{ title: 'The freeman's journal. (Cooperstown, Otsego County, N.Y.) 1819-1922, August 10, 1893, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn83031222/1893-08-10/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1893-08-10/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1893-08-10/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1893-08-10/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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4 TH E TfeOMPT PRESIDENTS MESSAGE. ’ SHEEMA.N ACT HEPEAt OP TJIE ■ORBED. ' |cl niJ ’ I M a* * ) don * “N ou'f lywl now Jptle i.H e |otic( -.,iv lo t 1 >:fo- oilkr 4 .Th, Blush’ LnT. g i td ' »uuE Bttac! 3 b ihe Congress o f ike Untied Stales: Tlio existence of ttu alarming and extraor-. ' diimry busjhos? gftnatftni, Involving. the .-Wet fm and prosperity of all oim people, has con-, . strained m e to Oall together in -exti-a session tlie people’s representatives; iii Uongress, to- the eijd tliat through a wise and patriotic ex, ercise of the legislative duty with whieii they • solely are, charged, present evils may b e miti gated .and.dangers threateningtliefuture may lie averted. tub KmseiAi. -.rxaoia;. . O u r unfortunate financial p light is mot tho Trantt of untoward wwentw mor o f conditions related to our. n atural resources; nor is it 1 ti;ac 8 alilo to any of the® afflictions which fro- queiitlycheck liatibnal growth and prosperity. IVith plenteous crops, with abundant prom ise o f remunerative production,and manufac ture, witli unusual' invitation to safe invest ment aud with satisfactory assurance -to busi ness. enterprise, suddenly financial distrust ■ —atid fear have -sprmig-upbu e-vety-siile.—-N u - morous -moneyed institutions liave suspended ln.-ea.use abundant assets were* hot immedittte- - ly available to meet the demands o f frightened depositors. Surviving corporations and in dividuals are gpntont to keep in hand .the ■ money they are usually anxious to loan, jand •those, engaged in legitimate business are sur prised t o turd that the seeurities'they offer tor loans, tliuTrgli horelofure\satisfactory are . no longer accepted.. . . ' VALUES SUPPOSED TO* JIB PIXEL. dgiu ' Cram johr Up!' nine does. Values supposed to be fixed are fast becom ing conjectured, aiuMo'sa and i'aiftn-e have in. volved every branch of business. I believe these things are principallj- charge- . able to congressional legislation touching the . purchase and coinage o f silver by the general government. - * * >■ This legislation is embodied in a ■■statute passed on the l i t l i day of July, 1890,‘wIHcir poke wiis the-mdnmiatipn-of'-mueh.agit-Btion onthe subject involved,and wliioh may be nonsid- erccC a truce, after a loiig struggle, between JTh “I* dear __ vith ate, By th itepa’ pmytl, pro.bi. L th PH” intending to be moro caliael-vadVe Undoubtedly .the monthly .purchases by tlie government of four million and five hundred . uiousanfl ounces oklfilvor, enforced under tliat statute, were regarded by those interest ed i n silver production as it certain guaranty of its increase iu price. T h s result, however, lias been entirely dif ferent, f o r immediately following a spasmodic and slight rise, the price of silver began to fall a fter tbe passage o f tlie act and has since reached the lowest point,ever known, . This .,“M abou- An tlmt ■ >he i tb E kiiico Th - ftifuli a did eheeh - • tlmu Tii fried --------- pile s b k g f . jjpoki. * vith • disappointing result has led to renewed and ~persisteut clturt TnTJie clireciiuu ofTi’ee silver coinage. “ EVIL EFFECTS OF TIIE SHERMAN ACT*.’ Meanwhile, not only arc the evil effects of the operation uf thu present law constantly accumulating, but tlie result to which its ex ecution must inevitably lend is becoming pal pable to all who give tho least, heed todiium eial subjects. The law provides that in payment for tlie 4,500,000 ounces of 'oilier bullion which the. Secretary of the Treasury i s commanded to purchase monthly, there shall be issued trens- . ury n o tes redeemable on demand in gold or ailver coin, at tho discretion nt tho Secretary of the treasury, nml tluit said notes may be reissued. It is, however, declared in the act lo b e ••tlie Cs'tilblialiFii \putiey 7 >f thu United ment has n o right to injure tliefflt bjvfhrsuclalT experiments uppused to the polity and pific-. tied of other civilized states, nor is.it justified im peimitting-'iuftxaggeratiid and unreason- - able re$ttttee..pn; 0 u r njUionpl. 'strength mid. ability' to jeopardize the soundness of the poopkds money. .j- -' AJ.O-YE 1 THE PInHN OF POEW-ies. • This matter rises above the plain of p atty - politics. Iy vitally concerns every Jiusiness and ealiiug. and enters every household iii. the lamb There is one important aspect of the snbjeot which especially should ucvbr be o ver looked. A ttunes like the present, when the evils- of unsound finance threaten us, the speculator may anticipate a harvest-gathered from the misfortune of others, the. capitalist may protect himself by hoarding,-or inivy evcii .dfiiid profit in the fluctuation of valiies,j_ hut Uic wigs earner—tlio th s t to b e'injuied by a clgpireeiated currency and the last to receive the benefit of its eofrectibif-j-iB practically defenseless. lie relies'for work-on-the ven tures of confident and contented capital. This failing him, his condition is without alleviation, for lie eirn neither- prey'onthe misfortunes *of others; nor hoard his labor.' •'BE ariST' AHD IBAli -NOT. COOPERSTOWN, AUGUST 10, 1993. - BPSIWEB 8 HATTERS. • •\ •/ The National German-American Bank o f St. Paul, with a Capital o f tw,o millions, closeii. its doors on Friday last. Its deposits, fijid been drawn down $1,5 02,000 since Janu ary last..- I t is a sound institution. Several other batiks hftve suspended from, the same cariso—foolish- distrust. J ' - I t Is how evidentjKat tlie \Woi-ld's F a ir will prove a financial failure. I t lias cost tin' im mense amount of money, and been necessarily ! 7 BRIEF. THE SEWS IE Throo indictments. havo been ^ returned against T. 0 , Burlingainor prosidoilt, apd 1 *. C. Newiuaii, cashier Of the -National Bank of Commerce. ‘ 6 f,SprH igfiidd,lJ\Iu.,/Tbcy-nixt One ofthe greatest statesmen o u r country has .-erwinwwzr,'■Speaking more than fifty years, ago, when afierphgenient of- the currency liad w i s e d cpmmeTeUu- * distress, said;- “ ’tlur-vaTy inair o f all others who h o stile 'deepest- inter est in a.sound currency and who suffiirs'uidst by mischievous legislation in money matters,, is-fhe man who earns his daily bread h y his. .daily toil.” THOSE WHO. LABOR. . . • These words are aa pertinent now os on the day they werb uttered,- a n d UugliL to imp res sively remind ua-thqt' a failure in tlie dis charge of our duty-at*this\thnei?iust cspeciiib Iy injure those of om- countrymen who labor, aud who, because of their number and condi tion, are entitled to the most watchful care of the government-. I t “is o f the'utino.st iiujifirtance that spcli relief as CtongrcBS can afford; in thp existing situation he afforded at once. The maxim, “H e gives twice, who gives quickly;” is di rectly anplicabie. I t m ay be true Jliat the emban'assm'ehtsTfoin whibli tfidTiusmess of thecoujitiry i s snffering-arisetts tnach from cvfis nppirehended as-ffoin tbose actually ex isting,' -Wo niay hope, too, th a t eabn' eouh- 7 sehrwill~p Tevmlymriirthat~neitha,'tliH' capital#' ists nor flip wage earners will give way jto nnr reasoning panic, and Sacrifice tlieir property\ or their interests under the influence of exng- NeTcffheless, every day's do- geratmg tears. Tay iu removing one of the main and princi pal causes of the present -state of things en larges the mischiof.already done and increases the responsibility of the government for its existence. W hatever else tlm people have a rfght to expect from Congress, they may cer tainly demand that legislation condemned by the ordeal of ,threo years’ diaaslrou 8 eX|iM'i- eiicc sliall be removed from *the_slatot,e books asjjsuon as tTielr reprcsentnlivtm can IegifF nhral inarely (leal with it. -AliOUT -THE TAItngr, run i t a great cost.*, [toy.; a Chicago dispatch: “There must nfeeessafily be n large attend ance the remaining period' o f the Hair if the management is to piy i ts debts, n n d this isdll it now hopes to do. I t is a foregone conclu sion that the stockholders o f tlie F a ir will get nothing on their invdsttiteirtp nor wili their oharged-with fraud in connection- w ith the bank’s recent difficulties. ^ ? \ Hinton E. Gitrr, late president of tlie.Tus- cumbia Banking, Company, was arrested on the 3d a t Cedar Rapids, Iowa. V Mrs. Maria Ii, Mitchell, widow of AiBxan* der Mitchell, lias begun suit against her son,\ John L. Mitchell, and the Wisconsin Marine and F ire .lnsm-iyice company’s bank. The baiik owes' her $300,000, j t is learned fronk good antliority, a n d her sou, i t is alleged, is! behind some $50,000 on tlie pnnual allowance vdiiehha waajffiipijreiJQ ptyJher which the exposition is-legally liable amounts to so lnuch.that it will take^ p tremendous daily average of paid admissions t o easfe tlte obligation. There was a grand collapse among the spec ulators ih pork* a t Chicago one day last' week, not’ to' the regret of coiisumers. The price of perk went down $9 on a- barrel. I t -had been k ept artificially high. Mo Uiore silver certificates will be by the Treasnxy Department for the present, as the limitprescribed -by law has been r eached,' th a t is to say, as many silver certificates are now outstanding as there are standard silver dQ,llag.tcpined and in the Treasury to redeem thom Standard silver d o llatsllavebeen coined to the number of 389,936,874of -wliich orrly 56,- -WlWaQ-are^-ht-eiveiriatlemi-—The—peepl not n’an t them—if tliey can get Iftty Other form of money. * A-larg(Miuiubet_of-fariiiere4n-thia-tociiii aro feeding their wheat te liogs, rather than sell it at the prices now ruling. Hogs are ([noted at from $5 to $1 p e r 100 lbs. accord ing to grade, and it is estimated that a bushel of wheat properly ground a n d prepared, and fed with a little otlier feed to giv£ variety, will p u t from fifteen to twenty pounds of I t was my piu-pose togjuuinoii Congress in special session early in the coming September when ne . might enter promptly ujioa the work of tariff' reform, which tho true inter ests of the country clearly^demagd. which so large a majority of tho \people as shown by the.ir suffcagesj desire and. -expect, atnl to th e .accomplishment of which every effort of tho present administration is pledged. But while tariff reform has lost nothing of its immediate and pemianunt importance, a n d must in the near future engage the attention of Uongress, it has seemed to 1110 that the financial condi tion of tlie country should nt once, aujl be- fori 1 all iitlii-r suigectB, be considered t y your iitlltes t o fflnnTtam tha livu-meUdsam-a.pariqc; iionbiable-bedy, ----- —- with each other npon the present legal ratio 1 re f e a i , t h e sheujiax act, QrauLdLratieas'jnay be phmnml liy-law \ Thi:’d e d Z t “ V o n , , T H ^ ^ J F ^ p^w d n v p F imwaT howe ■iego ijem-tary o f the Treasury a s to prcraid hTs ^ f-a^prew istous^of the a ct [ . . . . . . exercising tlie discretion nominally vested iu W** JHllt^ m'lzV!K tl!t’ rf.lll8e slheT taU; ® ^ I ion, ami thnt other k*gia 1 attvo action may p u t ouiB and sm im \ i . hiity bpyond nH doubt o r mistake the intention and ic 1 , ^ ^ : ! the -ability of tin-government to fulfill, its j f by sueh action the pitrtty -between gold -1 ,ll>|.tjniary obligation-; in tummy universally Silver miiy ^be^ disturbed, ^nian^'slly a j-(Co<enizetl 1 by all civilized countries. and refusal b y tlie Necrdfa'ry.iu pay those treasury notes in gold, i f demanded, would necessarily -l'OSiHt-in- blieir- -diKcpedifl-iinri -depreeiatieft na obligations payable only in silver nud would destroy the parity l)ctweeii_tliu two metnls by establisliing a diseriniiuation iu favor o f gold. U p to Hie fifteenth dny of .Inly, 1993, these notes had been issued in payment of silver inxivin a ~'bullion [Hirchases, tri tlrr amomrt o f - inoiv (inovEu ( lu v e i .a n d Executive Mansion, Aug 1. ism TELEGRAPHIC DREWS ITEMS. tbe faruier eati easily realize $ 1 -a bushel for liis wheat, awl save t h e trouble of lmuling it to faiarket.- Severnl o f the largest Kew-Fork-Gity- banks have recently, purchased largo amounts of government bonds,-on which they will issue additional circulation— and tiiere is profit in so doi ng. The Bank of England says \stop’.’’ to the export of gold from t b a t country t o tho Uni ted States, aud has p u t up its discount to i per cent. About $8,000,000 will be received in Ne<c York this week. Tlie collapse iu the provision market nt ing-ttpecnlatera of-diat-eily-vvasLegarded-vtdtli ■cmtaplacency in Now York. I t urns felt that wlilie the de.’il lasted it created tu» unhealtli AUtmation, aud-now-jtiiai i t liaLculmmatsuL iti^m ,au c tio n s of Minhosofu liquidatiuii in everything is about complete Eirai. it was in the indtiKtrial stocku, then ib railway- issues, tlum hi wlteat, and now in provisions, Nohubblesnre left to be pricked, the level of prices for practically eveiythhig is a low oju^ yind- there is a substantial basis etahvliich fo begin bttHdiiigwrpr T oexka . Ivan., Aug. *-J.—Tlie extulua of . t ’ojoratio uiinetn contmues through ICnumts, proving a ’ heavy burden ta farmers uml a , , , . . , source of g ieaf hiuibWuiee td rnllluiitlil. ‘Ihe\ than one hundred.and forty-sovcn millions o f , *ramj, tratus on the several roads carry from go; dollars. M lnlc all hut- a very small quauUty , -)|io to -IHO each day going east, ami tlm regn- > to of this b u llluu remains -uiuiomedand withom M,;u ;,n„ „,„i ? lISL'fiiiii.essjn the trcastity, toany of thejiotes zutu miners who nro determiiieil lo gel out of Every man or woman who withdraws a dollar from circulation,’ for the .purposo of hoarding it, is not only contributing to the disturbance of 'business, bnt is morally guilty of a crime against tlie general public! Keep the money in active circulatkm, . Eivvyour ‘little bills”—and do it now. HILL AT THE HOP GROWERS’ PICNIC. What He Had to Say on Personal Liberty. - Trrn “B oom \ U owaesed , —A recent Ore gon letter rcmarksU'KTllir\generttl buBipess Senator D.; B. Hill, attended. the Hop Growers’ Association Annunl Piciiio ou tlio 29th pit. A t 2 p . sr. he was introduced by president Henderson and ^ p o k e /for an hour aiid Si lm lf Among ofli^jhings he said; I f there ia any ope subject fknoiy'jnOthiijg,about it is that-of Raising h o p s.. I t was pdssibly for that reason that tliis society concluded to in# vite me to address you on this occasion. I am not going to assume, therefore, that I possess any knowledge Whatever, certainly no-superior knowledge,' over you. Senator Hill then began a discussion o f the subject of “personal liberty,” to wliicli muoh of his ad dress was devoted. H e ’Said in part: Conservatism favors per. sonaHiberty.- Radicalistnopposes i t, - There are those whose views are so .extreme that committing outrages in different p arts of the State. I t is said that Senator D. B. Hill is soon .to introduce .a new coinage bill. • ' On, Thursday nighi last, a small-steamer on Lake George was wrecked by hoing run on iken pier, atid nine lives were lost. The party oil board had gouejio one of the hotels tb attend a ball. ThtS magnificent armored cruiser New Y’ork,. a ship which will be notable among the war vessels o f the .world for h e r speed, was formal ly put, i n commission ott tbe latfm st..- She is adm itted to be one of the finest vessels afloat, • There lms been another death in the NVY. State bnilding a t Chicago, George S. Stevens, auditor. He died of typhoid fever, as prob- ably did Mr. McNaughton. The drainage is had, . , to tliqy would oppose the raising of ,hops because buc I i production facilitates the manufacture of beer. * They seem deaf to the fact that hops are used for other, purposes: odncededly proper arid -legitimate from every point, of viewv>»4l'hey forget.the fnv-thec fact-that-hop raising is au honorable Decupation and a vast consistent in their ineonsisteney; they shojuid go further a n d insist upon some restrictions oii the raising or sale of rye and corn because they; constitute some of- t h e ingredients which- enter into tlie manufacture of liquors.- The people of t h e \ S t a t e ' of ; New York are to be congratulated on the fact'tliat fanaticism; and ■ ill-liberality have lately found -little encour- x»Y.inAurt<i JlinTn«T5To?iniV' A+' onu W + o f zj * M'tii altimore lias a population pie,, one-fiftli of whom are employed in its factories. ‘ * \ 1 m f comerr stone of tlie Federal Capitol w illbe celebrat ed in W ashington,-Sept. 18th, on,a grand scale. * A number of coinriiittees have been appointed, subscriptions solicited, and enthus iasm will be worked up to the highest pitch. Thu number of applications for enlistment in the U n ited .States army haa been fom al an call o p jijaealthy hog. fh is being tlie ease, jAutuaaitg-mdifitLtoutol -tlie-lal»»tr—market -in this country. I t is therefore regarded as ominous that tlie pressure at the recruiting stations is now'grcater tliAli it h as been a t any time since the war. And y et desertions from the army are increasing. Fur June, 205 de sertions are recorded. Fire on tlie 3d inst- destroyed a score of small buildings on tlie east side of Wushbur.- ton avenue, Yonkers, aud -back on Mill street, and caiisud.a loss o f about $100,001). All the buildings were one-story structures, built on spiles over the Napperhnu River, wliich runs through tiie heart n f tlieeity. - , The new OoHeetor of the p o rt of New Y ork “free to beUeTuriuined by negotiation or mar ket rates.- He urged Uui agriculturist tp make Ida farm more a ttractive and induce the boys to stay a t home. He cautioned them not to im- (ibrtake to cultivate too many acres of ground, and impressed upon them tlie importance of doing well any tiling they undertook, He called their attention' to the fact that nsa rule the highways -of New York State were mueh poorer tlum those of Now England; H e said tiiere the reads were smoother, there Wbre no stones in the path, and neat, sigtq \boardsguided the traveler. Continuing h e ' said: Tliem is nothing tliat makes country lifo mure pleasant than good roads. Tiiere is somethiug defective «iu -our highway laws Tho—plait of worl * — ---------- — t — ~ . T , they nmy-exist. * was swul'ii lutu ofuee 1JY V J-;A- bilivids rt,,- is-ll. most iniraTilbU-- filduvj, for lt\e 1 lasfF n itay . § 100000 , . tte gitvtrbondirnr t lte sunr u llavagesof the army worm\ a re reported ns A gang of thieves and pickpockets nre. fol lowing about the great Iiarimm show, ns they follow any exhibition of the kTihd. . At somo places they tret a lilrpe anumiit-of-meneyT-- - The W orld's F a ir was ripen Inst Huiuhiy.— T'Jie nttendauee was light. ______________ 1187', An dit< feugt- Nrariy nll-nf the railroitjls inrtiiu crnmtry nre now’ umterially reducing tlieir running exjwisea, N Y*. Bulletin of August 3 d : There aro in- ‘i’tn r t ’kealionH-of-a-inuelr b e tter feelittg: i ll thirdly iideS. A eiid was rcceiif- 21)0 to 400 each day going east, ami tin tar trains are sliU besieged by idle aud 'k'-Si- i y,8\t(.rih y l.y n rapTes'eutative oPTHis the country. ' - ' I - __ J.,J.!’“ l'er* opinion nhoSvoil a gvn- - r i On account of tlui flnancial stiinEencr the , erally liopeful feeliiig .Few depositors twemr th e first day of the - Fur-iiitu j-i ■,t tht- srn-n religious iknoiuiuaUuiikljtaJlii.l T«,r thoir inoiiey at .the savines Laiiks iit AsldfflitKhivv,wiBri.'e,bttesit.jii one -T-hnm-h ,1 y^fertlay, andin fact tln aeposftsYvere larger listen toono minister mid drop tlieir n n tes in- ,i , .............. „ ,,£ -«r i . n o : .. m i . i . !■ i . . t l i a u o n a n y o t h e r d a y t ts w e e k . M a n y o f to o n e b o x . I his will add s i s tle r g y in e ii to , . , J . the givat army nf the unemployed. tH k - r ; tkesiT'thnt d id draw muney early m. tlm week <|moglit-st-riekcn cimuminitics will mlopi iho ' Imvt- returned tlie inuiiev to tlie banka. ______ sniic. plan. ___________________________ | ___ A.diip. ariivml—n—Xmv—Y i o rkJixmi-Ciiina- dolm Loehreu, Peiisioit Commissioner,.-lias extemleil until Get. lOtli, 1 Mi Jit, the period witliui wliieh [leiisiouui's whose [iciisioim hnve been susjiended may make proof of their right lo receive them. No mini entitled to a pen-, siini-unricrtrhe-luw—v-dj-tec it, . . . _‘l _gles Uiroiiglt each covnitj\ aiid\ maintained by the S tate. Ho said New York ami Brooklyn pay ovor liolfjho taxes in tlie State, and that if th e y «H.I »m> o b je c t li ii t) iii ru it, m i w h y - t l,.- -viien In .ita purcliase have been paid in aold, (’his is illustrated by the ataienient flint bo-. It seems to lmve been settled a t last that at uadfi upon leading grocery and dry. goods .{cltS[ Bl}iira- o f tlie thmres in t ht' Worid’s l'Ytfr sidcsiiotva are indigent.- ami onu of them has been sUApeiuted.. Kven tiie Orientals said it went lifVLilui anvt.lii|u/ I h-rml- \ \ilmstsed. — iiflaentli-day -of-duly,- baHlh-tliy-itoies gf-tiua :n-Y TtliiiT issue;fin_|iayllient [ o r silver bullion amounted to a littlo mow titan fifty-four mil lions of dollnra, and th a t during the same per iotl a b o u t forty-nine millions of dollars were paid Ey Hie treasury iii goht for fhe redemp- ■neir-efnaeh-iwites: ................. * ........ . ... . •”] E 5 ? * IfcTni\ [travt raid i Ilbvcl iduCt [his f l&hu Ihad - iG r e t frdidn b n a f e ticaus •m , ” G i A vekhvtli . e , Aug. 3. — I lit* scrcit-ycar- last w i k with fi,000 tons o f tea, worth $1,- 3HB-Q26b KE8KBVI. PEtatEASED., -• } «ldrisngirtw « f T ka»V“Kinraki, Bring toot ; (po ------------------- . Tho policy necessarily adopted of paying, lingam n n s Mills, was shot yistenlay by i to.. ' . . ....... , _____ , ... these notes iu gold has not spared the gold re- atew a rt Fairbanks, aged five yeaia. Huv-ei-at' i'iit^ n s in lsv o iy .la ^ l) represented aijjong serve of one hundred millions of dollara long children were playing together- in a room and-, latum and suspended luniks and bankers. agu_sel_aaiiie-hy .tlm g u ierm iiuaL.Uir-lliu-i.-i^pfutMlt|-<( gon.— -AVIuto ttrxras bei.ug. exaimmrd j The New Yd’k Sidi-’iW taiuy is ublaining deuiption of o ther notea, for tliis fund has ai- i,y Fah4«tihs t t was disdratged. Tim draigp 1 ,.,«■[ ilicales Inrgeiy i« mchangu for notes, ready litmnsnbjecfed h r the payment of new- Blrm-k KinraitlV- little tlanglttor, hilling licr pMtvi,v fe!enshtoLmldhehlnraiii#tOTrtifroatea obligations, amounting to about one hundred instantly. • ............. .......... a a .iivi»y....n,!Amsic.ggou.t ncigngainst certriicaiea, ami fifty millions o_f (iollitw o n account of ail- j y EW Aug.fi.-T i n - ahmnwl.ii* New ver piirciinses, and h a s a s a cuuseqnenev* for ( arrived from Suuthnumto-ni last night, tlio first time since its.creation been en - , y |,(, ]ias among licr passengeus Mra. Nellie croachcd upon. . • Grmil Sarteris, General -Uiwit's. ilanghtrr. IVe have thus made lie depletion of o u r , I(, is ^ Mre. Hartoris vvjU m;,k(, ]ier )KJ,llL. gold easy, and lmvo temjitcd o ther and more , illthia country hereafter, appreciative nations, to add it to tlieir stock. That tiie Opportunity we hnve ulliVed has not beon neglected is shown hy tlie largej amounts of gold which have been recently drawn from |»PP( | i t le* vast Itowi lyou lira to,- ahei so- tliat the free gold in tlty Treasary is now 51 Wl.iMHI.tltli), the lugal-tciider wserve fund l«*ing thus restorml. .Silver [trire-s showed increasing firmness daring the week, due the steady London de- _ _ . . _ , liiaml nml tlie dispositionsliownlhere to imr- n i ' n r o Ul\' f ' v ' ’Tx-7' , ' ’,n \; R 'Vrdva-*“'f o r future delivery a t current rates. Dr. A. li. Simpson, of \o r k , Itiadct^ui- . 1 . 1 . 1 r tlie Christian Alliance convention, whici( lias' ™ s ha8 resulted m an advance .of prices i m t r c ^ ’kild^ ' a x p o r t e d t e '^iri’e r o n m I h ^ n ’ , “ n, , a t • ! » « ' J P B.'^nid sine,-, f r o m 3 2 i d to 33jd per ounce, tlio N e w York nanmal strcngtii of foreign n ations. The ex -1 u|y -'ralscd'?,i5’000 for f<>tt-ign iiiissiuns cinmuorcial quotation natiig from 70e. tu cess of exports of geiel over' itS’ iinpOi'tS fq[ |-yatUimay- .. m_^, tho year ending Jnno 3(1, 1893, nnnmnfed tu i P aol . Ang. i.-x-The wcalhor during fn-r <hinn. -suvou aud u hair muuonsoi-j | ^ of wheat wore imusually heavy ■ ............ - - • - - - laat week, the total for seven, days being 5,622,000 busliels.’ngniiist 4 0 per cent less in aftd bullion ill ”our 'trea.iuiy decreased* inoro! Dakota. Alf reports show th a t wheat lias thu vveek ono y ear ago, 4,03t>,OfR)'husEel3 two -titan -one hundred and thirty-hro TTTiiliajTS of | SHed reinarkftbiy ivelkto f t e iop of the head, - yesrs ago; a n d 2 ,1 (IB,ODD bushels \three years dollars. Unless government bonds are to bo with a plump berry of flue quality. * dollara. Between the firat dayof July. 1890, and j itw ilt he ready to harvest next week'upou the fifteenth,day of July, 1S93, the g o ldcoin! r\ost o f t h e fields in. Minnesota and North. _sidy jn J anuary 19~.T Mr. Manning waa nml;, !(the • read eei h tdidi Ewhe oi Iwas |35df V pati- Jiii leant \ »*■ yOB r [else the- constantly issued and sold t o replenish om' exhqnsted geld, only t o bu again cxliausteJ, , \at is apparent th a t thn operation o t the silver ion o f ’the entire \substitution of silver for the gold in the government treasury, and tliat this must be followed b y the payment of all government obligations in depreciated silver. m usi r.u tr co S epasy . ... _ A t this Mage gold ami silver m u st part’ company and the government must fail iti its established policy to maintain the two metals, on a parity with tho otlier.- Riven over to the exclusive use_of a currency greatly de preciated according t o tlm standard of the commercial world, wc could uo longer claim a place among nations of the first class, nor conld onr government claim a performance of . ita obligation, so far as such ari obligation has bpen imposed Upon it, to provide for the use of tho people the best and safest money. If, as m a n y ' of its* friends claim, silver , -ought to occupy a larger place in o u r curren cy a n d the currency of the world through gen- . eralxntematipnalco-operation arid agreement, •it is Obvious th a t tlie U aited Statcs. vrill not ' \be in a positron to gaip a hearing jn fever of . siioh an arrangement bo long as We are willing _ f o ,lltinn;‘ o u r attempt tnirrpnmptrati i t r - dOV i suit single-handed, -■ f.AOK OF rONI'ltlENCE. The knowledge in business circles among out own people that Our government cannot make its fiat equivalent to intrinsic value, nor keep inferior money on a parity with s u perior money b y its own independent efforts, Tiiis resulted in sueh a lack’ o f confidence at Rath capital refuses, its aid to new \enterprises while millions ore actually -withdrawn from the channels p f trade and commerce, to bo# ‘come idle aii'd unproductive in the hands of timid owners, f oreign investors, equally S f lor [ont alei'L not only decliiie to purchase American securities, but-make- -haste tr i sacrifice Hhose\ wliieh tliey-already' have. Itdfies not meet, the situation to say that apprehension- in regard -fo hie future of ortr finances i s groundless, and-tliat there Js no reasoii for latik ofconfidence in the purposes o r power q f the government in the premises. Tlfo very existence of this apprehension and Jaok o f cpiifitlonce, however' caused, is a men ace\ which not for a raoment is to be disre garded, , Possibly if thp hndertftking we have in Band were the maintenance of a- specific known, quantity o f silver a s the'parity with gold, o u r abilitjr to d o so mlghtbe estimated ahd^djiged; and perhaps, in view of otir Unparalleled grow th and resources, might be favorably -passed uppn, B u t whon-eur avowed encjpavor is t o maintain sucli panty.an regard to an u.moimt of silver increasing at- tho rate of fifty million doUars yearly, with no fixed im’# munition t o such lncrenso, i t can hardly bo said that a pl-oblein ls-prcsented wlioae solii- ■tion i s free from doubt. , EltTIXLED Ui - 0 E curmENOv. Mie peopki o fthe United ‘dpates are entitled h sound and stable currency and to iifoiiey Tcfogmred as sucl on overy exd ange md in every narktit qf thewoild fie ir gjvefil- to ftiyuytirr ■Four P ^ sohs Killed and Several rajnrarl. T xtfk , 0., Aug. G.—One of the worst ngy- One of the few cheering paragraphs now appearing,\from the Albany Argus dT'FtlcKy :\ T h e repairs to t h e Cohoes company’s canab tliat liave been in progress the current week accidents ii,.thc history of the Lake Shore ( W l 11 lie completed Sunday n ight a n d work in Hailread occurred shortly before m idujtht n)l t||e Illill3. ftnd 8hopaill the Spindle city yesterday in the viUage of Lindsay,\ in San dusky county, eight miles west of Fremont-. T'he west-bound New Y o rk'alid Chicago limited passenger traiii, cansisting of n sixty- ten engine, three baggage and express cam, five d ay coaches and five sleepers, passed Fre- wQl he resumed by tho t e n thousand em ployes wiio have beon enjoying a week’s va cation. * ...... Tho failure of the J . IL \Walker Co., dry of Chicago, w ith liabilities of not less than sixty miles an hour when i t reached the station a t LTfidsii}’. ' StaiiiTing on the sido track, waiting for. tho passenger train to pass, was a heavy local freight train. As the passenger train was passing the switch the first sleeper—tlio E rie of tlio AYng- ner company—jumped fhe fraek and crashed into the freight locomdtive. TTia Eric was followed b y lllie sleepfirs Orinoco aiul Qaca- wanda- Tho sleepfera Ipswich aiid Beselute remained oil the track. Tlte three tliat left the track -were totally wrecked, and tiie big freight engine was reduced to a twisted aud broken mass of iron. - F o u r persons Were killed aud fifteen -lt»- Jnrcd, *twn ;fir tiil‘ro pf wfiOill- ni'ay J ie n ftetad $2,500,000, was' considered a serious affair in Turk, where they- owe a-fargCTnnount. Three national banks in Mankato, M inn., lug Prof. E . C/Em erson of Amherst College, Massachusetts. More than one-third of tho 52,000 immi grants who lauded a t New York last* uTOnth were Italian,ai}d Jewish, The remains of a gigantic race of oxtinct human beings have bee ii discovered near Y’asa, . , - . Miinto Eacii had double teetirJu fTorrtrffir '*aa cbsed-itsslropH and about 1,100 men are well hs in tho back part of the jaw, . It into b e en eStiHiatcd ^ th a t i n tlio s |iace of twenty-foUrlionrs a single germ of a contag ions disease will; under favoring ,conditions, m u ltiply-itself into mofe tliaii IG,500,090 \.55i.n%-«u . \Mrs. H a rriet Strong, bf W hittier, Oah, last year imported pampas g rosf from So'ifth America-to lier 6 virt«vifm ranch ahd raised 3,000,'fl00 phun'es. These make h'andsomo deeorations; One million, of these were sent t o the World’s Fair. Slie has exported over 1150,000 to Enrope, , The total receipts of the American \Bible Society for seventy-soven yeais to March 31, 1893, were $20,546,218.3!),' and-the total issues for tiio-same were 56,926,T il , Tlio total receipts o f the American Tract Society from the Tbeginnirig, May, 1825 to Aprifl'', 1893, a period o f sixty-eight years, waa $19,- ‘340,742. ' * An important industry lias-arisen iii-h’ranco r the selling of milk ftozon solid in. cans, it lias been .disebveifia that milk ean.bo- kept perfectly freali i n a frozen eonditiiiii fSFmoto than a rnonth. I t i s ' frozen by means of i p orillnriry ice-niaking macliine.itndilispatchcd Uy read, vail o r sfeamer to its . destination. The customer who -purchiusck the hbjeii milk has siniply trt tliaw ft out when it is required for use. ' — ' •' ! - ......... .Will amount t a $30,0(K) a year. suapeaditTon Saturday last, Tho .Treasury Department is doing all iu its power to moet-tho demand for sm a ll notes in and around New York c ity. Last Friday niglri S l , 000,000 was s e n tto New York, ahd next morning an additioiiol $ 1 , 000,000 was sent there. O f the 57 T rades Unions in New York city, enaploying over 10*0,000 men, 30,000 a re out of w e ft. : L . ' : Tho Norwalk, Hnt Company, who at one time thought about locating iii Albany, has finally selected Utica H 6 aplace for th e ir man ufactory. They have erected a large build ing and will give employment to some 400 bands. ' ~ Tho Michigan Stove company a t Detroit, thrown, out of employment. Tjie titter im possibility of securing currency to- pay- tl rneu was 'the .cause. The company has no idea ivheii i t will be n b le> resunie. ’ I f Congress passes a fre'o silver coinajgp bill a >1 ovent n o t likely t o l^ippen—it willtonly intensify the present ftnahoial troubles. . l i t - s a i d that the New York Central is e n deavoring to negotiate a loan of $5,000,000 in Loudon. .Is it, like Erie a year ago, .pay ing dividends while.piling up a floating-debt? T o Trieet the continually ijicieasing'dethand for national bank-notes,from hanks.which are taking advantage bf th e low-rate of Govern- nient bonds and buying them and increasing their circulation, Secretary Carlisle .has o r dered tlie force of the Bupeau of Engraving and P rinting to work from 8 mm. u n til 6 ti>, i t . This i| two hours- over the usual himfj?J' The daily ltlsuois YYliiki soinS factories aro closing, others atre ifcoiifmenciiig' biiBinpss^ - I t is not all darlo- ncss. Tlio dry goods trade in N e w York is im proving a little, a n d the hanks are d o ing bet ter. ‘ s ■© ^ “I t is . a tribute to th e credit of the \Sidney is to lmvo a silk mill f o r the inahu- • • “Ab is . a faaturo cfvglpves^anLViiittetis. 'The 'pfy-roB^*0* 11^ ate prOiTiigsory notes are to-day i-prohitQorifpjyxiiriu: . n)«iH*4*au—ri’uq«JIMi,eJ,t- ha* - gvalAted irorintssitiii to West I’oint cadets to travel through Canatln iu uniform attd'm'ariira on -tlrcir way to the lYorid's Fair. Tin- permit -\v.'is--ruq 4 uated by the .Uni ted !j tales Ih'iivi'IIi lnetiCT 'I'tti: A tiiaxy . A tkii ’ h mdchrated ifs'SOtli birllidny on the 3d inst —tlie same dny that tlie Freeman's -Juuriial completed its 85th ycny 'devutiiig n M l pagctom igtiflK srtng account' of its origin ami suhsequent liistury, and giving brief skelelit-sut its several owners and editors — two of whom. <j. H. Baruum and S. M. FTiaw, went into the com-ern from thp Puttglikeiqisie Telegraph, one iu 1825 aiul tlie o ther in 18-19, each remaining there In' tVvi'-en two and three ye-'frs. The great e d it ors of the Argus were Jesse Buel, Edwin I V,HU ell ami William I'aseidy, . Daniel Man iiing, a very aide man and astute politician, tlimiglrdii'latiiiO the i-unrse uf ihe Argus for a number uf yeara, did not personally do miu h president of tlie Argus Company, nnd then’ offered to Mr. Shaw the position of political editor, wliicli Was declined, as a renewed own ership could n o t then he obtained. The present Argils Company is showing enterprise and ability in conducting tlie pa per, ami the following paragraph from the birthday isStto reflects- its-pulitV-.d Co.UVsu and piirjlosc We tlumk the Brooklyn Eagle for the fol lowing: • The Albany Argus scrim to tic more Intent upon healing divblons among tlie Albany Democrats than in holding mi inquest apon who should he htamed for making them.. Right It is. And why n o t? I t should be a pleasure for every Democrat to do anything in liis power to promote Democratic unity, to advance the cause of Democracy and to bring about-Dem- Hon, a n d not The \one tliat is past, that all Doniocrats should unite t o win. A t WASjnrxoTON. - -Tiiere was a large at tendance at flic Democratic caucus of liieni hera of the Bouse last Saturday evening. — Mr. Crisp was renominated for Speaker witli# out opposition. The o ther nominations wero: Kerr of P a . for clerk; Yoder of Ohio for Ser geant-at-arms; Dalton of Indiana for post master; H u r t of Teim. for doorkeeper; Eev. The Repnblican caucus nominated ex- Speaker Reed as tlieir candidate for Speaker. President Cleveland spoilt Sunday a t his country home, in company-witti Secretary Lament, who went oiit with him. In the course o f the afternoon Seoretary Gresham drove out and had a sliort talk with the President. The House met at nBou,\Mr. Crisp was [legker,' Mr. Reed getting the Ko- pubiftau -vote, and Jerry Simpson seven, f Tlie Senate met at noon and a t 12 :30 ad journed until Tuesday, cu t of 'respect to the memeiry o f Senator Stanford. The President's message will be sent in on Tuesday* In tlie Senate, on Tuesday, S enator Hill of New York, introduced a h ill to repeal cer tain sections of the Sliennan act,’ and it. Was referred to the finance committee. Tlmt was followed by two bills, introduced by Mr. Stew a r t of Nevada, one to restore the free- coinage o f silver, arid the otlier requiring the Secre tary of the Treasury to issue silver certificates .for the silver bullion now in the treasury ni excess of the athouut necessary td redeem outstanding certificates, and also- to ’ issue $ 100006,000 , of 4 p er cent bonds. The House was engaged on a contested election from Michigan. , ■ ~u~ -U ISjp-Major-Gen. Fitz J o h n Porter has been appointed by Postmaster Dayton, of Ne.w York, to be Cashier of the General Postofflce, a t a salary of $2,600 a year.. Gem Porter suchedflff \Richard Van .Cott, son of the ex- Postmnster. T h e tieneml is a Tauimutiy Hall Democrat. , • fori ■ agemeniTm th.e legislation. Of o u r S.tate: Yfiro present excise law, after ti remarkahlc contest bf many years’ duration, vvas. filially enn'cted; and, although 'irofa perfebt inensnre. as i t is tlie/w.ork of,hum a n hands, yet it -is safe, moderate a n d practical, a n d reasonably satis factory to all\ interests. ' The fact cannot b e too strongly emphasized that every m an’s* labor is his own, and that he can do w ith ‘it as lie .pleases! He lias a persona} right to name his own wages, liis own duties, and all tlie’ otlier terms under they a te satisfactory toj-he one wlio hires .an agreenient-ia reached arid there Is amend of controversy bptween them.— 10 *%: a hnvgaiir between two Competent eon'tractiiig parties: and i t is nobody’s business but tlieir own. They a re free from the restrifltiQiia_nLanv-: other employer o r employo, and are n o t sub ject to tho control or dictation of any .associa tion of,organization to which'they do* not be long, arid to whieh they do not owe any alle giance. The right to discharge anil the right to q uit must go, h and in hand. Gne can not well exist without tlm other, Oi- else tile par ties are not upon an equality before tiie law Tlie wages of labor, a s a general rule, shout not be fixed by statute, but—iikttlht he l eft depression. is felt here,' tlipugh to pot the samo'cxtent as elsewhere. There have been [only a few hank failures in the S tate.. W e ‘KSv'e'-^it preva-: ‘lent as they, iinve beeiKelS'Swhero, and the' ‘reaction -lias been less tlisastrous.’.’- ' I t is the “ boom conditions” th a t have aid ed thewide-spread panic. The credit of maT ny, hanks and business concerns lias been strained, and noiy when there conres a demand for \ready oasli, tbey cannot obtain it,, and are objiged tp suspend. A great many enter prises that have been started largely on credit, no longer able to obtain-money o n tlieir paper, and with little o r nothing to SolR must fail. I n a b rief artich? on* this subject Harper’s Weekly remarks; Materialfi for financial disturbance exist at almost any time. Thcr-e are always someTnt# siness concerns wliieli a re insolvent-, on nearly jjgp-mjfc jg a cSriddion which confronts\ Congress\atow iit.sessipii, tuid th e question is w h ether ft will restore to tlip country a sound : 'currency. I t should take-t|egovernm ent out Qf the hanking business. . . *.. -**- insolvent, and which go t o the wall.under slight pressure. .Otlicrsaro, so to speak, on thq iiite,-and their embarrassments become crit- Tcol w7ieFFfWf{'is given sparinglyz and With suspicion^ A t a n y giveii ninirient-af-certain- number of inreBtaients'attd enterprises are lmlf-way completed, havo .an uncertain fu ture and must depend for tlieir continuation upon the loan market, If enterprises of this soij; have beeii undertaken upon a-great scale iii fields wlifth promise, no early return or' no return, atmll, we liave tfte^materials fop a g reat crisis', such as the country went through in the railroad. ci ;(ftli-uL187J, and again,—thua . l r l t - a d q v i a r t e r s ■ F q u h Beow.jp Kim.bd'.—Poytland, Me-, Aug. 6 .—The great reservoir of the Portland YYater 'company, on the eastern promenade, burst this iriofning; letting lo.gse its 20,900,- 000 gallons of water in the shdrE space’of about, fifteen minutes* The impiense inassof water thus suddenly loosed dashed vvjth mighty power upon the two houses occupied by tlie families of Michael Ltippin aiid Dennis M- Eoniey; j ’Tbe\ building ■ were erushed as if they F a d been inadje of cardboard and four persons lost their lives. - ^ Lie.ut. Apostolow of tlie Russian navy re- -eeiitly exhibited to some naval officers in Odessa a new style of ship, without Screw or paddle,: b u t wbioh has instead “a k ind of run ning |e)ectrical gear round the vessel's hull under .the waterline, and a revol ving median- ism,/which, he says, will propd a ship fioiji Liverpool 'to New York .in 28 h o u rs.” “I hear tliat your next door neighbor lias a new organ. Do you know how many stops: it has?- • ssOnly aVout-thrcft-.v day,' and-tliaso are only for meals.” *° T h e .United-States lms. a less percentage of blind people than any otlier eduntry'in the world. . - \ • ■ W ine elarifiei-s -in Francs irse more than ..80.000.000 eggs a year. - . . - t \ I t Pis with less intenfiity, in that of' 1834. probable that a t tlie. present- tim e there has been a considerable ainount of loose or reck less- investment, especially., in’ the innumer able electric-lighting a n d electfio-raiiway en terprises -w.ideh have sprung u p ’with such mushroom uruwlli in thu last few years. , B u t, in the main, speculative movements of a sort doomed to suec-uuib sooner o t later, probably do not exist ou any great scale. The condi tions of trade do uO.t supply the material for any* geueral crisis, but\ only fora one of those periodical straits wliicli bring down a com paratively small number of woaker ehterprises. N ot E xejiptj .—Attorney-Generattltosen-' dale lias written a letter in response to num- whether property purchased w ith pension money is exempt by law from taxation. He says “I beg leave to state that there is no stat ute which, by \its terms, directly exempts such property from taxation. I t is -provided by the euilu of civil procedure tliat a pension sliall lie exHiljKTi'imi'- levy and sale by virtiut ofyan etia-uliou. It lias been held by the Court o7”i7ppeals\ti7at iri cei’Uuifeeases—ttiin exemption exteiids tt> property puriffiased with pension money. Tlm lugiiwiiy time, and is made worse, than before, roads hrivo no systematic care- I* Tins Tina, •said-tltnf”tovery man can not keep a hotel, *’ nor can every man make a good highway. It requires .men wlio have madu i t a’ study. He#, advocated the principle Of Statu roads, that is,the principal highways running a t right nn- oitizens o ftho interior, tho direct beneficiaries, shuirld. lie thought tliat such a plan would he ns great a public improvement as tlu- canal. T hh PiiEstDENT'-i M rssaqe tu Cun'crcss. now -tw -nxtm'Sei&Hfti, puliiiinlu'tl in prtsinling Tin-: C holera . - Tho announcement that tlie elioicra epidemic has -reached alqrmiiig- propurtions in Italy and' southern France is not a surprise. It would luive been little short of a minute had not the disease shown itself after the epldcUiio o f last yuUy and it was certain that tlie authorities of-the afflicted districts would suppress the facta as long as -they could iu order that local business might not suller. t h i j y i ll'ui t should be made to hee), it uu uf this c.niutiy, an-l \quarantine regulations y piifatN’pil. __ —CF,nt» Ylimso. —Tire i-eeortl o f Uid South Africa iiiinea is one of the most wuuderful in the history of the mineral industry. In 1887 tlieir product Matronly -13,155 ounces, (worth From SITAO to 5 IS.25 per unnced in. 1888 it was 21.3,121 ounces; I u 1891,72.9,238 ounces, and in 1891, 1,219,862 ounces. During the firat aix liiontlis of the present year (104.971 ounces hnve beeu turned ont, valued a t about 8 t 2 ,(Klrt,gmi. nnd tin yield is still increasing. From present indications i t is only a question ,of uroliths when Synth Africa will take tlie 4 -vernier -penhieHr-tumtitgrift# goldqireduein columns. Ts a plain, pructicnl and efiuimnn- sense paja-r, which will commend itself la e appim n l of most business men, aud it is the hoped L, tlmt ot cioognss. TL.il lh-. repeal of the Fherninn act is ih-iuninh-il by loUlltl ieS -4 tlu* wm Id. C-jV'Tlic Christian Intelfigrucci-.aays: “The pri-n-irt financial st rain is likely to hist bnt it litne wlitb'. but ,v- h-ngaa it ifijca laat, ccuu on,y uml n-tiviu btiieiit will be the order ol the lust iutelt-stnt-f- iiu# (U ilrv.jn. inaile; ‘ *_‘.f,l> - still iiiore plaiii by file facts briefly\ set iu tliis Message. foi til C losivu ok M ills . - There Is a dispoai- tirm t o nlttieb-avernnu-b iliHHil tiHire to tlm numerous shut-downs of industrial establish ments which the newspapers are obliged to report daily From all parts- o f the country. It is quite true that the majority of these Jiut-itowiiH -un- -file tn thr rli-pri'-miili in bust\ lii-iS wiiteli had ita sourre in the wave uEjfinau- cial-distfiist' that -mvepl from East to-West nnd back again. But, it should npt be for gotten that tliis is usually the dull period of the year, when factories, mills and numerous industrial concerns close for general over hauling, repairs, etc. We ruuht readily eite a niunlx-i- of illst.qucus w here textile, paper aud o ther mills have taken advantage of pres ent eonriittons for just such purposes Tlum- are other crises where inill-mvners were glad to close for\ si period in order to nntntcrart any anticipated demands for .higher wages. Tliese and otlier li-asuli-s have teiuled to a->- Men wh;- itcrd- iiot, retrencii will |*r>ii \ .ii;-ntn ,ilit -if-I depressionlcprcssron, rat* lijho j - \ alt - t , i lit * i ami will liohl lan k from the various enterprises in w hirl, they haw been i-tigiigi-d.'' ’riniilstrain, as it Is now witnessed, may not he of long . 1 - - - .. - ,■ I.,-- tl,., 1 .'ii..ii,,-v- . 1 Co..-o.ot:i tivmliles arc not likely tn pass away\ in)a Few inoiitliA. 'The causes li,nre been a Toitj/lhiie forming, and the c.ffeeta may he Felt For a y e a r or two. Mcnntiiiic ••men who need not re- liriitli” should show liu-ii ixijL-rality and gooil feeling. They, (•speriaily, nliunld lie prumpt pay -masters, aud-keep asiiumy . mv-u at work as ctmveiiicnt. edftoli.il work. Uti-.n; tin- di .-tl 1 ; uf Atr—t g r a v a t e tlie shttt down\ nioveuieiil, w liieli ill —n I 1 ,n. i - i i —trrr i ■■i - ■-■■■■ ■ ■ I ■■ »■ i ri-* ■lvs,!,*, „ h I ,-i - .r, - I. - — -u. 4 _ F l - 1 , Ksct-ltiur loilge. t li I, T . of \Vi-*t Troy, tins UL lisiiUeil amt tnriu-i! er it- charter line of the old meiiitn-r-. '-tali-- tliat a luck oCiUtewliuice iiiitt.slues.nut liftllg lini.l in tills 1 l!e cutise uf the ludge stts[H-lldEng \Ve find flu- aliuve [tatagrapli in one of o u r rity paper-.. •-L.uk **F altrmhuiee and dues not being paid,*' is tlie trouble-with scores of churches that an- fmw weak, Imt which might lu- cuniparntireiy strinig if t-iery tnemlier was haiancctt and 1 dislitxirteiied—juflgmeirt- o ften. attributrd Solely to financial comiitions. Thq latter are serious enough, -and have done suffi cient harm without meed of exaggeration. — [N . Y. t ’oinmerce. A few months hence, in all probability, ttiese mitts will cufiimunciL, one after another, t o resuriu# o p eratio/S—and the Republican papers will uot attribute it to the ndminis trationl n paying uiii-, ami an uttruikijit un its meet Y ' aud McALtiSTiat is n o t a politician, and has been kaown principally as a society man; b u th e recontTy gave expression to. some very sensible Views, saying among o ther things: Li IFf92 o u r Government had $426,000,000 of revenue, a n d expended ofThis $417,990,-' 000. Tliis is tlfli Republican statement.— That was only the Federal Government, without including-the expenditures by nil the States, cotmties, towns and localities, wliich oc.ratic victory- f t is always t.he next_eico- probably* wns as much more. Is not this startling? Now I say to all this, first of all, reduce the n ational and Stato expenes. The Republican party depleted our Treas ury by paying out '$ 100000,000 , that we had accumulated,In pensions, aud other grand, extravagant disbursements, and thus brought .about a financiiil crisis th a t this country Fins never before witnessed, a n d will pruhably nut recover from for yeara to eome. a dis- A H oveptl V iew , j s indicated in patch, dated. YVashiiigton, August 3d; Representative .S.prii)ger_ 0 f Dlinois..'cliair- man o f'the W ays and flleans (Jommittce in to the tariff it Would be impossible for the tho subject while tiro House was in cpustant session; - P aid D eaely for his S oaiie .—S ays a dis# patcli, froin fVTmicie, LidTana, August 7 : . YVilliarn Dragoo, a farmer, fearing tliat tho bank h ere in which’he had $500 in’iglit sus pend, canto i n last Saturday a n d dtew it rill out in-silver. When I 10 reaohed home, after dark, ho tied liis liorse in front' pf his ifouSo and went iii,. leaving the inoiioy-in the buggy.. When lie returned, a few minutes later, tiio\ Jig and silver liad disappeared. Tlio Mills shut-down,” sings tlie O t sego\ -Republican. Yes, and largely as tho result, of. Republican silver aiid tariff legisla tion. If a Democratic administration, by the enactment of wiser laws, can chango tho cur rant, then \The Mills will open” again, aiid wo-shail see a return of prosperity. Jfey-Thc \Otsego 'Republican seems' to bo uiidor the impression thnt tlio business of tho office of Secretary of Stato is transacted in Otsego county I ■* ' .* < ir^ e r e are 221 Democrats and 127* Re publicans in tlio new Hoiiso of Ifopresenta tives whiqlrossombleci August 7th, feJ'Tlnm u h t ’ommi.-aioin-r Loclireu, Union veteran of splendid jmpntatiun, has as sitmed tin- respunsiliilrty for t h e lHVesliga- ti„m going nn in tlie . lYnsiun _Dt-|iart|m:-iiL St-crelary Hoke Smith continues to.sefveasa taigct for the intemperate nbnso of wlltl mnilisi# I'l-llsinn U>#f(ll:iTT.T/ To tlif# lh ’. tune frin n? iVnwn/ira} *\ 1 Harrison itw a s fhe policy o f Corporal Taifner or thc-policy ot Green R. liaum tlint'was’dis cussed, aiul Secretary Nolile was scarcely ever heard of in connection with pension matters, ft appears that Secretary Bmitli has uow been selected for attack simply because lie is a Southerner, though he was only sixyears old when Sumter wns fired upon.--[Rochester Herald. JS@'\‘iSitvor Tinning hss hc-coine uliproflt able,” says a city paper. W h a t o{ it? The iuining o f iron, cupper, lead may fpr a tim e be unprofitable; the raising of hops is in some yeara' unprofitable. Must tlie government step in to the direct assistance - of tlie silver mifiers, while it does nothing for tlie others? t h', should fliey fake tlieir chances with other pcoplf?* Why not? In Ulis viflrigo, August Jtli, AlAlUiLlv V -M,, John SI. Esuakn, agod 88 years-gnd S iiiouti;#- .wit'e.oi’ THE MARKETS. THE HOME EETAIL'MARKET. CORJtEGTED \VJEliKXY, Batter, ..rr. Cheese v .,. Eggs, per dozen. ....... . . . . . Pork (suit) per IB ........ -Uanif-por-lh-. ^ Lariif iitnlh Elour, per barrul ----- YVHGLESAI.B PitlC^. Butter, pur pound..................... _W Cheese, per pound ................... s (a> (a> 23 (a> 14 (® •• (a> •• {& 13 (Si I** (alb'i 6 (a) 19 -NEW YORK MARKETS. Nkw Ydihc, Aug. 8 , 1893.- FLOUIt—Market dull. Winter wheat, iucluding ldw-gra»le Fair tp fancy ......... Fairtofuncy patents ..................... Minnesota, clear.' .......... r.\ *. ........ .Mmiiesotii, straights ............ r .... ^ Minnesota, patents.. ........... . Low extras .................................. CHy Mil %r City Millsk patents, ..................... Rye liilxturCs ............................... .. 'H te F lour —l>uliat $3 00^J)3 35 at $2 450(ti)2 70. (THAIN^-Wheat ilrm; No 2 red in elevator aiid in store at 68/0)63lac; ntlont at07,vc; ungradeil red^t 7u. 2 45 a 3 46- ... 3 40 a 4 00 .. 2 50 a 3 00 ... 3 30 a 4 00 ... 4-OO-aatstfc- 1 95 a 2 4& 0\Uv-a-4 tw- .... 4 25 u 4 GO ... 2 90 a 3 40 Corn meat steady Rye .wreak; western at 6-l/S)G5c. tom spots dull, uu graded at 49c. Onta flrm; mixed western at 3Gtf{>3rc; white State at 37/a)43 tac. PROVISIONS—Pork dull; new mesa at $16 00 , Out,meats flrm; pjckled bellies ut He* alioultiera.a.t luimsat It we Lard-at^i W Bl'TTEU—The Itigher grades oT creamery Imv cleaned ut> closely, with n stetidicr bih I more confident feeling Thg under grades lmye accumulnted. with jscarccly auy outlet, und little if twy hopes vf litune diate improvement. /i Creamery,.State nnd Pennsylvania, extra, .f . 8 lov.j Creamery, westeni. extras .......... a Iitt* State didrv- hiitf tirkin tiilra _.-_vtnK ....... — --- 4 VOH __ a to Wcstemdairy. seconds................................... u 15 VrTEESE-TTie reeling us u rule lm quite clit'ernil, the full rates reported from the country uUbrdiugcon KtdcnrblrtsuEport tothr-NihmtiGn ____ State lUetory.ftiJI cream, fimcy .......... 91^ h Stipe factory, full cream, good to^rirne... Slate ...................... -■oice »- ate.factory, part skhmn, ch . KUtJS—Slarket werik. Stateiuiit JRvnnsy-lvttnin, nevrlnidr-...... . ^ r r V t tt Soutlivrn, fresh gathered ................. 10 a . POl’LTKY -Live nomhml in ub«i*iice of «upply Fowlft, qgarhy ................................................... a 14 Turkeys, mixed ............................ 9 it 12 Duck»; iht ixtir .................................................. tu a uo ' a 15 , FOR “A’JLL . O T 0 B G O G Q U H T T \ : WE ARE GOINaaap ’i'j SELL OUR-STOCK % OK |)ry Goods, Ilosieiy, > •»' . T i - f t i i n i i n g s , Glove's, . Yarns, Notions, etc., ■ a t - THE COST TO . . A T T H E STO ItK OK- B r o ’s . T in s is KUT A KAK/tra Hut a gi-eat-chanci: /*,. To obtain .ureything the,' may want iu the way of Druns Oouils, etc , at ‘ very low ftrict-fi/foi- we are Iji'ingiiig llii.-, department of our business to a close. . if yoli Avili atop » fynr store yon wijl be sure to liner something that tt ill suit you, iiuif our prices, will certainly induce yuu-to purchase, - _ C. W. G. R0SS & CO. • Cuopfexitown, A u g . 1, \18'93. . T H E E A R L Y -IN D IC A T IO N S C F .TTtnnTfnffDTri-WrtT-tF-fo T R A IN S NORTH. No 1 0 . No H N d fl l* SI e 31. 1*. 31 Arrive <’ou|>errdo\vn 7 26 'W ILL N OT M OVE U S TO ASK O T H E R TH A N Very Reasonable -Mces . A t tinny and Train 4—«AK dnncllon w itli l‘a«t trulu lrum\Albany Truin ft—At d miotitm with train from Bmghamtyii » Train o -At Junction with tMiiiw fronklhagiftmtuu and W est _ _ “ T rain T—A t JunclTuli witTi FraTu from RlngliamJuu and for Albany Triiiu 9 A t JunctluU w ith trains fvrAlbuii) mnd -Bittgltasifett— - - - - ' Train 10— A t Juuctiou w ith tm ius fryin AlUany aud Itinffhanitoii •Stop ( . . pair Hpriug Vliickciisinufge, per jniuntir.. - *,. Drte^etl jHrnitTy sientfy. •Chickc*u«. Stato aml lVniDylvania, UriiiletN 17 Turkeys, young touw and heim ..... tl Fow Is ....................................... . ............. Squubs, w h ite, large, p e r d c2cl\........ . . .2 60 '~ I I A Y A N I) S n t A W ^ T O k e t t p i r c t lliiy, N«> 1 , 0 U/a>l).V; Nfy a in n 12 a tl ; ttHipphiR, , clover, mixed. Tora-we Straw. No t long rye. ioc. idrortryv. 45/®60c; rrat, 40/2r4fHj. THE WOOL MARIvKT. The wool murkvt him been very rjulut on the surface nit(ltu*A rulu the tranMucttduraam. rtmfiued to ftinnil lolft, hut at tlte stnue timo thero hsrve been a few good Jim-tpf TrrrjliLry wmit moyyd .llili*. week. Tlu*. lowest. prtdcsajVrp reeonL^l-lmvnH^reti -acrfplt’d hy t he fradv Imt thr ftct that large nnd tthreav.1 Lniyers Imv *• bvt-ii «tuU-tly j.lfking up gnjni line* of wool in anticipation of n future use for them mun^ to iiulieitle that price* ItitYrr txmrhed ttmr tnwu^t luvvt I'Df gotkl ^tfuigTil Ihu* wool l*K.* ts-ftu uupviilt* price, ancl the range for flue J 1 T O R AMD CHEESE - MARKET. -'-\vqjrir-* Attg H t 470 t*li-KKSH--l3al«*;» 7 tKW boxen M on contmUshm BPTTP’ff- ’H7ttr?“'•rr-pkir» -rm tnrrrtnm rr a* 2 OLxC. I.TTTCT i\XX\( ft C IILLSErr-Sales 0 ,u 00 boxen a t Si'aiUc, && dairy at8/a*i»4C BUTTKH-Salfn id pkg$ creanitery bnlttr at 2oc 18 pfc£*,datry huttvr Ut iHjUiAic MEW YORK CATTLE MARKET. Nkw Y o rk. Aug 18Kt dull Steers at $4 40,iiiG 40.- —BHE VKS—Market V'eals at 6 W { a ) * op SH E E P AND 1.AMBS-Sh.*i|>- a t £3 un/.^ F o r h o p g o o d s , s u c k a s - K iln (’lolli, Hop Bnllng, H«i» .Sticking, CoiiLfovtahles. Sheeting, Tow e ling, F t f . Coo;>cratown B u n d y duly 2fl. 1893 B r o t h e r s . C A L L AT Li Lamb-s nt $6 60/^d 75 HOGS—Market Hnu at $0 THIS WEEK, . FRIDA Y and SAT UR DA Y, REMNANT SALE. BSSs-If Rcqiveseiitatives Holmes of Indiana ami CharU-s O'Nt-ilf of Pennsylvania complete .their, twins iu the Fid- X'aiigivsa, each- will thirty yuara the last .Congress, was at the Capitol to-day. In brief liis opinion is that Congress wili not be iu session for -more tltaira week or ten days in August.” Iu that tiun: thu hopeful. Mr. Springer thought the Rilver purchase clause of the Sherman Act could lie l-apoakd, and tho YVays and Means Conimittee oould be -empnwei-rai to tlrafU i'tari# bi-U for stih- lnission to Congress when i t reconvened, -n , r , „ _ r , , , wbioh should be some time in Oetoher. LL Mr#asach« se«8’nn Monday last Iinvo serveil thirty yeara, in th e House—a longer time tliau any inonilieiyhas yet served. Tlieir service has not been consecutive.— Thmn.ii | | JtehtfHi served thirty years ill the •Senate.aml also served one term in the House. Oil a second trial- fie wns defeated. - fi@”TiiPTB was a * sncrw a u d hail 'storm ih when iii mu- town about frfnr indies of snow Ways and Means Coimntfetee to d o justice ter -fell -Home ilaiH««e-wa#i- d u n e the-fruit treys by tho-hail. fi@''Tlio Prqliibitionists will- Jiold their State conventioD a t Elinira on thefiOfli lifid 30th of August. “ They polled move thau 38,- 000, votes in tliis Stjite in 1 *892. And y et if is n o t in their powW lo elect a single member of the legislatufy, . if@f'Tlie N. Y. YYorld lws lioen engaged iu showing tqi the had mmiiigeinent of tlm I'il- liiira liefoi-mafory, rinil ii full examination is demanded. . Tlio Governor says lie lms no hutinfrity in tlio matter. Hanttiim-s'* liave n o t y o t lmd the e f fect to interfeTe wilh liorae racing nml otlier amusements-now in- full blaze all over tlie conntry. but tho closing of tlireo .olnu'ches was last week aunoiiriced. , USY'E- Lllery Aiiderapn, kjiown to m any of o iir ronders, has Tieell appointed one d f tlie 'Pacific HR. I’onmiBsiohors. T h e phict-i is wortli about '$ 0,000 a y ear and expenses. is a tim e wlien there shotild homo over-insurance\ of property ^ i f any kind—iit m t . not bi-yoiid 75 per cent oi-its spot, easli vnftlo. , - * ' - “7 ■ • L* __ • : NEXT WEEK, HOP GRO WERS' L inen sale . D O N ’ T F O R G E T IT. pi.K ( ‘TTiWNi)TU’K—Clerk's Olfita, Otspgn (V - -.tr is btTvb) given. puraAytjoiito tUe statutes tn tiii«Sia» 4 > ati«f,«r tb© apuexxstiHotter of the >4ecTelflf 5 of that nil eleClioii wiil be held in thiscounty on tb© FuVsUa” ’* ----- - — *'“* **—* -ov ■* *•oii-m Flowers and Plants P A R T f E S , W E D D I N G S Suppln’if ht Short notice with Bouquets uml Cut Flowers* -AiHIn* Choicevurietiea of It«wi-s 1 Piuku, *tc ‘ Dc^igtta tastefully arranged forftineral and otlier occasions. P H 1 C 1 C S M O O Ifi Telephone and Telegraph orders promptly filled Mra. U ACKUM, 34 Elm street, Onkontn. O p o n § S e |> t. 5 I n ib i t t o d o l m l A p a v t n i e h l ^ Teaches In.n practical way the briiudus*- needed in business,<tltting its students to till positions us busipess manngefrs, accountants, cashiers, stenographer, etc — Students nmy outer ataflytime, for (Hie branch ora full course. Uirculurs free 3m27 ‘ SHIELDS fe HENDRICK. H. M. Hooker & Co. A*-e Agenft ,lici-e for tlie Venn ent [•’a i m Machine C’o’s gooilii, and will MH tlUin here af (kotory prlden I 8 . t-'reiuu St-puralor,#, Cuoley tri-aiHurii, tliu iisvii -iii/[ Kliurli, Eureka liuttcf Worker, etc Send for cubit ** * ............. * Swill, ................. Clrcullir. Ii; M HOt lKEU fc C'ii Coopentown, Maroli 16, iso* .. REAPERS We sell tlte. MoOumiick godd^tlcs best-made, amt we will’pfoveit to afly.buyer . Look GicuiOYcr L WAKOTJf LAAfll it. OO. AM* ENGAGE VtRTC • B - E I M S ’T O N E , IIOB SACKS, Kri*v Cl.aiTU, Groceries, Dry Goods; Where you can S E L L your R u tter a n d Egg$ nt tby highest roatfeet priee, amt bu> Sic v«r> .be$t goods at the lowest prices. Wo have tried- tbe 44 R o y n l” brand off FLOUR - And firtd it Hie best Bread Flour We- hav-e ever used Suovv Flake and Windsor Futent better tlian ever D e w itt C, Badger. y iurceeiling Uie lint Meml uf N her next, (Novoinher »*!«,) nt wliicli election the olheeis named in the annoyed nulli-e «IIJ he chuseu • LEE It (,'RCTTEKDKN, Connt)- Clerk . State of New Vorle, W*U‘K i>f* THK SEtltFTXHV *'»K SrATF. ^ 4 Ar-UANV, July tis; 1893. To tlio Clerk of the ttounty of. Ulsuco. Sir Notice L Iicfebv given, that, at the General Election to be held in this State on tlie'Tuesday sue ceedlng the first Monday or Novemberuext. <Nuvem byr 7th), tlfe. folluvting oflicera may bu lawfully voted for, to wit: A Secretary of State, in the plajxuuf Frauk Itico- A ftTEujiTroTTt r. in iTra place Ol Fniiik I unifytn.il - A Truaanyer. in the place of KUiot-Dft«ibrth An Attorney General, in the place of Simon W RtHKmrialc. ♦ , . . A Stfite Engineer and Purveyor,Tn the place of Mar tin '\'' — t ------------- C O O P E m O M & f . V. RAILROAD. ~T Im o~TU\lif 1 o i Y o rr4tfr \T u k u r i e f f o t t ----- Jn n e ^32, 1893. TRAINS SOUTH. 0 No. 1. No 3. No. 6 . No 7 Nutf — : --- - A. M. A M. Leave t ’ooperatowu. 0 26 9 20 rim-uis . . - ‘V 20 •* Hurtwiuk.... ■*u 35 J9 3u •• 2d II ford 0 44 (» 39 I'ortlundv ille 0 f.rt 9 48 Arrive at Junction.. 7 uo 9 65 Lome’ Junction . . 8 W to 26 Ai itve W Davenport K 26 lu 46 P. 31. 2 00 2 20 ♦2 3d ■3 2 55 3 08 3 20 J-66* 4 10 4-iio- •r. u 3 ou . 3-ou * lu 3 19 3 s r 3 40 i n t ti 13 No - p 1‘llU-lllx H a rtw ick - aiillUrd ....... “ lJortlamlville Leave Junction ....... ArrhV J u n a t i o t t ----- »* NV Davenport Lv Uaveuport Center 18 *7 14 7 05 ti 54 .ti 46 6 60 6 42 *5 32 6 23 6 10 6 OU 4 65 4 40 4 30 4 40 4 34 *4 29 •4 20 4 09 4 00 4 No 2 M A il T H T - 4 110 1 m n 21 *1 00*11 11 12 51 12 41 12 33 12 10 11 65 ll 4<j 11 OU IU 43 lu 30 9 40 0 2-f V 16 C O N N E C T I O N S . Twin I—At Junctiun lor Albany und east. 'i'rftin 2 —A4 Davenport tenter with ntagp firont Stamford; ut Junction with mail train# tu and frutu Albuny and Binghamton., Train 3-«-At uunctlou witli inall trains tu and from on onuiguaL E 31- fi ARRIS, fioneral Manager D. R> S l YERre Freatdwrt; fltsfigolalsffStaamMCofflpMf... - t ,li>m .< ItiltriTit tun , Ht\.hfi X juhujs ' ami Vth\$. <‘otu ntemJiip; — rornlNtt Ju n e ‘4S, 1H9J. NfHtTJT — a it . . . . 9 30 IU 30 IU 36 12 15 Sri'AMiii N.vrtt Len»ef'euiK*Tsto\\l» . . Arrive island foliage SlAD^H, Lean*. I-lAU‘l *. utlagi- Arrive KU'httold f l I . X W. t K i l V . . . . »• 11 Lrt\uve Kichllcld . 2 16 Arrive t livii .. A 6J UOl.VU SOUTH . 11 L .1 W- r H A ft Leave L'llcn Arrive Hlchtield 1 45 2 45 ' » 15 to 46 O 30 S ft) 11 OO 3 05 f-135 ,4:16 Leave klchflvld ......... ArriveI8lmit4 (nftiige StKAvrm NAtrv Leave Istlmnl C o ttage. 15 10'45 Aryjre VouiK?p*tu\vn . t: A C V UR AM tu 45 12 UO • il 3 OO 4 OU 5 60 2 0U. Leave CDoperxtowu Arr from the sUtyh ij* f nr Nan Dyke V. 3f 2 00 v- M 3 U0 AM PM PM PM. 11 30 1 10 4 40 6 60 I* #G*fnr nerved seat* er *pecial rates, apply fentml Hotel Richfield Springs, or W S 635 p it 7 25 to W A II WATUIXS. Froprktor, Cooperstown. N Y* Steamer Gyelone. Tinae.TnLK* •4 Ju n e *43, i.titv* F4-wify*rv?n»pn, U M A M ■ U l I’ M 4 AH T M Stop at all Point-* un Signal <)(*) ^ YT 1 30 JI 4 30 I’ M . Sefisoh .■rtitnlltqt «.,T| T\.i i ti Ltart On*ern Qrvre 10 3p A* M ’ 2 30 P M 6 30 P M H . 2 30 P 6 30 1* tup mk at utfic l l M and on ttu* boat , CI nft . 25 cctit-'Yfor a trip around Gbego Lake uti the Steamer Cyclone *• ^feanier <4em will run for prh ate partle® at reasonable ratr-j. Capt V 1* Pf)»rER. Rrop’r THE STEAMER • COBURN ?* T I R E TABLET bug.i iimlng Ju l y ,5^ lMtKL RKHCL'AU Trijvs around the Lake-Leave t ’^opert law tr at 9 00 A M , and I 00 and 4 30 I* M S’V-iSPA Y Time. Table I.euvo Conpetstownat 8 UO A M , 2 ouiwid 4-ao-F M StiijHaliiU INiint-d on dgtutl Camping parties aud pH nu parliti carried ut rea.8iniuhli* rate.* Rufi Btittlw fun I»i* uDhpc-il l*> t©lu|diuiie. If itartli- .coming «» the* i A (7 V Railroad, will telephone, the boat Wilfvvait- . . _____________ * it L tttltlK N , Drupnetor .JmlgiiiBiit for Sale, All vvhofie teriiiH of office will expire on Hie last day of December next An AA«iociate Judge of the Court of Appeals, in the place of Isaac II. Ma^nurd, appointed by the (4ov Tin: ifuderuignttl. Admfutntratur with tiiewiii uu nexeiLtf Almira Scot.t, dect’faused, will, 111 pursuance of an older yf tlie Surrogate*« Court of the count} of Otsego, X \ r at public auction 011 the F if th «l«y of ut ten o'clock A M , { al lire law altice of -Samuel fy. Hdidr tu thuTfttagu of (\hipr*to«,ii, N ^ . a judgment against Jolm K Seotl, recovered in the Supreme Court of tit? State of New \ork. ou ihe 2dth day dt M a rch.perfected ayd docketed, and tbe roll thereof filed on tlwxt day , in the t>|?^cgo connty Clerk’# oflico for an Hiinf with the ernoriu tlie pla<fe of <^arle«i«*Aiidretuu.elected thief Judge. Whose tenh of office will expire bn the last dav -Qf fVi.An-O.rtJ. tt — — - Fifteen Delegates at Large, to a visg and amend the Constitution Constitution Convention to- re Five District Delegates'to'a ponvexitio&to-rerDso and . n - - .......................................... - - thflfd'Senrtte tsego,. Lewis _nmendfhe CGpstitutlon for tl)e Twent “District, coiUposed of the coutlijes of i atid Oneida. A Senator fur tbo Twenty third-Senate District, composed of thecoimties ofOtsego, Lewis aiid Oneida. Conntyund Distriot Officers ulso to he elected for satd County. • One Membev of Assembly. . * * Two School i ’innnii.'wiohers. A County Judge* In tile place of Hartford D. Nelson _ . A Sheriii*, in the place . 9 / Jbhn A. JVard. A County Clerk! In the place of Lee 16. Cruttenden A County Treasurer,in Hie placeof Moses fl Lippitt. Two Justicea fur Sessions, iu Ui^'plitct* of Ca&iua Maples and Jumps A Storer. A Corbiiorin.the place of Wilfton T Bassett All whose terms, of office will expire on the hmTtlay di IVeceuaher next. . . (fiven.umler tny hand aiul seal of office of the Secretary of Stale, at the city orf Albany, this \ ninth flay of July, in the year one (t. •*•) twenty U jouhuih I eight huitdred und nlntrtyttmesr _ FRANK RICK, iSeerqpiry of State. P U R S U A N T to an order o f A lbert C. Tenm m t^Stir . t^ g a te o i .tlm county pf fHsego; irotlce. D“TTerebyWew-York. giVen,tacc6rdiiiK t o Jaw. against the estate of Klizabuflrlr: Bntach, deceased. fUSt,\ and bjatai#mr\-uf\ttirr'sald deceased' aVliTs plnce^nf rcsldejace in the towti of HartwTefr, in sa*d tf'duirty, on or before the 13th day o f February ii « jx L Dated Aug ABKL X y R IGLFY, Ey r. 0 ,1893. Salt-glazed vitrified Sewer Pitve i$ fkrgnj>erlor to all “~ nrauwtil tbr dralui, m d mueh cHeaper tlian any nttror. Wo ra.-* M«g» J7j : ugW lilCt uuabq, together with the accrued interest thcrvim wherein Charles K Burch, as Administrator with the* ty ill annexed of Almira*. Scott, deceased, w jvltuiiiiff and .Tolm If Scott ia defendant Saidjudg ‘inent was rtlsa docketed iu the Clerk*# office of the city uml cmint} uf Nt\\ lurk ou tin- 21st day of March. 1^93 Dated AuguM 1 1893 ------------------ CHAULKS If . ISl’ 3 t‘U, A s Admiwijdfntor with tlje M ill annexed of Almira Si-otts, deceased 4 6^20 '. L a k e w o o d COorKUSToWN. N Y -E . A . P O T T E R , P r o p V . - G ranite and M arble Monuinpnts a n d lleiphtonc* o f the latest dcsigim and at the lowest prices If you nre thin k in g of purchjping a monument, com e to Cuopvrstow n mul get my prices 'Y o u can ’ d o better here than at a « ^ other place in Central • - * Itarre, Quincy, W esterly, Scotch inul Svvedc G r a n - I t o s , aud Italian and-American B f a r b l o s . CorrusptMiderice aolicflcti. Rstltnates clieerfuily furiVisiied * ----- ' W orks o ii.JIaiii strpnt, near Ilnilrpad ,Dcp0|. I \y(* BK-pTi-rntt'1' to e o llltect for 8 f o ,m q r e ^ \ ' -------- - ‘- ’ Iblilon-. /i-aifio*' tetolu * co- 18036549