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DANA ON NEWSPAPER WOBK . In the course of a recent R ECO R DER interview b y T. O. Crawford , Mr. Chas. A. -Dana , the famous editor of the N. Y.. Sen , said : \I never work at home, eitber at ni g ht or morning ; never study at Lome. It is all done here and in the railroad trains. I get down hero , take the year throng b , about ten or eleven o ' clock. The first thing I do is to rend my let- ters ; then read the newspapers ; cat out atylhing I want ; then I road the proofs , rend them all every day of the entire-Su-v—not alJ-with attention ,, . but go throug h them all. I do not bother about work after I get away in the af- ternoon! I stop usually from four to half past five. I always had a eeperato officfe for outside work. At home I do nothing but get my dinner , amuse my- self , go lo the theatre , or to visit freinds. \1 almost nlwnvs dictate. If yon bare the th' ng in yoi. r mind you can express it yourself , or dictate it to any OHO. If your articles hav e the ideas and thoug hts, the principil thing, they will produce there own effect. \The prime object in the publication of a newspaper , of course , is business ; then , after that , cornea the intellectual motive , the success ot a cause , the su- premacy \ of one party over another , all those things which intellectual men contend about ; but no newspaper could be published unless it paid And when yon take a modern newspaper , with the capital that is r< quired to carry :t on— where for instance , it has to have a half- dozen presses that cost one hundred and fifty thousand dollars or so—i t is is p lain there must be a considerable profit or the enterprise would not live. The expense of producing the S UN , take the whole thing, nil round , month b y month , is about four thousand dollars a d«y. The g iantess of wooden ships , the new cli pper Roanoke , arrived in New YorK. lerentJ y, from ' the yards of her builders , Ar thur Sewall & Go. of Bath. She ia ui-xt to the biggest sailing shi p afloat , th e bi ggest being the five masted steel leviathan France. There was one American cli pper larger than lbs Ro a- noke , and she was tbo Great Republic , built by Donald Me Kay in East Boston in 1S53 The G reat Re public measured 4 , 5fi5 tons gross , w as 334i feet long, 53 1 feet beam , and 3S feet deep . The Roanoke measures IZ.iOQ tons gross , is 335 feet long , 48 feet beam , and 20 feet deep. A comp arison of these fi gures will tbow that the Roanoke ia just 6 il.clies longer thun the Great J^epublic , has 4i feet ltss beam , a nd is n ine feet loss in depth. The spars of the Roanoke are loftier than those of the Great Republic , and the spreads more ciinvas. It is said that tti e Great Republic could crowd on 15 . G53 FqiTiro yards of duck. TueJRoa noke , so her ski pper , CJ»p t. J. P. Hemil too of Brooklyn , say. * , will carry 20 ,000 tquare yards of canvas. The Roanoke will uiuke triangular tri ps between New York , i3au Francisco , and Liverpool. \BAB'S\ BOILED DINNERS. Ye ars ago a man taug ht me what-a boiled dinner was : Into the bi g pot must go one or two chickens , plenty of good potatoes , a head of that curl y cabbage , some carrots , green corn—in- deed every vegetable that can be boil- ed—and to fltvor it all must be a p iece of bacon. When everything is token out , and ouch put into its own dish , tbo chickens will be as white os milk and a>i tender as possible. The vegetables will be sweet and fairl y melt in your mouth , « nd th e p iuce of bacon may be present «d to tha scrub woman. Then , for desei t , with this dinner you have boiled dump lings of app le. If tbntis a work- ingman ' s dinner , it is a very good one. Rat I <3.i n tt-11 you there ul*o very few cooks who know bow to cook it , and there «re very few men who don ' t like it. It t-tstes a heap butter , whea itJi 'SOn it should be , than the . various ^\ w aU« dishes of which thoy tiro. So ii sr 000I1 rei gns in the Rub kitchen who cacno t compass a boiled dinner. As Wang *»*y. -3 , \She 'll not rei gn ; she 'll not even i-piiuklo. \ mm B » t ii It S HOULD B E I N E VERY H OUSE .—J B. Wilson , 371 Clay St. Sharpsbii rjr. Pa , a-ivs he will not bo without Dr. King ' s New Discovcty for Consumption , and Colds , that it cured his wife who was threatened with Pneumonia after uu Jitt..ck of *'L'» Gri ppe , \ wh e n ull other remedies and several p h y- * nicinns bail dune her no nood. Robert Rubor , of O otikspcrr. P,»., claims Dr- iving ' s Now Discovery has d o na him ruoro good than anything he ever used for Lung Tionble. Nothing lik e it. Try it. Free trial bottle at W. W. Tooker ' s Mother—It\j terribly lalo. Wh y in the world don 't you go to bed ? Little Daughter—I' m studying my grammar lesson. \But yon s»id the teacher gave you onl y one rule to day and that you learned that in ihreo rainutoa. \ \Yos ' ra. \ '•Then wh y are you pariug over that grnui um at II o ' clock at night ? 'Tra learning the exceptions . \Gj od News. BIGGEST OF WOODEN SHIPS. j The duties on stai-ch are l evied foi private revenue only. As wo import very littlo starch because of the pre Mbitory tariff on it , all this tax upon cleanliness goes to the starch trust and hardl y any to tho government. The [tariff of two cents a pound is a tax .which the foreigner does not pay, and \ unfortunately it is ' a tariff which does not lower the price of starch. This was confessed b y the starclimakei'3 them- selves in a comical way when th ey com- \ ' plained at tho treasury department that Starch was being sold iu the American market f or le s s t h an tho p r i ce fi xe d b y ' the sVndicatc , conclusive proof , they sa id , that it was being smugg l ed into tie country. I Treasury detectives went to work , and they found that cargoes of starch had been smuggle d iu under another name and had wi c kedl y lowered tho price of starch. The unlawful importation be- ing stopped tho price of starch went up A gain , and every housekeeper in the lan d ¦ was condemned to pay to private citi- zens a fine of two cents a pound on every pound of starch she was reckless enoug h £0 buy. The moral of this examp le will apply to hundreds of other articles dif- fering from starch only in the size of tho tax levied upon them and the sh are of its proceeds given to tho government— M. M. Trumbull. I Fooli ' s Averages. I In showing up the untrustworthlness of Commissioner Peek' s \ average an- nual earnings , \ tho New York Commer- cial Bulletin , a nonpartisan trade jour- nal- , says; \As to the value of e . uch averages aa these Mr. Peck gave an opinion in his report in 1888 aa follows; 'In the preparation of wage tables the effort has been to get down to actual facts, Tho statem en t of averages has been purposely omitted as tending only to mislead. ' In 1883 Mr. Peck would not average separately the wages or blacksmiths , carpenters or bricklayers because such averages would bo mis- leading, and yet in his report for 1891 ho averages tho wages of all tho skilled and unskilled men , women , boys and g irls employed upon the greatest diversity of ¦ \Vork , and attemp ts to use those aver- ages in showing whether tho tariff haa favorably or unfavorably affected wages. The utter worthlessness of this report is too apparent to need further considera- tion . \ The Ice Cart and tho Candidate. 1 Candidate Whitelaw Reid says: \Tho ice cart at the White House door will disappear in like manner from their campai gn literature when they discove r that it quite suits a nation of 05 , 000 , 000 of intelligent and sel f respecting free- men to have a president who does not gush , does not slop, does not play the demagogue , does not protend to bo tho bosom friend of ever}' man he meets. \ ! Which g ives occasion to remark that the ice cart did not originate in D>\?io- crati c literature , but is a happy witti- cism of big Tom Reed' s, i But is not tho candidate ' s description of Harrison a cruel whack at Bl aine? PIKE'S PEAK. An exohaogo prints a story of a young lady who wois t to Colorado tor her health , and while sojourning at Mini ton , fell into conversation with a man on Hie hotel p iaz/.a. The gentleman remarked upon the grandeur of Pike ' s Peak , which tower - ed majestioll y before tliom. Tho young lady expressed her appreciation of the wonderful spectacle. \I suppose said the gentleman , after the conversation hud proceeded ti little \Jay \that tho mountain bus 11 peculiar interest to tan from (he fact that . mv own name is Pike. \ ''Naturally it would , \ answered the lad y, promptl y : \ and I may add that my o wn en t hu s i a sm i s probabl y increas- ed b y tho fact that my name is Peak. ' 1 Tho co incidence was extraordinary, a nd the st o ry has strong mai ks of truth. If it h ad been made up, th e inventor would most oortainl y have gone ' on t o , say th at the acquaintance thus happ il y begun soon ripened into friendshi p ? that this iu turn gave p hico to tender nature , and tin t the young woman soon became like the moqntpiu itself , Pike ' s Peak. -«» «o» ¦ An exchange anya that a little girl 0! Norwich was p lay ing on the floor when a bol t of lightning struck tbo bouse and passed throug h tho room- The child was rendered unconcious and her bod y from bead to foot became as black as a negro ' s. The child was restored, to con- sciousness after five hours work by ph y- sicians. Her body ia still aa black aa charcoal. The slfouges trust may swell and bust Giving is living ; hoarding, shriveling. Pure thoug hts promote nonl growth, Love sees best in a dim light. - The Stai-eli Duly. The best ewbdiment of the sham and insincerit y o f ti o Re p ubl ic a n i s m o f the present day is t( bo found in tho persoi' of its chief apstlc , Major McKinley The c ham p ion < £ hi gh protection goes about tho counry repeating the stale humbug that \ho foreigner pavs the tariff tax. \ Yes ho champion is .seldom able to convin c anybody that he be- lieves his OWn lords , for ho nearl y al- ways blurts Oil I some fatal admission which shows thfc ho has not deceived himself at least. T i ms , in speato g at Woodsido Island p ark , Oh i o , he g:ie the following descrip- t ion of three of 10 tariff bills passed al the recent s essio of congress: \One was to i.t wool on tho froo list , which means f n f rom the sh e ep ' s back , ' but tariff whenit - g oes on the people ' s backs; another vns hoop iron free fui tho cotton p lan t , but hoop iron tariffed for all tho re st £ mankind; the third i. - cotton baggvnffreo for cotton states , put tariffed forll other states. \ But if \th o jrciguer pays the tax ' how can tho taff on. woolen goods bo a burden to thoeophj? \Tariff when it goes on tho pede ' s backs \ can have but one meaning, fd that is that tho Amori. can consumer tys the tariff tax. And if tho i-eigner haa been paying the tas on con bagging, does npt the removal of t! dut y merel y relieve the foreigner instul of tho sou ' thorn plant- er? What halshi p is involved in leav- ing \hoop iro::arificd for all the rest of mankind\ if \o forei gner ia going to pay tho duty i any cascr McKinley tes not believe hia own words. Bayard 1 narrison ' H Letter. In a criticis of President Harrison ' s; letter of accepuce ex-Secretary Thomas F, Bayard saj There is noti burdensome tax upon productive imstry which ho proposes tn l! c;lifnn . no .th o. weight of . which he desires to sec ore equally distributed. There is no iscurity or complexity in such cases t.t distress and embar- rass importe r and. puzzle courts mid counsel for -B- . ' - 'h ho proposes a remedy. To the ainou; of tax that roaches the public treasv. \ he seems wholly indif- ferent , hut tliulvantages and profits of protection to J special beneficiaries ho dilates upon ith rapture and proph- esies their abulant increase. Tho toilin^t ' armcr who produces the bulk of our eWt a , the great army oi unprotected jusmnors , iu whose in- creased cost t living the tariff and all other taxes fO ming led , cannot find oven ono cold\ord of passing consi der- ation and^ no ivtil promise in this docu- ment o f self md p art y congra t u la t io n and co imneiitfion . Never did paper more plainl y and unconscioushto the writer tell the story of its ori g in ' and that its author waa only tho adveato . and representative of a combmaluiofelasaoa unjustly favored by law-; who iad\advanced him to powei for their owtprofit and naturally desired its continuai- 'e. It IU 08 to Flaguo Thcui. Rcpublicm organs which protested against the JcKinley bill two years ago do not like to have their old files looked through jus! now. Yet tho truth spoken then k now :isiug to plague the insin- cere supports of McKinloy ism. The following fe from the St, Paul Pioneer Press of ° Set. IS , lSOO: \It is a miscon- ception of U- condition iind the needs of tho couciy on which the McKinley bill is formal. Wo can find , upon a careful review , no reason why the Mc- Kinley bill ihould become a law , and none whv it should receive tho support of Republic-^ members of congress un- less they beUL' to thc scn ° o1 tnat bo \ liovos in tlu- t ,lltir0 prohibition of im- ports and t' i> death of all commerce be- tween nations- Ifc is llot an auswer to the demaiui for tariff reduction and re- form. \ Wade ' 3 pjbrc and Fabric , of Boston , an organ of weavers and sp inners , says: \By cable, ^V l - a > we lcarn tlmt ? r .V * ¦ liBtre^s prevails among tho 10 , 000 idle GmpWecs of t JlG tin l !latc ketones m \VaW . Hnv. -ovci- , what is their loss is the gain of £om e five or sis of our mil- lionaire iron wasters. Stealing this business does not enrich this country; it only hastens the time wheu labor will tnrn and rend the coal and iron million- aires who are legally rppbiug tho entire natiaa . \ TnE iTOOy. GAVE OCT. \Wife—How did jou get along whiio I wn 9 nwny ? ... Hnahand—I kept houep fur about ten &*ys . and tbeu I went to a hotel. \A botei 1 vvh j <- ]id, yt y ° u e° on keeping hou*e r „ \Couldn 't. All tbeduhes wsro dirty. —N V Weekly. PART OF THE miiU. The ypur> # housewife fto the btitchcp —• \Have you a nice Spring chicken this mornJu K r' Butcher— \Yua m:i ' am. \ \Well , p ibiiso cut out the croquettes and send them to my address. McICiulcy 'itvoa lIIuiKf!lf « ...„.. Messrs. Willett & Gray reported laafr January that tho books of thc American^ Sugar Uofmcrics company eiiowod Dpi earnhiga for tho calendar yoa* 1801 or \ not lass than ^. OTU . OOa , f»om ' vl j ddt amount two semiannual dtvidondtrtt ia been p a id , encii of 4 per cent, on ' ttio eonu no n and 9^ per cent, on ttio nr*- fovrod , amounting, in M to $8 t 7»0 , 0 € teL kaWng a aurp lus of net earnings «f 61 |3* 3 |008,17 rentrvod for conlingauoi ai, During 181)1 , It should }>. - . remembered , the Sugar trust suffered from a very ac- tive competition of the Philadel p hia- re- fineries , and the conditions were hsss fa- vorable than today or than they were in 1G80 and 1800. Y*t the trust earned not less than fiS . UTa . OirJ , enabling it-to-pay annual dividends v{ 3 }>er cent, on c-o«t- mon stock and G per cent, on preferred stock—a total capital slock of ^Q . OOO , - 090 , which waa i«. -iueil tin rcfiiu ' tig prop, orty , building. -! , etc.. of an ostiunited value of no more than £1(3 , 000 , 000. Now a business which pays yearly a total profit of over :;• . \ > , 000 , 000 on uu actual investment of only §l. *i , o. ';0 , 000 may not lay itsel f open to tho charge of practicing OXtOl' tiou . but it dov« not uppo.ar ihiit protection in needed in itucaso , e^iecially as tho men employed therein ar-o uiia-. erablv paid. If tho sugar i-efinin;?- business Is not extremel y p r ofi t a ble wh y i.j it that so much new cap ital i. -j b eing put into now and independent reiincricti? V/horo do the enormous caniiugs of tho sugar mo- nopol y come A . -om if the marg in I K . ' * tween tho pricco of raw sugar- and tho refined, product i;s not much larger, than it shoul d lie?—Now York Merchants ' R e- view . ai r. Cleveland on .arijii...ii„„ ^ The HomoHtoud strike , wilii jtsvi olou l and distressful consecp-ienees , the end of which may not yet bo foreseen , hiw induced many who have given tho labor- problem more or loss consideration to. recommend tho enactment of authorita* tivo and competent arbitration. It is well to recall that tho most cij« lig htened friend of the American worit iugmen , drover Cleveland , made such p. recommendation to congress in April , 1886. In ibis communication Mr. Clever land suggested that \instead of arbitrat tors clioeon in tho heat of conflicting claims , and after each dispute . shall arise , for tho purposo of determining tho same , there \be created a commission , of labor , consisting of ihreo members , who shall be regular officers of the gov? ernmciit , charged , among ot her d uti e s , with tho consideration and settlement when possible of all controversies be-: tweon labor .. and _ c aj; ital. '!. incndation had been acted upon i£ & certain that the bloody ami disastrous chapter of the Homestead strike would rjoypr- hayp hcen written. Tho laboring people of the country will look confi- d e ntl y t o h i r f next a d m i nistration f or on ade q uate and * final tjettlcmont of this momentous question. From tho party which made possible the tariff enriched Carneg ie they have nothing \o expect but the old bitter portion of low wages. Tho hope of the laboring people of this country is in the Democratic party and its standard bearer , Grover Cleveh' .nd. ¦ Truth from tho Ent'iny. The Chicago Tribune, which >!:pi>ortd the protection candidates-without sup- porting hi g h tariil \ Melvirc!. .y ism , }ia? discontinued for the present its tariff rer form arguments, here \t cue of tho frank admissiona of thia threat Repub- lican journal made before tho campaign began : A comparativel y enisll percentage of the immigration to the- Vnitod Stjite« cqin ea from free trade pnghuul , and even that is made up lar ge ly fr o m tho classes not protected b y tho tftriff ai»d who cannot be regarded as socking hero the benefits of high protectionianj . Skilled operatives in tbo iron »un\ «U MI 1 and cotton and woolen iuduBjripa ftp* 1 littlo inducement to leave Wiet r enijilQy- men$ in free trade lSngland to 8e«jk higher wages in the United Stotes. On full inquiry they find tbo pronto of hi gR wages ilclusivc aiwl that the sup- posed advantage ia fully offset b y t\ia jnereased cost of living, U any sucl) disproportion between the condition of English and American operatives in pro- tected industries as is claimed b y ultra protectionists exiuted it could not fail to cause a flood of immigration of skilled operatives from England to tho ynitpt\ {States , wliereiw or.r inimi yratioii comes Chiefly from the hi g h protection coun- tries of continental Europe , and is made np of people who can enjoy no protection , here. _ A V«ll<-lt«it»n Metap hor. The following vehement proteflt a gainst high taxes was made noma years before tho McKinley bill was passed, but in an era of unnecessarily hi g h tax a tion : \ \yo want reduction of the tariff. Wo are taxed on ever y int e re s t ; bl o o d i s not onl y extracted from the- lavg. 'S veins of tho body politic , but it is bouiu] hand and foot and covered all over with jralli- ni ppers , who are allowed to suck h{ ood , from every vein. \ ThoFO are the words of General John , Ai Logan 1 who waa tho Repnhlican can. di<Iato for tho vice presidency in tho ye ar JSS-l , That piotap hor of the gallU nippe rs js a very felicitous o»p. Tlio word ia said to bo derived from \gal l , \ pud that is i> tend eminently appvopri- ate to a system that perpe t rates robbery In thc namp of pr-otcption ., —I , uuUvlllu Couricr'Jourual. The farmer , as fienator Allison haa said , \has practically no protection at R U, \ And that is tho bald reason why tho farmer should not voto tho protco* tjpnists 'JicJcct , —Uarrispiir^ 1' Htrtot. ¦ — - ¦ ¦ — Sugar Trust Profits. The Corrector. PUBLISHED EVERT SA T U R D A Y MORNING IX THE YH1I1AGB OP SAG-HAUBOF* . SDFPOLE CO., 31 1. SB.IM' 3i E , SZ ¦ ». S1EICHT , Editor and Proprietor. Terms , $2.00 Per Annum , ia Advance. OFFICE— In the Brick Block , o n the west Bide of Main Street , opposite the American H o tel , (np stairs ,) Bag-Harbor , L. I. No paper discontinued until all arrearages »re paid , except at the option of the pub- i»hcr. AUVKICTIKINU IlvVr iiS St»ace _J iw |» w j s wTTJnTs m^irTnTpTuTTTxr . 1 . 1 . nch *•• ¦ »> !00 \ fi»5 fioi) . T«TO , Vi fjo ,«o» ic bd ^ inches... ioo , 1 as 100 200 sso oool 800 is an s inch« ...issj ism soo 2so « 1) 0 000 1100 11 10 itnchCH . ..ino , xoO j SOU; 30n 450 TOO t!00 !» •» n ineties . . -i oo , a.w 300 4 on A no 8 00 1400 so lo VOo ii,nn.; 300: 400 4»)! soo l S00 lOoo ' ldo? li •• XCo umn.jBOOl 7001 8S0 IOOO 1B00 S000I9E00 WM 1 -^^ n ^ ^j !2B ^ f :£2I?J!L s4 ?if!!!> 0 ' « 0 « ° T» *« Na notice can bo taken of anonymous communications. Wo do not want lb* namca of correspondents for publiOQtlOB . but as a gnaranteo of good faith. We oai- not return rejoeted comamnicfttioM. Blt'ths , marriages and deaths , wlion ««. companied b y name of a responsibl e party, published free . aa news ; Obifcnarres . Tributii of Eespect . X-c , charged at advertising rataa Hi g hest of all in Leavening Power. —U- S. G ov 't Report , Aug. if , x 88o, Physicians and Medicine Baffled. Salt Rheum of B£any Years Standing, ftrs. fe' adsdcn Endured Hcnlhs of Suffering zn$ Torlurs. Dr. Kenned y Finall y Restored Her to Health by the Aid of a Simp le M - -», - . . . .. Remedy. - _ . - . . . - -lit <* . -j The cry of the ph ysicians ia \ purif y vour blood , \ a t tend t o this and you w i ll ¦ pave littlo ' use for their services. ThLs year especially aa ' the result of lhe tcrri- • ^^f=rv ble epidemic of grip ^§S 3 \\ peop le find themselves |g5 _ \ j^ H£^- l susceptible to tho ^^Qj^ir chang ing seasons. ^ S^^3* flB The blood is poor and ^^R j^^aW thin , the n erves weak ^^ TrfgK^jgs and unsteady and the i!stv * «v ^ i \whole physfcal organ- JS& /w J j ism upset , and out of *ll r k\tP. v4^ repair. Ono of the - mSM*ff iJeur ' ^BL most remarkable easea «^^MS^w fi z W 0 * ' atc 3' cara appears ^^Slii i^ ' ft /iS-^hr tire records of Dr. ^^S M § I^^Sarlennedy, he recom- ^^^p^Bjg ^^^^men ded a liarmlcss ^^^jas^gSjpaT spr ing rnedicine with the most extraordinary success. ' , - Dr. Kenncdv relates the case as follows: lira . Belinda Hodsdon , of Haverhill , 2f. II., Is a \woman past middle nge. She was suffering from Salt Hhouni . which she had had for many years; in October. 1890 , it settled in her limb , the pain was incessant day and ni g ht; the following September I took the case under treat- ment. Up to that time Sirs. Hodsdon had tried several physician s buttbeir pre- scriptions and ointments did not heal the diseased leg or case the pain ; she resort- ed to various kinds ' of patent medicines -which proved to be worthless , in fact I felt fully convinced that Mrs. HoUsdon despaired of ever haying tho use of her limb again. ' . I felt sure that thc terrible condition •which she was in was the result of an ulceration of the limb and a shattered nervous s y stem , t he remedy need e d waa . one tha t would s t r en gt h e n t he nerve force , build up the weak and debilitated condi- tion of the bod y aiid at the same lime . «xpel all poison from the blood—this com: bfnation was best found in I>r. David Kenne dy ' s Favorite Hcmcdy, made at Rondout , N. Y. , which I prescribed ; the result was wonderful and in Jlrs. Hods- don ' s own words from a letter I received ¦ hortly after her recovery, \A fter I had used about all of the first bottl e I found myself much improved , thc sharp , pierc- in g, s t in g in g p ains I had had in m y limb for many months were- gone. I contin- ued the use of FavoriteItemedy and when About half throug h with the second bot- itle great improvement was apparent ; my limb up to this time looked more like a •jlOCfl Of raw liver than anything else from ibe- foot to the knee ; it was swollen twice its natural size. My family and friends who saw it dur- ing the months of my extreme suffering jean testify to the truth of what I ailirm ; jecelvlng so much benefit I continued to ¦ use Favorite Remedy and now I am bet- ter In every way ; my general health ia . excellent , no more nervous troubles , the limb is healed over , no pain , it is growing stronger every day ; can walk nearly as wel l as before the sore broke out and the limb is now of its natural size and color. \ Pi Si \I a ^ so wish to state that I used In Connection with Dr. Kennedy ' s Favor- ite Rcmedv , Dr. ivcnncdy ' s Salt Rhcura Gream as an external application on tiic limb. \ iSvliila Favorite Remedy h curinsr thc eruptions and sores caused by impurities in the blood it also regulates the bowels , assists ' . digestion , clears thc complexio n , produces refreshing sleep, tlisprls ache? , pains , nen-ousuess . and melancholy, puts new life iind strength in the debilitated. It is thc greatest medicine on earth for Jth ' o aged and innrm. Choic e Lag er Beer In Bottles or Cases For Family or Otlier Use. HKIJfKT n. I'OIETKIC is now prcpnrea to ' mtipply famine^; an-1 1)10 puMio jroner^llr v.Mth f .»uI!GE MINiiLKK'S CHOICE f.A« \ JK!t Ifkljli . \ i:i fettles by the ttojea or larger qiMmi. 'ieii , at lowes t prices. - We claim that this beer is tho bwl in tho niar- «et . Try It au<l see; Doliverod every day. Leave yonr . order ' s at tlie BiJOU HOTEL ^Sn l?KrtTAURA>'T , ' \ ' > !;i U< . Srv '«t , Sag Hariior. HENRY B, PORTER , Proprietor, GEORGE C. KAYNGR , | ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL LOR , 1 NOTARY PUliLIC. i OfflM It l* «ooule U.ink , Pahja ' It' ock . ] S»£ Ilartjor . N. Y. THQMAS F. iuSGOOD , ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR , NOTARY PUBLIC. prriCKx OVEK v»\ w , TOOKKH ' S PI ; U ( J STOUB SAa-UAuypu . x. Y . 0. II VAUlilIN . Public Auctioneer , SAO-tii'siion , uu C n. TAl' nilX olluni his BUTV I OIU ta m* cltlionii o' m\n But End of Long Island as a l' ul»!}c Auctioneer. r*non« linYliicanr Kind of personal property or ri - rd Miate which Ulfy \ wish in dU;>»«. > of . i ?, :\ \ ilo st> '>? placing itirisanio in !iis eUargc. I ' aa \>c t.y.wA at lifs r»sid«ac* in llcary St _, Jtc.ir Division S:.. Ssi iisrl'or iff . H. TABOB , 8 BWSDE ALEB.. HEADQUAltTEltS i'OJt ga, ily aud. Weekly Papers —:o:— Wc R ' . RO handle SUNDAY PATKHS , and for the jonvod^ri K ' ol wsjomers our - NV- .vspappr llSse will be open from 1 to 2 1\ M. 0:1 Saudays. \ Onr X«jw. -=ijap. >r List i< <-r':i>:a:::! . r inrroasini: ' . apd we are no»- oullin^ MOKK PAl'l^ i US TilAS liVKlt uevouK What is th is election bill? Stripped of all its verbiage it ia this: That tho United States aro to appoint in each state a general supervise* oS elecHotu that tho supervisor lias comp lete con- trol over congressional elections in ovary district of the state. Ho can employ as many deputies as lie chooses. Ho can search tho houses hoforo election to see if there are any fraudulent voters there concealed. But tho real danger iu thin Jlieasuro lies in tho clauso which pro- vides that after each election those fed- eral officers would certify tho return of tho members elected to tho house of rep - resentatives. It doesn 't matter who gets tho votes. It doesn 't matter who haa five or six or ton thousand majority. The federal supervisor fixes the identity or tho individual who attends before the speaker ' s desk to be swor n in on tho day when congress organise. -*. You may say th a t perhajw the iU'pub- lican party will be honest in the exer- cise of this power. Well , gentlemen , t do not believe that there ever yet baa been given to any man or set of men a power to oppress his fellow citizens for bis own benefit that the power has not been exercised , and if you give tho Re- pu blican party power to perpetuate irn own control in thc house of representa- tives there is nothing iu its history to show that it would exercise that jw ' wer in a spiri t of moderation. Look at the histor y of the Fifty-iirs t co ngress to as- certain just how this power would bo exercised. I am reminded of tho experience of an English gentleman traveling through France during the empire. lie was in a firs t class compartment and had with him a French official who had several registers and a largo urn . The .English- man inquired what thoy were for , and ho said tho register. -} were a liat oi the voters , the urn was to receive tho bal- lots. Ho also had a lar go hag with him , and on bein g interrogated as to wha t its use was replied , \Oh , that 13 the ma- jority. \ That is the force bill in brief , jnsfc aa it would bo in brief here. Its result would b p thp emasculation of repre- sentative government ; it would bo the destruction of representative govern- ment. The Stuto TSniiJc Tax. The project of repealing tlio present prohibitory tax of 10 per cent, on tho is- sue of state hanks is a very hopeful movement in favor of a most welcome change in the financial condition of tho country. There need ho no fear of any toleration of a depreciated bank note cir- culation should this restriction lw re- union which would aiithorizo ' or \ allow it , and if it were attempted anywhere tho facilities for collection aro -now so great that it WOUld bo crushed out at on eo . Tl io best features of the former statutes would bo preserved in now state leg i s lation , aud tl io natural law of sup- p l y and demand would govern all tho rCFt Of thC needed restrictions. Tho tax which it is proposed to repeal is in itself imcoiistituiioiiah It its not l evied for revenue , but for p rohibition , and the fundamental law nowhere gives to the federal congre ss tho ri g ht to sup- pr e s s by i ts act i on t he issuo of the s ta t e banks. There woul d follow from its re- peal the most perfect currency for busi- ness purposes the worl d has ever known. Flexible hi its character , redeemable at all central p o i n t s , and thus always at t ar throug ho ut every portion of tlui count ry, and meeting tho needs of tlio hour in its answer to every legitimate demand , it would prevent pressures and stringency in the money mar ket , and in- ju re no ono b ut t li o g ree d y s p ecul a tor who makes his cent per cent in a finan- cial crisis. —David M. Stone , KdUor of ftew York Journal of Commerce , in F pruni. How 'Wanan»aVor Cot There. liepublican organs are accustomed to treat lig htl y the charge made by tho DOHlOcrata that the present postmaster general was put in the cabinet as a re- ward for his services in raising money for election purposes fou r years ugu. But tlio truth of this charge is c-iearly established by tho admissions of the very men who helped Wnnamakcr to raise that famoiis wlOO . OCO a few days before the election. Tho rich manufactnrero of Philadcl* p hia vrlio contributed most of the great corrup tion fund for Quay ' s u:so , aro members cf the Philadel p hia Manufac- turers ' C lub , an organization of hi g l j protectionists. The organ of thc club ia The Manufacturer. Soon after YVaua- Diakor ' S appointment as postmaster gen- eral this jor-vnal said: \ It i s to tho men t h a t g ive the push that a largo , if not the largest, share of success is due. Wo mak e the assertion ^hat tho money contributed by this club last year had more influence upon tho result of tho national election than all tho s k i ll , the ingenuity, tho labor and thO Vvil'C pulling of all thc professional pol\Uciana in Philadelphia. Wo bclicvo this proposition to bo capable of positive proof. If , therefore , control of patron , ? ago is rightly tho reward , pf victorious effort ,, the right of this club to name tho federal officeholders of Philadelphia reato upon solid grmmd. \ Thoy accepted wanamakpr a appoint ment as tho reward , for tho fat which was fried out of them , and did not hesi- tate to publish the f. -ict. And tho Iter publican pa rty used to boas t that it was the \ party of high moral ideas!\ Ai^ Answer to Harrison. Any man '* v ' 10 staios * aa * tuc FJerno: cratic party has any other policy thaq that of limiting tho revenues to tho need of tho government misrepresents tho p latform adopted at Chicago and seeks to achieve success by falsehood rather than by truth. —Bourko Cockra n , Kourlco Cockriin on tlio 1' orco nil ' il'