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• The troubles in Egypt OC(mpy a good deal of at'tention at present. England seems to have the happy faculty of interfering in the family matter~ of all small nations. If ShP strictly attended to her own ~· fai;rs. the present war would un doubtedly have...been avoided. -----1-·- ---- Senator Hill could have no better €pitaph than his remark the other day whee talk:mg about hi-; publiC' career: \Othet· men may have serv ted Georgia more brilliantly than I. None ever sN·ved ber mor\ nnflelfisb- Iy, or defended he1· more fearlessly.\ agita1;10n; i:lJJt ·is nut au ng~ressive man, and treu.t~ hi~ \r>j:iot>Piit.< w1th sNf restt·t iut. (•otutc·8y m1d tht-> quiet dignity of the ~chobl- am1 g~nt.te man. His tlr~t <ltpl•Hlllil\ ·pvSltion was that of !llJuist<-\rto ~p t•n. -Pl'es ident HayeH gav.~ him ht~ J.H'est>llt ~p pointn1ent. m wllH h.unt1l tho prese11t trouble COI1C>'I'Ilin,..,; thP lrtsh Ameri can \suspec:ts lw acq u i w•d h imRelf in a ma1mer v. h1eh ~'\ ttdh d 1n,. the lJl:\ited SLatPI' :tnd HHrn .. •l lnm a re ma1·kabl<-' o.:iPg-J·ee of p. qJula nty in England Tbi::; iwl1•e,J Is f'tlll at it'<l height, although Ill th~> United King· dum af! here public opiuwn 1s divided according- to th<:' oppo\i n ~vi,~ ws t.1kt>n o.{ the \suspt>ct'' difficult~·- -------.- Seth GreFn, !.Hr. Green i~ a n,ative of Rochester. New York St[lte. II•) was L0rn in 1817. * * * Speak lDg of won~v suatttere. r~mi11d~ .JJS that Prof. Ben_~on, wb,o i~ 'ooo to take np hts abode m OleatJ, is r~ported w be wen- fixed, lor a teacher. A Franklinville wan t.old us th~ oth~r day, that Mr. Benson was reportetl to be wo.rth at least $30,000. ''He is a good bn:~ine\s mnn,\ said fill inf9jwant ''and he has judiciously invested luHaaviDg< where they would do !tim the most ~ood arad,\ added the gentleman, who ens known him fur twenty y~ars, \be i• jn\t as good at teachil)g as he is at looking after his own He has few equal• ia the ~tate.'' *** I present aboYe a very accurate portrait of \The Man A bo~t Town.'' Many wiii no doubt re-adily recognize in the cheerful physiogomy, the line> of an old friend who lias for many years been engage<! in taking noteR 1 and ob>eryationA of many things of more or less interest to Olean peuple To all, I say\shake that the resumpt- ion of m v untutor<ed Faber may 11rove of some interest to your thoua&.nds of readers, as well as an agreeable pastime to yours truly~ As a ''Man About Town,\ with nothing to do bnt to bottom chairs, and listen to the remarks of m_y fellow loaf~rs, l' may -occasionally learn tbingo that wou)rl As a Man Ahout Town, I bear a guud .deal abou~ the PhelT>s-Jewell ditliculty, e-cape yonr reporter'\ eyes and ears. If I ' do, I shall nut heSitate to jot tbe!L down talk<!d upon the •tre•ts •nd in stores l and officee. 1 regret to \'e the tronbl~ for the edificatton of the world in r~nera, 110 d the Olean pullhc in particular. arise. I have always luok~d upon Mr. ~ ~ Phelps a< a young mftn of much shrewd- * ness and abtli1y, and I cannot but ti1ink he This iR a great yea!' for circuses: 1i ttle and bi11. Machias aQd Hinsdale, and Ceres have just had one. \Sam'! Q{ Posen\ Curtis is only 28 years old. He is just about $28,000 better otf since he bas struck Lucky Sarn'l. John Gilbert, the ve.teran actor, is seri- ously ill at his summer cottage at Manches· tet·-by-the-sea. His family are amdou8, but entertain hopes that lie will rally. Mme. Belle ('ole, formerly ofJamestown, recently make a great musical lut in the new comic opera \The lVIerry War,\ now being sung in New York by the Norcro~s company. T1rue changes all tlungs. VanAmburg's show was once the l~acling traveling nJena~ erie in ti1e land. Now it is going tlu;pugh the country the \snidest of the snide,\ ac- cording to all reports. T!Je fund raised by Mi~s Emma Abbott, Miss Clara Louise Kellogg: and o_ther artislll for the familx of Conly, the singer, who was drQWn~d in a Vermont lake while the Kellogg troupe were in that state, reached $4,500. ~ican party We are told why hi:' should have joined 1t twenty-six years a~o, fifteen years ago and eight years ago. Curio ugly enough ·nQt\a word is said as to why be ~:~hould have Joined it ten years ago. If the files of our contemporary of The habit the American people have of has embarked upon an. unrl<\rtaking which exaggeratmg everything, is proverbinl, and will eventtHIIy ruin him in h'is profession. this habit prtovai-ls especially among uil Mr. Phelps mn~t understand that the aigb peapl:e; In the- oil business when times reputation which Pnch men as Hun. E. D. are good, mo>t of us get the !Dip!e~sion Loveridge, of Cuba, Hou. W. H. Hend.er-:. ~S::~~~=fi=-hthr.a>:tltiiblietyva'iir;ee':\Vla~g~of.o\ldWfrde'.e!lal:l Tib~e~~tllefl'r ll't_hda~l\fF.t=;h~r~yii:j:~~~~~~~~J~gdge Barker, of Fredon· now enjOS!S a nuturiety w1de as civil- M~. and Mrs. W. J. Florence have finally determined, it is said to continu~ upon the stage next season, and it is therelore to be prelUttped that the furmer bas abandoned, at all events for the present, his diplomatic imagine eve!'ytl1ing JB going· to the bad, and The managers of the Madison Square ization. Pi\ early expe1·inwnts were in the taking of ti::;h for markPt by eve-rvbody i~ going up, bnr we notice that oil men as a rule stand hard times a\ out a11 the best methods. tl!lcl w,·re 1nude in by icing years of practice cannor be torn Theatre ba ve engaged for next season 148 down ao easily a\ lVfFt\'Phelp•seem to think actors and actresses, 13 of whom have been The id<>a that theoe m£n Blwuld embarK in well as any clas~ in 1he world, In sp!tP. ot the water·s of Lake Ontario aqd <ch their 'extravagant habits,\ as you claimed igan. After twentv·mne Yt' 'H in article a few week8 ae,o. Since .the - prominent stars. They will have twelve a conspiraey that involves perjuz·y and companies 011 the road, and their salary list fi:!!,Ug.J_is simply preposterous. They are ~~~-:that era..:w.ete examined many excel- lent rPasone:why the \young man\ should never miYre nave anything to do w1th so corrupt and dPgPnerate ;m OI'ganization. 'l:he Trzbune has the busiues,; Ill thll year 1 64, ht>:_J__L!h<l!'l'\t-(fflw-t'~~iJ-ennmt, bought a portion of Galedon· C! et;k, and began the artilidal p ova~atwn of fish. H1s first Pxpe?{nents Wt>re with brook trout, aud ~ulte<l in the discovery of the J ry .illel hull ot the impregnation of sJYl'wn am! other processes of less iJJ'l'p'Ortance- TllrE'e yearH afterwaru::t.~ the New England will ~mount to $7,000 a week. nut t-he men who have to resort to t]lose ...,.,,-J,.,,,.:~; ... .,.,rt methods to gain \ucce.s for their client\ Accordmg to the French law,M. Damala, folllld it convement to bt> on several sides of the fence in the last ten year::;. F1sh Commission induced him to at- .Now and then it becomes our sall and tempt the artificial gropogation of -lli'iSoug1it duty to give an occa~ional Shad m the CunnPctieut Rtver. He word of advH·e to some contempora succeeded in th1s, though mauy bad ry,.groping in darkness. Vi' e do not fa tied_ \Vheu, m the year ~1868, a know that GY-l'---Words of advice are F1~ltery eoitJmiHl:lion waH _ap'p_9mted always l1eeded, but the~admonitwns inN ew: York State, Mr. Green became are none the less freely given. V.' e onP uf thE' thrpe l\nnmiBRions. He regret to see that our esteemed daily resignt'd th!H po8itwu Ill ltl70, and neighbor IS the habit of scolding. A wa~ appointed Superintendent, the scolding woman is a down-right nui- offi('P lw nc prP:':Pnt hold~. Mr. E. G. sauce. anLl a scolding npwspaperis a Blad;:!t,rll ,, tL.1t \II<' uf ~ l'orn- gretJ;t bore to mobt rt>tul ers, Don't, ntl>'>' i\n' 1, n\\ 1 n , lli<·· · wIt\ 1, Let!t neighbo1·, ju~t becau~e oup, two, or known peo!Jlc, stop your paper, Tht'-C.Hit!l.IIik-HU11 ur 2\ew York State h'l.sten to pubh~h the fact in the col- proj,•et tlw Pl<\<'l ion of an IrnmenBe umns of your journal. It gives your batclunt; hUli~t·. ;,J,ol lht> IJI\OYiolllll uf reader8 the imprt•f'BiOJl that ) ou re- pt lH.lH :m-.1 Jllli'H·I'I•'s tor ) uuqg fi,;h, 'ally feel bad, when such an event as on Lun~ blt!id, '\ itt'n· lMth frPHh th!)loss of half-a dozen ::tubscribPrs .lllJ o.tlt tl~ll o~r•· !Jt u• un,ble w aLund should not be worth noticing e\.Tn 111, aJJCt>. By tho• !J:ot':\:lty ot CO!i,!;l·•·:<;< the smallEst paragraphs, ;much lt~:~.~ i tlw U mted l::ltatPH HHtdt~ an exh1btt in be ~ade the Sl\l:Jject of an editorial. II ttl..e reePnt J•'1~li J<:xpo~itwn held Ill If you don't get all the advPrti8n:tg Berlin, mul the t>x!ub1t WH::l taken to you want, from· those whom you I Europe m a vel:'He! expreH:,.ly eon- think ought to occupy your columns structed fm· tlw purposP. go and plead with them p-ersonally, The future uf fiHh culture tn the but never, no nevm· go to scolding United States promises to be a pros _ _them editorially. It gives these perous one, a bet due to Mr. Green v.ery fellows ·-the opmion that the§ per!::.aps more than -to any other man. are of ten times the importancE! that He deserves well of his country who -· the.y really are. If the town isn't assist;s- in the production of large doing as well for you as you fhink it quantities of wliolesome and nutriti ()tight, tell the business men so face ous food for its inhabitants. to face but don't publish your per, -- -sonal feelings to the world. By doing the latter you soon get the reputation of a'newspaper scold and fault-finder. and that is death to the , · bueiness of any journal. Be digni- . fied, be modest, apd nevpr scold. By · ~tbserving this rUle y JU will gain re- ·- spect, friends and patronage, and feet\.a.good de:;j.l bette1· yoursel-f. James Russell Lowell. \ . The 'agitation for Lowell's return led by the/~iew York He.ralcl and the occasion of a newspaper controversy -;gen&al througl•out.the country,gives _great interest to his name' at the pres· 9~1.t time, especially so as President 1 Artb\tr's action seems to be undeter- mined as yet. While he still· repre- sentfL1lS at tl::!_e Court of_ flt. James lit:. Lowell's friends hope he will be continued there in spite of the de- mand- for his recall; and, on the otheP hand, those opposed to his remaining , in England encourage th:e expectation t\hat he will b~ superceded shortly, · Mr. Lowell is uescended from an English family who settled in New England in the year 1639. His grand- father was made a judge. by Wash· ington after haying assisted in fram- fiig the Constitution ofl\fasso.chusetts ~-,,.\' 1780, moved the insertion lTI the of Rights of that State of the <Jlause that \all men are born free ... and equal, ''and earned great eminencfl ~-''as. a lawyer. The family of the Low- 'ens gave 1ts name to the city of Low- and litm'given merohante, IPaDl1: .,. fi:licturers, au thQrs, preachers,la wyers, Randolph. Do:\tESTfC TRAit EDY-CHAPTER 2 Osmer offrrs a re-ward of five dollars for infor- rna.twn that wtlllead to the discovery Qt thf' par- ty ur 1•arties that. wrote th.at arttl le atmut him in last wPek's HI•.RALD. '\\'Pll .NeviDs I think It would have Bennet wi~e for yo-u to have remain- ed ~nl~nl on the suhject, l.Jr·cauae the wore you say the deeper Lltill.go In thi• matter. You should have thought ofrnese thtng~ f>ome tim(; ngoaod tweded the warnings that were ...give-n you and saved all this, but as 1t b I w!ll dp my duty to an outraged wife and oommunity. Have you ever stojJped tot~ink of the happine•s yon have wreck- ed iu your own family May nolh~ing n.bout what a br!:'ak yon will C'ause to be made 1n a certain oth- er family wh~n this thing comes to light' I am aorry ta say it has gajned a great deal of pnbll~ity. At present I am not sorry fot your sa.ke, but it 1a tor other pa.rt1e~ concerned in the matter. I a~k you agam have yon ever stopped to think ol the misery you have CH.uaed, oi the fond ho:res you have ,..rusberl, aye, hmd hopes of a wife an tnutlt- er white you have bel'n holding clandestme meet- JOgs with some othef man's wife? What about tbe utmrr mant t\\l\n you, dare you, loo.k h1m in the face with a clear conscience', I wUJ uluse this \eek leaving you wiLh your conscience for a short t1me. 8ay \Tot Hallie says you have a perfect Wright to come and see ber but s.he thinks it isn't Wncht for you to go to-sleep as 'Soon as vou get there. Bow is It wtlh 1he UOC'tor eh'l . • 111rs. Stowe, has securcCr the gervices of a fiTSt- class barber who will attend stnclly to b~:)inf2'as. No more nigger s/lrees on ber dish \Art ' <1ro~s, hda'been on the sic1f1'i5~ tor the past week. Gueas too much drum the 4th. Ur was it au accou'ht of that gi;L lrqm Rutledge? ,.~.'-;ow own up ''Art\ don't be blt.shful Jim seems to take a good deal of comfort in taking tnat young lady <>Ut rldmgbehind that patr ot young colLa. That's right Shorty, have a gOod time while you are young. · Goes::~ ''Debu Gates had it too, much cider, last Wedr.esday. Get purty drunk. Lonk out' Deb' keep the gates shut m lronc ,of you, or they may sbuC behind you again. The young mau that was in th~ B!!nk that allnt Jerusha alluded to a number of t1mea, has risen in the world. Yes very Jast,so fast that he rl:'qUPsted h1s sa.la.ry r-&1-sed- to one thEmaa-nd a yrar, hut the bank officials could not see itJand 1 he nsing young man re&igned his position anills now to be aeon on the street With his head as high au usual. <'lay Boys, I was onto yau the other night, llut will spare you this time. You should be a little sooner next time. That ~ag uf wind who I! yes on a small pl~ce of land near East Randolph and furniah'es all tile w>nd and cii!n ruusw !Gr the east ei:ld orchestra, had better attend more to 1;1\.iJ!i.pg Ills cabbage and llcets and notfleddld',Yitli the business of certain J{artiealn thl town,ltlf'lrtf'l!tllableto got drummed 011, bo\Dick \ lead tbe bees- out and hoe the cabbage. and 1 ind your own business. aoJ.wlars, philanthropists and stfl,tes- The Oleaii' Sunday HERALD)~c_rea~ell\~ill men to the Bay State. circulation with every issue. If you want Mr. Lowell was born at Cambridge, to be sure of getting it ~overy Sund!IY mcnn- ':Mass., Feb'y 22, 1819. Ile ~V'aEJ e1iu- , ing, tell one, of t)ie news boy~ to \leav~ it for - .. tiated at _ Harvard, and, -in lSIJIS, you reguhirly. · · ~ ' - . '/~ so much lalk- abont how hard np Tom, T!le repeate•l and continual charges to that Sarah Bernhardt'8 husband, having mar- Dick and Harry, were, and how soon th~y effect by Mr. Phelps, lends a C•Jior of trtJth ried a woman who was neither maid, wife would go to the wallH, that we lhegun to to the reporls what huve been current in nor widow, can ''reco.:nize\ the cbilrlren of think that everybody wus really ou the this town and county for several months his wife bv formal process, and they will verge of bankruptcy. But we nuttce they past that Mr. Phelpe, was not of a sotmd then become as stri,.tlv legitimate as if all conti.:llle to \bang rm\ as it werP, and miurl. Sure il i\~ that nine-tenths of the born to him in lawful wedlock. wear good clotbeP, eat gout! food and drive lawyus lrl thi-R ~e<\tton hav<> deemed his De Wolt Hopper, of \One Hundred good horse5, &nd we venture the assertion acliuns, tuatmers und conversation for a Wives\ fame, will star no wore. He has that every mother'ti son of them will be 1 · 1 1 'd d be<>n engaged --~9_!:_.Harrl-gan 2 • Hart's The- ong IID1P V< ry •I range, atH t '~Y cons! HP .2~ ---· u; here when oll goes up again to a dollar It !'matte[_ u1 coarity to doubl Ju~ Hanity. atre Comique ~mpany for next season. takes a m1gbty hard blow to kilT the avo;r- Mr.Phel.18 iti 1eally a monornmiac in tbe Hopper appesred in Olean the past season d d d • , · couspiracy-1 n otht:r wordo iH actuall_v in· ag.e pro ucer, an on t you •Or~et it. and h1s drama was well received, But it sane-he 1s certainly to be regarued **' wllh compaesion, and hi~ friends ought to seems he could not make it pay. . Few Olean people thwk of the great interest themselves in hlo behalf, for Two youthful musical progities appeared own good. strides lorward wb1ch the town has taken THE MAN Anor-r TowN. last week at the opening exercises at Chan- within 1he pa>t twelve or fifteen month~. tauqna, and some of the brethren thmk it a Tho:~e who are hv1ng here, do not appre- THE NEWSP Al'ER WORLD, shame. One mimster said to a reporter that ctate how the :\lam 8treet, (very unhandily the 1de~ of puHing two girls of the ages of called Union) e,;pecially has been filled up, The Titusville lleralrl promi•es to print nine and AIX years on toe Rtage to make an adding mucll-tB it\ ultractlve appear,mce, a Sunday edition. exhibition of themselves for pay, as was and b~ til<\ v.ay I allJ glad to see that most ••( ;,. 0 ,. to •ee tloe tiro·.,urk-,\ i' the way with Lynnie an<! Minnie Beecher. child of Lie new structure:; are thrt!e :-.ruries sonw ut our t:'XI'htnl~t·s. head the 11 • ,u·coun t vt<.dini~ts. was wrong in principle and hi~ h. Gillon stred Is so unusually wide of limwau'• e.x.~o.:ulluH-v~ 1 v \\\'u' flwuld not be encouraged. tlwt any ordmary twost;r.v IJmldJtw, Jo\kS 1 · G \ v too. •:•·Je azette: .\ car <'ontainlng two ••[•t:tlt), aut! unsatt-.,Jactury to the eye. It ' 1 f 1 • I b 1 · 1 t i:; ...;s ... t'r!t:> • ~t.., .t .... u1 e thing that tht I wr~e~ orn1t>r y 11\\ Let y l H~ nototluus 11 utlldu'l be a uaJ ('ian 11 I he council slwul~ J J d ·\\\\\ 1 1 f prt·,ent propnd\r ul theE \~'\\\n ]',pss, 1 esse ames an t\'ue •y llill ltl 'utue o l \'~'au0rdtuau~c [Jrev~ntwg th~ 1'en cltutJ ' h' 1 · 'J h 1 'f' · f.. to <lart ., paper tn Fr.lllklinv!lle. t' mo\t < armg raH' t roug 1 ·' tssour1, 11110il l n1un t:.l)e~:t, ol a t'uth.twg unt.lE:-I l h h l ·t f th t · The lt\ndulph ( 'ourant '\v': Tht> {)le\n Pi!'\e' t roug t 1e c1 y or e eas yester- ihrce \lol'lc< loJ loe>glu. .Suu1e tllluk that d'~Y· They werP conveyed to Le\ter \Vai- Sttn<hy I!J:JtAL!J >e!'m' to l>e !.tking the here aw uow ll>O wany llel\ 'lule ruuo•s to luck, of New York, and will be used by him I l d l·ad of the f'lnnrl.ty l'\f'e\ \old bere now. meet I'\ deman< , an 1L doe> luok as in a border drama soon to be placed upon though we hat! ubUut tnuu,:h. Au extra TIHN' bt·a~ilifnl_ anr: e~dlln_g cor. tinned the stage at \Val lack's Theatre, New York. nletil_v, will teuu to rt-dllee rtuh, atai 1 1 stones cont.nned 10 St•sstun Law supple- I t d tl t l\l \V' 11 k 'd $ 2 OOO r t tH s ate 1a • r. a ac pa1 , to their to an)·thtng whicll Olean neech a• mt>nlll, have again put in their appearance. ~ecure these hor~e<. J'fE'oeut, it IS a reductJCJll in ~he CU>t ol The '!'\'~vne i~ St'ndi~g the ;•oor cbiluren I Ou Oct, 19th the gl·eat play of \Esmeral- livtng-r~nts, proJuce, and eyerything <else. of New 1 ork II. to t~oe Athrondacks fo.- da\ will be preBented at the Olean Opera *** ten weeks of recreation. Count us in on Houiie, by theN. -y, Mad1sou S'lnare Thea. l wao 1alkwg to one of tile illPJubers of tb.e poor list. tre Co. ThiH play is now running in New .+-n'ithin.J.he pn..;t two we<'ks we haye York, atJd has reached its two hundred and the Bual d or Ed ucallou the other day, as tO the rea:ftlll wuy greater dlorl 8 Were UOt iu the cuJurnnH \four exdt~tllge~, at fiftietJi r<>preeentatiOU at the Madison , llo filty portraiiH of lr•!iteau, au<! uu two of Square Theatr_e,...and rival~ in public inter- made uJ the ' ani 1u attract fure1g11 stu· dents to seek the advantages of our educa- ttuua I facilnies, and !11, reply was to the etlect that it would be !itterly useless to at- tempt anything uf lhe kiJJd, as long as board and the cost of h~ing w~s so higb. \Students sa1d he, \can , get good board and rooms in Frank linville, Randolph, Springville, and other places for from $2.50 to $3.00 per· week, while the lowest rate$ here are Dearly double that sum. Th1}Se are disadvantage!!· that cannot be overcome, no matter who we may have at the head of our schools-or hqw able or renowned. The cost of living is the great thing to stu- dents. I d1slike to say it, but there is no use in disguising _ _!_he truth. Until peup,e canJive as cheaply in Olean as in other towns, we cannot attempt to compete fur foreign students.\ ~ * * And so the same flhjection 1• raised in other quarters. The head of one of the large-st manufa.cturing comp.anies in' thi~ city to1d us the other day that be bad ron- teD! plated the enlargement of his eAtablish· ment-'-ljuadrupling its capacity, and em-'- ploying se\\m'aa. hundred :men, but • .,; he had thoroughly· in~estigated the matter, and he found that be could not compete with other firms simply because he would be forced to pay his men nearly fifty per cent more than his competition in other towns pay. * * * lt seems a pity that such should Le the ca~e, blU..,w.e see no remedy for it at present, except to keep oil down to a bon t 40 cents for the next two :J::eS!'S, §u!'h a· thing would, we are confidept, be a real blessing in. disguise for Olel\n· * * * them look ahlre. est the famous '·Hazel Kuke'' from the oTite Elmim Sunday Tdegmm aged fuur year.\; claims to pr:nt 5G;OOO copies, and the Tidings, aged eight months, claims a cir@lal.ion of 24,000 co-Pies. The worst piece of !-latitude of ~peech he have seen lately appeats in tb&Dil Citv Blfa~ard, whicf1 say.s: \We know a Illa;l who is so bow-legged that his paper won't circulate, saving uotbing about his blood, wbicll is all out of order.\ Her.ry H. Hadley of New York was mentioned by the .Mail and Expres~ in eon- .nection with the Morey lettef and bronght suit for libel, claiming $25,000, Now Henry W. Hadley has w.ithdrawn the Ruit payilllg the cost of it out of his own pocket. The Couders.EQit Ente,.prise of !ast week contaiJJs 'the following: \So paper will be issned fmm this office next week. m acc.,rd- ance with our usl!lal custom, of giving the printers a holiday at this time of the )ear.\ That& the kind Of a newspa1\er to work for, and we call tl.e attention ot printel'l! throughout the country to de~irability of a \sit\ on that sheet. Jotf>rnalistic entenJrise a; illustrated by the Denver 'lhbil.me: \Among the many recent improvements in our rapidly grow- ing a.JJd emin<lntly prosperous dty is a brand·new sink in .the com po~ing room of the Tribune offi4le. It is painted blue and is gua:ranteed not io spring a leak inside of 10 yeali'S. What have the en¥ious vipers of the New8 and ~epu);lican to sny .!? ~.': Wednesday, July 5th. tl.ie well· kn~;~wn, stallion ''Abdallah Chief,\ owned by Townsend Jackson of Ellicott, died of inflammation of the bowels at his owner's farm a mile and a half from Jamestown. \Abdallah Chibt\ was fifteen years old, and h~d beetl owned by !.Hr. J ackSDn fot• the past th1rteen years. · His sire was \Jupiter Abc\allah, ''and hi& dam was \Westchester.\. He was highly val- ued by Mr. Jackson, who at one time was offered$1,500 for him. Many of his colts are owned in this l:lection, and not 4 lew of them a.re fast and valuabl!J. · _ ,. eame theatre. The company to preBent \Esmeralda\ here has been specially select- ed and is eng.~ged during the summer in rf'~arsmg this PU<Jce•sful drama. Entirely new scenery foF every act is being made to be used in the representation. The following advice furnished by a New York dramatic paper, has the proper ring of truth. '·Managers, speculators. etc., who are organizing c0mpanies for the road next season, mnst not play our shar11 country cousins for flats, 'Rural ,rustics' are nearly as well posted in acting and plays as are be ci ry chaps. The combination system haH show':! them almost everythiog worth seeing. They have profited by what they have Heen au,d heard, and haye bnt little difficulty in tP.IIing a hawk ftom a herring. They can tell a good aetor from a bad one; and they k-now an amateur just as soon as they set their eye~ upon one. So beicarefnl how yotl Reek to impoHe had shows upon our friepds in the pro\>inees. UiyA them· good acting and go~il'\ plays and your wa:J:S will be made s~u<!oth aocl clear for a return trip·\ Killbuck- Mr. WUlloru Baker and Miss Annie Young, both of Salamanca, were manied,_ by Rev. Wilham II. Harrison, at his rtsldenc•'· Also at the same time an(.1 pine~. u. sister of 1\lr. Ba:ker w-aa married to Mr. Adam ELman of Killbuck. A new barn is in building in the Harrison farm. ~ · Ere >be next decade, Killbuck will be called East Salamanca. A new street Is belDg laid out an !I other l!nprovement• \'\ ~ilumally hvely _th!s RUtnn1er. A Aa.rge fJUant.ity of ,stone for building purposes of citcellent qnii.nty, are Tor siil<';1hose wlslliiig to buy, woulol do \\el\ ~o Iuquire of Mr. Liberty Pole, betore purchasmg elsewhere. M. E. Hess 1 of Eden burg, Pa., made his sister. Mrs. H. Foltz, a ahbrt visit last week, All Bolivar and Richburg is en route for War- ren 1 judging from appearances. ~ Tho bust at the U1eat Valley House is busily engaCI'ed Jn ha'illng teams, he gRts his run. Killb••ek can boast Gf llavmg tbe finestga,rden in the country, just call ou Mr. Crockeu and see. Goo. BleMing 11aa a beolnve that upsets a pat- en'b, Some. cases of diphthe> la here. The widow Kehoe lost a little hGy last week, T~o more of her children ate now very ill, Platner apd Morgan have fiuishcu :dike l:ihean'& new barn. · When the sidewalk is cow ~leted between the post office and d~pot tiler~ w)~l l•o an 11PJ>Ortunity l'iil'lllore !Wins. - - ~·\ ___ - Last Sunday there were' twlJlO-llS many HER- ADD'S sold a$ M--s • .l.H W!U-'it'\tnebeat papet •• ~e sllre to get eno ne:r,t woek· o. Th,~, ,.~ip:~y,thir4 .. ,,. };?~DJlSy~vania.' regunent wiD bold tbeu· aJJnual re;:- \~=~at ~ru:q;n.'}~~:;~·:~ __ P~~~~t_, __ } - Cad~t ·Whitaker lectured at Frank- linville, Arcade anQSprin'gville ·_Jas:t::;= week. His houses Wt>re u·ot large at any pl~ce._ Frel). Sip:upons·, of Cattaraugus, cougbt a young black bear about half a mile west of ~llicottville a few days since. · , Hon. Dick Church, of Angelica., N. Y., has got in his po8session the third ticket ever sold from Piermont to Binghamton, and bas refused $100 for the same. Several Binghamton girls stole val- uable plants from a yard and were- arrested. Their parents afterward paid the costs and the ;,Iris were severely reprimanded and discharg- ed. , · B~tavia has captured the Johnston harvester works, which were recent- ly burned ·out at Brockport. She pays over $60,000 for the luxury- probably more than she will ever get back. • A little girl aged about eight years, a daughter of D. Whitwood, of Friendship, met with a singular acci- dent last week m Hornellsville, that resulted m her instant deaoh. She fell and caught her head in a towel breaking her neck. Frank B. Farnham, who for a number of years has been cashier of the Chautauqua county national bank at Jamestown, has resigned that position, and Mr. S. Gif- fop}, tl!e forl!!ill:._ tel.!ftr, h~J,Ii;,o.\\\'\\~--\\\'----- pointed in hi~! place. Westfield's gas well is down 1,000 feet and gives a daily yield of 2,000 feet of the illuminating substance. If thi!if.-amount proves the maximum q~antity obtamed the owners will borft._,QQP.siderably lower for illl A lass only thirteen yea1;s old, liv- ing at Morton's Corners, ,Erie county, recently eloped with her father's hired man, who was only a few v-ears her.senior. They 'IV!lre subsequently married, and the angry father bas. relented and taken them to his home . again. - Recently, the Syracuse papers have resoh::ed hereafter to charge for publishing ' all notices of pic;nics, church sociables, excursions, society festivals, &c., where money istaken, at advertising rates. That's right. If we want a spool of cotton we are expected to pay five cents · for the same . The following new organizations are to be started at the Chautauqua l:l. S. Assembly this summer: \'l'he Society of the Hall in the Grove,\ \The League of the Round Table,'' \The Order of the White Seal,\ \The Athenian Watch Fires,.!' \Th'e 'Chau- tauqua Temperance Guild.\ Among the new \days'' will be, \Socrates Memorial Day,\ \Frmbel Memorial Da~First CommE-ncement· Exer- - c1ses of t.hP C. L. S. C.'' Tho price of admission has bet>n raised. Until July 29th It w1ll be 25 cents for day tickets, but thereafter 40 centi:l.. The managers say this is unavmdable. SPORTING NEWS. Capt. Paul Boyton, the swimmist, is visiting that other marine phenom· en on, Hanlon, at Toronto, and aston- ishmg the natives by giving aquatic exhibitions just tp keep his hand in, - ... - On the Fourth of July Billy Mad- den deposited $750 with Harry Hi11, making the amount now up $1,000. which Sullivan is to pay over if he fails to knock Tug W.ilso.n out in foUl' rounds. at the Madison Squarge Gar- den, _July 17. All of our readers who have a trace of the sporting element in their make-up have heard of Keno, the famous running horse, owned by Patsy Dailey, and now racing at various seaside resorts. One of · Keno's latest feats was a victory over Glenmore at Sheepshead Bay, when the odds were 40 to 1 against him. Miss Myrtle Peek, or Michigan, aged fourteen. rode on the Rochester driving park last Saturday, · twenty miles in forty-three minutes, twenty- four and one-half seconds, beating che best r&corded time by two min- utes. Sh~ rode seven horse<\ neue of whieh are cnnsidered fast, and two or threa \',/;ere slow. The.prince of Wales and duke of Cambridge will subscribe tQward the fund of sending a rifl.e__~m to Amer- ica. The total subscriptions now amount to £542 . ..., It will be the final exhaustive test for the selection of a t0am shortly after the shooting at Wimbledon takes place. A special purse of $4,0® w1ll be given at Buffalo,· Cleveland\' and Rochester. The conditiQns named are that St. Julien and Trinkett enter and start. The race will be · opim to all horses, with $1,200 to the winner, $800 to the second, $500 extra to the horse trotting in 2:14 or better, and $500 additi9nal to the horse trotting in 2:10 1-2 or better. • i At Oswego, the Fourth, Madam Adelle, the balloonist, made an as- cension and was carried over Lake Ontario: She threw out every thing to keeo up, hoping to strike·a current that would carry her back to land. Seeing a tug apparantly following her, Bhe opened a valve alljd Came down in the water seven miles froin land. 'She clung to the balloon, and was dragged through the water sev- eral miles and was finally picked up bv the tug, C. P. Morey, in an ex· ho.uSbd conditiOn. She was in the water nearly an hour.