{ title: 'Nassau County review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1898-1921, October 27, 1899, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn95071433/1899-10-27/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-27/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-27/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-27/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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• . ;7:' 1 O O r i W . j T S V B O R * T * « . — -t - (Bmintt) Itebidu - 4 — A F A M IL Y n e w s p a p e r o f l o c a l a n d g e n e r a l i n t e l l i g e n c e . FREEPORT, N. Y,. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27 , 18 <) 9 . m. o., o m d S v s a x o j r I ' S s i i f t f j r . i t . fW — *« ' I -—-—— tre ' ■ ■ ;• ' ' U ... . / !J ' • <- • « r~'3- .m p m u t t H n niM t _ _ _ _ .» A* M, to IP, M.; r . t A . I C t o U K . a n T » R * y Md f h - (Ml i ^ h P * * * ' *■ . .»\ » ■■■— -r ' ■TT ------- T j t . ; W M v e . V M M eeori!m*AL. • Greater |?w York • D e n t a l p a r l o r s , 10R0EMCREI SKIDMORE. | 00B. FULTON ND GOLD STS., Brookljj N . Y. M eCTeetk. m oo up. e e M O r e w n s K .o o up. O eM n i l l e s s *H.UO up O th e r F i l l i e s . - • » .60 up FULTON ANDOLD STREETS, OFp. L omst ’*, WODKLYN, N. Y. G E O R G * . M O T T , LAYER, M C e e r t ■L.Beroupf Brooklyn,!*. T .CitJ ■■elOeeee, L y e b A , Oureue Co., N. T. TeUphoee. ••*ILyn^k.'\-aJOCA Brooklyn.\ B . A ^ O R L O N , ^..BONDED UCTIO.VEER ... 0 * 1 r ,w > ' Block, fkttoa Street, Beer h u h . FREEPORT. JOHN iWRIOHT. GENERAL \UCTIONEER, FRE»RT, u l Adverting T h i s P a p e r 18 SU R E T O BEING ' e s u l t s . T h e o n l y -a y t o a t t r a c t t r a d e i s t o n a k o k n o w n w h a t y o u : a v e t o o f l e r . E, _ J ^ . , • 47 ', the Liberal dferllser Saeewfel ■erebael. Job Printing At This O ffice. ! • 4 TEAS. \ ‘ leehr In BlM lsIit Packages \ 4 t|to*m * e d • beleeg I b l - a i b . , 1 - 4 l b . KO-WELl—Ceylon & India KO-JBB-ia»ket Fired Japan KO-YO—In Fired Japan Oitee per lb. eo Cent ;|L T I > - E ^ > C h icw t | \ PHesptf»kJJ Cease. HAMOf-Extra Choicest E a f k B reakfast. Primer lb. fl.oo. i AND PACKED BY T W B O . * O . T E A C O i f r A N Y , r » 1 , 33,35 lifting Slip, / ' l e w Y o r k . | \ l t m m A n n bboom m kndkiby _ ;h,Freeiort,N.Y' M U I f T * IIM M I a p a e n t W ALL LOI ISLAND TOWNS. m ' i , 1 die of the plain. He sat down to rise no morel The white flakes fell on and on, burying him completely. His etiff- ned body disappeared in the endless ocneation of their infinite number; nothing showed eren where the body aecnsation noth\-----*•\ lay. $ \THE BLIND MAN.\ « Bu Guy 0 . Mai memeicsomGmtiii (Some stories never published here been discovered among the nepers at the lute Guy Do Msup issnnt. They nre uumlstak* eble, bearing, as they do, the mnglo touch of that “ vanished hand” In every sym pa thetic torn of thought and language. One of the most touching of them all la this sketch of the Blind Man, unsurpassed for pnt'uoe In any tongue.! What ia that joy which animates ns Hie relatives pretended to inquire for him and search for him for eight days. It ia said they shed tears. The winter was severe, and the thaw did not come until late. But one Sunday, when going to mass, the farmers noticed a large number of ravens flapping their sable wings to and fro over the plain, and then alighting like black rain at a single sped. They were going and coming in endless procession. Thehe followinglowing weeeek birds were still there. The heavens were crowded over with them, as if they had come to a reunion from the furthest ends of the earth, and the; THE SABBATH SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR OCTOBER 29. ess pro T fol w the sombre Subject: regim e ot Deliverance, Pea. ixxxv. anti csxvl—Golden Text: Pea. cxxvl., 6—Commentary on th e Day'e 1. “Thou boat been favorable.“ Thou boat dealt graciously. It w h s by the favor ot Bod that Israel got and kept possession of Canaan, and it Ho had not contlnuud very favorable to them they would liavo been ruined many times. The bringlog- back of tholr captivity was then an in stance of God’s favor to them, when it was Li the pardon of tholr in- captlvhy of Jacob.\ Tills Is led to the return from Bnby- 3 recovery from any calam- it flr,t sight of the rising sen? Why is it that this luminary, ns it tenches the earth, fills our bosoms with the joy of being alive? The whole aky is bine, the meadowa are all green, the houaee all shine white, and oar ravished eyes drink in theae glowing colors whi our sonls. Then ore we possessed with the impulse to dance, to run and sing—a happy elation lifts our thonghta —it Is some kind of swelling tende ness; we would liko to embrace the the ga lonebed in their eternal darkness, are -aim as ever in the midst of onr new found gayety, and without the least perception of it, tbuy quiet their doj that would like tt gambol in the ligl When they come home, at close of day, leaning on tie arm of some little brother or natei, if the child say, “The weather wai beautiful to-day,\ the blind man *epies, “ I know it mas have been fine, for Lulu would not be quiet a moment.\ Once upon a ime I knew, one of these men whose life was the most cruel martyrdom that I can conceive. He was a peasmt, the son of a Nor man farmer. 8* long as his father end mother; wers alive he received a little care; he sufered only in thought of his horrible intrmity; but as boo os the parents wee dead an atrocioi existence began Dr hipo. Received in the home of onsof his sisters, every aceompitDied ’ Iqulty. \The nutunilly sppll Ion; but It suit! k. “ Oovere 1 all their fins.\ 5 Ai h a - t Ircoly lorglvtm Mu, Its offcnil'vouess find abominable nature no longer npp whole la put out ot sight; and ns restored from our captivity the coi fu r th e s t en d s of t h e ea r t h , an d th e y . arc resioreo irom o ur captivity tuo couse- d r o p p e d eb a t to r iu g loudly in to th e j ‘ a ^ X a k o n °aw a y 'aU*Tij’y wrnih.” Thou enow , a t t a c k i n g it stran g e ly an d d ig - j hast collected all Thy wrath am, carried it ig in i t o b s tin a tely . j away with all our Iniquities. 4 Fierceness of Thine a n g e r.\ The captives m ight well ‘ V.i 1 I C l eh .S z,» /lce.1 I....... nately. i i f : - a t i i H t E i h d ? : blind man, already slashed to bits destroyed, and half-devonred. His pale captives m ight wel li of God had been not been wholly ht! who ste the breed that bo- called him a loafer end a beggar, w longed to others. At each meal tiey grudged him his food; they called him a loafer end a churl, but, inasimch as his brother- iu-lsw had takes possession of his in heritance, they iigrotfully gave him a little soup, just inough to keep him His face was pile as death, hie eyes were large and vhite as wafers; so he set unmoved by las wrongs, so self- contained that tieMwondered whether he felt at all. IWer had he known the least temkr^ee, for even his mother bad always treated him rough ly and loved hita Ittlo. For in the fields the useleu man does harm, and the peasants do Ste the chiekons, they kill those of thd' number who are In- So soon ns h had swallowed hie soap he went an sat down at the door in summer, or iitho chimney-corner in winter, never stirring thence till evening. ” Ht dt not move a finger nor turn his lied; only his eyelids, moved by soiuo lervous affection, at timet closed thewhite spots he called eyes. Had he imind, a thought, any clear idea of hi life? No one ever asked him. For a few yers matters remained thus. Bat his i ability to do anything, and most of al his impassibility, at last cxasperateilhie relatives, and he became the bntlhe martyr-fool—) given over to tb natural ferocity savage gayety othoae about him. They devised 11 kinds of orticl farces that his bliudms could suggest. And to pay themsevs for what he ate, they made his menlshonrs of delight for the neighbors ad of torment for the helpless man. The peasant who lived in I he homes near bjeame to the “show;” the word was passed from dror to door, and the lichen at the fern was :ity and had disappeared, picked out by the long beaks of the voracious birds. And I never experience the lively joy of sunny days without a sad recollection and melancholy thought of that poor beggar, so robbed in life, and that horrible death, which was a relief to all who knew him. MAKING WALL PAPER T h e In terestin g Process Briefly end In* structlvely Described. The manufacture of wall paper is singularly interesting. First, a web of blank paper is set in a reel behind a blotching machine; two cylinders bring the- free end of the paper into the machine, where a roller working in a color pan pnts a large quantity of color upon the paper in blotches. Then a set of flat brushes, called jig gers, brush quickly back and forth, thus spreading the coloring matter evenly over the surface of the paper. As the paper comes from the blotch ing machine a workman takes one end of it, wraps it around a stick and places the stick across two parallel endless chains, an<f the paper is thus carried up an incline. When eighteen feet of it has run out, the chains take up another stick that lies across them, and carry it up as they did the first stick; a third stick soon follows the second, and thus the work continues until the entire web of paper has been run out of the blotching machine. The chains, in their working, hang the paper in loops over a system of steampipes, and it is thus thoroughly dried before it reaches the end of the chain work, where it' is again wound into web form. Wall paper designs are first sketched on paper, and then trans ferred to rollers of the size required. It is necessary to prepare as many rollers as there are colors in the de sign; thus, if the design requires printing in eight colors, eight rollers must be prepared. When all of the rollers are ready the artist directs his workmen and each one is given a color. A work man to whom that color has been given takes a roller to his bench, sets it firmly in the grasp of a vise, and, with hammers, files, brass ribbons and brass rods, goes to work. Every bit of the design that is to be in green is traced out for him and he carefully reproduces it in relief on the roller. When his work is finished, the roller bears ou its face, in raised brass, green stems, leaves, etc., and at the proper time and place will put the green coloring and shading just where the designer intended it should be. In liko manner the other rollers are made ready for use, and they are then taken to a press that has a large dost roved 4. “Turn us.\ Thou hast turned our captivity, now convert our nouls. Thu Is raelites were*not restored from tholr cap tivity nil at once; 50,000 roturnod under the leadership of Zerubbnbul, B. C. 53-5; others, numbering about 7000. went with Esrft, B. C. 439; others with Nohotnlah, B. C. 445: but n grout number still rem ained In Babylonia, Media, Assyria, Egypt and other parts. The request of tho realm 1st Is to have a complete restoration of all tho Israelites from all places of their dispor- 5. “ Wilt Thou be angry with us forever?\ Continuously? Delivered from Babylon the exiles hoped for rest, but. Instead, found Increasing distress and anxiety, which to them Indicated God's continued anger. Generation after generation had sinned and therefore suffered tho punish ment of God. Tho Psalmist seems to ques tion whether God will And it necessary to thus continue, or can It be that each suc ceeding generation will not profit by the examples of others and so bring upon themselves severe Judgments? What hope was there of better times until Israel be came sincerely and thoroughly penitent? 6. “ Wilt Thou not revive us again?” Wo have long had the sentence of death In o u r- solvos, and have feared an u tter extinction. Shall not our n ation yet live before Thee? Shall we not become once more num erous, pious nud powerful? “ May rejoice in Thee.” Give us llle, that we may have Joy in Thee; so Thou wilt have the glory of It. If God bo th e fountain of all our mercies Hu must bo tho centre of all our Joys. 7. “ Shew us Thy mercy.” The cry for mercy always recognizes that judgm ent Is deserved. 8. “ I will hear.\ Walt and listen with expectancy. The Psalmist goes as a prophet to consult the Lord, and having made his request waits au answer from the s p irit of prophecy. By d eclaring what he would do the Psalmist teaches all Israel th a t they ought to attentively hearken to the voice of God and to receive His gracious declara tions a n d promises In faith and expecta tion, and His holy precepts and dispensa tions In obedience and submission, ami especially that they should wait to know what answer God would return to their prayers. 9. “Salvation is nigh.” Ready to bo granted as soon as there Is readiness to re ceive. That complete salvation and deliv erance, even tho redem p tion of Israel by the Messiah. It was the comfort of the Old Testament saints th a t though they lived not to see th a t redem p tion In J e r u s a lem for which they waited, yet they were sure it was nigh and would bo welcome to all th a t fear God. “That glory may dwell In our laud.\ That we may onoo again seo glorious days la our land; may recover our ancient glory, tho tokens of God's p res ence with us, the most eminent of which wo h ave jiow utterly lost. God gives g race and glory. Israel when fully p ardoned en joyed peace with God; for whoro He dwells He manifests His glorfous power. 10. “ Mercy and truth are met together. ” And therefore appear as united and oo-op- erating harmoniously in eouseq vnee of God's glory or majesty again dwelling In tho land when the people should become converted to His fear. 11. “ T ruth.\ Responsive to God’s groat mercy, there shall be man's fruits ot good works. “ R ighteousness shall look dow n .” When a people return nud adhere to God In duty Ho will-return to and abide with them In mercy. 12. “ Tho Lord shall give.\ When tho glorv of the Gospel dwells In ourdand then It snail yield its increase; for soul-pros perity will either brlug outward prosperity with It, or sweeten tho want of It. 8eo Psa. 67:0. I 13. “ Rlghte< a cat or a dog o 't h o table right Ij his roller plate when he logan to drink his toup. The animal knew hie infirmity tv in full every day. S o m e tim e s th e ) p u t The animal knnv hie infirmity ly Ftlnrt and quioly aa possible cane up to the plate, mil without any mise lapped from is plate. by chance, in its 'ogerncss, the aomal lacked its lip and attracted tin at- presa thal cylinder of the width of ordinary wall paper. There are groovea around the | \ j j “ {,yt sides and the bottom of this cylinder, ; iug Him. into which are fitted the rods on the 1- \ T h o Lord turnod again tho captivity end. of the roller, and when in po.i- j ^^“..L^fl^tSeT/ar^^d ^ tuZ tion, the faoea of the rollers just touch , 0, Israelites on tholr return from eap- the cylinder. An endleaa cloth band tlvlty, la tho midst of tho aeknowledge- ' . . . - moot l>v Gentiles and Jews that this ae* ‘ llveruiioo whs a wonderful and m ighty deed of Jehovah. | -J. “ F illed with laughter.\ A laughter of ' joy In God. not scorn of tholr enemies. Tho j heathenm hadad observedbserved tnetrnelr calamalam ityty nudud tention of tin poor wretch, it trew back quickly * a void tbo blow Irom toward the nolo. Then there .-sre nudges, laughing and atamping.itb joy by the ayecta- tora ranged tong by the wall. But he, without a ord, began to eat a|aiu with bin righhand while with hialeft he tried to pdect hie plate. At other tins they gave him corks to eat, or bitaf wood and leaves, for ho could not tl the difference until he had it in h month. But finally ey tired of such oriel jokes, and hierother-in-law, enraged at having to fd him forever, struck him and boxehia ears unceasingly, laughing at t, futile attempts that the blind mamade to avoid or return the blows. Ire was a new game,; the game of smao! And the plough hove, the hod carr- and the servants stuck their hands to his face, which made his eyelids uk most rapidly. He did not knowhere to hide himself, but stood wi outstretched arms try ing to keep em away. At last theoompelled him to beg. He was pled at the roadside on market tlaysud as soon as ho heard a wagon or rriage rolling near he stretched o his hat, stammering: “Charity-if n- p-l-e-a-s e!\ But the ant is not very liberal, and often fereeka he did not get a Then unying hatreu chained aget him. Am bow be die. One wiutthe ground was covered with snow i it was freezing cold. Xeverthas, one morning his brother-in l took him a long dis tance to sd by one of the chief roads and g alma. He left him there all daand when night came he said at he that he could not find him any rao And then he added: “ Pah! It'n nee of bothering about him; some « has taken him into hie house, becie' he was cold. You lay lie an he ia not lost. He ia ertain to cm in to-nurrow for his lint the d after he tld not return. After wing for nsny hours, frozen to tlsaarrow, tie blind man bad felt hmlf dying, ad began to walk. Noting able b retrace the road, cover as it was uih the thick coaling of t, he had wandered at random, fag into dtehea, risen seeking the I * | M l • f a r m e r t o o G M n e a r S t o n y B r o o k , o t o f t h e m o s t m a l a r io u s l i a s In t h i s S t a t e , e n 4 w a s b o t h e r e d w u h n t a r i a fo r y e a r s , a t t i m e s I c o u l d n o t w o r k , a n d w a s a l w a y s v e r y c o m p i l e d a s w e ll . F o r I * I t w d m a t e r ia s o b o d k l t h e s p r i n g , w h e e n g a g e d m p l o w i n g , I I c o u l d d o n o t h i n g b u t s h a k o , t m u s t h a c ta k e n a b o u t a b a r rel u W m p B h b e s i d e s d o w n s o f o t h e r re m e d s . b u t n e v e r o b t a i n e d s m e n e i i t b e n e f i t L a s t fell, in p e a c h t i n t I h.«d a m o s t s e i i o u s i o f c h B h M d t h e a c o i o i n c n c f d t o ta k e lip a n s T a b u l e s . u p o n a _[*• a d v i c e , M l t h o t r e t b o x m a d e m e a l i n g h t a n d 1 h a v e r.evet _i w i t h o u t t h e m * k * . I t a k e o n e T a b u l e I e e w e d m e e w h e e l S e l m o r e t h a n u s u a l l y > hove kept my stomach sweet, l the bast touch Uf raaiaria nor I acnccd uomi threa. I knew abo that 1 s i wtwabed dTaNtBWiuiy. I don’t know mTabutre w y o f r g morning and night usted I take three in bowels regular and I ;tmg headache since I better and wake up w many complaints cure aqy one in the at any price. I in the world, as convenient 10 take, jrd all my life, the all kinds ot weather, v* since last fall; in condition and have h e a l t h y ? comes to each of tho rollers from be low, each band works in a color pan, which contains, in a liquid form, the coloring matter to be carried on the oh the band belongs. Each roller is placed in such posi tion that the part of the design upon it will strike exactly in the spot sitated by the relative position other roller, When all is read passed through the is placed between tbs cyl the first roller, the cylinder and the rollers revolve rapidly, and soon tho is beautifully printed. At each ness shall go before Him. •’ of Itlghteousne-s, shall 1 nnd put us In tho way lids to Him. Righteousness Is it sura bo th I d meeting God nud lu follow- h o t c i n had trium p h ed lu It. Jor. V2:S, i); P s a . 137 7. Now they could (not hut observe their deliverance nud admire that. S. “ We are glad.’’ The h eathen wero bt t spectators, but the people of Ood spako of It as shares In what God wrought. 4. \As the streams In the south.\ fThe T the p a p e r t h a t h a s torrents and the brooks In the southern i b lo tch in g m a c h in e llo,,,rte run off and dry up lu the summer .. , j m o n ths; but after the periodical rr.tux they 1 cy lin d e r an d | return naaln, and the channels are filled necon- position of tho retu r n again for tho refreshti “ They tba of the thirsty traveler. Row In tears.\ Israel wna the puulflhment of their o en d le s s c lo m y p r i n t e d A t each | £ ^ 7 s c l th b a n d s th e r e is a ; just as gold Is put Into the fire to be re s t e d scrap e r called a doctor, a n d it is 1 ilued. The captives In Babylon were long th e d o c to r 's d u t y to p r e v e n t too m u c h ? ^ L UwlltDh‘7o>-: £nd 'Ih e n \ ^ , ’''^ '! . , m r i i l o liq u id from th e o th e r p e n s from get- , b„n, n t ol {bo|r suffering, nnd brought ives with them to their own land, cnerloncos of tholgoodneas of God They that sow In tears of godly reap tn the joy of a sealed te, and each roll ,rde. It is said oror wallsalla wasas firstrat In their c to them . paiu to advertise, ne was a tat prosperous merchant, and I tried a long time to get him to insert an i vertisement in my paper. “Oh, it's And here is ^ < again, alwi silently house he heealled hoax But tho uggishnese of the «k' was fast ovcomiag ha, nnd his wank legs eid no long* carry hue forward, aoi ant dowatn tba Bid* ting on the rollers. The wall paper prets throws off ten rolls of paper a mi contains sixteen that stamped paper f w w B manufactured in Holland about the year 1555. Some of the very costly wall paper in nse nowadays is beauti fully embossed and hand-painted. Converting m Non-Advertiser. Once, writes an old journalist, when I was conductinga paper in the West ern States, I convinced a man that it paid to advertise. He was a fairly for ad- my paper. “Oh, i he would say. “I never read advertisements ju a paper, and no one else does. I believe in advertising, but in a way that will force itself on the public. Then it pays. Bat in a newspaper—pshaw! Everybody who reads your newspaper dodges the ad vertising columns as if they were poisdti.\ “ Well,\ said I “if I con vince yon that people do read the ad vertising pages of my paper, will yon advertise?\ “Of course I will. I ad- i oth»r „,k m. nuf«„url0g States, the vertise whenever I think it will <lo any growth within the past f«w y*ars having good.’* The next day I ran the fol- ! bten quite phenomenal. The development lo.ing line in the lighte.t-faeed agate u s a l ^ . n d nn’.uouf aid‘ in in the office, and stuck it in the most . building, an ample supply of Intelligent, obscure corner Of the paper: “ Whit sober and Industrious Isbor, freedom from is Cohen going to do about it?\ The i?*>01r *‘r't*,1loa *nd cheapness of fuel, next day so many people annoyed him ' jX^haSe b£0 \m u p w H i by asking what the line meant, that 30 Pennsylvania towns and village, while he begged me to explain the matter in °* * total of 51 new enterprises started in - - the United States In 1898, th and weepoth, bearing precious 8©ed.\ There are tears which .are themselves the seed that we must sow; tears of sorrow for sin—our own and o thers; tears ot sympathy and tenderness. The num b er of returned captives whs but the remnant of Israel. They were returned to prom o te the true religion In Canaan. Through their prayers and tears their brethren In Babylon must be reached and Induced to return to God and their own PENNSYLVANIA'S SILK INDUSTRY R em arkable Growth During Recent Year* and W h at lies Led to It. The twenty-eighth Pennsylvania Bureau c tics, just Issued, glvei twenty-eigh th annual report of the rlvanla Bureau of InduH rlal Sta tistics, ju s t Issued, given some Interesting facts In regard to the silk Industry of that State. In 1898 there were 88 establish ments engaged lu silk manufacture In Pennsylvania, vrlth a total number of 699 - 808 spindles, with 117 hand looms and 9231 power looms. The number of persons em ployed was 20,365; the aggregate wage* paid am o u n ted to •4.863,851, and the value of the product waa 132,250,599. The re- i J0U port says that the twelfth census will ! a t Hbaron, doubtless show an enormous gain for the j dayi AMERICA’S COP. I he Columbia Makes It Three Straight From the Shamrock, MAGNIFICENT FINAL CONTEST. The Defender Won by Over Six M innies— Deciding Race Sailed In H a lf a Gale Fairly Testing the M erits of the Yachts —The Shamrock O u tsails! and Out pointed—LI pton to Try Again. N ew Y ork C ity (Special).—The Columbia von Friday's race against tho Shamrock, hereby securing the m atch by three itralgbt victories—Including the walkover —nnd retaining the America's Cup. The Jottl race was a splendiq test, being sailed n a strong, true breeze. The Columbia iron by six minutes thirty-four seconds, lu- •ludlng her Umo allowance of sixteen seconds. CATTAIN ClARLZfl BARB. (The skipper who won.) The g iant single stickers ran out to lee ward nud back against the wind without accident, thus making the raoe a perfect test ot model and sailing power in heavy w e a t h e r . It whs the whole sail breeze de sired by Sir Thomas Llpton to show Sham rock on her best points on and off the Columbia bent h er with lifted sheets go ing out and close-hauled coming home,and so proved her superiority In a big blow and n heavy sea. Shamrock s tarted In a twen ty-mile win.d slxty-one seconds ahead ol Columbia. The defender beat the challen ger to the outer mark fifteen seconds, mak ing a gain of one m inute and sixteen sec onds lu the run before the wind. With the ' teen seconds which Columbia had on ie allowance, she turned the outer mark ) minute and thlrty- one minute and thi of the Irish cup hunter. WIL FIFE, THE DESIGNER. ‘ CAPT. WIUNOE. CART. HOGARTH. The Shamrock’s designer and her two sklppern.) Then ensued a hopeless stern chase for tho challenger. She lost on every tack. She was outfooted at least twenty-five sec onds to every mile. The setting of a small clubtopsall ofT Normandie was the last desperate chance taken by Captain Ho- Columbia kept under lowar sails, but the cup hunter carried the topsail In the piping breeze, only to be beaten at the end hand somely lu the most glorious race sailed for the cup since Puritan beat Geuesta In half a gale fourteen years ago by a sixteenth of a mile. Columbia beat Shamrock nearly a mile, nnd could have done b e tter had Captain Barr and Mr. Iselln chosen to topsail. It was a famous finish Highland hill oreore’ bisls deteaefeat winner and lost wake the echoes _ Sir Thomaa Llpton b b d like tho thorough sportsman that he is. \The best boat won,\ he said, \and that is as it should be, and has always been In the races for America's Cup.\ He has announced his intention of again challenging for the America^ Cup. SOLDIERS COURT-MARTIALLED. C incinnati , Ohio (Special).—The Forty- sixth Regiment of volunteers, on the way from M assachusetts to Manila, was delayed hereby enforced drum h ead court- m artial, on account of an epidemic of drunkenness. The first section had whiskey secreted on the train. When they arrived here tho colonel Immediately called a drumhead court-m artial, which seut thirty-five of the worst offenders to the Columbus Barracks. As the other sections arrived in course of the day It was found that there was plenty of whisky aboard of them also, and the four sections wore all sidetracked west of this city, at Valley Junction, for more trials by drumhead court-m artial, and additional Instalments were sentenced to the Colum bus Barracks guardhouse. Negro Dies a t the Slake. Joe Leflore, a negro, was burned to death at the stake at 8t. Anne, Miss. Another negro of the name of Smith barely escaped a similar fate at tho hands of the mob bv the discovery that there was doubt of his guilt. Tiie crime with which the men were' charged and lu which Leflore confessed complicity, was the m urder of a Mrs. Gam brel! and her four children, who were tied to the floor of their house and left to die after the building had been s a turated with kerosene emd set on fire. Gold Found In Labrador. The schooner Isabella Dean, which has been on an exploring cruise for five months, hasi returned to Ht. John's. N. F., and rfpTAs Labrador, casks of dust returned to Ht. John 's . N. t he finding of gold at Rati She has brought back tht samples. Frl<htened to Death In a Runaway- i team of colts owned and driven by j Jo h n Kirby, p roprietor of the Hbaron Inn, 1 “ * H Conn., run away with him a few When the horses were stopped r.m 'V x d \ £ “\ 5 ^ txKgei my next issue. I promised to do it if he would let me write the explana tion, and would stand i t He agreed, and I wrote: “ He is going to adver tise.\ And he did. ' B lrrele Bella Beared a M ae. Edward North Buxton, whilewheel ing with hie daughter along the high road to Uganda, found that a lion had taken up a position right acroee the The bir; belle, and appalled by eucb a novel sight and the United Hiatee In 1H9S, Pennsylvania lend, with IS New Jerney being second with IS, and New York third with a gain Biramlaeea Deal Psweats la Nebraska. A vain of bltumlmna coal of a remark able quality, something that Nebraska never possessed, has Just been <iscovered In Dakota Oonaty, la the non beast For many y ean there »f tba Nebraska atatntes has d e part of track. icycliata violently rang their belle, and the king of sound in the silencea of mid-Africa, eien a away. Los Angelas, Cel., it distinguished for the number of petroleum oil wells it possesses. The output for 1898 ap proximated 1,100.000 barrels, and that for 1899 ia estimated te b e sheet th e provision of the Nebraska statut offering a reward ol MOW for the tint discovery ot a marketsbls vela s f soft coal an lees than Iwsaty-stx Inches thlek. Many efforts have been made to earn this reward and eoei has been found, bet sever la tbs required quas- tlty. The vela la Dakota County to re ported to be upwards of fifty Inches thick end a aaeoustared at e depth of only nine feet. A sample at the eoel, sent to the A Corner on Lake Tonnage. A b attle between the Carnegie ami Rocke feller Interests on the g reat lakes Is on. It mean# a corner on lake tounag*. Lhe doub ling of lake freights, an Increase of | 2 pet ton on the selling price of ore and the out right ownership of the largest t e a t on the ve B is flenfewce. Judge Lacombe, In the United Ktatas •w York - 0 :ty, banded Carter l i k e * ^ i r v Circuit Court, in New down a decision dismissing the writ of habeas corpus on behalf of Captain Ober- llu M. Carter. Captalu C a rter’s counsel intends to appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. asllere Die It* Collie* Captain John Fewere, Fred Irving. Fred Armstrong and Nell Brooka, com p rising a part of the crew of the fishing schooner f wo Forty, were killed In Boston Harbor lays ago. Their homes were In % few days ago. Their Gloucester. The sohoon Amidships ^ pie o l tb# eoal, sent to the ‘ imld'lilpe, cult (Governor along with tbo elalm for the re- instantly, word, la of nn excellent qngMty. Germ an Army*# Bread. The p rice of rye la now eo high la Her- B a a y th a t tbo military ant b o n ties have ordered th a t the soldiers’ bread thUSe r r # and one-third wheel Heed ol ell rye. i The British steam struck the Two-Forty g her down a i d sinking Meal# a Trifle Lower. Meats of every kind, beef Inelnded, have taken e slight drop la prices la Chicago, Jr eased beet 'ailing tvasty-Sve coflts par 100 pen ads. TERMS: $1.90 YEARLY Ilf A D V A lLl NO. 52 . THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Wketitnrten Heme, Pretl ent McKinley has Issued a procla mation extending the benefits of the Inter national Copyright law to Costa Rican publications. unsigned Admiral tho Navy Depart- CASTRORULESVENEZUELA h« ? « Secretary Long li Dewey to special du It was announced at the State D e p art ment that negotiations for a revision of the Treaty of Berlin are In progress between the three Po ment of Sam are in progress between wers Interested In the govern- William P. Lord, former Governor of Oregon, has been appointed Envoy E x tra ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Argentine Republic. The Haitian Government has nominated Judge Day as the sole arbitrator In the pending Metzgnr claim against Halt! fo» damages sustained through the Infringe ment of a certain concession. The nomina tion has been confirmed by the State De partm ent. The engagement is announced of Mis? <-®Eecella Rberman Miles, only daughter ol fienernl and Mrs. Nelson A. Miles, to Cap tain Samuel Debar, Signal Corps, U. S A.. Lieutenant-Colonel of Volunteers. The retirem ent from active service ol Brigadier-General It. T. Frank, having served forty years, is announced. The Interior Departm ent estimates foi the next fiscal y ear aggregate • 170,600,000. The Schley Testimonial Committee of the Royal Arcanum has presented a hand- some loving cup to Mrs. Schley, the wifi of Rear-Admiral Schley. President MoKiuley telegraphed the Sec retary of War an order promoting to the grade of Brlgadler-Genoial the following officers: Colonel A. C. M. Pennington, Second Artillery; Colonel Royal T. Frank, First Artillery; Colonel Louis H. Carpen ter. FJfth Cav tlry; Colonel Samuel Oven- shine, Twenty-third Infantry; Colonel Daniel W. Burke, Seventeenth infantry. The war In South Africa will result lu the cutting off of o u r mall service with the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, said an official of the Post Office Department. All mall m atter from this country for South Africa enters by way of Cape Town. Our Adopted Islands. The insurgent Colonel Rosario, Agninal- Jo’s hrothor-ln-law, who was wounded at Novaleta, is dead. Governor-General Davis has Issued an order against gam b ling and expressing his determ ination to stop the practice through out Porto Rlc i. Co’onel Federico Bacallao, Chief of the Secret Police of Havana, has made seizure of 4742 Remington rifles, 150 Mausers, and 100 carbines. Mrs. Let ord e, wife of Military Governor Ludlow’s acting chief clerk, died In Ha vana from yellow fever. The Manila new spaper Pati erances. new spaper Patria has been suppressed and its editor arrested, charged with seditious utte Domestic. The Revolutionist Rides Into th* Capital With His Army. f'oi m er President Andrade Declares Be W ill R e turn W ith W arships to Over throw the Govern ineut. C aracas (By Cable).—General Ciprianc Castro, the successful revolutionary lead er, made a trium p h al entry Into this city and took possession of the Yellow House, the official residence pf the President* General Castro rode at the head of the con quering army, and much enthusiasm wna displayed as they came into the city. At night there was a display of fireworks In honor of the success of the revolution. S T A T E N E W S . P e r N ew K d e e e llew e l Law*. After a conference with Senator Hoi White, of Syracuse,QoreynerRoosevelt non need a few days ago th a t he had „ hat he had ap pointed a commission to revise the educa tional laws of the State, or In other words, to devise a scheme for a unified system ol education. The report will be submitted to twTToveroor d u ring the coming legisla tive session. The commission will consist of the following: Frederick W. Holla, Chairman, who was Secretary to the Peace Conference to Tho Hague, an 1 Chairman ot the Committee pa Education lu the Constitutional Convention; Deputy State Huperlntcndeut of Public Instruction Aina- worth, Secretary Dewey of the State Re gents, Supreme Court Justice Joseph F, Daly, of New Y rk City; Form er Senaloi Daniel II. McMillan, of Buffalo, also a member of the Constitutional Convention; Robert F. Wilkinson, of Poughkeepsie, who was Chairman of the Committee oo Cities of tho Third Class, and William Ker man, of Utica, a well-known lawyer lath e State, Tim Governor thinks th a t a com mission will be more apt to devise a scheme than the legislator*, who are subjected te political influences. Killed by a Collapsing W ell. By the collapsing of a building which was u n d ergoing ropalra on the corner ol Court and Water streets, lu Binghamton, No.-man 8. Goers, timekeeper, was killed and Thomas Donahue seriously Injured. Patrick Managua, Daniel Meek. John Dayan and Michael Lynch were s lightly In jured. The men were at work removing the front of the building p reparatory to re placing It with plate Miss, when without warning the lower portion of the wall give way, tonpllng Inward and carrying the floor with It. Norman Geer had Just en tered the building nu 1 was caught beneath th« mass. He was taken out alive, but died while being carried across the s treet. Hit neck was broken. Donahue was taken out badly crushed, but breathing. Contraotot Jam es O’Neil, who bad charge of the work. Is unable to account forth# accident, Provisional President Rodriguez and bis Cabinet, which had been appointed, gt once turned over the control of affairs to General Castro. * In an Interview General Castro declared that the acts of the deposed President, 3enor Andrade, proved that he was in capable of adm inistering the affairs of the Government. His adm inistration was causing general ruin, nnd hastening the dissolution of the Liberal party. General Castro added that It was his Intention to use the best elements of the country, Irrespective of party, In forming a cabinet. He solemnly promised to form a strong Government. The troops arc In excellent condition. No atrocities have boon committed. Former President Andrade has written a letter to General Matos, formerly Minister of F inance, advising him that he will go to the West Indies, and declaring that he will return with warships and soldiers to over- ‘brow General Castro. CZAR’S SKULL TREPANNED. Operation to Relieve Cerebral Pressure Haiti to Have Been Successful. H amdcio , Germany (By Cable).—It is authoritatively reported that the Czar sub mitted to an operation of skull trepanning at Darm stadt on October 14. It Is said that William J. Bryan closed his three days* tour In the Interest of the Democratic State ticket In Ohio. Lewis Chnrotohas, a Greek, has caused nervous people of Topeka, Kan., no end of worry by allowing a steam peanut whistle to Ring away from morning till night In front of hls place of business. He went to jail a few days *go for the third time be cause of this nuisance, but he Insisted on leaving hls steam kettle running at full speed. Henry Ludovice, seventy years old, a well-known farm er In Middlesex County, N. J ., committed sulplde by hanging him self from a rafter in n woodshed in the rear of hie house at West Dunellen. He had been In ill-heulth for some time. Five men were swept from a narrow foot- walk on tbo Brooklyn Elevated Railroad by a passenger whose body projected from the steps of a train. One was killed and an other may die. William H. Appleton, senior member of the firm of D. Appleton A Co., passed away at hls home in Rlverdale, N. Y., at the age of eighty-five. Enoch Willard, a farm er, seventy-three years of age, com m itted suicide In North Rochester, N. H., for fear of being arrested for selling and concealing liquors. made and th a t he drafted the letter. | The Czar 1)R9 been suffering from am- Joslab R. Adams, the republican candl- jenln, the result of au injury to bis head date for Judge of the Superior Court of ivheu he was a young man, and au epera- Pennsylvania, sent a letter to General ion was determined upon some time ago. b rank Reeder, Chairman of the Republican State Committee, withdrawing from the ticket. j MEXICANS KILLED BY COWBOYS. A Running Fight on the Border Result ing In Many Casualties. E l P aso , Texas (Special).—Arizona cow- Captalu John K. Fleet, of the United ooys and Mexican officers at Naco hud a - u l . l n g in disunities on both r i d ... first Portuguese gold medal of honor ever n *e nlTrny took place ns nu excursion be- presented In this country, for saving the : :weeu Blaboe, Arlz., loaded with five bun- shipwrecked crew of the Portuguese bark ired men, women and children, which CZAB OF RUSSIA. Lord Mayor Tallon, of Dublin, Ireland, 1 and John Redmond, M. F., arrived In New York City a few days ago, and cordially greeted by Irish Nationalists two years ago. len, women and children, i jad come to Naco to witness the ball { ; to pull out i , » . t , . ™ * the ground between railroad switches is >rawl on the Mexican side of the line, where >adbed and can be taxed as such. This 1 number of cowboys nnd Mexicans were' HI add a large am o u nt t to the Ohio tax re- ovolved. Tho Mexican policemen rushed s. I u to arrest the cowboys. SSSHSKF 5 ? ,$= S ' S w e a lthy an d her hom e was one of th e | rinmn,t n Vnn Tho nmvhnv** w e a p o n s ng was wealthy and finest in Maine. unmod Ryan. Tim cowboys’ weapons w quickuick too respnud, and n runnin g fight en tilehe progressrogress off whichhich bulletsl rge am oun Miss Mur] was burneu „ llu ___ q t mod, during t p o w bul Foreign. j whistled all around tho excursion train. oa t r n X c ^ ^ U r ; ' . r t C,n r i o n .r TU?. U \ \ i ' o u fm\ ' \ T n ' \ ' * “ I1*,4 0U,‘ I Cowboy, ob «b . ™ l.er . J f o? tbi line '■UJT throughout l b . United Kingdom. , a , ™ ° / r l U t i M B tlte. The Indian mall train collided with a :orrllory held tho Mexican officer, lu check freight train near Schoerhock, a suburb of nntll the fugitive, were sale. \Joe\ Brussels, Belgium, three saloon carriages ((bodes made a determined stand, end, af. being demolished. Klghteen pasedugors ;er being wounded, was captured nud Is were Injured, t u t none fatally. now lu the Naco (Mexican) Jail. The NewHouth Wales Assembly has d e - -------------------------------- - theeT riu'ir«’e*lICh “ COnUnKeUt 0 , tr00i\’ 10 Uautennnl.Colonel Howard Killed. A S o T .lbTtV ap.r In Berlin say, the Kal- A cablfl \ ,‘a I*08' ” 4 0 “ 811*' ser’s recent speech on Urn need of a strong Nwb • Hunounclng the death In tho Philip- fleet Is the fore-runner of a naval bill. j pines of Lieutenant-Colonel Guy Howard, Hlr Alfred Milner, tbo Governor of Cape ot General O. O. Howard. The cable- Colony, bus Issued a proclamation probib. ^rn,nl was received by Judge J . M. Wool- tting the Importation of nil dangerous ex- : wof*b * father-in-law of Colonel Howard, plosives, and read as follows: \Guy Howard killed Mrs. Htockwell, the widow of Charles ' u uol*ou t0 Stockwell, who was Vice-President of Tif fany A Co., New York City, was robbed ol •75,000 In valuables and money at the Ho tel Savoy, London. Antl-Hemltlc riots broke out at Hall ;hau, Moravia. Jewish bouses wore^etoi Kaiser W ants m Large Navy, Emperor William, on the occasion of tbo and stores pillaged. The gonduri charged the rioters, killing three per* and Injuring several others. The mlllti finally restored order. / It was off!)fil.dally daily announcednnou at Ottawa, j Out., that the Im perial authorities have j a th e Im perial authorities have granted permission for trained nurses and surgeons to be sent from Canada for the Colonial troops. This announcement is ha led with satisfaction. The district elections In the City of Ham Domingoomingo resultedesulted In favoravor of Generaleneral Ju*uan D r In f of G J Isidro Jlmeues for P resident, Henor Horaclo Vasquez for Vice-President, and Henores Rafael Abreu e London dent says: Ice-President, nnd ml It. Caatlllo for Congress. lies- 'R a n c h ing of ftie b a ttlesh ip Kaiser Karl der ned ! C rosse at Hamburg, said th a t Germany - 1 uem led a stro n g fleet, and deplored tbe fact t h a t t h e g r o w th of commerce bad been retard e d by w a n t of ships. W ar Raises F| Tbe South A f r ica* has sent tbe prl of diamonds up flftp p er cent., and If hos tilities continue indefinitely further ad- II be made. Tbe price has been Transvaal contro- lon Is that nearly Hole diamond output of tbe world from Houtb Africa. f D iam o n d s, has sent tb e price I vances will be rising ever since tbo I vorsy began. Tbo rei San Isidro Captured. General Young's advance guard of Gen- Oeneral ..W .I Weyler . , ! . , rrorid.'nt ol tbe . Con- ,ral 8 \ \ “ ?» **» «‘ P l Kultatlro Council ot War b u been oou- I ured »an UM r firmed, an ! Is severely criticised by both J , ™ The London Morning Post's Madrid cor respondent sa “ The appointment of G W ns Presiden t of tb firmed, nn i is severely criticise military officials and civilians.\ In the Htorthlng, at Christiana, Norway, tbo Leftists have adopted an electoral pro gramme, which Includes compulsory arbi tration and a system of Insurance against Incapacity to earn a livelihood. The Neuete Nacbrlohten, of Berlin, says that the colonial council has adopted a resolution declaring It compatible with Gt-rmau colonial Interests to abandon Samoa in return for sufficient indemnifies- Smallpox has broken out at Cape Town, Houtb Africa, among tbe natives from Johannesburg. Crown Prlncosa Btepbanl, widow of tbe Crown Prince Rudolph, will be married to Count EUemer Izmyay, nephew of a former Hungarian Pffcme Minister. In London, on November A liberal revolution has started In the departm ents .of Hantander and .Toiona, Colombia. Martial law has been estab lished all over tbe Republic. Dr. Klapper, e d itor of a German paper, has been sentenced to six m onths' Impris onment for criticising tbe Emperor. M u g ^qaestloc^ reg chased at ttf. Thomas. D. W. I., for\tbe United Htetee Government In the war has been settled, tbe United m ates Govern ment paying ♦83, 000 . Tbe Colonial Council. It Is announced In Berlin, bee unanimously approved tbe pro posal that tbe Government should under take the eooatrueilAu of tb# East African Central Railway. Tbe Amt section will be to UkaflM. It I# to b# belli wit bln three ii'is. Tbe cost te ettlested el I ........ , Turlac. Iro, which will be used as d xpe-iition against Agutnaldo K illed by a Funeral Train. Bela W. Osburn, aged sixty years, was instantly killed at the grade crossing »t Brown’s motion, Conn., on the Watertown branch, by a special train returning with a number of persons who bad been attend ing tho funeral of O. B. King. Osburn failed to heed tbe engineer's warning slg- t Tue1eonVr o ? bisUsm rt * c iught ^ t b e h ^ e k Q u a r a n tines A g a inst the P lngae. Tbe Gorernm euts of Argentina nnd Urn. guay have decreed ten days' quarantine against arrivals from Haotos and live days' quarantine against arrivals from elsewhere tn Brazil after disinfection. Strangled to D e a th by H ls Shirt C ellar. A most peculiar accident ended the life of John Gustafson in Duluth, Minn. In tbe evening be drank too freely. He went to ids hotel, set on tbe edge of tbe bed end from that position fell forward to the floor. :bt at tbo A Caban ■espttal Celia gees ^ Tbe hospital at flagsa la Grande, Cube, collapsed a few days ago, bavin* been es* mined by floods Irom tbe reec^t heavy miLs. Of tbe forty-two Inmate# four were sided end twenty-esvee Inlarad flames no one. Governor Removes Hutson. Governor Roosevelt a few days ago Is* tued the formal order removing Thomas Hutson from the office ot Treasurer of C b a 'itaiqua County. The order says: \It appearing to me that. In violation of Ian and of his duty, be neglected to report tbs amount of Interest received by him Ofl ?ountv funds; that he accepted a pres sat M #100 from the Fredonla National Raaki •hat the aggregate amount of said Intersil and present was kept by him as bis ow* property until after tbe commencement ol this proceeding; U Is, therefore, ordered that the said Thomas Hutson be and bare* by is removed from office.\ Governdt by is removed from office.\ G o v __ Roosevelt appointed Emmons J. Swift te ‘.he office o f Treasurer of Obaulaaqo* bounty In place of Thomas ttutf Farmer Miller's Salelde. Henry Miller, a retired farmer of Thereeai committed suicide at the house of hi* laughter, Mrs. A rthur Greeneers. For a ong time Mr. Hiller had been euflaring 'rom a stomach trouble and bad become rery despondent. He called on bis deugR- :er, Mrs. Green acre, end the left him alone n the house for a few minute#. When the returned Mr. Miller was mleeleg. Hie body vns afterward found In the elstern. When aken out, It was found that he had eat bis hront, death resulting from tbaeeverlag if the jugular vein and not from drownleg, is no water was found tn tbe lungs. Mr, tim e r Ipaxpe a widow, two daughters a id Gets One Year For Kaeh With. H a rry F. St. Clair, whose marriage epl* •odes have created a large umouit ot rouble and comment In Rochester a i d •Isewhere, who was arrested on a chatffl' if petit larceny July 6, bat afterward ar- algned on a charge ot bigamy, plaadaf futlty a few days ago and waa i f Hflpfld| o five years In Auburn Prison. St. OtAff idm ltted that hls real name te O’Ertea—J tlaln Frank O'Brien—and that bis reel* lence Is Hamilton. Ontario, where be says' ils parents are living. He gave hls age a s wenty-one years, but looked flMeh 'ounger. He has been married at least ire times. _ _ _ _ _ Broeme County Farmers Combining, j The Broome County Farmers1 Union Is he name of a farmers' combine receatly> oniied which Is vxpeoted to azteed tw fiher m ates throughout the Unloe, Tba’ ■ombine came to light In the town of Wind er, and Its object is to unite In oo-opdsa o r, an d Us object Is to uni ion all the farmers In the county. ;ate of the union will have charge e ( f l lommlsslon house established In Hew York Mty, where all tbe products of Broome •old. Agents are 3lty, wh _ ___ _ _ 'ounty farms will be sold. Agents a al vork urging every farmer In the county to o!n the union, and when this Is aa ----- dished surrounding counties be Western Boy's Perilous Hide. Edward Bailey, of St. Paul, rode from too host er to Albany a few days ago on the iowcatcber c <o. 28 fron [i'lmler boy could i linn he was when he stepped ofl I. _ perch, only to fall Into the elutotms of a jollcetnaii. On the trip he lost bis bat. Suicide Pulled Trigger W ith Tee. John Gray, thirty years old, of Itbaea, placed the muzzle of n musket la hie nouth nud discharged the weapon by means of a string, one end of whleb Wflfl ’nstowed to the trigger and the other to )ue of hls toes. The charge tore a bom through hls head and he died Instantly. He had shown Indications of loaaolty. To Take Soldiers' V otes. . Charles T. Andrews, of Beacon Falls, iee jeeu appointed by the Secretary of Mtatfl is special agent of hi# department to dls- irlbute the soldiers’ ballots among the or ganizations of the United Btatea Army ata- .toned on th e islands of Cuba and Porto itlco. The ballot which each soldier will ecelve to vote is n ine feet nine Inches long. New Y ork's T r a v e ling Libraries. Of the 157 “ traveling libraries\ sent out ii this s tate since June 1, 120 have gone to itudy clubs and summer schools, sixteen o high schools and academies, sixteen to ihrarlos and oommunltle*, having no ii*' m irlcs, and five to speqlal borrowers. Wore thau 150 wall pictures have already (one o u t, and the demand for lanterns and dldes Is again beginning. State P r inting Contract S lgved. The Htate Printing Board has signed the tapers awarding to John A. McCarthy, of Mbnny, the contract to perform tbe Legls- m u re printing during tho years 1800 and 1901. A contest has been made lu tbe tourts by the Brnndow Printing Company, me of the bidders, but It Is understood bat It will not be pressed. Arcade B u s in e s s M en a Suicide. % E. !>. Keeney, for nineteen years In the irug business at Arcade, while despondent, lommltted suicide by shooting blm iell. He was fifty-four years old. A ll Around the State. Rulomanca sentiment favor a curfew or* lluance. Navigation on Heneca Lake by e x o y rsloi Doats has closed for the season. Nearly a dozen dogs knoiirn o r suspected )f having rubles have been slain by Look- port policemen. Niagara Falls Is now entirely free from •mallpox. In all fourteeu authenticated esses were treated hist summer. The Board of Managers pf tbe House ol Refuge at Albion held \ meeting a i d agreed not Insist on their . y ignatlooe ba ng accepted until after a ut>> board bad beeu appointed. Corning Is to have an emergency bospf- al. Corning Is a railway center. Nu inar m s accidents make a hospital au linpera- live necessity. D u ring tbe pa'.t month upwards ol :weuty-flve strangers who had drift# i Into Orleans County have been compelled to ;rove that they were not Conifer, the maty inspected of slaying young Halpln, the >edlar who waa murdered and robbed over four weeks ago. Mrs. Miner Anderaon, of Casenovla, while iroselng a railroad track on her Weyele was struck by a train oo the Lehigh Valley road. Hbe fell under tbe wheel# and her fight leg w*a mangled and her left foot irusbed. Bbe was taken home and both ege were empetated. flbe died. In a boat •wo boars. M n t M .trlp M far r t i i k r . i Omamnl M u a m r Underwood of Ik . Dal- (Imoreaed Ohio Ballroed will (kortlr Iw a . »“ oritrr prorldie* wrwle. rtrlpe. lor t h . . laltbfal * i .|>| otmm of lb . road. A gold d r ip , will maaa d r . y w r . of eerrlro xml o rilror .tripe two y— n . The oo e p .u r *01 ■ im larairii eooduttor., brak.mwa aad w-wgaawMO of Oil euuwee with badge., eo that lbar e a r be aeetly dtotlerelebed by tliyM aaiaaUtar with tho aorrlew. W oeeew (M o o r to ■arlooi Three hoodrwd Morooa law m e . an t red to thedtel# of doeera f aedeetUad a* lead greeted th. eeeeeefa e b e e the feexleae f Th. Mteey ia. bwe mm Jj