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yf'i 0. BtTRGESS, ) If. D. -BURGESS. ) Mtofs and Proprietors NEWARK, NEW YORK, .WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1889. $1.00 Per Year. .Ni'Mftfift-; 26 3= im^jwimp^ Rise of the French- Revolntioa One r -\~—Hundred Years Ago. \ SKETCH W~*HE ETEN-TS OP tlW. {Copyright, 1SSD. by American Press Association.) \• ' \ \~\ V. '\;H : •• r:.' \\r - \'\ i The foundation of the government of the 1 United States and the outbrealTof the ai-st I French Revolution occurred in the name year, 1789, which gives to Americans an additional interest in one of the most memorable; epochs of modern times; American emancipation from Great Britain began, it may be said', . with the Declaration of Independence, which was sixnedin 1770, TheFtenef Hevojution\ really 4ntedatod4t by two years, for Its oarli- ' grandson of jthnIhfwmnnii Loin* XV ascended the throne. A great, intellectual upheaval marked the rejgirof the tetter monarch, -when the excesses of the court and' the clergy de- graded the kingdom and, the .church,, anil fraelseuwe uteirotioilsntff- -•*- represeutea^tFjf\?plta^ i * ! 8&Bs*eSii, BKferot,' D'Alombcrt,' Condiflac; Helve tiua and'other able and brilliant'authors. They paved the way for the political upheav^t that followed;' ' as thf^'crjmesof the two Louis against hu- manity broughjt'on the era of bloodshed and terror at a later day tad maderuiiothgr Loins • the innocent victim of their monstrous wrongs to the people. Those writers s of ten spoken of as the Encyclopedists,haye ijeeh accused by. the church of directly causiiig the horrors of the revolutions but they were really-effee- -• tivo in relieving tfee.,pOpufar^tnind'of .super- stition, and have\ been of incalculable benefit to subsequent generations. While they were by no means free front blemishes, they were, as a rnlp, earnest, geassoiis, pUaanthropie \ wjd-especiaUy anxious to;advance the race. THE ENCYCLOPEDIST $. \Few historicalcharacters have been more ' grossly misrepresented than VwltaiCe,' much of the nusrepreseatatiou having been deliberate, systematic and malignant. Duringhis..ehtire tive, unhappy life, exceedingly pedr.--tnr^Mr VCjMBtra^Sociai\ he promulgated the prm- cipleT<8f unjverwSf^sun^age^TSBli anticipat- ing by more than a hundred\ years our'-BiBO- laration of , Independence. \ Ho has toeen- credited with setting the fashion of humaH- itj. a fashion' that will last .as Tung as the world lasts,. - Me Would see in our republic, ygre be eonsftrms, the\:pr«crimij wrioptitaLof many of his theories,'held, in bis day, to be little else than dromms. it isdifflcult tpdigBr- estimate the, immnnse influenoJa 6 \haBLexty- cised. Diderot, who performed the bulk* of • the work on the, famous Encyclopedia, Tins man of rare mind and vasterudition,*' Not- • t ,,, • ^ . m. •_*• witJltetanding-. tlmt he wasealted an atheist *h«a theseasen previous. Tables were he had «larga,.heart and-a-liberal ha^id, be*- tog ever retoy to help t^ie poor or succor* the distressed. • He was a complete philosopher m_o«t things, and the wonderful iwork he edited, though superseded by the inorease^of khowtodge and. the growth of Scienoe, would not have been flnisfaed but for his inflexible TgnergyTSnd dvi&inuttlloiC' ' , D'Alemfoert,. apart frijm . beinr ft^great. m.i-^amatician and ah 'able- ^writer. • wis nOted_for his independence of rnind and be; nevolence'of character. Eis \Preliminary Discourse to the Encyclopedia\ U one -of^the- *trougastJind most remarkable compositions of the Eighteenth century His treatise oh Idyusiilirsrdnnfi wjfveja-hw wfts'tlye-and-twejit' iiiMaQJOfiJlisHJJL made epti^yJErom gorir~aild-'wi»e«ji. A Utile to the right created anew branch of science. When ^/.thi.r n celebrated jgit and .beauty, Who abandoned him at his ^>ieth, was prompted to acknowledge hirh o\ account of bis. rising renown, he indignantjy*'renudiated her He said thai the poor glazier's wife who bad taken care of him when pickedispes a found ling \by the police, was the sole parent he had' known. He. lived wird> her, ever honoring and helping her, for-forty'years..' Gonditfacv \Q&ndorcet Helv4tius fc Stably,- Button, Marmohteli La Harpe, Baytfa^&ior^ int. life, and 'during raiieu of the next century, he was portrayed as an. atheist and a virulent ..asfiMlant.. of Christiaau'Lj-jJHt is highly grobrYble, indeed,. tlidt fnauy persons now living havetlje Same opin- ion. SoUiius cuuid \befurther fi^jni the, truth*• \ He -kns the ! f foe a t. - d'og^Hftic . theology iiud~ tho- many-«nd caor- mous abuses ot ttw rTufgp Lambert, V; elTet; Duclbs, and hear^ all the writers designated; • 4s the.Ei ^flists were friends of- human progress and enemies of wrong of whatever degree, The'y so- enlighte 11 ed the public miiidiihat it Was enabled to .see\ DIDEROT, ----the foul Itijustice and injury heaped upon the country in the Bamo. of ecclesiastic and royal iuitbo/ify fhey instructed the penph? HI. tlie<r rights, ^_lniul sfirflMl.atjj^jjiprii to r«»Ut oppl'p^iou^ 'They were~£t)f answerable fee thy 'ISvign (•(' Tefror, for-they taught,^ ui!n:bn]ty'.'Mie tyrants «ifh whj'in Ki'ance had so 1\!!^ heeii cift'-Hid. were.answrtTalile, arid thuy.alone, t^ Tt «^asTindet V| U tins very huniauity \Inch ! had bikeh the place of iivfifl'eiviu-v„ cruelty I iiiid. despotism liinoi^j.^tite upper .ami ruling Lclassed\ which made the' b!<«idy ih-v<4uti\U \CDtTilEE.\ 7|.pus.slbie. As. o£tp;i liappai^Avh.-u tlit'evjl I li«d neiirly ceased, the penalty for the evil Roman Catholic church, so rife in his \day. '''came, and fell on the comparatively: guilt- But he had no nat«-'n<* ***» man y ^-^ ^ i less ' \^^ T<J«\n\. like nature, often delays, sociates, who denied- toe existence of God, ' to°»& she n « Ve '* oancels. the ivsult of bein« whQe they re^rded him with a mingled feel- °\ s and continued injustice. It is the taw ihg of pity and contempt for what they con- sidered his orthodox prejudices. Ho spent 'much of his large fortune, gained by the great sale of hisworks and his various spec a) lotions^ in helping indigent authors, in bjiild- •thg better luibitations tor the poor,, and in contributing to worthy charities. Any and every act of .cruelty and- oppres- sion of which he heard, whether in his own or in a foreign coutttry, aroused, his prxifoand pity and indignalioni and -he did what he could to relieve it. For years he labored - -feerWlyin the cause of Jean. Galas, whou .w%?;\y\Wy ^P^^SI'*^ 0 *.^ t w ^ had been broken on the wheel for a, crime he Winn* iymirnitiwd,\«nd whose fatnijy had •been expelled froin France. JHe finally Sue* ceeded in i'evei - sing t the\Oa*i&hs sentence and . _partjallx_ jndfmHifylBSihis^wad^e^M^fibife^. that violation, of law must, soon or latt', bring' bitter consequence^,, as the gi-ent French, Revbluei'fiii hideously pntved.. The wrong's' of tho people had beeu cr3:irig through ages for. redress, and repress was finally gained in the most savage fashion. If Louis'X|V and; < Louis XV had been as I loral, as considerate, as unselfish as Louis XVI, it is highly probable Ujat the revolution would not have tirourred; r-But-the great king, as he was styled, was a born despot, and in some ways a colossal humbug. His reign iuTbrilliahcy to the ; able~nieh Tie/had about: lnm rather .than to his own achievements. p. or H» NO». sm. They had a Fipet Exhibition l-ast jBatu rday.. . Although it' rmmedTair day Friaay arid the fore p«*t <& Saturday, the Grangejps were not to be baffled. They came with their wagons'loaded'with theiftihpicest-products, arid by Sfctur- ctey^B^pBe\^wa^.w^^fln«^ r \'We- shDuid judge thai the exhibit this year vised many of these attractions j also, to ;C\ H. Perkins |or Uberai and taste- lul eontWbutiohs 61 flowe\rs7 Tilr.\ ~Pef kins exhibited eighteen differetttvarie ties df roses and a beautiful clipping was,¥tn;7«©ine respeetSj- •of' the clematis, Raraona, which was originated by htak f; -J59B. S. •%, -IBEit liams also had a fine display, pansies being \his principal exhibit.. Among the jflowers \exhibited by Mrs. B. B. Foster. were^ah^yeryJlhfe^peciuiens *|%tno1i ^elfe\ (grown by Mf. Gr, Freeh; Mrs. -Fosler exhibited•\thirty-six bou- quets frdni her garden; ^O. -M. • laneojri and JCiX Welchfit laid i n alj parts-o^'the hall forvegfo and booths :we«L^&ly_.cotti strucCed ia ttie corners ior the fancy: work. A large floral booth was also erected iri the center bf the hail, with ff-tJBnner new. b^^tth the• wWa+pirrsori, of ^eneciTCaitl^^wIio with was a table^atMbleb was*TP»iritaj ^6U8«^a»d>yarS,-«aad«uby B. !>•• Foster, #nfirely of eorn-stalks. It was very onique'indeed. : A._ jftjgjS star, itiade of wll«at jind oats b^ MiS ij also-attracted -inueb at- te'ntiont; D. \B. 6nyder and O. T, liin- ep]n each exhibited the variety of beets iiised '.exclusively for greens, which were new. to a great many^, MT.V Lincoln also shoWed a ten-pound turjiip. The largest cabbage was ,ex- •liibited by ^: Pardington, arid the Iftrgest'ifflrnp^,\ weighing fortyiTTve pounds, by E. f.'AusHii. F. A. See jiad on exlubitiBn- two tAviu squashes. yy'frft two'Vy^rs-Tirfl. IjSgra-Van- Auken esfhibited the best hQuie-grown p.eaghes. Soine . str'aJUiea ho^ey,\ eauntsd -by Slis^Jkiuawe Meliiiigliliri) would take the premium anywhere. Myron §ee had ^ouie of the. largest- \pears\ we 7 \SboSfc e\-eF;'saw7 Tile table of caune.d gfiocV drew a great deal of had largest exhibits of potatoes. M. A. Soverhili exhibited Tstalktt of Dut- M; F OVER THE FALLS. [\rip to be Made Next #prtmr t n a RubbeiiBall. ~ - Uemuerat andVhmnicle. Another Niagara Falls navigator has appeared, this tune in the person of ' William- Dalayanti^of ButTalo, a con—^ cert human ostrich, who desburs live snakes and frogs, horse-shoe nails^ ton corn 11 feet 6 inches high. arid, marbles, and drinks kerosene oil as an ordinary human being eats bread He is 21 years old, came frouii Syra- cuTe, has been a professional swallow ef fer eight years, and is noW drawing 1000 a. week in the Arcade Concert Sa- loon in Buffalo. He wishes t o get |600 ^1 . — , , . . ,« week and in-order to accomplish bjsWttVwa8 present, accompanied by+i,. -.^ i I.j7-=-~-i-i- ; ™\ ^ „ jiT/ „ —T„ *—rr^~ • 'i.'.v-.x'\ T7; i_: ^ tltre, intends going over the Fails. Mr, and Mrs. Kirigyexhibited 14 kindfr - —— ---=-— 5 — ~ —---=—- -* 4 . -. , . = , .—.v-p-,.. •- -TV- •— T •-• He; has contracted with^t of,elegant peaehes, IS.kjftdsof *P^ye ar :R tt bbe r Company for a ball 5 feet SoJ^p>ars and several of tomatoea k mB hes1nienght-a^^ The euhnary tuble—bread, biscuite, i ., . . . . . . r •_ t. - \\ * . - - 7^ ^—.--,7 ! .which beintends going over the Horse- ca^es^ eookies, pies, roast fo-wls, |CThr. t - •.•.--•--\.•-. honey,; etc,^-was very tempting ; and • * A , i t .„ ^ .-» - noon on Wednesday^Jias^S-iSaA-He- not;lr«8-*e-thema«nruceHti«a«tedBigf--- r; r 1 ^p-r •... w .:. „ • •'. r. T ^ « '7. ^ ,-.7- f wished to go over sooner but the ball wlueh J, ^.Beeves sentm,, bodily, to ^ ,. . - ... .-,:,,, /' j. , . . ,. •\•- •\' ~ 'T * - ^ •, ,— -•';, cannot be completed before midwinter be ducted and devoured by the an(J fae ^ ^^ the ; ^-^^^^ trowel ,nthe evenj,^. __ ^^^^^^^ ^o-btrthday OBITUARY. Dalavanti will be supplied with'oxy- KOBEKT TURXHULL. 8 erl ^ OIU a patent reservoir invented fliedeath ofTRobert Turnbull at by Lee Rankin of. Buffalo.—4t-is cal the liOTHetof tlis daUgfuterrlilw. Tf.. W i ^'ated that the trip «ui be niade m Soverimi, on Wednesday last iri' his 35 whwtowtod-tlie reaerrrrtr will cpn 93d year, was the teWniriatioifdf a very tain «» 1,OHr ' 8 sl 'PP lv of **• He »»««' interesting jife^ Mr. Turnbull was- business and undoubtedly will be kill- born near Glasgow, l^otaandV and^; lls lt i& ^ 1 ] ed i t< i sc( ' how he can> es, within half a iiiile of the birth plaee of; «aps, sufloeaffon^ ^ - • Livjrjgst^inej thei__African. explorer, in ;1797. His-pe«ple brought him at the ~% a£e~of four to this-.country. His early lite^was spent \in Kinderhook^- and he was'a.school-iuate ofiex*PresideiitJIar- At the age of twenty : Distress after eating, huiirtbiiriUiicE hcnuT\ ache aiid ituliSestion are cured by HoodN Sfdvapariltn. - It also creates a good rtppe- tite. J The Democratic Delegates. The folio whig are delegates from the •town ;of Arcadia, chosen at the ^Jeriio^ attoitian. B. 1?\ Foster had on ex jtin Van Buren. hibitibn niilk from six Jersey cattle, jhe was inari%dto Miss Catharine 5f0r- that ni&de a very gooilshr»wit'ttf.- Theirisoii, with whom lie lived in liappyi best was from a Cow that tested-»il-il wedlock sixty-tliree years, slie-tiayingi _ ^ * i .. I.li.wl iiT l'vi«ll «!v nlilMmn Team I™, I, HUIlCail, \ HlOlltUIO-LowUnfft4V= 1^^llOHrd.* - cent, eivnuii ami the poorest was 1 ,died 111 lSbU. f>ix cnildren were horn' « v ; eratic caucus Friday afternoon: * pishlPr^t^irn^rltnperT.t^Wni. A. Jerikitis; David ft. Snyder. tJaunty--Mitriieti t-'liadwiefc,;^Jfoses- per cent. euaMu ana tne pi &oma.t«o-yeiff(iid..tl]!!t tested 1!» per,^. theiii, of wlioni only two. JJrs. Sea; cent, cream. IfWould be 4mpoafijbI{;lh?iOS of Zunch, and -Mrs. Soveriiill *,,,,,„ „ ., „.., .' , i- * \ ,..-• v,T M„_,.:',.„ F. Haiiiiii, I. W. Colbum, K, t)^ M-il to give an accurate hst,ul the tfiing-s^URive. » ( ;. „ , .. exhibited, -or tell whTt-Ij- was the best) Mr. Turiibttll: was a nobler-honestj ler ; ' • J '- Mel onalii. ^f-\eaVli^rk*tv7wrtliiWt taking iifTT^l at- - •• law s-uit in his whole life,7\ He became- r M^^n'^^ a-member of the ipresby terian church o-fi?ewark in 1K2S, aiid ct«it-irnie'd e«- teemed in its fellowship ;till. death. much space, t)f anti(me -articles; We noted the.; following : A reprint of the first pa- Long hefore lie aiea tne-country »«s wasted fiy unsuceessf hi wars, the prosecution of the Protestants jind hX exorbitant taxes, ^ He M* af tor he had dren. Jn the case of Admiral Eyng he tried Very hard to prevent theEnglirfh from carry- Iltgxiut-thejatlgineht of tlie court; but the Unfostuhatenian.was sacrificed to tho popu- •W-cSoafor. I'Volttire wasright in pronounc- ing it a legal murder, the story ot there- cahtatiop Of hi* religious views in hislasthours hasno-basis. He died^as^^ad*lfe»a^a-4nn--. cere ajuf \consistent thetstT hiff iastr wards , , - ^ ^ • ; — , , . - • -^ ~ being,-*•'*- die worshiping God,- loving- my ! had dig.uty, toct, courage, and kingcraft in fiHmrts, fnr^vin? mv enemies and detesting an eminent degree. But he was supremely was more- become pious—piety wasbigbtryrsvith him— tbaii while he was profligate'. They: suffered less when be was ruled by \his misti'esses tban when he. was ruled, .by the priests. He had, the art-of appearing personally'and histori- cally other than he was; and succeeded-1* the Q]dHn ratmirtg %itnself-on*on the nationi«nd on^EarppeJis- a super-hurnan soverergtu 7 He\ friends^ forgiving my enemies and detesting superstitiou,*' Of his marvelous aiid versatile gifts there has never been any question. Goethe declared hutf to bo the most brilliant man of letters the universe had pro Ineel. ( . Rousseau was\ singniariy tinbaianeedr- «e-j amsaoi jreoi*- was a sentimentalist-T-^he had the gravest im- perfections—but he certainly , cherished a; vain, egotistic, selfish, and built himself On the humii;iatioh of his realm and the impover- ishment and distress of his compatriots; When he was dead, at 77, Prance experienced a great per published iii'Ainerica, the Boston JXewsJgtttr, April 1~. I~(i47jtnd views, of the first railroad train in the Mo: hawk valley, 1831, entered by Sirs. M. A. Sowrhiil; teaj ot and tiirre.ne, bought of Ivd>on BlackinarJn^lS;^, and several other articles, by Mrs. A. F. Galusha; a set of bone-ha.ndled knives and forks and other articles, by Mrg._aL'._A 1 .-. Soverhili; andironj!, gridiron, toaster,\ hitcfrel,\' skiin'meT,- shuvet and-tongs, Very aneientrby Mr. Sherwood ; Indian slippers, bjr Kate Garlock i- bahy'jiL-Jiregs,y.-thirty-five ' warm and constant love_of his fellows, even while his con- Louis XV, with nothing like the ability of his great-grattdfsther, wajfar more feupersti- , tious, 'corrupt' afld duct seemed to con- Jicintfous, Be had tradiot.it . His tern- inteliigence enough peramept andprin- :|. tr, perceive that the BOUS6KAU. cipjes were so en- tirely democratic that he 'is^reputed to' have been the fa- ther of modern d-emoeracy. His sincerity is-shown in the fact <ha* be neglected all oppor- tunities for his own advanoeinent, oon- tinuing.'to the «nd of has mwbidlr t&a- RIPE POR REVOLUTION. kingdom was siireiy' doomed, ami his sole solicitude wtys that It should feist as long, as ha No| prince ever made, religion more uatfe-J ful7 i°T while he* tranSKreeSed every principle jot • di- cava, and carried ' Louis .xtvi . [Continued on Page 2.] years old. and other, articles, by Mrs. McLaughlin; r'hina set. sixty-three years, old, by Mrs. D. Burnett; doll's shoes and miiff* forty five years old, by Mrs, B. IK, Foster : Bible, 115 i^f r iry*#rs7^ ?irk\: -eottfe, sevi enty-five years <dd, by. Albert McNutt; coverlets, iW) years old.Tby Mrs. Klir- lmrdt; copy <»f Olney's hy-ihn bewk, eighty one years-^^d,- and of James: Hervey's ' 'By r TSrrs.;*Tf(iriie-fia, .4\ ite&vi?-; spec- tacles, eighty-live years old, • by Miss; Mc'ciellari ; looking-glass, sixty years old, and; candlesticks- with pendants, eighty years'old, by B. I). Foster. \The entire ito,rat arraiigement was v artistic, ami ,siidi as._tQ jhoyvue^erx AssemWy—'«tos : VV hittleton, -S. -jfr- foftn McNaniara; Jat'ues\ O'Coniiell, Ulias. H. Perkins. His Closing hours were peaceful, and a fitting termination of s o long and good a life. 'The buriai, conducted by the family pastor, Rev, A. P. Burgess, was mtl ;emetery. ^erbridge, HrekieHoqgh,.Tay Welcher;- The Hudson River Artist. Hudson Daily Register. Those-Wke- visited tfie state fair at Albariy7. Mind-the \Souvenir. M.oslh£ tfrended over by. Mrs,. Frank Peck, the May Welcher, Fisher\(jalnsha Johnny Clark, David King* Julia King, Louie King, (teorge Mills. ' ; -liepqt schools Mary L. Bloom teach- er: Senior departriient — Cihrence\ Humestbn, Willie- liearstyne, Jitnmie Jfiverts, Andrew Cosgrove, ileorge Fet» Villa* Thuristrjn, - Bessie Doiik, Anna \Hudson River- Artist,\ very interest- ing. • Mrs. Peck fe .well and favorably known• HQ tbltriste^wlio '.'do'' the Hud- son riveri the Catskill mountains and. , Kinderhook Lake Park? having; for ^hrison.I^tsey Toohey,May M&;Evoy y many years devoted her best energies and talent to the scenes and views of thoaC, localities,, altd- from the, inspira- tions; received, she has produced many very firie,pietnres. We_Jux>ticp that at the fair she was awarded first prize for landscape paiiiting in oil from nature, Reflections,\ 140 years old, j Her premium picture was \A Hcene in the Catskills,\ and Was so true to ua' ture that it brought* fourth special eommendation_froin the judges, and from the public in general. Her pro^ ductions-are truly meritorious and are eagerly-sought after. . v T^at-ure to the best advuntage. The, —^JWierty Bell, mjideL of frUitsand wild plants': and flowers, with 'a squash for the clapper, 4y«R ingenious, as.vyas the Log Cabin, with eaxpeti bench, table, Well-curb sweep and bucket, also fig- ures of matt-, woman and child, all made from cornstalks. . Much-er#it: is due t o Mrs. B, 1>. Foster, Wh.o. sufier- - -After-ansea diet, to prevent^ boil^Twud-as- stst acclimation, use Ayer's Sarsapaiilla, ^Advertiseis Of various Classes* of business, and parties desiring to sell or buy real estate, will do well to call on or ad- dress Gex>. W.'Muth,. Newark, N, Y., as he is making arrangements to putk lish a 12-page # jburnal, devoted to th iriterests. icse ijk^f's A awe-Cure stimuiates fhe4ivef,,aiid, • neutriilizes Hie malarial poison in the blood.\ ?uVe. WuriraaiU'd to cu\- \ Rolls of Honor. District No. 14.—Lizzie Mills, Willie ; MHlsj Luellajl'lark, Irvie Clark, Peter • - A3ft' Primary department,. Minnie Kelley, teacher: Nettie Van-Ryan, ~~Bthel Waters, Julia• Toohey, Sarah jNorris, Maffle rtosgro^e. -'^zr-'x .:;--.TZS \\~__Z'±^ \ r \ 'X»|i«s*|«FtwiH e*s. ' Tlie WrighfTFence riiachine, 'with a. sarupnjJoT'rRerleiice,- can be -seen at Bartle & Karnes' lumber yard. Every farnier^should see • Ihis- irachine and judge for himself the merits of the fence built with tlie Wright machine.. wl. *K» Bent. Anyone that don't care-to buy a sewing lnachine can rent one very rea- sonable by the week or-iuonth of M. ^E. Avery, opera house block. 24w4. Tuetfty years njro it was. a fact. that you had to die to'-win.' But in Life Insurance now^daySi • all is\ changed ; a man or woman need lose no jnoney nowj as tlujy take paid-up policies, or draw put i n oasU at .stated' periods. J..4s &Ai£6Cj<Agent,. - •cm