{ title: 'Milford tidings. (Milford, Otsego County, N.Y.) 1889-1897, November 15, 1889, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066008/1889-11-15/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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< waco capt warm mm. cnn MILEORD, N. Y. NOVEMDER f5th, 1889, ~ PUBLISHED EVEAY FRIDAY MORNING, ~~ |= PHN . Enteren as $rcojp-ciass MAatTk® at Tuz rost orrick AT wtrronp, th y> ____________._...__—-— Trams Ons DoLLAR FER yEARy m. ADVANCE; > nang s All advertisements, marriages, deaths, and. er notices to insure-publication the same di to banded in by Wednesdiy - \We Invite mmpondenu on: fl! “latch of local-or general Interest. ° \_ \Kates of advertising ek MUST morning. . ! -= applications.. \ spplieationex 202 Dull co ' a Powell!“ 11081000 nude known mpon Mum'mdmulhhofiuulonofil M \east and: new.\ Mail for Gamma-u... Mail for Middlefield. From C. Gurney C. & C. V. R. R.; TIME TABLE: ~ TraiNs: NowTé. Arrive Cooperstown > ». Pheonix ~ > so ** Hartwick Sem, -*7.20 - » - Milford - - + 7aro- £16. 42.00 1148 i137 z- * Portlandville Lute Jul-film: No. 1. C < less with its completion 'the\ last trace of, R - Alan. ~ ba opy an | ofder to know where he can purchase his | ghg desert.will vanish, | The iron horso is a Leave Cooperstown - g.to - 3.25 6.00 Christmas presents that he intends to give away | wonTerful dispeller of illusions of that kind. \ Phomnik + + 916 3.34 . 6.06 | to the littlg ones on his aunmal visit, He in- | \The truth is that there are vast st regions in » - Hartwick Sem. *9.40 - *340 - *6.11 | feads to rely on the advettisff@gelumns of the | America, Asia and Australia wahich-are bar. 60 Milford - 0 + 931 3546 6.20 Tidings, to make his purchases. ren from the standpolnt of primitive and- » . Portlandville - gt - 4.88 - 631 | -On Monday night-the house of A. G. {Wm'glfl'fim‘g'Z-a‘t’fi‘l'mh Chine ren Arive Junction ~-. - gio _ 4.49__ 640/ Mors, beween Portlandville and Milford i y the educited farmen 0f Cie PTE - \*~ | ent day, with his implements, develop into ‘Swp on signal; Centre, was entered by burglars. They pro- {err-ll o felds and pasturce- A . D. E. Stvem, President. cused: four gold~ watches and all the silver «-_ ~, E. M. Harats, General Manager. ~ DELEWARE & HUDSON R.R. Time Table, No. 6, 'No: 4. No. 2. ». x4, P. xe. F, ar, [second brother that has died within the Pst op or vegetable life. That illusion mgt $40 12.47 two months _. ~ is now being rapidly dispellei. Recent ex- - pag 542) fi4q| -Services at the M. E, church, Sunday.) plorers report that inner is no - for -o- 6ga) l Trams soutit. bom. No, 3 No. 5. ml: the advertisments in the . Tidings, in 5.04 +8 from Junction C, & C, V. R. R. * TRAINS CoNG wast. No. 31 Oneonta Local + - + 3 0§ a- m No. 1 Through Express - >> IL. 342. m. day. followers of George Fox have never been No. 9 Omeonta Local > - + +4 3§ P| __ very numerous, but until late years they No. 3 Through Expres - + - 6.47p- m. Just as we 3°, press, we lean that the linve been extromely exclusive. | The in- TRAINS GoING Fast. , No. loouonll Local >- No. 2 Through Express - - Na;1‘hr3nzh£xp’ren ~ o>) > 4. 49 pam No. 30 Accommodation (- - +> 6. 45 as ms ~ -7.|4n.m. - i. to al m. ©5.26 *12.13 Church Semces. -o- METHODIST. Morning Service + + + ~ > Evening §nvlce a a G oue +n PRESBYTERIAN. ' Morning Service - Evening. Service - - 10:30 a. m, C1 po] . Loper DIREJ’OR\ ‘E—DNKA. Meets the fiest and third Mon- day evening in each munth at E. O. M. A. Hall htOpcn l-fon-c Block. -o- Hon. H. D. Nelson, Co., Judge, FO. Ad- are“, Oneonta, N. .A. E. Talmage, Shedff P. O. Address; Cooperstown, N. Y. A. C. Tennant, Surogate, P. 0 Address; Cooperstown, N. Y E. Clark, Sy ville, N. Y. Milford Locals -Kenych & Whitney have 100 empty barrels to sell. of Schen ectady county, “ht: he had ex‘peilr things to nsidored. | As s matter of encé in the bufseness. It is a seven-column | goog the ro successfal in life. - As -- Mrs. Day of 01mm. h the guest of Mrt: | folio, the first number of which was Issued on | a matter of fact the vo long. | Then, Irving Brooks. the 8th Inst. Itis No, 17 of the newspapers surely, true science will not curl. the lip of : Machines cheap for cash at Y. KBUblNl-BS Dl RILCTOIU - -Sewing. J. 1. Gridley's Milford N. V. -Miss Grace Manchester, of Oneonta, N. . is visiting at C. E. Roberts. -Thasks % Hom. John Eddy, for com- MmmhylflxuNwdlyhn. -Mrs. Q, R. Durham, who is 'under the 10:30 a. m. 7 pom , P. O. Address Portland: mmkmwunmmm -Mrs. Linn Hallock, of South Jefferson, S cnn ock aes -Mi *Burt\ Hawkins of Oneonts, his Fani womich to . A year ego thore were eloven prize A! been spending a few dayswith Mr, I. Brooks. womzn on 1,“me in- this cgmftry, but -Mr. Geo. N. Bissell, is expected to re- 'only six are left to gladden the eye of the turn frofo his western trip. tbcut the 20th, frequenter of dime museums. Many poople Inst. ~ will be sorry to learn of this fct, A 'prizo . -Mr. W. D. VanDyke, of the Richfield tdp woman is a very restful picturs to 'one Spdngl wast town calling on rela» whose soul is tossed with the agonizing friends, this week. - \ doubts and troubles of this world. Nothing e funeral services. of Mr? Sillenteck over fenzes thom. Year in and year out they ait on thorexhibition platform and gaze [ were conducted af his lat \residence. by the Rev. Grant, on Tuesday, <2 o'clock p. m; out of their sleepy eyes upon the throngs of Interment in Milford cemetary. josiling, unhappy creatures who are willing® to 10 cents frequently for the pleasure —Llundm South Carolina Jubilee lingers, will give 'a Concert at Opera Hall to night of looking at a befug who is completely satisfied with horlot in lifo. Nobody ever heard of a prize fat woman ever wanting (111112131) Nazism 1889. at?\ and here anything .she did not have. ~She - never them,“ . you ‘m‘l‘k e entertain\ | yearna to be as thiticas the skeletoy|; man, pment 0 -| because she knows how hard itis for the '. -Mrsv E. A. Prentice and her son Royal akeleton man to keep warm and how little of hlVemNew Mexico, who have been | 8004 his/ food\ does him, As for. eating, mm”, in flats vicinity for the past why, of course, theiprize fat woman always - ghxeemntln, will/flirt on . their alum u’lp financing]: because it is for 'the hum“ |f the “this?“ golos the management to keep her in pri és the of Eckerson: Ave. M : ordnamtmhetlsmfl: may not dmop' -Sine naming ve. 'Mr. | nor hor avoirdupols wate away. -W. E. Stickney informs us that he bas sold B + at house iind lof located on that Aye.\ He. says . Disappearnnce of Deserts, he lss one to sell, We would advise! 'What were supposed to be deserts ara the naming of all streets, if success depends rapidly vanishing before the advance of on a-name. . civilian} tion, | 'There was a time when the -Mr. A. Ph . and United ftates Had one of no small size, . car A thisegs sod te Beeving moi, Pout Bum Mon tial my had :| Hon. John Eddy and family, last weet, At | meaty. poe of | the wnlingty(Wednesdsy) we Tearn tet Mt. | snd pakotn have disposed of mach of the Eddy is sill ed and Dakota have disposed of much of the p y 20115\ to the home, with rUE‘“ great American Desert. a timé Wm“ ** large portions of the interior of Africa were -A NONE)! dispatch.was mama at this believed to be arid and uncultivable. - Now place Tuesday evening, anouncing the | death | o leftn that theyare fruitfal and well of Geo. W. Wentworth, of New Jersey, form«1 affix?! “ghznzflzvz‘ tmfi i a pl edly a resident of Hartwick, 'This is the howling wilderness, destitute of water and nest. Preaching by the pastor; SubSect at 10.0 -m, \Christ's entry into the city.\ Sub- ject, 4. p. m. \Five modern Kings.\ - -We'have justreceived a letter from Sants. ' dink, 'and he tells us that he is going: to Barahan waste, and that, though uninhabit» ed, it can support a large population. There ore grassy plains, large lakes, and also traces of gold and precious stones. . A north and south railway is now being made, through the contre of uid doubt- Why Quakers Live Long. It is-quite trug that many \ Friends \ live long. Itis equally true that certain cir- cumstances in their bistory iiillithto against long lif Among thess latter intermarringn i perhaps the most important of all. The wire in the house, and then made good their escape, without being detected. | Mr. Mortis familyconsisted of four persons, Uesides two mlnlncn, were in the house at the time the burglnly was committed, and none of them \| knew of the ther committed, until the next house of Mr. A. G. Morrisywas again entered by burglers on Tuesday night and procured some fan; dollars worth of clothing, and cash, We also learn that they mut have been very \ hungry far they took a pan of poppcdmrn that evitnble result of that has beer extensive intermarriage throughout the whole com- munity. Tue of the frs- quency of intermarriige have been, and are utill, very ovident. Qunhers, ns a class, fre not mussularly robust; many of Them aro decidedly anmomic, and not a few nre méhtally feeble, Yet, in spite of these prac- tieal and serious 'drawbacks, the Friends, ns a class, do more than their proportion of the world's serious business, and they mun« nge to nttain to a high average of longevity. Now this is exactly the kind of fact that trite medical sclonce likes to get hold of wid to Anterrogate and léarp from.' What 's the reason, naka the senible man, why Quakers, with so seany tndoubted disad. vantages, attain to such n high average of In all that cunstitutes worthy life, nil also suoeeed ih enjoying their: success to an expeptlonally old age? 'The reason, we are convinced, is: to. be found in their quiet bnbits and disciplined life, - Am ordinagy doctor, or oven Inyman, would probably have felt much more in- terest in at this poiat if we had been able to affirm that the Qnakers owed their success and long life to certain drigs, as, for exiinple, to arsenic, phosphorus; xtrychnia, and the like; or to certain moth- ods of feeding, as vogetarinnism, or ment eating, or fruit enting, or wino drinking, or teetotallsm, or smoking, and so on. But we snbmit that that shows a want, of real, modtal capacity. For what, after nll, is the true importance of the subject ? Does it not consist in the undoubted charncter of the results? Fhe results nro really: the had wally been popped and placed on the dining room table but a short time previous by some member of theifamily. They were not as meati as they might have been for they left the par, after devogring the corn, ima field near by the barh, ------sat -be Gp mam- Read what our exchanites say about the TIDINGS. -The latest filings from Miford is the first number of the Milford Turina, whereof D H. Crowe, late af Quaker Street, is editor and proprietor, - It is sold at $1 a year, and is the 17th paper in Otsego 'county. - Mr. Crowe follows two newspaper failures in Milford, but the town is thrifty and Intelligent and ought to. give him a fair support. | Let fortune go as it may he has our best wishes. Oneonta Sry. - -We are in receipt of the initial number of the Milford (Otrego county} Tidings. The paper is seven column folio and published on Fridays by D. H. Crowe, | Although Friday is __| hangman's day there is no reason why so newsy a sheet does not Crowe for many years. Fort Plain Faze Pass. -MitLFORD again rejoices in the publludon df a local newepsper, the Milfosd Tidings, ediled and published by Mr, D. H. Crowe, late 'because these results are obtained by ° what may be called \ natural and simple\ processes, instead of by elaborate prepar® | lons and out.ofithe-way methods, _-_-eo_--- Starred on an Island. News of tragical interest comes from a little rocky island some way» north of Sierra Leone on the west const of Africa. | Alcatrns: Island has no inbabitants,' and | would be perfectly valueless were it not! published in Otsego county, Success to it. The Freeman's JoYRNAL -The Tidings is the name of a new paper at Milford, |D. H. Crowe, formerly of Quaker Street, is the publisher.-Oneanta Press. ~A bright, newsy papgr came to our nffice last week called the Milford Tidings. - And we . congratlate the people of Milford on so fine a , newspaper.-The Morris CimoNICLr. > --- is the of Ma and Mra. D. M. Hallock: MARRIED. that it has a considernble deposit of guano. -Mr. J. H. Lidell, of Daeter was in horn The guano beds have been very little . Tuesday lest; looking after his real estate in {/* - worked, but France thought it worth while this town, - STRANGE-PERRY-At the parsonage Nov. | to take possession of the inland, amd over -Would it not be a good Idea to have owr | ~ Jh. 1550. by the Ret tt e en no o met tat SP burning! these 'm. nge, to Mrs. Allice Pery. th | thefe by order of the Governor of Benegal street lamps Aled, tritsmed and € of Milford, N. Y. to maintain the rights of the French flag, -Mr. Sebolt, a fife: long: resident of this Mrflmbonxbnld goods to-day to Hoosic Fun: N.V. * -r. ind Mrs. L Brooks, entertsined al. social perty on Thesday exening last, in honor of gaests from Oneonta. . -Excelient discourses were given by Rev. G. T. Price, pastor of the M. E. church, last en Eckerson Ave., Setarday, Nove 9. -Those Express wagons given awry with nepotddhthg—p-dn, by Kexyon & | city Wa itney All the eyes of the youngsters. * -H. a. David Wilber, of Qnccnts i still confieed to his bed, withost say material mfi<Mua*d_w velescing. * -We notice the new plank walk is neerty mfiwwfih—An‘ wasw.fmnthumdaanb Main St. - -=Chnimile,\ san of Gecege Halenbeck of Apbamost, Albany Co, amdwho is a stodent it Hsttwick Sem amadeus a plesse=t cal Friday, of last week.. , \. -¥. Wa, Soar, fither_of E. L. Soot, | going to tmom sed the hired men whing or | the tad tho farmer moot Through most remarkable carelessness ' the men who were sent to live on the bar. 4 ren rock entirely passed ont of the minds , of the authorities. . The blunder is said to . ELLIOTT—HALIFAX the residence of the brides parents Nov. 9th 1889, by the Rev. G. T. Price, Mr. Burton Ellit, to Miss Birdie L. Hall. | Both of Milford, N. Y. have been due partly to changes in the‘ Administration of Senegal, and partly to - THE TOMB. mislaying the papers in the case. Every- bodthenegflt-u-y‘lng to shift the raw One day : out of a | sponsibility on somebody else. st Hi, N. V. recently a document was fished Nov. 10, Arnold Sillenbeck in his Soth year. ne : beg.\ le abowing that two mmdm Funeral Tuesday, at 2 p. m. from his late ifizfomin hdgnhnazset; the island , f . -Mr. Theo. Am! and family, l-yvvd residence. Cals in behalf of the Government. I into the tenement boase,of W. E. Stickney, * There was considerable consternation A very dense fog, the greateit evet known, mapamdbythepeopdee-\wk city, Tuesday last. -oumpee-o a-cegm _ There's a Charm About It. 'Thelast counterfeit half doSer pot_out ka3 thisty-seven cents of the real qui aboot i, or nestly as much as the govern- wmammmwmm to Bost tens of thousands of dollire to make: day wages. | It was harder work than dig- ”madman-mm beating Unele Sera which never grows stain. a vessel to the inland. It was estimated That the men bad sbout siz months' supply of provisions when they landed. . The only hope that they were alive was that some mgvfldhdmntbmngmhdm trees and taken them off. _ MWmmqy-dwpenérba The vessel reached the island. 'Only a few mmstaahpnedleumthatkfletmohhe four fren were found stretehed upon the tozhdficmvahghtfleqmt my wi stood up on a platform «wildly -praving his Ammedintely he knooked it down. ,mmfitgm-1hm6mdr ml ~ Fulton Ferry, Fish Market, A sight that is often aveflooked by vistt. ors to this ofty ts the wholesale fish market at Fulton feiry. The best time to soo It. wording to what the dealers say, to early qn 'Friday morning, ds on that day the largest business of the | week is transabted, and from an early hour in the morning until 0 or 10 o'glock the- market is fust crowded. , People of-all clasiss mest there. \The patrons are not confined to otto viass, but embrace fishimgpgers from all “aligns. \ ..The Eigh-toned deafer from the aristo. mile precingts of Madisop avenue. rubs elbows with the poor peddler of Heater | stract, whose atock is shoved about in a broken pusli-cart. .. Millions of pounds of fish go ouf from thirmarkehmnnaflrand there do: probably more excitement here on Friday morning than in any other market in the country.+- New York World. nti Pawnbrokers Pledges. In a dimly lighted, natrow store on the east side 'a crowd -~of perhaps a people were gathered. Fully five.sixths of them were worhon, and they were squatted down om <be-floor. Each one carried a lurge basket, and many of them. were half filled with torn and soiled clothing. A man hands and calling out for bids on the nuclo which lie held in his hand. ihe ~ It- was a pawnbroker'a auction sate. Articles were being sold for almost noth, tng, Wearing apparel that had cost heavy rices when purchased new wore sold for 8 mere nothing.' 'I¥'was a common thing to hear fancy skirts sold tor 15, 20 and 80 cents. The auctioneer didn't waste _any time, either. When h6 offered an article he got a bid, and unless he fecaived nnothor. bid \* It only. shows,\ salda pollonman, \how mificl poor people ate able to borrow on a thing, when you see buch articles sold for a tow Seuts.\-New York World. agro- } VUranfum. In a mine at Cornwall, in England, there has been discovered a lode of the fare and precious metal. uranium, which bas hitherto only bewml pockets or patches nnd to-to or three widely separated locali- ties. | Bo rare TS TKGfhnt a century ago its ekistence was unknown, and so. valuable is 'it thut the market price is about $12,000 a 4on, . Two of the most important oxides of uranium are nlrguly used, the one in the prosnation of costly ' black porcelain and the dark tints of majolics ware, the other in glass and porcelain mannfacture, to pro- duce beautitfil golden and greenish colors, and, in c onjnnetlgp ith other minerals, |. opnlescent hues. chloride of uranium is also coming into userné s substitute for gold in photographic work, With platinum and copper the metal forms two fine alloys, ench 'tesembling gold, and offers a substi- tute for gold in. electro-plated: ware. 'On seeount Of its high electrical resistancerit is plso'likely to be lurgely used in electric in wtallations. | Its rarity and high price have hitherto interfered with its use in' these ditter ways, but the discovery in Cornwall will no doubt lead to its general introduc- tion for such purposes. ~> com- 4 lime- Why They Married: > 4 - In an old book written by a Western / Congressman, a contemporary of Clay and Webster, containing remit.isconces of 'his times, a story is told of one of his friends, a farmer in Kentricky named Payne, who had six danghters, none of whom: was blessed with beanty. The Congressmen knew thom in their homely youth, and wheit he returned a fow years later found them all married to good, influential men, Bo grent waa his eurpriso that he ventured to ask their father why they all had been so sought when other girls remmited negy lected,.~Tho old firmer chnokled. Yen, nnd you may say when they had neither dower nor good' looks. Well, I'll tell you, When I want my onttlo to cat buckwhent stubble instead of gruse I don't drive them into that Seld. I fence it off from them. 'They are so contrary that they always want the thing they can 'C got. They brenk down the fence; I drive them out and put it up. ~ By the time they..fight for it once or twice they think thoy Tike the stubble. * Well, I naw my girls weren't the most nttrnetive kind, and-I fenced them in I \ You never found them in the hotel: dancin' of keepin' stalls at county fairs. \/ Young men to know them had to come to their fither's house, - Whon the neighbors aw how the Payne girls were kept apart trom the erowd they thought their value , mant be high. - Young men came to break : down the fence. - They like to break dowa fences.\ '* The story was coarsely. told, perhaps,\ adds the ald narrator. *' But there is more in it than meets the eyo.\ onle oin 5 White Hair Turned Black. The patient was & woman aged 72, who had had snow-white hair for twenty years. | For the symptoms of commencing tremia, due to contracted kidney, twenty to thirty minims of extract of jaborandi was prée scribed several times daily, | The drug was 'taken from' Octéber, 1886, to Febtuary, 'I 1888. During the antamh of 1887 the eys- brows were becoming darker, and the hair CALL ON . mud Epaloch ~-I8 THE- and in”: Tustr Stock Or Crores ~ - MILLINEE Y. to suit the times. M novB-iyt. # YOU Waxt Dry Goods Clothmg, ' _ Boots, SHOES & WQUEM CHEAP for CASH, Call at J. E. Parsinaut's —°—\— a WALL PAPER and CROCKERY Cut! Cut!! GROCERIES Very Cheap. ~ LaDizS; you can save-5ofcents on every pair _-~ffie Shoes you want by buying of , J. E. PARSHALL. RUBBERS, OVER SHOES and FELT BOOTS at bottom prices.-All-for-Castr-ut J. EK. Parshall's N; B. Ail.persons indebted by note or account will please call and settle. - ._.]. E. PaRsHAUL. ' novB-iyr. Milford grke = -g---o- Fresh and Salt Meats, Pork Sausage an , Bolonga a specialty. We render out own LAxD. ~ OYSTERS and CLAMS in their season, Agents for Oneonta Rertilizer Company's Phosphate, Ground bone'and Domestié Egg Food' also we sell James- ville Plaster. patronage we remain \Yours Respectfully :- n Scett & Brooks. STOP! Ir In Nxzp Or 4 - Parlor -or Cook | STOVE, - Do not fail to examine the QGQLD COXNH$ BEFORK PURCHASING, - It is sure to please you, 1 have also a ful} te of HEAYY and HARDWARE, A complete stock of ROBES, BLANKETS and WHIPS which I sell at porront Prices. Solicting a share of your patronage, I am Very truly yours:-J. E. SMITH \IUST A WORB\ SUBSCRIBE AND READ THE No need looking further, Terms only $1.00 per year, payable strictly in advance. 308 WORX Of every description, from a single line to * \Three Sheet Poster,\ can be obtained atthe Job Department of the Milford Tidings Office, at prices as low as can be afforded for First-Class work. When in town tall and age as, even. though of the head became also darker in patches. you have no order for fob, work or do not This continued until the of hair were quite dark, contrasting with tht tat ural patches of snow-white hair. The bsir did not unfrarsally change before her death. In 1881 Dr. Prentiss bad published an- wish 30 subscribe fur the paper. ~ N. B.-The Tidings will not be sent to sy person after the time of subscription | has other case of kiduey disease, pyelone- phritis, treated with piiccarpine. . The bats I | of the-patient, a lady, aged #5, changed itrom light blond to black upser the m- | fnence of the drug. - The pilocarpine was administered hyprflzmieally (one-sixth of | a grain) twenty-two times in the course of | two months; She dose was then increased. muchestnutbrufl fede mottbs Inter it was \allsost a pare black.\ It is astis. hawryhfindlhflwcightyasdumrd, thebair is again a dark brown. Dr. Prentise um'bestbapbmm‘bthemdi oh F priveiple, pilocirpine. MWMx-eqfldflxmfiutw a of the ne-_as system, in pain or fright, mun-ham edeolonmpaxbdoxral curiosities. Sofflzhhmhom.d READ THE Bally, Brawl: tnicherbocker, € no” ~ he Sunday Press, TaEy Ark FRST SKAM FAMILY iXp RESEZESS PAPERS 'The Most Popular at the Capital of the - Empire State. &1 th: Frcs; Andegradent in Crergthing. Both - the \TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : Daily one Month go centy > > $61 yeut | Sunday Press, 12 pps 96 coly, -- $22 year Sezeple Copies Sent Free to 23 Applicants Subscriptions by mail received at the ofice | of the Tromces, MiScrd, N. Y. Westcott. Block © Fine Goods, Fair Dealing. md 'low prices . { Decided bargams-m all abgye Thanking our pe-] |trons fer pest liberelt United | and | Associited_ Prem] wf Thgy are: talkmg Just ow about Clothing, =. 00. ~~ t - - _ Dress Goods, - toy - Underwear, = c- Overwear, e h > Ie - Boots, , l Shoes | -= .~ o l...>~._. Rubbers, < 4. w - mennoned al moles? 2s Stock never as cognplete in all lmesasnow.) / . HAVE you BLEN IN THE NEW mwmmwfiwom THE-- Wilber Block? 1 have£ complete stock of GOLD, GOLD FILLED, SILVER and SILVERINE Watches, - fited with Eucin, Haxtoxt, ITcumois, 'af8~bther-American «Movements, . 4=5.4LC TWTARLRAKIBRD. like hznlflu fie of Eightday Mantle Clocks» Nickle Clocks both with and without alarm. , . sen C 2 Rogers Bros, HOLLOW and FLAT WARE, Roctrs Exo's, 184% Knives, Foks atid Spoons at greatly reduced prices, °__ Also Jewelry of every due-union. -_- _- --SPECTACLES and if all kinds andagrades, accurately fitted to the eyes, af ;yrieobwttmauydufive¢vét purchased before. Myzoodsmnnxmmd to be of the 'very best pduandupdmpbwnfimplkypobm be bought. =f shall continue fo seff the- “fink gm, gm! gum onl HKALGBIXEB . Tromflrednre-l prices finch-fl save lbepmbucrl’mmhnlnfiflmdolhm Agents you. Thanking you fyr past favors I solicita fair portion of your foture Resgectiaily, --- J. I GRIDLEY mm,‘ To t. \What We 8 ~* beumnmgudm Acorn and Andes: STOVES & RAN l AmEoszlbletndPocizQC-flay Rators and Shere, \220 GRANTTE WARE, ERIE HOLLOW WARE,-The finest in the word. > >. ..} Ares ind Cromest sews. fluwammuwpnfim vi- Wagncaupmdeopodmmnkfusfiueacmepfim Luther & Peck \ unseat and Fine Lomber, sho mmmwh gnge thoroughly season, ”if dagfiadwlbeflsumfindh Wabe’zz-gi’agiu’: were, 57 A the wand -Treim Domes wesp . any change raze in the ector of the Lait has bees 3:7; “g?“ te a“ tor ato bes portret | mwzmweabml netized. - Pharopratis Goma. \12 Bava &., Assay, M. Y Ekey, f : _ . T* | ~ | ne oe dor emai ize dence oe 4] A