{ title: 'The Malone palladium. (Malone, N.Y.) 1863-1909, September 10, 1908, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-09-10/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-09-10/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-09-10/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-09-10/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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^^*m*mm >i*»9m*m»mmt {%' w^iw^^'^idiifiafc^tet^^a^^; and .11 ore ii Ever. ntted States will to is he aad who edition rtd wfll telljfoa of what prom- the most absorb* tell you what you what fa. rid long ago es- Jmpartiali^r and (cation of news, n. If you want for the which conies to Sunday, and ? at the prfca of regnlar > per year, and We offer this the PALLA- BY THE P4J^^Blto3« 00. Malone Established in 1835. J . Published every Thursday morning kg THE PaLLADICM ttoWKaSy, -.-*.. FREDERICK J. SEAYER, President JOHN M*;N0LA& 'ifra&tk ' PALLADIUM BCILDIK6S, corner of Mais \and Catherine Streets, Malone, N.Y. WSOtE Jf^MBEB '> *$--•, t TEEMS: One Year, - - » Six Months, ••'\-\ - i\'» Payable in Advance. sfsioo RAMfLING 1TH0(JQHT8 OF i»A|.ON£ Advertising Bates on Amplication Advertisements should be marked the length of tune to be inserted, or verb- ally stated to the publishers at the, first i user lion; otherwise tbey will be con- tinued till forbid, or at theopfcionoftbe publishers, and charged accordingly. Legal advertising at the rates prescribed by law. Business cards, not exceeding ri re lines, $5 prg&ftr. Each* additional hue, T5cente»;» -^ L,»\«*>« •i J v« .-' and HorseShow mm .•1' •\•.- * JttlSS I^IIS FAIR] ':f.- BUSINESS DIRECTORY ATTORNEY AND <»imSBLH)B AT LAWJHD- gansbmgn. KT. Among them will\ be some of the finestoh the North American Continent. When seen in the Show Ring, with their handsome appointments and equipments they make one of the most fascinat- ing and^exhilarating sights in the World. . .,' EVeryJbo%6 charmed with tbe1 i S0RSE SHOW. Along with a personal leMer to his life- long friend, Mr. <X, R. Fav*;of- Malone, Mr, W r -®. Baflitot C&ij»K0 r #nd* tfce following communication to tb*. PATJUA- »nw,' • He entf tlwit^RamblingThpugbtB of Malone, Number Four.\ The preced- ing cammUnicab^mfKim Mr. Earle under thUheading waa.publishedlnthePAtJU.- DnjH August ^d^JOOS, to which he. gave 'uttr^f^ers-jin . : uiterei$jHg, wx^^tither. • far^finlea;^** v «ooda$ Itfa ;*IeJpirea yioliniBi:' \~ .-\•-;. ;>•\' r -; *••'•'\' \VS; '•..;• • ' ,-\'iknutt.fbo'*years rollabora me, \I ',!\.*.*> Thtefealbleak.drei^rday^ Mi&P&i familyafeat.cburchand with a alight touch of tflablues;and-a longing for-tfae, old home, the oldrfriend*, the old scenes, — \ ' ' t?'im* .,_„„ _ „.~.,.. yptt+wM pi**** pardon me. 'v»'>'''; *->• .•*•' • V \:' *.-i? ?P' - For ^ttt% >tfW| J ti*e>oifced iju^ pALtADioir :wba£TJncte«ah*$[ight#£t6 delinquent subscriber for' newspaper*-. up\v with the MG«ndOld (Man.''^rb* dropped from the u^Waftl^ijjenWor the FaiiMStjp&jfifo itithduSfiurtbef l defer, will dtfthe righfc tbin* inf ftpa^-nn* Every week,for three score and ten year* we-abe latnify^bave bad a copy $l llbe PALLAWO*; W*wa^^b^ginlrdtrg \\ iS^t.IPM: 1,ri «meml»^ d&fr^dfly. Ied» Blade weekly news- Stetes. edited has had the re years than \» America. -news- be explained write us for world so ar- more easily comber- All current by special inception published or dp not thirst for of a news- by the fact; has oveis 180,- is circiilated - In ad- publishes nany de- to every MAIN & CO0N&Y, Office over Duffy's Clothing Store, HA£OJ E t $.% ;- Branch Office at Chateaugay, N. Y, « Open Saturdays. *TEtE •OF-— ' . . • md Swine Wuf be Up to the Same High Standard of Previous Years. A. EV BOT9FORD, 4TT0BNKY: AND. 4?)BNSnOB AT LAW, BAEA- ase lake N.y. iTTOBKI? ANO CODNSSLOB AT LAW^ TOTPBB te, N. 7. FenonaJ MtenHon gltea to tmstoea riercefleM, rinst, AxGoh, Derrtclt, CbUdwoia Lake at »nJKood WUl be the targea^ana Befit Ever Sean fh the State of IfewVort R. N, PORTER, ~&.Sk 8., 79 EAST MAIN STElK'/jCALOSK.N.y. NKW ^U'l^v'Wtri'l T-Tnll and Other Btegartnients: wftl be pn i? i.OI dl XXdll the Same Higlb Order tBat | baa*60 Pleased all Who have Visited Ogdensburg the Last Few Years. . : *z^ CHARLES A. BURKJE. LAWTEB, 55 WIST MAIN STEHrE; STKC Aiu»on Block, next to coortiwflie. MOORE & BERRY. R.M.M0OBH lfcW&^s.--3.%Wj%8,Y : Office 1st Door East & Conr* Hons*-. Malone, N. v. ATTOBH«ra AimOODHBlXOBS AT LAW. OF- OoeoTwCl^*8dD , « «to^TltotoBXW oew PBO- ple'« National Baa*, \•«^~ «.» - • J.P.KXILAB. • note. Mitouxn sear * J.^C GXtUWAT. OP 40 PIECES It will be recalled by many that in 1906 Sbracoia was at the Ogdensburg Fair with only one-half of his hand, (20 pieces). ,, Those, who listened to their playing were more than delighted, for such music had 3«ldoni been heard here, or elsewhere. SBBACCIAS Band plays with* Spirit, Dash, Harmony and Precision, that no other Band equals. : They will be on the grounds four days pf. the Pair. back when the late F. P. Allen and ^'.•ai Heath were connected with the pap&Vup to the prewnt time-^md to^b© depriWed , of that pleasure now would be like loBto fa life-long friend. - It Jbt through the opl-, f umns of tb9 Malone pap*ra—I taka^n* othar besides ^ours^antt-fMOuentlvislta to the old honve; tirafc has kept me in o»d»e touch with the •ffitfra\ of the dear oltf towflt;ahH l,, tatcpii tto*ioSaiiD« :^Htm ( home papers aa a maiden at twfi%ht, standing at the gate watch^g the, «fm- ing of her lover/and;. when the* (the;Aa> pers) arriTe, no matter \what I am Sflpajg or how busy I am, I lay. all-business \aside and for a few moments am back in ~th« old home, visiting with did friend*..of which only a few remain, and as the I circle narrows down those that are left hire vetf dear? t>p- inViW^-* ^-ir much now in the Malone papers to inter lest me as there uaad to. be. 30,40,5ff~and nearly 60yeare,ago^ The oKToamea.^ •*£tstk Lathrops, Thorndlkes, Fields, Hoifor'ds, iAndroa, Meigs, Brewsters, EeeierSj and 'hosts^f others have *Inios(i,-and; in' some c'asesi entirely difeppeared from the list OfJMalone'ssnbetantialcitizeDsihatmade the town famous years and years ago, and • jin their -stead ootaea.»-4w*M^nerAHon-[ ••whose' f*CQBsJxi ^'early/^eve^yi^ot^^aire-* jatra^ge \o me. &to for \Aiiid-. -%Mg 4Syne\ sake we.havp got to have the PAL- I Island, for 110,000, and tbe the last lever heard of the horse be had' never beaten the time he. made on the half-mile track inMaloa«--buttben, Hr.'S. wa^ifohand could afford $10,000 borses-to look at. Tola toone of the fasolnatihr pictures that hing on Memory'* Wail, ahd-there are TfleoialranklinAoademy—stone build- irig—who** graduatee and non-graduates have filled and are filling pofitionB of prominence and trusfiln all the walks of lif(^fwmtbeseoondhighest hbhbr this nation WmW••<&&, 'db0O to railroad wprkera, lika tta tfriter. But to; every stjudenfc.ntfmatter what station inllfe he o< she may fill, there clusters >around the dear«ld buildmgfond recollections that I am speaking new of nearly fifty years 1 ago—we used to have good times in those. '•nSyi^md;^aiWB^'the>'things! % •*p^ae\i |fqrtheeivtertaihment and advancement 'of the student was,a \l^eenm\ which was held every other. Toesday. night in! to* gentlemen^ chapel. There w^ia \debate\ by- four gentlemen students' .two oa* ». aldc| atterwarda a *»ladieB,v I paper\ read by two lady students, which ! wksat alt times interesting and witty wlth-a goodaliare of aarcasm oh the stu- dint|,ofwbiehl:biaiaa»ample: *'Kdr;#aatandrfo>ty.4ftmffci;rii, ' :' • \• \• jOf oourae, such things caused a .good [deal^f merriment and was relished^ by e#eryphe» 7'I»JceamJS:ight'*' was. looked forward toby the boys, as that was, ^See^- your-girl-bopje-nigbt,\ and most of us, those who were not too modest, took a hand-rsometimes-two—in the ace. In speaking -of the J .\I<yoe^«n ,, it brings b#ck a little incident that h*J passed ont of my memory 1 years and years ago. The parties who took part in theiittlo episode IbeUevea/eililliivuiaandif theyshouldi happen to'read ibis article it will, I hope, bring -back to them pleasant rec »HecMon TOIRMS, #j,oo iff kmmm. : .'> ^ERE ^*D THERE* .^^t7iaail!b%'le^tbe^''.«re' isent frbm Qerm|ovtoJEhglahd every year for mil- ,»e«r 6W foWon rule claji. ate. i ' ; Lyoeum\ used to convene about 7:30 P.-M.,and Wit aboutten or a lute after. •ieraiaaaoommanced, it was clear and as beantlfulasa winter night could be as ask ed for. During the exeroiBis a terrific snow •torm oamo up—not down—and when \Lyceum\ was out the snow was\koe- deeppa the level,\ but those on the inside did hot know what had happened ou the outside. A$#3db^rfiavah^fthe«ub.: ayouhg lady about '^eeiB^her home,\ bnt from a rashion-they had in [LADIDK. Nearly every week Itrekd ^some lit'le thing that brings back the ^ood Iblddaysoftlje long ago. ! Manhattftd is the most densely popu- lated island in the woTld, 99,150 persons to the square mile, •- , Abbot the time a man kecomes dis- gosted with the world the world has be- [come tired of him. It helps console some of the people too poor toown automobiles tp think what risks are run by people who ride in'tbem. jTwo, dollars may look like a whole lot of money in the spring, so perhaps it;would be wise to put the old sjtraw hat iri the attioinstead of the ash barrel. Horace T. Johnson, of: Eltehbhrgb/ Center, a delegate from Clinton County to the State Prohibition convention at racuse, was in town last;, week, Tburs- fy&X*. './•;.. •:..'• .'- ••: •The aggregate production of anthracite add bituminous eoal in 1907 fell bat little short of half a billion tons; in exact 1 [figures the product was 480,450J)42 tons of 3,000 pounds. After all the bard work it is rather disappointing not to have the September cucumbers and tomatoes look anything [like the pictures on the seed packages bought in April. Registration days for Malone this year will be Friday, October 9th a.nd 16th and Saturday October 10 and 17th. See to it personally that you are registered if you intend\ to yote this year, • That shabby and detestable \souvenir\ habit is another bond of sympathy and 'kinship between Americans and Aus- tralians. After the reoent reception on •Ak^z.?' - iK:T^s:'**\??j3f*T* \i\™? ^wFiJooaTd the battleship Connecticut, it was Ope bigbt in the middle of the winter, m^M t hAt a hMwe nnmher of Rnonns an«i bealtfifuIaDft wJnter r B night, when l-UmFj^T T? 8 ^Z 81 ? 9 n ^T 8poom . ana •ieraiae* commenced, itwafl #•!««• *nii *a i forkii- innnnha/i =.»»• *•-'• LOOAL ITEMSi. .-•- > About 250 newspapers have been started in Turkey since the Young Turks got: the upper hand, Liberty slid the free press have always been inseparable. Harry Thaw fe saidf to have ^ro'wn stouter since his imprisonment. His present life must be a fair Wealthier one than the kind he us°d to lead. In New York last week a woman had [•her skull fractured by a hammer that fell from the tenth story of the Flatiron Building, where it had slipped from a carpenter's hand. She may recover, A special train on the Pennsylvania raiTroad was recently run from Pierceton to Warsaw, Ind., a distance of nine miles in less than five minutes, or at a speed of over 1C-0 mites an hour, breaking all rec- ords. -' » The electric furnace is -capable of at taining a heat of 7,'200 degrees. This is a fearful temperature and will melt al- most eserything solid known to man. Ip comparison with this heat, a redhot ironjjerieitesare bar would be called cold. After falling over the aah sifter nearly every time he vfcited the cellar in the summer, a man should not be lop severely criticised on getting rial, mad when he cannot find it the first time he wants it in the fail. • The rate for letters mailed in, this couii' try' and addressed to points in Great Britain and Ireland, beginning October 1,- will be two cents per ounce or fraction of an ounce. Letters unpaid or short paid in postage will be forwarded and twice the amount of deficient postage v ill be collected at the destination. ; NEW$y GkEANJIJGS. kt takes about 2,000,000 cords of wood a year to make the newspapers that go throught the presses of Rev York 0%. The Paul Smitfi base baU team defeated the local nine-at Malone last week W^- nisday byascbre of ^ t o 0. Errors in the field explain tbesoore. The Malone golfer&~who went to Port Henry last week Wednesday to play a m'atched game vvere f defeated by a score of eight to seven. Tfiey reported an excellent; time and good treatment. ' The firm ofMurray & Lawrence, manu- facturers of the well-known brand ( of \Adirondack JBeaBty?, and \M> & h? cigars, located in Malone, has been djs- solved by mutual consent, E. W. Law- reoce purchasing the interest of J. A. Murray. ...,-.... , Taftand Sherman lithographs are be- ing displayed in many Malone business places. Get a set of the pictures and hang them up; We know the majority of Ma- with Taftand Sherman, but J the stranger doesn't. Show your colors add let everybody know. i The largest rock crusher in the World whs recently thrown into operation in a [cement mill at South Pittsburg, Tenn., 'and it crushes all the rock used by a 4,000- barrel plant, The machine has an hourly capacity of 800 tons and 60 per cent, of / theprbdoot is in pieces four inches or John Fitzpatriob, a mail clerk, js suing _.._„ _. ^^^w^o cHu the Deleware and Hudson Railroad Com forks, inscribed with the name of the pany for 150,000 damages. He was in flagship, were missing. They were jured in the wreck of the Montreal and probably taken as mementoes, but the •ffieers, charitably suggest that toey\ were (inpany,\ and when I found out the con- ditions of aTTairs I w« mighty glad she did \have company.\ One young fellow ;gpt a sweet \yes thank you\ and started Off*%a|py'ia*iolam i 9 ! He'bad'46 escort the young lady d^own on jthe ^\Flat oh McCLARY & COUNSELLORS Over People's Bank, A? * •• T i Aii^rj Malone, N. ? ATTOfflSreYB AND COCN3ELOSS AT LAW. ] Off a«soT?rstoc*iren*ri»nat»n'«»tore. TH08,OASTWXIi. J.M.OurfWXLL- 4 eaSA3ra> GSNOEBT by some of the Greatest of Vocal Artists, assisted by SBRACCIA'S BAND, Will be given in the Opera House; Thursday Evening^ Sep- NBW'PHONI. ited. DENTAL OFFICE, KING'S B^„. Tenns reaaona We and all work flay trf tte faj£ I have, for at least the twentieth tune, just been reading the PALLADIOK of, , March 4tb, '08, about the thirtieth anofe virsalryof the ^Tth Company, andt^asyt 'read the name of this and thatt>ld fiiend, it brings back many a half«forgotten memory of the good; thaw >when ibe obmpany was first formed. The soenes .that stirred me in the long ago art always ITresh and green.. I ojed to tokfr a great deal of interest in such funotio IB and everything else* if there was any fun odn? neoted with, it, and while I am talking .•boat :It^^tJinli ; »•6k,feJl» ojd:«rmoty, f (King's Hall) and I can hear Captain ~ iman (aii »he.«ld^dj^fapa^ ^Enjerjil^i ^iFwooJd: say,- '*ma: mean Him\)? in, claripn-voice, giving orders: \Company fall ib,\ ''Eyes Eighty •*Dreee top \tat fronK 1 * A'Cldse up:*in the feat,\ etc,'t OonlitieKte 4 puoiok^. ojBj if&i&ptitiprf, but«ill wait unta I get home and irit that street that led up to King'sjaw-mill, Obi >Thby^ne^er<«looked~iB^ to go Indian fashion, ha ahead to break a mui and she fojldwedr- It was \tBfiT walking, but they had a good time and reached destination the same night. This young. lady waa one Of the most beautiful: and moetialeated young ladies that ever attended Fmnklin Academy.' In her early •Ufe^-alter' r Iea'vinK ; aobobl—^be' had her [fuUBhareof lifea^cJiautudw, but for « [number of years the '•Fatos\ have been ; very kind to her and she has enjoyed the [luxuries and pleasures of this life, and her 'daughters are at the iehith of fame in the muBiiJal world* ft .' , ; t icture, whlohldare say the older Ones t;.a'.generationago,will renjembar with lea•^.- , '^TWt&^lrdB:.ti8e^;l4;nln#;. vtfaer* eveifyy**y andtdght to\ WrtOh toe;, \merry skaters, and on masquerade night* H. fi. STIO^NET, OFEBASVC<AHD- KSCHANICAI. 8taWs.H. Y. - O0N- R^ J. & A. Q. Wtt.mT$&*< PHVaicrASS ANO 8DEGKONS, KALONX, H. * Office orer BaUridlfi book store. Eaildence on P«rkSt^whs»mctit calli should be made. T«to- paoDsoonnocUona. ^Tbcj^ei&i;; iflT^j^ ^POQ Good.\ This applies t o S. A. ^^^^.^, 4TTOBNEI AN0 CODK8ILOH. OWI0I IN 8T- moads 4 Aliaon Block, Malone. idjnltted to practf(»lnffie0nlte4 Sltta« Ci«oit-and Dittnct coura. PJFSICIAN AND 81JBGION, «AW>NE, N. Y Office and residence, No. 4 Weboa St., wtiere olxftt calls atwuld be made. WE JP SILL fODH mm A. B. PABinBlfGB * SON ADIRONDACK TlMBtB LAUDS ASS , VlLLAGk PEOPKRTT ALSO OSNEBAL BEAf ESTATE AGENTS GEO. W. DtfSTIBT^ Manager. , As well as anything else. If You 'ty£at WE BE^T Apply To OBDEB 0|| ogate at th§t > tbe st tuta Stacy Di tf. dereaswll with me lialDistraiura I Slakina, In 't Uecember )EDEB oyg gate of Uw* ) stoiute in irtvea E. Seaurr. tl tea J ttey Stiver, as lid- t»aoty, it- «. Fresh Home-Made CANDf^ FR irsiii4lNiJTf of allitlnds. CIGARS and the headine Jpli*<B liisur- ance Agent ^f Nortberp None but the Wftea a few cents {more pet ttBXM will bti3r tti»\ best. There is no economy in using cheap flour, because you\ will spoil enough <•}%&&:$&'&&&, than pay the difference hi;'; price between, the good «nd , the p&Qft Besides ,$Ber# aire -more loaves to. the barrei of good flour. Demand the crowcUi were simply-torrifio-and,*«re- •erved seats\ next to the raqf ?#erej at fc to thetH)yB-r'bui,rnever^^^'^iW^^•^ , ta^iiS^S i Sr , A;iT^ n T+,^A^^**Si£ yon are aU right andJ;hop» time ivBdeal WSSS^''tM^^^^SS^&' kindlv with \hi* *n#toimi£L~ -»- ^— I Wwrenoej the beet andjniosfi artotio boy skater that ever- glided, i ver the •glassy. aurfaoe. abotttlt, t IBiroElie¥flJbfedthe% brink aftmoon and, was there as often as i^T-one;^ J have his- photo how 1 Ukeu masquerade costume, Orra and the .„aaf' vmih^'mnM^mhtit**** thai akatera, and niott always' were partners in the dixxy »bu:t*rbnnti thViinik, Al-J ¥»^if,' <4&m ^*Mliyedr* < $nafeth I e^Mp/' IwasttthefaeidandOrjraat'thetaUend PiitoWty^ Bisl Wholesale and Retail Dealer in and best GEORGE TOBACCO .CLARK'S Represented. HORTON BLOCK. UAiiONE, M. % mSSm '*;. kindly with you and that we may- meet many times before we are \mu3tered out\ forgood. Many chabges have come since we us.d to drill in ETng% Hall and there* can only be a few of the origmal bunch', oFboya left. Qid CaptSin iTftheJ-df thW MArtUlerytk>rp«'Vh«beenbnsy witb hui \Gattling Guns\ and- fiasao-thtohed out theranka of the-original mwnb^ra that a \Coiporal's Guard\ oonld not be \mui- \-ed for >'Boll Ca.l,\ but when the Bugle ' for \BbU Gairon.the bihef ;^eIia^W6^tp|setn^;»^n ... »- ,'Three Bank Hollow\ Square.*' ithCapUIn Beman in the center. You see. captain, the ''Old Vet«^'Ot*tb«K iWttJ Company love you as the Old; Civil War Veterans loved <Sen;:<3eb. B. McClellan or •*Litt!e Jtao^'aa they used tb call him. ' I wish I bad time a t thle writing to tell my wholestpry of those good old days, but I have not, and with your permission willcopy from my scrap book a poem en- titled, «I Forget^ wffloh wlft^lilibut doubt deDict those day! rar-better thaw cpuld be done otherwise. It is a sort of % [^iy*dreinl of wbejt ^ werttboyej ' \\VjrtBojtr.'*\ of the lash and like the man on the tra- • X. J «rac«ful.aU — mr Af fiilWi'. *' «1rt» no conM When I tarn to my youth for tbe ptoaaurea it irave,' Not acning from tne Up ol good fortutiB I crave, Not a care Hare I then for tl« daiaatlll tacome, • Wlt^^toa^rejne,rttoWdpwn Hl»»0ro«jenU. Aak- •• .0rr»>^iie' 'Jtflow^ -, l ;woniler~~'iu6'jv [many remember Prof. Geo. D. LaFayette, of Brookville; Ont,? He spent two wipters in Malone teaching the \Ins and Qute? ottiumg.\ He*«»and, i» $$* -* courteous gentleman, an J was a 'great favorite in Malone and at that time the, world's obampion skater. :' On one of-my*] trips East a faw years ago I r^ent Over to BrookvUll and spent the- day with' him, , He, like the rest of ut,w nearing the foot lof the \wesWmalop^'^and although the *1 Grinding a Specialty Malone, : 1NL Ii «uui«*H,uiool<Jbo«aeIwaad«r»*»iB. lforf?et crippled Joints ttuainmbaioorbaclt,. - Hot get atst> paa yeu ptttg aJony sfi mrback, l S«i*rooiidon<melieelioabeiiadoul)letoT»u«h. I{oi^tBatmyWdeuti^a».lir^nta»jnewtIn, That my remusnt et cheek has irrosrn (.dedaadtWn. Tbe Mind of some fellow onr frlend«llp to o up; For^»bnidii«taoo lntteoTdamorj (Xlna'ai (XiDA'aW). Candy Kitchen, TbOHB NOV 123 SH*E. Main Sfc, jffl AE.O^JTE, : ^f. V -™^MM^ M «^aMaBMt<av<|l»W»WII1a*a^^ Its the small leaks that often t-auses the ialiures. Many a mer- <h;uit never looks after his adver- tising. fle Rill* to realize that l»y keeping his name before the Public that hejs doing a wonderfull good, both to himself and to the public. The wise up-to-date mer- chant will \advertise.\ He is ^leader, and when yea lead yeu have follower*. Be a leader. Aa ^dvertiaement la the PALLA- UlfJM brings good results. D. <£H. Coal Best in the Market, Hard and Soft Wood. Sherwin & Jones i jfocry;aay pas^ toe'wncltlpjr IBMje\\«>a5ita!j*\^aat ^mw&'\~ji£e?tt» &: • tbroogtitlie(tale; , • •• ^^ • J Whuetiie pfcbt gilder away utetn hour, of a tnmee. Andtaela»»Atmj»ldeatJ*Iiell60f«ieb«ir, . Who keepa-eyett step Io her WMri 'ro|ia4 the hall, maiewuLnaildofliMaaa with tMeptertoucb toe, , Till «»ivwa 8Jt«**u!UI» m flow ot*timm, I we-fltts* tfca **er^-doiyo,\tiieeqa<?t«3rar«an- Ttea i Rwato end: review Aft die lUvggm and atrtfa'oKxth Intaylon^troitaBBjo.'owinlttse \tresfcdowtr\ ot 'Uf^ ..•\.• r-' . Ana l littgti al tlia ttougui et my twins; placed, back OWr Woworeef yeSfs oinVTa'i varying tmtfc Woiils!ttrt»yt»jilo4t!acito«eel.* amjory (King** ttalli? nearly every(fce that ever attended the rliilt, and as I had Jrepr^tly^gpod :-jti& oh the Maktne'pedple of about our age, I waspleasedtobeablfl to tell Wof abbaii J them. Mr. Xi. h»a a^finp^ewelrysioreand oapries the rargeststook between T6rohto and.Jlfo»treai . HeJa ««!» in the «|Jig,* and on pleaiaant days in the winter time can tfeseen on the at. Lawrence BiVer as graceful as ever cutUBg*\tte-•^Opfafdei Edge w forward and badkwara-, single and double \Grape Vine\ iahd all the fancy latunta known in the skating world; ••p^» fowliaeni BulBell imd-Jeroift , Wehtwotth were the original builders of |tba rink and during their regime the akatempmdtM^iitofevwythlng. Tney •eemedto know just what was needed and we got At wfthOttt asking, t have my skating outfit yet, arid once In a while ib the winter time the old man goea opt on the Ice, |ast to m&fce him wish \I. would I were a boy again,\ and show his I eaten with the ices a^d cake\. Two women met at the bridge table, says the New. York Sun. \You wfll pardon me,\ sa-'djone, \but I have often remarked one of your rings. I am sup- posed to be'ah expert on stones, but I cannot place that one,\ Drawing off tbe ring in question and presenting it for closer inspection, the other said: \I think | it would puzEle you a little. The. fact is that, is my first b tby's first tooth and I had it set in diamonds as a souvenir of ['some of my happiest days.\ Anybday Can start a bank, with or with- out capital, and invite deposits, if all the other banxs are pledged for their security. A wildcat bank becomes just as secure as the soundest and most conservatively managed, and as the wildcat bank offers the greatest inducements to depositors it naturally get the business. When it breaks, the sound banks must pay. The scheme is but to put a premium upon epeculationapd dishonesty.—Philadelphia J&dgelv • j' . Chicago hears Wat a company has been, formedtooperatelndependentstocfcyardaj oh a large scale beginning, October 1. It ( wjll be knownas the Chicago Stockyards I Tranait Company, with J2.500.000 capital '*s^k^'Already 30 acres ijave been pur: chased at 39th street and 48th avenue, and buildings/are in process of obstruc- tion. The^Tew concern is exipeisted fb cut prices; and its organization on this theory wilt be welcomed by all with tbe possible exception of the-regetarian. '&&. Henry i M. Nevius, of.\jfed Bankj N. J., was elected commander-in-ohief of | the Grand Army of the Republic at the national eticampment held at Toledo, Ohio, hut week. The election was made on the first ballot. Mr. Nevius 'rfceiving 454votee as compared with 254 for former Governor Van Sant, of Minnesota, and 80 for L. T.Dlckason, of Illinois. The nomi- nation was made unanimous. The Wo- man's Eeliefi'-'Cbrps/el'epted..\'^!*.' W.;-'-t.^ : Giliman, of Roxbury, Mass., presideptr There are fewer persons on the. -United States pension roll to day than at any [thfte-;fpr thi;ip?8t'|U'teen: yesa*..' ;-;TaeS : army of beneficisries for the goverhtaent's bounty at last seems to be on the down\ ward grade, in point of numbers. There are now only 951,687 left, and at the Tate at which death is cutting into the ranks thatotal will haveshruk to 900,000 befvr6 another year. ', :O?er^S,06b, : : p^fp'na\' who drit^r^eniions fronl,: tht8„ gjo*ernmflSrjt ^v*r«|^htf'-a : ''!p>npy''-of\it/&er%, - ; T*«y '^fe^awM^'^ ejd to require 'pensioners' to pass their riBrnaining days «t hom•Jaithough the amtfttWi jpaW to thoae rasifiiBg in foreign [lands aggregates nearly $1,000,000 a year. 1 RoyCIeveland, a ydung fellow working forGedrge El Perrica, had the misfortune 'Albany express at Mecbanioville three weeks ago. Fitzpatrick says he was injured ab ut the back and other parte of his body. Game laws passed by the Board of Supervisors of any county in the State, are illegal and without authority, accord- ing to the opinion held by the Stabs Forest, Fish and Game Commission. The commission holds that supervisors have no pbwer to pas? such laws, this power having been taken from them by Chapter 974 of the Laws of 1895. Any game laws passed by supervisors since that time are therefore of no worth whatever. Nav : gationon the Richelieu river be- tween Rouses Point and St. Johns Is to be improved by the Canadian government. The work includes dredging at an esti- mated cost $90,000, and the construction of a stop-log dam 1,350 feet in length to cost $110,000. ^The rapids at St. Johna| will thereby be lowered five feet and the level of the water in the canal raised and the annual floods on the river averted. The dredging will provide a channel of 4& feet by 700, and the department is al- ready calling for tenders for the work. • Louis Joseph Lambert, one of tbe oldest French residents of Lewiston, Me,'..be- lieves he has succeeded in securing ^evi- dence to establish his title to property in leas apd 30 per cent, in pieces two inches or less. The crusher is nineteen feet in hfeight and weighs 435,1000 pounds The hbpper is twenty feet in diameter. The I operation of this machine requires twenty i- 1 nine horsepower. We have found that thin spots in our rubbers can be mended at home by apply • ing a cement made from 5 cents' wortl. of real rubber disesolved in chloroform v Keep the bottle containing the cement tightly corked and apply with a mucilage;, brush as quickly ias possible that it majj not harden,. We used rubber darn for an actual hole. Cot a piece of the rubber; the right size, fasten it with a few stitches over the hole, and brush with the.cement^ Both kinds of robber .may be obtained! from a dealer In dentists' supplies.—Har- per's Bazar. i There are now only two persons on the rolls aa pensioners* of the Revolutionary! War. They are daughters,of soldiers; who fought with Washington and Lsfay-: ette, and were pensioned by special acta] of Congress. TheyareSarahC. Hurlbutt.j aged 90, the' daughter of Eliah Weeks,, who served with the Massachusetts troops, and Phoebe M. Pelmeter, aged 87, the daughter of -Jonathan Wooley, of tbe, New Hampshire troops. Mrs. Pelmeter| resides in Brookfield, N. Y. The last, surviving pensioner of the War of the I Revolution was Esther S. Damon, of Plymouth Union, Vt., who died in No- \ vember, 1906, aged 92. The last survivor j of the War of the Revolution was Daniel | F. Bakeman, who died in Freedom, Cat-, taraugus county, N. Y., on April 5,1869,; at the ripe old age of 109 years. There, are more than 500 widows of tbe War of , 1812 remaining on the pension roll. i The Chateaugay Journal, in speaking of the prcposed milk stations along the «--€\---» —• of the prcposed milk stations along the the city of Quebec which is claimed to be line of tbe Rutland Railroad says: -It is worth S2Q.0O0.00O. Mr. Lambert will ba n,^,^ thata station wiU be located at 80 yeats old in October. For the last 40 m.-+ — — :-•» - - - -- years he has lived in Lewiston. For more than 50 years he has been trying to estab- lish hia claim to the property in question. It was originally Owned by his great* grandfather, Louis Gabriel Lambert, upon whose death it passed into the possession of his son, Col. Louis Joseph Lambert, grandfather of the present claimant. A hew picture machine is being shown in an Ogdensburg theatre for the first time this week. It is a wonderful inven- I tion and the faithfulness with which hu- man voice and movements are reproduced holds the spectator spellbound. The ma- chine is called the synchroscope. It con- sists of two devices, one operated' from the rear of the hall, and the Other being a specially constrrcted phonograph placed behind the scenery on the st«ge. Botfr work in exact unison. Thus a singer is shown on the canvas apd his voice is ['reproduced; with lifelike exactness, and every movement of the face ^'showifc A wfaistiing solo was given frith very realistic effect. Therearesaidtohebnly fee of these machines in the' United ^t^fias.;•\.-\..',-'iV-; '\:/•' \*; We read of a watch that is at once a I Chatecugay, and that a local factory will be purchased and be used as a receiving station, Negotiations are now in pro- gress for the latter and in all probability can be given in detail next week. Farm- ers will be disappointed if they look for all sunshine in the new innovation. Tbe proposition has its advantages and dis- advantages; the writer traveled for years through a section where milk jghipment by train was a fixture and ft is a fact tbat an equal number would vote in favor of a return to factories, were the question pot to a vote, Milk and cream must be delivered to tbe train under fixed oondi- [tions, at a certain hour, and when there •are no factories in operation competition is killed and the usual results follow under such conditions, as regards prices.. Then again, there is no return to the farm, of milk, Which is a considerable item in the raising of young stock, hogs, etc, 'Before Jjhmiting blindly into the schem-, the . 'farmer should weigh the advantages and disadvantages deliberately. • The Malone correspondent of the Bur- •ington Free Pres3 has the following: :One of the oldest residents of Mklone is Symonds, who is now 93 years of and a perpetual calendar. A mechanism suohas this conei-sts of no less than 552 ptecee, pierced with 753 boles and held together by 177 screws, some of which are pot more than 0,3 millimeter (about 1 80th inch) in diamtter. Also an astronomic .-1— ' ~* wjasepn oymonqs, who is now^92 years of [Tepeater,a '•chronogi^if ,| brato^:*atoh, age, and who for a man of his great age, and a perpetual calendar. _Am«fih»ii»iim1«. .___---^ •-•*-•••• - IMTtilZJl. —C » t. ^* ™»?*r» .«•\« BW ami«.v W ««. w «.iu uu<v U niter .», jtna'IorK,' tt¥firs? «°mi m h * waaW t rtonateiy, bad not fallen to the floor The last time I waTat homel attendedi^ ^Tetaained etaUdingand the eonsc* „ . r .. ; * —.—-• >UVM/ »u uioiutvei, awa an astronomic] [last Frlda| pd recefvoa veryjKribus,and: <varch; oh whose dfal • appearsi' hoursJ painfuiinjuiy. U appearsthstthey were minutes*, eeconds^ lunar' imimi days bf b^oadlbggralaan^he^ \ * -'' - :Oo beiDfctold to coma down he let hfe [fork slide dowo^ handle first» and inj. mediately slid down after it. Thafork, vim- «IES* «ivte' ceim* ~ cm&n tni J& L^CIQAR Both 'Phones. * Hfsraiiwrtstc IBN-CKNT MA VAN* M. 11 Cigar Co., Maloie, N, I Typewriting, shorthand, bookkeeping, etc., taught by experts. Big demand for operaters. Free car fare.. For full particulars address Speaoer'i School of Telegraphy, Kingston, N. ?. aim» latp, If* the Lord is wiUhjy, coming back to the old home mm wore before I come! for the la>-ttim». I would like to be.thete during \fair tteteV\- but don't think S can make it, aa one of the boys in the office!* \ordered into camp\ with his regiment during that week. It is S8 years since I attended a ~ \franklin County Fair.\ At that time, Lor we, were on the trip Of our iites, ano I pad more at- tention to the \fair one\ tb-«n Idid io the \fair ground.\ But the next time I get a chance— nqt this year, perhaps next—you will find yonr \Unote Dudley\ putting in full time on the grand stand. AA io«ag a» 1 lived at home I always had an \annual\ which read; \Paaa —- and family,'' And a81 was OH friendly terms with so many famine* I h»d no t rouble in paining the man at the gate. It is pleas- ant to tbink of tboee days, aad now as tbe autumn of life come* creeping on. It W a great pleasure to drift on Memory's River out of the present Into those halcyon days—the dream days of aarly life, and I uansre the late Orrin Partridge—\The Wizard of tbe Race Track\—and aa hone* a driver as ever drew reins over a none, coming down the \Ijomestretch drivirg \Sandy\ Flanagan's \Gray Eagle\ at a 2*8 pace, hia long iron gray whisker* (nearly tbe color of »n« boras) parted la the oaatsr, floating out over aaoa •hoolder a band concert on the Arsenal Green, tTheomsift wag-fine and of the highest order, bat it did not touch the tender cords as it used to when the old \Malom- Corbet Band,\ Jed by the late \Charley\ Townsend a» soloist and Geo. D, Lathrop with tbe double bass, used to play such pieces 0 as \My Old Kentucky Home,\ \Down on the Suwannee River,\ **B«n Bolt/ \Bell Brandon,'* \Home Sweet Home,\ and others, Perhaps no one ever left Malone that cherishes anob a longing for the old home aa I do. X love the old home. I love the old friends and I love to tilk about the old scenes and some day—if all plans do 00* fail—I will retnra to the place, where I first aaw the light, to end life's journey. Makm* iuu my be»ri at the end at tbe way Boa»ttla)a« •lib nrttjgiit round me I BOA—OTaMOl S6VM AtUatant afcorv w»ore rriendi or yore linger aa' waiefc for me SomeUawa 1're beared 'eat «aUl0 1 - Bo ttMKMr Uke'nd low. TBa* a alaMrt mmaai ltke« Hreaai I dre»m«f. Or aa •** of \oag ajto. DeKalb, III. Aug. 23, '0*. W, G. E. The interior department announces that the President has signed the proclamation throwing open to settlement on October 5 about 800,000 acrae of tbe public domain now s part of the Besabad Indian agency in South Dakota. All of this land M good for agriculture, sad aom« of the cliaae are valued at $89,000, and a rush of aattbra k anUoipated. q'aencewaa that the poor fellow landed on the ttnes, which piercid fats left side in a horrible manner and bis life apparently baagsln the* tjaiauce. Dr. W* N. Ifao- artney waalrhmediately summoned and is doing allthat medical skill posBibly can do to relieve the sufferer,—Fort Coving- ; Figures of thB latuber eut'tntlOl}?, com- piled by the Bureau of .Census and the forest service, showed tie largest total ever reported in the United 'States, exceed- ling by over 7 per cent, the cut reported for 1906, until then the record year. In 190^38,850 mills made returns and their production was over 40,000,000,000 feefc of lumber* This -is believed to Include 95 percent. 0! the Mtttal out. In 1906,22,« 398 mills reported about 37,500.000,000 feet. Since, according to these figures, nearly 29 per cent, more mills reported last year than tbe year before, while the increase in production was only a little over 7 per cent, it might be thought that j the amount actually manufactured must have been-greater in the earlier year. This, however, would be a too hasty Inference, for it is almost wholly among mills of small individual output that tbe gals in the number of eetabMsameau the month, the time of'sunrise and sun set, and a device for'showing the' eo.ua- tionof tinie, Tbe writer ooncludest- •»&•' such complicated pieoes of mechanism it is evident that all the wheels cannot be arranged in one plane. They must be dis - posed of in layers, which, of coarse, makes the wacbes thicker than usual. Louis Lproy made, several years ago, a watch with two dials, giving 25 different indi- cations. Tbe njte ehanisai of this watch is arranged in four layers and its construe tion required several years and the use of 975 different pieces.\ r / Writing from Ireland Mr. Curtis in a tetter to the Chicago Herald, says that tf>e famous jaunting ear is a most pn- cpmf«rtabie yehiole. None of the pas- Se>n->er8'can «ee -more than half the' scenery, as they sit bacfe to back and faoa] obt toward either side of tbe road. The ordinary jauottng ear is quite as awkward and unoomfortable, and if yon take, a drive to see the scenery you have to go over tbe road twice because yon can only: see half of it at a time. There are three kinds of jaunting cars—\outaide oars,\ in which passengers ait back to back with their feet on shelves over the wheels; _„ „ „„,»„ TO inside cars,\ in whioh they sit face to that auppHed by warming pane which face with their feet in the middle, and each family took to oaarc*, aa oooasioo \single oars,\ whioh have one seat ao- required. Mr. Symonda apoke almost is remarkably well preserved. He was born in Hillsboro, N. H., in 1816., the year known as the \cold summer.\ Mr. Symonds has never used tobacco, nor liquor of any kind, exercising modera- tion in all things, can see to read without \specs is only slightly deaf, and says he [enjoys life in a quiet way, but mourns the good old daya and ways of New Eng- land, life which seems only a memory now. The Free Press man happened to run onto the old gentleman recently when b.e was in a reminiscent mood, and, like ail old people living in the past, he gloried in the greatness of President Andrew ' Jackson, and waxed eloquent over Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, and other great Americans of the Onst half of the 19th oentry, all of whom hehad seen and heard speak on great political questions. Presi- dent Franklin Pierce he knew, an J\ went to school with him,\ but lie did not pan out right, the old man said, \as he mort- gaged himself to the South in order to gain tbe Jtesfdehcy,\ When he was a hoy, stoves were unknown, likewise matches, as well as hearty all the present day neoessaries of life, which then would have been iux-jres, Be went to Lowell, Mass,,-to see the ears when tbe first rail' - road io New England was built, and they were primitive aad erode enough. Speak- ing of btoves, he said a ooatention arose over the matter of baying a stove for the \Meeting Bouse,\ many thinking it would be wicked to put a stave in the sacred edifice, when, tbe only heat in winter single oars,\ whioh have one seat commodating two persons facing the horse. The latter are the meat 00mfort- able of all; \but give tbe passengers a shaking up, whioh we are to'd is «*o*i- lent for the liver.\ Mr. Sytnooda ^ . ^ w »» wiU» boyiah eothttiiaJBm of the food af UM told«nag«ofNew_Eagiaad iute, of the rk* viands, of^a hooa«sfly ladea taste whfoh cuhninaud m tt*v givisgdiiuMr. I m