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svens #0! LOCKPORY £OUBRNAL, DECEMBER 31. 1908. MEMBER or associ«tTke parss Bublished by JOURNAL PUsttsHING company k of Lockport 6. EREDERC OR. FOSTEEH - Progident . RLOBHLTS Soc'y-Preqgurer T W, NAGLE 4 Hditor t SUDSCHIPTION RATRG Bingle Copy, Icf one month, B50; six 7 ki. & * od Lie «ow « a inokths, $1.50; one year, $8.90 y EARTHQUAKES IN LITERATURE Lytton will hold his place in Htera- (x84, Bdward Paysim Hoe, widely triz? twonty years ago, put the Charles. tan Harthquake futo \The Harth Trenbird\. Some writer of the future wil give the San - Francisco | Harth many's check book was ready and it quake Its proper setting. SAINT TAMMANY Dit anybody notice that Tammany Enzmli out to the sulfereps of Calabria end Sicily? Did auybsdy notice? '- No sooner was the grcat catastrophe 'Ulearthoedl of in New York thin 'Tam- -was but the work of a fow minutes to SOLID SOUTH CRUMBLING | The World Almanae [Trend of political sentiment .in\ States composing the Solid are the folowing: The industrial Stites of 1. note that Cowper more than a hundred! to start two thousand five dundred! 0f 1909. years fdgo pat the Sivily Ruarthquake of 1788 Into \'The Task\ | dollars on its way to the fund that will be raised in the United States for the; The agricultural States of the South] remain almost unchanged in théir po-! i litical allegiance, Analysis of the official eleation re- i ture through his \Last ays of Poin-! Hail js aon desk as usual with potn' ftrns, taken from advance sheets of Ihave not vet succeeded in getting re-] for 1801, shows able information. I |vloarly, says the New York World the} the : suggested that you may be able to give! South.! ; Home of the striking changes apparent! io, 1 RC I the New [South gave a greatly dsercased . oue R ~ forms, as we want to make our play: It is i thing of more than passing. get the district leaders' \Bure thing!\ | for Bryan as compared with his vote] as realistic n Advertising fates on Raquest. Call Both 'Phonag | occurs these lmes: Advertising Manager No. 361. @anmimeeny v oncln i miesto c aat mio cance ti tlon that groat monument to his genius, wore the winds 1 - IGVARNAL WILL NOT Bg ISSUED: GUT OF DARKNESS INTO THE] tI@HT j The world faces a new your hy the! shqdlate of one of the most stupondoug} tragtdies of filstory. The old yews gork out ht sovraw and aufforing and AIl the peoples of earth fro uppalied by the terrible «rama of the Mediterruncink In ise closing days of 1901 \the trombBled\ and never was tio undverse more fearfully reminded that white in fife we are In death The pothle Is Accustomed to thialk of the do traction of Pornpell and Hereul« arient for one of tho tragedion of R was, but Sickhy and are a> much greater that if wots not for the glamoun that Lytton han Unown about thom two victhas of Vesuvius, and that they are so fay awiy ag to alm & Sceming Iistor|cal imap -retance heyomd theis real dimen» slmm, the public of the Twoentleth Cen» ALL A HAPPY NEW YEAR i alie to because of the proximity In: the most temote places very noar. f Put the your that dakou Ltn fight to- measuged because of the tliat wave .of of the Sleflfarn coast thougly it will haid a large and untoviable plaice in the, retort of grout catastrophes. 'The chief event In the United States] [It witnessed the thirdk of tiryan, his third overvheiming defect; wid the probable cnd of his Mctitor«| whip of a great party It witnessed a «troy ? « L‘fofif\ NoYs . .- | When did the waves so haughtily tintorod at Postofles at Loakport | wericap N. A?“ &g acqanéncmm mall mattmxz. ‘z'f‘luvll'ditgsxcut barriers, deluging the! OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE coUNTY t Ilhres 415322211;Dom-cull. and matcorts from t \o 'e « t. Portentous, ubexampled, unoesxplain'd, & witty ts , t Have kindled beacons in the skies, and i aa { the old aniston . . w iAnd; earth has had her shaking 'HUARS ; 1908, lts K HUfiGp‘AY, ”WW“? 31, 1908 f “(we frequent, and foregone hen usual - aa sews eres 1 POSE. AGGORBING TO THE CUSTOM OF is it a time to wrangle, when the AETERNGON NEWSPAPERS, THE props How doth the earth receive Himt- Of gritulation and delight, her King? tury: would apprcclate the maguitude! Pours tho hot all her cholcost fruits elo thio prefent catagtropho as It i# udg« tor time fut because the cable has bmumnf Disclosing Bha qualieg at His approach. Hor hot- night at twelve o'clock wilt not Bp); Ail. pillars of our planet seem to fail, And Naturt with a din and stckly eye lor end More distant, and matds & logon respite, unaccomplish'd yet; | Still they are frowning signals, and' - begpeals ' [ Displeasure in His breast who smites the earth Or heals It, makes it languish or re- jolce. . . And 'tis but seemly that, where all de- sopve And stimd exposed by common peg- * cancy To what ho few have folt, there should bo peate, that prophecy de- [Aud brothron fi1 calamity should love.} has shown its friendship for their peo- ple and nothing could go farther with Alas for Slofly! rude fragments now Liv soutktord where the shapely col- unis stood. fon palaces are dust. In all hor strects} The of singing and the sprightly! chord Are sllent. . Rovelry show . Buffer a ayncope and soterm pause, While (God porforms upon the trem» bling atage Of His own works His dreaarul part! «lgtve, and dance andi With what signs abrogwd, j sweet flowers, hor aromatic Gums, + ' Paradise wherc'er He wwoade? low womb . i Amcelving thunders, through a thou-! sind doope In Rook Two-«The Mimo-Pleco-of . 3m by the volce of all Its etoments | | hf x Subscribers who fail to receive The \\O the general doom. When; near so much? No, gg‘w’lflamggwgy {filllfloxmrifina égfltflmt slip with such it warrunt to de-j relief of the stricken people of the great peninsula and ancient island. Has any other organization Has any Org: 2 ; compared with 1900, so quickly and accomplished anywhere | One State, Missouri, 'away from the ranks of Hundreds of other$ will have to | South, and several others walt for resolutions preceded by long; “N’f‘c‘lmff the turning-point. . |_ Bven in those States . speeches about the sorrow this or that| v organization feels over the troublei that has come to the people of Italy-J has the are Both the Bryan vote and the Detmo- 'eratic pluralities decreased hotably in moved: 2 majority of the Southern States as DrOKCN | nssistance. Soild |, RP* | commanded was organized in 1861 and which have: oted dotal prohibition -of the liquor! traffic the Prohibition party vote wasi stand ready to do Tammany's bidding at least! Tammany Hall is closer to the people carth, not excepting Socialists, Anar- chists, whatever grade; and it shows that iii never loses an opportunity io make a friend-and a vote! | to trail Tammany, If they do anything pat alt. secret of Tammany's strength? be raised by appenis to stand togeth-! er jun the name of humanity. i It wastes no time assuring the people; across the water how sorry it is It: digs into its pockets instanter and; not forgetting to apprise the newspa-: pers of the performance. What Is the result: A The answer; NEW YEAR'S DAY, IT WISHES fm walt the close of allt But graut| can be given in~three words-votes for: ] { Tammany! i The Organization has made master-stroke, though no driftercntg than might have been expected from | the braves of the greatest Democratic tribe. It means that Italian voters, of whom there are thousands in New York, will regard Tammany Hall as next to the United States Government In power and munificence. They will for a dong time to come. Tammany them. Tammany thas shown itsolf their friend in time of trouble. Tpat'h is the true Good Samaritan spirit and the most forgetful will remem- ber the action untill next Election Day It is only one more evidence that} thar any political organization on Nikillsty or revolutionisty of As usual, the Republicans will have Once again-why ask thel i F : ‘McKIn'ley on the silter issue, alu} woo Hut hie wasited up on the shoris| And fleey enverns roar beneath Itis: Rust's defense mugt have beensome-| Rogsevelt also carriedtjt by a bare {T : Arkansas ..2....l.... 811015 plurality of 151,185. & crease iof 50,600 in the Bryan vote. {to the comparative nlumllfiés and go- * |ing: Dethodratie by only §:381. extremely small, maxing a pitiful com-) tno p 'and perhaps 'one hundred dollars will| PArison with Northern States whore prohibition is rot in force. Alabama, CHeorgia, North - Carolina | Tennesse, Virginia, Missouri and Ma- How different with Tammany Hall! ryland have made remarkable advances in industrigtism during the years. also an almost complete disfranchise-! The trend of poli- hauls out a respectable contribution,. teat sentiment in them is therefore the ment of the negro. sentiment of the white population. The following figures show Bryan's loss of popular vote and pluralities 1908 compared with his vote in 1900; Loss im Loss ir 3 ; . itea} © vote. Plurzil‘its: tsnmtgg nalfonal colors of the United] ¥ ...... 22.757 $9811 meagher fought at Antietam, where|f i CGeorgla 9,350 £4,007 he was carried off the field wounded, at Maryland ....s.s..... 7,363 4&2?“ Seven Pines, at Gaine's Mill, at Mal- azissoum “158 afg'fim‘vem Hill, at Frayser's Farm, and at North carolitiqac ...... 21824 2630) The charge of. the] f use of Tennessee .......... $032 3“? Trish Brigade at Marye's Heights dur- $1 Ion. Virgin? nett rennet 63,164 the battle of Prederickshirg was s printing. The agricuitural States of Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippl -and South Carolina on the other hand in- creasod their Democratic vote and de- creased the Republican figures slightly, but the right of suffrage .in them Is so restricted as to limit the voting to relatively smail nunibers. The Bryap anst Taft vote, 1900, ustrates thein attitude. ' Bryan [Bryan. Taft GM.] and men, was relieved by the brigade FOTKI «...... 6.60 tH Pits qr o of General Caldwell, which . nad il! Louisfana ......... “£2? 8,958 lode?! then remained in support Caldwell's] /> Mississippi ...... 60.876 4,505 9.174; short (§). 8,968 15.047 56,024 5.870 showing. it South Carolina ....62,283 Texas makes a strange gave Bryan more than his monumentat! plurality of former elections, © lut shows an enormous falling off in total vote. In 1900 the total vote of: the State was 412,290, Maya plubality of 146,164 for Bryan. 'This year the to- tal vote was but 203,128; with a Bryan There was'a de- Kenmbpucky makes a showing of her own,. increasing her Bryan vote ove: ! ; 1900 to §,989, but adding only 406 votes Maryland, in 1900 cast its vote for I he past eiSHA ! gressed in blue. In these States 'there has been | in: with Bryan gain over what uniform Meagher and his brigade wore during the war; also the uniform worn by the Irish Confederates, but The committee of the society have! us the required data and I now write; ask if yon can do so, anl if you; feauldl tell us where we might obtain} \; same of tho original frish Brigade uni-] weak womem strong | as possible. H yon ean) - | do this our hearty «Hanks will be yours.\ m. | Waterford, Troland Decemiber 18th.-} | Some information has already been! i gent ito our correspondent and anything lasfiditl‘onm that can be gathered will he { forwarded. Possibly some - of our readers will be able to render valuable - inale weakness, confidential. The Irish Brigade which Meagher originally consisted of three New York regiments, the Sixty-third Ney York In bandsome cloth-binding, When You Think ~Of the pata which many women experience with every month it makes the gentleness and kindness always associ- ated with womanhood seem to be almost a imiracle. While in general no woman rebels against what she re- gards as a natural necessity there is no woman who would not gladly be free from this recurring period of pain. 'Dr. Pierce's Pavorite Prescription makes sick women well, and gives them freedom from pain. J¢ establishes regularity, subdues inflam- mation, heals ulceration and cures fo? and Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. All correspondence strictly private and sacredly Write without fear and without fee to World's D jcal Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., Preside If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, dad how to cure ps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing only, and he will send you a free copy of his great thousanc-page ifustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser-revised, up-to-date edition,\fu paper covers. 31 stamps. nt Buffalo. 1g lfspensary Med« t, Buffalo, N. Y. them at home, send 21 one-cent stam ; Infantry, the Sixty-ninth and the Eighty-cighth. In the- Fall of 1862 wenty-cighth: Massachusetts In- [fantry and the One Hundred and Six-| # | iteentiy Pennsylvania Infantry wore addi f} '] ed. - 'The New Yorl: regiments started} ; with only about §00 men cach. The I soldiers of Meagher's (Brigade were The officers wore a | black felt hat turned up at one side} @ with an ostrich feather curled round} & {the crown. - Divested® of the feather, , i this formed the campaign hat of the iCivil war period. - Each of the five} & regiments that constituted the Brigade! carried green flags adorned with golden harp and sunburst in addition R «:- Good paese dove splendid. The London \Times\ said @i. . ... that the Greeks at Thermopylac did) @ nat exhibit more bravery. All Antlc- tam, where Meagher himself narrowly escaped with his life, the gallantry of the Irish Brigade is shown in Han- coet's official report. \A severe and well-sustained musketry contest then ensued, continuing until the ammuni- tlon was néarly expended after which he Irish Brigade 'having suffered se- | vercly, losing many valuable officers} { brigade advanced to within a | distance of the rear of Meaghoer's bri-| f gade. > The latter then broke by com- ie | panics to the rear and the former by| .. companies to the front and. in this |« Manner passed theit respective lings.\ presrreome The Irish Confederate soldiers wore! {f ~. @}@@ a gray uriform and also carried green} EO -- y * v, a ® FOOD, OBS flags. - A\Confederate officer bore tes- HEmony in an account given by him of lam battle of Fredericksburg to ' the | bravery. of Meagher and his Irish sol- diers on Marye's Hoights. During the war 4,000 men belonging i to the T¥igh Brigade were killed or | woundca-more than had belonged . to the. brigade at iny one time - It may iof o 8 be seen from these facts that Meagher was one- of the great heroes of the Civil war. ~A drams founded on his f J Ee p ~* 'There are certain things th . for one to say about one's self. «_ For instance-your character, the esteem you hold for your business, your integrity- these are things that cannot be advertised. impossible BUT, you can suggest them through the good business stationery an THE JOURNAL PRESS Can furnish both. You may be interested in samples. May we show them ? | . ' . Thats the name! Of the Best Goods on the market such é's'c'aihfieéi‘w ICY tthe hilly move lightly, and the moun-] (For He has touch'd them. was of courso tho peesidentlal cleat{on,! Of elevation down Into the abyss, & et do Qr HIs wrath is busy and His frown is foot. ' what leaky. tains smoke, t From the axtremest point old saw, but what if the needle broken? felt, e W 'The Lockport | Journal, . and - our You can blow your horn at midnight, \It's never too lite to mend\ is the is and the collar off the glass thereafter.‘ State swung into the Republicaty col- a hottble innfvrersary in the histdry of It marked tho unnountcement of the ond of the brit« W. Tunl«- It marked tho driving out of Lo racotrack gambling In the State of the complete ower of the Republican Party In the tho crown of Austria. , Hant administration ot Gnatles - Filet an President of Harvard - veraity, New York and the warrant for the issulng of return to Empife State, It warled tho death of Canpbolt« Dannesmar andt the euccession of néighhor down the street, fv erfticising Recretury Cortelyou for requesting the SHurveyor of the Port of Boston to re- sign either that position or the chair- of tho Republican City Com- imnitteo, forget that investigation was made In the Sith Congressional district and that \certain | Federal - officials\ were cxoncrated | from the charge of \pernlelous political activity.\ _ Tie two \Journals\ were among those that shouted \too much politics' but | it must bo remembered that tlon was wanting -Nlagare Falls Ga- vette. \Truth and The Gazette have never had anythitg hr common where the old Machine was concerned. | IT MIGHT EMBARRASS THE NEW , PRESIDENT _ ‘ ~ has a servant of value already proved, with @ noble prospect just ahead. He enters the Presidency with obstacles confronting him, -of course, but with cvery hope of' grappling successfully with thoso obstacles, > His brother, Charles P. Taft, has an opportunity not to add another diffi- culty. To have a brother in the Sen- ate would greatly éembarradés the Progi- dent, says Collier's «Weekly. 'When In William H. Taft the Unite® States * Honey Asquith as promler of Creat Eettain. It matked the domiso of the two raters of the Chinese Pimpire. It the brother's posftion conflicted with the President's views, William KH. . [Taft would be held responsible for the. ideas expressed, and It would be a deli- # Thore will bea cclebration in honor marked thypassing of Sertator Allison of Inwa and Renator Prootor of Ver- of Hudson and Fulton next year, Both cate matter for him to repudiate his brother's words or deeds. Delicate, likewise, is William H. mont, two of the veterut Republicans of - Congress. | Grover: Clevelind and Ts C, Btedman both passed away, It marked the cowardly murdar of Bix- Sonator Carmack of Tenusssee and the outhreaks ofnight «ders so-called, In Kentucky and Tonfessee who frwo committed ertmes that sake the hor- - Fors of the Inquisition seem: not much mote flogdish in view oftho advance- ment of the hurgan tacs singe that time to bettor «ad higher things, It marked & face rlot in thoe Notth at Hpetngfledd. have been neglected tong enough. busy atid add to tho world's problems. on \Last Days of Pompell.\ grossed ? Taft's predicament cat | present. It 'havrles P. fights for the Senatorship, his brother is perhaps almost forced to help. Such a fight seems to us n trific dacking in appreciation of the frets. (Charles P. Taft has a record not to be envicd-one which under no possible interpretation couldthe entitle him to the office. Burton, on con- trary, has distinctly carned it. { To remove Senator Foraker and put | in Charles P. Taft would be to punish [a strong man, with somewhat inade- quate ethics, and substitute a weaker man with ethics no more adequate. By withdrawing his candidacy, Charles Time will be when there will «hmelI’. Taft can do m service to his broth- Now old Stromboli will propably get Tho book sellers may expect u run Aro tho resolutions all sultably en- traffiegaive has no relation to politics,; Ala- Francis Meagher in Waterford, Ireland, | Murality, , still greater, and Mri Bryan obtained six outof the cightPresidential clec- tyrs by a plurality of 2,105. a falling off of 5,168 and the plurality decreased $8,279 from that of 1900. The umn by 449 votes Ho the good. The net decrease in votes in the Solid South, in 1908, as compared with 1900, was 188,925. The Solid) South that in yedirs past rolled up tremendous Democratic ma- jorities gave for Bryan this year the} following relatively small pMuralities: Alabama Mev.... ~ 22,038 Arkamsag ikl. .l... 80,801 lorHI® ..................2....2. $1,181 GR@OTBI@ ,...... ...l. l..... ..... 80,658 Kenti@Ky ...l.l.l dul lull... 8,481 54,610 Missiggippi ke... 56,371 N. CA¥OHM& - 22,041 S.. . ....l. sees eme e e> 58.820 Tennesses 17,300 TEXAS! ...ll... - 151,185 Virginia . $6,848 Maryland 2,105 (electoral vote divid- ed). i. Cl 20. e Missouri, Republican by.440. . To show that abolition of the Hquor bama but 666 votés for the Pro- hibition national ticket, Georgia 1,059, and South Carolina mone, so far as re- ported. All these mre: dry States by popular. vote. _ 2 unl !. THE IRISH BRIGADE - The Rochester Post-Express prints the following: e An editorial appedredwith notthe long since in The PostExpress above caption in reference to the intention to! erect & monument to General Thoma his native city. - The following letter Thisyear the Democmilis | ticket polled 7,868 votes less than eyin [in the disastrous MeKinley year, but the falling off. In Republican votes was In Missouri the Bryan vote showtd exploils is: sure io be interesting. Released and Almost: Robbery, Held For Another. -_ immediately Rearrested | Freed lnéonn’edtion With One Bank E' New York, Dec. $1.-The Canadian Pudding. Peaches, Apricots, Pears, Cherries, Red Raspberries, Fancy Pitted and Plain f Olives, : Brown Bread)\ Plum Fine line of vegstables, figdndack Spring - - Water. BEST THINGS AT: Lowest rkicEs At oun SsToREs. ' police having failed to connect George Munroe, also known, the police say, as George Edwards and \Portland Fatty,\ withparticipation in the recent plund-| _. ering of a bank in the suburbs of Mon- |- treal, the prisoner, was discharged by | | bres United States Commissioner Shields, | ~ but. Monroe Was, at once rearrested on a «bench warrant. on an- indictment found against him by the federal grand jury at Rutland, Vt.. 20, | The warrant charged him with be- ing 'one of the burglars. who on Aug. 28 last blew open and robbed the safe ~ IW. EMERT & SON: ANGELUS & in 'the postofiice at Morgan, Orleans county, Vt. . - . ' On. the new charge Comfizissioner - Shields held Monroe in $3,500 bail far | ~FLOUR: bail, he was sent to the Tombs. FACTS FOR CATARRHAL SUFFER. sages and cavities communicating with u the exterior. > m accompanied with chronic inflamma- tion from the mucous membrane. mucous. membrane: through the blood reduces healthy action, and radically cures all cases of catarrh.. examination in removal proceedin#s | on Jan. h. Monroe-says he was never | in Morgan, Vt. Unable to furnish . Ir‘s'ivéfipreciated by the best -_ bread makers. - ERS. The mucous membrane lines all pas- Catarrh is an excessive secretion, Hood's Sarsaparilla acts on - the' inflammation, establishes MAKES DELICIOUS BREAD AND MORE OF IT « IT {IS} NOT ONLY EPLEASURE BUT EcoNoMY - TO USE THE.BEST. | THOMPSON MILLING CO., Millers FOR SALE BY AUSTIN B. MORRILL, 98 Lock sTRrEer It murked the oud ot the panto thit brake in the Autumn of 1007. It marked the threo hundredth aunt« versary of the birth of Milton and tho bi«centenary «f Chatlog Wostey, It wan a great yearse@grcater than towbs, Hut £o great as goure others. It his brought | xortow and Joy, poverty wet pletes, Fallugen sond suecesses. It tum compelled wany to fearn bitter Trssons and placed «others or the top wave - Itamoy pase on to those feXms of which imostals nve without Iknow» tete mol af the gate closes aut only he inometien ate left, may the world [o brort the New Your asa it comes out of , Ito bower of hrofty soul mistletoe with Its byacinth crown an Its brow and Iauigh awaltenifg the eclhoos in the «letiv frons whence it come! U motive stent tink ued Obt henlss, old. Wine old year! make any rash promises. ta be a new book of \new teaves\. \Next year\ is tomorrow, so do not Now for soma slushy verse about Siclly and Calabria-and the waste- baskets. Ticket agents and postal clerks will fix their timce-recording devices be- fnrq they cat breakfast-perhiups. The stitute of Hmitations is what; knocks out 1909. Porhaps | the, tuberculosis - money raised by thethe Christmas stamps may ho nected for carthquake fund. er and to his country. It now develops that old Hubbard] was not entirely squashed by the fall- Ing tree. In the ovent that a subscriber may ask-1909 is not a deap year! Look 'em over-each in thy necessity may serve theo, if thou dostinstead not go at him if he were an officecat, of a public official. A suggestion is made that Eliot suc-i American Civil war and in it Meagher ceed Whitelaw Reid in London. The} is portrayed as a soldier, who, though man who made it will lose his compli-! {ilghtxqi muller. a foreign flag, had the © i M Fj r p ; nati a mentary subscrintion to the New York! Sueht Of Nherty for his native land Tribune, has now been received: > Editor Post Express: e I,.have (just read the. article on \Meagher of the Sword\ and notice the mention of the erection of -a moni- ment in Meagher's native city. - I 4m glad to find that the people of Ameri- ca are interesting themselves about it. I belong to the Waterford No. 1 Dra- matic society and this society is going to erect a monument to Meagher-not one of brass or stone, but by placing him on the stage in his native city and by familiarizing the citizens with his undying hopes of Ireland's liberty, his lofty patriotism, and his high sense of honor 1 have written a four-act drama en- titled \Under the Stars and Stripes, or g Meagher of the Sword\ which we hope to place before the public about Janu- ary 10th, | 'This drama «leals with the j ever present. J We are endeavoring to- ascertain r tion to leave the organization, Robertson says. There are several reasons given: in! the letten of resignation, which is ad- dressed to Colonel W. A. I headquarters chief reason is that Captain Robertson does‘not believe in the legitimacy of the movement known as the Salvation Army Industrial why They ArE ___ LEAVING THE RANKS . . Auburn _Salvation Army: Officer Criti- cize the Organization. Auburn, Dec. 29.--Captain and Mrs. Harry R. Robertson, for several years the officers in charge of the Salvation Anmy work in this section of the state, today «tendered their resignmt-ipns to their superior officers, to take effect January ist, and under mo considera- tion will they change their determina- 'o. v Mclntyre, at in New - York. The Home - Association, which, while indorsed the officials in New surplus funds out of the- community from which it derives them and sends them to New York, no and backed by wht receive them. 3 A I tain Robertson is that under the pre- gent system, which deflects surplus funds from the Salvation Army store {in Market street to purposes not even explained, he and his wife are com- pelied - to- maks freqnent saloon and hotel visits to solicit aims for the pur- aptain | pose of sustaining the spiritual work iin Auburn, gomething ghat would he! entirely amnecessary, he declares, wore the. profits of the Market street store turned over to this object. . e-- 22 'If you want to see the relation of advertising to \business take a look today at a few of the stores that are not advertised-then at a few that are. SUNDAY SCHo9t TEACHER'S SERVICE { | *% 60d ap. i) Another reason mentioned hy Cap-| Staten leland Woman - Has | Seventy-One. Years. York, dakes its P statement as to; | their uses being couchsated, by those & New York Dec. 31. -Mrs Van Tassel, who has live: years in Tompkinsville, S. she was born, and who £ taught the infant cla school ~of the Brig | formed ch urch, & all lie? 90 Or 71 years has Ss in the Sunday hton Heights Re- ille, and is ed a purse of Christmas cole- 1 Tomplkingy still teaching it, receiy $125 lost night at t bration in the church, Ex-Supsrintendont A. T.. ;the Sunday sehoor in his that Mrs. Yap T Tompkinsyille inf. were now gr Schwab of . speech noted assel had taught the nts in her class who 'andmothers -in the nelg