{ title: 'The Medina Daily Journal. (Medina, N.Y.) 1903-1932, March 11, 1903, 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/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
t- * t • t s- f' I- fc* „ W f< Medina Miy Journal S>«'# *•*>&« Act ofCoiigresaof Mswh-ft law- -. gt«3SOBEP3CION FRI0B By niaa'orcsmer s «9 do*year. t**» inontlis, invarisfbly in.advance,. Advertising Ttaleson AppUc»«on* . Wednesday, &arch II, 1905. 1903 MARCH 1 8 15 %% 09 IS-*- 9 ID 23 BO Tu. T 10 17 % 31 w«, 4k 11 18 25 Th, 5 12 19 26 ^••i- 190* it. .6 13 20 27 Sa. IU 1 'I \ ' 7 14 21 38 -«—3f MOON'3 PHASES, 3o» 6 #£ I .€& $$$ 13 IS PMoon 2Q 28 »:OS JJ.B1, PUTBACILLI IN CANAL Dr. Ravold Deposited ?oo Bar- , rels of Cultures at Letiumt, , AND TRACED THEM TO 8T, LOUIS Hi PrceiJcntlal If M«iti«>j» Made • . , - possibllttfea/ Betroth MteiV Marth-^tU-^Wit*^ tho prejenee of William J. Bryan, -whs matte an address at the. first session of tho Democratic state Jufltciftl con- vention -In. this city, the canyentipi): nwjuld have <been featureless,' Judge 0eorge Ji<' Yaple of Meiidon, who is. the nominee fpr supreme judge for a term at 10 years -to succeed Judge Jfraafe A. Hcoken was nomin- ated without any other- name being presented to tie convention. •Por^regent of toe state university Wellington K, Butt of Sagtaaw WW left In undisputed possession of <,ho, Held before the first ballot was com- pleted, the other candidates lor the plaeo withdrawing hi Mt. Burt's favor, Sir, \Welsh and Mr, tMckson vert candidate, again for a second, vacancy -on the board of regents t .but \were de- feated by Willis J, Abbot of Battle Creole, editor of the Pilgrim magazine. The-resolutions adopted merely ])<!• apo«Bt tho support of \thoughtful citi- zens for those principles of govern- ment which, find expression through the national platforms of. the party.\ This Is the. only reference made to m-. tfonnl platforms, The initiative and referendum Is de- manded and tho recent coal strike Is taken aa,sn indication of the nooej- ally for the municipal -ownership ol pi*\!c utilities, 1?) mecttcn rfvas made, in tho con- vention of wmoeratlc. presidential possibilities, t II i \. , NEW CANAL PROPOSlvTlON, \ymmip'm- '^mts^^m^ A Hsrmliii Creature Very Like the Typhoid Bsclltus U«d In the Ex- psHmtnt—Wer« Found\ In Sample* <sf Water «t fntsryati All the Way to 8t Loulti St U\i\i t Mweih 11. - On Amoni Batold dumped 200 torrois of toctill |«to the CWcaJBP.drainage canal tc ptovo that typhoid germs vrouM o« owricd, prajjUcBlly without ka«a. a* tot at SU l/iuls, H<* provoif ttls i>oin-t m ht told the \Oaltod States «otaml^ niooef, who^HMomod hearings «a 0« cut yeflsjrday. Tho ospcrltttoiit condttcled by Or Bwrold w«s probisAly the larget of the Mnd wr undertakoh In Uto Watery of .bacteriological selcnee. 'Shu nt moat secrecy was ohaorveifor detce tion meant not only the failure of tht X rlraent, tiwt the exposing of the i to the CMeago people-, to nay nothing of the posslWHty of Urouote -witli the woa, «oatdlng tho eaaal it ••ir, | fltte \oWllW» prodlglosuj,\ a ham- lem e«4««» \«W7 \Ho fte typaold tM«4llu», ws» itsed la tho expcrlmisnts hetng Imported from Europe, Aa omj- scat Qernm tclcaatlst made U»e mecc* •key sutlutes* ^wrWeh w«6 described in detail by Br* BUvold, Pirau a. bar rel full.of the eoltwe -was carrlod tc 0t*ftt»n^tnd emptlod. Soon aftertmei Kpodmen* of the bacilli were detected iA±ho watorworKa and\ at tho hydrant* of this city. Whoa time fmd been allowed fm these to disappear tho big experiment *•», rnada Two. hundred battels ol the'euHuro, loaded on-two frelghl oars, wore conveyed, to Lomont and aldetrTacktfd. *\ When night came llavold and hi* assistants emptied the barrels intc the canal, and, as he expressed It* \de parted with baste for tU Ixuls.\* \Bie result 6f the experiment was even more successful than had been expert ed, and the 1 \bacillus protflgtosus,' which had never i hetoro\ Inhabited these waters, wero found in large BtebSrS 1tt ssin^ples af WRtfr talvBll al Ifrequent Intervals betttoeh and St, Louis. Proposed Improvement of Present VV*terw*y by Expenditure of $5,QQ0,Q06«. . Albany, March 'H.-~An. entirely *p canal propogiUon Is to make Its ap- pearance here today, when John Mur- ray 'Mitchell of Kew Y«rt city' WW propose* to the canal committee tho Im- provement of tho prcieat waterway at an expense of only $3,000,000. •Mr. Mitchell represent* citizen's who propose to accomplish, b y such an ex- penditure, o& mueh*liupt^ggxnent In s shorter period as w*»ld be obtained by the espoadlturo of f 100,000,000, • The. plan is a sltoplo oat* nnd olcetrlelty la to ho Its basis. In short they propose to erect along t&o canal a third rail cloctrle track on which will bo run \donkey motor*.** Those motors will tow canal beats at higher rate of speed and «i a mini- mum cost to boat ovmeta and ship- pers. The cost of emilpplng tho Brio and ChampSaln canals will be 13,000,000 and tho present canal with Its pres- ent deptti vm bo utilized. AH that tho promoters of tho eatorprlso ask Is two per <?ent ot tho gross receipts charged for towing. It Is estimated that tfco twonuo de- rived by the state- wilt h« sufficient to pay for alt repair*. \Hicse repair* smoiint te abent |SOO,000 a^yosr, The apparatusi is to bo the property of the stale. m'J-w ef CcarSe.-Pen-y Wssated \Her ,#aii»si fftfneral.to fe'Without , • \ _ \SftnaMpn. Boston, Mwci 11.—X coMrovattfy between Mrs, feson-wayy .mother «t George XJ, p, perry, the aeouspd ne- .„ „ ,__._,„ . gro niurdei'ar of Clara A* Jfifttoa an* : ag-oyed that their very'location has bev ' jfc-ltet of'ltent clHes torned would J» a list ofTOwly\ all tUe-great C4pitals of the world- Eersepolls, the splendid ro- Iden'cit Of a lonksfriea of rulers, whose %-lbutary proyiHees extended f roa» tl»e Indus to the Hellespoutj w^as burned, with alt Its palaces and.,tehiples; Baby- ion and Carthage were so utterly d<n AgiteB JtfcMeo, who; died to QmribridSre iaii of \physljial exhsu^tlffiifBllowias fever, and the Rev.. William PlcWaisd Of |he --Obwles Street African MethO' Jist chnrchi was. an unexpected Inci- dent of the funeral of ¥em yester- day, . I * ' JEha'clerfiunan had ptepared, & state- ment wjaWh BO wiehed 'to read, ejepsfot in« that thofUblie would'be a.dmltte.\ to «ie «fervl'?8,' Mrs. ©onway, bo-w- ever, had determined on a private se^ vice and after disenssion with'Mr Pickland she gained her point, Mr. FicWand later iiade nubile bis .statement. In it he demanded an in vestigation, of S'erry'q treatment ip Jail and an iovegtigatjpn 4o detormln* whether or not the yppng man's deatS was due to natural causes, The funera) service was held at an «gndertalver'a room. Fully 1,000 per aosss*were gathered in the vlolnlty,,'btM only 50 individuals who held tickets were admitted, The se«ice was brte! and then the body la a white caslset or* top cf whlei <was a bouquet -ol piBhs and roses, was taSea away lot burial. Scnt.to^Tloipltal For Criminal Insane New Y(gJ(, March'11.-—A jury In the court of general sessions declared Daniel Harltlns, the gardener vie shot Wzzle <Joane|l, a servant em ployed on tto e«f»te of Mrs, Collin P. pantlnston at Thrtgs's Neclc, «n? Sept. 3 last, Insane and 3udse New- -hnrser orderod the man cent to ifat teawan. stato hospital for tho criminal insane. Tho girl Is still in a hospital , Found Dead In School House. CatafcHl, March 11.—William Johr* son, aged 60, a well bnown fawner ol Cairo, was .fcund dead in tho Round Top schcol'Siottse near that place by a boy who entered the hulldlwy tc start a fire In the atove. A bottle that had contained carbolic acid was found by his sldo. Ho was unraarrlOo\ and no cause la Assigned fof aio suppo^toil stttckle. BIVERS RISING RAPIDLY, £f ATiSTiClAN'S REPORT« Section Hand Killed by Train. Fonda, March 11,—William Kesils ot St Johnsville, a section hand on 4ho* New Ifosk Central raMroad, tnui killed by a fast train «t this pla«e. Ho \was dtllng on. the rail nsl&op. Qoverrfbr Osrvln Chsrocs Orlberyv Providence, R. 1, MarcS 11,—Ia a special mcjsage sent to tho senate Governor &|clu3 T. Garvin declared that bribery h common in n;any town of the staler and .that many memhsr* of the legislature occupied seats oh- tsdned *y purchasing votes. The gov er«er racommeaded the anpolnteeat of a commissioner who shall employ agents to detect bribery and brio? of fenders to Justice. Qoyeraor Qarvfa 1* the first Democratic governor Rhe*ie Island ias had to a number ot years TStesenato la Hepitbllcan, Ohio* at Cincinnati Is at a Stag* ol 48,1 Feet—Floodi\ In Arkansas. Washington, March 11. - f h<S wea4Ser hurtas has issued a special river bulletin >whjak reads: The Ohio river atsdinelnnatl has risen one-halt foot slnc\ mornltiitJind Is now at «i staso ot -184. foot and rla* Ins at the rate of l*10th of a toot- hourly. The \lower Ohio continues to rise, the stage\ ot Cairo being tS.8 foot, a-rise of Ofi foot since morning, \\ The Mississippi at Memphis Is at a stago of 35.0 feet, a rise of 0.3 fee* slnco Morning* No material ofetnge has occurred In the lower .Missis- sippi, , Ho4W rains In Arkansas have causolhth© White, river to rise raijldly ttM~tbe prospects are- that It will reach .the highest stage ever record- ed» Medsraialy 'heavy saiajfftave tal' T J emont|' le,ll n the Ohio basin and in Tonnes- ace, The present Indications aro for fair weather for a day or so. Democrats Talk About Unity, Washington, March 11.—After the senate adjourned a number ot Deato- eraUe senators met informally la Sen- ator qcrnmn's room .Tor a general dl»- cussion of tlie political situation in .the senate-and In the country at large , Senator Gorman talked-at some leagtb about 1 the necessity ef party unity ana pointed out lfafc*jtteeesstty ot harmony In the party In tfie aeeate at \this time because of its-pesstble. beating en the fortunes of the Democratic party ihreugbouUhe country. A number ol other senators expressed similar viaws hut necessarily no action was taken, *s the meeting was fa no* sense dffl- clal. Wheat Bimslidsng in Farmer's Hands k ' tfyi Per Genfof Last Year's Crop. Washington, March U,-The March report Of the statistician of the depart meat of ttgrieulttire shows the amount of whpat Jfbnlai3ilns: .in ffU-mprs* hands March 1 to have been about 164,000, OOO'bushols, or* 2-1.5 per cent of last year's crop, as compardl with -23.2 pes' east of Pekln. Rebel Prttoners Beheaded, \PeMfi SEsrefii 11,—TFtraa Shi' Iftt, jthe governor of tjh| LI province, ihavlng been informed that the Boxer 6rganl&a« tlOh Was resuming activity in tho oast- ern part Of the province, despatched troops, wtoo discovered that members of the society, well armed, were drill- ing at night in a town a. hundred miles The Boxers wero dls- 'r»- ceritof ie crop- of 1901 OH hand March I porsed after a dozen of them and sev- ' 1, 1002, and 24.5 per coftt of the croi., era! soldiers had been killed, Yuan of 1000 on hand March 1, lOoi. • , Slit J<al ordered, the prisoners to be The corn in fanners' hands Is est!, beheaded and their heads displayed In mated at or about 1,060,000,000 bush-] public and issued a proclamation lm- els, or 41,0 per cent .of last year's crop, against 29.2 her cent of ths crop of 1901 on hand March 1,. 1002, and 4oth Anniversary of Warrlafje. tsadsn, Mftreh 111—The 40ttt mmA Yersary of the marriage of Kins Ed- ward and Queen; Alexandra was cele- brated, yesterday with the Customers firing of salutes and ringing of bells. Their majesties received many tele grams Of congratulations from public bodies. There was a ball last Mghf at Buckingham palace in honor of the occasion, .—-*\\\ 36.3 per cent of tho E erop of 1900 on hattd March i, 1901, Of Oats there are repbrjpd- to be Sdjout 36S,000,6OO bushels, or 3S.9 pei cent of last year's crop, still 4n» farm- ers* Ihahda, as\<:ompared WIth-'SO.O pet. , cent Of the crop of 1901 on hand March .1,1902, and 36 per cent of the «rop oi 1900 oh hand March 1,1901.. \ In tho state of New tork the per- centages of last'year's crop remaining on the farms a.re;'\ Wheat 27» cortu 29, oats 4,7, -•'.--. •' — Fort Plain Postofffce, , JFondft,- N, Y.* March li,-—Congress- inan lilttaueir lias forwarded to Jftresi- •^epit Hoosevelt (ho name of Abraari Slefoiidorr, as the sueeessor of Post' niastsr Emlie BebOll ol Fort Piatn, who *a8 removed from office alew : days' ago on cfhai'gos preferred by & detjk In the I%a^,PiaInpoStomce\. ' posing the death penalty on mo'mb'ers and abettors cf tho organization, •l Caretaker,Watson Relieved. Binghamton, March II. 1 —The man-' agera of the Susquehanna Valley iome have temporarily relieved Caretaker Watson of his duties Tonight tihey eX ,pect to hold a formal meeting and take final action, on the cases of Superin- tendent Fuller awf Watson, against whom, charges c/cruelty and neglect have been, preferred. Another ropr& Scntative of the \uVte board of chaH- •ties, M. *S. Wepdon of Rochester, las arrived here-to Inspect the home, but says his visit has no special connec- tion with the recefit'investigation, To Be Named Defiance. * New York, March li.—The Com- mercial Advertiser, says: The yacht now bflllding to defend .bhe America's cup is to be named -jlfeflance,, . ' Wooa^men of the World. Gerry, Pa., March 11.—The annua! convention of Woodmen of the World for the district comprising Otto, Pennsylvania, New York and New Jer- sey met here. Sherman A-Fan-all of Johnstown, Pa . presided, Reading of reports consumed the day's^Bessioii. coiae £ matter of doubt, Rome \Was burned eight times* • Jerusalem four times, and, fhe-ugb they rose from their ashes, - . ' The second temple £ not like the. flr».t Athens, Syracuse, Bagdad, Alexan drla and Antioch now exhibit only # shadow of their former grandeur, The Phoenicians, like :the Spartans and A 8 \ syrians, disappeared \with the -ruin of their capitals, but the most fateful con- flagration recorded in the history of the world is perhaps that of Moscow. \They-tails as if the fate .of Europe had been decided at Waterloo,\ says De Bourlenue in his menioirs of ^the first empire. \If Napoleon had beaten Wellington and Blucher a dozen times, it could not have retriesed the reverses Of the three preceding years. The truth is that the French Caesar and his for- tune were ruined by the burning of Moscow, TluiC city was the funeral pile of the great nation.\ Man More ttania fhrnn Solid. Every fiber and every cell that enters into the formation of a living'body is bathed in moisture, by which means alone these ultimate elements are kept alive and aro enabled to carry out their duties. Even the bones, which appear to be the most solid of all, owe wore than half their -weight to tho presence of fluid. That our bodies contain a large amount of fluid is proved in a strlktaK manner by tho blisters -which rise after the infliction of a burn. Water, In fact, plays a very impor- tant part In the human anatomy, for it Is through Its agency that the vital processes of digestion, absorption and tho excretion of waste products are ttirrieftour. To rwluci the whole matter to figures and taking ItfA pounds to be the total weight of an average full grown man, Ij. is said that wafer alone accounts for 109 pounds of the whole. Wanted « Cktueno Sons. Most of the policemen In Australia are Irtshmcnr\whose genius for Namou- otis blundorlug loses nothing of Its qual- ity under the Southern Cross, Here is oa lustancc! Many Chinese names ate reminiscent of a burlesque and are probably merely barbarian caricatures •of the originals. Of these Fong Fat Ah Su and Ah Foe ar^tiie most com- mon. A newly appointed crier In a county court was ordered by Urn judge to a case in which a Chinese was witness to call for Ah Song. The son of Erin looked pusded and darted a look ot the beaelt to try to discover If this «w a colonial Joke; but, seeing the judge as grave ns an undertaker, he turned to the audience and blandly in- quired. \Glntlem?n will any of yon fa- vor his honor with a song?' « Hi Wit? Or**. CraiT* Hollow. The stems of smis sudjoata ate usnj nily hollow, and the knots of nodes which occur at intervals and which have a peculiar degree of firmness, de- rived from the Interlacing of fibers, give them a firmness and strength Which they would otherwise lack. If the material of wheat straw were to a soihl form, It Would ninke bnt a thin wiry stem, which .would snap with great ease, but In the hollow form, with the Intervening knobs, the neces- sary support Is afforded. Stencil With A •Wife. A former vicar of a country parish \not far from Sheffield was a gentleman distinguished for his learning nnd for the position he took a t Cambridge. One day a visitor to the village got Into con- versation with one of the parishioners, and the talk turned to the Vicar. \Sour clergyman,\ said the visitor, \is a Very able man. Why, he is-a wrangler.\ •T never heard that,\ was the reply or the vfllager, 'Tant Bis missis is.*— London Tit-Sits. \• Looking For Burdick's WatcH. * Hew York, March 11.—Captain Lan- gan of the detective bureau has\sent out a Score of detectives, at theNre- quest of the Buffalo police, to search all pawnshops for a watch owned by Edwin L, Burdtek, which is supposed to have been pawned in this cltv. East Buffalo Live Stock Market. CATTLE—Best steers On sale, §§j!5 @5.60; good to choice ^shipping steers, $ 5.6D@5.10 ; fair to good steers, §4 40 @4,$5; common to fair heifers, $3.40 @3.65; choice to extra--fat heifers, $ 4.i5f@4.60 ; good btttdher- bulls, $2.76 @il6; choice to prime Veals, J8.25$> 8.50; handy fat calves, ?3,75®4.00. ' ' SHEEP ANQ LAMBS -^Top native l&jibs, ?il0@7,25; fair to good, $6.S5 \@7.0O; culls and common, $4,00@-4.5Oj good t o prime wethers; -? 5.76@6.0Q , HO&S -; Mixed packers' % grades, ?150@7'.76; medium hogs, $7.75% 7.90; pigs, good to Choice, $746@7,26. - The Law ot Fatting: Bodies. Alt faUlug v bodle«, whether they he crystal raindrops or meteorites, fsll with what philosophers term \a tml- form accelerated motion^—hi other Words, If a body be moving at a certain velocity at the expiration of one second from the beginning of its fall it will be moving with twice that velocity at the expiration of two seconds, gaining in Speed at a uniform rate throughout the course of its fall. • Breie«* j?i>(b:'j»:i>l»UW|i.'W«'*«*' , i '\ One of tfce-BMWt reawttk&bie; dWcom? les in the suppeof ^peculiar spcc.esot fish-ever made- «H this/continent was \that made at Carsdn Gity, Nev-r In 1$7§. At that time both the Hale and Norcross and the Sayage w^es,*^ down to what is known a s the <.2,<K)0 footleveL\ W\heu attlmt depth, a slSb- terranean lake of- boiling water was tapped. This accident flooded both mines to a depth'of 400 feefc A%this; wafer had\ ail been pumped out except that which bad gathered In basins and In the inaccessible portions of the- works, and when the water still had a temperature of 128 degrees-nearly scalding hot—many queer topkhig flttle blood red fish were taken out. In ap- goldflsh. , ^ They seemed lively and sporpve enough when they were fn their native elejpfnt-bQitlng water-notwithstand^ ing the fact that they did not even have rudimentary eyes. When the flsh were taken out of the hot water and put in- fo buckets of sold water for the pur- pose of being transported to the sur- face, they died a s qulekly as a perch or a bass would i t plunged into a kettle of-water that was scalding hot; not only this, but the skin peeled oft.esact- ly as If It had been boiled. Eyeless fish are common chough in all subterranean lakes and rivers, hut this is the only case on record of living flsh being round In boiling wate?, , r»«.i»**ri»te i* K.cii^rck'. There was a very large congregation, and the rector seeing that there was only one alms dish mudeslgus to a rus- tic from the chancel entrance to come to bun and bade him go law the rec- tory garden through a glass door Into the dining room, where there hud been a slight refection before the service, bring a dish from the table, take it down one side 'of! the north alalo and up the other and then bring It to the clergyman at tbe.jplace from ivhlch be started. The rustic disappeared, reap- peared with the dlsb, took I t as ho was ordered and presented It to the people on either side of Tlie aisle, and then ap- proaching the rector whispered In his cart \I've done as yer told me, sir. I've taken It down yon side of the aisle and up t'other—they'll uoue of 'em *ave any,\ No order had been'given to empty the dlsb, and It was full of bls- cultsl-Uean Hole'* \Memories.\ ShelUc (» CM»««W«loietArt, By softening shellac with lionl It may be drawn out and twisted Into st- tuost white sticks and of a fine illky luster. Extreme beauty Is given to Chinese works of l art by the me of shellac. Some of them are very ancient and of groat value. They are chiefly ckoweliow boxes, tea basins or other small objects made of wood or mctaL They are covered with a coat; of shel- lac, colored with vermilion, nnd while the layer of shellac I* soft and pliable It is molded and shaped into beautiful patterns. Some* of these works Huns ornamented are so rare and beautiful that even In China they .cost fabulous sums. Unappreciated. \He's not whatjou would call strict- ly handsome,\ said the major, beaming through bis glasses On a^baby as he lay howling in his mother's arms, \but It's the kind of face that grows on you.\ ' \Tfs not the kind of face that grew on you!\ was the indignant- and Unex- pected reply of the fond mother, \Xou'd be better looking if it had!'* A Full Hand. \John said Sirs. Norton as she seat- ed herself,at the hotel breakfast table,, \did you call a Walter?\ \Yes said .Norton, looking up from his paper,- 'T called him, and he had a tray fulj.\ .- Feminine ConTer«a<lan. Blobbs-flVomeh talk about nothing but ihelr dress. • Slobbs-<*h, I don't know. • It seems to me J've heard some of them talk about their hats.—Philadelphia Record,\ •ride ' v M He Oniy Could; Sirs. Naoricb~-isn't it grand to in your owir-carrlage? r Mr.' Noerich—Yes, but I'd enjoy if more if Lcould Stand on the sidewalk andsee myself ride by^Brooklynldtev •J liLCfcMMSlONS Something Now! Buffate'i Gm\ 'AwtwnoMIe Shorn Cotivenfion Hall, 0iiff9iW JVlarch 9 to 14. The^#¥orJ?.\0entral'Wiil sell xoxuifj twn tietetaJo.-Bufjfalo, fro^ Mecjina^t-tlie rate ofil,20. The Automolrtfe ShWwill ope.n at Qon- Yention. Hall o» Monday evening March Sth^ttdvvSlleontinu.etJiTOtigU the Week, open £very -afternooii and evening,, witljt band conceits from X^amtteysomVVhTtTesembH nE? and JfSO to 10.-3Q ^. m.>. &me ol the begt\ maeliines in theeduntry will ^>& ojf teuibjtion. ^pri-cran^^ipt^lcets call on,Hew Yoxk Gentfai 4 tioik:et hjgents, JOt5 ZIWMER To New England* Boston Sprfngflefd, Palmer, Worcester and South Framjngfwm*. • Wass. Saturday, AprlWth, 1903. $10.00 Round - Trip. Umlt'IODays, On above date the New York/ Central will run. an .Easter Excursion to .'Boston, Springfield, Pabner, Worcester and South Fwromghain, Mass, Only tea dollars jrouad trijp, Ikoit 10 daysor -oaita Tuesday, ^pril 14th, tickets good on regular trains, except limited trains $08. ff, 22, 2(1, 130,19,25 and 51, Boston tickets arejgood.for atop- over on tti© going trip, within final limit, at. oitlier Springfield, Patnler, Worcester or South Fraraingham, but, in caso of stopover pasengera. ax© required (o go on to Boston for validirtiQn ol tickets for return trip. Boston mid vicinity lias tnaiiy at- tractions such as thq Old State Honse, erected in 1713* occupied by a Roy- alist Kegiment in, 17flS. The Mum- achusetta State House, whose gilded ^doine was called by Oliver Wendell Holmes \Tito JBfebof tho Universe\ Beacon Street, tho pririeipnl resi' denco street of Boston, Old Christ Ghuroli, tho oldest Church in Boston, dating from 1723, tho aigntil lanterns of 3?a«l • Rovexe were displayed from, the lowest of this Church on the night of April 18th, 1775; Old South Meeting ifouso erected in 1729; Tho Boston Public Oarden, Boston 1'uhlie Utbrary.FtttettilBall, The Cradle of liberty, B«*few llttl Monnment, jtfarvard College Build- ing and oilier objects of importance. - ©all onle«r York Central ticket agents for tickets tod all informa- tion;: or address, H» 2*AWIY, presslbly shocked. \Ob ton In this state! 1 am sorry; I am sorry; 1 am sorry!\ As the bishop was passing by on the other side Wllfcins 'pulled Iilnwclf, to- gether ami hiccoughed afterhlm: \Bishop-. btsbopF The bishop hastened bach In the hope of hearing a resolution of repentance. \Bishop If yon are really serry-I for- give yoat\ A nird MncU Like m. Flih. Tlie \birds of a feather\ that \dock together\ do nojt belong to the penguin family, as they are entirety destitute of feathers, having for-ft covering a kind of stiff down. Another penguin pecul- iarity is that it swims not on, bnt un- der, water, never keeping mere than its head out and when fishing coming to the surface at such brtef and rare ln= tervals that an ordinary observer would almost certainly mistake it for a flsh. lie FOI-K*Y* the Blafcop. A certain bishop, an ardent advocste of tcetotaltsm, found one otBls (lock»t© .whom be had preached for years, lean- ing In helplest* drunkenness against a \Wllklnsr* cried the bishop,, inex- General Afs&nt, 377 Main St,, Buffalo, KMklhtc «tuu,tr«rT. \Ah tCnt-ln*! 'Vim'\^ ' , , ST, JWS mmm* *Tk& Lenten address \on Wed- nesday nt 4:15 p.m, will* be del}/ ered by the Rev, F, S. Btmhain, Rector of Oltrist Church, Albion. There will te Services otfTneta- l».« Evo„ instead-of Friday as tho Rector wllhe otttof townoaFridoy- . * G, TORKBg.ttectof. Action of Republican Caucue. Albahy, March 11.—A iteptiblicsn caucus last night decided to make the mortgage tax Mil a party measure, not exempting insurance eomsanfe-J, savings banks and building associa- tions and to increase the Honor tax 80 per cent on all classes of Bcenses. SIxconrnKlna;. r \ily dear sir,\ Wrote the editor to the persistent young author,. «*in order to simplify matterSjSOUleWhat We are In- closing a. bunch of our 'declined with thanks* notices. If yen Will put one of these hi an envelope With yodr man- uscript and mall it to yourself, It will make it easier for all of txs, and you will be saving something in postage as well.\—Chicago Pos,t. . GoldflBh. . . There are some goldfish in Washing- ton Which belonged to the Same family fos the last fifty years, and they seem nobigger dad no less vivacious today than they did When they first came in- old. y Depre»»lngr. ' , i\ \Were there laughter and cheersl dur- ing your speechT' \Weli;\ answered tlie yonthfulstates- man, \thgre Weren'f-many cheers', but now and then people in the audience looked at one another and laughed.'*— Washington Star, . X C3a»e.-ot Ncceaaltr. Sirs; Smith—We missed you so nluch atourparty! Sirs. Jonesr-A,nd I wassoyexedwhen i couldn't cornel Tfou see; our cook lild company nuexpectedly, and she needed us to fill oht the card tabies.-*-Detrolt Journal. • \• She eyes of other people are.the.^eyes that ruin ns.-^ErahkUn. , VYsather Indication*, fialn and cojeter Wedneadsy; Thurs- «ay fair; Ught to fresh northwest >4nds. \ - • dlalrnl Of Sv^edsn and ( Wor«ay* ^Washington, M&rch 31. — Mintstei G-rlp and Mr. Bowes have signed tho isrotocols providing for the settlement of the claims of the citizens of Sweden and Norway against Venezuela along lines laid down. In\ the United States' protocol. . •. • * ' - ^ ., ,^_ . ' I -Buffalo Hay Market. f~HAY — Timothy, per ton, loose, *1S.OO®17.00; tray\ prime on track, per torn, $16.60; r?o. 1 do, do, flB.OO ©16.00; No-Vclo. do, $ 12.00@14.O0 . Flcinrea and the Bye. Sir Thomas ijawrence,, an eminent English painter and president of the Royal academy, commended the ple- to the owner's possession, A few of the flsh in the Royal aquarium in St, Petersburg are known to be 150 years | tmtes of a youns artist and then sold to Elm: \You ha-ve around your room tvfO or three rongh, clever, but coarse flemish sketcbeM. if I Were you. I •would not allow my eye to become fa- -rnlllarized- with any but the highest forms, of art If you cannot affotd to buy good oil paintings, -buy good en- gravings of'great pictures, or have nothing at all Upon your walls. - -'Sfoto allow, to intercourse with your fellows* that 'evil eommoMcatiOns cor- rupt good manners,' So is it with pic- tures*. If-you allow youf eye to \become familiar with \what is vukaT in con- ceptlonj however free ahd dashing the handling attd. bowever excellent the feeilng for Color*, your taste vgill inseu- ;slbly become ^Lepraved. WherehSi If you habituate your eye 16 look only \5>n what i> pure-.and grand or refined and lovely,' yoor taBte will Irisehslblyi 'Tjecome eleyatedL\ { . \ •; •_ •• -j ijr: 03 jnc Hoiaredge!A{ Honrss^-atc -,'.' Be pA3N'JEEN»J I Satisfactio; dera.at Georg ers, oratiesif r • 1 nave sonn \Vicunt to orde Also the ne Gcods, and CI goods! For tei I bave the 1 black i I have thel Worsteds best tri Cleaning, pairing* finefe Ladfies' T satisfaci PHIL1 Mci if go! Or, E 4 I freely ceri the \bed whe the mosfcterril erine disease, I'omeroy's S after having . Buffalo's mosl *- 33H After 20 yi words can des Catarrhal Blc Deafness, srnl the leading B their head pt within a shp Conise of thi made me a w health and \W recommend ti feting huinan Erie Laundry DlaBfeated. h« Daughters \S f»4p i . Beaut PermaneD Increase of pi 128 Oak C Fotj adven • a Pply at th Opera House I . \ The^ooiti ft-ttpiber is 22