{ title: 'The Medina Daily Journal. (Medina, N.Y.) 1903-1932, August 17, 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/sn94057567/1903-08-17/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-08-17/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-08-17/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-08-17/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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~-- i - rrSr ?Sp3S ! PAKER * BENSON. p \^* '**+«n«l February & 1808. at Medina,; .' ' m N T, aHcconil-oW matter' wder ::l6i;|iOM>fir«lQf March 8,1879. .... StJ^0EJM?rON PBICE By moil or earner: §3.0.0 a year; '$ 1 for nix months; 50 cents .for three inpiithe, invariably to advance,, « A£*ert)$ngR&te9 on Application, ,. Republican Nominations. • For Member of Assembly, OMBIiES Sg3RIDG32MA*r. For Coroner, :. EDWARD MUNSON. r 6TEAMEB SUNK, . Remit of a Deliberate Attempt to De- stroy the Boat. ITtlca, Aug. 17.—Tbe steamer 'White .' 6tar, owned by -Captain Eugene Tor- ' rence, was sunk at iter dock at Sara- nac lake shortly after' 2 o'cloclt Sun. • flay morning as a result of a deliber- ate attempt to destroy the boat, A dynamite cartridge placed near a gasoline tank on the steamer and fired by a fuse from the dock com- pletely tore tup how out of the boat. Rivalry among tho steamboatmen has boen strong hero all of tho season. , ^Torrence has also, It Is said, made eorae,. enemies among tho native'ele- ment here. < *Fho noise of tho explosion was lioard by tho night watchman of tho \Rtvernldo Inn and Officer Moore, but they wore unable to locate the cause until after daylight Tho Iqcal police nro -at worU on tho case and dotoetlvos from Albany-will bo eiigagod to place *~Hho Wamo if possible, RAN INTO AN OPEN SWITCH. Cleveland and New York Expreii Wrecked at .a Street Crossing. Cleveland, 0., Aug. 17.—Shortly ntt or leaving horo Sunday afternoon 'tho Cleveland and New York \flyer\ ox- press on tho Brio railroad was wreck- Cd at tho Utorary street crossing by running into an open switch. ^ho train waa j-unnlng slowly and no one* was killed, though a numbSr of perrons woro seriously Injured. Tho paaaengor train nftor running into-tho open switch struck a switch fcngino and tho Impact was torrtuc, The baggage car vias derailed nnl split. None of tho other cars waa derailed. Tho flyer carried about 100 pasaoit- gora, many of whom woro cut by fly- Irttsr glass. A special train an hour later C*ftlod tho passengers east. Bouibardwent by Furfdsb Artillery EjqjJodftd a Number of Mines. NCpnsta»Unoiile> Aug, a#,r-The offl-. cials here affect 'ftpftjiij.ee of the news that Jtussia'Js^f easing; a sciua'd- toil t o TurldBh*wat<er 1 s. ,'EJiejp'say that two* divisions of the \Russian Slack sea fleet which Recently aMemblea for the usual auttunn mjweuvers left SatQiijn. three: days ago. -and some of the vessefe .will probably' visit ports pa the Tufklish jaack sga, littoral, as; was the case-last year, They scout the idea of a Russian naval demonstra- tion, Qfllclal reports .assert that tie.in* surgentB, when they occupied the toyjn Of Kruehevo, massacred all the Turk- ish functionaries, The recapture of in* town was effected by three Turte teh columns operating from different, points. The bombardment of the Turkish ar- tillery exploded a number of dynamite mines behind the rebel entrenchments, causing considerable damage. The in- surgents then retired to the moun- tains where the fighting continues. A large number of Insurgents took, refuge In tie church of the town and the Turkish artillery commandant aslsed Constantinople* for permission to bombard the church. In reply he was instructed not to bombard it, but to accept the surrender df tbe inaup- gents. Negotiations to this end ara now proceeding. In the fighting around Feriepe 100. Insurgents' were killed and according to official information the Inhabitants of 100 Bulgarian villages have sur- rendered their arms and have been pardoned. A dozen villages in the neighborhood of Perlepe have been oc- cupied by troops. The Porte denies the report eman- ating from Sofia that it lias % armed 5.000 Mussulmans in tho vilayet of BaUnb, A military train was slightly damagod near Volesca, Ono soldier was killed and several others woundod. Two bags of dynamite woro also found attached to a railway 'bridge near Kiiprlll. Insurgents Hold Strategic) Polnti. Rome, Aug. 17.—Reports from Bul- garian sources received horo confirm tho statement that the Insurrection In tho Balkans Is spreading and dally gaining ground. The headquarters of eno revolutionary forces is the hlga p'.ateau of Baba Pollster, which is ewnaldered tho key to the vtlayot of Manastlr. and tho Insurgents are strongly posted at all tho strategical points on tho roads leading to Monoa- tir and Salonlca, . Believed to r£»W Eloped* .flaw York,, Aug. 17;—'instead of lying dead at $°^ bottom of Canada lake or bete Ifist Ift tbe* Adirondack's woods, •George H, Evanjf of Xp^nstown and *Slss Florence Brown oi (Jloversyllje, who disappeared '.a'weelt ago, are .be- lieved to have eloped,, .-detective Ser- geant Murphy of JWewark, & J-^has 'learned, tWt Mrs, w, if. Harper vt Newark and,her sister, MrSi Harry Paxtop, of Johnstown, met JSvans aijd Miss Brown at Electric gark, Vaite- burg, last Wednesday night. %s, Paxton 1$. a friend pt the couple and talked-with them for some time. vrairjr~i&r~l3lana. Blanc,, tbe founder of the Monte Carlo Kapbiinsf resort, \was well aware 1 of tbe desperater .character of many of his customers. Knowing that they includ- ed the scuntand riffraff of the world, he took precautions against them. Be never carried any money, whicb fact he announced so frequently and pub- tiely that. It was known everywhere along *the Riviera that tbe millionaire Blanc never, had a penny on his per- son. But he carried in a pocketbook a draft on red paper for several hundred- thousand francs, payable to the in- dorsee, B[e feared kidnaping as much as robbery, and in case of abduction he Intended to ransom himself with this draft But tbe instructions at his ofUce were not to cash a red draft with his signature unless a telegram was received from him ordering i t to bo done. Too Per»onnl. \I -want you to notify the paper man not to leave this Social Recorder here la the future,** said Mr. Lucky Strike to his\ life partner. \Why 2\ inquired Mrs. Strike. \Why they've got a story hereabout that young chump who is going to mar- ry Laura and refer to him as hOr finance.'* «'0h, I see—a typographical errorl\ \Typographical errorl Babl Error of foot. I hnvo been her finance for tho last twenty years, and. Judging from tho prospects of tho young man she In- elatB. is tho only ono she will ever mar- ry, I will contlnno to act In that capac- ity for tho next twpnty. Stop the pa- per.\— Philadelphia Times. WK9, Village Pottofflca Discontinued. Fonda, N. V., Aug. 17.—The post- master general has ordered tho post- ofllco at Nolllston. this county, dis- continued and tho business tr&nsferrod to the Fort Plain postofflco. A Good Place to Stop. He really ought not to hnvo gono Into the Latin class that day. Ho was called up drat and read ns far as ho had prepared. Then he skirmished on a little further. This is the way It •wont! ' \I Ulysses, saw her (Dido's) heaven- ly form advancing like a goddess In tlio sunlight. I sprang toward her, and she welcomed me. Her hair fell down upon her shoulders like the sun- beams on Olympus. Her eyes sbone like two Jewels of the sen. I—I threw my arms—my arms—about—about her —her neck— neckt and—and—that's as far as r got. professor.\—Exchange. nr*aeVpir*wfJi»It(j».'$ ; Wen* Spur*. ( .» Thackera^ : w# iftot a vain man, and jae disliked vtfnity }» others and made 'it the subject •8^^ ridicule and sar- casm. \'' ' *• After loftg- pleading his family in- duced him to have his portrait paint- ed, and. •JjRcwreneeV a fajndus London artist, gladly undertook the task. Soon after tblpicture -was complet- ed Thackeray chanced to be dining at his club TVhten a; pompous officer of the guards Stopped, beside the table and said: \Hat Thackeray, old boy, I hear Lawrence lias Been painting your por- trait\ \So he has,\ Was the response. \Full length? 1 ' \Noi full length portraits are for sol- diers, that we may see their spurs. But the otlier end of the man Is the principal thing* with authors,\ said Thackeray- WJion Soniirrel» , < V?«» Kmnerorrt. Accounts of early -writer^ show that Bquirrcls must formerly have been amazingly numerous. Godinnn says that the sray coat was a fearfu] scourge to colonial farmers and that Pennsylvania paid f8,000 in bounties for their scalps in 1740. alone. This meant tho acstractlon of 640,000 within a comparatively small district. In the early days ,of western settlement reg- ular hunta \were organized by the In- habitants, -who would range the woods in tiro companies from morning till night, vylay ns to which band should bring home uie greatest number of tro- phies, Tbe quantities thus killed are almost incredible now. A Cfim.aj.tlem ..: lit \^tcV;^ : -/ii&i»»- ;• ~ ' p$n«. m.% DaTiisnt -FijiteVv:-'.. , flight blindnesg is jq? coiiditio^ hj which vision: Js perfect, or f<iirl^ sft-ih. daylight, but falls with the \settitfg: o£ the sun and is not restored und# ordk inary conditions of artificial 'illumina-. j Hon,, The, sufferer from night blind-; ' ness can usually see the light of a cftp- | dlS|6r lamp when he looks directly at : it, But he cannot read even when the light is thrown directly upolwthe page* • Usually, however, he sees well in a room lighted brilliantly with electric ity, the degree of illumination then ap> proaching that of sunligbt. The cause of night blindness Is he- lieved to be an exhausting of the power of vision by too great light, for it oc- curs mainly among soldiers and sailors in the tropics, who are exposed for many hours to'the glare of the sun; and among arctic explorers, whose eyes are dnxzled by reflection from the snow. On shipboard it Is often associated with scurvy.'and persons who are de- pressed physically or mentally or in any other way \run down'' are more likely to suffer than the strong. Sailors have a superstition that the trouble Is due to imprudence in sleep- ing on deck in the moonlight, and this belief is embodied in the term \moon blink,\ by which they call it The tropical moon is probably as guiltless in this respect as It is In the produc- tion of Insanity. i The only treatment for night blind- ness is keeping away fiom bright light or protecting the eyes with goggles or a bandago until the exhausted retina has recovered its tone.—Youth's Com- panion. Ma Ab«tx«.ct Iden. At a card party at Oharles Lamb's Hozlltt and Lamb's brother got Into a discussion as to whether Holbein's col- oring was as good as that of Vandyke. At length they became so excited that they upset the table and seized each other by the throat. Jn tho strugglo Hazlltt got a black eyo, but when tbe combatants woro parted Hozlltt turned to Talfourd, who was offering Ills aid, and said; \You need not trouble your- self, sir. I do not mind a blow. sir. Nothing affects me hut an abstract Ideal\ ._ Dofraantlim. A pretty snuh delivered by a* pro- fessor to a very young and very dog- matic undergraduate la refurbished In a work of Action. \Dogmatism said the don sadly, \Is puppyism which has reached maturity.\ It may similarly he said of dog Latin that it Is chiefly used by papt.—London Globe. All About Xct*pl>7*io*. o A Seotclzman thus dcllnes metaphys- ics: \When a mon wha' kens naethlng nboot any subject takes a subject that nne mon teens anything nboot and ex- plains It to anltbcr, mon still more Ig- norant than himself—that'B mctaphys- fcsJ\-Lyr«*. j •The Fut'e of Hannibal, * Hannibal's life and fate wore so- premely great and sau. He was a pa- triot who bad oaly tho best interests of bis country at heart In tbe warn of Carthage against Rome he carried his armies across tbe strait of Gi- braltar, over the Alps and into Italy to the very gates of Itonio. For more than a score of years he remained there, supporting his forces upon tho enemy and proving himself to be such a, literal and lasting scourgo that tbe Roman mothers would quiet their children with the sound of his dreaded name. Finally, when old in ycara and he was driven forth and defeated, he had made a record In ita | way unparalleled throughout tho an- ; nala of ancient warfare. { Vet in bis old age bo became a fugitive, wandering from one country j to the other and finding no rest, owing to tho vindictive persecutions of tho Jltomans, who were then all powerfuL At last, discovering no spot on earth open to him as a refuge, deserted by bis former friends, his country en- slaved and his once imperial native city in ruins, ho gave way to despair and ended his life with poison. Jrj^ier D|stro^s ^ei^|| %% jrfjjisfe 'caiv J?e:]itfl0- Or flQ» jjojqjbfc m ttjrji^jr fever b^iftjg: •% geyiti • ; 4laeise. 'tejsjjjfoe), ope ^$#86 \?3ieVe proven- 'tion, la m.ijch ea,s\ov tb.ah Mvfi**' ; ' :'\. AltwltQ flr^fplj|^fc #j thia i3}8ar. gr^p&bfejtroubi^sfOuld' wet Hyomsi Mail/ £6>it; least) tyvp pr tiiree. -sveekB. before %;: i&ne] of -ifieiry^tiual iatfackv jij'tM*'^ %i .4ti*«jjittg paroxysms of y^ming, r^ij'maag at the nose an« watery:. .W9;:,l^iai:t|ng eyes can be ^yoi^ejli:, ' ;•'•; *.\ r '. !'.\' Ibis remarkable discoiftry snoWs it i possible for , anyone j*>: breathe air at home whioji is almost iden- tical with- that of: mi Adifah- dacksortYhite llpuiitainspr other resorts where: hay fever.siififereifl go to escape, th^ir t-ro,ubIe; ' If, however, Hyomei ha? not jjeeii used until the disease Kasbe^pm: U is necessary to use it uiore 'freqent- ly, afc least half ft dozen times gaily and Hyomei Balm ehou^d- be rpbbed into the ,no8trila both. a%b.t and morning. Tbip treating trill re- lieve at once and, will eSeVt> c^re in nearly every case, •Ohas. A, JTack has a complete Jirte* o£ the Hyomei goods and will sell an outfit of inhaler, Hyomei and medicine dropper for p.0Q,' and will also agree to refund the money if the treatment does :nqt give Satis- faction. - _ i Do not try to cure hay feter by dosing the stomach. 33reathe Hyomei and in that way ,the \medi- cation will reach the minutest air cells in the nose, throat and lungs, soothe and heal the irritated, mucous membrane, and prevent and. cure all j hay fever tronblea. •HORSE FOR SALE. A good general purpose Chestnut mare 10 years old, apply to W. 0. CULVER, Bakery. Mra. Mollis AllehroE South. Pork, Ky„ sayB ehe has prevented attacks of cholera morhna by taking Cham- berlain's Stomach and Livor Tablets when aha felt an attack coming on. Such attacks are, usually caused by indigestion and these Tablets aro juat what is needed to oloanso tho stomach and -ward off tho approach- ing attack.. Attacks of-bilious colio may bo prevented iix'tho aania way. For sale by Gharlea A. Mack, Drug- gist, 426 Main St., Medina, N- Y. NEW DEPARTURE ,-t •I^X4X*X#I We have added a new departure to our store, believing that, without an additional cost of rent, light, help, etc., we can make it an object to buyers to trade with us. Therefore we place on sale a new and complete line of ; 'J HOES sell high grade goods at the lowest prices-lower than others can afford to sell them for reasons stated above. We know we can please yon in STYLE, FIT AND PRICE. COME IN AND SEE OUR STOCK as it is well selected and the assortment complete. It will cost you nothing to look ; if you don't wish to buy just now. Don't fail to note that we are still selling Summer Clothing at Half PHCC We c a n offer.you rare bargains in almost everything you wear. Our aim is to do a large business at small profits and we believe our new departure will enable us to do business to your own and our advantage If Ton want'to S Hiter Shown If you contenrplate ' thing in the I for the next moi Jn all its branch* D BS. THAYER & OSTEOPATH! Holdredgo Ap&rtmenl Honra;--9to 18 a. m Consultation Free. BEDB. SKINNE Counsellor « ] Kearney buildii Central practice in at TO WHOM JT m TotnePublic:- \We haTa used 1 Mincer's glasses f tions. Tbey ha' satisfaction to all MRS. EOBEBT \ Jtdy 24, 1W08. Shelby, N. X Thiais to certify I & pair Of glasses, Dr. Mincer, for twelve years and as clear as when] 1 To whom it may I hao) my eyes fitted with a paii Dr. Bernard Mil .years ago, and t as well with the j I got them, Sev( Dr. Mincer exam: tor's eyes and n glasses for her. glasafcs two years entirely cured an wear glasses any MRS. B. 1 408 Ann St., I purchased mj ' Mincer 8 years aj served me well ai part with them f Gan truly Bay mj today than ever. MABt £ August 6, MOB.'