{ title: 'The Suffolk County news. (Sayville, N.Y.) 1888-current, May 03, 1890, 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/sn84031477/1890-05-03/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031477/1890-05-03/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031477/1890-05-03/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031477/1890-05-03/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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SAYVILLE ! Drug S tore, : • - 'g. j, klaassem , l} m;x g i=i and C h emist . Prescrip t ion carefully compounded. I vews Dealer , Books. Stationery, and all kinds of Var- ie t ies , ic. Before r>u reLasin ^ else w here , call anil ins pect our Goods . MAIS\ STREET , S ^ - i: V 1L L 2 . u . I. ii tw &ili Sfi ffi Insurance Agent S A T YILLE , \ L. I. STOVES, BANGES HEATERS. Tin - Ware of All Kinds . PRACTI CAL PLUMBERS. J o sepn J e cUicka & Son Jedlieka ' s Block , 5AYYILLE. We have oa h a a d a lar j e stock «a d food ts orfe s sx i of ranges , beaters , stores , a lio mem and improved oil-stores. Tinware of rrery description kept la stock and aide t« ir dsr. Give n s a call—we ess f sit job- FOSTER HOUSE , Mass Strict , SATVILLI , L. I . if AS. F- KOKKB- .-Lessee. Fine line of choice Wines , Liqu ors and Ci g ars. Every Accommoda tion Given , and Sp ecial Attention Paid to Com- m ercial Travelers , Fishing Parties , and Transient Visitors. ^^ Here It Is! trial to learn an ibont a J4 j r ^ - - - - - Ea rser Eewto K cfc Osta Ai ^ ^ \ ' tl oat s s d s o Gcsrd s sx lsst \ - * \!s Fraud? DetectBi s easeaaa / V ' '/A c ZSs ecmCcra wii s a ss s iei s ^ r \ ^ \ I \ passa g e? Ten the see feT •» t * * I» ToeS»? ¦Wbat to eaH3Jie l>iJr«reijt P a rU _ oI U w As S aall HowtoS a oe a Hor so Property i \infills aag a erV a h isb is Ia Z annsUaa caa b» obtained b* na O -s ocr 1 6 0-PA . GE H.T.CSTKATED HOESE 5 00S. wfcl cb wo wai forward. \ mA - j a tf^ oarecelpteroE l ySS cm> m In nun- BOOS PUB. HOUSE. t x« Leonard St., Mew York Clt a r SLEEP While children sleep They fcnow not th at their father toils; They know not that their mother prays Bending in blessin g o ' er their tads , Imp loring graca for after days. While children sleep They never dream that others work That they may have their da il y bread; When mornin g comes they rise and eat , And uever ask ho w they are fed. IT hiJo children sleep They do not see the shining sun— Th s y do not see tho gracious dew . In daily miracle of love Is ever making all things new . Do we not sieap? And know not that our Father works — -With -xatehftil cure abontdu j r •way f-S \ *** ' He bends in blessings from above— His love broods o ' er us day b y day. Bo we not sleep ? And never dream that others work , Rea p ing the sheaves that mi ght ua ours; We see not how the shadows fall , \Which mark the swift departing hours. Ah , still we sleep . ' Our drowsy eyes see not the li ght , See not the hands stretched out to bless . See not that waiting for us stands God' s king dom and His ri g hteousness. —Good Worth. THE PIRATES OF SARK, Br S. G. W . BENJAMIN. When I was in the Ch annel Islands ] heard the following story about the p i- rates of Sa rk , which is one of the most curious islands in the Atlantic Ocean . The wa ves that beat against its richiv colored o ut inhos p it able cliffs , and roar forever in its inaccessible caves , bristle with rocks and reefs of m a nv a g rotesque shape , which make the approach to the is lan d exceedingly dangerous . The peril is greatl y increased by \ the hi gh tid es and furious currents that rush p ast the Chan- nel Islands , of whicli Sark is the most re- markab le. The shores of the little island are lofty cliffs , steep as walls. There is onl y one possible landing- p lace ; this is a shelving beach in a wee bit of a cove , and the summit of the island , where the peo- p le live, caa onl y be reached hv steps cut in the face of the cliff , admit ting onlv one person to pass at » time. The dwellers on Sark arc now r p e ace- able folk , who raise a few cattle and veg- e tables , which they carry over to the Is T e of Guernsey when the weather is clear and the sea not too roug h. But at one time Sark was held b y a band of despemtc pirates , who lured ships on the rocks \> y putting up false li g hts and beacons; or they att acked them in boats when be- calmed in those uncanny waters , mur- dered the crews and smugg led the car g oes into the po rts o[ France! * >. - ,. — r r — r —\ & \ > finally became as pestilent a s a swarm i.I ..a= r y ....so, flis- turbiag the guests at a sumptuous dinner. It threatened to ruin the commerce of rhat re g ion. And yet it wa s almost im- possible to reach the freel>ootcr5 , for tliev had an a bundance of everything on the island ; aud they could prevent any one from landing with the greatest case. In those days also , cannon did not carry far enoug h to make it p o ssible for a fleet to bombard them from the distance at which it would be safe for a ship to ap- p roach the terrible cliffs. And yet some thing must be done to root out this pest of the seas and make thos e waters safe for merchant shi ps. The matter was all the more ticklish be- cause the p irates of Sark . were perfectl y well aware that they could only be van- quished b y s tratagem , and , the refore , would keep their weather eye open for any attem pts to subdue them by treach- ery or cra ' .t. Those who sho uld venture on any such attempt knew well , there- fore, that, they exposed themselves to the greates t peril in any undertaking against the desperate sea banditti of Sark. And yet such men were found , men who for the commo n good were willing to risk their lives. And this is the way they went to work to circumvent the p irates of Sark . They fitted out a mer- chant shi p wi th a full supp l y of arms ; they also took a large , l ong-boat for l a nding in the surf; and a company of bra ve and trusty adventurers; prepared with the ¦utmost coolness to execute one of the mos t hazardous enterprises ever unde rtaken. One ca lm plea sant morning the look- ou t at Sark discovered a shi p heading for the island , as if with the intention of ma k ing « landing. The tidings flew at once from one end of the island to the other , and p roduced intense excitement . The surprise increased when it became clear that the strange shi p was not a man- of-war , but a simp le merchant shi p . which one mi g ht suppose would steer as far as pos sible from the island. She dropped anchor less than a mile out , a still more surprising circumstance. But when a boat was lowered and was seen rowing towa rd the landing p lace , every member of the p irate, band was Slled with, sus- p icion , althoug h a white flag flew at the masthead of the shi p and another waved at the bow of the approaching boat. The men in the boat were also entirely unarmed , as became evident when they drew near the sho re. In sp ite of all these si gns—that what- eve r the errand of the strange shi p, it was peaceful—the bold pirates of Sark crowded down to the landing p lace brist- lin g with arms , and ordered the boat to keep at a safe distance from the beach. \What do you want at Sark ? Clear out from here : we allow no o ne to land , \ cried the p irate chieftain, a tall, hand- some Breton from Ma r laix , dressed in bri g ht colored , p icturesque garb. The mate of the strange shi p rep lied; ' •Wc are bound southwest , laden with go ods from Flanders. One of our crew died this morning; be was a good Catho- lic ; we wish to bury him in consecrated ground ; unless we go far - out of our course there is no such spot nearer than your hol y chapel built by the p ious Bishop of Dol- All we ask is permission to land the coffin containing our poor comrade and inter it in the chapel. ' We wil l come exactl y as you see us , without arms of any sort whatever. If you grant us this simp le request , which as good Christians you can h ardly deny, we promise to make you a suitable present of some of the goods we have on board our shi p. \ After some deliberation , the pirates were so impressed by the earnest , confid- ing manner and strai g htforward honesty of these good sea-folk , who were so will- ing to p lace thems elves unarmed in their power , that they gave the desired pe r- mission , the stran g ers solemnl y promising I that they would al low themselves to be I searched o n landimr. i _ The bo at' s crew returned to the shi p in hi g h g lee; they hardl y hoped for such success. In antici pation of the plot they had planned the shi p ' s crew had broug ht with them a stout coffin of sufficient size to hold a large man. A fter dark the coffin was broug ht on deck. The lid was firml y fixed in its place , and yet so contrived that it could be quickl y de- tached. The ne xt morning , the weather still I continuing fine , the coffin was carefull y lowered into the boat and a flag was rev- erently thro wn over it. The p i r ates were all at the laudin g to await, the arrival of this uni que funeral procession. Each sailor , us he stepped on shore , w as care- <full y- . searched.,™ Relieved. to<-£od- every- man of the landing party totall y unarmed the canny islanders laid aside all s us- p icion and devoutly assisted to lift the heavy coffin out of the boat. The coffin was large and heavy ; evidentl y the dead man must have been of portl y propor- tions. The seame n seemed tenderl y at- t ached to their dead coi a rade. They in- sisted on li fting the coffin themselves. It was a most anxious moment for all con- cern ed . But the invaders still had a far more laborious and dangerous task before them . The summit ot the island where the peo- ple lived , and where the church stood , wag over one hundred feet above the landing and could b e reached onl y b y narrow , s teep steps cut in the rock , up which it was simp l y impossible to carry the coffin. There was onl y one way of getting it to the top ; this was to hoist it with stout ropes by main force. Surel y never was a dead sailoi buried under greater difficulties? Not onl y did thesail- ; ors have to do this very hard , severe duty, i harder far than hoisting » wet topsail , but it was also necessary that not one of j ths pirates should loud a hand in haul- ing up the coffin; at the same time the I tas k had to be done without arousing j their suspicions. Death was in the air; j blood roust flow before the day would ! close. i I T he pirates were not men to show | mercy, and the least susp icion on their part meant the massacre of every one of the invaders if attacked before they were rea d y. The landin g part y contrived to Start up the cliff ste ps first , and white some , nimble as cuts , ski pped up quickl y and proceeded to hoist the coffin , the others lingered along the steps keep- ing the impatient , but yet unsuspicious p irates in the rear. While the above incidents were occur- ring several of tiie p irates , move d by their covetous and treacherous natures , thoug h t it would be a good idea to take the shi p ' s boat and steal on board the * b i p, wh ose creiv they supposed to be all on short: engaged in the funeral cere- t L MOnU\ '* TJwit- l . . - . .—,, ^ *- 1-- -l-i. • _ £.. « „ , .„• .« uie reft ' afa ~ promis \ eu ' ~ tKcm bv sprang ou deck they were fearfully taken aback to sec a number of lusty fellows sorin g up armed from behind the bulwarks , who ilew at them with great fu ry, o verpowered them , and gagged and chained them to ring bolts in the deck. This done , the sailors sprang into the bo at and rowed to the aid of thei r com- p anions on shore . As we shall see , they rea ched there none too soon. Immedi- at ely cm getting the coffin to the top ol the cliif the invaders gathered around it, a nd hurried with it to the chapel . The p irates also hastened to arrive their first; it was nip and tuck which party should first enter the chapel. But the coffin W e avers , knowing well the chances at stake , put forth herculean exertions; keeping together in a close group the sailors cro wded into the chapel with a haste most unseemly for a funeral , and closed and fastened the door. As soon as thi s was done they opened the mysterious coffi n in a twinkling. Instead of a corpse it proved to be packed wi th daggers , cleavers , halberds , swords and a blu nder- buss or two , with which the sailors hur- riedly armed themselves and were soon ready for the deadl y affray. The p irates were now furiously knock- ing for admittance. If not exactl y sure o f the purpose of the invaders , they were b y this time exceedingly susp icious that such singular proceedings at a funeral boded bo good. There was mischief b rewing, and it behooved them to find o ut what all this meant without a mo- ment ' s delay. They f ound out sooner than they ex- pected , and in a very unp leasant way, when tiie Captain or , the ship in a tone of thunder cried : \Open the door! And now , my brave men , do your best! Cut and slay ! Give no quarter! Strike home !\ The doo r flew open and forth rushed a troop of armed men falling into tho midst of the band of p i rates. Taken al- together unawares , the latter , althoug h the most numerous , fled in every dir ec- tion pursued b y the shi p ' s c rew. Some were cut d own on the spot; others leaped panic-struck over the ed ge of the cliffs and were d ashed to p ieces on the rocks below. Others threw themselves into the sea and were drowned. But a good number gathered in a rocky ang le , and being armed p repared to make a desper- ate resistance which mi g ht have been successful , as they , still nearly equaled the invaders in number. But at that critical moment the other men from the shi p arrived ; after a short and desperate fig ht the pirates were overcome. Those who were taken alive were thrown from the cliffs , not one being left on the island. At sunset the other p irates who had been seized on the shi p were also hanged at the yardarm. Not one es- caped. The vengeance was bloody in- deed ; but then it should be remembered that many a help less crew had been sent to the bottom of the sea by these same cruel and treacherous ruffians who for so lo n <» a time had made tho island of Sark a tenor to the mariners of all nations. Since that bloody tragedy the island has been the abode of peace. — The Indepen dent. Raisins Kangaroos in England. Attempts recently made to acclimatize kangaroos in Eng land appear to have been remarkably successful. Instea d of , keepin\ them confined in small enclosure ^ and c a refully tended , they have been turned loose in park and woods , and have been found to thrive and breed freely. T here are now in Tring Par k twenty oj thirty kangaroos of different species , and the curious creature seems destined to rank amo ng fami liar domestioanimals. —• Hew York Telegram. j msmm e i riot An Exciting S cene on the Streets of Chicago. Police Sergeant Beaten by tho Striken— Fifty . .of the Rioters Under Arre a t , K on-iinlon Men Aa n ullnl . A bod y of Chicago ' s striking carpenters caused ariotin the southwestern part of that city, and , (is a result , about fif ty of them arc l ocked up and a sergeant of p olice is under n physician ' s care , seriousl y hurt. Some non-union carpen- t e rs tt ' ere put to work on Wallace street , near J ' ifty-tUird. The strikers ' pickets reported the fact , and a committee of union men was sent Jo persuade them to quit work. Idle carpen- ters tothe a umbcr of about one hundred joined -i Ms smmitiee , iwd ^ w ^ ej i argu m eatsJuiJe tU io. induce the non-uuioiiis ts to quit , the crowd began je eri ngthem , and a riot/ollo n- cd. Police S ergeant Bcgicy intcrferred , when he was set u pon and beaten by the strikers. The alarm was sent to the nearest station , and a-detachment of p olice was sent out , and Mi ereeiled in n nvsrin sr iihuiit fi flyofthe rioters. The re st escaped . .hut the police arc hunting for th em. Ser v ant Bcgley was taken to his home , and in c i li. al assistance siiininoi i ed. The nn i i-iiiiiiiii jn eii , in the mea n time , dropped their to ols and fled. f uses of intim idation and violence hv the st riking e a rpeiit ' Ts a re h« . < . '<inihi g more mimcr- \iis. I' atrn l wn g i i n o are kept busy in several sections answering calls. ( . Inly \ two serious ro ws occurred , ho wever , anil lew arrests were made. At the B r o ther -limu f' s Imsc liuil - rrewmis .iIk . iii .v«i stri kers assemliled and attempted to intimidate the workm an. An alarm was turned in , ami a p l afnnn of police eamc to the scene , when the strikers withdrew. At one or two others places non-union men at work were st oned. At a huildi i u; in the n orthwest seclioi t of tlie city a delegation ol striker s ordered sev e ral non-union carpenters to quit work , bin were met with a refusal. The strikers armed themselves with sticks and hrick-hats and attacked the men. The owner of the hni l dinu 'called i he patrol wagon , hut be- f ore it arrived the strikers had knocked fore- man [fait son down and scverelv injured him with a scantlin g. The strikers were placed u nder arrest. A erowil of , -fri krrs attacked t' . eor e e and 'William . lolinson , who were nl work on a new Ivinlt l tit ^ on Armita ^ e avenue. Th e North Avenue Patrol was called , but the strikers had li ed. MIL AND WIND STORMS. • \ rent Damage none nt Ilnltlmnrc by nn A pril IIn( l-S(orm. Baltimore was vi sited between 3.40 and 4 i ' cl ock in the afternoon , by hail of the size ml destructive power never before seen there. ! \ lie hail was tint like the usual snow - eonted ki nd , hut was plain , hard ice , frozen through a nd through , and solid n.s a roek. It went through thick panes of class as if they wore tiss ue pa per, and the amount of damage done can only be lignred when all the broken panes ar c counted. The loss will run into the tlinu- s av.ds. The stones were like rocks , some rag- ^¦ d ami some sharp on the eilges i .Many of the m w< - re as largo as a man ' s fist , a nd weighed i' \i;r ounces , and as they eamc down they . - ¦ otiude d like sii many cannon halls falling. Th e storm came from the West, was local in its character and swept t. > the K:i. -t with a rattl e . lik e heavy musketry, fri ghtening peo- ple oh tof t heir wits , niakii!\ some of the .A . f v, . ^ ¦ ^^^^ a ^^a^a gj | a« ^M | ' ^ ' ' ^ A' - . ^^^^^^ H a^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ Br te ^^^^^^ l ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Hf * All \ ^^^ H ^^^^^^^^^^^ L was stro t i!; en t u l tl ^^^ HP ^^ Hmnes Street windows looked ils ^ a WT ey had been on the field of battle and in (he houses nn Ml. Ver- non p lace the damage was considerable. The hea vy rain covered the car tracks in places with manv inches of mud. In the annex , th e rain wind and hail did even more severe damage than in the city. Walls were swept down , houses unroofed and th e amount of glass smashed and other dam- age done was almost incalculable. The wind during the gale reached a velocity of thirty mil es tin hour. WcsT Mki.vim.k , I' - . ' i. —Everythin g , looks gloomy. There is now one to. six f eet of water in th e \ town limits , anil not a si gn of land An ywhere except a small strip of levee onthe front. The water is now within two inches of th e top of the levee , and no more material ob tainable , theearth hereabouts being covered wi th water. Mr.MPH IS , Tenn. —A evclone . aecompan t ed liv a heavv fall of hail , \ passed from So o th- wY st to X ortheiiM iibmil live miles Southeast of here. Keports coming in show that eon- -idera lde dama g e lias heeii done. Severa l hou ses have been blown down , but mi los s of lif e lias bee n reported . A dispa tch from Louisville , I vy. , says: A cloud burst struck English , Ind., at one o ' clock in the morning. The water rose rapidly and Ho oded the streets and many of the houses to ade pth of four feet. Within fifteen minutes the water bega n to recede. Much dama ge was done. THREE MEN KILLED A Boiler Kn « l <' olln. pHCi> and rlie A \ ork- men are Thrown Pell Mcll. All exp losion occurred at the Etna Mills, New Castle , Pa. , at 6.30 A. SI., three men be- ing killed and six badly injured , two of whom will probably die. A t that hour while nil of the men were workin\ the flue end of the big boiler col- lapsed with a deafening roar , andiu a. moment the place w as drenched with scorching steam. A full half hour was lost before the . injured men could be rescued and the last dead body recovered. Those instantlv killed were George Kinge.n- smith and John W elsh. Johnny Slurphy could not he found for some time. His body was finall y discovered in the fl y wheel pit , where it had . b een hurl ed and ground to a The injured are: Barney Regan , horribly scalded ; 1. Shif nocker , badly hu rt by flying debris and scalded; Law rence Flynn . sculded; Andv J lyers , scalded; Joe Round s , arm broken and \ bruised; Johnny Slycr u , burned. 3 So cause can yet bo g iven for the breakage of ttt « bo iler. LIQUOR CAUSES CRIME A Drunken Husband Attempts to Kill Ili a Wife and Shoots Himself. Dnniel Reittmnn , nged !5 I , formerly ol Cleveland , Ohio , while very imich under the influence ofliquor , entered the sleeping apart- ment of his residence on Second avenue , in Altoona , Pa., and called to his wife: \You hav e only half an hour to live. \ As Sirs. Keittniiin sprang froiu her bed the drunken man pulled his revolver and fired severa l shots at her as (he rail from the room. One bullet shattered the bone in his left arm at the shoulder and a second bullet entered at her back , passing almost through her body. Reittman then fired a bullet into his head and fell dead. Mrs Reittman will probably recover. The couple had been married about a year. MURDERED HIS FATHER The Co nfession of n Boy Fourteen Years of Ag*. Edwa rd N. Butler , a prominent citizen of Clinton , N. C , was fired upon while walking on a street in the suburbs of Italeig h. Before dy ing he made; a statement that John Sim- mons was the assassin. Simmons is a deserter from the regular army and 1ms a. bad charac- ter. Gov. Fowle offered a large reward for him. Avery Butler , a son of the murdered man , aged fourteen , confessed that he is the as- sassin and that he fired a steel slug at his father. He said that he was cruelly beaten by h is father and this provoked him to kill him. The boy fled as soon as he had made this awful revelation and a large party is now pur- suing him. Publishers of cheap novels have formed a trust and advanced the price of paper- backed books of light reading thirty-three oereent. - THE NEWS a inrg e sine mm in tnc J . enigti vnll e y, l ' n. , operated by a New York firm , was ileslr ' oyed b y fire and four persons killed and twelve in- jured. A farmer named Morrison , of .Shel- bumc , Out., drowned his three children in a barrel of rnin water , and then attempted to drown himself in a creek. During a tire in Perry & Green ' s picture factory, Chicago , a crowded sidewalk gave way, and several boys were hurt. For three days continuous rains have fallen nil over Texas , bridges have been swept away and the low lands H ooded. The Whiskey Trust lias finally sec u red posse ssion of the St. Paul distillery. David Sullivan , Of Dayton , Wis. , aged seventy-six years , was burned to death while engaged in burning .* MW anjJ. brju»I v ;Q < F i *^ — m ; F. Churchill , manag ing partner of the firm of Gifford & Churchill , dealers in art works , Chi- cago , has been missing for some time , and is believe to be in Canada. Gifford say s he is out about * S.000. Fire in the office of Dr. Kean , under Rutin ' s Hotel , Chica go , caused a panic among tho q uests. Cook U ros. ' lar ge boiler at Flint , Mich. , exploded , scalding Fr ed Cook- to d eath and seriously injuring several others. B y the burning of their home at I . ellcville Out., Jane Arthur s was burned to death , and her husband seriously burned about the ' head and arms. Fi re in the Sliclton Comb Com- p a n y V Works at S - ' li e lton , Ct. , did $S i , i iOo iblm- nj, ' C . Fire hundred men in the employ of the Southwes t Virginia Im provement com- pany, at Pocahonta s , have struck against a re- duction in wages , and the mines have b een shut down. The cedar w orks at Elizabeth , City, N. C - , were burned. L oss . <1 / ; , Oiii i . Tramps bent a farmer of Franklin county. Pa., be cause his wife refused to cook a meal for them. Thos. Bishop, aged seventy years of Petersbu rg, Va., was convicted of murder in the second de gree for beating his wife todeatli , and was sentenced to six years in prison. The Slississippi overflow is very disastrous i n t hc Fointe Coupee parish , hundreds of fanii- lies being homeless. Ki g ht hundred miners went o u slrikeat Sco f tdale , Pa. , and nearl y one thoustind coke ovens are closed. The Roc hester Wheel Works , at Rochester N. V., were damaged S i ^ . OOO b y fire , and three fireman were injured b y falling from a ladder. Several horse thieves- were whi pped and a illoricd at Georgetown , pel . M ad dogs i inve Im - cm In ning cattle and causing g i vnt ex- . 'ilenient in the neighborhood of l.cwistou . III. The Miss es Minnie and Gertie I ' iereewere killed a! Lima . Ohio , b y bein g thrown out of i 1 carriage against a stone wall. An insane i vnuniii in PubiH|ite , la. , attempted to burn Iter iiouie :i!nl murdered her children. A canoe . - omai t iing twelve lumbermen , while cro- siog llie rap i ds on the 0' .:cr ri ver , ne ar ( \ abuiu¦ ' .. .U ieh. , was capsized and two of tii. . m en .Irown ed. Edward G ree t iwald , a Southern lliearieal manager , committ ed suicide in New- York. Grass and forest tires in .Ww llaniji d t ire did consid erable damaged. Herman ' ii yi ' il'ieVlTif lieiifl ibs - iase while p ' a . vinga game if cards. M ra Mary Crim l j ok- T iif r.os i mi. b : niracy to iim/der lu:r ' husband. The An- ; lo-Ai ucric a , n , vh l s 'Li o h l mg ComiM i iy h as been TT ga t fizoil wiili a capi l al of over f YV WO O i H . mil is the bi g gest thing in the syndicate line yet attempted. A capiml i if . •? * > , 'mo . O. H will i jc provided for the constructi . io of lUe Sm . ii li P ennsylvania Railroad ,under the ronrg. i- ii/a- ' .ion pian. ——-No n-union c.v. ' i KM ' .ters io rid 'ago . who are n ot residents of Illinois , coming ' rem other states , havea ppealeil to the I ' nite - .i sta tes authorities for protection. Itichai' J L ' roU er , th e Tammany liwlc t ytinl MayorGran! , if New Yo rk , wer e shown up in a bad li g ht n ' .ii c testimony of the former ' s bro t h cr - in-ia u •\for e tin- Senate Investigating <' ommi Kee. l.eaiulor U ntcs , n young man of Greenw oo d , Del. , wa s killed in New Mexico several days a go. Merrick , Price & Co., proprietors of a bucket sho p in Philadelp hia , su spended. J. W. Carr oll' s tobacco fact ory at Lynchburg, Va., was burned . Loss .? 4 0 , 00O . The Haiti- more an d Ohio Railroad Company grameillhe dem and of their emp loyes at Pittsburg for an advance in wages. Farmers on the Dela- ware penin sula are annoyed by the appear- ance of a new and destructive insect in the wh eat fields. The vestibule train from Cin- cinnati on the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad was wrecked at Staunton , Va. , and SlissSIyrtlc Knox , of the Pearl of Pekin Opera Company, en r oute for Baltimore , was killed , and severa l o ther members of the company were injured. In n tenement house lire in Slilwaukce one child was burned to death , throe others fa- tally burned , and a woman fatally hurt by jumpin g. —After Slay 1 the sale of li quors ov er bars in Boston is prohibited. Thomas Morri son , of Shelburne , Ont., killed his three children and then poisoned himself , The pastor of St. Paul' s Lutheran Church at Mas- m illion , O hio , has forbidden members to j oin secret socie ties. It is reported that the vet- erans in the Soldiers ' Home at Leavenworth , Kansas , are badly t reated , being compelled to work in a brick yard . The Grand Army will investigate. The trial of Sirs. Carrie E. Vandergrift on the charge of attempting the life of her son , to obtain the insurance upon his life , begun atSIoiint Holly, N. J. Three slig ht shocks of earthquak e were felt at Sara- toga , N. Y. The Federation of-Labor has issued a manifesto to workingmen to enforce the ei - dit-hour work day peaceably and quietly. - Samuel All en , of Neilsvi l le, \W is., who be- came enamored of the wife of a nei g hboring farmer , poisoned lvim . tried to kill bis own wife , was arrested , and escaped from jail by the aid of bis mistress , has been finally captured in \Washington. Frederick Kimball , teller of the People ' s Savings Bank , \ Worcester , Slass., robbed theconcern of $53 , 000 , and $3, 000 reward is offered for his capture. Liraie Meyers , of Boston , was found dead from an overdose of arsenic in a Tro y hotel. Sloses Hnrtz ' sbnrn , near Lancaster , Pa., was burned , and thirteen cowspcrished. —Daniel Reittman . agcd thirty- five years , while drunk , attempted to murder the wife to whom he had been married but a year , at their home in Altoona , Pa., and the n committed suicide.: During . .the past week there were 170 business failures in the United States and 39 in Canada. Thc publicschool at Hnrtby, Del ., closed , owing to nn epidemic of scarlet fever. James Fallon , a p ugilist , received a blow -on the si de of the head in a set-to with John Murray, in B oston , which caused fatal paralysis. The Circuit Court of Roanoke , Va. , has ordered the sale \ of the Shenandoa h Valley Railroad to satisfy claims against the company. Harrison \Wagner , nged eig hty-nine years , started from SfcCon- nellsville , Ohio , to wheel a wheelbarrow to Baltimore and return , proposing to make the tri p in twenty days. While F. F. Fisher , of Mobile county, Ala., was driving along a road a n egro jumpeu \ into the rear of the wagon and slashed Fisher ' s throat with n razor. Depu- ty Sheriff Davis , of Newark , New Jersey, ia missing, and reported to be an embezzler. ¦ John C. Graham , twenty-five years old , a clerk of the Pennsylvania Company for insurance on lives and granting annuities , has been ar- rested in Philad i d phia charged with o mbez- i zlemeut. - -¦ • * - - ' ¦ :¦ \ ' . ' ¦ '' The town ol'iC yie , Tex, - .? , wag visited by a ! cycl one. Much damage was done. Thomas Xorris was killed at the Delta slate quarries in York , Pa. , by the f alling of a hoisting inn. chine Th omas Trowbrid ge , of Rome , N. J - , was arrested for ra ping his thirteen-year- old daughter. —Thieves robbed Hugh Carey ' s tail or-shop, in Boston , of three thousand dol- lars ' worth of goods. TheChicago policeare enf orcing thenrderto stopthesale of ci garettes to boys. New York bricklayersdemandthe same pay for the men employed b y the city as is received b y outside men. The coke work- ers in Pi ftshurgtlireate n io rt rike . , T. ? ,Icr> . Cromnr , the ag ent of the Peop le ' s Ban k , at Halifax , who ab sconded , has been captured. Rev. \IV. A. Har rison , pastor of the Third Presb yterian Church , in Knoxville , Tenn., has A ^ ?a»pepded«—An effort is being made by •a British syndicate to purchr - e the flint g lass industries in this country. Three m en were killed and six badl y injured by an explosion at the Ki n n Mills ,. ; M \ ew Castle , ' Pa. Samuel V. Pier son , prcsid & r c .f the Lehigh and We stern Railroad , di ed i:i Philadel phia. Wilk es Smith , of Parkc rsbt t rg, Jo wa , wa s ar- rested , char ged with forgery. T)r. Hagen- do rnand his companions , I l a gemau and luiuss . have been convicted of stealing chickens in Racine , Wi s., and sent up for two year* . H olzhay . the lone hi ghwayman . impri soned in -Mar quette , S l ieh. , i s trying to starve, himself. Ks ' iert Williamson , n . coachman .. 'in d three hors es were burned to death in Ithaca , X. Y. John G. Wagner ' s f ive-story block , on S outh St. Paul street , Roche ster , N. Y. , was de stroyed b y fire. Three Chinamen were ar rested in Bufi iilo , N. Y. , forsmti ggliugopitim. f> f!:eor Peterson , . d' St. Paul , Minn. , was t erribl y beaten by a g ang of tramp* . He shot Neil Cusli t iutii , one of his as sailants. William J. Lo rd , bookkeeper for Fresh it Slook , painters of St. L ouis , sy sfematica 'ly rubbed the firm since ISS. '( and then tin ned a book-maker for the races. He was arrested and attributed his downfall to horsp - r aciilg. Tw o men were killed and five injured b y (li e falling of a roek in a shaft of the Great Eastern mine near Nor way, Mich. M alig- nan t diphtheri a is epidemic among the Scan- dinavians in the village of Vining . Minn. The King and Hamilton Implement \Work s at Ottawa , 111. , w ere burned, boss .friV ' \ ' ' . The city treasurers of Chicago for years past have been pocket ins (lie interest nn er 'ty fuiids as i i persona ] cmolumenl , anil th ey are no w called upon In refund. ——A n iron fence i s to be put around tlu ^ Unc o . ' n mount it at S pringfield , 111. , to kee p o l i' tiie rclie.hunters . The dead bod y of Frank R. Harbison was f ound on a farm near Cockford . III. , with a revolver , raz o r , and a . Initio of laudanum be. side it. The court martial of Commander Bowman II. Sl eCal l n , of the En/crprise , V. S. N. , bega n at the Brookl yn Navy Yard. 1 . W. Cradd oi 'k wits committed to jail in Henrico coi.nty, V a.. fo r attempting to wreck a train ori th. C i , ~ .ipeake and ( i|iio R ailroad. 1} % ' \ ' ' VI . I,, (lie - ¦ \ ' \\'•'• ¦ s e vere ly burned , and P lt' ..: ^ lll- ! 11 .J tB B SB ^ BV ^ BBV. lbr..r n ef »f ...ihe... v ;!o-V. s H l v - . i ^J^Ws^ P B H Dear , at Sy racuse , N. Y. T nsc ph C. Hi t ch- lier ' s cracker bakery and warehouse at W est Pittston , Pa., were burned. Loss . *s , 000. Rabbi Colin , of Mount Carmel , Pa. , was brit- tallv assaulted bv two thieves. Nicholas C. Stiller , of Philadel p hia , who sold the La ke Gas Com pany to the Jhicago Gas Trust , is now suin g the latter for die cash value of $213 , 000 trust certificates of stock , charging false represen tation. Chicago carpenters resorted to ri oting and assaulting non-union men. A f oreman and a police sergeant wen injured , and fifty ri oters were arrested. The Indiana polis carpenters have been granted the ei g h t-hour day. .Mayor Cregicr ordered nil the pool-rooms in Chicago closed. Ileavj rains a nd high tides have increased the Mis- si ssippi river ' s overflow in Loui e iana , and ti n creva sses are widening and inundating towns and large sections ot ' country. WORK AND WORKERS Tlt E carpenters ' strike tu Chicago i s still unseflled. Til F. ( brieklayorsand plas terers in Portlan d , Ore gon , have joined the striking carpenters. TUK bouse ami shi p huildiiu: trade s in Sj. Joint , New Brunswick , have secured the adop- ti on of the nine-hour day. A Pl.ASTF.nKJ' .s. ' union has been formed in Balti more. They will unite with the Federa- ti on of Labor and the American Federation of Trad es. T HE miners employed at the Penwcll Com- pany ' s mine in Pana . Illinoi s , hav e decided to strike. The company refused to reinstate -10 u nion men discharged last week. TllK Para Ru bber Shoe Company in S outh Frumi nghani , Massachusetts , ha s valnnmri l y increased the wages of its emp lo yees , th e aver- age b eing about 12 per cent, in the ditl ' ercntde- partments. TllK eig ht-hour movement in C hicago is u preattiii! ! to lliewomen workers. The makers of coats and vests are preparing to strike in ease they are not granted a reduction in the hours of la bor. Til K eond uetors a ml engineers of the e leetrie street railway in Ottuimvn . Iowa , wen t on strike for shor ter hours and the privilege of smoking while on duty. Their places wera filled after a short delay. TllK strikeof theseven hundred cement and asp halt layers , cement masons , artificial stone masons and cement laborers in New York city and Brooklyn , which was begun two weeks ag o for the S-liour day, has resulted in it vic- fo rv for the men. I T t i s statc t T n Chica go that the United States Express Cor v ' .iuy will not re cede from its position on the cutting down of salaries , and that a strike tha t will extend throughout the entire express system in all the cities of the Uni ted States will therefore probabl y be the resul t. Tb E railroadtrouble in Pittsburg isstill un- settled. The railroads have conceded all but five of the 1(> points presented by tho men in tlieii ' gi ' ievanccs , bil l the most iniportan( , wa g es , remains to be settled. Jt issaid that the ruling sentiment favors arbitration and concession. PnESlOKXTGo.M l'El t s , oftlie American Fed- eration of La bor , ha s issued an address re- questing till except carpenters and joiners to refrain from Inking act ion to seen re concessions until the first great struggl e has been won. Their contributions will be needed in order lo secure the succe ss of t lie carpenters and joiners , which trade has been selcctedto make the fi rs t demand for the enf orcement of the eight-hour day Slay 1. If all trades strike it will mean def eat for all , or at best onl y temporary advan- tage. Contributions from all are solicited. Tin-: Collector of Customs at liurlington , Vermon t , re ports to the Treasury Dcparfuion i t hat a nuniber of Came'lnfo s who were re c cntly sent back to Canada from Newport , Vermont , for violating th e alien labor . c ontract law have been put to work by the nmn : per- sons by whom the y were formerly employed undcr e b ntract. lie adds that , whil e the pre- sumption is strong that they came hack under nn implied contract to work , it is im possible to obtain positive proof to thet effect. He says be don 't see what lie can do in the premises , and the de partment has so far been unable to su ggest a remedy. Count Muenster , the present German em- bassador at Paris , is the author of one of the best coo k-books of the day. A sarcastic col- league once said of him: \fie is the best cook among the diplomatists , and the best diploma- tist among the cooks. \ ' Ex-Governor Swineford , of Alaska , will soon start a daily paper at West Superior; He predicts, that in ten yea rs that city will have 100, 000 inhabitants. . 'he Critical Situation In the Industrial W orld , Owning to the. Klght-IIour Movcinrnt— \ Wheat Krports. Special telegrams to Brutltlre r t ' * indicate ex- ce pt in the lower Slississi pp i Valley, that there h as been a widespread improvement in the di - itrili Hiion of general merchandise. Thislm* been aided by nearly a fortni ght of season able w eather. J obbingis fairly active in dry goods , groceries , hardware , and b oots and shoes through the East , the Central West , South- west , West and Northwest , and is backed by an increas e in-thc -r nt t u t a nd TC-ar w . ' t rr.ent - dc ¦ t nnnd. Interior roads are in a better condition than they have b een for a long time , and mer- cantile colle ctions at several Western centre; are rep orted fo li c easier for the firs t time in some mouths. S pecial returns from Louisiana report that Missi ssi ppi River levees are broken in thir t v places in that State; that fully onc-l i fili of the suga r and rice laiidsare , or will be , inundated ; that thc country trade is .-tit otV ami public sentiment is demanding a National instead of a State system of levees. U pon ibc Pacifici ' ., : isr the S t in Jo . - u piiii Val- ley wln - at cro p promises to equal the average ou tput there , but in the Sacramento Valley it promise s in be short. There is only o i ;e disvii- g l lL ' e.i wheat >bip on the I ' uei ii ' - eo:' ,. -t . Widespread Improvement Noted Ex cept in the Flooded Districts. fil e iiiiluslri a l situation groc. s tno i v thre at- en ing as the first of May approaches . At ( \ ni- e i igo -jo . non packing h. ' .us,. em p loyees , in ad- dition t o harness maker- , clothi ng workers , gas fitters , stair builders and other trades , threa ten to strike , in addition to the 'J. \ > . ui »i alread y on s trike for an cigln-hoiirday. Sl rikes of building hands jr» n -j . - o rted from Sharon , Pa. . N ew York . Brookl yn and Portland , Ore . At Bosto n , L ancaster , p.i. , Birmingham , Ala., a nd Milwaukee , strikes are expected nn May 1 of building bands. Employers at Portland , Me ., Philadel phia . P a. . Louisville . K v . . I n- dianapoli s and Wheeling. IV. Yn. . ha ve con- ceded demands made. There bale been 1 2 o strikes involvi n e g s . - J. \ . .t emp l oyees tb, i s tar in A p ril , against sixty.one strikes , i nvolvin g ;;. ' , - If' . '* employees in April last year. Since Jan- u ary t there have been oitt strikes , invol ving ; o 'U l - 'i em ployees , against onl y : ' . ¦ ) str ikes , i: :- volv t ng IV ' - ' I employees in :1c- firs t four mon ths of lS sf i . Exp orts of merchandi-e in March aggre- gat ed $ 72 , i ;o7 . l sl , a nd import- sO T . !\ . . ) : ^ , showing gains over last year of ' re > pee;i ' ve!y 5 an d 1J per cent. For lim e nee i iiis oAports aggr egated. > 2|.\2: ' o . -l - ld , and iiopor:- - . >t. '0 . >; - _ , l . - \ LT . a gain in exports over last year of , \ per cent, and a ilecliu , - in imp - e. - is , ,f i : . per cent. Pork in specu b iti' . e lin. - l eis been pushed up anoth er 2\ .c per barr- l . l.ui h . r. l I ' mnr . -. have r ex-fed folly l - . 'i c . Trading in hog pro- ducts has been onl y moderat/ ! > act ive . Wheat , with free exports , fair speculative demand , and short crop and low Mock reports continue (inn and 13 alje higher. Indian corn , howe ver , bus la en in b s:-:o - iiv, - dimain! w lib ti - e. - sbip i ne - i. t s: is o|| \ 2aoc , while oats have reversed the usual order and advanced ra-rc There have been fr eer orders tor iron this week , and cut prices at th e South have been less frequent. Woo l , u is worth noting, lias b . on in fairfy aetivc request for the firs t time in a year or n i ore . rnaniitactiirers ,iclii:illy Inlying fbrfimire requirements . But prices areas yet imhighcr. Ex ports of wheat (and flour as wheat) from Je S { h . ' a^ o ii v \ f ' to \ .le i ? , i -s ! -r- . W' J;»A'i{fe l b A ^ - calindar yca ^^saaJ I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H oe ks ^^^s^Q^^^^^^^^^^ H ^^^^m^ B ^ B ^ B ^ H Bu siness failures reported to -\ ^ \ ^^^^ fl nuni ber 171 in the United Stales this i veeT ^ ii»niii > t l ' W last week and 1P1 this week last vear. Canada had ;iSthis week against if) last , week. The total number of failures in the . United States January I to date is - iOOo , against • 121a in a like portion of !>;.(> . STATE OF miffl BROKE ON A DOWN GRAD E Terrible Smn i h-np on (be Chrsliprn k r mid (Clio Hon.I. Th e Ciiieiiiii. -ni a nd Washin gton ft press on the Chc s apeakeandOhio Road was comp letel y wrecked at the station in Staunton , Ya.. t: boiii th ree o ' clock . A. M. Miss M vrth' Knox , of Kansas City, and a mem ber of tin- Pearl of (Vkin Opeiii Com- pany was killed . Tiie following w ere injured: Mi. -s r.ditli Miller , bg broken in two p laces , pro bably fatally injur..!. Loui s Uarri - oii . scal p wound. B ertha Fiscli. injured about th e spine. Edward A. Stevens , shoulde r dislocated. Mis s Jane I t nrhani . ankle badly sprained. Si rs. Ed. Webb , leg bruised. All these a rc members of the Pearl of Pekin Opera Company . W. F. Kil patrick . of New York , was badly wounded in the leg and bead. The tra in was » vestibule , and was made up of a baggage car . smoker, severa l pa ssenger coaches and two slee pers. The first was bound f or Old Point Comfort , and the rear sleeper , the Auste rlitz , was bound for Washington. The train is due in Staunton at 1 A. SI. , bu t it was t wo hours late. At about three o ' clo ck th e station p l atform was tilled with railroad m e.i and loungers , who were waiting for the t rain. Wh en it came up it was going sit a fearful rate of speed- about seventy or eighty miles an hour—and the engine looked as though en- veloped in a sheet of llames. Those on the platform quickly got out of the way, and , as th e train dashed b y, > omet biiigstri t ck the bag- Cage car and tore a gash in I lie side , bu t that coach and the remainder of the train kept on. The rear slee per , as i t was passing the station , careened a liifle and struck the p latform cov- ering. It tore up several front posts and wrecked the whole platform structure. The sleeper kept on , and pitched into the Eastern baggagc- bonse , a brick building, which is fifty yards beyond the station , c rushing in its front and completely wrecking the building. The slee per then turned o'-er on its side , and the car was shattered in thousands of' p i e ces. o £ the sleeper had gone on fifty feet further fl would have r olled down a steep emhi i nkin ^ H and there* would not have b een a persou ^ H hur t. As soon as llic Austerlitz luriieiL ^^ H the people hanging around the station ifl ^ H to the ear. The whole end of it was tor a a ^ H and those wiihin were groaning, and some ^s l the women were shrieking. The city tire alarm was sounded , and , assisted b y citizens , rescued the passengers. The train , whi ch bad gone on , was finally sto pped about a mile up the road. The con- ductor p ut back , and the members of ibc \Pearl of Pekin \ Trou pe who were in these rars were soon doing till they could to relieve the in jured and their companion?. KANSAS WANTS HEALTHY MEAT , All Cattle Comi ng Into the State From the Ku s t Must he Kxnmliird. The Kansas Live Stock Sanitary Commis- sion has agreed upon an order under whicli cattle from the Eastern States must be held 90 dnya at Kansas City at the expense of the owner , and until they shall receive a bill ol heal th signed by the state veterinarian ol Kansas. Th is applies to nil ca/tlc shipped into Kan- s ns from that portion of New York l y ing south of the North line of Connecticut , all of Penn- sy lvania , New Jersey, Delaware , Jfaryland ; District of Columbia , Virg inia , West Virg inia and the Dominion of Canada. Cattle from other districts may enter the state , provided the shipper satisfies the inspector that they arc healthy and have not been exposed to any contag ious or or infectious diseases. FLOODS IN TEXAS 14ve Stock Drowned and Trarel De- lay. ctl—Rivers St t ll Rising. For three days continuous rains bin e fallen ^ a ll over Texas. Rivers and bayous are out ov ^Q their banks. Bridges lnive_ been swept away, and travel is delayed. All . - ¦liye i.tock in lowi ' lands and cane brakes have been drowned , but so far no loss of life is reported. i ( i , - ' i I I' . l ' i. THE S J L'2\VII J L E S TSAM Moulding and Saw Mill TERR Y & RAYNOR, Propr ' s. (Successors to I. H. Gsxcr , J x.,) A ihJI Iine of BUILDIXG 3L4.TER I ALS and BUILDER'S HARE HARDWARE. \White and Yellow Pine Lnmber , Oak , Ash , Cypress and S pruce Planking and Timber. Eg- Sash , Blinds. Doors , B rackets and Mouldin g s and other Turned Work T COS S WDO intend I 0 build Will find it to tfce l r advanta « s to s rlve us it can. Yard and Mill , - - SAYVJEX k , X*. X. ~~ Mr T^ siTi o Kr™ ^ * PRACTICAL TAILOR AND C UTTER. % GREEN'S BLOCK , SAYVILLE , L . I. SUITS MADE TO ORDER FROM $16.00 UP. Other Garui enis in Proportion. A Large Assortment of Goods and S a mp les to Select from. GARMENTS FOR CORPULENT MEN A SPECIALTY. Also Cleani n g aM Eepairing I d eally 3)©328. I have made s amienr ? for DEVLIX & CO. , for Cenfenn ; \ il Exhibition. AOKEEL T' S PALACE MEAT MARKET. Mai n Street , S a yville , L. I. PRIME CUTS OF BEEF AND ALL OTHER CHOICE MEATS IN THEIB SEASON. POULTRY AND GAME TO ORDER. F resh « sb , Orsu t r, SQ4 i v e getables «. fi g ii line of Smoked M a ata. ¦ . j \ R. E. ALBIN j ! ALDRIOa BLOCK , I | SAYV; JL T .E , h.. I. i DE ALER IN j ' Diamonds , Watches , Jewelry, j SILVERWARE , j Cloe l s , Musica l I m traments , Sporting j Goods mi Cutlery. j I have a larger stock of Watches than j ever b e fora. Prices to suit customers from ! $2.50 up. ! 1 have a complete stock of Jewelry. I cava just received a full Una of Silver- j ware of the oe ' abra t eJ Sogers & Bros, and ! Pairpoint ' s goods. All Silverware bought; j ol me. will be engraved j FREE OF CH A RGE. I h a va a large selection of Clocks. ! I have juss received s ne r r stock of Prices to suit every body. Also all kinds \ of gunnin£r material. 1 have ths best pow- ' . der ia Say ville. Also shot In fact I cava j everything that goes to make up a sporting • man ' s ontnt. _ I I fca ^ e in conn*ct£on -witii zny sporting ! gco i s a full line of \ l i E V O L VEIi S Of all kinds. Also all kinds of cartridges. ] I hare loaded shells always on hand. Call ; and examine mv stock of musical goods. I have a fine line- of Cutlery -which Is ' guaranteed to ba as represented. I w ill fi t all persons having defective eyes j v rith glasses of all kinds and prices. Se- member that I have first-class goods at very j low prices , and all goods are warranted, to ; be as represented. Repairing ia all its ; branches neatly and promptly done by ! :R. E. AX - B PSf . I Anton Peterman , | E&m -:- sb tohb ! AND | Ba tk P a rl ar St j One door West of Fishel' s. j Patehogue , L . I. j First-class Bath Rooms in con J neetion . O .L. RAYNOR , QE S EEAL Furnishin g Undertaker. PRACTICAL EMBALMER. s a t ? i t . t.t: . i»i. Allreq c ects for f n y yR fc i, . oomss , C s S K eis , b u b i ai, oases CHAIB S , CASSIAGES , Eti , Pro rs pU j- Fsraif bed at Be ia onsble Rites A gent for all kinds- of Tomb Stoaa. US rl C ^ ssssslsssslsaaasB a ssssssssmassssss lB s B ssB joli us nausER , SA YVILLE B A KERY , HA2 T U 7 AC T UXSEB OT Plain and Fancy Cakes SAYVILLE , L . L COAL I _ COAL ! C- 3S T^ AXDBICS . DK4XZS IS. U al te , Ked-Asa and Lehigh OoaL Papain f dees rale. Coal and Wood dell v er t a la any pari si the Tillage or town. W** 4 uvea aa d f * £tt whea deslrea &•« a a 4 CMm Mate « X . S arrt O *.