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l J of to at AlLY E Vol. IV.-Whole Number1,235 BATAVIA, N Y., MON]).A\Y EVENING, JUNE z6, 1f\82. Price One cent ----~---- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. WHAT WE ClN OFFER. Mechanics will·6nt1 .that in Batavia they can enjoy a.ll the advantages of life in a small city like Rochester, and at a much less cost, Batavia has no water pO\ver, to be sure, bn t that is no advantage in this instance, at least, for Mr. D~wey took occasion to say heretb.at r;heydid not care for water power. 'The land Jequirecl for a site by the Johnston Company, would cost a g:reat deal t:Mre in Rochester and itis doubtful if so advantageous a site could be secured in that city at a.ny J>rice. Workmen will accept wages f11orn ten to fifteen per cent. less Ln Batavia than they would in Rocheste1·, U':RLtNGLE OVER A. BRIDG;IC, OA.Kll'lELD OFEEBINGS. !!lilll\lOD.8 TronbJe llletweeu. llaU- : A: S·urgJ&li'Yo Pcl\I!Oia:t\'1 . .P.rtil'UI!,':II\ft~JJ.II!I (r~pilofWm, Courtney, NewYork,) ( '\ \ Sig. Nuoo, B11ffalo, N.Y.) TEA OHER OF PIAN 0 · And Voice Ctdture, ~ession 'l)a:y,-Tt•I!SUAY, FR.IDAY & SATt:RDA.Y. Opera House, (t!:p stairs.\ The Choicest Line of Goods for Upholstering BA!XA.VI..4.'8 NUMEROUS &DYANXA.• GES OYER lWOHESXEB. Wb.F Tho Johnston Earveli'ter Works l!ib()ald LoCI! te ·Here- Everything in Batavia's favor. read DieD. llia}lpUy Ave:;:.~;ect. ~uui ImanU.~I!lw. 'The place where the Lacka.wa.nna O~tKFIELD,June z6.-Fridaynidht Ever ~!>own m We,ten New York, , is Now to be S~Ben a.t DAILEY'S. B R:I.i.'\ (j un your lrames, Sofas, TeteES I'a. tent !{ocker~, Fuilt Rest~, Ottomans• or an:9 article d l'unliture, and 1mve 1t covered with any goods you may select• and at LOW PRICES. The very best of satisfat1on guaranteed. The Rochester Democrat this morning has a lengthy article, in- tended to present to the Johnston Harvester Company the advanta.ges of Rochester as a. location for their works. The Democrat says the people of Brockport have felt that they could offer no argt1ment to the proprietors fm rebuilding there. and it has been well nigh settled in their minds, that the company would for tl1eir advantage, whicb. is patent, locate in some railxoad center.- Their business demands the best shipping facilities, and they are men who will be quick to look to their advantage, now that they have notll- ing to remain in Brockport for.- After quoting liberally from Mr. Dewey's remarks, a.s published in THE NEws Saturday, the Demo- crat presents the followit1g advant- ages which it claims that city has over Batavia or any other town in thiB vicinity : '•In the fitst place, Rochester is a great railroad center. It has the great New York Central, connecting with other trunk roads east and west; it has tile Rochester and Pitts- burg. connecting us with tile great iron interests of Pi ttsbu.rg. It has the Northern Central, besides the old Central lror.n Rochestet to Au· burn and Syracuse, and the Niagara Falls road from Rochester to Cvn- nect with the Canadian ra;Iways and witn boats for the upper lakes. It has the Charlotte branch, connect~ ing, with a seven mile link, the grea.t New York Central with the lower lakes, and with the Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburgh road for northern New England. Be- sides these it has a branch of the New York, Lake Erie and Western road, and shall have the Genesee Valley Canal road shortly, Roch· ester is the headquarters of the west- ern division of the New Y0rk Cen· tral. and distributes the lreight and makes up trains for all these roads. Secondly, Rochester is a manufac- turing city, and business can be done cheaper here than in a small town, for skilled mechanics are al· ways to be had, and there need never be any delay. Rochester has water power in ab11ndance, and land is worth no more than in any other city of this si~e, and is a good in- vestment at tbe present figure.- The advantages which Batavia possesses over otner places may be found in the low rate of taxation which prevails here. The vi1lage bas no debt, al3.d comequently the taxes are low. Rents are compara- tively low, anE! nen who desire to build house for-tl1emselves can ob- tain lots at low f:lgures. This is a beautifnl village, healthfully located, having the best schools and with everything to ciQnunand it to enter- prises of the ltimd. The people are desirous oi bavi ng the Johnston Works locate here and offer them eve{y encouragetnent to come, well knowing ther 1vill be satisfied il they croose B£tnvia. rafl.Joad crosses over the Eric in A.l- about 12 dclock~ an . attempt :as exander 'i'las on Friday the scene 01 a made to get into the hardware store ~or.newha.l exciting and what Pl. ight <Jf A. E. & W. Richmond. 'fhey have been 9. very serious affair if the broke out a light of glass in the Erie authorities had not been ra.ther office. John Casey, who sleeps in dilatory. The latter part of the weel~ the_ store, hearing them, got up and before workmen from the manufac- 'vat ted for them to begin business tory of Alden & Lassig, Roche:ster, which tney did shortly by trying t~ ct'lmmeh ced p~ttinr~ in pla.ce the open a window in the shop. John iron bridge over the Erie road, 2nd, Casey then opened fire on tllem, in order to do this, \vere obliged to firing one shot through the wi11dow, eroect false work to support the gird· which had the effect of driving them ers while being riveted. Tbis. false away. When they passed the back work re!'ted upon the Erie land and, doo1· Casey firel again, but missed of.course, was a trespass; but aside his game. from the trespass it was placed so This town will turn out in full force nea.r. the tracks that the ste~s of, to the circus Tuesda . The sta e pessmg passenger cnrs Str\ICk 1t.-, willlerLve h . e t 6 .. y . · d' g Com plaint wa3 made by the Erie Jull 1 'oad era ab 1 ·' Sd pzoFvl mgr: a cr. • 1 • d · L c n e 1a • • are ,or outcta s ::iatur av evemng and, ,,n r·'und tr'p 1 t t ' S , d · h r.r d\ I v 1 , on y so cen s; urn out, , on 1!1}' mornmg, t e Oi1en tng;snp· boys and see tll.e fun. porls were removed to a. safe dts· . ' ta.nce :rom the rails and the woik Dunlap & Farnsworth, from Dun- cent inned. Nothing more was ham's Corners, have bought WiU h~tm1 from the Erie until 'Tu-esday Warren's meat market. This mak.es rooming, when Mr. Davis, the resi· a strong firm, for both are good doeut ~EJgir: ~~·r of the Lack:ai'Oianm stock men, and wiil probably make road, recdved orders to stop the a. success. IV'Otk on the bridge, pendirrg IJcgo· Everybody who had a horse or ti ations bt:tween the two coropanic::s. could get one, was out riding Sttn- '['lle next mornwg, however. orders day. Why don't some one keep were rc<:eived to resume opera:!ions, horses to let here? It is most itn pos- a'tld the work prr\·eeded. Mr. Davis, sible to get a rig. ~ <l) ... ;: ~ a a ~ jl., Cii 00 ... QJ ~ l'l ~ ~ 0 ~~ Jleing made of Metal and Glass 1t is air- tight, durable, stylish attd neatly trimllled. Wilen in need of Ft.meral Furniture, ex• amin~ the Celebrated New Style Glass Caske1, a.t DAILEY'S 8 to 14 State-St., Batavia. A. H. CH~E, DEALER IN COAL ·-ANl)- LUMBER, Oor. Ellicott & Jackson 8ts., BATAVIA. i:l:1.1.vin~ perrectetl illY arrangements for my sl!IJply ot Coal for tlte commg seaso11, of son1e of the largest and best m1ners and shippers in Pennsyhania. I am now pre· pared to take orders for the coming winter for the following lcin<ls of coal, namely: l...ehtgb, Black DtantDnd, Henry Clay, Sprir1g Motmta~n, Spring :Brook ancl Lack- awaona, at the lowest market rates. Prices of Coal. PER Tor;. I PER HALFTmr. VARll, JHiLIV'D YARD, DELIV'D. GRATE, $4.8o $5.25 $2.43 $2.68 EGG, \ '' \ \ ST()VE, 5.10 6.50 2.55 2.80 NUT, \ \ \ \ No. 4, 5.60 ().00 2.80 3.05 llatavm, J uue I, I!:li)z. ELIJ.A. STAGED LEA. VB ELBA I ARRIVE IN' B!I.'J'AVIA Atb a. m~ and 4 :p.m. 9 a. m. and 5 P• m. LEAVE BATAVLI. ARRIVE JN I!;LUA. 'IJ:As a.m. and 6:3o-p.m.· 1 p. m. and7:3op. m. Eqness packages carried and Errands promptly <&ttctJ.ded. to. Jl, ()HUSBY$ ,Proprlo1or, Workmen can be hired in Rochester as cheaply as in any city of the coun- try, as the company well knov1.\ Granting that Rochestet· h.as the advantages claimed, J3atavia. pos- sesses them all in a greater degree. and can offer ir:dtlcements whicl1 it would be impossible for Rochester or any other city to compete with. :Batavia has all. tbe railroad connect- ions necessary or desirable for reach- mg- all parts of tile country direct, and it can offer a. location for the works, between the great lnmk lines, the New York. Central and the Erie. Switches a few rods in leng1h lrom either of these roads would enable the company, should tbey determine to build on the proposed site, to Jlack their goods on tile cars with· out carting them a foot. Rochester can offer no such advantages a.s this. The item of cartage is a great con- sideration, and where the business is as extensive as that of the Johns- ton Company, the advantage Bata- \Via. ofters in this respect alone, would be a matter of thousands of dollars in one year's busine:s. The second argcment, to the effect that business can be done cheaper in a city like Rochester tlla.n a smaller place, soch as Bata.via, is quite absurd. stdlled mechanics vnll be foQnd wherever there is work for them, and they will work for les~ money in a place v1here they can live cheap ... Iy than in a city where even liberal wages are quickly eaten up by the demand foi the necessarie$ of life. --·b--- \.Q.'HE l\HC IN B.RIEP, There was 1ioting in Cork ::atur- day night and last night. thinking expedition a gooci thing, 1!-a.d the force oi riveters donbled, E. T. Chamberlain & Co, have The Bushne:ll collectiOn of Amer- ican coins brought $Io+,ooo. Elmer, son tOf Dr. Helmboldt, at- tempted suicide Saturday night, stabbing hin1self ittlhe groin. He will probably x:-ecover. a.nd hurried them !l.ll in his p-ower; received a very neat safe. This firm bout they were brought to a stand· ~s doing .a large trade. They have still Thursday evening by the non· JUSl receiVed some very nobby hats arrival of certain important :~Aeces ot for young men. t!le bridge. Frank Quinn a.nd Robert Hale A general advance was made Sat- urdey in tt1e [>'ric:e3 of coal for east- ern shipments by the Philadelphia & Reading c~al Cornpany. The switchmen employed by the New York C.entrat Railroad Com- pany in New York ba.ve secured the increase of $5 ~ rnonth asked for. The Harvar-d-Columbia. U niversi- ty boat race at New London has been poatpoo.ed till July 3· The Yale-Harvard ra.:e will be rowed next Friday. Lieut. Danenh<Jwer has had an interview with the Secretary of the Navy with r~erence to having the remains of the: Jeannelte ctew trans· ported to this country for interment. Estimates received by the Kansas State Board of Agriculture warrant the belief that the harvest this vear will exceed 3o,aoo,ooo bushels. by far the most botmteous since r 878. Within a !c:w weeks 30 Hungar- ians and Poles suffering from the worst for~n of scurvy have been ad- mitted to the hospital at Pottsville, Pa. The dis-ease is ascribed to the almost exclusive use of sa.lt meat by the irnpmted laborers. The New Yor'k merchants han given up all bope of shipments of goods until the strike of lreight handlers is ended. The general impression is tllat the corpora.tions intend to mai:ntain their present sit- nation until the :first of July, when freight charges will be advanced. A. bill whic:h has been reported to the House incorporates a national railroad to ex::tend from Washington to the H11dso-n River, opposite New York. It litnits flrst-cl!lss passenger fare from \Va:shington to New York to $6. The charter shall not be sold, trailsfcr::reti> or assigned. A. boiler at the St. Catherine Gold Mine, in the s11 burbs of Charlotte, · N. C., exp 1oded Saturday. En· gineers Roai\ke white, and Max- well and Wheeler, colored, were terribly scalrled, Roarke and Max- well fatally. The former ha.d an ann and leg ;broken. The latter's head was :perforated by pieces of the boiler and hissi<le <:ooked by steam. Wheeler's hi!.nds were so badly in- ju.!ed that arn.j)olation -was neces· sary. Sllperintendent Pitcher was rescued fro1lk the debris unhurt.-. The steam p:ressure was too hlgh. Dentists recommend YEs TooTH· POWPEB; Friday m<Jming the necessary iroll bad a row in the billiard room. and came atld shortly thereafter Mr. En· Hale lost pan of his nose. Q.uinn g;lisb, ol the Ene road, made his j has good teeth. ~ppea.rance and sta\ed to Mr. Davis The West Shore surveyms have that he had been instructed by the . ag~in returned to Buff.1lo, after run- SuperiiJtenden t to notify hi1n agai11 ning three dilTererlt lines up to the to stop the work. Mr. Davis t._,td gravel banks. bim most positively that this would Rev. S. F. Drew, of the Presby· o_o~ I.Je, af:ld, on the c)epartllre of the terian church, preaclled 111 :Bethany Euc offic1al, the wommen were told Sunday, changing pulpits ,vith the to make the greaw;t haste and their Bethany elder. ~irnc ~onld be doubled. Wi:t~ this Henry Blosser bas opened an Ice ln_ccntl ve the men worked. wtth a. Cream parlor in connection w·ith his ~ovt!l and completed the bndg;e ]ale billiard room in the alternooc, and none t<lo sam. ' Immediately upon the cm:nj>letion R.. L. Mas~onaugh, teacher at the of the :riveting, orders were given t() Seminary, has gone home to spend tear down the false work, ntd, in a. his vacation. few moments, the Erie track was covered with a mass of timb~r and IJlank. About tllis time a train was t!card to whistle ut the A.le:xander An exhibition which in this rapid slat ion and Mr. Davis sellt a:. man day and age presents all it advertises ~p the track with a red flag. The is, indeed, a novelty, and richly de- train came dashing down at tile rate serves the commendation and sup .. ()fa mile a minute, and, uttedy dis- port of the fair-minded and impar- tial plt blic. From all we can Jeam i'egarding the danger signal, pas-cd we are induced to believe ~uclt an <OD to the bridge, whete the track one is the Ryan Show wllieb: is to llad been cleared just in the nick of exhibit to-morrow· in Batavia_ I ttme. When the train came to a L:> ~tandstill forty men, under cooornand rare attractiom are not only of a '(){ :i.\fr. Engltsh, dtsembarltcd; bnt umque and sterling ch<~racter bnt they \Vere too lBte. They i:lad come embrace a world of standard merit. The Menagerre i;; clean, ntJrl! <\n& with orders to pull down thoe false rr work and if the bridge tell w·ith it, complete anr-3 ho:t~'\ the le .. ~t:img all ri~ht. 1\1r English ex;Jressed features 0f ti1r• wtl(1 i)·:ast Eingdom includin~ elepnnt·-, c,une :-:;, Bmr< ,~ considerable surprise at the work · being completed and c·,mplirnentcd tigar\ lion,, a. t-~ph:u itd black. t1ger, f panthers, leop;~r(l~, dand, antelopF:s, . Mr. Davis upon his success ni. efforts ak 1 , 1 N b b 11 · d >.. , Y r • .lC Oll Y L ll ll'tl! U in the an , upen the return of t.ue tram, Uni• d ,., t·.. . d 1 ... carried him to Ah:sander. - 1 ·e · \' 11 \ 8 • ,~n an. unexarnp~ elL M )) · t 1 t\ . I cata ngue ot rnuan amma.l:;. Il>e r. av1s was con emJl a me: \_ '! . f b'' · havino- a force of over one hl.mdred 1 '-'u en,,, L le .ct!mw 0 · P 0 uc mter~~:: \' h d t t • . f always, IS gtven m a separate pavtl- men ?l~h an kO h [~re~en !EHff cr- ion irom that in which the tuen<1.gen:1 endc~ 1 t ethwor ~ ebent p:_o 0 ~ 1 g-- is s~cn to excellent advant~ge, anui e m o e evenmg; u · ..,y 'LC • ·1 1 · • t · f h b . .J ccr: am y presents c a1ms to p11bhc ex ra exertions o t e n~g-e men f h. h h th . d 11 . avor w tc none ot .ers caLl bu.;!:i •• IS -was unnecessary, an a re- 'The ne f ] R · · course to force and possibly blood- p•r\'nntar f 0 1 atbuesk obmstn~, .the .1 h 'I n \' o )are ac eauest.nanrstn sheu was app1 y averted. nd t\ne d\ d 1 lt ·, · f a 1a.m.on >e cnamp1on o -·-· Lawn Party In Coril~:. A Jmvn party and festival ior tll.e benefit of the Universalist SO(;ietyof Corfu will be held on tbe grouJ\ds of Winslow Sumner, three miles south-west of tha.t village, Wednes· day evening. There will be music by Barnum's band, alter whkhthose so disposed can dance, and refresh- ments will be served in abnt:~dance. A very pleasant time is anticipated, and all are invited to attend. ~- ..... ·~-- J..a4ies, use YEs Toora 'P()Wi>ER. two hemispheresi is a gnarmtee o£- the superiority and surpassing SJ>len- do:r of the arenic pl:lrformances, which are given in a single ring, thus avoiding the confuston of two or three arenas, which reqt1ire more than two eyes to see. Iles1dc:s him there are abont a hundred DlOlt ladv\ and gentlemen 1·iders, gymnasts specialty artists 2nd circus stars. A. grand free sti'eet parade wili CCClH' at 9:30 a. m .• and there will be two exhibitions, afternoon and evening. 'The ~reat merit ot this snp.erb show i.s beyond question, '. 'I . ' '. :· .· i 'd; ': ' 'l' , ! ·: 1 ' ·.··1 . a ··.'!I . ' { ' : ', Jl .J• • '.: j . . . i . ' I : .I . ! t, ·' 1 •· i ' ' I · .. '