{ title: 'Bloomville mirror. volume (Bloomville, N.Y.) 1851-1871, March 15, 1870, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn83030931/1870-03-15/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030931/1870-03-15/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030931/1870-03-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030931/1870-03-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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Vat“! . ater. Whest,. of Wheat tflfigméhfifi, of his Brier 8. C «Also, his:. tpa C yang, + mile cast of by the sib» and imbaiid . business; watered md 'nukt the pur ; _. ~ N, ¥. ' SALH. in the- contereplat- farm B- ,' houses, tro ain Thera ig - yemaindér, with heavy: thansad. ms willagweil ag paid farm C DOUGLAS m, contstitng ' the Deluvard Hobart, apd & R, now watered, near keep m if desired - ° good farm. - > is sown. ___| g Store. .It is e and goods 40 ds,. - Good tith lished; Rexon: 0DENOUGE. - gist R SALE, at Bast Brinch, : of 1ang, 4 ner the place doing ° s of the Miliand p gubscribirs 03 88th FRANGIS(O. SALE, 'a of the villi“. story house with n 22x40 feet, 88 acres of as good udition, at the rch \ \the- lhe editoroft! AN BARLER t hgs been male py a ames M. Syeallid vn -of Konriglt vea, 01 the Fo#n which mortgage of mortgsge YC to Jeremalth And whet?» owlog ' work ty Doiari Eater i Sigma), boilar$ ¢ pavenport, Del and - on the sqaiheby‘ by the highygapi‘; th's ‘lmdszuaml ‘ ence as the £4 neland hereby thela gy thitty« < 5. 5. OnaMPION, Enox, __ ___ Vol. 19 ._ ___ - ___ jay woitki®o; BY Apvaxce-One Dollar for a yéar;| for six months; twenty-five cents for three months. Papers stopped when the time paid X nless other directed,\ An X. before otes the expiration of the subscription . \ of 10 linsg or less, inserted for | 25 cents per week ; \$3 for 3 months.. Cash must] \ fifty cents. for for expires, u the name den Agyertisements,. accompany the orders.. MAME nanan nme cea _ And in your Uncertain are your © E To bring you to your graves here po- and if you travel down the broad road, &e,, E And if you travel down the broad road, Abd if you travel down to darknass you are on sald n of this not ~ «man anrarrer coon fo vax axzarser uiosn,\ __ Lév lATiE 0'! NaYt; TBESAY’M ARGH15, 1.870 ___ _ \ Whera.the Money Goos . _ - : ~ Weve Bail the Rysith, bestorel on camps | - Given to rédeain the world frobs error,\ -- Theye were no need of | |~ Made it and Who Will Get its > |= ~ -| 0 ther ‘iThei satisfies of the Jfibémb Bears estate com-. plain that. they are annoye by newspSper MSD ling to 4 she dur + take 'and others sexism to the estngéScoufim’e‘d with | 22a vi: m Hemi R 81:31:12.2?” gt“! e Wa rs mit wd w lw and: forts.\ © Take five of the most christian andenlighten- ed nations, and ascertain their Telative expendit- ures for military prepartiong in times of peace, tion of their expenditures for all and the result will be found to be 'very nearly as follows : tu - Tp Austria, as in the propor Civil purposes, 33 per cent.; in France, s in Prussia, as 44 per cent.; in Great per cent; and in the United: ent. 1 And this is exclusive ASPERATIONS: _ Our aims aré all to high; we try 'To gain the summit at a bound, When we should reach it step by step, And climb the laslder round by round. He who would climb the heights sublime, Or breathe the purer gir. of life, ( Must not expéct to rest in case, .- But brace himself for toil or strife. We should not in our blindness reek To grasp alone for grand and great, Disdaining every smaller good. | For trifles make the aggregate, Aud if accloud should hover o'er Our wesry pathway, like a pall, Remember God permits it there, . 'And his good purpose reigns o'er all. T.ife should be full of earnest work, - Our hearts undashed by fortune's frown ;: Let perseverance conquer fate, And merit seize the victor's crown. The battle/is not to the strong, ° 'The race is not always to the fleet, And he who seeks to pluck the stara Will lose the jewels at his feet. _ | Britain, as 74 -_/~.|Btates, as BQ) per cer lof the cost of the fuilitia, which Mr. -1at $50,000,000 annually, forty years ago. No part of the public debt, 16 bounties, pensions, or extraordinary appropriations are included in 'the above comparisons. - - e ~ \The very great d expenses of the severa Jay placed ity between the military } goverataents alluded to, h arrests attention. That dollar collected to carry on. 1d be absorbed in the death- war, is not. very compli- e civilization of 'our people.' Re- fnorality are painfally rebuked in the ‘ jimparison.: Intelligence is hushed i silent amazement ; while with bowed hopes ang: staggering id ground. ong-it must be painful. \Phe better elements of social prog work. They can no more fail, than God can be altered or repealed. Why is it that United States are the high itions? First, our civil g 4s the first thing whic teight?s cents of every this government shou -| dealing machinery 0 I mentary to th nto F Ab y VHA MC a? was past sixty yeurs old, and then it was he. faith we feel forward ih search of sol- her to his large Will it be found ? _ Yes! | 'The way (NEM t0 hit 1784 press are at the laws of\ experses of the est in the seale of ni- overnment is the cheap- the military - warame to youre, Remember, sinful youth, you must die, you must Remem heifsidful 3011151), you must dig, Remember, sinful youth, Remember, sinful youth, w truth, ~ bound, Etebpally around the broad road; &c. To a 'dreadf{al judgment To & dreadful judgme To a dreadful judgment whate'er they may, - Nor can you it delay-you at ' The God who built the skies, The God who built the skies, The God who built the sky, has sai lie, Impenitents mustdie and be damned,-&e. don't. you, I entreat, &c., 'don't you, L entreat, 't you your carhal mirth And oh ! my friends, And oh !. my friends, And ob ! my friends, don pursue, | Your guilty souls undo, I entreat, &c. Unto the Saviour flee, eséape for life, &c., Unto the Saviour fies, Unto the Savjour flee, le Your final destiny -escape A léxd‘yl oneg asked Nr. that you knew that. you wo. venwing time?\ - *How madame? he repli I intend to spend it now. the evening at Glouchester, morrow morning ; after tha , Tewksbury, preach in, the afternoon, the societiesin the evening, I sho ald pair to friend Martin's house, entertaia me, converse and pray With\ as usual, retire to my room at . mend myself to my He - to rest, and wake up in glory.\ are who so-live that. they could. answer sd questionin. a similiar spirit! _ A few days ago a man entered an insorancte : office in Buffalo, and, to 'countér;said to the clerk T. want to get it renewed.\ ed the document a b face, and be inquired has yan out ?\ \ Yes, . told :me jit tan out yesterday mornin® upon the clerk hand tificate | > .° lt .‘« l a ; 22 _ A young lady, noticing a yOUS seat behind her in an Ind thought she would faint away an her. She did so and «was carrig : entry, when she opened her ey _. young man, but she found | ~ .on Qld‘co‘lmed’l man had cars A 'est ; second, our cdast to be fortified, lighted aug | ouly one person, an unhappy man, reetritting that. defended, with one exception, is the longest ;- ignificant of all, the milita- third, last, and most :s i too abundant in our [9,35 ry clement is a islative and administra tive councils, y cents for war lonly. get; four-fifths of your taxes no? future will come “fife fig}; ofiogzewhere in me onlya portion of theta, the terms of the will giv-} \Another morn Rien on mid -noon.\ It is a hard task, perba 1 mean all. A cians, learn to be self-reliant and true. It has come to be- Supreme Wisdom nev {should see and compre 'The omnipotence, lédged. But wh much that coucerns have need to both ask I know that t erature, of a free press, make hot work, comes the polished | crucible issues the pure gold blows to crush the quartz, silex, which for ages t of the frost of fire, you must die, -twenty cents for peace l ho hate the way of | Have courage'by pleasures boast, you vmnst die, &c. Uncertain are your days here below, &e: - Uncertain are your days here below, . nrdays, for God has many ways below, &c. ps, but you mast leara| \\\\ 2, 2 t learn to be politi (€\ When h great, good, independent mep, well anderstood that the er intended that gli men hend all things exactly of Trath is everywhere at is truth? In very t serious inquiry, we k and extend the largest tol: he conflicts of a free lit-} and a free pulpit will t of the blazing furnice steet, and from the glowing -It requires heayy day. you are bound, &c. nt day you are bound, day. be your thoughts e . bound, &c. great am I, &c., great am 1, d, and cannot and horablend, # eld in the rigid the glittering du sfagp | pondence Chicago Journal.. _ The | ann eng oll, | - RemarEast® Incrognt-As a freight train| G e aao ed doe wert\ ich Boy-The Joshum Bears Estatt-Who| - £4 the Sears property,. | 'The fact that a young mat is largely interested in the property, has caused. 'went into business with the view of ammssing: thought 'he was very poor. - Possessed of re- \ markable shrewdness aod. industry, and with very frugal habits. \he made money like dirty\ in the commission business, until he could draw $800,000, and not distarb 'his banking account. Sears wus a peculiar character in his way, ahd: was every inch a Cape Coder. He Kvas always. : off-hand, blunt, not always strictly con mercially | {square, but not dishonest, however. He sal ways so absorbed in his business that the god Cupid-made no impression upon his heart til he sought a wife, more lor the sake of having an 1 property than on acegunt of amfipnssmqoftfovez that burned in his bosom. _- Hemoarricd a Brewster lady of who died shortly after thebirth .of the child, in consequence of the. neglect wf her to. prochre sufficient wood to keep her rooin warm, he being \too poor\ to provide. /t. , Sears. died] in an attic in South Boston, y' the préssence of 'he had not sixty years more' in which to make money. - Young Sears is bging educated in Ger- many, - When he becomes of age 'he will receive $30,000, and nt thirty-five ho will have control of the entire. property, but/use of only a portion of | it, receiving stated siyfns frgrn the income, when: he will at 'that age nlanage the estates, Thai share ing acertain portign of the property.to two broth- ers. - It has bgeay generally erroneously supposed that young Seays is the solp: heir, but this is not _ @/atrives at his majority the moper-| ty will be wofth at least $10,000,000. 'The in- come igyéeaply reduced to real estate in Boston.] O14 Joshug never had much faith in stocks or paper repfesenting values. Lands and buildings are deemed the safest investments. | 'The city tax. on the property last year . was in the neighbor-} 'hood ¢f $65,500. - 'The Trustees, three of them. have/a \fat\ thing of it; they realize some $20,- '000/each for the trouble of looking after this erty. - Young Sears 'has none of the traits | that distinguished his father,and it is said by those bo know that be isnot a precocious youth.| He may turn out, however to be a smart young \ man; but it will require i large business mind 3 | to mirnage such a vast property .- Boston Corres- overlaid world The angel. of peace lower world with /the beaun- y, had we naught h smxénagrd 3222133211113; to kindling wood, and it was supposed that the d to be met; ang | Doree was lostantly.killed, but the train was'all pate their coming 00, 55] ed that it should go ahead. - This it did for for- g, and . divide and: do? if cthvfigg’ $3 cow-catcher, with a puzzled look, as much as to all never riper for on earth the «MAXIUS- | pogited on the platform in front 'of the engine who | where, too mich stuoned or frightened to move, to O 2 | he laid until lifted of and was found to he com- the latte\ | paratively uninjured. He was led back to his ca b paid f {astonished owner, who: stood gazing at the wreck The buyer Pg‘; 9T {of his bob-sled, and wondering what had become. them.- lof the onimal-Porflend Argus. {richest veins of the precious metals are. 'by mountains of gri there would be no rai would never visit our tiful ministration but the placidity of eterna less morps to contemplate. and the thunderbolt ag we can neither antict { cape their shock, let us > an~~-| with philanthropic ben Wesley, .! Supposing | equalize, as near 28 may be ald die at twelve to- you spend the inter- a of love and joy, eseape for life; are here, an st death eternal be for 11 fe, &e. and the sorrow§ d; ~We sfi heaven by doing misfortunes, 'shipwrecked worl thebeaititude of very work morrow.night, how would 4; \ why jast as * should preach in and again at five to- t I should ride to «« ’;-,'='a—”' .4.;w.__. 2400 ounty merchant agreed at 40 cents a bushel if measure -w .- A Tioga c farmer's oats would let bim t \The farmer agre sixty bushels a \Fhe farmer | chant got in a {upon the farmer into the bag. - t the measures 'The farmer info ement of that, ramp\ the hen filled. d next day went after bushe}, and 'the mer- d the half ( them down. nd tramped ings: The merchant ] manded tha hould be fille tramping. | was no agre tramp down the out they were measured. _ man at Paterson, N. J.. who that a young lady's pulse always beat strong the palm of the ha to find out but that he might aper on the tun out, and As the clerk unfold- rin spread : \ Are you sure said the man, ' ssing a p ; * That's nd than any where . else, for himself bis intended, skillet over his head: ges beat as str But he is.not 0 mind any more. There is a clergy decturing on \ The: 3 he possesses au devil holds a m f thé House 0 while | body \ _ nd ske busted an fron | 4 o t+ 4 Stm m- , .alnie has concluded that| - In the last illness of the witty George Cole- man, the doctor, being later than the time ap- pologized to his patient saying that he had called to see a man that had fallen down :\ where- ma c. ,‘v.-_; Lan —,_', ‘.',\.‘ cer- lec ed to him his-miarrlage no lead as any | man £ an inquiring turo of | pointed, a map in the lis church, let him catch d out into the man ino Washington who is | groaned Coleman. the statement that oats on rly every tiem» | 30 cents a botile--25 cents for the bottle and 54 age on nea regentatives | _ t the sexton and ied, her out behind time was passing Oak Hill Station in Searborro' the other evening, running at a speed tacked to a, bob-sled, 'which .was crossisg the track with no driver. The sled was smashed in- right, and the \exigencies of the service\ requir- haps a mile and a half when the engineer look- ing out, saw the horse staring at him from the say, what is all this fuss about t The train was promiptly stopped, and it was found that the horse: had been picked up by the cow-catcherand de- Where.| - An Indiana paper rells this story of a cruel he oats so compressed | woman who lived in the town of Muncie in that: protested,, and de.| State : © By her cruelty, she drove two of her d up after} daughters from 'her to seek a home among stran- rmed bim that there | gers. She beat, and bruised, and starved 'them, until they were forced to fy. The last thing she heart's content after| did to them was to take. as many pins as she} 6- {could bold in one hand, and rake up and down. + {their arms with the points. She. also took an read | orphan child, living with her, and put it in a pen er in | where several hogs were fattening, and tried to| tried | make the brutes tear the fiesh from the child's! la well \Did he kick the bucket, doctor ?\. He , . @ +4 \I 100 , , - Wine is peddled on the Missouri railroads at cents for the wine. ;;;;;; Manufacturing in England{. _ / , { ceilo man- ufactures she enjoyed thirty years: ag! she was the groat workshop fop the conting titors are springing ~ . gium and France men, trained: io pri re surpassing the Fi & never 'enjoyed au ud displacing their wa and the art of extract rea much better, iglish by cheapening the pro- , tto - Xhe fact that £ 10008 (00 | ap in alf divections. In B about fifteen years of 'ngo, the only child- of Sears,] “gait; “Hamlin?“ ed {v or a nac hane neanle - voperty, has €20560 | meclianical 80110018, a good many people to become inquisitive on: D {emblopee we mie \| the gubject. \ .Joshua Sears died in 1857, possest- £201??? if? $32,333 Fe as 33 | ed of about $2,000,000 worth of property in this antages of raining, 7 city. aod it is now worth about $6,000,000 | inctals from the Sears came to Boston from Yarmouth, Mass., derselling the B just before the last war with Great Britain; 400 -| g me 'The Germans unders at in Eogland lest the a give a death blow Bat while ankie- layed by scientific taking. a new direc- per and tin and lead. mines have ta dopth that they can cheapness ,of production he Chairman 'of the Liv- f Commerce remarked at's re- , \ América and France and Ger- y are excelling us,\ 0 f bile the manufacturing i erism fucreases. | 'The poor-laws work bad- ny. of the deserving, spirit of self-reliance. ts on charitable aid. en- $20,000, at the end of which time he intended to | gog) 35; has been great feat s point has bee igx the fears fro , rorked to so grea no, Jonger.compete in with other nations. T cent meeting, nterest languishes, ly. Whey fail to hel and destroy in othere the The number of dependen larges annually, ' provision nor vate efforts me men and statesmen are a of the poor, and are organizing a vast a emigration to- relict those cagar to emigr glasses ofa wozkxzxen. \ 'home, aud hope to impro ‘—-Provid,erggzpa(oumal. . . den wedding- \and noither the Government so sams raised by pri- t demand. Public larmed at the- condition tho immer et the urgen e the pressure, A ate are many of tho best They despair of work at ve their fortunes abrgaa.‘ Pass If A w marrying a ~ _- _ A goider wedding-marcying for money.-El- mira Gazette. 4 ae A crystal wedding-marrging a \ylast eye.\ -Syracuse Courier, M e e ' A tin weddin burn News. - __, ] wedding-marry «ca Democrat. . C+ A. silver we jing a milk nisid-Au- ing an editor. -Ithi- ~ Iding-marrying an 'old maid of sixty.-Waverly Democrat. _ ae A. plain wedding-marrying a carpenter, Louis Journgah © __ _ A copper wedding= Rocky Mountain Herald. 'The worst sort of wedding-marry - Ohronicle. A steel wedding-marrying a Carry Blade. .A cotton wedding-matrry now-a-days.~-Ral. Sentinel. ° A second-hand weddin '--Rei. Standard. 40 ~- ._ A woolen - wedding-ma ° Charlotta Observer. © ~ A common wedding.--m Easton Express, A bully wed _-Doylestown A magnetic wedding--marr 'operator.-Bethichem Times. |__ A disgraceful wedding-marry -of any df the above line A foolish wedding--marr .but love.-Seranton Journal. |_. gany - wedding=-marryi girl--Elmira Gazette. . ~ ' A great ado about ry either of the a Horsebcada Journal. * An impradeut Wwe Burdett Local Visitor. Just the wedding-Marr Tionaire) for the consequentes.. marrying n aquaw.- figfiabafiy; shop lifter.. ing most at y-marrying a widow. trying a negro; arrying false calvem- of 30 miles an hour, it stmck against a horse ng--marrying an Engli ying a telegraph lng the ying for ‘éjbythgfig' - ng & mulgito nothing wedding--to mar- bove sap-head ' seribblersg.- dding-marrying at all- ying a Milliner, (Mi- - Do You Own AxvBony ?12-About this time of the year the following 1 meaning and forse, ally conveyed and acte satisfactory all ground. gle dollar, go and pay 1 money we ought to keep i ty. Jim owed us. we owe Jim. Jim got ma one morning last week ; Bill paid Jim, and ag happy os a clam, he had in the morning, ttle anecdote has pe- If tho hint ba gener- pon, the result will be : \If you owe but a sin- t; when there is so little t moving around live- d Bill, andBill owed ade him pay but we paid Bill, and went to bed that night with just as much money as and three men ouf of . d. because» we - m At a lai suit in Crawfordsville, Ind, the prin- t drugk, and -the , lawyer made & to kill time un- to testify: the fifteenth me to time. | cipal witness go speechof seve til the man co He touched on everything, amendment, and finally his man ca ral hours' duration. 4 uld get sober enough has made a provision buried ' in a buiglars ¢ fear Ben Butler will 1d filling ' out of his . A man at Lowell; Mass., in his will that he must be proff safe, when he died, fo go for him and steal the go