t ivat ion. S h e dec lared that w h e n she returned h o m e she wou ld arrange to h a v e J i m m y sent to t h e best vocal t eacher in the world, Mrs. Gould h a d b e e n th ink ing o f mals ing the s a m e proposal , a n d w h e n s h e learned of the g e n e r o u s offer of Mrs. Bel l both Mr. and Mrs. Gould asked tfi$ pr iv i lege of accept ing with her the trust .of cult ivat­ing the singer's vo ice .

J i m m y has rece ived a letter from Mrs. Bel l and is expec t ing to hear from Mrs. Gould any day that" the arrange­m e n t s h a v e been m a d e for h i m to g ive

that secfion-ten;;*rfieIekWH> <»***» ••«*PS%$»*4-beamende^soartorea&ksTonows:. ' . •l'rL.

loan money or asmXy&ml^onpi-M[«BlSfi!JfR;.-^-No coiml3>city, town or YiBftgfershaQfcereaiter give any money or property, or loan its money or credit to or in aiS o f any individual, asaocw-Son or corporation,,or become dfceetly or,, indi­rectly the oyfner of stock in* or bond's of, anyas-sociation or corporation; nor shall- any. snch county, city-town or village be allowed-to incur any indebtedness, eieept forconnty, city, town J or village purposes. TJhis section shall not pre­vent such county, cSty, town or village from making such provision for the aid or support of its poor as may be authorizea by law. Ho County or city shall be allowed to become; indebted for any purpose or in any manner to an amount which, including existing indebtedness, shall exceed ten per centum of the assessed valnafidn of the-real estate of such county or city subject to taxation, as jfe appeared By the assessment- •: rolls of said county or city on the last assessment for state or county taxes prior to tffe incurring of such indebtedness; and ail indebtedness in*fe£-cess of such Hmifation. except such as may now; exist, shall be absolutely void, except as herein otherwise-provided. JJo'eounty or city-whose present indebtednessjoxceeds. ten per centum of the assessed valuation of its real estate subject to taxation, shall be allowed to become indebted in any further amount until such indebtedness shall be reduced within such limit. This section snail not be construed to prevent the issuing of certifi­cates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes for amounts actually contained, or to be contained in -the taxes for the year when such certificates or revenue bonds are Issued and payable out-of such taxes. Nor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water; but the term of the bonds issued to provide the supply of water shall not exceed twenty years, and a sinking fund shall be created on the issuing of the said bonds for their redemp­tion, by raising annually a sum which will pro­duce an amount equal to the sum of the principal and interest of said bonds at their maturity. All certificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds is­sued in anticipation of the collection of taxss, which are not retired within five years after their date of issue, and bonds issued to provide lor the supply of water, and any debt hereafter incurred by any portion or part of a city, if there shall be any such debt, shall be included in as­certaining the power of the city to be become otherwise indebted. Whenever the boundaries of any city are the same as those of a county, or when any city shall include within its boundaries more than one county, the power of any county wholly included within such city to become in­debted shall cease, but the debt ot the county, heretofore existing shall not, for the purposes of this section, be reckoned as a part of the city debt The amount hereafter to Toe raised by tax for county or city purposes, in any county con­taining a city of over one hundred thousand in­habitants, or any such city of this state, in addi­tion to providing for the principal and interest of existing debt, shall not in the aggregate ex­ceed in any one year two per centum of the as­sessed va.uation of the real and personal estate of such county or city, to be ascertained as pre-seribeU in this section in respect to county or city debt.

§ 2. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election, in ac­cordance with the provisions of the election law.

A m e n d m e n t N o . 3 Proposing an amendment to section two of arti­

cle six of the constitution, relating to tempo­rary designations by the governor of justices to the appellate division.

WHEREAS, The legislature at its regular session in eighteen hundred, and ninety-eight duly adopted resolutions providing for an amendment to the constitution, relating to temporary desig­nations by the governor, of justices to the appel­late division; and which resolution was referred to the legislature to be chosen at the next gen­eral election of senators, and direct ed to be pub- •. lished in accordance with section one of article fourteen of the constitution; and

WHEREAS, Such resolutions have been duly published in accordance with law and the con­stitution and referred to this legislature for-action; therefore

SECTION I. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), That section two of article six of the constitution be amended so as to read as follows:

§ 2. The legislature shall divide the state into four judicial departments. The first department shall consiBt of the county of New York; the others shall be bounded by county lines, and be compact and equal in population as nearly as may be. Once every ten years the legislature may alter the judicial departments, but without increasing the number thereof. There sht>U be an appellate division of the supreme court, con-" •" " -•—.:««„ in fV,n fire* rinnnrt.TYlP.n.f.

t h e Sfec&Jary' # 6ta*e, Albany, J u l y 3ft, l$$.-^FtarsHant t o t h e provisions «ol sec-^1 tiom one of article fourteen of the ConstK tution of the S ta te of N e w Torts, a n d sec­tion seven of Chapter nine hundred and nine of the L a w s or eighteen hundred and ninety-six, notice i s hereby given that the following" proposed .amendment to article three, or the-Constitution of the State of N e w York is to be submitted to" the p_eoi=

•pie l o r approval" a t - the n e x t .general wee* tlon t o be held on the seventh d a y tot N o -tes iber , eighteen hundred a n d ninety-ntae,

AMSaSTOMENT iTTTMBESR ONE, Concurrent Resolution of theUeriate<and

Assembly proposing ah amendment to ar­ticle three, section twenty-s ix of the con-Btitution, relating to-boards s>t supervisors and devolving the ditties thereof upon the municipal assembly or other legislative b6ay o r a city iin counties -wholly Tncliuled In a, c i ty or; wherte-two or more entire coun­ties are Included In a city.

Whereas, the legislature a t Its regular-session in eighteen" hundred a n d ; •ninety-seven duly adopted a resolution, providing for ah amendment to the constitution re­lating to hoards of supervisors and de­volving the duties thereof upon the m u ­nicipal assembly or other legis lat ive body of a city in counties whol ly included in a'l c i ty or where two or more entire counties are Included.in a c i ty; and which resolu­tion w a s referred to the legislature to be chosen at the next general election of sen­ators, and directed to be published In a c ­cordance wi th section one of article four­teen of the constitution; and whereas, such resolution has been duly published in accordance! wi th law and the constitu­tion and referred to this legislature for action; therefore, Seotlon 1. Kes ,olved (if the assembly concur), that section twen­ty-six, article third, of the constitution be amended so as to read a s fol lows: Sec, 26. There shall be In each county, except In a county wholly included in a city, a board or supervisors, to be composed of' such members and elected In such man­ner and for such period as is or may be

•provided by law. In a city which includes an entire county, or two or more entire counties, the powers and duties of a board of supervisors may be devolved upon the municipal assembly, common council; board of aldermen- or other legislative body o f the city. Sec. 2. ResolvedT (if the assembly concur), that •* the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval a t the next general election in accordance with the provisions of the elec­tion law.

State of N e w York, In Senate; March 3, 18flfl.—The foregoing resolution w a s duly passed,- a majority of all the senators elected voting1 in favor thereof. B y order of the senate, TIMOTHY E . , E L L S ­WORTH, Temporary President.

State of N e w York,. In Assembly, April 22, 1899.—The foregoing resolution w a s du­ly paased, a majority of all the members elected to the assembly vot ing in favor thereof. B y order of the assembly, S. P. NIXON, .Speaker.

State of N e w York, Offloe of the Secre-?, tary of State, s s : I have oompared the pre­ceding copy of concurrent resolutioh, pro­posing an amendment to article three, sec­tion twenty-s ix of the Constitution, wfth the original concurrent resolution on tile in this office, and I do hereby certify that the same is a correct transcript there­from, and of the whole thereof. Given under m y hand and the seal of office of the Seoretary of State, a t the c i ty of Al-

« r « » e feoVirfncr HI Jiiiittcei t o tfie "appelr l a t e d iv is ion. . .

, ^Wnereas.Tthe legis lature a t i t s regular L sess ion in. eighteen hundred and nfiiSty-» f j * i t JXvXji attopi&fta resolutions providing 1 "<fotf 'art-amenameMrtO' the constitution; rey.

la t ing to temporary".designations B y - t o e governor, of Justices t o the appellate divi­s ion; a n a which resolution w a s referred t o tne legislature to be chosen a t the next

f:eneral election of senators, and directed 0 he jJuMished- in- accordance "with, section

-one .of .artiele fourteen of trie constitution; and Whereas, such resolutions- ".have been dttly published I n accordance wi th law

' a n a the constitution a n d "referred to, this legislature ; for act ion; therefore Section l*.StoB6nre&'.(i£ t h e "assembly concur), th&t section two of-article s ix of the cortstltur tiofa be amended'so a s to read a s fol lows! Sec. 8. The legislature shall divide t b l -state' Into f o u r judicial departments. The first .department .shall consist or the coun-

B

u p his life on the ocean wave . J i m m y loves the sea, but he loves-music better, and he will d o a n y t h i n g to rece ive i n ^ ™ » ^ « ] S ^ » ^ ^ ^ f ^ V ^ ^ d e i S K

If you are tired and dull, can't get rested, and have no appitite, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. It enriches and vitalizes the blood.

An Envious la i io r .

struction from a c o m p e t e n t tutor J i m m y was born in Liverpool . H i s

parents are Irish, and h is m o t h e r was a s inger o f local reputat ion . T h e boy's voice exc i ted c o m m e n t from the t i m e h e could warble a song. H e w a s at the age of s e v e n se lec ted to s ing 'the oslos in the choir of St. Franc i s X a v i c r in Liverpool . H o w e n t to schoo l in Liver­pool , and w h e n s ix teen years o ld went to sea on the- C a m p a n i a . , Ben Davis , the L o n d o n tenor singer, g a v e J i m m y a letter to t h e m a n a g e r of the Carl Rosa Opera C o m p a n y iu which he s a y s : "This boy has the rinest t enor vo ice in the world."

T h o s e w h o h a v e heard Edward L loyd say that J i m m y ' s voice is purer and has a wider range. J i m m y can t a k e UVJST and a half octavos with, ease, and His" high C is a wonder . H e is a natural mus i c ian and n e v e r h a d any in- truct iqn.

H e sang for Richard Croker and Thos . B. Reed , and e v e n surprised these staid old pol i t ic ians . H e has rece ived high c o m m e n d a t i o n from Sir Jul ian P a u n c e -fote, t h e D u k e of Marlborough and C h a u n c e y M. D e p e w .

A t a request of a reporter for t h e Jour­nal J i m m y g a v e a samjple yes terday of what h e can do in the s ing ing l ine on the d e c k ot the N e w "Mork. H i s se lec­tion was "Let Me L i k e a Soldier Fa l l ." W h e n the m e l o d y rang o u t pure and clear above t h e din o n the s t eamer every l o n g s h o r e m a n quit work and a crowd gathered in W e s t street in front of the old W a s h i n g t o n Market . H e was loud­ly app lauded ,

J i m m y is good looking . H e is of

sl ight build, but strong, and has a r e ­m a r k a b l e c l iest e x p a n s i o n . H i s m a n ­ners are pleasant , and everybody o n the N e w York , from the stoker to the cap­tain, has a good word for J i m m y , and is g lad of the g o o d luck wh ich is c o m i n g to hi n i .—New York Journal.

listing of seven justices in the first department,

bany, this twenty-seventh day of July, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-nine. (L. S.] JOHN T. MoDONOTTGH, Secretary of State.

The foregoing Concurrent Resolution • la published once a week for three months, next preceding the next general election in oonformity to the aforesaid provisions, in two public newspapers In each county In this State representing respectively the two political parties polling the highest number of votes at the last? general elec­tion, and in one additional newspaper.In each county for eVery one hundred thou­sand people in such county as shown by the last preceding State Enumeration. JOHN T. McDONOUGH, Secretary of State.

THE HUMORIST. TUF. MORVLIST.

Passenger—What time do these care l e a v e this corner1 ' Coiidiict'n---Qu:trter after, ha l f after, quarter to and at.

It's all well e n o u g h for a m a n to greet b i s wi le witli a .-mile, bat llivrt: are t i m e s w h e n it is hetter- to wait unti l the j o d o r ot t h e '' s m i l e " has s o m e w h a t | a b a t e d . — C h i c a g o N e w s .

A y o u n g w o m a n w h o npp'icd for a pos i t ion as a teacher in a school in a certa in Clmriton county district received t h e answer ^that the school hoard had dec ided to '• h igher a mail t eacher ."— K a n s a s City Star.

" Most men, 1 ' said the plat i tudinous boarder, "are m o r e a m e n a b l e to ridi­c u l e than to reason.''

" Yes , they are m o r e easily g u y e d than guided," said the Cheerful Idiot .—

Indianapolis Journal.

A certain city w o m a n 1ms been in­d u c e d t o buy a smal l farm. S h e has become very enthusiastic over it; it s e e m s a n ideal pluce to s p e n d tlie s u m ­m e r s . In describing it ehe grew quite e loquent . " It's a fine farm," she *aid,

, "and there are at least twenty head of liens.'"

T w o little rblks w e n t to church alone. . I t was- on ly around the corner from

the ir feme, and their m a m m a knew t h e y would be sale. Dur ing the long s e r m o n they got tired, and the older

. o n e ; . suppos ing that tiro school rules . h e l d ' g o o d in church, led h i s si«ter u p in

front of the pulpit and said : " Plcas« m a y We go h o m e ? " Much, surprised the c lergyfhan looked at t h e m over his s p e c t a c l e s ; t h e n lie understood and said: "Certa in ly , m y chi ldren." A n d the t w o toddled out whi le the congreatiory

. s m i l e d . — C o l u m b i a n . " ' .%-,

It doesn't always take eight quarts of beer to m a k e a peck of trouble. •

" Be careful not to mis take headedness for i n d e p e n d e n c e Zir i imerhackle in tlie

pig-says Old

Dansv i l l e Breeze.

T h e m a n w h o n e v e r borrows trnuhle s o m e t i m e s g ives a 1< of it to p e o p l e of w h o m h e borrows o..her th ings .

A m a n ' s repentance is n e v e r g e n u i n e w h e n it mere ly c o m e s from the fact that h e was d i scovered .—Chicago N e w s .

[ Two-thirds of the p e o p l e w h o c o m -'< plain that the world doesn' t under-, stand t h e m ought to be thankful it

doesn ' t .—Chicago N e w s .

T h e fol lowing paragraph by J o h n I ltn.skin is full of truth : " If y o u want

k n o w l e d g e y o u must toil for i t ; if food,

you must toil for it; and if pleasure, you m u s t toil for it. Tod is the law. Pleasure c o m e s by toil and not by self

indulgence and indolence. When one gets to love work his life is a h a p p y one ." -

T h e five worst ma lad ie s that affect the female m i n d are indoci l i ty , d iscon­tent, s lander, j ea lousy and s i l l iness . Wi thout any doubt these five ma lad ie s atlhet s e v e n or e ight o u t of every t e n :

w o m e n , and from t h e m arises the in­feriority ot w o m e n to m e n . A w o m a n should cure them by self- inspection and selfrreproach. Tlie worst of t h e m all and the parent of the other four is silli­ness '—'Comhil l Magazine.

T h e r e is a story of an e n v i o u s tailor current with the F r e n c h peasantry , says Youth ' s C o m p a n i o n . H e fancied that his neighbor, w h o rece ived a p e n ­sion, for the loss of a n arm incurred whi le fighting for his country , was bet­ter off than himself . Bo th m e n went to pay their rent on the s a m e day .

"That's a lucky m a n , " said the tailor to the landlord. " H e gets wel l pa id for his arm."

"But w h o would be wi l l ing to part with an a r m e v e n if h e w e r e well paid for it?" said the landlord.

"I would ," dec lared the tailor. "You!" cried the landlord. " W h y ,

m a n , y o u wouldu' t be wi l l ing to bear a n y t h i n g of the sort, n o mat ter h o w y o u were paid for it."

"I wish s o m e o n e would try m e . " " N o w , s ee here ," said the landlord,

w h o had stndied h u m a n nature, "I'll tell y o u what , if you' l l wear e v e n so m u c h as a chalk mark on y o u r back I'll remit y o u r rent as long as y o u wear it on y o u r coat so it can be s e e n , the condi t ion be ing that y o u tell n o o n e w h y it is there ."

" A g r e e d / ' said the tailor, eager ly . "That's an easy way to pay rent."

So the chalk-mark* in the form of a cross was m a d e on the back of bis coat and the de l ighted tailor sa l l ied torth u p o n t h e street.

Strangers and a c q u a i n t a n c e s ha i led h i m to tell h i m of t h e m a r k u p o n h i s back. J o k e s were m a d e at h i s ' e x ­pense , chi ldren laughed and pointed a t h i m , a n d h is wife a n n o y e d h i m with quest ions , a n d with conjugal famil ­iarity told h i m h e was a fool. T h e usu al ly a m i a b l e m a n grew surly and m o ­rose; h e s h u n n e d m e n , w o m e n a n d chi ldren, and frequented back^ streets. Before the w e e k was u p t h e tailor found h i m s e l f embro i l ed in a quarrel with his best friend, his wife bad threatened to l e a v e Ids h o u s e , and h e cons idered h i m s e l f mi serab le a n d \\t-used.

F ina l ly , o n e n ight h e took off h i s c o a t

and rubbed but the cha lk -mark , a n d said : " T h e r e ! I would n o t wear that cross on m y back a n o t h e r w e e k , n o ,

not if I could have all the money there ia in Paris !"

—^ — « » _ — — - —

New Collars.

N o n e e d to leel s u d d e n at tacks o f cho lera in fantum, dysentery , diarrhoea, s u m m e r c o m p l a i n t of a n y sort if y o u h a v e Dr. Fowler ' s Extrac t of Wi ld Strawberry in t h e m e d i c i n e chest .

s e p t l w 4

le F l o w e r '• s ta tue fund n o w a m o u n t s to $22 ,084 .55 , m a d e u p by con­tributions from twenty - two t h o u s a n d subscribers, in s u m s vary ing "from 25 c e n t s to $1 ,000 . R i c h and p o o r h a v e a l i k e contr ibuted , accord ing t o their m e a n s , a n d the n u m b e r of subscribers is the best e v i d e n c e *of the popular i ty of t h e m o v e m e n t . T h e s ta tue will b e the nobles t m o n u m e n t of W a t e r t o w n .

ElectioniWotice.

4

Mrs, JustwetlWVVhat's good to quiet :ft baby, uncle?'

"Uncle Crusty-^-Well, cliphtheritic sore roat a n d a t Christian Sc ience doctor

aa good aifiknything ! know of!

B ^ i A Chicago pOet sings the joy of ' e a i i n g corn upon the cob, when there's no one there to see ." Thi s is the corn-jealing season and nearly every g e n u i n e A m e r i c a n is no& chewing corn from the cob in the most primit ive fashion, but m a n y of us s y m p a t h i z e with t h e poet when he exclaims.:

Bnt; alas, what compensation Is contained for you and me,

In nibbling corn upon the cob When other folks may see.

S i n c e the d a y s of high s tocks a n d c o l -lars there is n o ei id to t h e variety . Several o f the fashionable w o m e n a t 4 N e w p o r t this y e a r h a v e b e e n s e e n in the m o r n i n g with dark l inen col lars and cravats o n whi te shirt waists , in­stead of the reverse, as has been so long -

the fad. T h e s e col lars and s tocks are of dark red^ brown or b lue l inen of the very fiiiest qual i ty , and are m a d e with the little turn over top, just as the w h i t e collars are. T h e y are m a d e with a t ie at tached of the s a m e material , w h i c h is crossed over beh ind and tied in front with a smal l bow. T h e s e n e w collars a n d s tocks are the latest th ing here, and set off a whi te m o r n i n g waist to perfec-tioh.-^-Ladies' ^ l o m e Journal .

HOOD'S P ILLS cure elver ins, BM-fousness, Indigestion, Headache, laay to take, easy t© operate. 26c.

STATE OF NEW YORK OFFICE OF THE SECEETAEY OF STATE,

AlBANY, July 29, 1899, To the Clerk of the County 0/ Ontario:

SIK:—NOTICE IS HEREBY UIVF.N, that, at the General Election to be field in this State on the Tuesday succeeding the Jflrst Monday in Novem­ber next (November 7th,» the following officers may b§ lawfully voted for, to wit: County awl District Offiders to be elected for said

Couitiy: j A Membe- of Assemblji Two School Commissioners. A District Attorney, in -the place of Royal R.

Scott. I Four Coroners, In the place of Orlando J. Hal-

lenbeek, Oliver H. Wright, Watson W% Archer and Barton S. Partridge,]

All whose terms of office will expire on the last day of December next. I

At the said General Election there is to be sub­mitted to the people for jthe purpose of voting thereon, tne following amendments to the Con-sutution: !

A m e n d m e n t HTo. 1 Prouosing; an amendment) to article three, section

twenty^ix of the constitution, relating to boards of supervisors jand devolving the du­ties thereof upon the; municipal assembly or other legislative body i of a city in counties whoUy included in ai city or where two or

Tnore entire counties are included in a cityv WHEREAS, The legislate e at its regular sesr

sion in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven duly adopted a resolution, providing for an amend­ment to the constitution relating to boards of su­pervisors and devolving tjlie duties thereof upon the municipal assemoly on other legislative body oi a city in counties wholly included in a city or where two or more entire counties are included to a city; and which, resolution was referred to the legislature to be chosen at the next general election of senators, and directed to be published in accordance with section one of article fourteen of the constitution; and

WHEREAS, Such resolut}on.haa been duly pub-llshed in Accordance with law and the constitu­tion and relerred to this legislature lor action; therefore, i

Section L Emlved, (if the assembly concur), that section twenty-ax, arpcle third, of the" con^. sUtution be amended so as to read as follows:

8 26. Thiers shin be in each county, except in a county wholly included in a city, a board of supervisors, to be composed ot such members and elected in such manner and for such period as is or may be provided by law. &> » city which in­cludes an entire county, or two or more entire counties, the powers and fiuties of a board of su­pervisors may be devolved upon the municipal assembly, common council, board of aldermen or other legislative body of the city.

82 . Resolved, (if the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election, in ac­cordance with the pro visions of the election law.

A m e n d m e n t N o , 2 Proposing an amendment to article eight, section

ten of the constitution, in relation to coun­ties, cities, towns ana villages, (riving or loaning money or credit and limitation of

. their indebtedness. . WHEREAS, The legislature at its regular ses­

sion in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, duly adopted a resolution providing for an amend­ment to the constitution, in relation to counties, cities, towns and villages giving or loaning money or credit and limitation of their indebted­ness; and which resolution' was. referred to the legislature to be chosen at tne next general elec­tion of senators, and directed to be.published In accordance with section one of article .fourteen of the*eoDrtltuUon; and

WHEREAS, 8och resolutions have been duly published In accordance with law and the consti­tution and referred to this ldgialatare for action; therefore,

Section L Boohed, Of the assembly concur),

ments. In each department four shall constitute a quorum, and the concurrence of three shall bo necessary to a decision. No more than five jus­tices shall sit in any case. From all the justices elected to the supreme court the governor shall designate those who shall constitute the appel­late division in each department; and he shall designate the .presiding justice thereof, who shall act as such during his term of .office, and shall be a resident of the department. The other justices shall be designated for terms of five years or the unexpired portions of their respective terms of office, if less than five years. From time to time as the terms of such designations expire, or va­cancies occur, he shall make new designations. A majority of the justices so designated to sit in the appellate division in each department shall be residents of the department. He may also make temporary designations in case of the ab­sence or inability to act of any justice in the ap-(•ellate division, or in case the presiding justice ot any appellate division shall certify to film that one or more additional justices are needed for the speedy disposition of the business before it. Whenever the appellate division in any depait-ment shall be unable to dispose of its business within a reasonable time, a majority of the pre­siding justices oi the several departments at a meeting called by the presiding justice of the de­partment in arrears may transfer any pending appeals from such department to any other de­partment for hearing and determination. No justice of the appellate division shall exercise any of the powers of a justice of the suoreme court, other than those of a justice out of court, and those pertaining to the appellate division or to the hearing and decision of motions submitted by consent of counsel. From and after the last day of December, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, the appellate division shall have the juris­diction now exercised by the supreme court at its general terms and by the general terms of the court of common pleas for the city and county of New York, the superior courtiol the city of New York,the superior court of Buffalo and the city of Brooklyn, and such additional jurisdiction as may be conferred by the legislature. It shall have power to appoint and remove a reporter. The justices of the appellate divipion in each de­partment shall have power to. fix the times and places for holding special and trial terms there­in, and toassign the justices in the departments to hold such terms; or to make rules therefor. ' § 2. Resolved, (if the assembly concur). That the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the nexi general election in accordance with the provisions of the election law.

A m e n d m e n t TSo. 4 Proposing an amendment to article six, sec­

tion seven of the constitution, relating to the court of appeals.

"WHEREAS, The legislature at its regular session in eighteen hundred and ninety-eight duly adopted resolutions providing for an amendment to the constitution relating to the court of appeals, and which resolutions were referred to tne legislature to be chosen at the next general election of senators, and directed to be .published In accordance with section one of article fourteen of the constitution; and

WHEREAS said resolutions have beeri duly published in accordance with law and the con­stitution, and referred to this legislature for action; therefore,

Section I. Resolved (if the assembly concur,) That section seven of article six of the consti­tution be amended to read as follows:

§ 7. The court of appeals is continued. It shall consist of the chief judge and associate judges now iu office, who shall hold their offi­ces until the expiration of their respective terms, and their successors-, who shall be cho­sen by the electorsof the state. The official terms of the chief judge and associate judges shall be fourteen years from and including the first day of January next after their- election. Five members of the court shall form a quo­rum, and the concurrence of four shall he neces­sary to a decision. The court shallhave power to appoint and to remove its reporter,clerk and attendants. Whenever and as often as a ma­jority of the judges of the court of appeals shall certify to the governor that said court is un­able, by reason of the accumulation of causes pending therein, to hear and dispose of the same with reasonable speed, the governor shall designate not more than four justices of the supreme court to serve as associate judges of the court of appeals. The justices so designated shall be relieved from their duties as justices of the supreme comt and shall serve as associ­ate judges of the court of appeals until the causes undisposed of in said court are reduced to two hundred, when they shall return to the supreme court. The governor may designate justices of the supreme court to fill vacancies. No justice shall serve a s associate judge of, the court of appeals except while holding the office of justice of the supreme cOurtj and no more than seven judges shallsit . in any case.

g 2. Resolved {ii the assembly concur), That the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election in accordance with the! provisions of the elec­tion law. ' . .

GIVEN under my hand and Seal of omce of the.Secretary of State,, at the.qity of Al­bany, this twenty-ninth day of July, m

IX.s.l the year one thousand, eight hundred and ninety-nine. "

^OBNT.McDONOTJGa, '4augl4w' " "), "Secretaryof State.

Election Notice—Town of Geneva. STATE OF itEW YOKK, ' )

• ONTARIO COUNTY CLERK'S OPPICE, V CANANPSIGTJA, N . Y., August 8,1899. )

Notice is hereby-given that at the General Elec­tion to be held in this'giate on the Tuesday suc­ceeding the first Monday in November next (November 7th), the following officers for the Tbwn of Geneva may be lawfully voted for, to wit:

A Supervisor in the place of Samuel McBIain. A Town Clers in the place of James W. Holland. A Justice of the:Peace in the place of William

Merrife Ah Assessor in the place of Albert J. Sutherland. A commissioner of Highways in the placeof

Chauncey Sheffield. . . ;. An overseer of w e Poor in the placeof John A.

Boss. • A Collector in tbe place of George Black Two Constables in the places of E: P. Albright

and Walter Jackson. Sour Inspectors of Election in the places of

J» Grove Bappey,- Melanchton Kinney, Clarence Dean, DanieMa. Bennett

All whose terms of ounce will expire on the last day December next. Given under rhy hand and Seal of Ontario Coun­

ty t i t s 8th day of August in the year one 1L. 8.] thousand eight hundTea and ninety-nine, - - P. E. HOAG,

Ontario Comity Clerk.

STATE OF N E W YORK. O F F I C E ' O F the Secretary of State, Albany, July 27,

- . . . . , ' -section Itution

or tne ottLtw MJL AI^W •*«.*»., *«.« section seven of Chapter nine hundred and nine of the Laws of eighteen hundred and nine­ty-six, liotiee is hereby given that the fol­lowing ! proposed amendment to artiole eight, o f the Constitution of the State Of New York is to be submitted to the people for approval at the next general election to be held on the seventh day of Novemi bar, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine.

A M E N D M E N T N U M B E R TWO. Concurrent Resolution of the Senate and

Assembly.—Proposing an amendment to article eight, section ten of the constitu­tion, In relation to counties, cities, towns and villages, giving or loaning money or credit and limitation of their indebted­ness.

Whereas, the legislature at its" regular session in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, duly adopted a resolution providing for an amendment to the constitution, in relation to counties, cities, towns and vil­lages giving or loaning money or credit and limitation of their indebtedness; and, which resolution w a s referred to the leg-

. islature to be chosen a t the next general election of senators,. anrj_,directed to be published In accordance with section one of article fourteen of the faonstitution; and Whereas, such resolutions have been duly published in accordance with law and tht constitution and referred to this legisla­ture for action; therefore. Section 1. Be-solved (If the assembly concur), that sec­tion ten, article eight, of the constitution be amended so as to read as follows: Sec. 10. Counties, cities and towns not to give or loan money or credit; limitation of In­debtedness. No county, city, town or vil­lage shall hereafter give any money or property, or loan its money or credit to or in aid of any individual, association or corporation, or become directly or indi­rectly the owner of stock In, or' bonds of. any association or corporation; nor shall any such county, city, town or village be allowed to incur any indebtedness except for county, city, town or village purposes. This section shall not prevent such coun­ty, oity, town or village from making such provision for the aid or support of its poor' as may be authorized by law. N o county or city shall be allowed to become indebt­ed for any purpose or in any manner to an amount which, including exist ing in­debtedness, shall exceed ten per centum of the assessed valuation o£ the real estate of such county or city subject to taxation, as it appeared by the assessment-rolls of said county of city on the last assessment for state or county taxes prior to the in ­curring of such Indebtedness; and all in debtedness in excess of such limitation, except such as may now exist, shall bts absolutely void, except as herein other­wise provided. N o county'or city whose present indebtedness exceeds ten per cen­tum of the assessed valuation* of Its real estate, subject to taxation shall be al­lowed to become indebted In any further amount until such indebtedness shall be reduced within such limit. This section shall not be construed to prevent the is.-suing of certificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes for amounts actu­ally contained, or to be contained- in the taxes for the year when such certificates or revenue. bonds are issued and payable out of such taxes . Nor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water; but the term of the bonds Issued to provide the supply of water shall not exceed twen­t y years and a sinking fund shal l be cre­ated on the issuing or the said bonds for their redemption, by raising annually a Bum which will produce an amount equal t o the sum of the principal and interest of said bonds at their maturity. All eeifv tificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes , which are not retired within iive yearB after their date of Issue, and bonds issued to provide for the supply of water5' and any debt hereafter incurred by any portion or part of a city. If there, shal l be' any such-debt, shall be Included In ascer­taining the power of the *city to be become -otherwise indebted. Whenever the bound­aries of any city are the same a s those of a county, or when any city shall Include within Its boundaries more than one coun­ty, the power of any county wholly in-oluded within such city to become indebt ed shall cease, but the debt of the county heretofore exist ing shall not, for the 'pur­poses of this section, be reekoned a s a part of the City debt. The amount hefe-.after to he raised >by' tax for county or city purposes, in any county containing a City of over one hundred thousand inhab­itants, or any sueh city of this state, In addition to providing for the principal and interest of exist ing debt, shall not in the aggregate exceed in any one year two per centum of the assessed valuation of the real and personal estate of BUCTS county Or city, to be ascertained a s prescribed in this section in respect to county or city debt. Sec. 2. Resolved, (if the assembly

eoncur), that the foregoing amendmertt he submitted, to the people for approval a t the next general election in accordance with the provisions of the election law. . S t a t e o f N e w York, In Senate, Maroh 3, 1899.—The foregoing resolution was . dttly. passed, a majority of all the senators elected vot ing In favor thereof. B y order Of the. senate, TIMOTHY B . E L L S ­WORTH, Temporary Pres ident M S t a t e « L N e w York, I n AMemJMjr, April SS, 1899;—^Che foregoing resolution, wasi du-

-state Into f o u r judicial departments first department .shall consist of the t y of N e w York; the others shal l .be bounded by ooutity l ines, and be compact and equal in population a s nearly as .may-be. Once every ten years the legislature m a y alter the Judicial d e p a r t m e n t s / b n t wi thout Increasing' the number thereof. There shall be an appellate division of the supreme; court, consisting- of seven jus ­tices Jh the first, department^ and of five justices in each of the other departments . i n each department four shall constitute a 'qjroruni, and the concurrenOevOf three •Shall be necessary to a decision. N o more than five Justices Shall s i t In any case. F r o m all tife just ices elected to the su ­preme court the governor shall designate those w h o shall constitute the appellate division In each department; and he shall designate the presiding just ice thereof, wl»o shall act a s sueh during his term of office, and shall be a resident of the de­partment. The other justices shall be des­ignated for terms of five years or the un­

e x p i r e d portions of their respective terms of office, if less than five years. From t ime to time a s the terms of such desig­nations expire,-or "vacancies occur, he shall make new designations. A majority of the justices so designated to sit in the ap­pellate division in each department shall be residents of the department. He may

• also make temporary designations in ease ' of the absence or inability to act of any

Justice in the appellate division, or in ease the presiding justice of any appellate di­vision shall certify to him that, one or more additional just ices are needed for trie speedy disposition of the business before lC Whenever the appellate division in any department shall be, unable to1 dispose oi i ts business within a reasonable time, a majority df the presiding just ices of the several departments at a meet ing called by the presiding justice of the department m arrears m a y transfer any pending ap­peals from such department to any other department for bearing and determina­tion. N o justlde of the appellate division shall exercise any of the powers of a jus­tice of the supreme court, - other' than those of a just ice-out of court, and those

fiertalning to the appellate division or to he hearing and decision of motions sub­

mitted by-consent of counsel. From and after the last day of December, eighteen hundre'd and ninety-five, the appellate di­vision shall ha've the jurisdiction now ex­ercised by the supreme court at i ts gen­eral terms and by the general terms of the court of ooimhon pleas for the city and "county of N e w York, the superior court of the city of N e w York, the supe­rior court of Buffalo? and the c i ty of Brooklyn, and such additional jurisdiction as m a y be conferred by the legislature. It shall have power to appoint and remove a reporter. The justices of the appellate division in each department, shall have power to fix the times and places for hold­ing special and trial terms therein, and to 'ass ign the justices in the departments to hold such terms or to make rules there-Jtor. Sec. 2. Resolved, (if the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submitted to the people for approval at the next-general election In accordance wi th the provisions of the election law.

State of N e w York, In Senate, April 11. 1899.—The foregoing resolution w a s duly passed, a majority of all the senators elected voting in favor thereof. B y order Of the senate, TIMOTHY E. ELLS­WORTH, Temporary President.

State of New York, In Assembly, April 12, 1899.—The foregoing resolution w a s du­ly passed, a majority of all the members elected to the assembly voting In favor thereof. B y order of the assembly, S. F . NIXON, Speaker.

State of N e w York, OfiBce of the Secre­tary of State,, s s : I have compared the pre­ceding copy of concurrent resolution, pro­posing an amendment to article six, sec­tion two of the Constitution, with the original concurrent resolution on fete in this office, and I do h e r e b y certify that the same is a correct transcript there­from, and of the whole thereof. Given under m y hand and the seal of office of the Secretary of State, a t the city of Al­bany, this twenty-seventh day of July, in \he year of our Lord, one thousand eight nundred and' ninety-nine. [L. S.] JOHN T. McDONOUGH, Secretary of State.

The foregoing Concurrent Resolution is published once a week for three months next preceding the next general election in oonformity to the aforesaid provisions, in two public newspapers in each countv In this State representing respectively the two political parties polling the highest number of votes ,at the last general elec­tion, and in one additional newspaper in each county for every one hundred thou­sand people in such'county as shown by the last preceding State Enumeration. JOHN T. McDONOUGH, Secretary of State.

12

& HUDSON RIVER R. R.

THE f iWRvTRfteK T8UMK LIME. In eBect Sunday, £ o v . 13,1898,

LEAVE GENEVA—GOING EAST.

6 E C a m . Waterloo^705, Seneca Falls 713, 0 3 Syracuse 9 05, arr New York 7 00 J> m.

9 a c a m, Waterloo 0.45 ieneca Falls 954* CO Syracuse l l 25j New ydrk 6 80 p m

H i j f l a m, Waterloo U 30 p m, Seneca Falls £ U 1137, Syracuse 118

I ' 0 7 pin,Waterloo 150,S ivccaFalls202,Syra-0 1 cuse340,ttrrNewYr_:i5.R§9

4 atl pnt, Wa,terloo4 40. SenecaFalls450, Syra-LQ cuse630,«rrHewYork6 3 0 a m

tL-A.lt» Waterloo § o5, Seneca Falls §02, Ap-P •TyburnJB40,Syracuse735 •-

r A g p m, Waterloo 7Z5, Seneca Falls 723, v a Cayuga? 33, Auburn? 55

8 4 fl p-m, ..Waterloo 852, Seneca Sails 001,Au-. •HI burn 945, Syi;cause 1040, Albany 250.

New YOrk'7 00 a m. midnight, Waterloo 1210 a m , Seneca Falls 1218, Auburn 12 5!-, Syracuse, 155; LEAVE GENEVA- -fiOlNG WEST.

6 a n a m , Phelps 6 52, Clifton Springs 701, -Gan-•HJ! andaiVua 7 20, Kochester 817.

8 f t f l a m , OaKaCorners807.Phelps813,Clifton Ut l Springs 8 20, Canandaigua S -IS, Rochester

' 9 45 •

9 |C" a m . Through,train for Buffalo. Phelps 1 0 930, Clifton Springs 938, -Canandaigua

10 00, Eochester 10 56, Buffalo 12 45 p m.

H CC a m , Oaks Corners 12 08 p m , Phelps 1215 .UU Clifton Springs 12 27. Canandaigua 1250,

1 '• Rochester 150 p m . '

2 n C p m, Oaks Corners 2 34. Phelps 2 42, Clit-ZU ton Springs 2 52, Canandaigua 3 20, Roch-

6st6r 4 20.

3 A n p m, Phelps 3 54, Clifton Springs 4 03, Can-•f L andaigua 4 23, Rochester 510

7 n r p m , Oaks Corners 713, Phelps 7 20, Clif-U.O ton Springs 7 30, Canandaigua 8 00, Roch­

ester 900 v If) flftP m> ' 0 a k s Corners 1016, Phelps 10 23, IU UU Clifton Springs 1032, Canandaigua 1055,

Rochester 1155. SUNDAY TEAINS—Going east—leave Geneva 9 35

a. m., 4 29 and 8 40 p. m. Going West—leave Geneva 8 00 a. m., 2 25 and

7 05 \. m. On sale at Geneva, sections 5, 6 and 7, in

sleepers attached to 8:50 eastbound express. GEO. H. DANIELS, Gen. Pass. Agent

H. PARRY, Gen'l Agent, 308 Main Street, Buffalo,^. Y.

^ . EDGAR VAN ETTEN, Gen'l Supt. J. P. BRADFIELD, Supt.

J . « . JFOSTEB, G e n e v a Ci ty Office, 3 3 S e n e c a St .

Pennsylvania Division—Fall Brook Distriot. s GOING SOUTH.

S U M M E R ; T I M ^ TABI,E.

Took: Effect J l ay 29,1899. Beginning oh the above date.Tthe Seneca Lake

Steamer "Otetiani" will make landings as per timetable below, and this schedule will be in enect for the balance of season, unless otheru w-ordered. . . *

GOING SOUTH: Leave Geneva.*'. .... Arrive Eashong -. *.., .".*- Deys (fL ~ . •' Dresden -.

" Wfllard.......... " Long Point (0. . . ...i " Highlands (f) „

• " Lodi , .*__ „ " Lamoreaux (f) " North Hector....,.....; " Peach Orehard(f) f Glenora (i)..._ — " Watkins „....„..; ..;,..

• . GOING NORTH. I&ave Watkins „ Arrive Glenora(f)„ .....,.....,.., . " Peach Orchard (f). „,..,„*

" North Hector * *' Lamoreaux .(f);.-. " Lodi,

8:10 A. : 8:40 • 8:50 ••

.... 9.25 •• , 9:50 " .....10:00 " ...._10:!0 -

ioas •• 10:40 •' 10..V, •• 11:!" • 11:-J> •• 1-J-oii i l

Highlands (t)..,...., ~ " ' 0)

... 2 4'. 1 . . S..«i ... 3 4(J .. :iV) ... 1 !0 .- 4:25 ... 4:15 ... 4:55 ... 5:10 ... 5:25 ... 0:05 .. C:15

f.:15

51

Lyons.... Geneva-Dresden.

1 arr.. j-lv...

6 00 6 27 6 45 7 1 0 7 20 6 50 727 S02

Penn Yan Hirarods, Dundee Watkins Station.... Corning jf";.'."" Lawrenceville Tioga « Stokesdale June ... Wellsboro jf™;"' Ansonia Blaekwells Jersey Shore '916 Williamsport 9 50

a m Reading, P. & R.... 2 50 Philadelphia 4 35

p m GOING NOR

a m Williamsport _ .'..... Jersey Shore .... Blaekwells Ansonia Wellsboro }?"". ; Stokesdale June Tioga Lawrenceville

coining j-f^rj;;;;;. Watkins Station... Dundee Himrods Penn Yan }iyr ."; -Dresden Geneva Lyons..' :

6 00 •610 6 32 6 45 7 1 5 7 20 8 02 822 8 30 918 817 8 4 4 910 9 45 a m

SUNDAY TEAIKS—Going south and to Penn Yan —Leave Geneva 10 22 a. m. Going north leave Geneva 8 20 p. m. ,

Connections at .Lyons and Geneva with main line and Auburn road trains; at Williamsport with Philadelphia & Reading R. E. GEO. H. DANIELS. W. W. NORTHROP, '

Gen'l Pass. Agent, General Agent, New York. Williamsport, Pa.

a m 850 9 35

10 00 10 28 . 9 32

1014 10 24 10 43 1125 1130 12 00 1213 12 45 K55 12 25 100 130 2 38 315

p m 8 26

1018 p m .Hr

a m 7 2 0 7 5 4 9 1 2 9 4 2

1015 9 45

1005 10 28 10 45 Ulfr 1125 1217 12 38 1247 1 2 8

12 32 102 1 30 215 P m

p m 415 4 40 5 07 5 28 4 32 5 21-5 30 5 48 6 30 6 35 702 7 15 744 7 50 720 8 00 833 9 50

10 25 p m 5 50 8 29 a m

e

p m ; 2 85 3 13 4 2 3 4 53 5 30 4 55 5 1 5 5 40 5 55 6 2 5 6 30 7 17 7 37 7 46 8 38 7 32 7 58 8 201 8 55 p m

p m 7 20 745 811 8 38 7 32 825 8 34 854 9 35

Long Point •• Willard " Dresden " D6ys(f) " Kashong , " Geneva

"F" indicates boats stop on signal only, or. to land passengers.

Bath and Hsimmondsport Hailroad.' Time-table taking effect Sept. 13,1899.

Leave Bath 8 48 1 m, 3 08, 8 23 p. m. Arrive Hammondiiport 918 a m, 3 38, 8 48 j. 111 Leave Hammondsport 7 00, 1240 a m, 6 00 p in. Arrive at Bath 7 30, a m, 1 10, 6 30 p m.

Connecting wit 1 trains on the Erie Railroad at their station, and with the Delaware, Lackawan­na & Western Ra! lroad at their station at Bath, and with steamers on Lake Keuka at Hammonds-port. C. J DRAKK,

General Passenger Agent.

Lake Keuka Navigation Company. F i v e S t e a m e r s i n t h e F l e e t .

Leave Penn Yan at 6 45 a m, 10 30 a m, 1 30 p m, 2 15p m, 4 00 pm.

Arrive at Hammondsport at 9 15 a m, 1 00 p m, 3 45 p m, 5 45 p m, 6 30 p m.

Leave Hammondsport at 6 45 a m, 7 30 a m, 9 30 a m , 130 pm, 4 00pm.

Arrive Penn Yan 9 15 a m, 11 00 a m, 12 00 noon, 4 00 p m, 6 30 p m.

Steamers will make landings only on signal. Sunday steamer leaves /Penn Yan at 1030am

returning leaves Hammondsport at 12 45 p stops at Keuka, arrives Penn Yan 7 00 p m

Steamers connect with Erie Railroad and Dela­ware, Lackawanna Si Western R. R. at Bath, via the Bath & Hammondsport R. R., and at Penn Yan with the Fall Brook R'y and. Northern Cen­tral R'y. C.J.DRAKE,

General Passenger Agent.

p m 5 47 6 2 5 744 8 1 8 8 50

ESTABLISHED 1882.

Nebraska Loan & Trust Co.,

HASTINGS, - NEBRASKA

Capital Paid np, $500,000.

Guarantee Surplus, $136,̂ 0

G u n n u i t e e d First Mor'ir: •_•• - 'id De-benti'.M'!-- bearing M mi-a i . .n . l interest.

Every d irec t s : i (Ontiiv.n.i obligation of l l i is c o m p a n y lms rrci: i>:.id prompts ly a t m a t u r i t y .

S. SOUTHWORTII, Agent, * BANKER,

3 Seneca St., Geneva, N.Y.

1 STATE OF N E W YORK, OFFICE OF

the Secretary of State, Albany, July 27, lg99._pursuant to the provisions of sec-ion one of article fourteen oS, the Constitution of the State of N e w York, and section seven of Chapter nine hundred and nine of the L a w s of eighteen hundred and nine­ty-six, notice is hereby given that the f o l ­lowing prop6se"d amendment to article six, section seven of the Constitution of the State of New York is to be submitted, to the people for approval at the next gen­eral election to be held on the seventh day of November, eighteen hundred and nine­ty-nine.

A M E N D M E N T N U M B E R FOUR. Concurrent Resolution of the Senate and

Assembly.—Proposing an amendment to article six, section seven of the constitu­tion, relating to the court of appeals.

Whereas, the legislature a t its regular session in -eighteen hundred and ninety-eight duly adopted resolutions providing for an amendment to the constitution re-

Jiittne to t t v court of appeals, aria which resolutions were referred to the leg i s la ­ture to be chosen at t h e next gefteral elso-tion of senators, and directed! to be pub­lished in accordance wi th section one of artiole fourteen of the constitution; and Whereas, said resolutions have been duly pubUshed in accordance wi th law ,and the constitution, and referred to this legiala-ture for action; therefore, Section 1. Re­solved (Jf the assembly concur), that sec­tion seven of article s ix of the constitu­tion be amended to read a s fol lows: Sec. 7. The court of appeals i s continued.—It shall consist of the chief judge and asso-oiate Judges now in office, who shall hold their, offices until "the expiration or their respective terms; and their successors, Who shall toe chosen by the electors of the State. The official terms or the chief judge and associate judges shall he fourteen years from and Including the first day of j e / iuary next after their election. Five members of the court shal l form a quo­rum, and the concurrence bit four shall be necessary to- a decision. The court shall have power to appoint-and to remove, its; reporter, clerk and attendants. Whenever and a s often as" a majority of the Judges

.of the court of appeals sha l l certify to the governor that said court i s unable, by rea-Bon of the accumulation of causes pend­ing therein, to hear and dispose of the same with reasonable' speed, the governor shall designate not more "than four jus­tices of the supreme court to serve as_as-sociate judges of court of appeals. . The justices so designated shall be ifelieved from their duttes a s . just ices of the su­preme court and shall serve a s associate judges of the court of appeals until the causes undisposed of in said court are re­duced to t w o hundred, when they shall return to the supreme court, The govern­or m a y designate just ices of the supreme court to nU^vacancies. - N o Justice shall serve a s associate judge of- the cOurt of appeals except •yhlfegholdlng the office of Justice of the juppsejaej-court; and no mote than seven judges shal l s i t in any case . Sec. 2. Resolved^. (If the assembly concur), that the foregoing amendment be submit-ted-to the people for approval a t the next general election In accordance wi th the provisions of the election law. , ^ J a t g , ^ o f ¥*? York, I n Seriate, April 4, 1899.—The foregoing resolution w a s 3uly passed, a majority of all the Je&atdfi elected vot ing in favor thereof. B y of del - the Senate, TIMOTHY L . Wi

In effect May 14,1S99. GOING EAST—LEAVE GENEVA.

6 RR A . M . Daily, except Sunday. Local express. • UU-for Hayts' Corners, (Ovid Asylum) Shel­

drake, Famers, Trumansburg, Ithaca, El-mira, Sayre, Towanda, Tunkhannock, Pittston, Wilkesbarre, viaiich Chunk, Al-lentown, Bethlemem, Philadelphia, Balti­more, Washington, Easton, New York, and principal/intermediate stations. Connects for-aH points in coal regions.

9 00 a. in. Daily. Local for Variek, Kehdaia, • 0 0 Willard'; Lodi, North.Heetor, Burdett.Sayre

and intermediate points. Connects at Sayre for Wilkesbarre, and intermediate stations

1 ft M Sayre, Wilkes-Barre, Scrariton, Maucli l U . U l a m . Daily, Solid Vestibule Train for

Chunk, Allentown, Beading, Bethlehem, Philadelphia, Easton, Newark, and New J York, connecting for principal stations in ' the coaLregions.

If) RR a. m. Dally, for Sheldrake, Farmer, Tru-IV,UU mansbrug, Ithaca and all intermediate

stations. Q-flQ P- m. Daily, except Sunday, B L A C K LMQ DJAM0IUD E X P R E S S for Sayre,

Pittston, Wilkes-Barre, Scranton,- Manch Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Philadel­phia, Easton,*Newark, and New York, con­necting for principal stations in the coal regions.

7 Of) p. m. Daily; except Sunday.for Sheldrake, I >*-v Earmer. Trumansburg, Ithaca, Sayre, and

intermediate stations; p. in, Daily, for Farmer, Tramans'burg, Ithaca, Sayre, and all points east.

1 0 0 0 a. mi Daily,. Fast»Express for Sayre, IZ.AA Maueh. Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem,

Philadelphia, Newark, and New York, Does not stop at Wilkes-Barre.

GOING WEST—LEAVE GENEVA.

3 00 a. m, Daily, Solid Vestibuled Train for • 00 Rochester, Batavia, Niagara Falls, Chicago

and the west,

5 1 0 a. m. for Manchester, Eochester, Batavia, ••*jfl and Buffalo. ';

7 KR a. m. Daily for Clifton Springs, Victor, «u U Rochester, Batavia, Buflalo.Niagara Falls,

Chicago and the West.

9 An Daily, except Sunday, for Clifton Springs, *~' Victor, Rochester.

3 A K .p. m. Daily jftw Olifton Springs, Victor, «V o RbchesterySatavia, Bufialo andlntermedi-

• ate stations,

6 Knp. m. Daily for Clifton Springs, Victor, • J u Rochester, Batavia, BuSakvNiagara Falls,

Chicago and the west. •"-

7 * r p . m . Daily, except Sunday, B L A C K • 4 3 J M A M O K D E X P R E S S for Roches-

L 1 Z Z I E M. H E . \ . \ 1 . ; ) V ,

• P R A C T I C A L EMBALMER * 7 5 35asn .Street,

Night Calls, 153 Washington St R . M. K e n n e d y & S o n ,

Funeral Directors and Embalmer

J.W. GALIAGHER DEALER IK

9,

ter'.and Buffalo. 0 1 K p . m. to Manchester only

Pullman Palace and Sleepi: trains. Dining Cars/ a la caH trains

Cars on through on Day Express

aitfl Lips Ho. 16 Castle St., Opposite Kirkiocd

This stock embraces the Best Brandies and th« following superior brands of Rye Whiskius.

Thos. Moore, Hermitage, Bellaire Jas E. Pepper and Old Crow.

Price* 81.50, $2, $8,84 and «5 1 er gallon.

I

' Th© Famous

CEIFORWA AND KELLY ISLAKD I I S in bottles at40 cents, viz:

Port, Sherry, Tokay, Angelica, Mus­catel, Glaret, Sweet and

Dry Catawha. Same goods by the gallon at $1.25.

Sine foreign ajnd Domestic Cigars, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco. Pure Liquors for medi­cinal and family tises a specialty.

Goods delivered in the village without charge

5 0 YEARS' EXPERIENCE

of

Election Notice,—City of Geneva, STATE OF NEW YORk, )

OuTAjtro COUNTY CiEnk's OFFICE. > OiNiunmaijA, NI Y:, August 8,1899. )

Notice is hereby given, tfcat, at the General Election to beheld in this State on the Tuesday sui:ceedingthe first Slonaay^ln November next (November « h ) the folltwingiofflcers for the City of Gen*v« may be lawfully voted for, to wit:

A Mayor in the place o t Albert H. Herendeen. A President of the Common' Council in the

place of Millard F. Blaine. A City Treasurer in the placeof Frank Mynn. A Supervisor in the placeof Herman F. Fox. Two Aldermen for the jSrirt Waid to the placet

of O. J. Cammann Rose and J. IjttwrenceSlosaon. Two Aldermen for . the Second Ward in the

placesofW.K. Butler and D.H.Henry. Two Aldermen for the Third Ward.in the

places of W. E. Stubbs and John H. Bigby, Two Aldermen for the" Fourth Ward in the

places o f C W. Fairfax an* T,K Archer. Two Aldermen for the Fifth Ward in the placei

of John B. Alsop and Henry C.Manley. Two Aldermen for the Sixth Ward in the

places of Thomas D. Roger* and Daniel 3. Quln-All of whose terms of offloe wJn«xj*»on the

last day of December next. Given under my hand and Seal of Ontario

County thlgeighthdaTOfAtutOatlntheyear I t a ] one thoujand eltfrt tandwd «»d innetr

n t o e ' > . : . * . "

^M%^m

ly passed,; a majority of all the membejrs elected! td the assembly vot ing in favor thereof, fey order of the assembly,. S . ,F . KIXON, Speaker. -

State qt N e w York, Office of the Secre­tary of State, ssr I hare compared the pre­ceding copy of eonourrsnt resolution, pro­posing an amendment, to article eight, sec­tion t e n of-the Constitution, With o»e orig­inal concurrent resolution on file-in. this office, and I do Hereby certify mat the same Is a correct transcript therefrom, and of tbe whole -thereof. Given under m y band and tbe seal of office of the Sec­retary o f State, a t the c i ty of Albany, this twenty-seventh day of July* Jn the year of our Lord, one thousand e ight hua lred and ninety-nine. {I<. a.J . J O H N T. Mc­DONOUGH, Secretary of State. .

The foregoing Concurrent Resolution i s published once a week for three months next preceding the next general election to 0011/01111117 to the aforesaid provisions,, in two public newspapers in each county in this State representing respectively the t w o political parties polling t h e highest number of vote» at tbe last general elec­tion, and In one additional newspaper In each county for every one hundred thou­sand people in aUeh county a s shown by the l a s t preceding Statu lCntimB*»«M. J O H N T. McBOS< State,

„ State MHJOH,

Enumeration. Secretary of

S T A T E O F N f i W TOHK, OFSTCE OT the Secretary of State, Albanin, Ju ly *?. 1S99-—Pursuant to the provisions of section one of article fourteen o f the Constitution o f the State of N e w York, and section seven ot Chapter .nine hundred and nine of the L a w s ot eighteen hundred.and nine­ty-Six, notice IS hereby given that the fol­lowing proposed amendment t o article s ix , Of the Constitution of the Sfate of N e w f o r k i s to be submitted fo the people for approval a t th« next general election to b* held o n the seventh day of November, eighteen hundrtd and ninety-nine.

AMfiNDSOBNT N U M B E R jraJftfeB. , Concurrent Resolution of the Senate and

R U F F , President. State of Ni -

oor>-

few f o r k , I n A s s e m b l y April SS, 1899,-^-The' foregoing resolution w a s du­l y passed, q. majority of all the members elected t o the assembly vot ing i n fovpr thereof. By- order '«£ the aaseinbiyi S. F> NIXON, Speaker.

State of N e w York, Office of the-Secre-tary of State, s s : I have compared tbe pre­ceding- copy of concurrent resolution, pro>^ nosing a n amendment to article s ix. sec* l ion seven of the .Constitution, wi th the original concurrent resolution on file in this office, and I do hereby certify that the same is a correct transcript there, from, and of the whole thereof. Given under m y hand and the seal ot office 61 the Seeretr— '— " " " - -"" "

fiaples Branch. * " KSAVE GENEVA. -

1 0 . 0 5 a . m . , .Daily except Sunday. Stanley, Gorham, Rnshvple, Middlesex, Naples,

7 .10 p, IBU, Baily except Sunday-for Naples ano all intermediate stations. ' - , *

Seneca Falls Branch. GOTNGEAST..

S i80 a in, Waterloo 8ite, Seneca Falls 855. 4 . 0 0 p. m. Waterloo 4 45, Seneca Falls 5 00. 7 . 1 0 p m, Waterloo 7 25, Seneca Falls 5 33.

' LEAVE SENEpi FALLS; ft.lO a m, Waterloo ff 25. AiTi.Geneva 9 45. 5 . 3 0 p m, -Waterloo 6 00. Arr. Geneva 6 20, 7;35 jj.m. Waterloo 7 42« Arr. Geneva 8 00: ROLLIN H. WILBUR, Gen. Sup't, S6,BethlehenV CHAS.S-LEE, Gin. Pass. Agent, N e w p o r t . A. W. NONNEMACHER, I>iv. Pass. Agent,

South Bethlehem; 5a. <

A. A. ALLEN, City Ticket Agent, -B o o m l , O p e r a H o n s e B l o c k .

ATENTS TRADE MARKS

DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS A C .

Anyone sandlrig a sketch and description m»r uieWy1,jMcentaln our opinion free whether an

lnroBtlonJi probably patentable. CommimKa-UonSatrioHyconndentlaL Handbook on Patents aentfree. Oldest agraricy for Becnrin^patents.

patents taken: ffirongh Munn & Co. receire lf€Cfalnotice, without charge, in the

c American., *ed weekly.

Largest*!* Terms, »3 a

i'ttl. Sold by all newsdailew.

„ . . . . ^ SeiBroadway, tygyy TOfK •SSiSlofflcefa® F g U "Washington. D. C. M

ealationeSf any scfehtiflc journal. J«ar: tonrmonl

1-ye [idr< hundred and ninety-nine., IL. 3,1 JOHN

T. MeDONOTOH, Secretary o f States : ._. 1 "The foregoing Concurrent Resolut lon. i t

published once a w e e k for three months nex t preceding the next general ejection in conformity t o the aforesaid, provisions,

I n t l two . * ~ w ~ o number of votes a t the las t general-e lec­tion, and to one additional newspaper Hn each county for every oho hunflrea thou-—*"* """-'- ' ch county air shoTi '

McDONOTJi

Crenevjt, WatBrioo/"S6iieca Falls, aiSt v Cayuga^atee ^pa.qU<m Company,

Commencing at &S0 A-;jtcai^^leivSs^neya ey»-ery to/Bow;forrWaterlo6uattt3E^.E^*£-. < ~-.

Leaves Waterloo at 6 iu w. Seneca Falls at 6:30_ I I h~ at. anS-every half hour" thereafter Ifor Geneva, -f up to 10:53 P.M.. ""• • • ' • . • ' - • "

Leave Cayuga Lake Bark for the west, at >€:46-A. it. and every half fiour thereafter until 8S5

Last car leavesISeneca Falls for, Geneva at.J0:30 • P . M . • • - • • . - • • •"• - v ; - V » / • - , ; . • - . - -

Cats leavingGeneyS'at U aact i i s o r,x.~ntxlT']: run to powerTionse at Waterloo. ,. " . - ^ . - -, J

Last car leaves Geneva/st 10:30 £ . KvXor Seneca' Palls. -• *' ." W.C.GRASjGen.'Manager.' ': I ~ V V;KJ»wpoo-;£ENfEtas.A*enfc

Band people In such county a# shown By the last: preceding fttete JBnumeratfcm. J O H N V. MeUaNOTTCHEE, Secretary of State. i'- *

CLUBBING RATES We aire maMiig arrangements to club

he GAZETTE for the ensuing yeai* with Several popular city publicatSons-i-Biagi azines and weekly newspapers. So far ifae list comprises

The Gazettci and Bforper's Weekly, " ^ 4 25 Harper's Monthly, 4 20 Scnoner'& Magazine, * 3 2§ CJosmopoiitan Magazine, * 2 00 Eochester Union and Advertiser 1 ?$ <<Whattolat," a monthly dfe

Voted, to -the Calinary Art 1 50 Albany Weekly Argns, 2 00 Kewi&>rfc Daily; Journal, 7 00

(exclusive of Sunday): Other publications will be added as

we may be able to make arrangements theYefor.

• *>£* ' mm& '^msM Feed Davison's Onstless Oats.

I ^ A t K C A l O ^ A I O T A i ^ B T a . * •7 AS »Jtt,Stanley 805,mati$6 MtBeiHrYah 8,28,

WrftkhiaS 11, ElnHraa^S^aithporfimm,, I-IO pni;StaBley-iia )-B8lls44<^enn Yan ^ 0 1 ,

- ' m t k J n a 2 5 2 , E u i u ^ 3 « , W i l l S t o s i % * 6 5 . . « 1 5 p m , Stanley 6 45Sal l s6 5J>^enhJffin--7 33, \ • * WatSins^^.^BjorseBeaaa-SS*:: ' *"

IJSAVE WftErAMBEOEX'—koEIsL .? * SO a m , Elmtra -* 50, Watldhs S35, Eehn 35«i;,

7 Warn, Elmiifi ldDO, WatlMs^il?,«enn y#n> 31-3?, Ba l l sH<58s i i t , Siaailey IjJtOi^-nE; a f l S e j

' 9 S l r > W - X ! i i n > h ^ ^ , ' W a t l d n i r . ^ ^ ^ B e t e 7 ^ '

•'-'.:-ee^3,Stanley^ ean^dl^aff85"^^-•

ISAWBGJHJS * 0 H W i « 6 P « H v •7 B O a n v B f a e ^ J q g e H o n a a ^ ^ e v i g ' S S . ' .

•.••i Over the Ocean."""•. -Ocean.tieketsby^ the.beat transatlan­

tic Hues for tele af ifew t ^ r k Central ticket offices. Accommodations re­served and personal attention of Hew York Central steamship agent on the dock gives facilities jiever. before offered to the public, Staterobjja in your stateroom, and otherlL.-^,-,^..,, placed in hold, without annoyance to I passenger. JPoU; iMfonhation fr»eiy given at 0 t y Ticket Offloe, SoVBeneea.

r street, Geneva.

^ ^ *

T H ^

TRIP l ^ t w e e n I few YORK & VIRGINIA ig t tos t ; a t t ract ive and refreshing

NORFOLK,

W|IMA BEACH, " ' • r - / . / - f A N D "

i l ^ p O N D , VA., j ^ w l ^ g ^ t f u l ' Points to Visit.

StSSfess Steamers " Hamlltonf j ^46^8011^ "Princess knnt w i

Jamestown " now in service. Send for eopyof T H E P ^ O T -

OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP »

20jan-tf

York.

H.B. WALKER, Traffic Mar^e..

3. J.BROWN, Gen'l Pass AK

P i e r 2 6 , Nprth River, New

. G, BABBEB MS.MAl*? STREET,

tn ami-« _ E S T A B L I S H E l PUBLISHED EVEEl

Sr H. PARKER, P R I ^ ' O i E o e B o . H o . 19 SeM

TERMS IN AOVAI

Office j » i Mail Subscribers, p«f

JOB pSTfl o f erery descripUon e x e c n t e d l

< despatch, at * h e 3 o > «

i

r -

h

K E S T .

Hot with the EJUS I he | Hot with "the eyes I

^Slght and the day are Yet they-are naught

Green grows the grass : Birds to my gravesid^

Only the feet I love Thrill <through my lor|

Naked to God's clear ejl Since the warm yest t^l

&ere> where Sje1 jjody Here-doth the soul ab |

Bred of the -heart and Child of £heir marriagH

Frail was its garb of p a H God's peace enwraps i | ^

When to my soul yon Missing the body so.

Think not that I am did AIL of your grief I kno3

Jt i i Jny voice yon hearj mien, loving life so

You ̂ feel no passing fear| Wfth my glad soul to

Here, in this narrow b e d ! God gives me clearer e f l

A31 that I did and said lives on for paradise I

80 simple heaven is— t i f e i s infc truly blest

When death in speechless I Holdg wide the door ofl

-^FreCG. Bowles!

£00000000oooooooo<

I IDMA o a a o o

^§ ,, v B O A C o n s p i r a c y T h a t E e m a B r> -o O-

IF h emu p u n i s h e d 3Tor a Q n a r t f

C e n t u r y .

jgoooooooboooooooooj y p e r e c e n t t r i a l In M a r s e l j

a=of J u l e s I jmcralx f o r a n al lc

on Ids w i f e , M a r i e , l e d t o t b |

ot the r e a l p e r p e t r a t o r s

crime c o m m i t t e d 2 5 y e a r s

to t b e e x o n e r a t i o n p f a n i n i

The s t o r y o f t h e tr ia l ,

F r e n c h n e w s p a p e r , Is dram^ D u c r a i x d e a l t In s h i p ' s

w a s s u p p o s e d t o b e inc g o j i t e n c e s . I n h i s d e f e n s e h e ; h i s w i f e a s s a u l t e d h i m w i t And he showed the unheal on his left arm, made by w h e n h e ~ e n d e a v o r e d t o w a r ! .might h a v e o t h e r w i s e b e e n | blow. A t t h i s j u n c t u r e in note w a s h a n d e d t o t b e <_ counsel . W i t h p e r m i s s i o n ofl ne read t h e n o t e , a n d a s k e d ! eused f o r a m i n u t e or t w o . lowed t o t h e e o r n d o r t h e mail handed h i m t h e n o t e a n d sf t u r n e d ^ A t h i s r e q u e s t th |

"" w a s reca l l ed a n d q u e s t i o n e d follows:

" W h e r e w e r e y o n bora , mac "In P a r i s , I b e l i e v e " "Were y o u e v e r in P o i t o u H " N e v e r ! "

' W e r e y o n e v e r in B i i t tanyl "Never!" "Did y o u e v e r k n o w or se

named J a c q u e s S a u p i e i ?" " I n f e v g r d i d ! " " W e r e y o u n e v e r marr ied to

that n a m e ? " J "Never !"

"You s w e a r t h a t y o u w e r e nel ried t g one" r Jacques Saupier a i B saw-or jEhew "him ?"

"I d o BO s w e a r . " . Counse l t u r n e d and, g lanc in

the a u d i e n c e t h a t filled the coif h e e n e d :

" J a c q u e s S a u p i e r ' " A m i d d e e p s i l e n c e and w i t h •

flxecTupon h i m , a m a n svas sed Ing forXvard f rom the o u t s k i r J

t crowdr" H e w a s tall, d a r k ! s h a v e n , w i t h a s lop ing forehe a r e c e d i n g c h i n

" T h i s ^ w a y , J a c q u e s Saupierf se l s a i d , a n d t h e st i a n g e r m o v e ly-forward, with his ejes fixa the w p m a n . Wi th in three or fol 0fI1erj.be s t o o d and looked a t h^

a steady, unflinching gaze. She < ed^and t u r n e d a w a y her head, cotrnsel-i q u e s t i o n e d her

"Do you know this man?" "Xe§, yes, I do " " I s t h i s J a c q u e s Saupier?" "Oh, y e s , I bel ieve so " " I s h e y o u r l a w f u l h u s b a n d ? " "Xjes, y e s ' Oh, let m e go!" " W h a t h a s b e c o m e of y o u r

mour, L a c r n s e ? " "JEfe i s in pr i son for l i f e—dead

dead!"

" ^ h a t h a s t h i s t o do w i t h the the^court a s k e d ^ '^This w o m a n is a criminal ," ai ed t h e c o u n s e l , "and I ask you tain, h e r o n a c h a r g e of a doubb der, c o m m i t t e d 25 years ago." _

X b e , c o n v p l a i n t a g a i n s t D u c r a i H dismissed , a n d t h e w o m a n w a s 1 OVCT t o t h e po l i ce T h e narrat ive -follows fe g a t h e r e d from a rep toe p r o c e e d i n g s a l r e ^ l y mentio:

M a r i e R o z a n w a s the assoc ia t thief, s o m e t i m e s cal led Crasc^a •whose real name was Lacruse. In May,>1873.' L a c r u s e and one | planned a j o b b e r y a t L e m a n s , pt ef Maine , w h e r e P a s c o t had one e m p l o y e o L a s a e o a e h m a n . Mai c o m p a n i e d - f h e m . P a s c o t w a s a L 5nd Lacru0e , f l ed a n d a b a n d o n e t f l to her fa te^ S h e m a n a g e d to

-from -the n e i g h b o r h o o d and w a .

<». suffering from want and exj "Htll s h e r e a c h e d Mor la ix in Br She c o n t l n u e d r o n n p o n e of the • ""til she came upon a comf| nomestead, w h e r e l i v e d Henr i

, "•**>» his-v^ife a n d o n l y son . M. ^ **hed wme'QO acres of land ad|

~«8 t o m e - a n d w a s in good < • « n c e s , T )e in^ c o n s i d e r e d , in f a

IJea l thy m a n In t h e d i s t r i c t T | fe JPF**' ™ " , 1 1 ( r t par t i cu lar ly In!!t u * a r n e d " a ^ a d reputa t io i • ^ W b o r h o o d , h a v i n g t w i c e

•wafey f r o m b . l s*parents a n d ^th it. H e w a s n e v e r fOnd o l *e truth o f t h e m a t t e r b e i n g * ? been s p o i l e d i n t h e bringing

lr,*8« b ) B f d r e * " * o n t n e e v e i *y 80,18XS, S a u p i e r s a t in t h e r ! n & I « o l t l n g u p , h e s a w i 7 <1&(t w o m a n , s t a n d i n g w |

*tt4 o n t h e j g a t e a n d h e r e y e s ^ ? a i i m . -

"Pier, ^ p i o w a s ^ t t g tou|

- j £ h te p o o r "woman w a n t s .

| ^ P « r e « l y - e n c o u r a g l a b y t h j

" • " ^ o f t h e o i d r f l a ^ M «Peoed t h e w i e T c e t a n d J m t l

, * ^ h m b a n d a i a w i f e l « ° ^ » « M r t o s t h a t h e r n a l

w » d t e B i h g h o w l , •—-•"Bia»t ytw d r o w c ««? b r o t h e r ^ * g i n - t i i e J ^ y o a ; « a d U«># s h e

w ^ 0 ^ •**'*** *"**» w a « p e n n i l e B s

« t h d e c e n t

i ^ J a t l f l d