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CATCHING A SHARK. REGULAR MAN-EATER. / mrayarftndCotirrfrentfftJKeeflnir, • -*fr. ElUor.~T)o }o n evor g o to prayer- 1 meeting? Pi-&n,n)|ng that yon are a Ohrle- 1 \®«n. «DiI knowing that nearlr all CI ri»- j STANDING BV FOR A BITE FROM A *Un s who bnv« tlio opportunity do attwiJ *»e b meeting*, I JUCIRO that your presence an d volco len«l their influence to ton hmnch nt Chiiumn »ork For many years I bave trequently at- J ' tende d Dray er-mcelitig*, and have benefit- f •eJ thereby. 1 am not a m'niatcr of Hie _ . . <9o.pe,, .„a .ay know *r, Mtle a, to tl „ I JZ^Z^l^^ZtZ £ Catching a Twelve-Footer with » Month aa L»rg« M » Floor Barrel — Mlatake of m Darkey Wb o Should Uave Koow a D otter. •irork which migbt bp don* in Hie prayer -meeting, or of the beat methods to be adopted to secure the t «?st rvMitta As I esdge Ihe matter, howetrr, fAe end in view should bo to increase the spirituality of <JhrlsUanB, (itid to lend those present who an not Christians, to find Christ as a Bar. or. < How I Attended a mcotfng not long ago »h«re there were a large number present, twent y or thirty of whom DO doubt *nuld stave been pleased to have said a few words •a* t o what Uie Lord had done for them uad th e time permitted. Such testimony on Aelr p*irt would have secured to them H •Meeting, and been of lnleres* to all ihos -present who lore to bear of God's deal sags with f fin people. At the meeting of wbioh 1 e|toak, lh<-. .•ssastor read a chnpter from ihoBi^le, and iSOSulc eotnf fntpwiting comments tliereon tn -wjhich he was quite brief. Several hymns wwr e sung at ItiicrTats, but tho remalnder «f the hour and Iwemv minutes WHS bare* y sufficient for three or four of the breth re n present tn ssy tholr prayers. For want +k ((me only three or four ut ibo large num %e r present had an opportunity to speak And they each consumed a httlo more ths- m, minute of time. The aco'wg was * 'failure, and Its result so far as could be ia*en were without any value, My1mpr*s> -stfoo was (hat Che thirty minutes dorote <t * o three prayers might have been spent bv thirty Ipeople In glrlng sbort acoounts of jpa*t*or present Chrtsffsn «*rperteuce. If tb» educated and morogiflcdjoncs wouM ^aonflne theraselves to prayers or remarks «f cue or two minutes, (host) wfio are un> 1 warned or more modest In their pretentions \wrould feel lew era bars wed to make brief ro- 'amarki, than (f th^y had to compete with those who lallc and pray, wh.it they have 'talked and pray d Tor forty years. The , poor and bumble ones in every church wrattt to do sometbJpg. They are many , times, as pious and good at heart as their .snore fortunate neighbors. Give them •wrorJc to do,—help them l o do It.—and the wthole church will be cemented closer,—a better spirit will prevail, and much good »%• done. My humble opinion is that In tho prayer- '•Meting, long-drawn-out prnyors where th> wfbole ground is gone over, from \forgiv-* •^UTslne,\ to \bless the Prestdont of the Hatted* States,\ are uncalled for, out of ytace, and do not help to gain the object •ought. Let the prayers and remarks be aAert % andpo%nltdto some subject under enn- MsSderaUon, or in regard to our prist* <i '•piritual needs, our joys, our hope* and rffearsi Th e unconverted prcaont will learn *C our experience, and how we LICK been •SVVMWH ) through the religion of Je-u* •Omit Their attention will be turned tn th e subject, they mav be corrected, and XhuM tho desired end gained At our h»me% or even in nur walk* we \<*l»Ave'tlme *to co over tho \whole ground ' M prayer -t o pray Tor tho individual mem- *&ers of our family for our relatives and friends —our enemies, for success in a!l le- | south coast of Florida, for the purpose of hunting up old Peters, the famous shark- catcher He lived on a small key or Island, which WHO surrounded by olber keys, and bis domain waa shared by a number of colored men. Potent devoted hi* whole time t o ahark-catchlug and alligator bant- tng, aud mado something mora than a UT ing at this strange pursuit. We found htm a very good-natured old chap about 60 years of age, and he gav e us •> hoepltablo welcome. When w e stated oar errand he ropllod: \As to 'gators they U purty nigh whipped oat around /ere, but aa to sharks every channel la full of >nx We kin be off l o half an hour \ Whil e one colored man got the boat ready, a second man ran aoroas the Island to a email flsh-pen and returned with half a dosen specimens of the flnnj tribe weighing from ttireo t o five pounds each. Peters selected a big sharp book wit h a ohaln attached, threw a coll of rope Inte the boat, and we were of f ft was a row of only tea minutes across to a aandy key which bordered on a channel fifty feet wide and deep enough to float a> tnao-o' Vniere the Bullion Goes to- i Ctr*rett« Halting la the Booth. It is often asked* Wha t has become of, There is now la Durham 10,000,000 the bug* amount of bullion that India has I pounds of leaf tobacco awaiting manufao- abaorbed In recant years? She hnj re-1 ture, and It comes In every day by the celved on balance some £350,000,000 of all- train-load from all the aurroundlDg eoun- rer and gold in tho last forty years. What ; try Tho tobacco manufacturers of Dor» has become of It allf Many writers tn ham pay to the rallronda over $1,000,000 a England hold that this la a great proof of | year for Incoming freight*. They have wealth. H is not so regarded In India, it, over 3,000 operatives, more than half of ut extremely dlfQcnlt t o say what becomes i whom are girls. 1 saw 600 girle In one fao- of the moaey, no oae could give m e a sat* tory They were all sitting at little desks Is factory answer. It la apparently diffused making cigarettes, and they were singing over that vast population, either in tbe , one of iiankoy's songs when we entered, form of coin or ornament*; it shows little . Cotton factory girls look pale and measly, visible sign of existence, probably much , for thoy have tost/pud up all day, and they of It is hoarded. There still remains In 1 look caroworn and weary They can't India tho feeling of mistrust, burned into slog for the sound of the machinery; but tue mind of the people through age* of these girls look rosy and neat, and were pillage and anarchy N o property ta cou- as merry as larks. sldered by the villagers quite secure uu The doctors say that the tobacco bust leas I t can be hidden. ness la the healthiest In the world, and Banks and bank notes are very Uttle that these girls are never sick They all used, the rupee has to perform the ordln- work by the piece, and many of them ary exchanges of 250,000,000 people, and . make $3 every day Most of them make everything that can bo spared is put upon $l.fi0, and even the little tiny chaps make the woman In the shape of rings, brace- from 75 ccnta t o $1. Tho girls can beat the lets, anklets, and otnor ornaments. Of j boys at this business, for their fingers are late years a considerable part of the bull- more delicate and nimble. They mako too imported—fully one-third—Is In gold, 1 760,000 cigarettes a day In one factory and it is said that much of this goes Into Just think of It) Nearly 1,000,0001 An d the native atatea, where the rajahs and nil to be burned up Into smoke and ashca, rich natives are fond of display. Z doubt i I casually Inquired where all these cigar* whether any safe conclusions can be ettes and all this smoking tobacco went to, drawn aa to the wealth and prosperity of and the general manager handed m e ft lot the masses ot the people merely on ac- of bills of lading that had been shipped count of thl 1 absorption of bullion, still, that morning. They went to Hamburg, It Is un.iuuuted that India has greatly re HnnMulu, (Singapore, Madras, Antwerp, plonutiiu-l her currency as compared with Rotterdam. Montreal, Auklatfd, and Sour- the ear.; p . n of the century, when It was aba; Thoy have a large trade tn China deplor'ilHT scanty ami when the ruileal and Asia and India and Arabia.—Dill Ar p means nad to be adoptod tor the purpose in Atlanta Constitution. of exchange -Contemporary Review Wn f . I Uloa MOD T%k» id* Che«p tT»y. -1 reckon you don't kesr about foolin' | \The age of economy bos begun,,' said around with scrub •harks,\ observed j a sbrew-i clerk In a hotel to a reporter Peters , \and that's wh y I cum ober yore. If w e git anything here It will be a man- eater and no mistake. J hooked one yere a month ago which was thirteen feet long, and It took the hull o f us to land him \ , BTAK D1HO OT FOR A DITK. 1 The ooloreit man with us was named Tom. He was a powerfully built man and about 80 years old, but moved In a j lasy way and had a sleepy look Tb a key bad but Uttle shade, and the sun was very I hot. Tom was Instructed to bait the : \Fow ot tho wealthiest men,\ he contin JoarnelUU Ar e Not Mendicants. The better majority of the Journalists of .Serf York feel humiliated and outraged by enterprises which make them pose un- ued. use carriages in going to and [rum tru:hfally before the public as mendl- the depots They take the street cars and cants The Income of all the lawyers, send their baggage by the cheapest ex clergymen, physicians, and other profes- press. Some years ago nearly all of our ' 6ltma! m0Q ,n New York hi *«• P*r capita customers out of the city always took a I tiiRD tnat ot th * average newspaper hotel coupe or carriage both coming and Tite r Th e young lawyer Is luoky if his going. It only cost them a couple of dol • f\** year's practice keeps his stomach lars aud that was considered cheap then HUod and bla body covered, but the cal- for the style they had tn the way of a ' lowest reporter Is rated as worthless I f he bright and handsome turnout. No w I gets less than $15 per week from the out- prices are down considerably and many ot Mt - Ta e clergyman Is fortunate If his cost I t mt o the channel, and the free end of his line was made fast to a stake driven in the sand Whil e waiting for a blto the darkey sat down on a log about twelv e feet long and tw o feetthlok, whlob had come down the rlrer with drift-wood, in about (en minutes he song out In a lusty manner) and we ran across to find the hundred foot Kne all out and tho stake trembling as If a yoke of oxen was pulling r*t it.» \We'v e hooked a buster this time, \ said Peters. \I'l l bet any one ofyouohaps a red wool on shirt that hs'U measure over twelve feet.\ We let him play for a quarter or an hour to exhaust himself, and then the Ave of us took hold of the line and walke d him axhore up the slanting beach. It was a pretty hard tug, but be had to come. When he was fairly out of the water we suak the ax into bis head three or four times, and then cut him across the spine. He measured a tew inches bus than twelve fast, and was a veritable man- eater His mouth was Urg e enough to take tn a flour barrel with ease. Peters and his man ripped him opeo. and tn the stomach we found several fish, a large tablespoon marked \Litxto Way. * an Iron spike and the socket ot a kerosene lamp. \OUTJUt KWOWBD SKITS'ft.\ Peters was a Uttle disappointed at the alxo of tho shark, and the man To m was Instructed to bait strain We wen t book to the shelter and lighted cigars, and by and by we got to tulkmg and almost for got the darkey Whe n somebody finally looked up he was not to be seen. We ran across the key and then we caught sight of Idru a quarter of a mile down the chan nel He was on the log spoken of, and was being towed around lu a lively man ner by a shark wbloh had token the balL A- noun as he saw us he began wa v lug his arms and shouting tike a lunatic \Just like a dome d nigger 1 \ growled -sjittmut* business and enterprises, for the 1 POUT * as wo made for the boat \Instead hook and stand by for a bite, while we ' the depots can be reached lo Orst-closs salary reaches $1,000 a year after half a crossed the key to the shelter of the • B t T l e (double horse carriage) for $1 and life time of work.but the skillful newsgath- only two trees on I t This was a distance $) 50 single passenger erer expects* from $3,000 to $4,000- Th e of perhaps of 800 fee t We saw the man , -y e t with all these dose scaling, bank- physician Is regarded enviously by his tel- bsit the hook with a couple ot the fish and rupt prices, the oustomers evince an ' lo*™ when bis arduous practice yields economical desire t o take the street cars.' $3,000. but an able writer of original mat- Think of it Men worth $4,000,000 and * ter for the press receives in this city at $0 ,000,000 seising their grip bags and com- 1 least that recompense, and possibly twice lng a mile or so for 5 cents. Such a thing aa much. The days of Bohemlanlsm is fifteen or twenty years ago was rarely ' over, and the feeling among He w Yor k done. Even a $100,000 man disdained to | Journalist* Is strong now, that the corn- use anything but the carriage. But all this applies principally to men alone. Of course, with their families they muster up courage t o pay the carriage tariff. Ye t t bare known several Instances where the entire family went to the depot in the street oar The elevated railroad takes a great many too, and la. If anything, quicker than a carriage Times hare ohanged when millionaires economical paratlvely small element of bummertsm should be kept out of sight instead of be ing exploited A s t o the deserving men who die poor lu this profession, they num ber relatively no more than in others.— Indianapolis News. \People** Coff«* Hons*\ In Devlin. The Berlin branch of the Society Against become so the Abuse of Spirituous Liquors lately held Its annual meeting under the presidency of Privy Councillor Splnola. A variety of Swell Touriau and Th«lv Dresses. interesting facta were brought t o the While chatting with the proprietor of cognizance of the members, a well-known Long Uranch hotel the whose number had risen to 217 from other day. 1 remarked that I could already 194 the previous year The number of see signs of the coming summer exodus, alcoholic patients treated for delirium Ue laughed and said: \Well my dear tromons at the Charity had Increased from boy, 1 tear that the more signs you see 800 In UHJl to 611 In 18H5, exclusive o f the less visitors we'll have. 1 have Just private cases which escape offlcla' control, dropped on to one or two of the latest The Peoplo'e coffee house, established by wrinklfu of those people who puse as swell the society about throe months ago, has summer tourists on exoesslvely small in glvnn excellent results, the promises, comee, A dressmaker whom m y wife went calculated to hold about seventy persons, to see recently toM her that she had a are too email and need enlarging Th e great variety of dresses for the summer < dally number of applicants varies from 700> season which she would hire out on to 1,000, and the daily receipts, at & and reasonable terms, and change for other* 10 pfennings cents and 3V* cental once every week Now, ain't that an, United States currency t a tneul with idea' Yo u see. Miss Do Smith can got o coffee, amounts to from 100 to 200 marks, j Ixuig Itraneh with seven morning and -Berli n Letter seven evening drosses, and after a weok | *he secures another fourteen, and can statistics of th » whaling industry. 00m out In an entirely new set for the The off shore whaling In the Pacific | .oUowlng week Al l these costumes are 1 dates from 1787 when the flrst whaler and 1 made upon a eliding scale basis, with big 1 English ship ventured Into theso waters. | seams and wide flounces, which facilitate She was manned by Nantncket sailors. , their being ohanged to fit many slses. J In iTOt six vessels came to the Pacifican d You see that with four sets of dresses tbt> 1 tn IKW 100 well equipped ships rboaed the oustomor can change tbem from one bit? animals What is called the \Kodlad watering-place t o another and thus servo Gn.tmd.\ tn the bend of the Alaskan tour people simultaneously giving *scb cooat was discovered in IKJi In 1839 the The Standard Remedies! Compounded from prescriptions long in use by one of the most Bucressful physicians in Central New York, and thoroughly tested by experience. SAFE, RELIABLE AND UNFAILING in their action. Standard Herbal Tonic, For Dyspepsia, Loss of App«tite, Impure. Condition of tke Blood. Debility caused by Illness, Exoebsea, or bv the Natural Changes of the Seasons, \it rontains no Mercury or Metal- ic Poisons, bnt is purely Vegetable in its constituents. STANDARD CHOLERA MIXTURE Cures Colic. Cramps, Diarrhcoa (Aoute or Chronic,) Dys entery, Cholera, and Cholera Morbus. Standard Gouglx Xtalsam Affords Instant and Permanent Belief to pereons afflicted with diseases of the Bronchial Thbes and T.ungs. TheBe remedies are now offered to the public with the confident exportation that their great vaJite will make them the most popular medicines of the day. MOOBE.& HOBBABD. Syraouse, N T. Wholesale Agents for the United States. THE mm MUTUM BENEFIT SOCIETY OF NEW YORK. iNCORfNiJUTED UlCXXDER, lttU \» J.ttBR04U»A t 'JPP0<lTB P.8T0PFltt. otTriltb and the downfall otWrnnu ' ot making fast to tbe .tako h . tied to the a conttant mcceaalon of new totleta. For America n fleot wa . .caul . In 1843 It ONLY TWELVE ASSESSMENTS tlnvo boon levied from W to Ave nur log lb'\** a rear anJ maltlnff llieoostfnr AH-twaem -ntA to a m*o of f rtr rears of W. Uiwthan rW AWIar* a f*ar tor e/vb Thou- fvantl Dollar* of Insurant IOK and no doubt there's a coll or tw o of the line about his le<rs He'll be a dead I olg^er before we kin reach him!\ j Tw o of us seised the oar* and polio 1 (or I aU we were worth The negro was lying on his breast, and Peters said that his feet were tangled Ue screamed and I love the prayer and con lore nee me* • •£8 , and believe them to be V* * great ex *ent the motive pow >r of (be church Y e , SHi a rule, not one-half the inambtrsare m th e habit of attending Many <if those wit\ -do *dmetimes attend, will remain away on I shouted and seamed to be terror stricken -t«n U to IhcM, things in which they are in-1 colled out: * crested. As Cliribtisiif, are we earnest:? i Mist what I was afraid ofi Another i mertstcd In our own spiritual wel'are, and hX ^{ shark has bit Ms legs off'\ » RT . . , , ,, I Such was the case and the body dlsap- in that of others? Or is true piety an ol U | ^ ^for e W e reacr, the lo g Th e line about a week the girls can have the was ftta, and In 1&46 about 10.000 people „ . . . . . use of a wardrobe that couldn't be duoil obtained a J»vl 0 g din-.Uy from the In 3ond fo r circular s Agonlewantod use of a wardrobe that couldn't be dupll cated under $3,000 Think of that (or American enterprise-\—Baltimore Amer lean CbtettTw o CvntnrlM Ot <L obuitn#t} a llvlo g dire. iJy from the In iluslry th« u-isols employed representing ueati) Kl.OUOOOO At this time tb«* Amt -rlcan fleet of whalers consisted of A7H •hips and barks, twenty two schooners, t bti-t v five brigs and soveral smaller craft % Boyd Winchester, the OOOAUI general of iu l\7 tons tn all A number of whaJe% the I'nlted States to Switserland, has Just are now owned tn San Francisco, but the completed some exhaustive researches lo industry is not what it was in those days regard to the cheese industry of that coon — Lhtia^o Herald try He has made certain discoveries that thecheese-makers of this country will be Trees Transformed Into Hons* Plants. a little slow to believe. He claims to hare , A very preU , ornament for the house or nr>4 rnll'inln m« n 5m6 • - i ^utD u *»° ro»«ii wuo iu tt . t u« IUIV ( seen cheeses that are more than 800 years tawu is a dwarfed white oak. some en tho *>ime story, and our religion (so called) b-n j was aronnd the log as well as the untort> , old One of the customs that formerly ' B t Ml making verltabU pets of these mln | » m ytb, followed up inform, .nuts -or. foetal t-nterprke? as a bus- C 1tf«r*«tllei a Dliatjreeable City. Marseilles Is not an agreeable city- it Is «over*d with particles of white stone or «arth , which nils the nostrils and eyes and -offend the clothing. They have boon terribly plagued with cholera, and can wot clean out their harbor, into which all Che be were of the city discharge. Th e tide there rlSM and falls only a few inobee, suid hence there is no way to got that «ia*al out of the harbor, which Is destroying Abe place. I Inquired of responsible per sons why they did not, accordlag t o the neonimendatlons of their engineers, build ou t Into the sea some teajpIlea of tunnel, rsvhlcb by a force pump could (brow this •>;<diseAse Into the bottom of the ses^ They told^me that they were too poor t o undec- stalnihe work. -Edwi n Cowles in Cln- s«xnnatl £nquirer unate man's legs, and we got hold of It t o j And the shark at the other end. I t was a good hour's job to get him to the beach and land him, bus be was a prise worth securing. He was a foil dodged man* : eater, and ueasured sixteen feet six Inches^ We opened him, but the stomach ' was almost<«mpty Some other shark had taken the negro/a tegs. \Durn him, but he otter knowe d bet- prevailed In the cheese regions of thai mture lords uf the forest These plants country Mr Winchester says, was fur art) r^Uy mlard in dower pots from the friends of a bride and bridegroom to the acorns, and require no attention ex- Join in the presentation on their wedding watering The dwarfing of the tree day of an elaborate oheese This cheese ts effected by the cutting off the tap root was used as a family register and heir loom on which tho births, marriages and deaths are recorded. Ue says that he has eeen some of these *old cheeses\ that date back to 1600. In many parts of Swltser- teri\ said Peters. \ A nigger what has * land cheese forms the principal diet ef the ootoned sharks fur twenty rears has no ' people. H e says that new oheese often every spring for a few years, this proness keeping the tree of diminutive sire while It does not prevent ordinary develop ment of new branches.— Arkansaw Trav eler business to put himself up fur bait. \—De troit Pros Press. causes sickness. When this Is the case the Tbs Ohaaoee of Uartat Alive . \The ohanees of a person being buried while In a trance are about one In a mill ion. I f you have a ny fear that suoh may be your\ fate 1*11 take your 'order now to 'fire s> musket close to your ear before the po$^f3*Jed;.np . M yottjdotjit.|ump I'll go ocr with the burying —Detroit Under taker, ^ Katies; Uncooked Vegetabl* Food, A community was started at Anaheim, CaL, several years ago, the principal feat ure of which wa s that only uncooked veg etable food was to be used by Its mem bers. One after another of the members patient Is treated in ths bommpathlo fash 1 loo with old cheese, which generally ef- I feces a cure.'*Washington Cor Boston i Herald JE31s*rot Inkstand tn the World. A letter from Heidelberg In Uerlln Das SSebo, says that a rich Amorican has of- Dared t o provide the city on the Neckar, sttready famous fnr Its gtgantlo tun, with _ _ She biggest Inkstand in tho world. H e ( lef Neither by resignation or starva^ tfchiks that the Inauguration of a mam- Uon and now but two are loft —Chicago mot h Inkpot would bo a most appropriate Times. 3?oxt o f the ceremonial at the approaching - — • r centenary of the university, while it . Kit * Y 1? IDS ; Mania 1st XUlnoU. tsvould be much more fitting tor the c*ltl- Kite flying has become such a mania at •sens o f the Alhenj on tho Neckar t o boast! Raiitan. HI , that prominent citizens en- thai they owned the blggost thing In Ink- { gago to it. One kite is seven feet long and pots rather than the biggest thing in win e j has been sent over fl.000 feet Into the air Three men and a windlass are required to draw it back to earth.—New Orleans Times-Democrat. CarcFnl Gradations tn Rtaglamd. | The occupants of the softest cushions f 1 are treated with the softest manners —the occupants of the hardest with an appro priate asperity \Tickets gentlemen If 1 you please,\ Is the form in which first-class i passe&gerssre addressed, this becomes. In 1 the case of the second-class passengers, | \Tickets please,'' and when the collector f pQta his head Into the third-class comport-1 , ment his manner ts shorn of all civility and he brusquely cries. \Ticketsr*—W H. Rldelng In Brooklyn Magazine. J When Flre-Plsee* fT«r* Used. Flre- places came Into general use In country halls In the sixteenth century In earlier halls the hearth was In the mid die of the room, and the smoke found Its way to the timber roof, which It black- ICorel Treatment of Typhoid Tevev. The writer's son suffered with typhoid fever during the heated term of last sum mer, when the temperature of the room often rose t o 00 or 06 degrees, and the pa tient's temperature ran up to ICQ degrees sod over A number or tubs were placed U the room and kept filled wit h ice and the doors kept closed The temperature of the room eank to 80 degrees or less, an average of 13 or 15 degrees below the tem perature of the other rooms In the house, and the cooler atmosphere not only added to the comfort of the patient, bnt aided In eoed, and then through the lantern in tho keeping down the body temperature and center to the open air The more refined ISrUlU H AM'EOl \N<)KDP.HOF<lEOIU>K I It ' .<•*( *urr->jT'tf»* f ih» r-ituotr \f On<>n rlnvo- New Y»rk tinii t< l» ho rob? «|vro to the • I .U 'OCtJ t Maf 'Ul lt |.««»«r *U ,lA '«\f th <tOWQ • •[ M» nlln» In »'»U > ouri'v docca»rd that tho* >i< required to mMblt u<nlr -lalm*- with the * »irht*rs ttit .r »-.t IVJ ho aubscrlbor at bla rewtdennn >u EHU\'\ Village In ihe town of M'iniJua, lo 'bo n><untr of OoondajriwN. Y 'MI nr bof .>r- the «0 h dar of J<*f uary, 1687 - Uai«-I Julr 10. 1880 NEL80S MILLS 5m« 'dtolotstrator IN PI KBL'ANCE Ov AN ORDER OP OoorRO I It Toos ^QfTofrste of the Oounty of Onon- daira. New York, not loo is hereby given to the creditors of Caraifao Lamb, tate «f the town ot Manltus ID said oeunty. decL'tecd. that they are required to oiblbt' their claims, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber at bis office lo the viliaso of Monllus. In the county of Onondaga. N V . on or bt-fnro th* tTth dar ..f January 188T.-Dated Julj 15*1 6m0 FHANKUN II TJB» BY Kiecutor I N PURSUANCE OF AN ORDEU OF GEO, > IL Cook. Rurrogate of the oonntr or Onondaga. No* Y->rtt, notice Is hereby given u* the creditors of wittfam flQas n late of tbe t,owo of Tally In said o -uoty, docoased. oa* 'hrrnT*^Q)r*d to,#»ihililtthei» claims with the vun^hurs there- -f. to tbe subeorlber ct bis residence lo the town of Hanliu*. on or > eforethe 6th day of Deonmber* W WIU.UK w Gun*. Eieontor M OHTOAGE FOBECLOBUUE ANDSALE:- Dofault has been made in t * e payment of I cortatn sums beoaredc l o be paid or a mort* f agoeioouted b y Erskloo P. Woodford ot ompey. Onondaga County M. V.. to Louisa HI. lluntlyof Do \ lit. county and state atoro- said, beariogdate Apr US, t8«e and seedting the payment ot two ihousand dollars and In terest, and whJob morts -affe contained a pow er of sale In case ot deia*!', and whloh was dnly acknowledged, and wkh said power of sale, recorded lo, 0noodsKii, county clerk/e '•mee on the nth dar o April. A . D lafla, In |ihi.rof mort :'Sgf»». a* psffo 4**: nnfl in | wbloh the mortaagedipremlses are described I sui «tanilally as follows, te wit : All tbat tract or paro«l ot land situate In mo to * o of PomDoy, bebMt pari ot lot nam- I bar iiinety-throo iO*j-of said towa.boundpd i and duwrlbed as follows: Boffinnina in the northeast cor er ot said lot, theooe south i *oatfMBt chains And nhnety-ibroolinks. . ibODCo went Hevonty-towr chulna and fifty toks to the eontorof the road. thence north uigtit degrocit twenty-two minutes eoaulwen- iy two chains and *o«inteon links, thence east s ^vonty chains-and Btaety -elaht links to tho pin- e of feeglonlna. containing olgbty and nneou one hundredths aoros of land,' [on wbloh mortgage there la claim dt o be i das at tho dflto and flrst pablleatlon of this notice the aforesaid principal enroot two <hou»and dollars, and the Interest thoroon from tbe first day of April A. 0,15M. Jess oineiy Uvodollars paid Tobroary *. to opplr on such lotfrust: toei>l)oct which o r any part thoreot no net loo has boon brought Nuw therefore bf virtue at the power of sale in said rooriKnge contained, and in pursu ance of tho etatutn in such case made and provided said monguvoA prumlsee will be sold at public auctloniattrtefron door \ f the ouri house la iiecliy oi Syracuse In tho roun - i ot (moitdsga atoresai.i on Saturday tbcAih .lav f Ausuet.A U. isae, atSo'clook io the afternoon, an d paid morUciwa will then and tbore bs tor*cloeed.- Dated June s. I/IUIHAM HUNTL Y Mortcwree. N it i niPUiH Atioruoy .at Fstettovlllo. NY ai 13 INPllLsr \St E OF AN OBDER OF OEOEOE I It <'0\X Surrogate of the county of Onon- qaga Nnw \->rk, notice Is hereby glvon to thu oredltoraorHlram Wnod.Iateofthotown ot Manlius In said coa&ty. deceased, that teer am required to exhibit tbelr claims. I with the vouchers thereof, totbosubsorlbers * ni t e Ia>e residence of Snttl dooetsed to the village of FaTetUvllle, In tho town or Manll- us. In the county ol Oa..ndft«a, N . V.. on or before rbe l*th day ot September. 18&S.- Dotod March B, ISeA N*KOTWOO©V Executrix, 89fnt Hiaaic OaTioaD WOOD, Executor. fN PCTH-tfJANCSOF * N ORDER OF George 1 It. Cpok. .-utrogate of the county of Onon daga. New \ ork. notioelsberoby given to the creditor* oS Arnold Remington, late of tbe town or MaoUua in said county, deoeaaod, that they are required to exhibit their claims, with tbe T ouch Grs UtrooLW the subscribers at toe office of FraaallD II. Dewer In the vlllagoand town of Manilas, in tbe county oi Onondaga, \.-J - fi n or . theSUa day of .November, I isao ^-Dated May It. teas. t \ VIBOIL BULL. Executor, AMKMA H- 8TKVBNH, Executrix. Dated June. I. IBM. ftlmt IN PCTTtSnArlOKOFAN OUDBB OP George 1 R Cook, Surrogate of tbe County; «tOoon- •laga.^cw York, notfc* Is heTobymve n to the creditors of Fetor 1 Terpenlng. lace of the town of Manllusln said County deceased, that thejaroreqnlredtoexhfbltt'hctrolalmst with tho vouch far* thereof to the subscriber*, at the late i^denoeof said deceased. In tho town of Manilas. In tho County of Onondaga, N r, on or before the 1st day of January, 1887 - Dated June 24. \m - MARY TERPENINO. Executrix, am6x EDWAHfU. DEWRT Executor. boxrels. The generous man Is the owner j oX an enormous monolith In Texas, which «ockl be excavated so as t o hold countless gallon s ot Ink. The stone Is worth $1,500. ' • feat ho will gladly present it to tho city, 1 Wsrthc university, if the authorities will' Wrauge ' for the cost of Its transit from ' A Ulah-Prloed SpoaUh Fiddler. Before leaving London, Baraaate. the ' Spanish violinist, refused $Sx> which was Americ a to the palatinate of the Rhine, , offered him to accompany Fatt l lnaau v It Is not like the' Cleopatra obelisk, ob- gie song at her last concert before her serves tho owner, for I t has never been- marriage. - * H e demanded 51, 000,—Chicago •^Idcsocrobsd by A chisel.\—Chicago Times, , Time*. materially contributed to a final recovery Cor National Druggist. Flowan Eaported for Thvlr Bngor. The Maluva tree of Central India (Bas es! I lattfottaj bears flowers which are now being exported to Europe tor their sugar, of which they contain more than half their weight. Th e tree reserr.bles the oak, and a single specimen sometimes bears a ton ot flowers,—Boston Transcript. Newsboya* Protective Union. The newsboys of San Francisco have or ganised a protective union. Te n cents Is to be the uniform price for a shine, and destitute members will be taken care of.— Inter Ocean. habits of the sixteenth century led t o a better arrangement, and the fire-place was universally constructed In the wall, and the smoke escaped up a chimney — De- morest'a Monthly Measuring the Foroe of Oraviry. A spring balance tor measuring terres trial gravity was exhibited at a late meet ing ot tho royal society ot Edlnburg by Sir W Thomson. Th e apparatus is so sensitive that It will indicate a variation of a forty-thousandth part in the force p i gravity.—Boston Budget. The Prince of Wales' stables cost him over £80,000 a year. Ths princess loTfta i dogs. She has over dgb/fy. OBERIF F HALE -D r virtue of one execu *.''loo Issued out of the • ounty Court ol Onondaga C. untj flute of Now York to m© directed snade Ire red against the pro port? of James P. Doit a. I have seize! and taken ••11 tbe right, title and Interest which tho said James P DelU bad on tbe*7th day of December 1682, ar at any time thereafter In and to the follow lng\ described property, whloh I ahali sell at public auction at tbe front door - f the Court Douse, tn the clt» ot Syracuse. Onondaira Coanty titste of New York on the SSth d*y of Heptnmbor 1S8C. at 11 o'clock lo tho forenoon of that day to wit All that certain piece or parcel ol land sit uate In tho town or Ballon in Onondaga County and State of New York, known an<i distinguished on a map made by Calvin Oultteau as the west half of lot Number is In Block number thirty-eight. In the city (lato village) of Byracuse, being thirty-three feet In front and. running back to tbe center of said block, supposed l o be one hundred and sixty four toeL-Dated Aug. 12, IBSO. THOMAS R.O'NErXiU 1 T. « _Sbnrlff of Onondags. County. By Davzn B. YaaErrs Deputy. ia.< THE PEOPLE OF^HE STAT E OF XVVT t York to tbe heirs at law and next of kin of Franels Olver. late of the town of Uanllna ioihecoantr ot Onondags, tfeWiYork. de- eeased.whoaeseveral names, ages and places , or reeldoaco aro unknown and cannot after i dliigontinqulry for that purposo be aaoer- Ital &od creeling WhBreaA.OarrleOlvertbe ' oxwatrtr named tn a certain Instrument in writing purporting to be the last will and testamem of said s rsncls Olver late ot the town ot ManttuR, tn the county of Onondaga and *tate of New York, deceased, and relat ing to both real and Dorsonal estate, has lately made application to the Surrogate's Court of our county of Onondaga* to have said instrument In writing proved aad ro- coH M as a win of M»RI and personal eetate: You-ndear h of you are, thareforo. horeby eltvd to appoar before tho Surrogate of the eoitDtyoronondaga .n t h| » offlco In the city •t Mrracuso. in tb *s<> Id county ofOuondsga, New York, on theSSthdny of September Itoa, at lo o'clock tn thn forenoon of that day. then and tbero to attend tho probate of said will. And If any ot tbe aforesaid persona are under the age of twunty-ono years, they will please take notice that they are required to appear by their general truardian, if they have ono and II they have none, that they appear arV^applr for tht> appointment of a special guardian, or in tho event of tholr neglect or failure to do so. a special guar dian will be appointed by the Surrogate to represent and act tor them Inthoproceed- Ings f<»r the prooaieofSAld will. IN Tta-riHoitT WuKUcor* wa havo caused the seal of offlco ef onr said Surrogate to be hereto affixed. Wit- nossOeorgoR.CookEaquire.Surro- (L.S J gate of our county o/On/ndaga,at the city of Syraouso, In said county this llth day of August, In the year £ i onr Lord one thousand eight undred and elghty^slx. Oxoaax Ii, COOK, S arrogate.