{ title: 'The Malone palladium. (Malone, N.Y.) 1863-1909, October 15, 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/sn83031566/1908-10-15/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-10-15/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-10-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031566/1908-10-15/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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*ui &IK/ tell yon iftiaei yoo *&**% long ago «*. \artial%.a B 4; auoo of naiih^\ If youwwaas*,. • bsoribe for the ••h comes to-v Sunday,*** the price of |<1'« regular r year, and * e offer this the PALLA- WEEKLY BLADE evvspaper in itates. ledo Blade eekly news- United States, pecially edited has bad the years than o America. cheapest news- be explained write us for wtrld so ar- more easily mg cumber- All current ue by special inception r published or \do not et thirst for of a news- bv the fact has over 186,- is circulated States. In ad- publishes many de- to every py to EBLADE, Toledo, Ohio. splendid pa- to subscrtb- the PALLA- • for H.35 OICB CO., Aialone, N. Y. NEW YOBK. -, Sarah Maria Hastings, t unstable, Kansas DeWtKO. WIJSOL, Alia . Constable, N. Malone, N. Y^ nsslsrarl. Cedar u . N. v.; Wttl- HasUngs, tfcdar sangs. residence wife, jieijg at Bastings, late of of FranKtin and greeting . Bastings and Her- named In the last James M. Hastings, surrogate of ous will proven as a in pursuance at Bruvtded. cited and re. ippear before oar Malone Tillage. tbe 19tn day ( 3 forenoon, men last wiu and are under the take notice ineir general Have none, appolnuaeo& ineir failure will be ap- d act for them d WUL reunto afllxed toe Tiiean- Witness. Paddoca. Surro- « at tbe Surro- June village, tn, day of Septem- BRYA.VP, jgate'3 Couit. COUNTY. 8AM- speocer. losure and sale arf..n on i^. tbe offlre of Uxe lOta da9 retrtve in satd sale and to w'll sell at Court House November, 19UB, tbe premises In tbe town In and State as follows: beretofore sold ana Tborndlke. and 13 tbe nortbweat. deeded by gafcl by tier to r. I. line as deeded line of said Mo dy tot to tbe wf-a tine turner of lot sj west along me beginning, CUQ- LHiods- except so Edward J. Man- April 171b, 1868. . BWeree. i>RDEa OF 'gate of (be • tbe .dt&xjaitt l<-e Is Bervby list Stacy D. '7. leceaaed, <amt\ witb tbe aJm i n istrators n Malone. In .f L**ivm her MSo.S. IDisljuUiDi. uai>EB or t the ermntj statute tn sued Hereby iflvt-u CarlnRtin A . samp, wltb tne executor, at bli -nlj. -a > EleruMr 4ttm8 'KbKK OF .',c ' . u-iy imfr (-as* 1 ' •i' - a.i.jjer- lU-r .lai**\of t :l)ey are r IVeirb. •ai'l '< >>nni»,. a; KU <;? _U:»-entity •i>7- orii rtv tin tbdrenf,- :Cecea^e(5,a^ !agB..m '.kajjj ' TieK'n^it.\ \Frrr'..'. If.f'.tute- ! * .upon.\ izationi might . ; -Tlit3 accoja. an to-:, erg&ri'tza- ? ensu- er: l^f \%: VOLDME 4«XX1Y | *• t BUSINESS DIRECTORY Liberty and XTnion—Now »a4^Por©T©r—On« and In»eparabla\ WHOLE NUMBER ?3801 BY THE PALLADIUM GO. Established in 183S. I'ublishod every Jhursday morning by TB«' Pal<t4i«ttflt OOHPAHT. \ FKEDERICK J.; SERVER, President. JOHN M. Ni^^&N, Manager. >' PA LLADIUWL BUILDINGS, ';. Corner of Main irhd Ga^erine StreetB, Halone,N.Y. One fear, . -?l.' ^- :& :' j*-. '*#1.0O^ Payable la Advance. Advertising i^iesoi|%|iJ||l^«tii6il Advertoemfcnts^bold n*\aia*Iett l^e lens^k*»f time t« he maeited, or verb- ally stated to th0.pablfebejs at UMJ firat tinoediiill fojrbid» or afc1*4opio4ef#* publishers, tod charge aceoidinglyi ; l3ie-.vfitn^kf Fire tnsur- / ance Aeent of Northern t^cifM;* : : : r None but tbe Legal advertising atthe—,~-,~ -T— uy tew. Buainesa oaf%nbt exceeding H ve line4$5 per year. Etajsh additional lirie, 75«tote. : ES; m&RB&k N. C^ASE, AlTOBKK AHD. COp8*UpB,*T tAtC|H0- gansnargB. H. Y. I ' MAIN, COOKEY & MAIN, taijeis., office o»er daj|r#^|| :ng,SEbre, _ Branch Om^f§Gb!*i^iai#, N. Y.. *- Open Saturday a. A. K. BOTSrQB^f ATTOBSSY AND CQIpSKKUMB, *T tilT, 8AIU- naoUtoS-Y. j, ATTOENBY AND coxfeiU)* « ! I**3W?«B iAke.N.7. FeracmieWttflittonEiten to^uaiDe« af^Kei^aV^«!*rtOWlS^*D^<«ttQ«^^ and Blood R. N. PO; ?j EAST MAIN ST1 Phone 283. ?,MA10H«.S.Y. OTW A. BtJBKE, BTBJtfcR 8YK0NPB * CHARL, UAWYBB , 55 WIST Allison Block, next MOORE '& BEBjEtY\. a.M.HOOBa Ufl^BB ^ ^.%.*«B6V 1st Door Bart oiiConrt Jb««P. W«toj«, N. V. KELLAS & C^ESAWAY, 4 ™IKrt^^iS^1iP , ( »* Bir *\ : pte'i National BMrt.^W*$M*VH. *S. W ._,»_ J. P. SKUAS. . id . ;^,1f»jE?MA.WaY' McCLAR\3 COUNSEI Over People's Ba •••-': -^i-- >^BS A3? !*£$? Malone, N. Y C SJt^^WEJj 1 \ aoeOTBPStOClCWBlIJ THOB.< 3WEUL., „»rt'«4tor«. J.K. H. D; mmk^M-M Brs« DgNTAL OffI0B, l Terms reasonable « ,3'8BUMJK. NIW'PHONI. il all wo* * arranted. H.H.iiricKja!EY, OPIBATIVI AND: JOSOaANtOAiiDIWnBT. O0N- '---,». Y. -, »'. „ L , ~»ii—-u- 1. PSYrHOIANS AHO tklUHKINS. 'KAIiONX. N. Y OOtoe OTW Battrici* boot atow- Bealdeooo on t*A 8W. wnere rufUt oalla aUouWi bo made. Tato- DhotMiooimectlonc. S. A.BEMAN, . •'• 4TK3BNIY AHD OOTJHB«M)B. OJHC« IN 8Y- moods A Allison Block. Malone. ^ /dmltted to pra«MooInU»anKisd Stotaa Ortult and DWnct «HBtfc. ' 'SE?f^Y|--Ftr^NE8e,. . ,:'• PJYfflOIAN ANtt stnteWH. MtAKWB. N. T Office and raatdence. No. 4 Webtter 8U wbere BixMtJalliafcoaiaiio-BMBie. IE CAN SELL 1008 HEfiL .! AB1MHDACK TD1BM LAKES ABD i VlULAOS PKOKWt ALSO GBTBaAI. BKAJ I8TATB : *!•',- A6tNT8 •* W. firtFSTIN, Manager. |[ GEO. II4LON11, FRANKLIN CO« p, 1^ fM0»8©i % OC3T0B1R t^ # P08. TERMS, $1.00 IN ADYANCR As wall M aoything etoo, W Vou Want THE \fiHEffiT SfRiS and best Represented. ' HOUTON.BLOCK. MALONE, N.'rf. —wwawa—awlm iiiii^'liir^iiaiiaAi*«»^w^aMartMf»«a«il*i»^>faiftli«J>^^ DON'T BUY POOR FLOUR When a few cents 'more per barrel will buy tbe best* There is no economy in using v cheap flour, because you -will spoil enough bread to more than pay the difference in price between the good and the poor. Besides there axe more loave's to the barrel of good flour. Demand Pitlsbtiry's Best Wholesale and Retail Dealer in GRAIN, l%Et>, ETC. Grinding a Specialty O. S. Lawrence, Malone, N. Y. Good cloth bindings. Over 100 titles of re- cent fiction. BEVEBLY OF TBE Ifew title? c^aiost Its tbe sma^ leaks that often causes the failures. Many * mer- chant never lojaikaafter hi« adver- tising. He falif to reallie that by ^ ~ keeplsgl^hls nattv-'***<*«» ^L— the PaMte that he Is doing ^f^ a wond«rfull good, both to • him^el^and to the public, H titie «i|b1(iprto^iate mer* l> chant t*|H \advertise He is a leader, An^*henypuvlea»d yon have followert.^ fie a leader. An sidvertisement in the PALliA' DIUH brines Sfood reaalts. 8 CPTIBMB COPBT,, ,8T. XiAWEKNCat COtTNTY. New Yortt. In twitoatterof ttie roluntarT dj»- solution of me Aaton«Uo Utnp-8nade Company, a iwporatton. 1, - ', •'• ; in pursuance of an dW«r duly awde la the aboye entitled action by Btf, H* 3V Kellogg, one <it tbe iuos, botiee is tu^itiW «fa*a to «a alBdltors or aaa •UK-r parties' tntereaSt in the said corporation fo «n: Tbe AHto^naattiJiaip-HW* Company. q»* •j^r are Bereby i^uttttEto proT« <Ueir ,«alm* wttu Bit-bard E. Heffernaw reeeiTer of aaW corporaaop at .is uflto-at; Brasbei-JW«.8t.W*reiJo»coimfy. Ke» Yors. wttbtn two mloMJ» trom Uw MU» day «l ^v,ber. lOOS.anaaiat all «redltor» *b0 mtte»4^- '»u!t m so (tote* shaUilew^aaed frottrarydistMba-; •4un wbirii may ba neletnifter made, eiceot a» pror virtpd : tofcrtkwl,W4*U8Ww ot «I?11 pfi»edo% anil tJait, all -olilBis .to jprovsett i>y preseiitallon of • oactiers atTOnipBnieCsy-«t*ffi*H!tt 0tl6«.party Ot~ •f-jof-.-ia tte partiesUUteTBfMd <jf aft a»?nt «f SAld. •Jahy or partle* batt0|E BKS*iea«« of tnfe facta that :iitiyVlii«-ifrom UM» c4)rpotWfvn a|o»»>a*la over «b<l ab6T*a>spt^frsjuidl^«bfa»-c'«'nM.*iUi Bberty to eaia-'recWver O^SvM «nj of tiW»laiffl**Opea»eD M ce may * adyiseO, atw tba* mii receiver will apply. if cwxssarn wtt»«*|i* forlostrticMona In regard to uny of ifie.r^ims'iWW*»ybti«ptt»e«Wd. - J tatM:tfeob*t8r^jk*. ,,_„ .... « , -i.TTra-HE. ELUSIO*. Atty. for lleeeiver* •mnttirgpV.M;'YE; • A rofux-SAta.^W' jp0wn?AKcit or ^HE ^tfntlmylty tiyett *y »» orfcr t« ll» »upt«n« '<?l.art. , . ; StjBiindfTsJgtted, tte^ltwof the Automatic tarap- . Ptotlft Co., wltt Sell Atjlltt offlee At Bnaber fallav N. *~ at *nctio»U)*»e'n!iir«'plant and all known aw* <rf said corssoratlon m Octc*er flat, 1WS, « *« »*<aoc«. p. jt, (*aw. !', ?*4»irtt e«witst ta part ot book aeeooata. Patent*. m»nut»rtured and partly aanufa<*ar«l ihadea, ud ttaterai, jjoxe* UKt-'dntei for »Mw»Bt. d»«a, nta- eainery,4sc, EiaailaaUon of the property prupcaad »be*>W may be bidupoB«pp«<»rti»a to the uader- 3?piaa.at«By Haie. T, s .» »€«A»n^^«f«BNAN.B«elv«r, ,. 63 ISast Mtin Malone. Hew st= D. & H. Coal Best Itttbe Mwket. 'Olttay oppoaeathe EooeeYelt poUekt a* too radical and jingo-like, and than «up- porta Bryan who claim* to ba this ©lily rightful hair of the Booaevelt polioiee. Lodge thinks Olney moat be supportinj |»yari beoause h& 1*inkt BJrjan ~yr otild not carry out Eooaevelt'a poUoiekv but wonldarrestthem. It daes look qnear. • Neh«miahD..Sr^itj,th* oldest mamber of Congress gayanotioeofhi« intention to withdraw .from puWio life at the etoaa of hia next term, after he had b>«i renomin- ated by acclamation at Middletown torep- resent again the 3d GonnectioutCoBgrets diitrio% Ha ,hu aerted oontinuooaly since 1894. He iselghty-pne years old. Too many diamonds and not enough champagne to go around! You eee if i» going to be a hard winter. The nHMe# in £he champagne dlitriots in France has bean so nniveraally destructive in the vineyards^bat the output this year' wil be 2,000,000 instead of 45,000,0011 bottles. The apple crop in our country U. a little shy this year, but no doubt champtgne will be as abundant as usu»l notwith- standing. ; • v .;-\;/'.. ' Farmers throughout the country are deeply interested in a hybrid potato that: grows on fines like gooseberries, and it is bra 6ne flavor. Samuel Wilson, of Wol dott, has the potato en his farm. Ha has iept his methods eeoret. The product is a cross between the yellow tomato and 3 weet potato, Food experts have already sported the new^ potato to be far .more hutritioU8th»nth?Iri8h or sweet potato, And more easily- grown. It boils in five minutes and bakes in eight minutes. Poisonous ribbons are the latest foe to the health of the occupants of the nursery:. Danger may lark unseen in the pretty bows that decorate the b*b>'s bbnnsV. \I have a little girl eight months old, for whom I have made ; some'pretty ^whlte hoodsaind caps, which I trim-with soft satin bows,\ writes a oorreepor|dentof the Londo|Daily Ma'l. <'l*|t Wednesday I was trimming one with apple green ribbon purchagedfromonBof the best shops in liondon. The child got hold of a \short piece and sucked it, with the result tb» half an hour after she had convulsions and was very ill all night. Had she been a weakly child the green coloring matter would ptobably,have killed her.\ ' The weather up here has been de- lightful, cold nights it is true, but with warm sunshiny days fend air free from? smoke and clear as a bell. In fact it i s typical October weather, juat such as we ought to and do have in these grand i old mountains. Friday morning oh the; higher peaks there was a slight fall of show, just enough to whiten the tree tops, and speedily disappeared. Tbe special dlspBtoh' therefore from Tupper Lake f unction to a Syrycjae paper that a snowstorm was raging in the Adiron- daoks,\ and that '.'tbe enow mingling with the clouds of smoke from burning forests produced a curious atmospheajo effect,\ was intensely amusing, inasmuch as at that time all smoke bad disappeared and there weft no Bree where the anow fell.—Tupper Lake Herald. * : The Christian Commercial Travelera' Assoofation proposes to place a Bible in every room of airthe'hotels, big, medium and little, in the-United States. The Bible wilt cost the association only 18 cents each, but the total willjrun up into. &e millions beforSithe workIscorioluded. In reply to a suggestion tbat manyof the books migfct be carried away, National Secretary F. A. Garlick said: \If any man steals one of oor Bibles from a hotel: room so much the better. The Biblea will cost us 18 cents apiece. If any fellow wants to take one away with him be most likely grants to read it. Any time we can save souls for 18 cents each we will keep all the presses we can find busy.?''-', -'•.'. v -^5. SIlEilOB You can't afford to be without * «lo. They will pay for themselves easily in 'toyjeaivv.'\; j ; - --.-.- /•;-; - We are making the best .alio ever built in Franklin County out of only selected dry lumber. \ ^\ -]--' : '_• A; \.'.'. .'\\. . ' ..''-•*.;•'..-'•.''>^;.tL Catalogae on Application. . AdiroridacK-SHo Co>. QU6EB PRAYfBS, The moat fre«.mnt cause of priate petitions ir, no doubt, the peraist- enoe of habit, Certain phrases are naod again and again, until they come to be repeated without any thought of their iminedlateappucatlon. Ifa pwaoaer is accustomed to mtrodrwe acriptoral quota- tionsin his r>rayers by referacoe to what was said bjw'tbyserTant of old,\be is in dasgar of aometimes employing the form- uht grotesquely. Ihavemyseir heard the belief expressed «'tbat some in this oon- gregation to-night are asying in; their hearts), like tbjr oerrant of bid, •Ahnost thou periuade« me to be a Christian,' and I have been tola of an niatanoe in ivhicb th« petition was o£fered \that we inay say, with thy seryant of old, *Ob, to* be nothlng.jaothmg/\-We may similarly explain the stories of theworkhoosichap- lain who prayed that thoae preeant rnlght not trust in uncertain \riohes and the prison chaplain who besought the Lord that he conduct the r orshipsra in aafaty to their respective places of abode. At the Congregational union -meeting at' Blaokpool last year the miniater conduct- ing the deyotiona at one- service so far lorgot his surroundingsa» to refer to the nlaoe of meeting—the theatre l of the gardens—a^ \this hallowed, spot. ^ The Bense of humor must purely have been lacking in tbe'Old man of 80, sup- ported by crutches, who-regularly in- cluded among hia petitions at the. weekly prayer-meeting jfcbe request thathe.migbt be;kept from running with the'giddy J multitude to do evil. Familiarity with ponyentional phraseology was the undo- ingx)f the minister who, after a aermon on the Pharisee and the pu^icfen, aelced that there might be poured out upon bis hearers a double r^uon of the pubbcanV spirit. Netvery coiaplimentory was the use of a wBlliMnb^tt-aprlp^i^^^aeiiagf made by • -thiinstsr 'it, «w^4mg; ^^ theseperaonsUve together in such har- mony in thia life that, they may Anally, attiirrphtfrthattBtite of;ietioity* *here they neither marry nor are given; in mar- riage.\ As a concluding example; of the thoughtless use of familiar-language one may quote thta<«reoaarkaWa-iamalgam: \Oh Lord, we praise thee that we are thine; we feel-that we *re thine; we know that we are thine; Lord, make us thine,'' As in a sermon, so in -a ^prayer, the vat- tempt to correct a hasty utterance • some times leads to surprising results. A cau- tious Scotch elder, it i s saidj had.taken supper at his pftbtor's house, and,t in .re- turning thanks aUsr- the meal,: entered a a detailed exposition of yarious causes of gratitude. .He ooncludei by invoking the Divine blesaipg upon the pastof'a wife aa his godly helpmate, who bad always upheld bis bauds to every good vwork r -* , at least,\ he •» 44&&* 4h. a saving clause, \as far as we Jtnow.^ Jtfcis related of a oompatrit t that in a moment of forgetfulnesaheonce thanked Ood for ?the; aaivatiott oj all jneriv\ but, im^ mediately redeemed himself- from heter- odoxy by the qualification, \which O liofd, as thou knoweet, Jatru- in one sense, but not in another.'' .' ^ ; •\ The absurdity.of attemptedvmagnilo. quenoe in prayer has had two surpassing ulustrations. It would be hard to eay whether \0 thou art the ne plus ,u,^rji; and the sine qua non of all .thafci is ;good and great,\ or \O thou that, jjasinteBt' th« petals of 'the jrwlyabthui**fc; the vmiiite terrible exorlium. There are some men who seem to think,tha^anjiridirect man ner of expression Is especially «uHed to sacred tbiuga, as the Scotch tan quoted by btt Boyd as saving, 4 *For, ia* ^pu knoirest, men do not gather .grapes of thorns nor flgs of the national eli^blem, , ' and the Englishman who thus pledged himself, \»AB40 Wdi '''it ^tbeuwiltmose theb«Ktof;ahy.»»unty»Mttttb«r^^ ..-, ., aeryicefetamWiqn^y,^ approval in a way which thou will appre- ciate.\ Father Saylor, the\ JBoaton, aaiier preacher, was oneof' the iJW4Jb&k$£ men and on one recorded Occasion When he essayed a roundabout -atyle, Nature triumphed over artifice. Jt.was the Son* day before the State-eleotions, and-be was ,pra|Int-fe*feritty *h*t a. man'/'m#l| b« chosen for Governor wbio fro«td rale in the fear^^of God,- who ^trtud; »ive«^b» afraid of lbs face of day, who woald da- f«at the ringleaders of oocraptlon, who- would def* Wa ow* Jaarty if it - yitlded. to wu^-poller»,JWlKir-^od*iaily lataw ^ !or paused, and then exclaimed, \O Lord; whatVtheoseofbo^a^ th» comp as 'ftj:' thiaf / Give ns Gsorga N. Briggs for Gov. pierrABiBti-r'^^^^rtitlwi'l^ - -.'~ SEfttoua vyAt^ft emnf AQE AT •*?. AjtBANB; ,\- J -,;.'\-;.\..'V;-.^ Owing to the: severe drouth, the level in the reservoir of the St., Albans (Ver- rnont) waterworks system has been fa'l- ing steadily for weeks past, and a few daya ago dropped r«lpw*e actual dapger liner-whiob means that the supply had become insofflcfent for fighting even a; •Ingle atrk)as ffr*, wd waseiiual onlj to a two weeks* supply forordinary uses. The order bad to be-made in coase- quence that all water be out off at even- ing for tbe entire night, and the shops of the Central Tarmont Bailroad, the Green Mountain Paekiog Oompany and the Yah Gpimp .^\kwisr Company:^we>e. deprived Of service alto^tber—which,neoeeaitated the abutting down of all three of theep frotks.'\- - •- •' ' .'-',.-' \••'\ '•-\.\• :\--' • • Thejr^i'dbriB^p^m^ inglts shops fulhhanded and overtime iit brier^«>^et;iti equipment mto condition for the ^nterrand between 350 and ^400l\opo mm mmmH, An application win be presented to the Franklin oounty board rof supervisors at the sessioB in November to change the boundary line between the towns of Hsrrietstown and Santa Clara. The idea, we understand, is to annex Sarausc Inn tp Hsrrietstown. - Unless the presen\t plans of the navy department are changed the Atlantic battleship fleet will come home direct to Hampton Eoads. The fleet, according to present plana^. will remain two or three days in Hamptonltoads for a^grand re view by President Booeevelt, then go t o New York to remain five or sik days in: prder to give the men shore leave. The fleet will then go to Guantanamo for tar- get, practice. ' • •• : /With a oononssion which shook the entire village of Eichford, Vt. a large grain elevator, having a capacity of 500, me& were.-thrown- out of employment. Themohthlypayroll of these amounted to^bout |IO,oSo,*nd the loss to general busln'ees a» well as to the employees is of 'orm^a3ip|T?*«he.\ • iTMY^^^'^a^temj GomDanyvbas been the local market for SSGdairies, and Jtrdisbursementa were-|25i000 a m.ontbi of ; whioh fl«,700 wpnfetothe farmers. •-•-\' The Greewlifountaiu Packing ComDany is s canning enterprise^handling lar?e quantities of vegetables and apples, and employing about 00 persona. I ^ jit hardly niej^sfoibft^pojlnted out, : that theeeoonditioriBrnake a gloomy outlook for St. Albans, and that they suggest a w.mtexofdepre8eion.fndjhard8hip. ^. Thedty Ismovjng to-qbta^in an addi-^ tional supply of water-.from* Lake Cham- |liinit!|toj^bettj;»irfrlojpe»^t-reliffmay bs found in thI*d{recUonwritbina month. Stilt thereate great difliQUlties to be sur- mounted, for the city's finances are law, aaditirnoteasyforit to borrow. Both of the local banks have refused to make loana to theoity in the oiroomatanoes, andjust wherethe money is ooming from that Is required for the new work no one seems to know,' THE tiNCOtN tWAY. • ; ! The centenary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln falls on the 12th of February next, and it is sure* to be, celebrated .far and wide throughout -the country. > Jt jRill be an ! -ocoasion:'9f interest to.the world. But the often proposed JNationat Memorial to the: great President, ibat would moat fittingly maTk the anniyer- sary, has notr, thus far,-been decided on; in fact, no plans hav'ftyetibeen made. It Is a subject that should engage the atten- tion of Congrees eirly in'the coming session, in. order that an adequate' me- morial, nmy be, inaugurated on the date of the centennial. There is wide diversity of opinion as to thefoimauoHfetrlBute 8bould take. Io themeantlme'the advocates of a great national highway are by no means idle. That project jb brought forward agsinin an artiole inthe Amferloah Review of Be .yi!twa^.'<irHtte.^b|!-'Janiw-.7. McCleary, He arguos that Uie Lincoln memorial ihould nqt be asttttiev bewever imjpos Ing, neither should it be * ubiverBityi-or $^|taltery^o£': trtrbr a» museum, -.The capital City - alrsmdy . possesses many aUtuea, ihd tfa*/ mighty ^aetitogtdn monument, also apfehdid Institutions Of ;the*.s oha^aea^^rtaniedi jtM, -hrtdgb -'-sbr l^ch la not fayorecr, and the waiters** lieves the most fiiting memorial to' Lin- coln-Would be-a noble highway,or boule- ^td,' running direot front' the W«Ii|| House to Gettysburg, a. distance of seventy-two miles, fitt fe .proposed • that ^^.na^#at? he )9Q|ptr||ot^[ ftp^ national It could be-made Indestructible, beautf- fuiijeaibsqi«hed,*ndjprovidedwithH6leo- trloal illummation at night. As an in- atanc* o f the peTmanenoy^f this form of hiemorial, tha Alp^.-Wlyf at'.lKoW jr l^ifid*..-., •' '-•;-,•..*,',.'/'*'-'\\- •\ - , \. ' \•:. j The proposition is in aeme respects a 'ftopt attractive one. . Will j it ; eyer'be realised ?—Buffalo Commercial. West Bangor. 1 even- Their Pooblarily Sherwin & Jones Both 'Phones* irerfdarpeople »n> ***Mm ThfiADIRONDACKBEAUTY THB BEST FIVK <tmt C1BAB #»* M. & L. CtGAR i&k^m* Tvpewritiog. shorthand, bookaaepinK, •ttTtaiicb. by eaperte. Big demand forotwrators. Free oar fare. For foil particulars address Speooer'i School of Telegraphy, K «^2°° A «vrm»vtnm rK^^mn* HAVANA Mswufaettirea m tBe M I L filgar Co,, Malone* %. I. w OVICBS-fDasUArlT TO AN ORDIB Or _ . Hott. Frederick «. ruddock, wrrogaU of Uw oounty of Franklin, andjwoordtot ^ »tojwawteUi wch oaae made and provided, notice Is hereby ftvas w ail aetaooa ba»ln« elates afaJata Mary Aan Cur- ua. late of rortOinlawtaavtaiSBM MW, its* IBM taid tSattbeyarsraasiraSioHUitsn us SUB,™ rMeSwi ttowoTw •• •»»«*B»^«!?» tt *: •» .tors in BocaastarSb. tows of Bombay, la • eoiinty. on or artorMfts i* *ay ol Oslotor iwat. Dated atarafe M. taos. MAIS A OQOSBT, Att'ya for Exsoitor. V A Western minister says iaY .the See- teinUr American lUtaxIne: -*.'Tni ; *a«- Mng decline ia tba number of stadeats •j^v a •iav*IW % *a.^a^B>^Bi»aj\ t ^m • Kr^aw«Mn«sj|^ ^Va^BSjSin^H aajat JB&m- hrMobes of tbe bburoh. la 56 tkaatotl- oal twaiaaries the n«mhert«ovef Tltlaa* than 1!? years ago, though the popnlatiaa iMWittoreased S.OOO.OOO. In one leading denomination tbe loat has beau W pei- oent., while the naeiwberahJp-*«a ia- omsed orer SW.000, H«Horio Aadortr Seminary, with seven mstroctors, a li- brary of 50,000 vorumea and a* Wttdow- meet of $850,000, has but It students. Statistic* gathered by H. D. WOUams, of Boston, show that of American farmera, W per cent, eenve from farmers' famlawa, of lawyers 40, doctors 30, bankers 43. ministers only 8 per oent. Ministers' sons are turning largely toother calling*, and they are probably doing so because of oondittons within tb* churches. Then the writer goes on t o describe aneae of these conditions. What he says about the inadequate support which the church gives a minister is parttoulariy Interest- ing, After spending tan years'time and enough money to have set himself up in busiaetw, a minister gets on the avarage less than *600 A year. He is expaoted to furnish his talents at * discount of from 35 to 00 per ecnt., because he is a tninUUr, and pious people generally agure religion on a charity instead of a business basis. The lnadeqaate salaries are materially reduced In tbe long run, as short pastor- ates mean time lost, expense of movieg, •tc. So ia assay oases tbe church ia s arvug to death the goose that lays tbe gokton eggs.\ \ \Snail tbe people rater fcfee the eS* oial records of tbe votes cast to MM 1900. IBecelred too late forlaM week.1 . ,cia»iitelW^*^ifi*i:ft^.M>' were united in marriage Tuesday !JiBg,4te*tetttber89. - r - , Kites,. AlbertJCmaryiof l^ttsbari . . tod Mrs. Louis 0*bTe,of SoitoHftWlllL wwe< g>ssts of; J^^r^oousiii, Mrs. Mary B^les,last week. J.'. - • i Mr. and- Mrs, Tbooias Oris wo% of Cur- iae, CaL, arwarisiaing taeir seusias, Mr. and Mm. M. J. iiyfca, and. athsr, retatives andCrtendsin tassTistorty. Mr. Gnswold WM fpraseriy ssont Bauaftot, tut .tba »ast thirty yaarsaxeaideittotOAttjtenia,^^ 1 rood hia gsov*.: . fred Hubbard, of Pekware, is visiting Mr. *^ Mrs. aeettOfnofcs. Fa—)1 OianifcUis aaws a hiTjf* dorr that' \* I< \-\ ,W ^ \' '\%A HERE AND THERE. I LocAi, Mm$- exploded last. Wednesday jcau8ihg the death k of fifteen workmen And'two women, who were walking The 'explosion blew off the entire roof of the big building\ scattering timbers in all directions, and almost in- stantly flames burst out over tbe whole structure. Twenty-one men were em- ployed in the building.' Fifteen of these perished. Th&loes is estimated at $400,- »00.^ God Intended that there should be one day each week as an especial day for the culture of home. ties. A day when the father would be home from work, and the children home,from school, and the mother have leas of household care, when all could puVonf their beet clothes, sing their sweetest songs, and enjoy a day of -love. The Sabbath should never be made aday of labor in the home. Tbe work in each home should be so arranged that it can be done almost entirely in six days and as evenly as possible in each day. \Six days shalt thou labor and do all. thy work,\ In the day of judgment;\ said Presi- dent Hadley, of Yale, in his annual ad- dress at the beginning of tbe university year, \the wicked will be condemned, not for the great sins which they have committed, but for the little services which they have left unrendered. The righteous will be distinguished, not by* the great deeds which they have remem- bered, but by tbe little, deeds that they have forgotten.\ That is a fine little ser- mon to cut out -nd paste on the inside pf your watcb cover; or, better still, to in- wardly digest and assimilate in your sub- consciousness, if you know what that ia. \There is a small piece of carpet in tbe mint in San Francfeco that a good many people would doubtless like to get posses- sion of,\ remarked R. H. Smith of the California city. \Itis.ln the adjusting room, where surplus* gold is trimmed from the coins after they have been stamped. Of.course these little trimm- ings often drop on .-the floor and are imbedded.in the carpet, which is soon to beburnedin order that the precious filings may be recovered. Sometimes after a piece of carpet like this has been burned' 15,000 worth of gold dust is taken from the ashes. The sweepings from the floor each day are carefully treasured.\ A Gloversvllleachool boy who had read considerable about the forest fires in the Adlrondaoks was impressed with a desire to see what a burning tree looked like. In the resr.of. the school,.yard there is anold gunky maple tree, which he\4e; elded would afford the illustration. He set a fire. It soon spread to the old tree and gave.-prortti.se of a ^rand conflagration. It was going finely when the principal of the achoolarrived, and with the aid of a •. few students and a^re extinguisher.rthe experimental foreat fire waa,sGOtt put out of buainees. In a short time.it would have reached the shed of a church near by,and much damage would have been done be- fore it could have been checked. Nearly: a century ago David Fife, a Scotsman of O onabee, Ont., sent to a friend io^Iasgowfor-a small bag of-seed A representative of the French govern- ment has been investigating the clothing: manufacturing industry of the United States. He says America excels in the art, and particularly in the ready-made branch. . | There is not one-twentieth as much Mocha coffee sold in New York city, ac- cording to label, as there was before we had a pure food law. Now coffee sellers must tell the truth about then- wares, and only coffee grown in Yemen, in the southern part of Arabia, can be called ?Mooha,'' - . ; Makers of artificial flowers in New York city are receiving an unusual, num'er of orders from all parts of the country for the fall and winter trade. Most of the supply for the nation comes from New York, where more money is spent for the manufacture of imitation flowers than in any other city in the world. v A tunnel more than a mile in length, said to be the longest in existence for use by a municipareleotrio railway, has been opened for operation by tbe Genoa street railway. It connects Genoa with the ad- jacent large commune of Rivarolo, which previously was reached by circling the mountain, the distance being now short- ened one and one-thud mile, and the trip is made in 15 minutes' less time. Con- struction began Jane 1st, 1905. Sorghum is a cane-like grass, with the stature and habit of broom corn, or of, the table varieties of Indian corn, but more slender than the latter, without ears and of a glaucous hue. Sorghum is culti- vated throughout Africa chiefly for the sweet juices of the cane. In the United States it has been employed for many years to make syrup, for which purpose it is more or less grown in every State. It has also been the subject of much experi- menting in sugar making. Governor Hughes seldom enlivens bis public addresses by relating amusing in- cidents, but at the Greene oounty fair tecsntly he relaxed, -He was inspecting, be said, with tha aid of the princip 1, the Bohool in a small town. After visiting the gymnasium, swimming pool, and auditorium they entered the history class- room. An oral examination was evi- dently^ progress. \Thomas said the teacher, \did Martin Luther die a natural death?\ \No ma'am,\ Was the prompt reply, \he was excommunicated by a bull.\ . Accordin * to the latest census there are now nearly 4,000,000 moles in the United States, representing a total value of $416, 930,000; Good mules sell as high as $500 a team, and there is always a good de- mand for tbe better class. Farmers will find the raising of mules a profitable industry. The mule is hardier than the horse and much easier to raise. Sick mules are rarely seen, and mules are not as susceptible to disease as horses. The mule generally lives longer than the horse,' according to history a mule in ancient Greece having lived to be 60 y ars old.. ' Recently M. L. To wne's hired man went to the pasture of his West Hill Farm io Barre, Vt., and drove up a cow with a baby oow. The next night he went down to the pasture and drove up the same oow witb another baby cow. Tbe man was eo astonished that he wouldn't go for the cows the next night.- Mr, Towns himself then performed the- task 1 of rounding up the herd. Monday sight, September 7th, the roundup showed ttiat the same oow was missing; so Mr. Towne went out in search and found her with another calf-^tbis time a male. All three calves resemble each other in color markings, and all average about the same' size, -which was -somewhat under the normal; The whole family is living. baokwoodsr A Canton correspondent taya: A lum- ber deal of considerable magnitude has beep closed here, Bertrand H.Snell.Sarafi M. Snell and Kimball J. Saell.of Pots-, dam, selling to Sidney B. Miller, of Union City, Pa., and Evan J. Jones, of Brad-, ford, Pa., all the soft timber on 9,000 '#heatto try in *^ oleated patcbof: the^ aorce W Ian* in .Cotton. Some time ago; The. friend obtained, som? in from DantBio. Unfortunately it ..was a fall wheat and ; reached Divid Fife in the spring. Neverr tbstoaa David Fife sowed it i n spring. K>olyttrsewheathead8survived till the: fall, but those three wheat beads were entirely free from ruat that %ad Ifuloed his neighbors crops, and really rspreeent- sdanewvarietyof wheat, a falli wheat turned into a spring- wheat. Dayfii I3fe treasured the three beads and planted Hum to tbaanrjng, Saob wa»t^e begta^ nlng of the Fife wheat in - America. I t la thought It must have oome originally Crom SussU, for: orosaed witb \Russian Ladoga by &t. flai'aders of Ottawa it baa produced a wheat splendidly adapted for the: bold climate and long summer sunlight of tbeNjrthwest.riO»ting. It is Stated that the twenty one famous Messrs. Miller and Jones acquired .the, fee of tbe land and the hard,wood timber upon it. The soft timber at that time was one of the choioest bits left in the Adirondacks. The price given ia said to havelwen a long one. The present hold;: Joe Levy, of the firm ofM. Levy & Co., ia in New York,, purchasing gppds for the Levy stores, ;* Oliver Laplant,, Jr.,, clerk, in. Mallon's clothing store, was in Saranac Lake but we«k on business. Jack Porter, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Porter, left last.week lor. Albany, where he will take a course in the Albany Busi- ness College. There is nothing more tantaluing than to go home all primed to scold about somebhing and ^Bnd company thereand be obliged to act»g£eeably. - , Mrs. Thomas Jabaut, of Hatlsburgh, arrived in Malone last week and will spend a part of the coming wlnterrcont'is with hersonj Frank, on Academy street. Miss Ada Rushford, whohasbeen tisit* ing her parent8,Mr.^and,Mrs.-Louis Rushford, ia Malone, returned to Lowel*, Mass., last week. Her, sister, Miss Belle, accompaniedther. A combination of a lump of soap of the size of a hiokory nutr, a pint of boiling water and four.tablespoonfala of turpen- tine is the familiar solution used to trans- fer newspaper cuts to another piece of paper orto cloth. The largast lump-ol; anthracite coal ever m'ned was taken recently from a mine In the Panther creek valley of Pennsylvania. It weighs seven tons, and will be placed in a museumj either in Philadelphia or Boston. Partnership for mutual advantage was observed on Friday afternoon, when two one-legged men went into a Broadway automatic shoe-shining shop and each bad his one shoe shihed for the- same nickel dropped in the slot. Though the-hunting season is well on, not agreat, many hunters< have >been in tbe woods, those that are therebeiogcl iefly f'natives.\ It is bejieved, however, that when the forest fires, are completely ex- tinguished there will -be a 1 rash. - Con- trary to reports, the deer eeem to be in good condition. > . Sir Francis A. Cbannjng, member of parliament from East Northamptonshire, Eog., has concluded, after a study of tbe trade schools'in the United^ States and Canada, that the jpstitutions on this side of thewateraresuperidc to tboee of hia own oouhtryf wnSre, he observes, tbsy are quite iifeely. to put a boy with a bent for engineering to raising cabbages. Western Ireland was recently excited over a particularly clear mirage seen near Bally sonnell, a town on the wild Con- nemara coast. The speGtaele of a beauti- fully situated small town, with buildings of different sizes and varying styles of arohiteoture, was seen rising out of the sea apparently about six miles west- ward. Hundreds gathered to witness the sight, which was visLble from thrA until six P. M., when It giadually disappeared. The wcrld-famous collection of butter- flies and moths, comprising, between 75,- 000 and 100,000 specimens, that belonged to tbe lateH rman S'reoker of Reading Pa., the well-known lepidopteriat, has been sold by his- widow tb the field Museum of Natural History^ Chicago, < for $30,000. Toe-extensive library and manuscripts pertaining to the science owned by Mr. Strecker, and including volumes of his authorship and engravings made by him, go witb tbe purchase. Tuesday of last week an intoxicated ' man was-picked up on the streets of Plattsburgh. He had fatten onthe side- walk and cut a long gash in his head. When searched at tbe jait the man was found to have in a pocket book over $1,000 in cash and negotiable paper. Tbs con- sisted of $70 in cash, a New York draft for nearly $800 and two notes for about $700, Thenotesanddraft;were payable to W. H. Carroll and are dated at Wilkes- barre, Pa. Besides this he carried a val- uable diamond pin in his necktie. Chief Conners telegraphed to the-chlef.of-police of Wilkeabarre to learoif poaaibia aume- thfng concerning the man. It is Slid that every man, iooks like some animal, but few men look like the animals they are named for. Now,, Sen- ator Crane, Of Massaohusetts, it is said, looks exactly like a crane. He is thin— \so thin,\ says a New York Tioiesspecial- istr, «»that when he stands sideways all Mr. a«d Mrs. Seott CnKto^Fred Hub- bttrd and P. F. CaaTMaincs-««nt oo a pteasoretriptoJUks £>uane«k«st Friday, „_, T „_.. _^_ J^^l^J^^^J^L m J}t^ tovettlgators of oooult problems who Mary BowlwtlM paw law wesJcavretarnad tahsr tan WM*r<f lto.l^tUtk tawreaoaiaarjeadiog a few days witb bee son, Sidney,tn Malone, While the month of September re- oMdedantecrsase of 170 in nambet of failures there was a deereaee of ever $I,«00,000 in amount of liabilities, the improyement occurring In the brokerage and real estate division. A deereaae oC about $6,000,000 In maanfscturing liabU- itles was offset by an increase of $7,000,- 000 Is trading defaults, which iacraased l«j in number. The, maaufaoturlDg oomparison was not only favorable in respect to the total amount of indebted- ness, which occurred mainly in tbe UBUeisbfti forma of iron and atesi and in lumber sad building, bat-ten of the fifteen subdivisions recorded more or less im- provement. Ia fact, the only msnuiac tuiing classes showing any inorease ovar last year's UabUities were wooteas, bats, cbemlosU and drugs, paints a d oils, and glass and satibsaware. It is also note- wartby ibistbsv* wars 2S •oote manu- laoturtrg fallsres ia tbe oomparison as to number, and in no ease was tbe differ- •ooe acaneatawt. Tba only leading etasses showing seaaltet ttobdlties than last year WON dotrdog, dry goods, and chtmioaU sad drags. oosMUtatetheXJhoatClabof London will presently convene for^Uw purpose of getting into communication ytftb tbe spirit of th* late Prof. Caurtsey Collins. The bite professor was a member of the ahoat Club and beund.by the usual oath to do hk utmost after dath to reveal the secrets o ! the great beyond. His brother members believe that if i t lies within tbe power of the departed to communicate with the Jiving, the professor will be heard from in a way that will leave no doubtas to the authenticity of the mes- sage. Hshe-ild be borne in iPlnd that these inveltigators are not men of easy oreduiity* ready at any moment to Accept the shadow for the substance, but scien tista of approved training who demand unquestioned proofs.' In order to dearly eaUblUb the Identity of the pro feasor's spirit it will—if conditions prove favor- able—be asked concerning last entries in the Collins diary, entries which ars known only to the member of the club who is to put tba questions. All thia is interesting to tts reader of intelligence, illustrating as it does that never-dying desire to es tabtisb oommunioation with tbe unseen world, and to oatcb even the faintest signal from across the sho: elese sea. And I yet, who doebts that this effort—like so many others—will prove equally futile T county comprise some 56,000 acres, represent Pennsylvania capitalists, and probably lumbering operations will, be begun on a large scale within two, or three years. . ; ^ What is said to be one of the largest priced sales of stock ever made «at one time from a farm m Jefferson county to a single individual was recently made at Theresa in the sale of a part of the herd of tne ElmWood stock farm owned by Geo. T, McNeU, to Wmi C. Hunt, of Fayette- ville, N. Y. The deali which, has been closed, takes from Ehawood 88 oows, ten head of young stock, inoluding oalvee^ and one bun, 44 bead in all. at a price around the $10,000mark. The herd is tho-oughbred Holstelo-Fiflesians, prac- tically of one family, the Inka-Pietertje, and go to stock a farm recently purchased at Fayetteyiile by Mr. Hunt. Included in the herd purchased, by Mr. Bunt srs a number of choice cows, one being Leila Pieterjo, whioh has a record of 37 pounds and[five ounces lb seven day » The Number Five section claims to be the banner street for potatoes this season, And from reports received from that por- tion of the -community their claim would seem to be- justified. James B. Clark finished digging last week and from twelve and one-half acres he harvested 2,500 bushete. John Meagher went even a little better thatt tmXhls average being about 225 bushels to the sore, and nearly all Of the growers tbeWWy that on tbe whole the average will be 200 bushels to the acre. This is in striking contrast to other sections of the town, especially north of the village, where the harvest was very light, and '100 bushels would be looked upon as being fairly good this year. The continued dry spell has made the harvest a comparatively' easy one this season, and potatoes are going into 'the o illara in finer shfcpt than ever before.— i Chateaugay Record. ing* of Miller and Jones in St. Lawrence J^on see is * head and > a atreafc-^Aod not very tall, and he has a sisible head and a pronounced beak—beg pardon, nose. He stands in the humped-up, rtflsctive attitude of hie namesake, and when he is rumjn*ting in a .Senate, corridor with bis wings folded—that is, with his hands in his pockets—you can't help wondering why he doe3 not stand on one leg.\ A correspondent writing from Bridge- water In the bop gowing sectijn of Oneida county says; : ;*'The annual bop- r^kingiejuwnisagain over. There was A time when every farmer, with two ex- ceptions, John Howland and Mr. : Hub- bard, from tbia village, to C&88viUe,.hAd their hop yard. Now Mr. Sisley, near OAssville, has the only bop yard on the road. A like condition preyAils ia every direction, and where ence newly every farmer in this vicinity had hop yards, now hop raising is the exception. Even tbe veteran bop grower, Hugh WiUiAmB, is decreasing his mterest and had tbree acres less this year than last. Seven hundred boxes were picked in bis,yard last yearand only 880 this year.\ v *• The towttc board held a meeting «a Tuesday and figured up the cost- of the - new piece of road which has been eon* structed on t^ke street, fcooib of tbe corporation limits. It was found that the entire cost of construction amount- ed to about sewa* dollars per rod, which, when the contracts for State roads are taken into ooosMeration, makes the officials feet that they have expended the pe pie's money ia a most satisfactory and economic*! omnoer. Tbe read ia^ fourteen feet In width, and, being aailt of crushed atone, makes a most lasting and substantial piece of highway, and if the wot k is continued on throughout the township aloBg-tbe same Hoes, Chateau. gay wlllsooa bear the««pu«stkMi of aav- ieg the obeapest ooMtreeted and iiest highway of any town in this. —Coateaagay Rsoord. \ - i 1$ 1-1 i' r&m