{ title: 'The Baldwinsville gazette and farmers' journal. volume (Baldwinsville, Onondaga Co., N.Y.) 1883-1891, December 26, 1907, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn84031018/1907-12-26/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031018/1907-12-26/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031018/1907-12-26/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031018/1907-12-26/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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_. bim#elf furnishes many excellent ex- ~ of the article In question. 'and a alulgol i re stand I inzvzsotféaré‘n: & -Q We offer this complete outfit.; on terms of : <0 - $5.DOWN. and $1%a WEEK ' G Write for Catal d furth ~ Int:- ofothii'gnzxfl 3&9!“ er pate , ~SPEICH CO. - ._. m Seuth Salizn St.' . ‘srucusz. pig, & if who gave American life its form and w ~ de WIT OF AN IRISH STORY. Lost. as a Rule, When the Tale -is Re- duced to Cold Type. \Iyren wit loges more in reduction to cold type than that of any other na- Hon on earth.\ 'At least that is the «pinion of- m 'St. Louis Hibernian who \When an Irishman perpetratos a wit. \ Hciem It is always tinged with a per- sonality\ which Jn print or even in the retelling is often completely lost. There 3s always sompething-a wink, a smile, an arck expression, a shrug or gesture -that 'emphisizes the joke and must be seen to be appreciated. Sometimes an Irish witticlsm put into type is mis- taken for mere dullness of superstition, \I remember once hearing an Irish. man tell a story about a wonderful old time king on the north coast who «caught the devil at some trick and for a punishment made Old Harry carve his own head on one of the cliffs. The story was told as seriously as a ser- mon would be preached. No one could apparently be more sincere than the story teller. He seemed to believe the legend as devoutly as though it came «directly from holy writ. \After he ha und up the na afiwscent. After he had wound up hit ndant), in charge of the stone and tive, noticing a smile on my face, he stared in apparent surprise. 'Don't ye belave It? Sure, the old king's ham- mer and chisel is kept in the church beyant, and what better proof could e ax? And he gave a wink and a grin and spread out both bands in a gesture of expostulation Just as a law- yer would when posing before a Jury and putting his most convincing argu- meut in' the form of a question. \It was the most exquisite bit of act: ing I ever saw. The tone of perfect conviction in which he told the story was inimitable; then the contrast from solemnity to comic dismay at the idea of any one being so grossly incredulous as not to believe the story and the wink, which indicated that he didn't believe it himself and was simply talk- 4ng for amusement, wore worthy of any actor that ever trod the boards. Yet in the type all this was lost. Tc . appreciste properly the wit of an Irisb story yow must hear the Irishman tell 8t.\*~-St Louis Globe-Deimocrat. - A DIFFICULT TERM. \The Word \Bourgeoia\ and a French Woman's Definition. I am always embarrassed when ask- «ed by foreigners to give the définition of the word \bourgeois which is gen- | <raily emphasised disdainfully. The -Gictionary defines it as \common with- «ut distinetton.\ It is not exactly tau. Bourgeolsixam, like provinclalism, is a mentality. It represents'a kernel with wut the pulp and emanates from the shell of the dinner pot. It is one of tha oer no it have “M?\‘Lffl’bi fre received a good edu: <oltfite, who hava'fasta kand a sense of Béatity. It betrays Itself by mean fnd marrow Idens, by implacable intoler ance, by stubborn. blindness and, above all, Uf «#8 Incapacity to understand liberty or to It. generously. \This fpentality creates a certain at mosphere which is felt at once. The -©ortman, the, pessant the artist, are mot bourgeois. I could name & king who is much more so than fuany of the gesidents of our worst districts. Napo leon 1. was bourgeois; Napoleon II. - was not Balzac, Martpassant, were not Hnipro :' melting in the mouth too rapidly fot Nerv S9 0% , o \The finest possums on earth hre found .. Arict of Kentucky, and they reach per. e ;[\fection about the time the perfumed ' l'all of its golden., beauty in the orange < claimed as tribute from the trees for 'Journal. D - bhelrs of a great literature. They de- | pursued art:as an end and whose first hose Ho walt with whetted , coming feast, - With the nd. taters served ier the. ordinary Kentucky ¢0 ne 'h an, adjective may. be applied to anything so >or the Olymplan eracklin' bref e, hog killing season.; 'In justico ossum it must 'be said that .n pone nor crackling ary,. but it server .well not. Only | mop up the gravy, but also to pre-} the posgum and the yams from he fiavor to be enjoyed in the fullest. in the woodlands of the Pennyrile dis. 'pawpaw becomes so ripe that It falls from the parent stem and reposes in tinted leaves that the earth has first , her enrichment. - Louisville Courler ‘Afitéricqn Temperament and Art. The majority of the men and women irection were not the children of an artistic race, though they were the from a.people who have never Instinctive expression in meeting great experiences has never been artistic, 'but who have never divorced action from vision nor failed in the long run to match power in action with some kind of beauty. in speech. From, its English ancestry the country has in- herited an ingrained and ineffaceable 'Ideailsm of nature, which enormous tasks and hitherto incredible prosper: ity have at times smothered and blight- ed, but never destroyed. From other races have come richer temperament, quicker gensibilities, craving. for Joy and love of beauty for its own sake, which have already immensely enrich- ed American art and are subsolling American life.-Hami!iton Mable in At lantic. 'The Wottest Trade. The lot of the Ceylon pearl diver is not an easy one. Stones are suspended on a running rope over an outrigger projected from the boat's side in such a convenient position as to allow the diver to place one foot within a loop affixed to the stone. The diver, having placed himself with one foot on the stone, with a net around his neck to hold oysters, draws in his breath,. closes the nostrils with one hand and raises his body to glve force to the The manduck (or diver's at- nets, lets go, and the diver rapidly reaches the bottom, leaves the stone, which the manduck instantly hauls up and refixes, throws himself on the ground, creeping along, and fills his net with oysters. This done, he jerks the rope, which is pulled up by the manduck in charge, and the contents of the net are discharged into the boat. The diver meanwhile rises to the sur- face.-Ceylon Manual. The Restless Piper,. A Wall street financier was talking about music. \L. like all music,\ he sald, \except such native and special sorts as the tomtom, the bagpipes .of the Ifdian hufaa give off, Did you ever notice how a piper prances up and down as he pipes? Hq never sits, he never stands still, but up and down, round and round, to and fro, he struts continually. A little boy, listening to the weird skirl of the bagpipes of a street performer, once said to his fa- ther, 'Father, why does the piper keep on the move all the time he plays? 'I can't say, my boy,' the father an- swered, 'unless it is to preveht any- one getting the range with a cobble stone.\ \ Correct Interpretation Essential. Many of the most beautifol pieces of poetry in literature would seem un- Interesting and fiat if read by a bed reciter. In the same way a good re citar will make attractive a } whose ire not #0 sppiren A fine painter will light up each litte] beauty In his pictures 'until the small- est datall is attractive snd strikes the work is characterised by sameness amd | Logital Suppositien. Little Lioyd ~- Papa, was George Washington married to England? Fa- pa-Of course mot, my son Why do you ask such a silly question? Liftle Licyd-This book says England is our mother country, and as George Wazh ington was the father of his country I supposed they were married.-Chicago News. He Was Incorrigible, Underdone-My husband is complain. ing agnin of your cocking, Mary. Mary mum, I don't take smy potice of him, for 'tis the nature of him to fnd fault Ain't be forever complainiw' of you, mam fits; ois; zembtxumg Eng Giana, Italy,} Bits. R Stain, are not bourgeo many is, Wt Lor empeé Is tot, and so one Good Nature. - ‘ ces yon o yeasts Pongs mg moumege, mow bes mong, more by fien‘sfle ngirm Rrewen - ~ g than honor, to the persons who possess - it,. and certainly to evergbody who:, ie - ‘dwafi‘s «lth them, in so far ss mere} i nappimess is -H. W. Reecher, p tolfecd, tout davilas, Alsmea? Wm Agat-Am84 have you bean all that) lag mew long way alote? Nisce-¥Yes, sontle, } vied thur Aunt-Then how is it you weut out} eye. It is only the mediocrity whose! v i g r. e a t (e showman, - EFA journeyed to the Pacific coast to visit: 'a relative. On his way back east he stopped at Kausas City to ' see the great Barnum & Bailey show. To the editors of . the. local dailies who . called upon bim Mr.. Barnum said; \Gen- tlemen, Mr. Bailey tells me that my presence at the performances of the Barnum & Balley circus is worth $5,000 a day to the show. If this is true it is my name that is so valuable. It is known in every town, city and: bamlet;-it has become a house word throughout the country. nl \Now gentlemen, all of this was done by newspapers, and if advertising can make a name worth $5,000 a day what is it that' advertising can't doy\ You lose much of the value of your \Business reputation If you do not keep your name constantly before the public in our columns. OCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOO «-- mmm ~~ MACBETH. ~~~ A Famous Actor's Views on the Sleep- walking Scene. The first time I read this tragédy I expected to see the sleepwalking scene played by Macbeth instead of his wife. This, scene occurs at the beginning of the fifth act, and not until the gentle woman and the doctor converse togeth- ef are we aware of the change in Lady Macbeth's character and of the illness that has made her weak. A woman so brutal in her conception and so res- olute In her projects-how could she at once lose stondfastness, she who was of siuying: I would, while It was amiling In my face, Have plucked my nipple from his bofnei leas gums -o, And dashed the brains out. Such a woman is capable of commit- ting any crime without losing ber im- passiveness. I shoula bave preferred not to see her, even in sleep, wash her hands of the murder of Duncan. Her wicked personnlity would have appear- ed still greater. I do not belleve that Shakespeare meant the sleepwalking scene for Lady Macbeth. Have you not noticed how precise the famous writer was in draw- ing his characters? He always tried to keep them in the same light from beginning to end. To my mind it seems impossible that Lady Macbeth should collapse like that. Instead It would be more natural in Macbeth. I found this scene so unnatural that I cut it out in my version. The explanation may be something Mke this: In Shakespeare's day there were no women players. Perhaps some of the actors were not satisfied with the length of their respective parts. Shakespeare, to keep the peace, mmaAY have shortened Macbeth's speeches and given them to somebody elise. The tragedy of Macbeth is a sublime display of tragic passion, & pathetic picture of fate and evil conquering good. There is no moral, but without donbtthlsplaymayberegardedu the greatest work of dramatic litera- filer-Tommi” Salvin}! in Putnam's Monthly. > were all down ~ Jew point today,\ remarked the broker. \The idea!\ exclaimed his wife. \It's Inwmdertbeydidn'tadurmttus ' bargain day®-Catholic Standand and Times. eify streets Mr. Benjamin Gastal Pelotas, Brazil, has devised an im: 1 proved wheel adapted to be used or all classes of vehicles, but more espe 'clally on street and ralirond cars; O. course the ordinary expedient of equip -| ping the wheelqa. with pneumatic tires is not wheels which trav el on rails, but Mr. Gastal has invent | | ed a special form of wheel, in which ' the pueumatic cushion is placed be- tween the rim and a flanged tire, so . that without changing the character of the tread surface the wheel is cush- #I 4oned find the usual noise and vibra- i] tion materlally abated. e 1 a central annular flange. R” Idea. I With a ..to: red 'In the accompanying engraving one E| of the figures shows the improved Hi wheel complete, and the other, which 'I 1s a cross section through the rim, ghows the details of construction, The rim (A) of the wheel is provided with In this flange and in the main body of the rim at, either side of the flange an- \W) AMneniaAant CUSHIONED CAR WHEEL. nular grooves are formed, which serve as seats for the pueumatic tubes (B). The rim (C) of the wheel is provided 'with seats, which bear against the tubes (B) at the center and outer side of the wheel. A lee section (D), which is fastened to the tire section (C) and bears against the inner pneumatic tube and the inner side of the central pneumatic tube, serves tq hold the tire section to the wheel prevent it from being movyed late) off toward the outer side. The section D is held in place by a series of countersunk screws (E). The space which separates the rim (A) from the tire section (C) and side section (D) is covered by a pair of annular covering flaps (F). AN ARTIFICIAL FACE. French Surgeon Porforms a Marvel of Mechanical Ingenuity. In consequence of the bursting of a gun while out shooting, a man had his chin, the lower part of his Jaw, a por- tion of his tongue and the whole of his upper jaw ud nose blown away. Dr. Delaire of the French Academy - of Medicine has replaced the missing or gans by artificial parts. ind his work, which is considered a inmrvel of me chanical as woll as surgleal ingenuity. bas been eshibited before the acad: emy. From ten or fifteen feet distance even In a well lighted room, the ime chanical face appears quite natural and the man is able to masticate bis food and speuk with comparative ease Every day be takes off bis artificial face and washes it with soap and wa ter. This face consists of four parts. The first is a silver groove, into which some of the lower teeth are Axed. This is attached to n dental apparatus of tin, Into which are fixed the remaining teeth. The second plece consists of a dental apparatus In vuicanite and gold for the upper row of nine teeth. 'This is fitted to two small protuberances, which fit into the nasal cavities, This also fills up the right sinus, which was smashed in. At the back is a plece of gold mechanism with books, used to fasten on the face plece. The third piece of the mechaolcal face consists of the chin?and lower lip. This is of india rubber, painted to resemble na- ture. Over the chin a false beard is fixed. P At the back are a couple of small bolts, which pass through holes in the teeth and fix the lip to the artificial lower jaw. The fourth and last pleco of the apparatus consists of the upper Hp and nose, also in india rubber, and painted, to which is attached a faise/ mustache. At the back ara two small damtochhtheupperdenwnhco and jaw are fixed. Courage. \Heary is a brave man. The other night his wife thought she beard a burglar.\ \And be went down?\ \No. He had the courage to tell her te was afraid.\-Clircle. oad is swelling: w mg’fifiorfifig \ Li rapier k up. Quiney ffinimenfi is un p Prack. ~ . ‘J is hi ~ iment // . s é ggéqmeifimggedm EC ill the swelling and gives instont relict. <e -£ Aan E .. sthma, Pain in ( b RL1YE ing?\ asked 'the 'eloping bride, re: 'turning to the parental\roof. ''Free- ly,\ replied the old man, \no trouble about the blessing, but boardfZand lodging will bo at regular rates.'' 1 ''I'm not going to that female bar- ber shop again. There's a rude girl there, don't youknow.\ \*Whnas did she say?'' \Why she looked at my mustawsh and awsked mg If \I would have it sponged off orrubbed in.\'-Exohange. ''Now that you've come in for a little money,'' said Zimmerman, (I hope you'll pay me what you owo me.'' © 2. 'Let's _ see,\' _ said Borroughs. \Your name's 'Zimmerman,' isn't it? Sorry, old man, but I'm paying off all my creditors in alphabetical order.''~--Philadelphia Press. A Missouri exobangeo says tbat a Pike county teacher who asked a girl to purchase a grammar received the following note from tho little girl's mother: \\I do not desire that Matty ingage in grammar, and I prefer her to ingage in more useful studies, and can learn her to write and speak pro- por myself. I went through two grammars and can't say as they did me no good. I prefer Matty to in- gago in German and drawing and vokal music on the peano.'' A traveling man was on a business trip in a nearby rural town and found. but one miserable hotel. His room for the night was at the end of a hall, wifi) a sheet hung up to screen him from view. In the middle of the night he woke up with a violent wind blowing the hangipg sheet in all directions. He called to the landlord and a voice somewhere in the darkness asked: *What do youn want?\ iI want a paperiof pine to look, my cor with,\\ was. the, answer. -Ex- change. Wearily a tramp wandered up the garden path on one @ hot summer day, , and took off his hat to one of our lady residents. She eyed him keenly, then said : [\~ Saas § ''Look here! Aren't you the man I gave a big meal to one morning in February, and you promised to shovel the snow out of the back, yard, but sueaked off and didn't do it?' ''I'm the man, mum, an' my con- science smote mo so bard that I've tramped many miles through the blazin' sun to do the job.'\'--Clyde Republican. 8 ''That was a brave aot!'' ejaculated. a stranger as be stood on the bank of the canal the other day and saw a fisherman plunge into the | water and save a small boy who bad fallen in, and as the man climbed back on the land, he continued : ''My friend, I wish to congratu- late you on your bravery in saving looked from the lad to the stranger's face, 'don't you think for a minute that I'm darn fool enough to let that boy go down with every speck of fish: bait I've got in his pooket.'\-Ex- change. The young Duchess of Marlborough, during ber recent visit to the Tombs, said of pride of birth: \The English aristoorat is vor? proud of his lineago, but not nearly so proud as the German. '\'\A German once fell from a Ham- burz-Awerican liner into the seam, and a sailor, seeing bim disappear with a splash, shouted : ** 'Man overboatd.' ''The German, as soon as hae came up, yelled haughtily to the sailor: '' 'What do you mean with your ''Man overboard\? \~ Graf Hermann ron Finkanstain, Duke of Suabia and Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, is overboard.\ **-Scobenectady Gazette. A stout little woman on the East Washington car looked around anz- fously for seats for the childran who were with ber, says the Indianapolis Star. Two of tho older girls had babies in their arms. People on the car did not know whather it was an orphans' home picnic or a Sanday school convention. ''Reg pardon, lady.'' said the con- daetor, ''but sou have given me anly sight tickets.\\ \Dido't know - yoo charged for babios in arms,\ said the little mem- ber of ber party. ''*Bat thero are nine without them,' said the conductor apologetically. ''Stend op, childres.\' commanded the liffle woman. She was impori- ons in ber command and immediately after ber order to stand op, they all arose to their fest. Counting them ome by one she pras- ently came to a little boy of about 3 pears asd, pointing ber foger af his, ske amid: L + you sayed at \Sarmamy I thought se \chilirem. ** Lboces with ths ress A ves iste aval lien waa rathor s ;[ OTe was Hike \| Adams butler. - \ la tiny nature student amongst her that boy's life.\ i «A \th the hero, as he- 7 pointing sunothor afternoon at four 1dge of a certain the fspaeech of\ the. old:} \'When I was a boy in Adams] County, Judge Blank\ was taken very| ill. The dootor called, regularly, but the judge kept getting worse, and and finally the crisis came. \\'The morning after the criais the dootor rang the judge's bell at sun- rise. '* 'I hope your master's tempera- ture is lower than it was last oven- ing? ho said to the butler anxionsly. * 'I'm not so sure mbout that,' the man answered. 'He died, sir, in the night,.\ * L \0s The Rev. William J. Long, the fa- mous nature writer, said one day in Stamford : 'A nohool teacher bere in Stamford was put right the other morning by pupils,. \She lad given out for parsing the sentende 'The birds sing,' and all the children had said thst the word 'birds' in the sentence Was common gender. She had accepted their an- swer as correct. But one little fel- low at the tail of the class said that 'birds' was masculine gender. || © 'Masoulinet - Why masculine? the teacher asked. © 'Because only cock birds sing,' the lad replied. **-BEXCDADG®. A theatrical manager was holding forth on the value of publicity the other day and pointed his moral with this : \When the teacher was absent from the schoolroom, Billy, the mis- chievous boy of the class, wrote on the blackboard : *' 'Billy Jones can hug the girls better than any boy in school.' ''Upon her return the teacher called him up to her desk. * 'William, did you write that? she asked, pointing to the blackboard. * \Yes ma'am,' said Billy. said she, 'as punishment.' \The other pupils waited for Billy to come out, and then they began guying him. \ 'Got a licking, didn't you?' '* 'Nopo,' said Billy. \ 'Got jawed ?' - 60 ‘NOpe.’ =/}. did shefdo? theylasked. i'\ 'Shan't tell,' said Billy, 'but it pays'; to?, advertise.' '*'-Des (Moines Register and Leader. Miss Vesta Viotcria, the English music ball artist whose song of a jilted - bride, ''Waiting at - tne Ohurch,'' is as popular in America as it was in England, said at a dinner in. New York: - '\A clergyman, hearing the song at the Tivoli in London, wrote me n let- tor of congratulation from Stoke Pogis. He said he adored 'Waiting at the Church', and he told me of a jilting that had actually happened in his parisb. ''He said that he bad an appoint- ment to marry a couple at four on & cortain afternoon. He appeared duly, aud the bride appeared, but not the bridegroom. The clergyman and the lady, silent and embarrassed, waited in the qaiet church from four till six. Then}they radly departed. \'A weok later the samo couple wrote to the clergyman again, ap- forjthe ceremony. ''And again the clergyman and the bride wore op hand duly, and again the groom failed to turn up. ''As the two waited, time pmasod slowly in the still empty charct. It grow darker and darker. Five o'clock sounded, then siz. \And then the bride broke the silence with a fierce ejaculation. \ (Dra: him' she cried. ' 'Tain't his trousers this tims, cause I bought him apair.' ''-Schansctady Gazette. To Tuanal Mont Blane. A] The war of tunnels is on in the Alps The completion of the Simplon route, | followed by the tunneling of the Ber nese Oberland, now in progress, bas revived discussion In France and Italy of the project for a great series of taon nels nnder Mont Blane and the Juras The object would be to prevent the di version of traffic toward the valley of the Rhine. Engineors have calculated that a tunnel of about eight miles length woukl suffice to penetrate the giant of the Alps. The cost is placed at $12.000.00(1, thatwof piercing the Ju ras at $23.00.M0. - The cost for ap prosches to the Mon! Blane tunnel if estimate} oa: (fd), The shorten time English Ler not to let college professors tell hot too many sssumed facts about the Ife is that Sbhakpdpeare me a LEAVE BALDWINSVILLE-GOIN [0 '\ so0TE. ~ ** 'Well, you may stay after sohdol.’ | _ Trains Depart-#8:10 sa. m., \8:55 a. m., #12 / Ing eof the t ' cbhasone un } one thers fairy would be} only ent 'n are twa hour=' time on Hm bo hot t'he frends of the projet G 26 che _ twa bears wou 1 ~~~ g_! 6 l the traffic that sus fess sce- Lecth's Compan lon Nothing Lacking. : Ghea Helen Kefler the brillant! ® biizd and deaf gif, met Dr. Furness, t & the Sbhakecpearcan scholar, be warred}@ | M of Shakespeare. All we know, be said,[ St 3‘ it 6 * UPt 7:34 a. m., Oswego: and New Yor Express, daily except . Sunday ching Singhamton 10:50 New York 5:10 p. m. coaches from: Baldwinsvili 4 New York. « n alent te 8:11 a. m. Sundays only. - !!} with milk train legging 8 afs 12.00 for Binghamton. Les 11:34 a. m., Manhatten Flyer, wit through drawing room c@rs,; $ ning cars, daily excepting §u9 ys, arrt gg' at Binghamton'® p. m., New York 7:36 p. m.~' \; 4:40 p. m., daily for Binghamton, mirs, Buffalo and all points' with through and from Binghamton to Ohica express, daily, York 7:50 a. m., Buffalo 7:0 with Pullman sleeping cars ' Baldwinsville to New York and; Binghamton to Chicago without change. j - LEAVE BALDWINSVILL NORTH. le } 7:53 a. m., New York and105wego‘ press, dally, with through stee 1 cars, leaving New York at p. m., Binghamton 5:00 s. m., Syr® cuse 7:30 a, m., Arriving at Oswego 8:35 a. m. Al 11:30 &. m., New York, Buffalo and! Oswego Express- Sundays 1:30 p. m., New York, Buffaly: Oswego Express, daily except H . day, leaving New York, 2: with slesper for.. Binghamton: mira 6:80 &. m., Binghamto® a. m., Syracuse 1:10 p. m,,. rrI¥IOF! in Oswego 2:15 p. m. -| =~ ©.\ ; rawing room and di from New York to Oawego, Binghamton 3:33 p. m., & 5:39 p. m., armving atOsv'¢ pl m: « C 2:26 p. m., daily except Sunday, Rings mton and Oswego Rhyming 6a ing Binghamton 6:00 p.'m., . land 7:39 p. m., Syracuse 9:00 p. Mj arriving ego 10:25 p. m. . K ~ AT SYRACUSE. > BYRACUSE & OSWEGO DIVISION, For Baldwinsville, Fulton and Oswego: , Trains Depart-*7:80 8. my., a. m., $110 p. m., *6:45 p. m., and 9:00 p. m. <n Trains Arrive-$8:00 8, m., 56%. m., t8: &. M., £15.00 9.111. and \8:25leF gm m., 10:8% \ '8., B. & N. Y. R. R. DIVISION. For Cortland. Binghamton, Scranton, News '# York, Philadelpnia, gnd?oint's south; Owego, - © ' Waverly, Elmira, Bath and the West. e noon, {12:05 p. m., *5:07 p. m., and #10:80 p, m. Trains Arrive-*7:20 a. m., ©11;00 a. m., *5:839-p. \ m., *6;20 p. m, and 8:60 p. m. *Indicates trains run daily. {Sundays only, tDaily except Sunday. Lakeshore and - Northern - Liectric Railroad. © Leave Baldwinsville-Ato a. m., 6:4§ . a. m., 7:15 sa. m., 8 a. m., 8:15 a. m., an W every half hour thereafter until 10:45}; p. m.; m. and 18:45 a. m,. :, Baggage and Express car--7;15 a. #i 9:45 a, m. and 5:45 p. m. Leave Syracuse-Start at 6 a. m. Aff every half hour until 10 p. m.; 11:15 and 12 p. m. Ragga? and press car-8:15 a, m. and 4:4 pm? THE NEW YORK WORL a THRICE-A-WEEK EDiTion '*, Syracuse, Ie. Read Wherever the English Langua Is Spoken | The Thrico-a-Week World expects to be'm batter paper in 1908 than:@¥ér beforo. In the course of the year' campaign will be forseahadew everybody will wish to keap frif The Thrics-a- Week World, com you every other day, serves purposes of a daily, and is far changer, The news service of this. paper' ii constantly being increased, and iK ¥4 ports fully, accurately and promip every event of importance any in the world. Moreover, its p news is impartial, giving you | pot opinions and wishes. It las markets, splendid cmrtoons and i esting fiction by standard author. ~THE THRICE-A- WEEK WwORLD' regular subscription price is only $1.00 per year, and this pays for 356: papers. We offer this unequalied \ newspaper snd .The Gazette toggithet ,. for one year st $1.65. sod The regular subscription price of - the two papers is $2.00. - E ONE OF THE BEST If you want to keep in touch with . the doings of the world, subscribe for The Albany Evening Journal It is one of the best newspapers published and coots but $3 a year, Address The- Journal Company. Albany. N. Y. 198° . © \L_ Ll cle - KicL=: couch | | «o CURE thc Luncst MummmmfiuBW’“ \Tel.\ ske repSed, \he sweesas tt nomenon commies