{ title: 'Wyoming County times. (Warsaw, N.Y.) 1876-197?, March 28, 1889, 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/sn84035923/1889-03-28/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035923/1889-03-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035923/1889-03-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035923/1889-03-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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>- wggpr* *■ A,: u Y O L . X I X . N O . 1 6 . W A R S A W , N . Y . , M A R C H 2 8 , 1 8 8 9 . |S a b K r i p t i o a 8 L & 0 s Y w a t en d e f Y ear* TO / TO-/ . V- TOft/ft\ - v X X W A R S A W , \ P r i d e o f W y o m i n g V a lley .* ’ The March number of the Buffalo* Rochester & Pittsburgh “Flyer” con tains the following sketch of W arsaw: “ T he most ‘beautiful for situation,’ and one ol the most im p o rtant towns, industrially and commercially* along the whole line of the Buffalo, Rochester & P ittsbi igh Rulway, is Warsaw, the shire-town of Wyoming-county. A few miles to the east is th° plateau which holds thev crystal waters of Silver Lake while through the valiey in a north easterly direction flows the Oatka Creek which empties into the Genesee river just before it comes to Rochester. W ar saw was called by the Indians, “ Chi- nose-heh-geh,’? or “ on the side of the valley. *’ The village nestles picture esquely at the foot of the hills, while along the east side at an elevation of 115 feet above Main street, wind the steel, threads cf the B. R. & P. railway. The ! opening of this road and the discovery of salt roused the hitherto peaceful val ley from its long slumber. -—- The Warsaw' salt company has six wells, five pans and at present four grainers, » with 20 new ones soon to be com p leted... ... T O - T h e Standard company has one well, ;-: v 50 kettles* two grainers arid manufac tures barrels dmly. _ ft. :—^ /.- T h e Miller works have twq weils, use both kettles and grainers and the pres ent Capacity of 300 barrels per day will . sobri be increased to 500, by the exten sive addition now building. ft >- ft ft . TO:- The Gbuinldck &'■. Humphrey works, with two wells, two pans arid one grainer produce 400 barrels daily. these plants are on the B. R. <Se p . ^ which offers perfect facilities* not only’for the shipment of salt, but also for the transportation of coal, which is taken direct f t om the mines, and with out passing over any other road, is : tm- loaded at any of the works for about $2 per ton. TO' ' ...TO.- ft,-' TO/ ftThre© miles iiorth of Warsaw are the . Crystal salt works,- with two weffs, seven pans and a capacity of I jQOO^/Mirels daily* . Seven more pans are toftbe: added this . spring. The fuel used by the Crystal : company is coal oil, which is/hrought in tank cars hbm PennBylyania, and stored .ft ‘.atthe*-Worris; in an iron tank holding about-2.500 barrels. ; ■ , V The K err salt company has a p lan t on 'tlie-ftB^ftR.ftft&';ftF, about three ft miles south of Warsaw,: with 6 wells, 10 grainers and two paias and produces 1,000 harrbTspf salt p er day . ft This gr©j\| salt industry in its various //\.-/’ft departments, gives employment tocfthun- v dreds of . men and girls Witli steady work - grid good: pay. Among the other manufacturing in terests of Warsaw M the T ariety Machine / Company’ Works, E.f B. EvCringham aiid .. ■: • EftTft Montgomery, proprietors. They ft do a large. business in; th e manufacture, from their own patent, of iron arches for sugar makiag, and make all the cast ings heeded at tlie salt works, such as /ft, piping, tubing, gas fittiugt, etc; They make large sbipmTOs over the B. R &, P. road. . -ft’’ /\•'/•'' -/'ft /'/'ft\' ft . ^ a Iktge h a s iaesam coal and lumber, and has also lias a bean establishment where a number of hands -. are employed. M. Brown Sobs turn out ari im- . mense q u antity of iriap rollers which are / Bhipped to Canada, Chicago, St. Louis arid other points. ’ ft yyft Morris & Co;, the wealthy hardware , are the largest dealers in fertili zers and in wire bav bands, in .*•*••• • v j N o t a r i e s P u b l i c f o r W y o m i n g € o . Arcade -TOosiah D. Colburn, A. C. McCall, M. T. C. Perkins. Attica—Lewis Benedict, George T, Loomis. » Cowlesville—Grove Barnum. A. H. Hoskins; Castile—H. A. Pierce, C. H. Sher wood, H. W. Smith. Covington—Lyman Broughton. Pearl Creek— Lorenzo Brownell. Peoria—John M. Fiero, L. F. Wood. Eagle Tillage—S N. Xaramore, Bliss—Edwin J . Wheeler. Gainesville—Seth P. Allen. Portageville—Augustus Beardsley, D . L. Toland. Castile —Albert N. Wallace. Java—Lucius F. Horton. North Java—James H. Moore. Ardee—Charles A. Mason. Wyoming—Thomas S. Cashing, Otis H. Keith. Johnsonsburg—Ephraim J . Johnson, Ammi J . Warren. Perry—Owen Harris, Wm. D . Page. Pike—Carlos Stebbins. Yarysburgh—John M. Bryson. Warsaw—Frank W. Brown, Charles J . Gardner, Jacob W. Knapp, E. O. M c N a i^ L . Li:'ThajBri-’\nTO':\v ' **■ Hermitage—Jniribs L . , Blqdget. In former times there was a profusion of distillers intkeRoy and good old home distilled whiskey was sold a t from twelve to twenty-two cents a gallon. Then a large proportion of our b est farmers took their cereals to these mills and returned bairelS of whiskey to their cellars “for; medicine,’’ft and there was no trouble about it at all. Theie was none of the mbdern “nosing arqund.” Elisha Stanley ran a distillery and made whiskey at a pbirit; under Fort Rill, just to the right of th e present red bridge, and all the country adjacent sheddrid its horses and drank his goods on that classic site fry th e Oatka’s flow ing tide* /Toboggans, were not in vogue then, and people from this w ay;: walked down the hill and then walked up again after getting their jags filled, ft. / f t - Lampson arid Skinner and Wm. Morr gan expressed the pure spirits on the Thayer farm, up the creek6 n ear the present oil mill; and people “ up south” wet their whistles and luged their jugs of bug/juice there because it was handy and because they loved the critter whose horns in latter years have had such a perietrating effects upon latter day insan ity. It will be noticed that all these were on the creek shores—water being then as now, the chief agent used . in . “ tern- peiing the wiud tb the shorn lamb. ” Now wre have but one distillery, arid its products are shipped to another state entirely— Courier. , F . Kingsbury, and farihly will re move to Erie, P a ., about the middle of Mrs. George C. Otis and Miss Carrie visiting friends in Buffalo, Miss Jennie Baker 6f sail for Europe May 15th. Dc. A. P. Burkhart, Supreme Account- arit, E. A, TCI./ of Dansville, '/N;; Y.,' was- the guest of E . H. O wen oyer Sunday. / J . H. McGuire of East Arcade, was in town Saturday. He has rented his farm to Jaines Simons and/expects soon to go S u d d e n D e a t h a t W i s c o y . 1 About 8 o’clock Monday morning Mrs. Catharine Fuller, aged 67, was found dead in her chair, at Wiscoy, where she evidently died with appoplexy while p re paring to retire Sunday evening. She had washed herself and partly changed her underclothes and the wash dish set near her and her night dress was on a chair within her reach. She was sitting in a large arm chair which she usually occupied and in which she could com fortably enjoy a nap without retiring, as she frequently did. At the time of her .death which the circumstances indicated was instantaneous and painless, says the Hume Enterprise, she was in about the same position as when sleeping except the relaxation of. the muscles allowed her head to incline sidewise to the left and backward, and her feet and limbs were a little more straightened and ex tended. Those taking charge of the re mains said they were in as good condi tion for laying out as if she had died in bed. She was a very large person and is said to haVe brought down the scales earlier in life to nearly 300 pounds, bu t when divested of her wraps now is esti mated a t about 200 pounds.. H e r wraps under-garmenfs* trirp of the usual dresses, skirts, etc., and a large woolen shawl over and about hpr head arid shoulders. That was about her usual daily dlfess, even iu suminerft Atfchough she had a p parently changed some of her lihderr clothes a few moments before expiring, she h ad carefully /guarded against severe exposure a n d but spr thri presence of the washdish and extra garments lying near* a mere passing glance would not discovered any change / from her appearance, /; As it was, with thp super- aburidauce of clothing, a very larga cor poreal personage and a fairly warm apartment, the remains did not assume the usual rigidity of ordinary remains, until they had been thoroughly and neatly placed in the sepulchral casket which had been previously: provided by herself nearly two years before it %as heeded. The casket was composed of marble slabs aud put together Similar to wooden/caskets a n d inclosed in a wooden covering, the /covers being fastened down with screws in the usual manner. The casket had no linihg but was highly polished inside and weighs with its cov ering about 400 lbs., ft and cost delivered. a j WisCOy .$38.; Ifc was made about the right size for: the life form, but owingftto the accumulation of gasses • affcer death it became neoessary to give vent b y tap ping before tho lid to the casket could M'Olpsed dOwri. ftft: ■ . . ft-: ■ft: D eceased leaves• /many relatives blit; ; few of whom attended the funeral owing / to the suddenness of the death so reiridfcej: from their homes with the roads alinos^ Impassableijriri the place of iuterm 3/hkt? Funeral: fette the Methodist church im W iscojf^t 10 o’clock ft a. m. Wedriesday. T h e remaias were placed in th e hearse after service arid taken from the late residence to Short Tract for burial be side h er late . husband* where a n eat and substantial monument mm*ks their rest ing place* I t required the combined stren g th df eightftirien to lower the .,re-.-. mains into the. grave. Rev. R, Ganfieid:/ coridiicted the services at the church arid the grave, Messrs. Goodrich & Skiff of were engaged to direct the fuue ’S- X*. An immense/ftmouiit of baled hay is / shipped from Warsaw sfcatibri tp all par is of rtpe country / by F. B. Keeney rind ■ ../ ..Frank H-ft Y^ilsoD ft: ,.-;/ft/\; ft : Richards ■& Mills, Grawford & Watson .and D. A. Crippen are large dealers in also ca r r i a g e s , ‘w a g o n s a n d siejgiis to Omaha, Neb*, to reside. Smith leaves : the employ of Bryce, Brydoii & Go. to-day, to accept a position in the dry goods house of Hewitt Brothers, at Batavia. Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Brininstool re turned from their wedding journey on Tuesday. - Mrs. Wesley Wiggies and her sister, Barrett* haye goiie to Medina On a ft : \' manufaeture : '-j • Triere are VdriGna other intlustries in ' :■ • Warsaw of greater or less extenfc, Lack of space proeludes their meiitiou. of the/busiriess /interests oL War-; /• //: '• ft. , /saw are direelily: benefited / by the facil- ft ft: ; ities for shipping their products offered ft ft : ' by the Buffalo, Rochester Pittsburg rail way. •..-•/./ ./;. -./' /. '-ft:/. /\ Gen. Thayer, Hon. Augustus Frank arid other Warsaw capitalists, are now. agitating the scheme of establishing aft salt water . Sanitarium at the sulphur springs, riot far from the B. R. & P. station, Much iritsresfc is manifested in the enterprise and there seenn to be no1 doubt of itg uitimate success.7 A mQeting of the citizens iriterested in the new hotel p roject was held a t M. E; . A -Eft, M. B irtlett’d ofllee oa Thursday : eysning, and $10,800 were pledged t/iward the enter pri st3. J. H airy Bussey, >h.e popular landlord of the ‘‘Hotel .Beiry*5 will take quite a large amount • of Stock with^tk© nBdrirs.iandirig: is to have the managerneiifc cf the nriw necessary papers for procur- i ft r the “ Warsaw Hotel Corn pauy, limited” have been forwarded to D i s t r i c t Ho* 5 W a r s a w The following is the standing of each pupil examined on Feb. 22 ud and 23rd, in district No. 5, J o h n A. Peck, teacher; History—Gota Braley, 100; Frank Blackmer, OO^Elmer9-earns, 80; Frank -Wilson, 80; Walter Buck, 90; George Baker, 100; Alton Munger, 70; Mma Blackmer, 100; Laura MeCaffery, 00; A rthur Belden, 90; Carrie Crane, 50; A rthur Clark, 40. Algebra—Elmer Steam y 75; Arthur Belden, 75. Grammar—Arthur Belden, 90; Canie Crane, 100*. Mina Blackmer, 95; Cota Braley, 65; Laura MeCaffery, 100; Elmer Stearms, 100; W alter Buck, 20; Frank; Clark, 80; Frauk Wilson, 15; A rthur Clark, 55; Frank Blackmer, 90. Arithmetic—Charles Clark, 60; F loyd Stearns, 100; Benj. MeCaffery, 80; E d r a Burch, 100; Clayton Crane, 100; Jennie Blackmer, 90; Ida Clark, 60; Frank Clark, 90; W alter Buck, 90; Hattie/ Clark, 70; A rthur Clark, 60; Frank Wilson, 70; Cota Braley, 90; Carrie Crane, 100; Elm er Stearns, 90; Mina Blackmer, 100; 41t°n Munger, 85; Geo. Baker, 95; A rthur Belden, 90; Laura MeCaffery, 100; Frank Blackmer, 90. Rlacfemrir 75; Carrie; Crane* Blackmer, 90; Laiira MeCaffery,/ 70. Spoiling A rthur Belden, 95; Laura M eCaifea^ ' Bla-okmer, . 87-1; Carrie Crarie, . 90; Stearns, 82|; Gota Brainy, 82|; Murigrirr47i ;ft Mina Blarikmeri 9Q; Walter Brick, 55;. F rank Clark> 85; Edoia; Btirch 85; H attie Clark, 80; Jrinnie /Blackiner, 82; /:4rthrir Clark, 75; Ida Clark, 25; ftBorijft MeCaffery, 80; Floyd StearriP, 70; Clrijtori Crane* 30; Charles Clark* 80ft ft/Z^o^aphy-^-Elm er Stearns* Braley* -100; /George /Baker, 95; MeCaffery, /100;. M ina Blackmer Frank Blackmer, 100; Alton Munger, 90; Carrie Crarie, 75; Arfchttr Belden, Frknk Glark,/ 80; Frank Wilson, A rthur Clark, 100; Ida / C lark, 40; Walter Buck, 100; Jennie /Blackmer,100; Ednia Burch* ft 90; Z H attie Carfe, 70; Floyd Stearns, /ftT^;ft:ftftBeu3,: ” MeCaffery* 100;/Charles Clark* 40; Clayton Crane, 4 0 .ftft ft; ' ft ftft./ ,\ft; /•' \ft; '-ft ft; ftReadipg—Alton Muriger, 70; George Baker* 75; Go ta: Bralriy*y 90; Carrie Crane, 90; Arthur Beldeb, 90; ftijaura MeCaffery, ft 90; Mma Blaelim.er, . 90; Frank ftBlackl mer, 85; Elmer Stearns, 80. Frauk Clark, 80r/Be&j* MeCaffery* 80; Edaia Burch, 75ft H attie Clark, 80; Ida Clark* 05; :jGunieftBlackmer, 85; FrarikftWilsbu* 7o; ' WalterftBtiek, 75; Arthur Clark 70. :' '..'.O b itiiai’y , ... ftv ft;: Airs. Martha Dxidley Fariner died at the residenee of /her soil, / Harwood A.: /Dudley. on /Saturday afterrioori, aged 86 years. The / •furierril., was - held on Monday. afternoori/, Rev. m / AftHobbs arid Rev* Dr. Nassau offir efafcirig. Mrs. Farmer was born in Washing- 'ft r Her home, a fine residenee, she willed to Rev, R. CanfLeld. pastor of the M. E. church in Wiscoy. of Londonderry, N. H is the guest of Mrs. L. A. /Hayward. Mr. Wells and Mr. Knapp, of Feel skill, were in town Ori legal business or. Tuesday, and visited the Warsaw salt works, in compariy With Superinteuderit / Fowler Who is an Old friend. .. Mr. W ells . is a brother-in-law of Dr. -Nassau, ft Mfes Ham ilton / and Mies ftTaleotfc o f . Roehester, have been the guests of Mrs. E . D . ; Gardiner, and Mrs* F. B. Keeney have fribved unto; thOir beautiful new house on E. Court street. ' - Mr. Bryce returned ou Monday from his trip to Scotland. / 1; . ft Mfe Ewart of ' Brockport, Was g u est o f \ \ P E R R Y A N D S I L V E R L A K E . W f i a t o n r R e p o r t e r H a s S e e n a n d H e a r d — A l l t h e N e w s . Do you move on Monday? Tenements to rent are very numerous in Perry. The Presbyterian choir has ordered new music for Easter. Congressman Sawyer has our thanks for a large collectiori of garden seeds. The spring term of Perry acad^imy commenced on Monday morning. fare- large Rov. J. E June delivered his well address on Sunday before a audiance. A number of new and handsome mon uments are soon to be erected at Hope cemetery. Miss Jennie Y. Cornish has been mak ing some improvements to her home on Covington street. ’• Quite a number of young men from Cattaraugus county were in town last week and hired out for the summer- to our farmers. _ s h r r a few days old. street B a p tist Mission- mefc a t the residence of Mrs. Samuel Sweet on Friday last. ft. ftft residence of the late Thankful Was last week sold for $705 to Messrs; Benjamin Prindle and Joseph E. Cole. /ft'ft ft-ft. ftft .-/..-ft ***?• On Thursday 0eo. Needham sold their sheep at Buffalo, arid B* C. Shepard received a couple of car loada. ■- 'A\:';ft'ft\-'Z:: ft James Wyokoff is te build a /2-story 20Jobfc addition t o his new purchase on street. Jam es M cIntyre will do mason since! over Sunday. Alleridorph returned on Monday a week’s absence in The apgortioriment of school money/ to tlie towris in the county is as follows: 1,768 93 9o9 01 1,850 34 2,245 63 ........................ 2,107 48 .................. 3,060 15 Coviiigton M iddlebury,. • ie! V • i Sheldon.. ./Warsaw.. the Sieretary of State at Albany, incorporators and committee to receive subscriptions for stock are Augustus Frank, N. S. Beardslee, S. 13. Whitlock, E. A. Miller, E. O, McNair, Frank W il son and E. M, Bartlett. The capital stock will be $30,000 ia 300 shares. Var ious locations for the hotel are being talked of and the committee would be glad to receive suggestions and bids. M> J . Monroe’s lot is b y many consider ed the most desirable, site. • Ifc has a front of more than. 150 feet, is 200 feet deep an d ' can be bought for $9,000. Warsaw’s hotel accommodations are en tirely inadequate, and this plan for a new one, begun with such _ good prom ise, should be carried to a speedy com pletion . This is a grand opportunity for our capitalists t o . give substantial evidence of their public spirit and inter est i a the prosperity of th© town, Arcade.. Castile *.. Eagle ....... .. . Gainesville.. F a lls.. . . . . . . . . First district. $15*521 21 .......................... $1,721 90 \Wethersfield ......... . Second district. 2.202.11 :i,254 01 1,680 66 536 84 1,490 53 1,138 10 1,048 16 ...$11,073 31 A H u n d r e d T o n s o f M o n e y . It hard iy seems possible that the money paid in one month for a ten cent article, could, if pennies were used in payment, weigh one hundred tons. Yet one of our bright school boys has figured that this is true of Diamond Dye* Three new colors have lately been added to the list of Diamond Dyes: Fast Stock ing Black, Turkey Red for cotton, and Brown for cotton. The manufacturer*, Wells, Richardson & Co.* Burlington, Yt., will send colored samples: of these new dyes, with book of directions, to any B u r n e d i n H e r l l o u s t v A u : I r ish Woman riam ed Joh a n n a widge, living wifch an unm arried daugh ter i a one o f the houses com p o sing the huddle known as By ariville, at the sou th edge of th e corporation oh South street, iriet with a terrible death y e sterday, h a v ing bee a burned so terribly as to die ba- foro diseovered although easily within reach o f help had they known her needs* I t seems that Mrs. Lam b ert, a neigh bor, went into the Led widge house at about 3 p. m. and was horrified fco. find the old lady lying on the floor dead, aiid her person burned all Over the breast, waist and arm3, An alarm was given and Dr. stone called, who saw th a t she was beyorid , help, having apparently been dead two or thiee hours. H e re/CT ommended that Cororier Mulleri be noti fied, whicli was done, and the coronar responded promptly last evening, but did ».9t d?ejm an inquest /nepessary; /as the affair Was so plaitily the result of an accident and the body was -prepared for burial by undertaker Henry Steaber. When found the poor woman , lay on the floor acros® the threshhold between sitting-rpom and kitchen. In thehitpben stove was arranged the kindling wood all ready for lighting, and on the/ floor near lav a pine stick with one end burned. Ifc iSAUpposed that she was carrying fchia lighted stick from the parlor sloye tb ligli^ the fire iri thekitdhen stove,that her dress , had caught fire from the stick, and tliafc j she then started fo* the/dbor, when the air fanned the flarne so as to envelope her lihole upper person. Evidently she had at this moment inhaled both flames and smoke to suffocation, arid fell to the floor helpless. H er age was 79 years or thereabouts, and had -combined 46 render her uriable to iriake; much rpsto\ tarice to the flames, arid so she perished unknowu to the neighbors amid suffer ings that can never be t q l d ^ Oenesee Courier. .' • .ft ■ Were the/result o f this, u n i and Mary J . , who married L* of Warsaw, and died eleven Mrs. Dudley removed with her husband arid children to. F e r iy in 1831, and six years later Mr. Dudley died* • In 1840 she was married to Jam e s lj. Farmer, and with him came to Warsaw t o : .reside in 1855. . Since Mr. Farm er’s d e a th,: about seventeen years ago Shy has resided with her So-ri* / She was a mfemher of. the Congregational church, a zealous Christian and interested in all.gobd Works.; Her chafacfer was one of great strength, mmgled with sweetriess rarid sim- plieityTOer natiire social and generoris* her /friendships strong and faithful, ft Mrs*Eliza Prerifcice, wife bf John Prentice, died of paralysis, March 18, 1889. The de- . ceased was bbrri! Sept. 18,; 1808, ■/iri New Jersey, removed tb Seneca .Falls at ari early age, then tb Nrinda* Where she w6s rinifed in lriarriage With John P f entice, one ofth e early pioheers .of that tmvn, / She . wag ;cbnr Verted at the: age of 14 years, and W'as a con sistent member of the Presbyteriari church until her residence: at Perry Center, when she united with the Congregational church there. She was a very industrious woman, a faithfill wife, a tender arid loving mbthef, .’/a /kind arid xisef ill neighbor,ft always ready to ft lend a helping hand.46 the rieedy. Her hbrae and the community realize .a sense, of be^. reavement; arid loss. Although, speechless her mincl Was clearalm ost.ib, the last j when: anxious to go when the Master called; her life was :a benedictibri, her end peace. c'1' ~ Mrs; Ella/McIntyre Wodtlw orth, wife of Johri L.: Woodworth, died on Monday mprii- mg, after an illness o f smany- mbnths, aged %6 year®. The funeral wak held fro^ the residence on Brooklyn street, this. (Wednes day) afternoori/at 2 o’clock. / John Barinon died on .Sunday,/ aged 54 years. Thfte funeral was held frbm; his late residence, on Warsaw West Hill, Tuesday morning at 10 o?clock, the services being conducted by Rev. C, B, Sparrow, acting Ghaplairi of Ctibbs Post G. A. R ., of which organization deceased was a^member. /There was a large attendance of friends, neighbors .and comrades. The burial took place iri the/ Hatch ceirietery* . Mr. /Baririori served dur ing thriw^r ^ Libutr in the 136th Reg-t. •N; Y. VoiuriteefS.; • /'. ft. ft 7 ft ft;: a. note received We lied b f prioumonia on the I7i;h at the; residerice of his m other at ftGrbat Yailey, aged 45 years, 8 mbs, //ft. T h e Wbmari’s Missionary/ Society hofd a two days) meeting ftat the presbytbrian church in this village ori the 4fch and 5th of n ext inqnth. './;.\ 'ftft\/; ftft'\ O virig to the low pricea prevailing of te in the sheftep m a rket of the east, there were no shipm e n ts from this Mr* Charles S3* Reud believes in an oe- casiorial change, aridlast week he/ pur chased: the E. M. Read house on Center Hendersbn captured a turtle At tbe lake/ which weighed 37 pounds. Hendersbu wou’t buy any more m eat thfe mbiflrh;; /'/ '/; - ;■/ Z; ft ft- , ■t f Thbte a pleasant gaiheririg at the 1st Baptist chirich Friday evening to eri^ joy a dime social given by the Y. P. S, 0. E. / A good time resulted, ft/ft-ft' is sold at: 9 cents per ponrid arid new; syrrip at 90 ft cents by p cddlers visiting the houses of our cit^ izsus this Week, I t is prime* ft.; Defcective W . H , Cornell of Y7arsaw, was in town last week servmg papers on witnesses in the case of the $tate of New : Vs* Win* Clifton . - '-ft/./ r of Batavia, is president of the foreign* and M1,13* W ickes, of A G tica^:^eSifi©at^^pf /the hbtee /hriSsibna societiep, : whicli m eet in this village ft ftRev.'Y- / A. .,Bage* pastor of Baptist chufeh ypill deliver: his farewell sermon to his coDgregation on next morning. No successor the best wishes of onr citizens for th e ir continued health and prosperity. The street seraper has been put- t o / work this week, and Commissioner - Schenck is full of business. L a st week Fred O. W illiam s sold his ft lot on Lake street to Mr. Wm. Palm er, ? for a consideration of $850. The Sons of V eterans P o st enjoyed » “ m aple sugar eat” at their headquarters \ on Thursday evening and had a jolly ft “set-dow n . ” \ Mrs. H enry’s little daughter was se- ft riously injured and burned by fallm g on j a stove, on the 22d. Dr. Harding was /; called to dress the wounds. Last week the Calvin Fanning house, corner Gardeau and W ater streets was purchased by Mrs. Robert Wallace f o r a ft consideration of $800, Miss Laura Page gavfi a tea party to - a number of friends oa Saturday eve^ ning, in honor of h er friend, Miss Isabel - Carleton of Port Huron, Mich. Miss May R . Keeney entertained her - Sabbath Sehool class, consisting' of- eleven boys* a few. nights ago andft-tbe a C. S. Leicester s treet for sale. There; is a project on toot t a pttrcri^ft land find btuld large evaporator Yorkfi near i h e foifl; of the lake. Mr.; Needham has been approached to. sett his land near: the yaitroad for the pur/ poseft Th© locatiou is a goc^ one toir the purpose required. ^Methodiste held^^a festp^l church parlors on Tuesday/ Cvenuig at which warmftsugar^ ice eieairi;/ lemonade and cake furnished the Z menu. /There was a ■ ft; T here was qufle/a;; pleasant; g ft/ft at a dinner pkrfcyft^ Sam u e l G . Sh a rp at their resideriee bn G/Williarias on MQoday to purchase new/ gbodsft/IOrftTO ;. the popul ar dry gaqds h ouse of /WfllteteTO \\ . A O b . % and wili return Saturday^ : ft. There appears to be no let up in the siibscriptioh business* - J . H , Tfeny; is numerpus orders' each \/-week;/ and magazines at the same prices as in January . friends/ sympathize /with Jerojne Bucklarid in ' ^ ,. over' the1/ lbes of the daughter Afiie, who/died thb 23d, /ft'i -Tmqrith®////ft-y-./;/ ft ' ft.''-. / ft;.. :• / R / F . B/iillard has a iiairimer has been in cbristaut use iiP the h a r r i w j: business tor the past sixty -five or/severity years,; and is good tor ariothei ceritury* /;/■/:;- .'ft'/ftft’/'TO State Society for„ Prevention of Cruelty to Animals h ^ a^f/ pointed John M* / Bonghtari fi /specialft agent abthik^YiH#©, a n d the power b f ; a State constable ZTfiTO ‘ ' ion is a gqodonq, ftft.' ’ft/ftft/:^7 now/ Mr, and Mrs, Aft are the h a p p y ; igreat grand '-parerite/te / a pretty bouncing baby boy, brim ft ii^/ft week to Mr. and Mrs. Sam u e i/0. Stick- riey o f S t./PfiuhM rih. / ..-Mrri. / Stickuey v[as tormeHy/M iss. G haHotte Adams arid ' has many frierids in Perry,/ /where' - has frequentiy pateed the srimmer. A couple of Attica fisherriaen were at the lake last week and Captured some twenty fine pickerel. T h e club liouse on the • west side is /to be much / improved “ coming season by the owners. 3 craze for ‘‘tissue paper throws” iri is at its, height* and the girls ar© busy hiaking some very handsome onCs. Orange arid light green seeni to be prevailing colors most iri « M , ftftSe®Hed/tt:|BHs4lf * J. Hoag is/, to: be much mud made i t decidedly nn- pleaSarit^for the people desiririg to at ^ tend the numerqiis auctioris pf farm stock, held i n this vicinity the p ast week. Lum ber arrived at the lake last for Wallace Mason’s niyr hotel at Wesley. The buildirig will cover a space of 26x36 feet and be; three stoiries Work has already cdmmenced on it. There was a large fam ily gathering at the residence bf M rs. Alien Mrioomber at bonon- . stoye to ligrit Qattaraugus, 3 tfc was settled fairly, b tHe fire iu tkekitdhen stGve,that her dress j esfcly and harm oniqnsly. T h e leadirig rtlf ■ . ffllfl 'flllO. iG'l .. ‘ 1 rt/3.*rtrtnKlA' In -t.lirt the H n m p l i r e j - - W a t r o u s . A very pleasant home wedding took place on Thursday evening at th e resi dence of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel/B. Hum phrey, it being the occasion o f the mar riage of their daughter Minnie, to Elqn G rant Watrous^qf: P erry. ThejBeremoriy was performed by Rev. W. Aft Hobbs in the presence of nearly one hundred guests, to whoiu an- elaborate fiuppCr was served. The/presents -were num e rous and of g reat variety .anA elegance- ‘ thep?/ wedded repubiiearis: thoiTght i t ' advisable in interesit of harmony to man L udlav? of the responsibility to hold a cbriference tq consider merits of the five candidates, arit\ ballot decide which was entitled to position. L ist Saturday a/genius srigr gested that each of th e candidates select five men* / I t was provided that /th e :25; delegates shonld vote in ten additional to be chosen from the rariks of the party. Late Saturday afternoon the five aspir ants, W. F. Andrews, John , Osborri* Thos. Gardner, M. J . Hoag and D. W. Keeler, m e t/at the office of Dr. Luttin, and iu the presence oi J . H. C* Ritch, W. J . Manley, S. F , Burger and other leading republicans, tfiis arrangement was agreed to ari a fair arid honest way, and. each agreed to abide by the result. A farther prpvisipri was made ff the conferenca failed to reach a nomination at the end ftol the fifth ballot the oan- dididate havipg . the loweet nnm l^r of totes .should withdraw,' thm t o ^ / r e peated aGthe rindftpf/ each suooefiisiye baltoV/)iritff \#•’^ribmlriattori was on Thursday lasj: to colebrate birthday auniversvry of that estimable ' dy4 The guests: all voted the occasion a pleasant o n e . ft. \://;/ /.. ft. ■/>/ Mr. /Nathaniel Seymour is to move part of his/old house pri Main streetr back on W ater street .and fix u p quite a large tenement house. He wfil /\ftlsp build a new front on Main arid make /.severe! other improvemerits. Jam es /M cIntyre will do the mason morir. ............. _ _ . . i s ...... about 300 barrels per day. Hefivy ordCrfi are reteiypd from paokete both: •west, for the salfc. Tbe e6mpany 'w'illv:' probably /buUfl,a reflriery arid Btok/Arimivi/ well: this season, besides makinjgf bth’er/ ft improvements pri the block* ~at least Burih/ is the ptosqrit talk. . ' '/?y-ft;ft/:--//-./ft- //•’//;•/ \ft L a st week Alva Clark in ehestriut tree w h ietostood in/ian < fo r i^ I d tlre-joenbar of branch of 18 Ipcbes diam eter, which had been. / ago,; sburid and blacked over with Agee- A growth of 12 years, covered / I h f It has been piit iq the log / cabia as a a a tc the Arcade Ariqcfe?’ of Ix^t/ week; ; usual Indifiri show accompariying aft patent medicine fakir has/fiPFiivcdft /T&riteft7 traveling 'ft attractions seem :to , be ’ tE/a fashion this seakon and p r o b f i b ^ i h i s h i : as good i f . not - better ''ftthanft'tbeAftTestft. /'-'R'/: Ylqesri’t cosf .; anyfhiu g to j^e/t -irito show?but i t cost/the Berryiths/ 200 in one week to get out. F ree shows come high.” / B ro. Hiilette, b u t put it ^!. 190 :«ud/ife;ft will be nearer Corlect* B u t/ ybUft /juSY/ Orighf i ° see^^ the busiries®^ our local physicians. “Ite rift that blows, ©tc. / -' /ftft/;TO/ft/7 Following is A'brirtial ... chacges which have dr .vyB: ft m-'/tewrift-toisft. sprmg?ft/'C^l/ arid E. M. Read to Akrbri* N, Y* ;/ Aridtomqri/tq;the//W.'/J,/'/Huttom^ W a ter Sfc, ; J . N. Bmith tq/ ;|h^ -''w ^' Hquseftat “ Fred Munson is to build three bfirns this„spring, one for Mr. ET. Matte- spn, the size to be 26x40, haridsqmely finished'np; one tor Mr* Johri Sowrirby, 35x75, which will b e a riredit to his plfice,' and one/ for Mr. Geqrge^Kmg^Tcyy 3Qx50, with a hip roof. : Mr. Murisori find Mr* Bowerby went to S&l&mriricaft i a s | week and'purchased a heavy cqrisighm©nt of lumber with which to begin the work a t onC9. ; ft. v: . '/.'/-ft';;/ • A social and sort of farewell reeeptiori was held for Rev, 3T. E. June arid Wife at the^UriiversaliBt parsonageft the l9tK. of friends orithebooaMou. Iri the W* C. D u r y e a ^ te^ W ^ s a w f tf t^ /^ S ^ l^ ^ f e to the Duryea block, M a m 'ate|^;1fe/H iTO •'Aft - E . Waldo to/ the T . J. Alton Center; Chas* ........... SqhhA farm* E . Root Harris to the /T*' ^ street; H, A. Post to the Ed; St.. Helena s treet; G*;S; GoleriteM Wallace house,, W attous street; Cam Sisters w *j *; -