{ title: 'The New York farmer. (Cooperstown, N.Y.) 1893-19??, September 08, 1893, Page 7, Image 7', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/np00290001/1893-09-08/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/np00290001/1893-09-08/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/np00290001/1893-09-08/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/np00290001/1893-09-08/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Fenimore Art Museum
. faith and prayer. ° , tho:other six «lays of; tgig‘week sais to- ane L¥ne week. R Or BPASMODIC;: _ Gennine reli s not spasmodic, 1 dbesixbbépvby i nd 'starts, ds not an Your E ‘fgmha-on'steadflnnv wteop hills and. E along dangerous declivities, its: eye ever | on the everlasting hills crowned with . the castles of the blessod. - E. toshow you how we may bring our re- E Higion into ordinary life and practice it E tm comma things-yéesterday, today, $ tomorrow. &., E ought: to bring religtondato our ordinary $ ~A flam breaks, and two- E. .of three villages are:snbmerged, a South | American earthquake.awallows. a city, E versation think they sro erigiging in re- $ Hgious service when there may be no. re- E Bigion at all, ' I heve noticed that in pro- f portion as Christian . deathbeds aind hearses: and tombstonés l tween this and that, Yet how seldom IF © the conversation is hushed, gud things E.~ summer day, the forests full of song and E > seen a social circle that professed tate p> lasting E ~ is that en professing the faith of the : ~ are \often so inconsistent that sEPTEMBER 8, a8o3. ___ PE ul wEEK DAY RELIGION, | +e practicat Theme or on. TAL MAGE'S SUNDAY SERMON, Religion. Xs Applicable to the Common» place Affairs of Lifo-The Aggregate. Xm» portance of Small Things-\In. All Thy Way#k Acknowledge Him.\\ ' Sept. $ -Rev; T. De Witt: [ Talmage in sélecting. a topic for today , \ choseoneiofpractical value to all classes | only a day's wages in his pocket. as cer- | - -viz, 'Week Day Religion,\ The text is from Proverbs iii, 6, \In all thy ways ; \There has beon & [ acknowledge him.\ i tendency in all lands and ages to set apartcertgin days, places | religion of Jesus Christ who donot bring | and occasions For especial religions serv. - ~ ice, and to think that they formed the . realm in which religion was chiefly to act, - Now, while holy days and holy , - places bave their use, they can never be a substitute for continuous exercise of In other words, a man cannot be so : good a Christian on Sabbath that he can . afford to bea worldling all the week, If a steamer start for Southampton and sail one day in that direction and the other elx days sail in ~othor directions, how long before the gtegmer will get to Southampton? Just as soon as the man will get to heaven who sails on the:Sab- 'bath day toward thatwhichis good, and ward the world, the fidsh and the devil. .so mudth at. the Sabbath t ford . religious 'on. cAn, attack of chills aud fevrer-now cold un- til your teeth clatter, now 'hot until bones ache; ° Genuine religion {propose, so far :as 'God may help me, And,; in 'the first 'place, Lremark, we nd people begin to talk about the un- erta tizififitgiihxdn Ife, and fn that con- \ A { experience is shal- low mon talk about bout: funerals and and epitaphs, | 00 ~ (~; If aran have the religion of thegos- 'pel in ifs full power in his soul, he will talk chiefly about this world and the etérnal world and very little compara tively about the insignificant pass be- it is that the religion of Christ is a wel- come theme! If A man-full of the gospel of Christ goes into a religious circle and bogins to talk about sacred thirfs, all. become exceedingly awkward. Asona chirp and carol, mighty chorus of bird harmonies, every branch an orchestra. if a hawk appears in the all the voices ars hushéd;so I 'havo,.sometimes Christian: silénced by the appearance of the great theme of Cod and religion. © Now, my friends, if we have the reli- glonof Cbrist in our soul, we will talk E aboutit in an exhilarant mood,; It is. - more réfreshing than the waters, it is brighter than. the sunshine, it gives a man Joy hore and prepared. him f : happiness before -the throne: of 'happin Add : room, feeling that something ought to be said, puts ono foot over the other and sighs heavily ahd says, \Oh yes; that's so!” » u My friends, the religion of Jesus Christ isnot something to be groaned about, but something to talk about and sing sbout, your face irradiated, Tho trouble ' they ato. afraid their conversation will no€G harmonize with their life. 'We can-. not talk the gospel unlesswe live the gospel. You will often find aman whoo. entire: life is full of inconfistencies fill- ing 'his conversation with such 'expres . sions as, 'We are miserable. sioners,\ \The Lord help us,\ \The Lord Bless you,\ 'interlarding .théir conversation } : __ With such phrases, which are more -cant=, ~ ~ing, and canting is the worst kind of | f isy, e { Ll - If A man havo thé grace of God in his heart dominant, he can talk religion, and | dt will seem natural, and men, instead . of beinggepulsed by it, will bo attracted by it. Doyou not know that when two ~ Christian peoplé tallcas they . - the thing@ of Christ and heaven God gives mpecial attention, and ho writesit a; win. - Malachi if, 10, 'Then \they other, and the and hoard, 2&3 book of remembrance was writ- 1mm: F ZYRXTDAY a¥¥ 'the religton of. Mk __ spond: thing Aor 'batloirs mrid \Lor ship- * A In my thread and needle atore, | - will help you in it. If yomare a fisker= talking with the Samafitan woman, '[getteth riches and not by right shall forever: - $ God, And yit, if the'theme of: religion | F beintroduced hito a circle, everything $ . is silenced-silenced unless perhaps an: \ aged Christian nian in the corner of the feared the Lord talked one to the | Christ into our or» |. dinary 'employniémts. yor say, |- \that's a Fery good. thoory for aman who : ' ”m CC C f = cant. thing in giant life is of enough im- portance to attract thie attention of the | Lord Clod Almighty? - ~ . My brother, you cannot be called to do anything so insignificant but Cod | man, Christ will stand by you as ho- did | by Simon when he dragged CGennesaret. Are you a drawer of water? He will be with you as at the well curb whoen'| Are you a custom house officer? Christ will call you as he did Matthew at the . receipt of custom. . The man who has | tainly needs religion as he who rattles | the keys of a bank and could abscond: And yet there are. men who. profess the: the religion of the gospel into their ordi-. nary occupations and employment., | ~ There are in the churches of this day moh who seem very devout: on the Sab A/. week. A country merchant arrives in this city, and he goes into the store to \buy goods of a. man who professes reli- gion, but has no grace in his heart. The country merchant is swindled. Heis too exhausted to go home that week; he tar- ries in town. On Sabbith he goes to some church for consolation, and what is his amazement to find that the man who carries around the poor box is the very one who. swindled him. But never hind, The deacon has his black coat on now and looks solemn and goes home talking about that blessed sermon! Chriss tiunifonEunday. 'W orldings during the week. GOD SEES SMALL SINS, . That man does not realize that God knows every dishonest dollar 'he has in through the fron wall of his money safe, 'and that the day of judgment is coming, and. that \as the partridge sitteth on. eggs and hatchoth them not, so he that Tesvo thom in the midst of his days, and at his end shall bo a fool.\ But how many thero are who do not bring the religion of Christ into their everyday occupation. Thay think religion'ia for Sundays. Suppose you wore to go out to'fight for your country in some great contest, would you go to do the battling at Troy or at Springfield? No, you would go thore to get your swords and muskets, 'Then you would go out in thefacé of the ensmy and contend for your country., Now, I take the Sabbath day and the church to be only the armory where we aro to got equipped for the great.-battle of life, and that battléficld is Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Fri- day and Saturday. \Antioch and \St. Martin's\ and \Old Hundred\ are not worth much if we do not sing all the week, A sormon is of, little account if weo-cinnot Garry it behind the counter and, behind the plow. 'The Sabbath day is of ho value if it last only 24 hours. > \Oh says some one, \if I had a great sphero, I would do that. If Tcould have lived in the time of Martin Luther, if I could have been Paul's traveling com- prnion, if I had some great and resound- ing work to do, then I should put into appli¢ation all that you say.\ I must admit that the romance and knight er- rantry have gone out of life, There is but very little of it left in the world, The temples of Rouen have been changed into smithies. The classic mansion at Ashland has been cut up into walking - sticks. The muses have retreated be- fore the emigrant's ax and the trapper'« Alleghany and the Rocky mountainsand see neither an Oread nor &a Sylph. The groves where the gods used to dwell have been cut up for firewood, and the man who is looking for great spheres an great scenes for action will not. find them, And yet there are Alps to scale, there are Hellesponts toswim, and they are incommon life. It is absurd Afor you to say that you would serve God if you had A great sphere. Ifyou do not sorvée him on asmall scale, you would n6t on a large weale. If you cannot. i stand the bite of a midge, how conld you. endure the breath of a basilisk? ' A TARIFF ON ArnovaNogs, thing it belittling to put a tax on pins and & tax.on buckles and a tax on shoes, Tho individual taxes do not amount to much, but in the aggregate to millions and xnillions of dollars, And I would tariff on every annoyance and yexation that comes: through your s This might not amount to much in single cases, but in the aggregate it would be a. | great revenue of spiritual strength and satisfaction. | |_ A'Bés can suck honey even out of & nettle, and if you have the grace of God in your heart you can got swestness out of that which would otherwise frritate me that a conmmpany of adventurers: row- ing. up the Ctanges were stung to death 'with the carcasses of men slain by insect 'conquer theso. small troubles. Suppose a soldier should af few enemios-I won'tload my fun; walt man does not serve his country in a Af you are not faithful going out Against: [ the: single. hay _ life you would not be faithful when 'great disasters with their thunderingar- tillery came rolling: down overthe soul. |ought to bring the religion of Jesus E eran ass maze oe office or shop or factory hardly see from stroke to stroke that: bath who are far from that during the | his pocket, that God is looking. right |; gun, and a Vermonter might go over the | Our national government does not have you, ob, Christian man, put a high | | and-annoy.~. A returned missionary told . by flies that infest that region at certain - seasons, 1 have- seen. the earth lannoyances, The only way to get pre- {pared for the great troubles of life is to only & skirmish, and there are only d. | until Iget into some. great general an-. | gagombnt.\® | That manis a coward and. 'Would be a coward in any sphere, Ifa: h, he wilt not in a Waterloo. And: hayded misfortunes. of this. “fain-1 ngs me to another point . 'We ho | Christ intoall our trials, If we haven | & | bereavement, if we loss our fortune, if ; t trouble blast like the b8M--] an, then we go to God for comfort, but | trai or' ; very different man from what I was.\ , and making. you l¢ss.and. less of a man. - Yomgointo 'an 'artist's studio; You' ér?\ With hismallet and his chisel he: oes click, click, click! and you can tone, and yet the work is going on,: \Oh!\ Ke replies, \that would shatter thestatue, I must make it in this way, ' stroke by stroke.\ cinated. man. Heis shaping him for time and 'shaping him for eternity. I say, \O Lord, why not with onetremendous blow | . of calamity shape that man for the next | I deal with this man; it is stroke after | stroke, annoyance after annoyance, ritation afterirritation, and after awhile |, he-will be done and a glad spectacle for angels and men.\ - THE DAY OF SMALL THINGS, {od. Not by one great stroke, but by ten| thousand little strokes of misfortune are men fitted for heaven. You know that | being paid out in small sums of money, and the largest estate of Christian char-] acter is sometimes entirely lost by these small depletions. 20, | \Ve must bring the religion of Jesus | Christ to helpus in these little annoy anced. ' Do:not say that anything is too insignificant to affect your character, Rats may sink a ship. One lucifer match may destroy a temple. A queen | got her death by smelling of a poisoned -|. rose. The scratch of a sixpenny nail | may give yoh thelockjaw. Columbus, by asking for a plece of bread and a 'drink of water at a Franciscan convent, came to the discovery of a new world. | And thera'is a great-connedtion between trifles and immenasities, between noth- Angs and everythings.- Do you not.suppose that God cares for your insignificant sorrows? Why, my friends, there is nothing insignificant in your life. How dare you take the re sponsibility of saying that there is? Do 'you not know that the whole universe is not ashamed to take care of one violet? I say: \What are you doing down thero in the grass, poor little violet? Nobody knows you are here. Are you notafraid nights? You will die with thirst, No- body cares for you, You will suffer; you will perish.\ \No says a star, \Ill watch over it tonight.\ \No says the cloud, \Tll give it drink.\ \No says the sun, \TH warm it in my bosom.\ Ard then the wind rises and comes bending down the grain and sounding its psalm through the forest, and I say, \Whither away, O wind, on such swift wing?\ and it answers, \I am going to cool the cheek of that violet.\ And then I see pulleys at work in the sky, and the clouds are drawing water, and I say, \*What are you doing there, 0 clouds?\ They say, 'We are drawing water for that violet.\ And then I look down into tho grats, and I say, \Can it be that God takes care of a poor thing like you?\ and the answer comes up, \Yes yes; God clothes the grass of the field, and he has never forgotten me, a poor violet.\ Oh, my friends, if the heavens bend down to such insignificent ministry as that, I tell you God is willing to bend down to your case, since he is just as careful about 'the construction of a spider's eye ashe: is in the conformation of flaming gal- axies. Plato had a fable which I have now nearly forgotton, but it ran something like this: He said spirits of the other world came back to this world to find a body and find & sphere of work. One 'spirit came and took the body of a king 'and.-did his work, Auother spirit came and took the body of a post-ind did his work, - Afterawhile Ulysses came, and \he said: \Why all the fire bodies are. taken, and all the grand work is taken.\ 'There is nothing left for me.\ Andsgome: one replied, \Ah the best one has been iéft for you.\ Ulysses said, \W hat's that?\ And the reply was, \The body of a common man, doing i common work and for a common reward.\ A 'good fable for the world and: just as good fable for the church, - But, I remark again, we ought to bring the religion. of Jesus Christ into | our ordinary blessings. Every autumn the president of the United States find. the governors make proclamation, and we aro called together in our churches: | to give thanks to Clod for his goodness. But every day ought to bo a thanksgiv- ing day. We fake most of the Blessings. of lifeas a matter of cours, 'We have. had ten thousand blessings this morning 'for which we bave not thinked Cod., 'Before the night: comes we will have &. thonsand more blessings you will never think of mentioning before God.. How 'To APPRECIATE OUR. DLESKINGA - We imust-gee a blind man led-along by - this dog before we' learn what agrand | thing it is to have one's eyesight. 'We | must see a man with St. Vitus' dance be- 'fore we learn what a grand thing it is. to have the use of our physical energles. . [ We must see some soldiercrippled, linp- ' ccataleeve pinned up, before 'we learn what a grand. thing it is tohave the use: -of all our physical faculties In other. words, weareso stupid ‘thwnothlnghntv © thotxghfm «macho? can wake us: up toan appreciation of our commen: anxieties, you have your véxambiOn8. |retern home. Not an adcident, not an: \Oh you. say, \they don't shape MY Nothanks. | © | character. Since I lost my: child, since |. \Jn |I have lost my property, I have been a greatefulf when 50 people Tose their lives I and you get off than you are gratefult6 My brother, it is the listle annoyances | God when you all get off and you have | ofyour life that are souring your dig- Ing glarm at all, Now, you ought to be | position, dlipping your moral character' thantefal when you escape from accident, | 'but more thankful when they all escape. | ou T 18 io, YoA'lIn the.one.case your gratitude is some- gee 'him making a piece of seulptur®.| what selfish; in the other it is more like You say, \Why don't you strike hard-|- what it.ought to be. common blessings, how little we appre- Alanadine {One , ciate: them and how soon we forget thereis any impression made upon Like the ox grazing, with the 1 with & hundred thonsand hari dollars. -| You say, \Why don't you strike harder?\ plover up to its eyes, Tike the bird pick- , prute, but perhaps I wronged the brute. world?\ God says, \That's not the way I do not know but that among its other it : what we call \irrational creation.\ The cow that stands under the willow bythe | thankful, and who can tell how much a 160. - 1 : *the flowers smells like incense, and the large fortrnes..can soon be seattered DY | mist arising from the river looks like the and our King, and we do not.even think. Ang wlong on his crutch of hisempty } lite cogs, but to Me| . SOLD EVERYWHERE. \In Other words, you stem to bemore | Oh, these common mercies, these: you gop to: Boston in safety. | Then you FBTTSINZEI§S _ L.E. SYLYESTER, General Insurance Agent, - cooprarstowk, N. Y. PHILIP H. POTTER, | Real Esme and [mumm- The T able Shali Not Be Efir -__- RENTB COLLECTED: TAYLOR BLOCK, COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. ingthe worm out of the furrow-never , thinking to thank God, who makes the: MB *:\! grass grow and who gives life to every M é And he-continues ON} living thing from the animalont» in the by week and month until after awhile} sod tothe seraph on the throne. Thanks- every man that enters the studio8 f@8- | giving on the27th of November, in the rate Lou. f | gutamn of the year, but blessings hour Well, I find God dealing with .s01a8 by hour and day by flay and no thanks at all, I compared our imdiffefence to the tinctsit may have an instinct by which cognizes the divine hand that feeds {' I do not know but that God is through it holding communication with watercourse chewing its cud looks very bird means by its song? The aromas of smoke of a morning sacrifice. Oh, that wewere as responsivel {> _ If you were thirsty and asked me for a drink and I gave you this glass of water, your common instinct would reply, \Thauk you.\ And yet, how many chalices of mercy we get hour by hour) from the hand of the Lord, our Father to say, \Thank you.\ More just tomen twawfiod. , RATITUODE , Who thinks of thanking God forthe water gushing up in the well, foaming. in the cascade, laughing over 'the Rheks, pattering in the shower, clapping its Hands in the sea? | Who thinks to thank God for that? Who thinks to thank God for the air, the fountain of life, the bridge of sunbeams, the path of sound, the great fan on. a hot. summer day? Who thinks to. thank God for this won- derful physical organism, this sweep of vision, this chime of harmony struck into the car, this cnmson tide rolling through arteries and veins, this dram- ming of the heart on the march of im- mortality? I convict myself, and I convict every one of you while I say these things, that we are unappreciative of the common mexscies of life. And yet if they were withdrawn, the heavens would withhold their rain, and the earth would crack open under our fest, and famine and desolation and sickness and woe would stalk across the earth, and the whole earth would become a place of skulls. Oh, my friends, let as wake up to an appreciation of the common mercies of life. Let every day be a Sabbath, every meal a sacrament, every room & holy of holies. We all have burdens-to bear; let us cheorfully bedr them. W6 all have Marth ard fronts Works - COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. | agyysnc MENORIALS FOR THE DEA}. Funeral Director SIVER & KNAPP,\ DENTIST 8, COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. Crown and Bridge Work, or Teeth without. Plates. a speciality, D R. SIVER. . ___ A. § ENAPP.. A. 8. PRENNEY. - 1&eran LEONARD. PHINNEY & LEONARD, Real Estate Agency. HookerBlock. - - __ Cooperstown, N. Y. [ T have exclusive right ot the town of Ot: sego to use OGdontander for the painless local Anesthetic Known: hi Dr. G. 1. WADSWORTH, | |. Lala f RD: .|OTSEGCO COUNTY PEOPLE.] General Insurance, the people of this county. Prices reasonable. When attending County Conrt bear in') q mind that T BETH EXTR ACTED WITHOUT PM“. | erat rates at this hotel. It will pay you fo give the place & trial and be convinced. extraction of Teeth. This is thesurest and safest | OPEN ALL THEY EAE [New Central |K Tuxs House -<=AND- His all the Modern Improvements, |fsp fe tgs Maley THOMaA 'Dat celled. cooperstomn. N. g v1 POTTER, Manager, COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. RTOTMICE To CREDITORS -Porkuint to an the connty. of Otsego, notice is hereby glvel,. Becoming to Jaw, to gll. persons hating dating {against the estate of |.coaged, late of the town of Middleficld,.in said county, I required t hiblt the same, with. vouchers thoreof, tc the nderigned - administrator, with the will annexed of the goods, chattels and credits of the.said deceased, TI.a+.l T ham , P in - Fil F! /| dits of the said Receased ACEO Ts . 1LPL I T | at Bis place of business in the village, of k VCA V A. K VAiA V & 3“‘e,stow:n.~m said county, on or 'before. the.80th |, , day of December next, ~ order of Albert C. Tennant, surrogate-of =. Mary D. Sherwood, de» 'that they are required to sxhibl Dated June 26th. 1898. _._ . ;-) ' PHELIP:H. POTTER, Administrator, - Rim6 20. withthe will annexed, etc, , . . nous. hee ' Specifl Announcement to . gNDER its new manggeémént the more\ will be conducted in a tanner to especially meet the requirements of ers and others will be given lib- NOTICE TO OREDITORS. -Pureiy the county of Otsego, notice is hereby @1 cording to law. to all persons hay! - {against the estate of Adella Clilbe late of the town of Hartwick, in sal that they are required to exhibit the sams, with vouchers thereof, to the tindersigned executrix of the last will and testament of the maid de- ceased, at her place: of residence in. the town of | New Lisbon, in said. county, onor before the 17th _ ~ Dated June 10, 1898. order of Albert 0. Tehnant, n. im r « unt is: ay of December next: . . - ELIZA A.JAGOBS, Tne \___ Hxéoutrix. Cooperstown, N. Y. Sly - DENTIST. E. WHIPPLE, Proprietor, LaB E. A. POTTER, Proprietor. Ceo. A. Bailey, FLY CREEK,. N. Y , B DEALER IN | All Kinds of Funeral. Supplies. |, No extra charge for Hearse and Team. w. A. THayEH®, Pres. H. M. Pisros, V. Pres. THE OTSEGO COUNTY FARMERS Co-Operative Fire Insurance 60. | Insures Farm and detached property only, at actual cost. A. C. SHIPMAN, Secretary, , ~ For the Feet? - I will Ty it! éfi Dr. Rosell's Zeaoalr'yy, EDO | OR FOOT POWDER, & Is the Bost 'Enown Remedy £ r the Cure of SWEATING, SWELLING, ACHINO, TEMDERX and TCRED FEET, INGROWING NAILS, VARE- CGSE VEINS, CIRKS, BUWIONS, &c. WHEELMEN USE iT, Price 25¢, Druggists or Mail.. R. D. PALMATEER, Waterford, N.Y. BOLD BY DRUGGISTS GENERALLY. battles to fight; let us courageously fight them. If we want to die right, we must live right. You go home and attend to your little sphere of duties I will go home and attend to my little sphere of duties. You cannot do my work; L cannot do your work. Negligence and indolence will win the hiss of everlasting scorn, while faithfulness will gather its gar- lands and wave its scepter and sit upon its throne long after the world has put 'omashes and eternal ages have begun their march, Dancing Amid Daisfes. A \daisy dance\ is the latest in enter- tainments given by an originat young lady at her summer home,. Adjoining the old homestead is a great daisy field. The white petals of the flowers stretch afar before one's eyes in a'sheet.of snowy whiteness. In the center of this field was erected a dancing platform, Atone efid the musicians sat beneath a mam- moth daisy, that had been made by the village carpenter and draped with white cheeso cloth. The sides of the wased dancing floor were also draped with this inexpensive material to harmonize with the whiteness of the surrounding daisy field. * The young hostess receivedher friends. lorof the country house Hressed in a simply made white silk mulle gown, and wearing only gold jewelry .and natural \jardiniers:-were those same pretty field ' blossoms. 'The lady guests were request- surely white, with daisies for floral dee- York Advertiser, | Insuring Against Bad Fenmnies \There has lately been organized a rent by bad tenants. _ The scope of der to ' a businées of keeping informed as to the standing of tenanta, and for . sideration landlords are #upp information which often ; | indesirable tenarite: ont of - b £. ental stage, in the white and bam boo furnished par- 'Gaisies for ornaments. The mantel be- | 'fore which she stood and the wide win- | dow sills were banked with daisies, and | trailing about the mirrors snd. in great. edto wearwhite of any material, but | orations, And the chuflmafi'ineseoflhs' | fair ones as they danced. in the light. of Im bright July moon cin best 'be imag- guarantee company, the 'business of: which is bo insure landlords against loa : ; this company ds a little: wider than it would seein 86 first In or- reduce ite risks to a minimum 14: acon, Y with has them to- st out in | 35 Arve: i's conomonr powners **! Building Paper. - ~ best at #1. Ferroil _ { . I- Laie a oo. Opens Sept. 5th,fin Teaches in a practical way the branches need- ed !n business, fitting its students to fli positions ‘ as business managers. accountants. cashiers. Remodeled Apartments. stenographere, eto Students may enter at iny time, for one branch or a full course. Circulars free SHIELDS & HENDRICK. NLLER & (0., Bankers and Brokers, 16 AND 18 BROAD ST., NEW YORK CiTY, Buy and Sell Stocks, Bonds, Grain and Provisions, for cash or on margin. Orders executed in all Stooks and Bords dealt in on NEW YORK, PMHILADELPNLA, BOSTON, CHICA- GO, MONFREAL and other Exchanges, A high class of State, City and Town Bend constantly on hand Orders ur instructions may be telegraphed at our expepse. Daily Market letter on ayplioa gigs.” lon-espondeuce lavited and strictly con- entlal, ''The dows of theevening most carefuily abun, Those tears of the sky for the loss of the sun.\ - [ Chesterfield. DIPHTHERIA, or any form. of Sore Throat, cured by pr. Hoxsics & - _ This remedy acts at onee upon the tissues of itherlhroatand Prevents 'the formation of the white tmhembrane. {Sold by druggists, Price;50 conts. AP. HOXSIE,. Buffalo, N. Y.. M'f'r. _ of suffering, Whélivi‘35' cents . ' will buy a bottle. of Paid up Capital, - Surplus and Undivided Profits, 100,000. trators are solloited. On New York,. England and all principal points | Ireland and the Continent, for sale. department on aH sums of $5 and upwards, un- der the rules. 12 Low Priced! # CROUP CURE | {Chase & G. TYLEY'S| 2. 'and inspect his fine I f © Second National Bank DRY 60008 !| - © oce a CASH STORE QF N. Y. [Jnocessor to Bank of Cooperstown.] - $200,000. ALso 2 L P - ROCKRRL | d1ASWAR, |- 1x PAGE ATL ~ | Staple Gnois, runtifise vit HB ___ C. POMEROY KERSE, | - _- President. L. L BURDITT, - >- - Vice President. G M. JARVIS, - - - - Cashier. DIRECTORS. G. Pomeroy Keese, L. I. Burditt Walter 8. Bunun, B. P. Luce, Caleb Clark, Robart Quaif, B.F. Murdock. George Brooks, W. D. Burditt. ACCOUNTS of Firms, Corporations, Manu- acturers, Individuals, Executors and Adminis w -* DRAF'ES. in Europe, at the lowest rate. Steamahip Tickets toand from §nzlsnd. INTEREST DEPARTUOENT. 'The Bank continues to allow interest .in this Geo. L&White's . FURNITURE! always ARTISTIC and always A careful inspection of his Stock Will Convince You Fine furniture does NQT mean High Prices with hi THE .EXCLUSIVE SALE COFFEE -ONX THER- World's Fair Grounds -HAS BEEN- of Boston. Austin & Delong -HAVE THE- Exclusive Sale -OF TEE- - Sanborn Coffee for this Vicinity. Thorefore gll can enjoy the loxury of a. without going tol‘Chyleago. ; PAIN-KILLING - _ Magic: Oil. ~ \It Works like a Charm\ _ 'for Sore Throat, Cramps, Chol- era Morbus, Rheumatism, New- ralgia, and Pains of all kinds. Doméatic Animals need- ~A. ror particulars, call on or address. | 10\ p' 'W;.F.J€§&~w‘h | Your chole qtziopplgvidg on 30,000 acres6f good. 36 houts ride from Bufalo, N. Y. te. SILV ERWARE - Granted to Chase & Sanborn { ;| Gass and Putty. Situated: in Potter Co., In“? 'Only B81 to 85 per nore. \ © This is one of the New Spring Styles .of Casos-Gold Canes. ws SELL‘ MORE . T | Than guy firm in the County, Are our _Speo‘ia1ty, Only She Best of American Watches B SOLD. As a Side Line we sell a L¥tHe SOLID SILVER GO008 1: Our prices average one-third below. would-be. compelitéers. ~ .. f * nie mices j . B$ CALL AND sn is. micromp JEWELRY s'rsons . HARISON BROS. & 00. - _,; Town and Country Paints? of Yata Best made, Also full line of Lead and J. W. LAM 7- Easy tkans. BE your Own own TENANT! H. M. Hooker & Co. &A. NE Aréute for the Vermont Term N | To F4 1 BAGK A 00K, 106 Dos: Compan m separston (acts Tenor N. C., Mai