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NEWS OF THE WEEK, jused liuutt y «f tt»e Prlncl- —The President is spending the week in New York. —The net profits of Sing Sing prison for June were $5,000. —All the banks/at Lookport have agreed; to refuse trade dollars. —The State Board of Healtk will meet «t Ogdensburg on the 9th of August. —The Court i>f Appeals has taken a re- cess until Ootobe* ist, to meet at Albany, —LaBt Monday was the second anniver- sary of the assassination of President Gar- fieia. —Eight bodies Of drowned persons have been found along the shores of Staten Island durinjthe past eight days. —An accident on the Boohester & Pitts- burgh railroad, Sunday, resulted in the death of six persons and the injury of • • nine. ..•; ' ; • ' /,\•• .\..- . /; —The New York police have some evi- dence that convicts and ticket-of-leave men are being shipped to this country from England. —The Bessemer steel works of the Bethlehem, Penn., iron company are idle. There are conflicting statements as to the cause for the stop. —In New York city an agreement has been entered into by many business firms to refuse trade dollars, except at the cur- tent rate of discount. —Six hundred and eighty Mormons ar- rived in the steamship Nevada. They are v moBtly from. Sweden, Denmark, Wales, * England and Norway. The sex is about equal. —Richard Wagner, station master at Cornwall, Ont., was stabbed in the neck by a tramp he was attempting to eject from the station. He died on Friday; the tramp escaped. —f he Supreme Court of Ohio declare* the Scott liquor law valid and constitution- al except the second section which refers to leases executed prior to the passage of the act. —Two million dollars' worth of opium, in neat 40-pound Jboxes, is now in San Francisco bank vaults as collateral for loans of three-quarters its value to Chinese importers. —Daggett, the owner of the horse Bos- ton, who raced his animal against a cata- maran, Sunday, 90 miles,\ from New York to Stony Creek, has been arrested for cruel- ty to animals.^ —An exourslon party on a small steamer on Tonawanda Creek, N. Y., on Sunday, beoame excited from some cause, and all rushed to one side of the boat, whioh up- set. Fo^^e party were drowned. —A fwtfthitrain drawn by two engines was predp^Rted into the river near Nor- wallc, Wis., on the 28th, the iron* bridge having been undermined by the floods. One of the firemen was 'scalded to death. —Reports as to the business outlook from 79 trade centers indicate a mot© hope- ful feeling as to the future. The demand for pig iron has greatly increased of late, and prices have been raised $1 to $2 per ton. v —The Delaware & Hudson Canal Com-, pany announces the prices of Laokawanna coal for July, per gross ton: Furnace lump, $1; steamer lump and grate each $3.90; egg, $4.15; stove, $1.45; chestnut, $4.60 and pea $3.15. —N. S. Collinge, of Rochdale, Lanca- shire, England, started from Albany at ,10 o'clock Sunday morning for a six days' swim down the Hudson river. He is ac- companied on his tiip to New York by a friend in a row boat who attends to all his wants. , * —Richard F. Beirne, editor of the Rich- mond State, and W. C. Elam, editor of the Richmond Whig, fought a duel at an early hour Saturday morning. Two/ounds were fought. At the first fire neither was hit. At the second shot Elam was wounded in the upper part of the right thigh. , —The Commissioners of Emigration have sent to Collector Robertson the names of 28 immigrants who arrived at New York by the steamer Fnrnessia, who are likely to become a public charge. The Collector forwarded the list to the Anchor line with the request that the objectionable immi- grants be taken baok to Ireland.. —The Muskegon dock, with 800,000 feet of lumber, fell into the lake last week, pre- cipitating twenty men on it, into the water. Three or four of them are missing, but the men are Hollanders, and their names are unknown. A boy named Frank Barhordt was crushed under 40,000 feet of timber. —Gen. Crook has arrived at Denver en- route to Washington. He says the tele- graphic reports that the hostiles are again on the warpath are false. They realize that a further demonstration will be most disastrous. With. Nana, Loco and Bonito subdued, and Old Jura a refugee from his own tribe, further trouble is impossible. —The United States Mint at Phila- delphia is now turning out about a ton of silver a day, most of it being in dollars and dimes. About $5,008 worth of five-cent nickels is coined daily, which amount scarcely supplies the demand. Three- quarters of a ton of pennies are made daily, and the demand is equal to the supply. —The board of health reports to the col- lector at Boston that within the paBt six months the port physician has examined 23,630 assisted emigrants. Many of them are feeble by reason of age or other in- firmity for self-support and must be aided by private and public charities; most of them are without luggage and scantily clothed. —An agreement, in New York, has been largely signed by trades people, on the west side, to refuse trade dollars at the current rate of discount. Brokers are buying them at about ninety cents. Cigar makers, in the employ of Land <fc Frey, gave their employers notice that they would not, in the future, accept trade dol- lars in payment of wages. —Rear Admiral Sands, captain of the Dacotah of the North Atlantic blockading squadron during the war and participat- ing in the capture of Fort Fisher, who re- ceived the surrender of Galveston, the last rebel city to acknowledge federal authority, died in Washington last Sunday. He was bolto. in Maryland seventy-two years ago, I although a southerner remained true 8 flag. —The Chicago papers having refused to accede to.the demand of the printers for an increase of wages, action has been post- poned until October 15th. —Taylor's wool pulling establishment in New York was burned on Monday. Loss, $25,000. It is believed that the fire was caused by sparks from fireworks. -\-There were 109 deaths from cholera in Damietta on Saturday. On Sunday the number reached 141. —An appropriation of $15,000 has been made by the dominion government in par- tial aid of an immigration depot similar to that at Castle Garden, New York, —Two thousand persons have already fled from Alexandria in consequence of the outbreak of cholera. Great alarm prevails in Spain over the outbreak in Egypt. —A London despatch says that the iron trade is active because of the increased de- mand from the United States, owing to the new tariff. Numerous shipments have been made in orders to take advantage of the new scale of duties. , —The convent of Villa Marie, at Monck- lands, Canada, the interior of which is rapidly approaching completion, will, it i; said, cost about $1,000,000, and will be one of the finest buildings of the kind on the continent. —For the seventh time the bill permit- ting marriages with a deceased wife's sister has been defeated in the British Parlia- ment. Americans can hardly appreciate the stir and commotion which the proposi- tion has created in the House of Lords and in the aristocratic oircles of English society. Items «f Interest. Facts and Incident* from Fa r and Near* —Twenty thousand persons visit the New York postoffice daily. r-fhere is to be a Baptist resort on the Sound, near New fconuC\; Oonn « —Mrs. Langtry will leave for Europe on the Alaska on the 24th inst., to be absent about two months. —Four Alderney cows are kept at one of the Saratoga hotels for children, and fam- ilies make contracts for so many quarts per day. —The Illinois supreme court has decid- ed that a contract made on Sunday is just as binding as if entered into any other day. —Horatio Seymour was a large con- tributor to the memorial tablets just put up on the Schuylerville battle-field, near Saratoga. —The Fenwiek Hotel, at Saybrook, Conn., whioh is midway between New York and Boston on the Sound, has passed into the hands of the Lelands. —Petroleum V. Nasby is to write a vol- ume of European travels a year, for eight years, for his Boston publishers. NaHby is as bright as he ever Was. —The tin plate manufacturers have or- ganized an American association, the ob- ject of which will be to develop the tin plate industry in this country. -The reduoed taxes on oigars do not benefit the smokers, who continue to pay the old prioes. The cigar-makers the re- tailers and the manufacturers divide the >3 remitted by the government. —Senator Edmunds was surprised at the welcome extended him when he entered the harbor at Victoria, B. C, a few days ago. Salutes were fired, flags were thrown to the breeze from all the flagstaffs and the British shipping in the harbor was gayly decked. —The Prison Association of New York intends starting a trades farm, where crim- inals who wish to reform, and especially discharged convicts, can learn a trade and work their way baok to respectability. It appeals for .funds, and ought to have them for so worthy an object. A Connecticut Cyclone. Fourteen Lives Reported Lost. The small town of Cromwell, in Middle- sex county, Conn., twelve miles south of Hartford, was visited on Monday afternoon by a oyolone, which caused terrible des- truotion. There is not a building in the place whioh has not been more or less wrecked, and the town is practically blot- ted out of existence. Fourteen lives are reported lost, and scores of people have been maimed. VIOLENT BTOBMS AT OTHER POINTS. At Williamstown, Mass., Monday after- noon, the new college gymnasium was wrecked', with a loss of $6000. Many bams and trees we're blown down through the town. In Connecticut a car house was blown down at New Haven, and thousands of panes of glass broken by hailstones at Mid- dletown. In this State, at Binghamton the Catho- lic church and other large buildings were badly damaged and many houses were un- roofed. At Port Jervis the Catholic church was blown to the ground, the Erie freight house demolished and fences and small buildings were demolished. The storm broke over New York city about 6 o'clock Monday morning, sweeping through the streets and an unfinished three- story frame building in 142d street was blown down. Also the front walls of Miner's new theatre on Bowery, 75 feet front and three-stories high, fell inward and knocked the rear wall out of plumb. It is liable to fall. The workmen had all left. The Bible Revision Failure. They are selling editions of the revised New Testament now for whatever it will bring in ounces and pounds, in New York. It was a stupendous failure. No one would read it; no one would buy it. Booksellers have had enormous loads of it they cannot carry, and so it was sold as old paper to be turned into vats in the paper mills and soak- ed into pulp. A fair edition was sold when the book was first issued, to people who were anxious for curiosity sake to look at it, but as soou as their curiosity was gratified the sale stopped short, aud it has never started up again. Half a dozen schemes have been tried by the book publishers to get rid of their useless stock, and a great many have waited patiently in the hope that some genuine interest would be manifested by Bible readers in the new version; but they have all been grievously left. The book is commercially good for pulp and nothing more. Many New Ideas In the home core of diseases, accidents, and uow to treat them, and many Mats of value to the sick will be found in Dr. Kaufmann's great Medi- cal Work; elegant Illustrations. Head two 3 cent stamps to A. P. Ordway & Co., Boston Mass., and receive a copy rrce. The Latest News. Seeing: Her Child Bebeaded. The three year-old child of John Darby was beheaded by the cars at Hoosick Falls^n Tuesday. The mother saw fifty cars pass over the body, and carried the head in\ one hand and the body in the other home. Decrease of the Public Debt. The debt statement shows the decrease of the public debt during the month of June to have been $18,098,201. Decrease of the public debt for the year, $137,823,- 253. Striking Miners. Three hundred copper miners at Ely, Vt., struck for their pay, which is two months behind, Tuesday, and broke into the min- ing company's store, stripping it of goods. Wednesday they paraded the streets with riotous proceedings, threatening to demol- ish the company's property, creating great excitement. The J>ntle Dollar. The Pennsylvania Senate passed a reso- lution on Tuesday requesting Congress to make the trade dollar a legal tender. Launched^ Death. A Card. To all who are suffering from the errors and Indiscretions ot youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c, I will send a recelpe that will cure you, FREE OP CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America, send a self-addressed envelope, to the Rev. JOSEPH T. IXMAN, Station D., New York City. . 32yi |yi3. Spear has Just received the largest and best assortment of Hats, Caps, Trunks, Bags, Umbrellas, Canes, fine Kid and Driving Gloves, and Gents' Fine Furnishing Goods ever offered In Clinton county at wholesale and retail. MERCHANT TAILORS. Photographs. The great success of the Instantaneous Qella- i tine Process whlcn HOWARD & CO., has worked since last February, has given universal satisfac- tion in tne taking of enildren and nervous peo- ple's pictures. They have now adopted it for all work whlcn produces much finer results and at lesa cost, and enables them to give more pictures Of a superior quality f©r less money than any place in Northern New York. Gallery in Vilas Bank Block, opposite Post Office. Over Fifty Persons Drowned. The new steamer Daphne was launched Tu«Bday afternoon in the Clyde river at Glasgow. She left her ways at a very fast rate, and when she gained the water she rolled from side^to side. The persons on board, fearing that she Would capsize, ran to and fro. The vessel finally reeled over and nearly disappeared beneath the water. Those who had maintained their positions on the portion of the steamer not submerg- ed did their utmost to save those who were cast overboard. At the same time boats hastily pulled to the rescue and to assist in the work of .rescuing, and sucoeeded in saving quite a number. It is known, how- ever, that there were fifty persons below in the Daphne when the vessel went over and they must all nave been drowned.. A diver states that the companion way of the steamer is blocked up by a solid mass of bodies, 1$ appears that the men who were ai wo!* WW when the ship went over rushed from then? r ork «* b «°« m 6 jammed in the passage way. Some of me 1 bodies still have tools in their hands. The diver thinks there a.re still in the vessel at least as many corpses as have already been reoovered. - Forty-one bodies had been found to Tuesday night when darkness stopped the search. Divers say they felt many more bodies. VJ. ^phur.which makes Um _- Greatest • Blood Puriaer/ * known. I>onot ever take BLUE\ PILLS morrow, * Try'a Bottle To^Dayf Are yon low-spirited and weak, or Buffering from the excesses of youth t If so, SULPHUR BITTERS Will A. P. Ordw»7 4 Co., Boiton, A Novel Spectacle. A Bridegroom Spanked b> His Pa- rents* The novel spectacle of a man and wo- man pursuing a seventeen year old boy up a street and belaying him at every bound with a clapboard and willow switches, at- tracted a orowd of people on M. street, in Washington, last week. The boy was Er- nest 0. Lowe, and he was being spanked and switched for getting married. His father is employed at the navy yard. Er- nest procured a marriage license, stating to the clerk that he was over twenty-one years old, and in the afternoon was mar- ried to Rosa L. Buckley, a damsel about his own age. Later he called at the paren- tal domicile and introduced the fair Rosa as his bride. The surprised parent said nothing, bfct disappeared through the back door, and returning with a stout switch Ordered the young woman- out. He then began to belabor the boy who stood it for a moment, but soon broke away and ran down tee street, the father following, ply- ing the switch and ably supported by the mother, who had procuried a clapboard which she laid on with vigor. Ernest was finally captured and taken home, but an hour later joined his bride at her father's where they were serenaded by a brass band. Home Items. —\All your own fault If you remain slok when you can Get hop bitters that never— Fail. The weakest woman, smallest child, and sickest invalid can vise hop bitters with safety and great good. —Old men tottering around from Rheu- matism, kidney trouble or any weakness will be almost new by using hop bitters. —My wife and daughter were made healthy by the use of hop bitters and I recommend them to my people.—Metho- dist Clergyman. Ask any good doctor If hop Bitters are not tne best family medicine On earth. —Malarial fever, Ague and Billiousness, will leave every neighborhood as soon as hop bitters arrive. - —'.'My mother drove the paralysis and neuralgia all out of her system with hop bitters.\— Ed. Oswego Sun. —Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bit- ters and you need not fear sickness. —Ice water is rendered harmless and more refreshing and reviving with hop bit- ters in each draught. —The vigor of youth for the aged and infirm in hop bitters. BANKING HOUSE HENRY CLEWB & CO., [Next Door to the Stock Exchange.] Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Cotton and Petroleum bought and sold only on commission for cash or on margin. Deposits received. 4 per cent, allowed on dally balances. Member a of N. Y. Stock Exohange, N. Y. Mining Exchange, National Petroleum Ex- change, N. Y. Produce Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade. Private wire to Chicago: MONTEzcMA, cayuga Co., N. y., April 1882. heumatic Syrup Co.; Gents—I feel It my duty to let you know how much I have been benefited by the use of Rheu- matic Syrup within the last three weeka I have been a great sufferer for the last six years—much of the tune my limbs and hands were so swollen that I was unable to help myself or more without help. I have used many external applications ana liniments, which were warranted to cure, and some of which did afford temporary relief, but the pain soon returned, more acute and ag- gravating than before. I am fully convinced that, to effect a permanent and lasting cure for rheumatism, the liver and kidneys must be reg- ulated. Talk the Rheumatic Syrup has done for me, and now I am as well as ever, and am in- debted to you for .this valuable remedy, which is sure to have the largest sale of any medicine in the market, as soon as its merits are known. I am truly yours,. MRS SAKAH DENHIS. W~A good name at home is a tower of strength abroad. Ten times as much Hood's Sarsaparllla used in Lowen as of any other. THE NEW YORK MARKETS. Government Bonds* Bid. Asked. Money 2 v U.8.Reg. 4)£ 112?^ 113 IT. 8. Coup. AX m% 113 U. S. Reg. 4 119^ 119& U. S. Coup. 4 119'^ 119# U. 8. Reg. 3'S 108# 103X U.S.EX. 102tf ...V. Currency,6's 131 Tne Hop Market. Hops have been unsalable at Malone this week at prices asked by holders. The Palladium hears of no offers above 35c. per pound. There Is as yet no general demand, Local Notices. —'•In no other medicinal preparation have the results of the most Intelligent study and scientific inquiry been so steadily and progress- ively utilized as in Ayer'a. Sarsaparllla. It leads the Hat aa a truly scientific preparation for all blood diseases. r No injurious effects can follow the use of Ayer's Ague Cure in the treatment of malarial diseases. It contains, besides a specific and un- failing antidote for miasmatic poison, other rem- edial agents which unite to expel the poisonous humors, purify the system, and leave it in a healthy and relnvlgorated condition. r *No female should attempt the toil and drudgery of washday, when it can be obviated by the use of Jamea Pyle'a unrivalled Pearllne. '\Dr. Kline'* Great Nerve Rest«rer la the marvel of the age for all Nerve Diseases. All fits stopped free. Send to 931 Arch street, Philadel- phia, Pa. 47 Jend two 3c. stamps to A. P. Ordway & Co. Boston, Mass., and receive an elegant set of fancy cards free. Notice. H \AVING secured a f nil stock of the best coal, . fresh from the mines at the lowest price it can be bought, we are prepared to furnish any size wanted aB low as any. With men at the yard at all times whose special business it is to screen and load teams—with new improved Fairbanks scales—with careful men to deliver, and close attention to all de- tails, we ask for a fair share of the coal trade. Give us a chance to deliver when coal is dry and screens best and we will give clean coal. Orders left at the Delaney coal yard or at A. Williams' office, or by telephone to either place will receive prompt atten- tion. WILLIAMS & WILOOX. June 19. 61 HANDSOME AND DURABLE CARRIAGES! OPEN AND TOP Buggies 2 TR01HBL¥ & BARNARD No. 149 Margaret St., PLATT8BURGH, eep on hand the very latest styles, and warrant th< rorkmanship to be first-class. CARRIAGES MADE TO ORDER. HT*Call and examine our stock. Pittsburgh, June 8, 1863. 59m2 Farmers, Attention 1 HE UNDEB8IGNJBD WOULD BE8PEOTFULLY X announce to tho Farmers ot Clinton County, that we have the Agency for the following named FARM IMPLEMENTS! All of whioh are of the latest and most approved patterns, and are warranted to gire entire satis, faction. The \CHAMPION MOWER,\ AND ALL REPAIRS FOB SAME. Tbe \Wairds\ Chilled Iron SULKY and HIND PLOWS ! The \Electric\ CULTIVATOR! The \Yankee\ HORSE RIKG ! The \Automatic\ BAND CORN PLANTER! Iu offering the above we feel confident that no better can be found, our aim being to sell \THE BE8T,\ and would simply ask for our goods an \Examination and Trial,\ which we think to be the best test of merit. All of the above goods may be seen at the store of F. E. PIERCE, M0RRIS0NVILLE,N.T., And any communications addressed to us at that hat place, will receive prompt attention, VAUGHN & PIERCE. (I) 0 CD 10 B I*. FRANKFIELD'S Temple of Fashion.! New iifltf Elept Store, Owsite VILAS BanK, PLATTSBURGH, IM. Y, WHOLESALE. RETAIL. o Q LADIES We Cordially Invite You all to come to our store, and in doing so we wish to state that we are pre- pared to give yea a welcome that means somethicg; and prove as to what it means. It means that we shall show you the most elegant and complete line of goods yon ever saw. It means that these desirable goods will be ottered to yon at prices lover than you ha?e ever known, It means that you secure better goods at lower rates than oftn be found at any other place in all the oonab^ round. These are not mere words, but facts whioh we stand ready to demon- stratejwhenever you see fit to give us the opportunity. 500 doz. Assorted Hats, 200 boxes Choice Flowers, 100 boxes of Ostrich Plumes, Tips and Pompons, 2000 pieces of Ribbons, 100 pcs. Satins and Velvets. The immense stock we carry in the above goods, enables us to buy at least from 15 to 20 per cent, cheaper than any other house in this section, therefore, by selling cheaper than others, we do not intend to offer any impossibilities, bat only give our customers our great advantage by baying in FAERYTHI\G INFANCY GOODS & NOTIONS! Jouvin's Best Kid (Moves, Beal Hair*.Switches, Frizzes and Curls, Corsets from all the best known Makers. Bargains in Hosiery, Ladies' Underwear, Lisle Thread Gloves, Novelties in Frillings and Soarfings, Handkerchiefs, Guffs and Collars, great variety in Neck Runnings, Children's Collarettes and Lace Collars, Frenoh and American Gim- pine Laces, Frenoh and Spanish Laoes in every variety, and many other goods, too numerous to mention, at prioes never equalled. Infant's Cloaks, Dresses, Hoods, Caps, in endlesslrarietf* Bergmano's Celebrated Zephyr Worsted, 8c. per ontoee.} Every ounce of Wool warranted to contain J20 Skeins. Wools in Skeins and . Balls, of every description. H Q OUR SPECIALTY ! OUR SPECIALTY! BLACKfA¥D MOURNING DRESS aOOJDS, SILKS, SHAWLS, DOLMANS, PARASOLS, BLA0K 0RAPE8 FOR VEILS AND TRIMMINGS ! We feel quite confident that we can offer these goods, being our specialty, 25 per cent, less than equal value can be obtained at any other Store; in fact anything in the line of Black or Mourning Goods. Ladies will find it greatly to their advantage to examine our stock before purchasing. In presenting the above advertisement for the consideration of the Ladies of this section, we would reapeotf ally remark, that we trust it will be aooepted by each reader in the spirit in whioh it is presented, as a personal invitation to all in need of anything in our line, to oall and see what we have to offer in the way of new fresh goods and low prioes. New goods added as soon as they are introduoed into the market, and • effort made to make our establishment attractive for everybody. Respectfully, L. FRANKFIELD.