{ title: 'The Malone farmer. (Malone, N.Y.) 18??-19??, February 21, 1900, 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/sn84031968/1900-02-21/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1900-02-21/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1900-02-21/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031968/1900-02-21/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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= TO INSURE NOT LIKE OTHER MEN Dl IDF HI flflfi MpvIDyoxt ever be«u> that old Quaker quo- f UlmL.' DLvVU U tatkm,\ began the girl, \that 'all the **i Keep the Kidneys and Livet Healthy, Active and Vigor- ous by Using DR. A. W. CHASE'S KlDNEY-LiVER PILLS. Nature makes an extra effort in the spring to rid the blood p{ its impurities, and the filters of the blood—the kidne^l and liver—are called upon to perform an enormous amount of labor. As a result, they become tired and ex- hausted, and there are backaches, side- aches, headaches, and pains in the shoulders and limbs. Digestion is de- thnesTtreE5q \It's true, too,\ affirmed 4&e busybody, counting her stitches in her mind and talk- iag at the eawt^JJiine, \you know—\ \Do you•ineaftlto say'thatTm queer part of the * timg?\ The gin appearal, to be \All of the time.\ The busybody nodded her head and counted tbe lest row btiore the tfau&b on..tiie .mitten she was knitting/ What the busybody did with the mitteus she kDitted was a mystery to the boartiihg house. Some said she seut them to the sol- diers in the Philippines. ''But, Maria,\ protested the 'girl. j < \I'm not saying you're queerer than- the rest.\ Xhe husyJbody dropped her u^u d h k d nothing—it was hkfl\f yy pp nt and then asked, apropos of d A , pp ay *be had: \Are yo h ?\ nothgy thankful\for anything this season ?\ \Lots ot.things. When I was coming home ranged, and the languid, exhausted feel? to-night I met little Tris—-you remember ings of spring cause misery to the body, j j itt j e xrix. I was. ber bridesmaid when she There is only one means of making j was marr ie<i a year ago last June, and you the blood pure, .and that is through the j gur ejy remember what a lovely gown I had, kidneys and liver—the filters of the Wlt ,h \the yellow rose^ ajid ribb blood. By acting directly on these delicate organs, Dr. Chase's Kidney- Uver Pills purify the blood as no other preparation was ever known to do. \ „ would positively hate it U tins time. Mr. W&. L. Maurey, Scottsville, N . 5 ^ wa ° n C lh e g ^ rrr i t wa3 Trix y I ^ Y., writes: \Liver complaint and im- tbankfui ab ounthankful 1 wasn't »he f you pure blood were the bane of my life iot | ^ now -•> . - years. My face was covered with ..^ idea ,,, The bu5ybody roi ff e d eon- pimpies and blotches, and^ I .could get tegi p luous ;y, \Why should you be thank- Do ycfu mean you are thankful for a gown you : had 18 months ago?\ in terra pled the busybody. \Well if T ---' Vi •\•\'• id nunk -par excellence, and I shall recommend them to my friends >r. CbasVs Kidney-Liver Pills, one cided I didn't want him.\ \Well of aiTthings!\ The busybody i. •\•- pill a dose, a?? cents 'arbor, aratrtf Barters,\ ** •«*«? -breathless-a» r . . . -.!•••• L r-v U,^ ],Q \TW i T eve r hi or by mail on receipt of price, by Dr. A. Wi Chase Medicine Co.,Buffalo,N.Y. IjGLteliYEj\Bim I HigWy recommended by Medical Profession! I m decorate? Tin Boxes -Pocket s>ize. I '563 Broadway R EFEREE'S SALE ON FORECLOSURE. Nathan E, Foote.plaintiff, against Wells B. 1 Bishop, defendant. -\ In pursuance of a judgment of f< '1 sale, made in the above entitled action on the 123rd day of December. 1893. and filed, entered docketed in the Franklir ., ©flioe on the 36th aay of December, !899, the sub- , »«riber,the referee for that purpose duly appoint- . . < e& and directed, will sell at publie auction, to the i highest biddtsr. at the front door of the court to be. \Did 1 ever hear such impudence, and you Ehought -about him fer two days! JVfi'J youare gueer!\ \I met them conffilg hSSMe to-night—they only live a half block below here, you know, and what do you think? He had his arms full of packages, ^and she was trottinjrulong beside him—regular Darby and Joan. There were celery stains sticking out of her bun- | die, and they .were so busy talking they I never once looked at me, so I just watched tltem good..\ \And what did you see?\ asked the busy- body, anxiously. \See! MT dear, just as I was aknostupcm them ehe dropped one of her packages, and he heiped her pick it up, and just as he handed it -to her—fancy her carrying any- thiEg! She wouldn't bring home a bos of eaedy before she was married. As I was saying, just as he handed it to her I saw him squeeze her hand under her cape. She hadn't any gioves, and. really her cape was quite passe. I'm sure she had it before she was married, and she was about the sweUest girl that ever came to our church.'' \She's a regular dowdy now/' commented th« busybody. \Yep. You'd think he'd be disgusted, --*mi!dn't you'?\ 'ureand **W e lJ } he's about as bad. Don't you re- member how he always wore a fresh flower in his buttonhole, and was quit* smart? h th f TcT health than any 'one\\\\else \In\ the 1 It \was in a^lumpl of pine, and. iedTc world. These facts should, and do, j -weed-grown ridge where wintergreen ber- have immense weight with all sensible lines might he found. That \rabbit\ had women. Remember these ai-e not wild ] tracks three'times as wide and f,our times statements but solid facts. I Facts About the Good Being Done by Lydia Em Pinkham's Vegetabte Compound in Cases ot Change of Life, Bearing- Down Pains, Etcm clerk's impose in Malone, New York, on the second day ;-„ „ n ; D e I ©f March. 1900, at ten o\clook in the forenoon.the m f* V K Ireal property directed by said judgment to be 1 m I sokt viz.: ;' AH that tract or parcel of land, situate in the i t«wn of Constable, county of Franklin and State ; of New York, which is distinguished as a part ' of subdivision lot No. s»of sub-divisions Nos. 2 ! *ad 4 In township No 3 of Great Tract No. 1 of ; Macomb's Purchase, beginning six chains north ! from the southeast corner of sub-division two, ] ranning sooth along the west bounds of sub-divi- flioDS two and four to the southwest corner of , toeburyinfj ground lot; thence west 90 degrees in his buttonhoe, a q And now. if you happefi to go there of an evening, he is sure to be sitting about in some old dressing coat, and like as not smok- Ad h lt hi\ ', and forty toinata >uth ten chains and seven ; links; thenee west four chains; thenee southerly two chains «nd fifty links; tbence south 31 de- cree* and 30 minutes east a chains and 72 links; ; tbence south one chaia to the north bounds of ! land formerly owned by Joseph Hastings: thence west to along the north line of the said Joseph . , Hastings'land to lands former'y owned by Harvey Hastings; thence alone the north bounds of said ! Harvey Hastings' land to the northwest corner « thereof: thence south along the west bounds of \ the said Harvey Hastings* land to the center of ''• the highway leading from Joseph Hastings to • John MeLane: thence southwesterly along the ; center of the highway to lands formerly own- d 1 by Orin Knowiton.now owned by John itennwn; --: thenee north along the j*aid_Denneen'» east line j to the of the old 0 tat John 1 Child's farm; thence east 41 chains and 30 links to the place of beginning, containing all the land within said bounds except the following reserved pieces of land formerly sold : AH the lands lying | east of the road leading from Constable Corners j t© Lucius Wvinan's, and- iormerlv sold to Joseph ' Hastings and Sophia Langdon. Also one and one- | balf acres of land in the south bounds of the \• above described lands conveyed to Bailey Dudley * by deed bearing date Peby. 11, 1853. Reserving 3 also about one-half acre of land in the SQUtb bounds theretofore sold to Fred Gravel. Re- serving also three-fourtfcs of an acre in said south iiounds heretofore sold Amos Merritt by the party of the first part. -* Also one-half acre of land sold to Myron €3iamberlain by the party of the first part. Also two acres of land in the southeast corner of the first described premises sold to ihe Catho- Me Church for a buryme ground. Also 37 and 44-100 acres lying across the west end of the first described premises heretofore conveyed by the said A. O. White and wife and Phoebe White to R. C. WffisotTby deed bearing date April 18, l«M. Said pieee is bounded as follows, namely : Begin- ning in the center of the highway leading from the Malone Road to William DeGowin's. where it iaterseete the east line of the Orin Kaowlton farm now owned by John Denneen; said sub- division 4 and runs thence north one degree west 83 chains to the northwest corner of the old John t!fcllds lot heretofore mentioned; thenoft .east 90 chains 50 links: thence south 38 degrees west 12 «baios and S5 links; thence sooth 17 de rees west i« chains -18 links; thence west o?te fcbaifi-IB Hnks; thence south one degree east 5 chains 13 {inks to the center of the aforesaid highway; thence south bi degrees west along the center of the highway t ohatns 71 links to the place of beginniag. Dated January 17,1900. M. T. SCANLON, Referee. BADOKR AND CASTWEIX, PHF8 Attys. 3w7 OTM1K.— PURSUANT TO AN ORDER OF _ . Hon. Sanrael A. Bemau, Surrogate of the , County of Franklin, and aooordlng to the statute I in such case made and provided, notice is hereby riven to all persons having claims against John . McMahon, late of Constable, in said county, de- . that they are required to exhibit the 5, with the vouchers thereof, to the under- _*1, at Gordon H. Main's law office in Ma- te, in said county, on or before the 1st day of August next. Dated January 15th, 1900. SMITH H. MARCH, Executor. GORDON H, VAIN, ~ ~ Attorney for Rxeootor. 8w27 OTICB.— PURSUANT TO AN ORDER OF M \ _. of Fraaklinv and according to the statute tn Buoh case made and provided, notice is hereby given to ail persons having claims against Joseph P Hartley, late of Wesmfie. to said county, de- «eased,that tbey are required to exhibit the same, with th« vouchers thereof, to the undersigned, «x«outrix, at her residence in Malone village, is said oountKbn or before the 21st day of July aext. ^** Dated January 9th, 1900. MATT1E I. HADLBY, Executrix. GILBERT & VTsixs. Attorneys. - 8w87 HOfEL LAWRENCE, MOIBA, N. Y . Under New Management. Newly Refitted and Tienovated. ItfYeigr t n Connection. irtoe bus to all train*. Yoar patronage solicited, Uti Ii. B. BULDTCHABD, Prop. ssi g coa, p And she lets him.\ Im thankful she's Mrs. Dannie.\ Th* girl fixed the tea things and then went on, •reflectively: \I was a bridesmaid three times that June, and every one of the marriages wag a fail- \You don't mean it! Do tell me all about it!\ \Well there's Trix and Dannie. There couldn't be a worse failure—'' \There couldn't,\ affirmed the busybody. \And you remember that Mabel Drew, fhe tall girl with the dead-white complex- ion?\ \I remember her. She, married that nephew of oid Jack Powter. He was a little fellow with a yellow mustache, and expect- ed to come in for the Powter money, and the Powter house, and the Powter horses, and didn't.\ \And when Mabel found out that 'dear Uncle Jack'—that's what she used to call ^im—had married and made a will in favor of the new wife, and she had to ask even for the carriage when she wanted it, and couldn't send over and order the Powter coachman about, she just went home to her mother, in Westehester county, every sum- mer, and her grandmother down in Georgia every winter. She's develot>ed into a reg- ular \flirt. Such dresses 1 never saw in my life. Her mother is so glad to have her part of the time that she just loads her down with clothes, and Mabel takes 'etn. You'd think she'd be ashamed, when every- body knows what her husband makes.\ \And before she was married she dressed so quietly that I was ashamed to have her at my teas when strange guests were com- ing, aud didn't know what a good family she came from. \And there WMNCII: you remember Nell —regular HttJe rolypoly. Sh« married that big handsome soldier from West Point, end now he's in the Philippines, likely to be killed every minute. Nell thought she would live in Washington, and all that the would have to do would be to wear eveningcloth.es \and* have her hair curled. She'a stained it because she fancied the shade was becom- \Tbat's «tn awful thing to do,\ said the busybody, censoriously. \Isn't it, though?\ agreed the girl. \You know I tried it myself, and it was «p expen- sive I had to quit, but she keep*'right on, and, really, you know, I believe if she didn't there would be white hairs in her temples, though for my part I don't see how a woman can care a rap about a man who would pre- fer soldiering in the Philippines to bei:&g watb nis wife in Washington-\ \But the papers Bay the loveliest things about him,\ put in the busybody, \that he is brave and courageous and all that »ort of thing, don't yoxHbiow.\ \And Nell reads 'em all. PomtiY«ly, sbe Kets up at four o'clock in the morning and - • ' - - » if tht—*- down uape i it g » if tht anything about him in it, and she just wts at borne thinking about him, and never goea anywhere. I call it morbid.\ \Som« people are queer,\ mused the busy- body. \And «he'» on* of them. I'm thankful I'm not a goose about any roan.'* ••^h&t on earth are you girl* talking about?\ .broke in a man's voice. It was the btwybody's bachelor brother, who had been *sl*ep on a couch, with a newspaper over h » fao*. \Say but I've l*ad the queerest dream. Thought I was ia a big church, or theater, or «otae place, that was juet packed full of peo- ple, and every 98* of them was standing up chanting: M l thank Thee th*t I am not a* other n are.** \?*«**• b#tm Uttcatef to ua/* «tt th* dri. .^ «- ^ Women A SLIPPERY BABBIT. iir T H?:RE ain't no use talkie',\ said Wall i Reading in West's store OB Saturtfey of any I've ever Reen. All day to-day I wag after him, imntin.' high and Jow in Solo- mon's swamp, with two dogs runnia' and one pointin', and that there rabbit just slipped right past us, 'round usand oothin.' but a dog hung up in a barbed wire fence ] to show for it, the durned fool!\ I The \rabbit\ of which Heading spoke is a i great northern hare which apptarc-d in Sol- j omon's swamp, northwest of Long Branch, j N. J., five years ago aud has beeh there ever ] since, in spite of the most persist«?Tit hunting I to whidh so small an animal was ever pub- I jected in that locality. It is probably t nly ha; Am* article, whatever its merit, must be made known to the public by means of advertising 1 . Advertising, however, though it can do much for a thiny. cannot do everything-. I t may -create a sale for a time, but in order to insure a lasting' demand the thing- advertised must have solid worth. This is the case with Lydia E. Pink- hams Veg-etable Compound. solid worth. . Women everywhere have learned J swamp their home and fighting ground pre- in Monmouth county, being a vii?- itor from the CatskilJs. It has z^p male of ite- own race, but, judging from track*, found in the snow, hunters &ay it is not unlikely It has I that the hare is a formidable rival of ihe j smaller buck bunnies which made Solomon's, this fact, and the result is that there is a lasting 1 and absolutely unequaled demand for it. It has the larg-est sale of any remedy for female ills in the world, aud tliLv lias'been the case for years. A The reason for tliis is that Mrs. Pinkhum claims\ nothing- that she is not entitled to claim. She ran do all that she says she can do, and her twenty years of experience make her advice invaluable. Her experience has been not only long- but world-wide, and she has helped more women back vious to his arrival. On one occasion hunter found the hare's tracks on that of an ordinary •lbhit's,: and.- following the two trails, he came to\\tho dead body of an un- usuaiiy iarge buck bunny. The bunny** neck was broken and the tender fur broken, by long scratches. TTiere was no mistaking the work of the hare's long hind leg. \Uncle Dan\' Covert vras the first hunter to meet the bare. He was after foxes in a fight mov>- about Christmas, 1894. His dog failed to jump anything until Solomon's swamp was readied, and there \Uncle Dan.\ saw the biggest \rabbit\ track he ever saw. I Th \\ f i d id T *~~ \• I hj*d falling 1 , inflammation and tdeeration of the womb; backache, bearing-down pains; was so weak and nervous that I could not do my own work: had sick headache, no appetite, numb :speUs, hands and feet cold all the time. I had good doctors, trat none of them did me any good. Through the advice of a lady friend I begraa the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and after taking- one bottle L felt greatly relieved, and by the time I had used several bottles was completely cured, so that I could do my work again. I am now passing through the change of life and rasing 1 your Compound. It helps me wonderfully. I want every suffer- ing woman, to know what your medi- i h d f \M W M as long as any he bad ever found before. Added to that were the monstrous leaps, some of them eight and ten feet long, the average at least five feetr dog, and in a minute the dog was in an as- tonishing race. The \rabbit\ was away for 15 -HH&tttes-aBd-thea- came back,-right past \Uncle Datr' in the cow path. \Jiminy crickets!\ the hunter gasped, for that \raib- bit\ had a, white jacket and leaped over the leaning weeds instead of goiog under them. %Jncie Dan\ told all about that hunt to his friends, and a few days later a party of hunters started after the beast with seven dogs and two pups. A doctor who had huated in. the Cat skills knew the name of the animal Bern m aaxt; Sale. Pleasing Patterns in Wall Papers frorn 5c. Up. We buy all patterns in eonihiiiations and can- not sell paper, without the hord-er designed for same. Attractive Lamps in Brilliant Colorings. Our Special Table Lamp..-..., $ 69 Parlor Lamp with Decorated Dom»Slia<3e 88 Reception Lamps,New Metal Besigns,$l to 25 00 Hall Lights, Etched Globes .* 1 50 Brass Library Lamp, Dome Shade 1 8S New Miller Library Lamp, central draft burner ...-.-.: .•.-Tnv^.-n-.Tr-...-- : -,-. .... 4 6O 25 1 00 Gem Night Lamps, Tinted Globe Artistic Globes, 50c. to Mie and Ten Cent Counters a Special Feature. ng woman, to know what your medi ine has done for me.\—MBS. W. M. BUXL, New Palestine, Mo: \ Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound saved rny life and ga bk li th t l h The Grram-o-Phone is at once the distinct, the farthest-reaching in its effects, the most delightful in results, the widest in scope, the most powerful, and beyond all com- parison the most \ThThTre had to hump itself that day. ^natural Talking,Sing- The hare had t Nine hunters scattered through the swamp, d d f b h sh Nine hun which covers hundreds of and fidges. The sno b d h :v€i, both marshy c _ just right and everybody there was a good shot. Four dogs got after ordinary rabbits, then the hare wa* jumped from a brush heap and wen* .scurrying away corthward. Nobody kuevf what way it would take to come back, so they took mauds at the openings and waited. p y g a loving mother to eleven children, which was more than any doctor eould have done or any other medicine in the wide world. My trouble was child- bed fever. The third day after my babe was born I took a chill, which was followed by a high fever. I would perspire until my clothes were as wet as .though dipped in a tub o^water. Th hill d f kt f th All\ the little rabbits in the place were alarmed and half a dozen were killed. Three dogs got after one fox end holed him over back- j o c B uc k kin t and the hare came back o^wa for th through the thickest of the second growth. \Prea\ Wood got a shot at it and drew blood. The hare crossed a ihree-yard-wide open and \Pres\ fired, hitting it, so that a drop of blood was shed. Solomon's brook was only a hundred yards away, half choked •with ice. The track ended .in that, and none of tiie four dogs could pick it up agais. The hare must have floated to a hole under the bank. ' When the season opened the following fell the bare reminded the hunters of its ex- istence. A couple of hunters would go out to Solomon's swamp and take a dog to have some fun with rabbits. The dog would run one, or perhaps two, and then the prey wouM stop following the regular aad well- known runways. T\he dog would circle about as usual, but not come in sight. The game would just keep out of the way, leaving the hunters to hunt for new runways. All at once the dog would yelp and squeal in great pain, and a hunt for the dog would discover it lapping its lacerated skin near a tangle of finding any relief. Ytrie^dockors'/biJt | barbed wire fence in the brush into which nothing seemed t o do m e any g-ood. I i the trail bad lea the dog It was a Jersey had falling of the womb, leucorrhoea, {fox trick, but the hare did it. g pp ^ The chills and fever kept up for three days. My daughter got me a bottle of your Compound. The fourth dosfe stopped the chills, and the fever also disappeared. My life was saved. My age a t this critical time was forty- nine.\—LYDIA E. BOFGHKB, Etna, Pa. Facts About Two Cases of Falling of the Uterus Recovered by Lydia Em Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* I suffered for fifteen years without ing and Music-mak- ing mechanism ever invented. That which other machines imitate, the Gram-o-Phone repro- 'duces. We sell Gram-o-plioiies as well as Records. Ask to kear^the Gmm^o-pfeoi you visit our stores. Department Stores. g pain in the back and head, and those bearing-down pains. One bottle of A year later living near the Willie Weesler, a farmer's boy i e swamp, studied the hare, boy Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cora- j fashion, and found two of its runways. pound did me so much good that I sent j wt four very krge copper wire snares, each for four more, also two boxes of Liver j of them about a hundred yards a t *u I. Nom- Pills and one package of Sanative S ing got into them, and after snow flew the Wash. After using these I felt like a I hare's tracks were found to lead around the new woman.''—MRS. G. A. WlXTEB j snares. However, Willie left them, and then ' one day he found a fox in one. The rabbit's trail led under the noose that time, and the fox, which had been pursuing, got into it. In Glidden, la., Box 22< 4i I was suffering- with falling 1 of the womb, painful menstruation, head- ache, backache, pain in groins, ex- tending 1 into the limbs; also a tenable pain at left of womb. The pain in my back was dreadful during menstrua- tion, and my head would ache until I would be nearly crazy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has given, me great relief. I suffer no pain now, and I give your medicine all the praise.\—MBS. J.P, MCSPADDEX, Rosenberg, Tex. .esa than a week Willie got another fox, but never got anything else that way. Nor did steel mink traps do better, though a weasel was found in one last winter. Countless times the hunters have taken their dogs after the hare, but with the usual result. The hare is easily found. By ita jreat track it is identified, and its roaming pro pen si ties take it over so much ground that cold trails are everywhere in the snow, easily followed by eight. On bare ground one ha« to jump it, but a dog follow* its eold U lbl il d hl f d' k j one has to jump it, out & aog IOUOWB use A Grateful Woman j t»a tolerably eu&y, *»<* ^ * day's w. Recommends Lydia Em Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to Every Wife and Mother. \ I have taken eight bottles of Lydia Pinkham'g Vegetable th t tif i y tpound I hd with most gratifying results. I had been married fotrfyears and had two children.- I was all run down, had fall- ing' of womb with, all its disti I had doctored witi sy^ physician,\ but I derived very little _ from his treatment. After taking a few bottles of your medicine, I was able to do my work and nurse my seven-months'-oldbabe. IreeommeHd your medicine to every wife and mother. Had I time, I could .write much more in its praise. I bid you Godspeed in your good work.\— MRS. L. A. MOBBIS, Welaka, Putnam Co.,Fla. \DKAB MBS. PHTKHAJM—When I com- menced the use of your remedies I was very badly oft . Every two weeks I was. troubled with flowing spells which made me very weak. I had two of the best doetors, but they did not seem to help me. They said my trouble was caused from weakness and was noth- ing to worry about, I felt tired all the time; had no ambition. I was growing worse all the time until I began the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. • I am now able to help about the house, and am much im- proved in health.\—M A W CalUcoon Depot, N. Y. The Bed Cross Range U considered one of toe Best on the market today. Call and see it at M. X. Fell's, Malone, N. Y. routs it out. The dogs lose the trail sooner* or later, sometimes after ten or fifteen min- utes, again not until they drop down from exhaustion. The hare seems to lose them at will, but rather enjoys a long run once in awhile. The favorite tritrk is to kad ti e hound into a fence or the thick briers. Tbe hare's iast resort to get rid of a smart dog is to end the trail in the brook. That has never failed, and .hunters along the banks have yet to see how it is done. A man from the Freehold, wno still hunts without a dog and depends on his abflity to track and his knowledge of the habits of game, tried to gat the Solomon swamp hare ^wveral times. He spent a week in th« swamp for that purpose last winter and hunted from daylight till toward sundown every day. H« ia d a good tracking 1 saow, and the first day got four shots at the ani- nml «e it ran away. He uses » repeating rifle, with wiiicn he is a fine shot at game. It is a 22-20 center fire. Had be used a shot- gun the hare might have been killed. His way of hunting is little practiced in New Jersey because of the skill it takes. He took the hare's track and foDowed it as oau- tiously as ifliftef TTdeer, treading otr twigs, breaking no branches and avoiding the far-souodinjg drag of briers oa his clothe*. He used the same care which had netted him deer and two or three bears in the much-hunted deer counties of Pennsylvania. In his week's hunting he* saw the hare six times, not once white it was sitting still. The first day fie surprised it, and the hare had to cross an open to get into the brush, and here the four shots were fired. x After th« first shot ev«ry jump wa* Irregular to right or left a»d of different kmgth, bnt every one quick a**vfiash. It w*s two day* before the hstt showed up again. Th«a a* cot two gfe'mpees of it in one day. The next day he fot a shot good enough for a shot- gun, and saw it a couple more times after that. That was the best a first-class hunter ecmM do with &* hv of Solomon'* swamp. NOW IS TIME TO BUY ¥ CUTTERS AND TWO-SEATED SLEIGHS. Our stook includes the memt complete and up-to-date as&ort- ; ment in Northern New York. You wiU # be surprised t o learn how low we have marked the price* Will* exchange for wood or farm produce. OUR STOCK OF SINGLE AND DOUBLE HABNESS, BOBES, BLANKETS AND 3THIPS,/ including a full line of harness and horse equipments, while not j away, are sc*d at such a close margin as t o put them within ^ the reach of every puTse. ' ELDREDGE & WILSON, - nytaaexn-e, Wedding You should edding G-ifL Me SILYER AND CDT GLASS NOVELTIES. You should see KNOWLTON'S STQ<?K before buying a Wedding G-ifL Me always keeps on hand the Choicest Lice in EP YOU WA1TT A HANDSOME Lamp, Watch, Ring, Chain, Brooch, Or anything else in Jewelry or Amateur Photographers Supplies, risit _KNOWLTON'S. SSTABLISHBD 185O. CHAN NELL'S • Fire Insurance Agency. CHEAP Insnranee is not reliable. . '• \ 'The best ig none too good for those w-bo inaure for PROTECTION. # , We protect you, and in the day of trotibk, l t w* BOLD THEK SAFK ' 25 East; TVTfviXL St., :Ml£fcloxLe, 3ST. Y. F. S. CBAXXSLL. -' , \ A. H. MBANTT