{ title: 'Lansingburgh state gazette. (Lansingburgh, N.Y.) 1880-1883, November 13, 1880, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn87070138/1880-11-13/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1880-11-13/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1880-11-13/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070138/1880-11-13/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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r ' i - i; S T a t t l b d i : L4N S il|fg^,t{pi/iT.0V .. tWigso.. BUSINESS PKOSPEHItY. A new cr» In the busineBe interoeta of : the country mtty he jrefy proiserly eeid A. B. i -• - s m t . : TH& g a I ^ ' t e ' s N e w iie a i )- i f s reco ^ a n d p r o s p e r i t y . The first isBuo of the G azette itrzuf- pifed September I8i IWS. Though under another name it was published long before that periodj and ever since the inaugural numher^of the G azette it has been pub lished continuously, without a break or suspension. ThuSi for over 82 years, amid the mutations of time, and the rise and fall of hundreds of journalSj the old time G a - zE'ttEhas preserved its journalistic life until the .present date. It has withstood : the nipping frosts Of adverse liiasts and ! the perfidy of false friendships, and Is to day rock^botlomed, rock ^ribbed and rich! crowned with the emblem of the great State Of New York, with our motto, “Ex-! pelsior.“ T|iis is fitting and appropriati intry muy he .very properly sai have dated from NoTcmber 3. We have passedi through tbe dull season that nature i _ ally and veiy wisely holpiigs to the Bum- Sine ;iuer months, and we how aiso iiaVe 'Demo< ; reached the end of the periodical political, contest for the election of the chi^ mag istrate of the nation, which has claimed no small amount of the attention of the busi given aa much time and, attention to the political questions of the day as during the lasti Campaign. But the battU States says truly; “Avno j history since the United Slates be« lion, has this people had so abi a his proclaination 25 as a day of isident of the United •AVno period in their and so universal rCiisOns for joy and grat- !: itude at the favor of Almighty God, : been subject to so profound an obligal and humi and prpteej for over font score years, the G azette ban been a htstorie record of State and lo cal events. We drop the prefix to the former head ing, as “ Lansingbujgh'’ appears below o n; the line Of date; and “Lansingburgh G a zette ” appears oil tbe; second- page, preserve the tioievbonored name of “The G azette ,” • . ' It is a proper juncture to make improve-; Our crops have been ments. The State and country has just ; passed through one of the most hotly con tested presidential elections known in his tory, resulting in a triumph for the Re-; publican ticket, in which the G azet 'CE and its editor and proprietor have borne an humble part, and as a consequence, business is boo.ming with thrift and enter prise. We enlarge the sphere of the old time G azette , and give to its potions a! live journal commensurate with the pro- greas of the age. The G azette will live and flourish as long as its editor and proprietor lives, and it will pass on to the future as a land mark of yo olden times, and amonument of modern live journalism, The G azette I s booming. Now let all its old and hew pa trons extend iis rapidly increasing circu lation if possible still more. We expect In our next issue to offer great induce-, Eients and benefits to the G azette pa- trohz- .The people now spiell out Nation With a big “ N” and we spell the G azette with i h ig “G.” The finger of time On Its dial shall st op. Before the QszkTTs'proves fatM, Or its promises drop. T he Hour remarks,incideiitaliy :Tbrough Joi^ Kelly the Democratic party fell froi its being a questb tbe people shall bo fed and clothed, ouri merchants are forced to seek new markets. in which to. dispose of the surplus, the beneficial results of which are seen in the : greatly increased prosperity of the farmers and manufacturers of the counti;y, butes- peoially of the great West ; in the large increase in earnings and renewal of divi- mocracy, and so they saddle everythini mds do not like to have rejected Dc- ddle every thing on (less their hearts, they jOuB Democratic admit that the people iuncy, and sc It John Kelly. j not seem to know that the pet sot like Bourbonisin, and i ibat the solid South shall :i ^louotry. D b . H owabd C bobbt comes out strong Bl^iast Barah Bernhardt. In announcinj a miaaiunary meeiinj “I cannot refrain ii referring to an unholy woman of shame who has come to this city on a publi stage. I hope none will so degrade then selves aa to encourage her immoraliilcs in •ny way ato~dotermined :uat.govern the irnhardt. In announcing •l ing lost Sunday, he said: 1 in this connection from T he bottom fact about the alleged con spiracy to ste.il tbe presidency is this; Democrats want a pretext for not paying I the election. Of course, lelieve e bankri lemocrats wani tlieirbets on the election. Of com there are a few, like Barnum, who 1 that the American people would submit to a nationalization of “ Garcelonizlng.’’ But there are few of this sort. The bankrupt betters, however, are numerous. northernrthern Dem<ocrats fHE no Dem are very i ions that the South should stay solid. ;; they have used the South as a cat’s- ir So many years that they wish the n to go on forever. If the South luts not had all the spi to continue solid. course; I it has only ly years that they forever. If the S sport it cares for, i to continue solid. On pure party grounds no Republican can object, for a solid North can be depended upon to elect a Republi can president every time so long as the sectional issue ia kept alii T he Boston Journal talks In ieulousei way almut Burnuin’s ridi 'counting out New York, “The Democratic party at large is not pi d to make the action of CommDsioi the right inport in preventing the voting c persons bolding tlic bogus naturalizalio papers of Tweed’s courts a pretext to dis franchise New Y^ork. There is a large element in tbs Democratic parly which dees not wish to avail itself of the fruits of the crime of William M Tweed to cure a victory they could ;not obtain the votes of legally constituted citizci Let the conspirators take warning. Gen. Garfield has been fairly and constitutlon- !y elected president of the United States. 1 by will be inaagiirated March 4,1881.” O ne of the most influential and repre- sentetlve journals in the South is the At- lant I Constitution, which thus calmly ac quiesces fn the popular will: “We would impress uponIII I fiuence of the Constitution, that the ^ o - those who fall within the in - ! pie off the S< electing a Democratic president or in con- pie o the South have no vital intercat trolingt would have been better for the whole coun try if Gen, Hancock had been electcd—- hetter for the blacks as well ns tbi whites. Blit wee proposese to make the best of Gen. Oarfleld if he ia controlled by the impulses' propo Id if he is of patriotism and statcsmani will reap ifs share of the benefits; If, on the other hand, he is pontroUed by the etretiuoui spirit of sectionalism whioh ah-' iiuates i b e i ^ feptitable lenders of his party, we shall endeavor, as heretofoie, to mallte the most of it.\ leiilation ick Billy:; Prohabl the war have time at no previoiis time since ness men of tiie country for some bly at no pri business men of ail cumpaign. been fought; and in questions have been low to business. t the butties have ail a siingle day thepoiit- 1 settled; Injure Gri and Kingf Ick’s foiolishness; iterview lihject to so profe i tbaiiks for His ibly to implore His et ity throughout all our borders; peace, or and friendship with all the; worid; ! obiigatibu viug kindness; icontiniied care Health, wealth and pros- throughout all our bordi idship w flrm.M^ faithful adherence by the great b o d y ll our population'to the principlea: of liberty and justice which have made our greatnees r s a nation, and to the wise institutions and stroiig form Of govern ment and society which will perpetuate indant that as to how BAKNUU AND the OTHER riBATKS BADI,Ti EUKT--THK GBOANS OF THE PERO- tTlb FABTY aODNP LDGDBBIOUB. ice November 3, tliere has been in the 'Democratic ranka, mourning, lumen and woe; The query is who “ struck PatteraoD?” which of Barnum’s mules kicked nut the brains of their owner and ti» other pirates? Who did it? Whoae fault wa« it? VS One-man power li^t New York? Whose aeif-wililoBtKings county? Waa lt ^iqn-i many’s arrogance? Did Irving Hall'play fair? Did Grace tiurtHancoek orllancbiBk':; :e? Was it done by New York tings or by the Interior counties?; Was It Watterson’s tariff plank or Hat fo the Paterson Guardii lew or iSenator Randolph’s iiiterfei Was it the blind obstinacy of the; South or the weak tuckling of the;| nbrtheni wing of the party ? Was it because Tildeii was defeated at Giiicinfiati, or be cause he sulked and did not enter with any heart into the canvasss? Did Barnum do it With his mules, or with his stolcti ' dispatches, or his forged 0hinese letter? ‘ Which organ injured the party by doing too much and which by doing too little?' Was It because of tbe alliance witli the Greenbackers In Maine or because refusal to upiie with them in Indit Which did most damage Indiana, the prostitution of the supreme court to Mr. Hendricks’ ambiti nomination of 'William H> EiiigliSh Vice-president? Was it one, two, dozen blunders, or was tiie whole businesr from the defeat of Tilden at Gipcinniah tlic Domiuation ot Grnce for mayor of New I thousand and renewal of di ids, and ih a thousi other forms that make themselves mani fest to the most casual observer. With a proper regard therefore, to nance, it is not presuming too much to say that the present prosperity of tiie country is only the beginning of a far greater and an enduring prosperity tluit awaits us as a nation, A NEEDED ENACTMENT, The recent Vermont legislature passed a w requiring the manufacturers of 1 alter, “oleomargarine,” to stamp goods with the proper name. The Elmira Free Fress saya: “The farmers of St, ^Lawrence county have sud denly awakenj^ to the fact that Mr. F. B. lurber is quite a»'qiuch devoted to oleo margarine 08 to their intereats, and is hot averse to milking a littlenioney on his qwi hook. At a recent meeting of the koari ip theii the beastly stupidity, nor stupid of one organ or all the organs, thst of trade, at Canton, in that county, ofSclai id in 1878 21.- statistica were presented; showing that in ■ts of butter from New York exports ( 148,016 p icrease |h 1870 the ex| were 38,248,016 pounds, 837,117 pounds, sbowiiig an increas 1879 over 1878 o f 16.410,809 pt Ends. Not^ Witlutanding this increase of 76 per cent, in the foreign demand, the price paid pro ducers was 18 per cent. less in 1870 than! in 1878. It also appeared that of the in creased exportation, nearly 17,000,000 pound.s, less than 3,000.000 were received ; at New York, from sources outside of that is, with increased exportatii per cent,, the Receipts were only 13 percent, greater than the preceding year. This leaves 15,000,000 pounds of sonie- tbing to be explained, which tbe custom house manifests show went out of the butter. The something. luniry a largpd b; by a speaker at the meeting, oleomargarine, and Mr. F. B. Tlmrber, the farmer’s friend, probably contributed a large amount of it, aa he was at the time maiMit'actuiiiig bustard butter at the rate of 300.000 pounds a week. The speaker in question urged the farnaers of that noted daily region to combine against the bogus article, which ho declared to be poisonous and injurious to everybody except generous and unselfish Mr. Thurber the other ip.mufactiircrs of it; and a titiou embodying the views of the dairy men Immediat-ly received the signatures of over five hundred farmers of Canton and the surrounding neighborhood. The petition is addressed to H. K. & F. B. Tliurber A Co., and recognizes with quaint CHrncstuesB the fftlherly interest which that firm takes in the guileless farmers of the country. It expresses regret, however, that these noble humanitarians should have’devoted themselves to swindling, or rather to the manufacture of counterfeit ter, even though they do so on the undund thatat thee counterfeitounterfeit u ‘aa new arti-rti gro th th c u ‘ new a cle of commerce.' significance, that the Thu fascinated with humanitarianism in behalf ley are with the desire of the farmer as •The petition comes from Mr.IIeptmrn’s own county, and therefore has a double sra of New York are not so are with tl to make money for theinseltes, and extremely odd that the farmers of i country were not aware of it long ago.' VERY AGGRAVATIN«. A pmniihent southern Democrat, who was 111 Wasliington on Thursiiay, said 1 the correspondent of the Boston Journal “If I had my way I would cast the IS electoral votes: of the South for Garfiel my way and make the tiling unanimous, liance with the northern Democ: kicks. We have done all we promised, poHiically, biit our northern party asso ciates have sold ua out or betrayed us. The northern Demnerats always consult their interests, and I am ip favor now of the South cdnsulting hers.’ M b . B arnum ’ s real candidate was Dr. Garcelon of Maine. Why not try to get the doctor into the White House? I f the Democratic party wants to start anew and start a reepeetable opposition, let it kill off its fools, to begin with. Bar- hum, for instance. Potm cAD incendiaiiisin, after election, is a more dangerous crime orgary mid mi BARNUM’S MULES KICKING. INTERESTING' AND GRAPHIC LETTERS. C. L. MacArthdr,. editor of the Troy N orthern Budget, # ith his wife is making a tour of Europe. A'series in - : desperate political gamesters, , __ ___ ______ 1,.^ _ ______ ' madness and mad schemes, tercsting letters from the^gtaphic pen of *Mac.\.haveapimafed BucsessiVely in his paper. Every griide of taleat has been tested in dcscriptiopii of the ‘'old country” anil the AmericahjteadeF of “Letters from Europe” has aintirEi tired in perusiiig such ; sketches; but weimiist say “Mac’s” grapliic Sat^ss bring forth thiiigs new and old in ly a very attractive way. His letter from :k Venice, Italy, is leaded down with rich ' gems of deS(-Fijptiye talent, and richly freighted with; the. bid wine of historical relics and landmarks of biden times, in luit to the public pal- tiew bottles uj I ufebudi foliowing, which; is of interest to tl zette : “'the: first-newspaper started in the world was started here. It was called the Gazzetta, from a sroail piece Of coin, ' the price a t which it was sold. The 'coiu ’Gazzetta’ is about one cent Of our money lb of a fraiir^a: thin, white sixpence. Ail the ‘Gazeltea’ in the world got their name front this, I went to an old coin collector and bought cne of the small coins; ‘gazmttaS.’ They, are very iana? scarce'now. T b e p n elhaveisorthedate le party ig; .1700. Any pnbU^r.,qf a ’Gazette’ in e supreme iheUiuted States may see from what the tion, o rthe nasae bf his paperjbri >* he will l for visit the Budget sfi^tum hereafte o, or half a! ited the building'where this firsi i businesr vwas pripted. it is i linn I \ vwas pripted. It is now ; ernment office, lichen 1 as to be entitled to bn called one grand puration of blunders? These uieuinong/ qaestions under disciissioa ih Demo- i lie circles and the party press, Wh? ,i did it? That’s what a milliou or more of fellows, who have just seen the offices they hungry for snatched away from them, hi- . Well, let the discussion goon. It is well that the (IlsputantB should free their nuiids,' fi- ami tiie cliaeces are that a good deal of truth will come out, to the ultimate ad vantage of the whole people But when verbauling of tlic ipaign to find! led, they will be no nearer the real cause tiian when they began. The trouble in all this pulling and bauliug is that they don’t look back it is all over, and the overhauling of the managcnient of the whole camj the. causes of defeat has censed, they ifter. I Vis- Irst Gazette occupied as a govr- I. When the first number was printed copies Were thrown out of the window to the crowd below a ta ‘gazetta’ per copy, and fhE.pcopIe tore tiie sliect in pieces and sold each piece for a ‘gnzetta’ hiukingthat there was as much virtue in in the whole sheet—which might began. Tbe trouble in all this ptiilii bauliug is that they don’t look be enough. It isn’t Mr. Kelly, or Mr. Tildf n, nor Mr. McLaughlin, nor Mr-'-Qn lall, nor.Tammany,nor8pIid iff, nor Hancock, nor English, Irving Hall, nor.Tammany,nor8pIid South, the Venice OwEett|’S first ed Statm and; DOW;'over 82 years old is more vigorous' than over, never having suffered stisnended circulation or life, hut thundered away’ tyontinuously for mnre tiian four score years. Last week we had the honor and pleasure of placing at its head that proiid nii4 glorious bird; the American eagle, theomblcm of union ami Jiberly now and j^bSTer, bearing on its pinions the triunii^hant American statea- I, patriot soldier;'and eloquent type of American instUutions, Gen. .Tanus A. They did; • toward it; • the fact that have to thank for defeat, in bis own way, their part the defeat is due after all 1 the party itself is dishonest, found out. is sincere in some things, and especial belief in the divine right of southern stiitesiuen to govern the countiy. The ican insdiutions, Garfield; presideut.elect of this great and glorious republic. THE LAl’EST BLUNDER. 'The Democratic .party is profoundly un fortunate in the character of its leaders If a coroner’s inquestisliould sit upmi its dead carcass to-day tiie Tcrdicl would liaveto , and has been carcass to-day tiie vcidicl would liiwe 1 ngof the party be, “died from Bn ■excess of blunders.” id especiatlv in And this rnlingipassion is.still dominan |; o f the gov irnment fbromth its aliiance with tbe Soutl ts chief endeavor to deceive the North as d the meaning and purpose of that alb ince. In thoiie twenty five years it has lardly done an honest act. It cannot show in all tliat period a single instance of deve tion to principle The only credltab pordons of its record are those in which it was 80 nearly suppressed tliat it made record. It has never revealed itself but at tiie expense of defeat. It is the pirty, not any one or all its lenders, that pudiated It isn’t Mr. Bariiutn, Kelly, or any other leader; it isn’t i pirty, not any one or al kt the people have just now I t isn’t Mr. BariiUtn, or Kelly, or any other leader; it isn’t the ly- ing. the forgeries, the mud slinging, or ahy one mistake, or the whole campaign of mistakes; it is the organized blimdi called tbe Democratic party that the con try kicks out, —^ “ -------- . - fount* —• \ THE \SOLID SOUTH” GRACEFULLY GIVES UP; While tbe rascally northern \Bump” of the Democratic parly are trying business to a stand-still ami to i ivii war by vague ami vain Uncriis of lit Garfied anil Animr. the rul- ,lhe \solid South’’ ccnntiiig out ( itgfr viile American; “This tide is somewhat of a flood tide. It doea the Republicans world of good, and as they ate a porti of our country, a part of our countrymen, we see no reason why they should laugh once more, and leave us only consolation of laughing last and best when tlic IiLst laugh comes in. It has been postponed too long, hut we rely greatly upon the turn in the lane. There was never one yet that had no turn.” Repnblicaiia need not worry tbcmselycE about the idle vaporinga of Barnum, The: southern congressmen will settle this dan gcrous trifliiigin short order. They know how naueh the dUpuled election of 1 cost the South, and tliey know that North IS not to be fooli blood is up. I with when BABNtIM'S LAST TRICK. It is not worth while for any Bepubli- can to be at all anxious os to Barniimis! last game to thwart the will of the people. It is too ahsiirdi Republican papers make a mistake in honoring it with a disem James A, Garfieid wjil go into the White House on the fourth of next March. If '^ Barnum, or any other idiot who docs not know wlien he is beaten, chonses to raise any difficulty in the way of inaugurating Garfield, it will be bad for the obstriic- tionista. but the inaugurating will go on, all the same. COUNTING NEW YORK FOR HAN COCK, , Wo hear some talk of taking away the electoral vote of New York from Garfield, to whom U-bcioDgs, and Cock, to whom it does not belong. If Gen. Oaifield lives till March 4, 1 giving It me cent Of our moni •-•ono-twentieth of a frahe^a thin, piece, as amall round p an old-fashioncd ‘Gazettes’ in I DON’T CRY; BARNUM AND DEM OCRATS-dHEER UP; LISTEN TO s THE SOUTHERN SONGSTERS. ■What drives Barnum and the rest of h the tranquil manner m which the; solid SoutU accept-s the situati'onv F(ir!inatanqe, such porten- ;tious talk as this, by the Richmond States one of the ablest organs of Virginia De-i mocraey, viz: “'Tiie announcninent tliat Hancock iiad failon far hebind in* New York city and Brooklyn was enough. It settled tiie question; The national De mocracy had been again defeated--defeat- ed. perhaps never to rally again an a party, I people rcceivedthe announcement with Calniness and resignation; Our own great victory at home was a baim for every other wound, and we could mock at a ca lamity so distant from us as the election r .Tames A. Garfield. ” The bare suggestion that the South would abandon the “ dessicated northern Democ\acy” to its fate, was enougb;to ad dle Bar.mim’s brains. ig that there waa as much as in the whole true of some raodern journals.' if the Gazette q f Venice was the oldest newspaperrspaper in thehe ^orld,orld, we arei happy in t W we a e that the Laiisingburgh C Venice OMMttg’i fir born 1 8 3 1 1 8 8 1 THE CULTIVATOlt f i O l l T R Y f i T I E i i m 'T H E A G S T O F T I I E A g d c i i i t u r a l W e e k l i e s . gazdvxe h APREMMINNMblEyERYMR in the Unit- intleman ingTassion ia still douiiiiunt. Not willing to accept the overwheliniiig th e p ^ ilg p r i l ^ r i y ^ d ^ r i t e i h B f e tion that tiie ^pubiicaa e was void because 1,t<poiUain.ed both “cap tion” and “ qndorsiainHnt ” Sliould any reeuguized aiii liori ty atteinpi whole people, and taeir elluiie to lliwa to act upon laughing stuck of the as' miserably fail in the expressed will of tbe people as they iiuvo in Uieir futile efforts to preveut l|io puuple from giving free expression to their will. Ills a blunder to talk about throwing sndoraed” Uallot; a crime ished if crime which would be suiiiiii! dierc that should larily pun- i he dou( out an “endoraed” Uallot; ami it would be a crime which Would ished if anywhere llii which is thus Idiotically talked about. Tiie piipiiiar wilt lias been legally and clearly ! piTrty That th^coun- “ Passed, and any man or any set of men the rv.;u!mi for it is who shall aUempt'to prevent the consnm- impaign, but in all its inattou of wliat the people have decreed 0 Jonah business; the i,g treated as an enemy of the fran chise and a traitor to the country. Bu the suggestion is a farce, and those wiiu make the suggestion are blundering sim pletons and silly knaves, BRAINS a n d GOMMON SENSE. THE 80IAB second THOUCllIT—WHEBE IS MUDB BARNUM? The following letter has been addressed to the Argus by Mr. Edgar K. Apgar, nienibcr both of the Democratic Sta committee, and of the executive commit tee of that body:. AtBANt, Nov. 9, 1880. To THE A rgus : A s there appears to be some luisiiiiderstanding on the subject, it is proper to state that there has been no meeting held since the day of election, either of the Democratic State committee; or of the executive coiiiniittee of timt hotly; nor tmve notices beebr sent to thejnembers of agy.eomnilttee for ahy such meeting in the future. Any action laken by the mem hers of the coiniUittee; whether officers or otherwise; is individiiai action, wliich the committee has not aUtliorized, and for which it cannot be held responsible. In »i> giavc; a matter as ealliiig into question the vote of New York in the electoral cob lege loo great enutioh cannot be exercised, the 'rhe only way in which any Contest could its be made, without even a shadow of prob- 8ble;8uccr“ - - ■ ■ ■ • the Rei— done. To ctiange the result in any other way more than 29,000 Separate cases of tiHuduleut voting would have to be proved board of canvassera will declare oilierwise than is shown by the faCe uf tlie returns, and my view of Democratic doctrine leads me to hold that Congress cannot go bf- hind the seal of the State to investigate fraud at the polls in tliC choice of presi dential electors. This being so, it seems T<)te of tlfis state cast f<)r Hii|i^ is. cal- tify even a slight departure from esrab Ilshed laws and forms to poUnt in Gen. Hancock, would take a iotig step towards Mexicaniring oiir governUient. Sheir » ilic s : ; 7 u r i ’S “ s , p . a \ ' $ pub utterance. Very truly yours, E dgab K. A poar , Defunct Democracy, hoa as many heads IS lega; tn fact, its legs as a centipede has lega; tn fact, will he liiangurated. Tlien and tlierei • r r » a m .. . n . f l A R l i S & S t i N , Importers and Dealers in Gold and Silver t i n i u m i i i i i ! . 2 8 2 E I V E R S T i E E f , T r o y . Next door' to National Exchange Bank. : JorreHpoiuit iiu P r o c e .s c s . e a n d irriiit-«F< i’in t i l t u r a l N e’i w - p a p a r to producers a 1 402, etc, Nori^l4\STO-Dafed*Oe^ ouiorc tUG util' u£iy oi a P tii hgxi N E W Seviis Machines; NOS. 6, 7 A N D % Are adapted to eveir grade of manufacture stitched goods and every kind at domestiosew iiiiiisTfiiiiiiis have been awarded this Company's Machines a all Fairs ot importanee since 1858, including the Paris Exposition of 18T8, over SO competitors. Sold cheap for cash, or by MONTHLY INSTAD MENTS, at the Company's pffleo, 4 5 4 P D I F 0 H S T . , T E O Y O. S h H T n , Agent. .1 FEW L O U L AGENTS WAKTEO. A o o ' r s A g l l O F S W n i . O . M e D o w e l I . McRoiiCGri Baiiler & £tcci Erclerl Room 11 , Coal and Iren Exchange, 17 C » n r i l : i i i ( U S f ., X c w Y w i'k . STOCKS liOKDS ONLY SOLD. A LECTURE T 0 YLUN& lE Ii LOSS «»F ................................ ■’DlscoTXiinii Of LYDIA E. PINKHAiyi’S TOBTABIiS OOMPOUITP. ThaPositive Car. __ For all Female Complaints. Tms PRSPAltATlOK RE3TORB0 TBB B~ XJkTUXUXi COXDlTIOKo <•* ARIQHT,BTR*SQT ---- * A!iDLrrrsxTXaSi IB BLOOD TO m B TITAI s POWBB O E O . Manufacturer ot and Dealer in F I N E B O O T S , S H O E S , R u b b e r s , G a i t e r s , S l i p p e r s And everything usually kept in a F irst TIass Bool aitd S h o t S i c r t , 6 1 1 S t a t e S t r e e t , L . A J S S 1 ] S G B U T ? G H ■ prominent cmnnpet the makers vbrspverV he sells, and wliose work is not excelled by any,.are tbe celebrated E. C Bnrts R. & D. Silyef. hmlm ai CoBsiRS. H ctm 'iritu'i* lire 9 laii iiird t*!uee, C 3 - E O . I i . 6 1 1 S t a t e S t r c < ^ t T . A N S I N G B t U f O T T . n Address the Pnbli.shers, THE 0ULVESWi'I,L MEDIO,* L 00.. 41 .anil Mre«'l N e w > o r k CUty; 2My Post Office .X .45S6. C. H. GRITTENTON^^N. Y-, Con’l Agt. R H A R R ISO N , Druggist. W A L S H i S I C H M O N D ’S H A T S T O I E . N o - 3 6 4 : I l i v e i ’ I S t r e e t . ■Where we will keep as fine a lot of U T S , I W , TSSN B U l ) EAffil, All the Latest Noveltiesi v m m & K i d t i H i t i i K i i . s S p IddressTHue&Cp., F L U N ir u H K 6c V N » i ItTAKINSa. I I . J . M A B O ^ s ^ & B O N , X T rS fl> K K ,T A .IC I i:jR s . Funeral & Furnisliins Rooms. No K4l S tate Street.FhnnixBIopk LANSINGBUROD N. \ L l i f l E l l T A K l A a H O U S E H O L D F U E N I T D E E ! In deciding to continue on in our business, w*. return our sincere thanks to our friends and Ni. public for the liberal patronage bestowed on ns for so many yenroin the' papt, and ask for .a con. tinuance of the snnie in the.futu're. Bca1ising.tli. great fall in the prices of goods in eur too, w . will sell all goods ai BOTtOn PRICES FOR ClSH! In our UNDERTAKING DEPARTMEliT espS daily we offer our services nnd goods at very much less than former prices. iSblldtlng your orders, we remain Bours, Ac.. p J . B - L A V E K B E B , Lansingburgn; March gflth. W». _______ HICHAEnwaiAB. OBAS, b. BiOBKOND. utC liA V K K ^ ' ■ BOLTON & SON'S B I T T K I I u A .L ,3S Madsfrom the FINEST MALT AND HOPS only.and proupuiiced'by competent judgesequai to Bass’ celebrated Bitter Beer, BF-Pure Home Brewed Ale and FdHer fef I family use, put up in barrets, BaU and lod s>,:ut«lN. I * oitaliona for travellers are , l of the greatest importance to pt isona who ; have to move about llie eouhiry on inisi- iiess or pleasure; “Just wiiere lo go” is what every man wants to know when he leaves home. Tiie Grand Union ttotel, opposite Grand CenirnI Depot, New York V R G I I . M. Y. City, is a very popular re.sort, liccause tiie ' . ......... . . ............ . .......... ' ' .... — flolel acconimoitaliona for travellers are , barrels. Orders by mail promptly attended to. the greaiestimportance to pcisons who ^BOLTON'SFAMILY ALtl--anperior to any Other ale-manufactured, 3 3 3 Rtate Street,