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CHARLES HALSEY MOORE -...

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THE PLATTSBUKGH REPUBLICAN. SAT¥RPAY MORINlflG. APJMI. 21. 1888. (Tljr Ulrjinbliriin. -UrRPAT MOR.NIM-.ArKII n 1KW. O R V V C & B \ < \ \ Proprietors [•etiioettUIc Xational Convention. The Xjvti.•>•.«: r»fm»--ati<- « ••nra>!t<'p bar tr t - n.ft IT. tt'f rtty >'f Ma<tMrpt"Ti. up Ihe IWfMi »M-..r..i a«T i:r Fpl.tuiiry.Iliff.hM xp- V .tMTi FM-A*. thi Firrst I>AI IT Jr>i»c. r.ext at t.r. the IUI.P. »t<d chosen tbe <~TT\ i r HT I., i i« «« t).<« flare, for holding the Katifr.A [.in.-ralu I ,>n putint. Kach 8ta.te in er.t .t.«-.t «<• a represerUHtiriri thereir.. e a; l.. iV- I <> t he r.umber nf Its sena«ers a. 1 r . ; rp^ft:it-t.K ir» t h e e'«.ricrre<te ».t Ibe I M P M de* »'"1 each T>irltt-r> an' tie L> o't'.l i-f i •• xu.Ma shall have tw-.> rtplc- £-«tf i A I»*-n..>ftrait.' ( orisrrvaiirp t il'/iM * t>f t> •• t i.ife.l states, irrespective «f past p, .:I.T. x.^.uw-i.i.1 U.T.-S HTM"! d< fTerpr.fe*. ^1"' i-a' ui Itf with in Sr, tVie «II .rt ft r pure, econ <tr."t»t *.r.d const,lull.»rtai porer nmenl-. are c v r b a . i y I n r l i M t<. jilt, lis in sending dele catp« t • t h e convention -i.gn*»1 WtLLlAHR. BARNCM, Chairman. >i.corBirK O TRTvrK, .Si-eretarv N"JU1,.I.IU iiem t ..n.mlUee. \\ ASnisor«"v. February £i, i*<' Democratic Slate Convention, Tl.er»emi»-ratir f lerliw o f t b e State if New V«.rlc are requested t.. unite in ch.w.fli g tl.rpp dplPEateK au.l thrf pallen.atpilt-l" eatps.fr. iii ea'r. asserublv dtstri-t. 1. a. terd the Mate ('..uv.rill. r. l<" I P b':.l at \<-w 5orU.ir tbe Ara-ien y >>t Mn<d.', "H t h e Fji-TJ--R>TH I>A\ <.l WAV. at tw.-i*e «.•:>. k ii.mn, t.iriliepor jx.se i f f utii.p four rteugates at large, two dp.ppatrs ai .1 l w . ilttrTi.-iie •]« legates frtih «a> \ cuirrc*-' .* «-ti~trift. ti> atlpr.il t».i- ri.nrriul'- Ct'iivetiltiin tu tie held a . .i—ms ,l..nrf. !«<>*. a m i t o transact «u, h ctl.pr t.iismt»s as, an-or.Hr.tr t" iru u*agis of tlip part t . i n b e brought before it. ri>WAkl> Ml RI'HY. jK.Clialrtuuii. W it IIAM L. Mrtt FB. net retarj. >t>tl. rlc. Apr!. *. li*^. Anti-flrlberr In the Legislature. Tkt Rfpublleaa Party Mil Tf-mperaace. Ami Bribery was up in the Awmbl.r Tbc policy of the Rrpublicftu leaders The Secretary Can Baj Bond*. Both Houses of Congress hare a! l-t«.t rs last Tuesday." The virtuous solons whose with regard to tbe temperance question is plicitly declared that the Secretary of the while souls are shocked t.. think that evidently settled for the coming cam- { Treasury hos the right to use the surplu snrh wjcfcrdncsR as bribery at tbe polls paign. The word has been passed along tbe line that one more mighty effort must be made to retain the temperance element winch has been drifting a«- n y from it at, a steadily increasing rale for Hie last few years These leaders aie fully alive to the fact that in this movement of Repub- lican v.'ters to the Prohibition ranks lies the chief danger to the Republican party. Standing in a minority they do, they rcaliyp that a temperance element holds a balance of ] oner which threatens their destruction. iSn a rallying cry has been passed along the line that this out-setting trade nf t e m p e r a n c e v o t e r s m u s t be slopped at all hazards. How do they propose to do it? First by a rigid and uncompromising boycotting of everything that tends towards a third party movement. That word, "third party" has tremendous ter- rors for these leaders of the modern Ke- Pemocratic County Convention. can exist anywhere on this fair earth, have arisen tn their might and pas?id one more bill to ft >p political bribery. How many of these honest fillows commimd forgery whrr. they took th<* iron clad ostb, swear- ing that they contributed no money to prornrr their election' t'ne would think there was too mileli anti-bribery law al reaiiy for ibe avfragr legislator. In the debate o n t h e bill M r . U e o . 8. Weed ufferf.l an anifinlment prohibiting employers from influencing or coercing their employe* at elections. But tbe Re- publican majority would have none of that. They knew it would strike a death Mow at modern Republicanism in the "rcoral dec-striclP." In Clinton county, said Mr. Weed. Republican employers are in the habit nf Compelling their employes to rote the Republican ticki t on pain of dismissal. Then Assemblyman Ainsworth undertook to dodge this home thrust by a little abu*e of ,Mr. Weed on accnuDt of bis own family being interested in the iron bip-ness. to which Mr. Weed promptly Hung back tbe reply that the iron com- pany to which reference had been made was managed almost wholly by Republi- can* and the imputation cast upon himself and his family had no basis in fact. On the whole Mr. Weed appears 1" have fully dcnionslratiil the ability to defend him- T! '• Pi-ro. • ratlr eieriors or the county nr i Sl .)f. The bill was finally passed by a vote (r-t..i. arp hereby r.<iuesr,-.l to send flvp | - r , .IrffntM fr.m rs< b town i n a Convention b' , o f <J4 to <l, the J)( mncrats coming solidly be l.t ,.t at ll.p Court ilousp. tbe village <.f i = t j J n f r „_.; i, r ji„. rv . r.s-tsi„,rgti,o R .Saturday, May U l W . n t 12 , lnl " lint I'T anii-nrtlii r). o'l'M-'k 1.^*- r.. t o <-b K.SP three delecates to re- j.rpsriit tt.p pour.ty a t t h e Plate Convention u. 1 P lipid In UiPi ity of New York o n M a y 1.1th for the t .i-c-tb.n «.f dele>ratts to the National I>ehtin i.itle Convention t o b e Urld a l S t . t.ouisM; .tnr.p.'.ih. iss-.and for tbe transae- Repubiicaiis PiSfranchlsinjOlcl Soldiers The kind of friends the Republicans are to the old soldiers was shown by the vote of the Republican State As- sembly on the 12th of April. Two pro- positions were before the Assembly: one being a report re commending a simple bill giving the 1,100 veterans in Soldiers" Home at Bath the'right to yote in Bath, which they have always enjoyed until a short time ago when the-y were shut off by the a«tiun of Republican politicians: and the other was a constitutional Amendment to be submitted to the The bdl allowing women to vole tit people, having the same end in view, IH at municipal elections has been de- j but which cannot reach the people until tl.itt of su> b other business as may come be- JOre thcConventlor.- WAL*S PARbU.Vs. Chairman. M. y PiRKHfBSt, Secretary. TOPICS OF THE WEEK."" t ..-'• n l.'. unty Hi piiblic-an Convention \\ t ,ir ..lav. 1'r. t'• rnt'ius Agni w, an eminent pby- Sii ,itn of New Vork < ily. dbd at his borne lliire. April I s . in the Treasury to buy TTnited States bonds. The Senate last week voted to that effect, and on Monday of this week the House did the same. An act of Congress passed in 1SS1 apparent]}- gave this authority, but the President in his last message expressed a doubl as to whether that act was intended to do more than apply to an exigency which then existed. But this action of both Houses of Congress clears awa\-all doubt, and specifically gives to the Secretary ihe right to "apply the sur- plus money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, or so much of it as he may consider proper, to the purchase or re- demption of United Stales bonds, provided that the bonds so put chased or redeemed •hall constitute no pan of the sinking fund." This action of Congress is import- ant anel should remove all immediate clanger from surplus accumulation. I t is understood that the Secretary will at once publicatiisrn. The alarm with which the begin to buy bonds and proceed according Whig leaders of 1848 and 1852 viewed the to his judgment, so that a considerable movement from their ranks to the third reduction of the national debt may be an- party of that period is fully equalled by ticipated in the near future, that c f these Republican politicians, as they watch the steadily increasing Prohi- bition vote year afler year. They have i The following extract from a speech by tried to keep" this movement down by fair Chas. O'Conor is commended to those promises. The plan worked Tor many ' Democrats who were defeated in the scye- years but empty promises made before j « ' towns of the county last Tuesday: election to be broken immediately after "Part of the vile code advocate 1 by the have lost their potency. So now they try hirelings of misrule is, that direct and im- thl' bin Cftt. Thev have undertaken t o ! mediate success is Uie first and paramount siamp tlie third party out. They sharply j aim in every human effort. On the con- scrutinize every temperance movement to ' trary, my morality inculcates honorable see if there is a third party taint in it, and if there is they will have none of it,so they Charles O'Conor, fiati'l in Ihe Assembly. ^e< notice of Democratic convention find forward, notices for town caucuses for the tli< tion of delegates. The Kmperor Frederic of Germany is re- ported to be near his end and his son has been advanced to the Regency. Ei.rb.iy breweries in. New York closed their ,1 • TS las* Monday on account of the uiiioT, - boycott, and ."000 men are out of u- rk. 1> th *!.' Pn-identia! nominations will ).. madi ia less than tvr." rmnths and the fab* of the c .untry ..nee more decided live m- rKhs later. A handsome porrrair of Samuel J. Til- d. n ha= ju^t been presented to the State bv prominent citizens of Albany and will be L'.n.; :u the gallery of Civernors in the < > , : •'. D.irrium ha-- _, i>t imported iwo African l.viD.c- f.-r hi< gri at show, and it is re- p..rre!:haf hi. kopf to clo-e au ctisr.ige- n.t i.*" with Senator In.'iuls s.mn after the .V yi n.btr i-it < tion. Mab-Ch.l S.-rvice Evttniner John I>. Jtiby f.m.Im ted ait examination tor State ib partiiitut stenographers la.-t Tuesday in A.'tr.v. n'.ne candidates appearing', v. inn. and foor im n. 1S S D and cannot give the soldiers a chance to vote until 1890. Now, strange to say the Republicans united to kill the bill re- storing to these maimed and aged depen- dant soldiers the right to vote at once and passed the measure which at best shuts them off from voting until 1H90. Tbe Re- publican party whip was cracked aid the Republicans fell into line, voting against the measture which gives the ballot, to these soldiers at once, while the Demo- crat' voted for it. The reason of the Re- publican action was of course purely po- litical. These demagogues in the Assem- bly were afraid that more of the 1,100 old soldiers would vote for the Democratic ticket than for the Republican. And for this reason and no other they vote to dis- franchise these old soldiers. And this is the party which professes to be the soldiers' friend ! And to this depth the once proud and "grand" party has fallen. Is it any wonder that honest men all over the State and all over the country are making up their minds that the coun- try has little more use for the Republican party so long as it remains under its pres- ent corrupt and demagogical leaders? 'II.I- Wnl .w .f ib :i. Haa 1 with a ' .'i !•> i.i r friend-. It i in.HI, -ro'.e fi..nt and -t:tnd< in one t'.i Hi •-' desirable quarters of the city. Mr. I't.ilp-, the American Minister to l. _•'»•. ! arrive.! in New York. April 13, .[•.r a three JI-JI-' aWemr, It is said ',' i' iii I- Lollti' l o r a three week'-, visit wr. . t, i: i- no pi litic:il sigiiirif .trite w i n ' . A Long Wednesday. Wednesday, April 4th, was one of the longest days ever made in the House of fj ve | Representatives. The occasion was this : j On that day what is known as the direct tax bill came up in the House for consid- k h-is just : eraiion. This bill proposes to refund to <>-• i. pre-, ii'.-.l -with a hi.u»e in Washing- ( the States a certain direct tax which was four story j levied during the war, and by a precon- f ' certtd arrangement Wednesday, April 4th, : was fixed as the day on which the measure should be considered, to the exclusion of other business which rightfully had the precedence. The bill was stoutly opposed tit the start by fifty Democratic members, who were able, by making dilatory mo- tions, to stave oiT action on it from day to day, anil all «ight sessions were the rule, the House taking recesses from time to ii-i of Representatives time but refusing to adjourn. The bill Mr. Mils mole a strong had a large majority in its favor at the start, but after a week spent in rillibuster- ing the opposition grew from fifty votes to ninety, and finally April 11th a Democratic caucus decided that consideration of the bill should be deferred till December. As light is let in upen this subject the conviction grows that it is a piece of job- bery which would set a dangerous preced- ent. The Republicans have made a solid party issue of this bill and were at first able to bring to their aid a number of Democrats, but Ihe latter have forsaken :.av;.i:i Congressman, will their unworthy allies. The proposed t '.,>•! States Senate from measure is one that should not be rushed (.;..-.• . t SH.u'.jr habin's through without due consideration, at any ion the •Tl tin H M.i lar.ll bill Was 1 ..-i, -; . . :• : u . ! - lav .r, Mr Kelly "f IVnnsyl- >_' * -;•> .... r.g ii tl»p other -ide. Tht- .;.-• .'• v.. j r .bably la-: .i tui-u'b or more. -.. relary of tin 1 luted Suites Treasury, 1',- r. .i 1. .*-'ii-l • n ihe 1 7 t h o f April a < •• ..'*r -i-n.rii: loi tenders and unlimited .i.i. ^r.'.s ,.J 1 h.te.l Mj.te- bonds >•£ t h e A. "s o f . f JM;V 14. 1^70. and January 20. '.•'.' I '.'• surplus in the Treasury ^ IJ "W t - .;; j.'t 1 a' SIOVOUO WW. -Xp. ,1 that Kuutt- Nei-on, iliu- t;i. Mi : l o t .' j.! 'h. . NLI.- .6«!l -'- r. g idol- in.* t'o the mod- ! rate. It would take abuut.-felT, 000,000 out lea id tariff for prntcc- j "f the* Treasury, and might open the door i-. -he need of revenue, for hundreds of millions more. For if thi? tax is refunded w h y n u t the cotton t:i\, and the income tax, and other war taxes? jf our Republican friends could nave their way the United States surplus would be disposed of pretty quickly, re- moving this pretext for reducing the direct War taxes and thus protecting their friends •i , re-..!'-i >p -i. th- oountry •>{ twenty- | t fae monopolists and the mammoth trusts with their systems of organized robbery. Ai..ir.i.iu A.l.ai.«e, -u-< llr.-.y. N- '1>."S party. h:i .! T the Aru. in ait \o't-r 1 -:;.*' - '.•„ wh : i h .ts purp •- s..r t" i--ued in the .-e is -lat- i :;.e r.-t'ural:/IU'.II lav*-, ..<• r._!.: of -ufl'raj-e only e .i. tii-rountry of twenty- l! _•: .'. i .\. '.,' Ihihol'ta'H la-t Tllts- !r :.i 4OK.II ' . ">o."iiHj majoriiy. . i.t ! tl.i > •.'!.. ru M:iti-t Uiat j .'.. • .:. i r.'.nr.-n L iy<- been ex- '-:,.- L •) i - ' f i •UlJiU^. The '. . ! i »rj•'-' ba^ ru... i- a li'.Lle -h. N ' Mi:- i-ehf.r..". ."'lli'.'lhfT I... ei.-e is re.t ulieiy t o g e t thruUgh ' . .-•;. *'e. Luiiiiii- I.ra.s-\ Jiepubliean ii.<h b ai'lo- :. r U.e ub-urdity of the i i,i.. tii C by i r.d •r-^.uf thi- priraiple the JCej ib:,i..:» j.ai'y will be i ntitled to lem- pr.rc --ipp -r' a'id a- the main object . f 'i,.- move wa- t-> make a tub of it to tl.r .ft (•• tie- b mperatii e whah* the motive c!i» ifpe'ir- f..r pa--iug it. There appears t-j b< troable brewing . vf-r in Fratiee. jioutangcr after being '.r.h rid to the re-.r b y t h e n e w govern- ment ha- been taken u p o n t b e very M.i.h'.ders of Ihe people and sent back to Pari- into the nauouul Legislature and it rr.-iiiy looks to-day as if another French Uevolution wag impending. But arter a g . ..1 nij-hl's re-l the unstable Republic nciv wake up Hober again. erne o£ the late sensations in New York c dv is furnished by the case of a woman i.aiucd Dm Debar. She professed to be an artistic medium who painted pictures under the inspiration o£ lUphael, MIcb.*el Augelo ami other old masters. In some way hhe got Hon. Luther Marati under her influence and he deeded valuable real estate to her, but she now lies in the city prihon awaiting her trial for swindling. She professed to be the daughter of a king, but this also, of course turns out to be untrue according to tbe testimony of her brotbt-rg, and her course of deception appears to be ended. • • r e KepHfclleaa GaittaNiSM. A prominent Republican of Chicago is •redited with thin talk. While the be»t men in tbe nation, regardleM of politic*, were pnyrinj for the recovery of Mr.Conk- Hnjr it remained for a modern Republican politician to (peculate tuui gleefully on the probable effect of the impending ca- lami*./ on Blaine 1 * chaaees. It U the old Ouiteau apirit, wtten you come to aeore it down: it Coakliaf die* that aaaaaa Blaia«,aa aura aa the woriX Bat a* ioa* aa Coakliag U*m ha will aiaaarw hia eaaaity for the ana f roaa Maiae aa4 aerer let w». Taare ara ay MloaMf* of CoahJi-ii. *mw York tewkowotaUaa »lUlaf lo ktary the chat far awi-eVe aaha, a«t tfeajr will ) f «-LU.. JU A aa.i— u to Mlate' Death of Roseee Conkling-. Roscoe Conkling died at his rooms in the Hoffman House in New York city at 1:50 P. M. on Wednesday of this week_ The cause of his death was aa abscess formed in t h e e-ar and extending ta the brain, the abscess being the effect of ex- posure during tbe great blizzard, or of a cold subsequently contracted in an office which was not property warmed. Mr. Conkling was born in Albany, Oct. :;o, 1H20, bis father having been Judge Alfred Conkling, who had moved to that city in lHi'.i, on being appointed by Presi- dent Adams Judge of the United States District Court for the northern district of New York. Rnscoe Conkling received an academic education and then entered his father's oiBee and engaged in tlie study of law. J n 1S4G he entered the k w office of Francis Kernan, and was admitted to the bar in 1850 and was soon afterward ap- pointed District Attorney of Oneida coun- ty to fill vacancy. In 18'1iS he wa9 elected mayor of Utica by the Republicans and the same year was elected to Congress, being elected in WG'i serving till 18C4. In 1806 he was a£4in elected to the House of Repr*sentatives but before taking bis seat was elected by the Legislature to the Unit- ed States Senate, in which body he served till 1880, when in consequence of differ- ences w itli Garfield he resigned his seat in the U. S. Senate and appealed to hU own party for vindication and was defeated in the following election for Senator, since which time be has been pursuing the prac- tice of law in New York city where during these last seven years he has secured a very large and lucrative business. Mr. Conk- ling, when quite young married a sister of Horatio Sepiuour who with their only child, Mrs. Oak man survives him. In personal appearance Mr. Conkling was very striking, and as a public spaaker be was excelled by few men of bit own time. He was twice tendered a place on the . Supreme Bench of tbe United States, once by President Grant and once by President Arthur, and decliued tbe honor both limes, Ilia great fight in tbe Republican convention of 1889 for the aoainatioa of Gen. Grant for a third term may be aahl to have bcea the but act of his political career, and tbe auaaar ia which held the famous paalaai "•*•" together till UM very close of that eoateet forma a atrikiag page of tk« political biatory of toe CM* try. Ilia las* public appaaraaos wat at eoaaaal of Ua Haaati Iaraatigaiiag Oam> mitt— ia taa aaoaaeatioa of I** Broadway railroad fcamda. Mr. Coakliag vaa a faat Mead bit Uttar, Ifcoaga mat aajoat aav .aadlaaataafdrfafcarlttaat .akiafk iiirm-watba ^ Mtaftwllfeaa** djpajiitha vfnala Bjajaaa tmtttm§, mm' r ia.-s the word to crush it at once. This is evidently lo be a very severe aud summary process. As if the Republican leaders should assume lo themselves complete control of everything pertaining to tem- perance business. No temperance move- ment must go on, the}* declare in effect,- unless it has their approval, and in order to have that approval the men engaged in it must satisfy them that they will scotch and kill any and everything hav- ing the appearance of the hated third par- ty taint. This we saw illustrated a few weeks ago in Pittsburgh when the editor of the Pittsburgh Sentinel, a Republican organ of Clinton county refused to pub- lish a notice of a temperance meeting which had been sent to mm for publica- tion from the town of Mooers, for the reason as be freely stated that be did not know whether there was any third party taint in it. This was frank. Tbere ii no secret about it. Orders had been received to stamp out the third par- ty, and he was obeying orders. The meeting was called to nominate an ai*ti license excise commissioner, but how was our limorsome friend to know that ? But these shrewd Republican leaders have another string to their bow. They are once more setting up their decayed organization as the real Simon pure, genuine, Original Jticobs temperance par- ty. The eilort is enough to merit the scorn and derision which it is meeting from the best temperance elements of the country. But it is being made neverthe- less. How do the-y propose to satisfy this time the temperance people whom thev have gulled so often ? Why by High Li- cense. We have had it sounded iu our ears by the united temperance chorus, lo, these many years, that license was only legalized crime—a league with death and destruction which should never be counte- nanced. But now come these cunning Republican politicians and cry High License, and with many of these temper- ance people the word "High" appears to have a sanctifying effect and we now see these people shouting for the Crosby High License bill pending in the Legislature as if they really thought it was a genuine temperance measure. Does this satisfy the genuine temper^ ance element of the country. It will un- doubtedly satisfy the people who put the ascendency of the Republican party first, and the welfare of the temperance cause second—the "temperance" men who would rather vote for a Republican drunk- ard than a Democratic temperance man. But this is not the temperance clement, however loudly it may preach temperance and pray for temperance. How then does high license satisfy the real temperance element? The present indications appear to be that it does not satisfy it at all. Harper's Weekly, always on the side of true temperance says that in this high license policy "the Republican party is playing fast and loose with the temper- ance people. The Cincinnati Commercial Gazette, a leading Republican organ of the west ridicules the movement and says "it will not succeed." The leading Republican papers of Min- neapolis and St. Paul recommended the High License law of Minnesot as friend- ly Ui taloon interest*. And now comes in the testimony of liquor dealers themselves on High License. The Weekly Bulletin, a liquor organ of Louisville, Ky., says the "distillers and brewers of this State are pretty generally in favor of a $500 license for Kentucky." The Yolksblatt a liquor organ of Cincin- nati glories in tbe high license law of Ohio as "an effectual barrier against Pro- hibition, giving tlie liquor traffic a legal standing.'" In this State, the Liquor Dealers' As- sociation bring out the fact that the brew- e.-s of Nebraska City, Omaha, St. Louis, Peoria, Qnincy, Chicago and Cleveland derfully agree that that tneir business has increased and improved under High Li- cense, that "itijnoiit Prohibition and gives their business a legal standing," that in short they prefer High License. After doing business seven years under the Nebraska Huh License law of *1,000 for any kind of a saloon, Peter E. Her, President of the largest distillery iu the west, and a most influential Republican says "High License is one of the grandest laws for the liquor traffic." That such men should be Republicans is not strange, when here in New York we find Republican leaders and their poor little aUiject followers setting up the Re. publican party as a temperance party on the strength of the fact that it supports High License, as a temperance measure. What an infamous league is this! Pre- tended temperance reformers joining hands with the leaders of the liquor in- terest ! Is it any wonder that the true temperance elements revolt at SUCh an al- liance? Is it any wonder that our Re- publican friends should be discouraged at the j oor succes or their attempts to make p e o p l e b e l i e v e t h a t the Republican party is the o n l y t r u e t e m p e r a n c e party? Strip off your poor tattered rags, ye po- litical hypocrites, for they* do not at all cover your moral nakedness. If your sal- vation by ballot depends upon such poor tricks as these it is indeed past praying for. Take warning from these burning words of a true temperance man: Moreover, is it reasonable to suppose that men who have given up home, sacri- ficed fortune and refused political honors —men who have suffered alaoder awl ridicule, been burnt in efflgy—are going to aive way in the hour of triumph to a party so faithless to a great trust ? Did those who founded tbe Republican party and led it to victory try to resurrect the old Whig party aa better prepared to maintain the Union and destroy slavery? It would only have resulted in a divided country and the perpetuation of the slave power? So the Probibitioa party says. Ho met, no compromise, and demands aa nacoa. dUioaal surrender. To use the agure of the M. Y. Bv. "The elood of theloriaoa A storm ia brewiag , ' and manly struggles for the right, how- ever slight the prospect of immediate ad- vantage to the actors, or even to the cause. Every man of ardent mind, who is afforded an access to literature, selects in early life from history or fiction the demi-gods of his idolatry, and with more or less earnestness bestows upon them through life his constant leverence. Sline were not the heroes whose victorious chariot wheels, stained with the blood of vanquished millions, conducted them to power and renown. My ideals were Troy's champion at his last stand beneath her walls, Leonidas in the Grecian pass and the dissenting consul at Canna?. Without any claim to the heroism that could imitate them I could still yield them my homage. To spend in one's allotted place a blameless life of honest effort; and, at its end, to perish nobly contend- ing in the Thermopylae of an honest cause, has ever seemed to me the perfec- tion of a happy individual destiny." Chips. SOLDIBIiS' HOME, OB SOLDrKUS' POOliHOCSE? At Bath in this State there is an institu- tion termed "The Seldiers' Home." In it reside about 1,100 war "Veterans;" in 18S0, the authorities of the town of Bath, made the grounds including the "Home" an Election district, and for five years the inmates of the "Home" were per- mitted to vote unquestioned. Last year some of the citizens of Bath obtained a judicial decision, that "veterans;" were not legal voters in said town. Last fall some of these old soldiers voted notwith- standing the decision, and 150 of them have been indicted by the Grand Jury for illegal voting. Early in January Governor Hill brought Uie subject to the attention of the Legislature in a special message, asking that body to grant to these "vet- erans" the right to vote. The matter was referred to the "Judiciary Committee" of the Assembly; after a month's delay the the majority of that Committee, all Re- publicans, made a report declining to give this right; and proposing an amend- ment to tbe Constitution of the State, al- lowing these veterans to seal up their votes and send tham to the place of their former residence, to be there counted. Their rights under this amendment if it was adopted, coultl not be secured until 1890. In their report they characterize the veterans as "waifs of fortune" and class them with the inmates of alms- houses and lunatic asylums. The minor* ity Of this committee, all Democrats, made a report in opposition to the claims and recommendations of the majority report. If the claims of the majority are to pre- vail; then the name of "Home" is a mis- nomer, and the Republican Legislatuie should at once change the name; to be consistent they should term it the "Sol- diers' poor house," or if this sounds "rough" say "almshouse." Don't insult the veterans by calling it a "Home." If these War veteians had homes elsewhere they would not be inmates of the so-called "Soldiers' Home." Does not tbe word "Home" imply all the rights of citizen- ship? and among these rights is there one more prized than the right to vote ? Arc the leaders of the g. o. p. fallen so low that they are ready U exclude from the ballot-box the men Who periled their lives in support of a Government "Of, by, and for the People ? If so, keep right on "pointing with the pride." Republican Progrr«*. Pr-grcss is r e p - t o .1 by C.f V vto »*J A managers of the modern Ref tj"« i an pany Tbe Republican primaries cade.j f.->r nom- ination of town officer', assembled on Thursday nighrof last week in the f ur Pittsburgh, districts. The Plattsbur^h Sentinel reported the procetdings of these primaries thus i n i t s issue of 1 ist werl;: [From tbe PlatUburgh Sentinel ot April 13-1 PtATTSnCROIt PRIMARIES —AN 1IIEOU AM> DISGP.ACEFTL AFFV1II. The laws of our Stale, when enforenl. throw around our primary elections every possible safeguard for a free and fair bal- lot. They require that before entering up on their duties the inspectors shall take a solemn oath to enforce those laws: that there shall he a locked box, to prevent "Stuflinit" and fraudulent votinir. and thru there shall be a poll list, to prevent re- peating aud other illegalities. How wax it iu I'lallsburgli last night? In District .No. 3, not one of these provis- ions were complied wilh. There was no oath, (except ordinary profanity,) no bal- lot box, and no poll list! A broad, flat, drawer was placed on the counter, the signal was given, a rush was made for it, and in less than ten minutes it was half full of ballots, deposited singly, and in pack- ages of from live to forty each; A row en- sued, one of the inspectors seized the drawer and rushed for a back room, fol- lowed by the crowd. The liglit was blown out, and for a time there was total dark- ness. After a general rumpus of about an hour, order was restored and the ballots were counted. There were probably 150 persons present, not more than 7.5 of whom were permitted to vote, but the count showed that 54S ballots had been cast! In view of this outrageous aud disgrace- ful proceeding, we respectfully protest against the delegates being permitted to take their seats in the Caucus on Saturday of this week. Of t h e 3 9 4 votes counted for them, not fifty were legal. Had there been a fair vote not one of them would have been elected. On Piatt street there was no oath nor poll list, and a hat was used for a ballot- box. Large numbers of illegal voters were cast. At the Town Hall the inspectors under- took to proceed witliuut a poll list, but voters insisted that the voting should not go on till one was provided, and the in- spectors were compelled to yield. The responsibility fer these outrageous proceedings rests solely on the town com- mittee, of which J . P . Brenan assumes to be chairman, and who, with others put up the job, to keep control of the town or- ganization, because they know that by a fair vote they would be voted down and out! The following morniug the Pittsburgh Telegram, tbe twin of the Sentinel in the organ-ship of pure and undefiled modern Republicanism in Clinton county played this choice piece of music: [From the I'l.tUburgh Telegram of April 14] TUK rLA.TTS!!t T KGU PRIMARIES. A cljaiacteriaiic article appeared in the Sentaiel yesterday.' It was the wail of a soul bubbling over with indignation that it was not allowed to have its way. It was an ill-advised article, such as comes from men who write but do not tjjintt. It was a bold piece of bluff, reeking with misre- presentations. It was a groan that came rrom the heart for it told ho A* the voters were "onto" tbe editor's peculiar methods of carrying primaries. * » The Sentinel writer, presumably the halting, vascillating figurhead of the coun- ty committee, finds irregularities in two districts, NTos. 3 and 4. Regarding the primary in No. 4 the "organ" says "there Was no oath or poll list,and that a hat was used for a ballot box." Two direct false- hoods 1 The inspectors were sworn and a ballot box was used, and had there been any call for a poll list, as the law requires, one would have been kept. As it was ev- erything was regular, quiet and orderly. The primary in Dist. No. 3 w r as far from being satisfactory. A mob of heelers packed into the voting place by the editor of the Sentinel anel his lieutenants created considerable disturbance. A "broad flat drawer" he says was used as a ballot bo.t, and he ought to know what it was after forcibly taking it from the inspectors and holding it up for his tools to deposit their ballots., in number and manner to suit themselves. As illustrating the mendac- ity of this man: "Not more thau 75 were permitted to vote," he says, and yet 194 ballots were cast for the delegates sup- ported by the Sentinel editor and his friends ! And the editor had the box in his possession! And one thinks of the past and smilingly subsides! Accusati 'ii of political immorality and crookedness come with poor grace from such a source. The spectacle is presented of a man precipitating strife in the party for the gratification of his own selfish in- terests. closely following this came an extra from tbe Plattsburgh Sentinel, from which we take the following extract: X PemfMTatic >"n,ite in "*0. r •- - • , . - . - i«. n I^J f ' iiv.r s.ns -j- i R. i' ? rein Iiirp TT.- ----- : • k f r i !»• u -• vt r y r » -r "»— _- ' t. •!•* ft «• I»» rn • ' i ' ' f s . h tw» r U '. w I »f ' I ~i i r. •, tv f < F.J fi..r%»r, i rr»- fr n«»vb js""> I ' s'.rt PIITIU' . *-.'»? V .'ITT'I Arker- «»s, I>e -Twin l,< r^ i K - r • h i I >< '-- lan.i. H . - t V -4 . M » - - - , :• N -r- i faro.tii. "• • r u ( f . • i i |. •.lois/T. Ti xa.<, with Yir^o, , i _• c. •',> f>. m • crals, with iwi u*r i. 1 i r - - . i t i r y thirtv-citrht votes i; . u< f t'e- S.-nt f <- T o h a v e a maj ri'y tie v m.i-* «•.>•<-r a n o t h - e r M n a t ' T f r o m ('!'rtii. I hint -. I"WH. K a n s a s . M a m p . Mi.*.«arbu-rtt". Mob'^m. Minnesota, >Vhnsl\t, NY,y H imp>!l.re. New Jerspy, (>rcii-'n. or Hbo.i, Island. »r if lliey elect a Vice President or la'ry N . w Jersey t h e y w o u l d have a rlear majilT} Three Children Burned to Heath. By the burning of lile hoti-e of I) A. Uollman, near Jaeksnn, Mo , last Satur- day, three (if his children lost their lives, and Hoffman and three oilier children were badly burned. Several months ago Mrs. Huffman died and since the father has been acting in an insane manner. It ia believed Hoffman set the house on fire with tlie intention of destroying himself and his family. *'Xfter a varied e x p e r i e n c e w i t h many so- called eatliariie reiuedien, I a m convinced tliat Ayer's Pills give-the most satisfactory results. J rely exclusively on these Pills for the cure of liver an.1 stomach complaints." John B. Bell, St, Abilene,Texas. L I N K S OS' T H A V K L . UAILKO.UIS. Corrected to Oct. 24, ]Ss7. iDEhAWAKK Jt HUDSON CASAL COMFAXY Js'OltTUJSRX DEPARTMENT. CHAMPLiAIK OrVISIOX—.MAIN LINK. Trains arrive and leave Plattsburgll as follows: jt'OKxn unuXD. Express arrive 5:30 A.M. daily —leave 5:35 A.M. Mixed arrive 5:d0 !• M.—leave 5.20. Mail arrive 7:35 V. M.—leave 7:55 1'. M. SOC'TJJ BOUN.D. Mail arrive 7-A5 A.M.—leave 7:50 A . M . Mixed arrive 11:45 A . M — l p a v e 12:00 r. »r. Express arrive 7:20 p.M.dui'y—leave 7:40 P.M. MOOKRS BRANCH. Leave Plattsburgh €:30 A . M., arriving at Wooers Junction 8.-00. .Leave Mooera Junc- tion 9:15,arriving ai Plattsburgh 11:10 A. M. AT7SABLE JiKANCp. Leave Plattsburgh 1:30 P. M., arriving at Ausanle 3:20 1". M. Leave Ausable at 4:00r. si., arriving at Plattsburgh 5:15P. M. CHAT1UDGAY RAILROAD. From Dec. 5, 1887. GO TNG W B S T . Trains leave Jriausburgh 7:00 A. M.and 2:10 P.M., arrlviHg at Lyon Mountain 8 : 4 9 A . M . and 5 : 2 5 P . M . , a n d Loon Lake 10.15 A . M., ana Saranac Lake II :a5 A. M GOING JSA8T. Trains leave Saranac Lake at 1 : 0 0 r . M . , Loon Lake2:20p.M.,Lyou Mountain 7:00 A.M. and 3:46 P.M., arriving at Plattsburgli 9:45 A . M . a n d 5:35 e. M. LADIES, y. Mrsi^prttteraTtw* (.JPTPI Tb» >*<•*«• f T -ur h--"ii<*- '<!. ,h.- >.-i.sr-l«- f«.» l» fr r- r-r a l tfr,-j,UW*. V.sl.al la'" " . » I i\r .t»i» (1.VK ' i j t —*» .^ «***m r f l ' j- *<.rl*-t> '---I i'« w-»-. iotatP-1. WT r.-r. i-lltij.ol' ' <k »»|' -ill f 1' > j-, l-,.t,,r, I TJ 1 ,.iff t.. th*' cti^.r.ta: »;j~ -1 ' y wM»fcw«« r r' p x* irpi* a- T t'«tr[-a*H!rvt.'r"' ' --1 ;h"lr r-r.-l <•" r r - p.-it-it 1 -. £r t 3 1 • - *t*- t-K*rl; ' •.v-.r--.-t.-t • ^ [ , - ' , p __,.,., i r ra^> 1 A— t, I . t -t,a« IrPt- w ^ * , t». I .i.rli'.i.fO * fct. nr.-o. h H-.-xl. a' 1 Ut.r Y u are * '- v. I- tidtawd > - - .lit!.-is . f itii-w r- K-lf.slri.-.-TT.n'.'ll'n ' . all Ii in-emltT ^ t lnvporli.Tar..lf' h t r «nH>rlt.K-< I r**mp.^r f.-r ^." f •»rtiifT ntl'f v '•' \..uni.t-l li.-ot 1^"- * 1SIAHI V . '"•'" < ' theuM* "f llet* I'* - !„ fpni.il.--,UR"W> .SABSArARrlXA PARENTS, Remember »t til I * season tlie peculiar natures of ypnr chil- dren. A limn Tvlrit' r ef study an.1 cpnlliic- mrntlins jiawil.th" kl-viltutlf) Of SlTlllU macks them; It Is weeks yet ere tliey will have rest an.I rc-reatlmi which the Mitnnu'r holidays l.riiiil- Aid their -treiivtt*. purify and enrich ilielr Dined: Wtallzelt. <:Urii|> ihiir shatelsh. Inar- ttvellvers;lnawiir.t, elve HEALTH and ST1VKW3TH to their linille*, that their brains may «.!-... <>e i>i., by Know A" a S.\ KSA PAiU LLA. Breadwinners "Whether you be en- gaged In the oBIca or the -workshop •w-helbcryour duties he professional 01 mercantile, do not let tno spring nimiuV pa^s without forti'y fnjr your sj su-m* and Improving youi health by using BROWN'S SARSAPARILLA, l*rcpared only by ARA WARREN k CO.. liangor. Me. Sold by ALL dealer* in medicine. CHARLES HALSEY MOORE ATTORNEY ANO COUNSIUOR AT UW, l*mli->- I C'lti > !„,, 4«.o< i»»t"r> «o.l .if the (*r..«>'it? •»••-! Tl«. > ' • '» irnil «»n»ti'r ««lli'rn V « »"ik ' • * 1 .-»rt ! . » » K . . . will C..llPCtI.>n K*<-Sn»n»P, Noi»rT I 'I'.Hf n> Ii '«(•« ' 1888. Wi. f.<V t o f '» SPRING- ANNOUNCEMENT. •r J .*. tl-uit a-l.^thpr w tl ! I 1J. • f «i r•' ,, t i , r . ( , . . o »' W. CENTRAL VBKMONT. Oatober 30, 1887. CBNTKAL AND WESTEHN DIVISIONS. Trains arrive and leave Bouses Point as follows: Going West. Mail arrives and leaves 7:10 a. in. Express " •' •' 7:20 p . m . Geing Kast. E t p r e s s l e a v e s 9:j5 a. in. Mail " i:50 p . ffi. - CANADA. ATLANTIC RAILWAY. fVoiJii? West. Leave Rouses Point 7:15 a. «]., arriving at Coteau 9:24, a n d Ottawa It :35 a m . Going Kast. Leave Ottawa 1:20 p. in., arriving at Coteau 3:31, and Rouses Point 5:40. Connecting at Rouses Point with Central Vt., l>. & H., and O. &. L. c. trains ta and from the east, south and west. PlatUburgh and Burlington Stage Line. Leave Plattsburgh daily (Sundays except- ed) at 10 a. m., arriving in Burlington at 2:30 p. iu. Leave Burlington at 9:30a.in., arriving in Plattsburgh at 2 p.m. Freight at reason- a b l e r a t e s . fs ,f. «,- •n -I. . 'IU 1 ». rI.I- * «j . ' ('. -'tl .-V VtrJ. 1-t^p I )• wr i n . I.I . t I- T»l> '•. i I I- . Ml-Vl.jvr.1'. .Ill I - .- i-r tr^*- 'V I.IPP with t b e w .. ' . r f .! '• * than 11.»n etrpr '•*' -rf. T.. liT.'.t'r«, f i t TV * iri' f T\. '• .ri'H"". >'" I »• " ' ' T.t (Ti5i,rMr5, Ot*rf • ' - ! *•". I *»• lt,.l I o,...,,,,.,„ , , ,, IVP ciT.lia'fv i'"l '*-" ' tui^incsw. KUt rtTUhl'U'lUTtinT II ..•«..«. tiipitrcm yL.t-nt.., HI m i:» i n i n i« i . i u v n n ' i R T M P r i'i- ii.n. >"• uient r,.mii,iii> r.VS1*a\NCE PKPAHTMAET-OoniatiTrs r. ; f . r , '. li.rnnn An.cTi-n . . . . r^.rv y.rk r.rro.•'...• '\<n'' .' 1 nltl.l V Ht M ..r N.u \ U I •>•• r-Ma . r M i . . i . . (,r-. linl.-b • t S o t V.ik M. r. , . ti . F .- o i ^ ' i ' I.-ro.-i ( 0 \ if \PW It-T^. % .\rnnrVT. TI i- .("•' *' >• ' • ' ' ' ' *•• r •" M *" •' •' ' I \\V PM'll'.niKM i . '• • « •• ' • '•' •« '"">•'' ' i - 1 ••'• ' • V " ' » '« ' T 1>HSIIIP'« in 110= .lpi.:ir'in-r.t , v •• « | - ' I |.o«tl I'to'i n \ H . > > . i> i - . \„w l-.-ll,-llniPlo I.U". I . • .v- ,. .1 « w 1 '•- '..IU- li - 1.1'.-^' ' , flti It - n n o w . N" 11 n •»• I w s t i. 'W II or. w r :\ j-'isti 1', ' 1 C H »> . .^ • „,.« I>>T.I <>l .|..wt. n n . j iv I >. .- Oiiii-tin I oil-1'.vn V' 1 ^ 1 • • • nnreen Uii i n I ai.«. :.oe fct.- « i,-.',-.- r ...n ' m...m I ' n o ! ' i i . i n > • . i . pxpprli-i --p. w l • II tl- P t on '•• o m.i' |.. IIH r .l.iio ii. -1 i . . i - l t\ p <• I t . yi.lM.I ...it noil "lo I" «'P «»-.- . 1 P M ' I l y , v l .. 1 .(I. 1 St J. r , ,, - , i b) alii nipling lo .I.i lln ili^t- ii « l o r D o i. -• t t i ^ II 1-mi.mwl. . . g o t , , , ^ , * u n u . i l i a i i t i n - j w. iibl 1 m r !•• |«i> *>* n tw,-i,i\ \ . i n . HOUSJES TO HINT. II..use No IVMarfirit'fiii J'r'" f''«' ]•< r ietr Hon«n >'" l.il'oucii sir.-, i 1'Uli and i ! "ii I P n i !'ii |.-r K if Nonh ajMHUlPll, Nlclmls « p « li .use. m .Isl.l^ ..I IVei <lr. w I'r . =1". { - r * , Ka-ii np.iriint-t t Norman.', i n »i '"^- ««ni.|«lVini|..i Pnc- J. ,,_,,,.,, WeM iijwriini'i't nrsi II i m . \|. h>i-\et lib . k. Itn.lt'p >ir. • t p . » ..M i • r \ . ( . lloiKC S o . 1J PI l i t slippi. ni.lt ^s |.r.-.-n'tpi. ml lopf.-ri J k. » j. t.. l'i' Ji j . This jirniu n j is also for ^alp. P r o •- $ 1 .IHI. I...trxii«i. CHAKLBS HAI/-EY 3100Kr. Kns, n Clinton STeet an,I .1 llr-'l I MP »f, 1 I ll'il L't'.N i ADV1CK TO MOTHBKS.—Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a s i c k c h i l d suffering and crying with pain of Cutting teeth '! it su send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs.Winslow" 8oothing8yrUp" for Children Teething, its value is incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer Immediately. Depend upon it, mothers; there is no mistake about it. It cures Dysentery and Diarrhoea, regulates the Stomach and iiowels, cure* Wind Colic, softens the.Gums, reduces In- flammation , and gives tone and eaergy to tbe whole system. "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup"fof children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the ol lest and best female physicians and nurses in tbe United States, and is for sale by all druggists throughout the world. Price twen- ty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mas. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING svaur," and take no other. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla, When she was a ChUd, she cried for C'aatoria, Wlten she became Miss, she vlung to Cantoris* When alio had Children, the gave them C'sstotl*. WHO PAVS. Several years since in discussing the so- called protective policy; a member of Con- gress ased the following language : " B u t suppose the operative must haVe a bounty or protection to his labor ? Who pays it? '•Foreign nations do not pay it. Our Cov- ern men t does not pty it. The manufac- turer does does not pay it, for he asks the Government to provide the bounty. I will tell you. They are the poor boys de- prived of the means of education, the poe r men the toiling millions of tbe fields,whom you see melting under a burning sun. and larding the ground with their dripping sweat. These are tbe men who love their country, love its very earth, for the earth has been their only foster mother, who has given the breast of nourishment and life to them. They are the country's strength and when the country shouts to them to rally for its defense, the Valleys heave them up, and the hills pour them from their loins." RGITGH HBWEK. *r« MM chip aauM go to oioooa. Au the Umpmt MMM by, UM oM LPlattsburgh Sentinel Extra, April II.] We do not propose to wait a Week be- fore replying to this morning's Telegram. Its charges against us are false in every particular. We had nothing to do with getting tlie crowd of men to the caucus in District No. 3, and did not know who had been placed on either ballot till we reach- ed the hall. We did not take the ballot box into our possession, and to charge it is an Imputation on the moral, intellectual and physical status of both the inspectors. It never went from their hands for an in - stant from the time the balloting com- menced until the rumpus was concluded. When one of the inspectors tightly hug- ged it in his arms and declared over and over again that not another ballot should be cast, while 75 men were staading out- side who had not voted, we did endeavor to pull him and his box over where the men could reach him with their ballots, and we have no apologies for so doing. The only addition to be made to the record is that the Republican caucus met on Saturday and not only nominated town officers but proceeded to name town dele- gates for the Republican County Conven- tion which meets April 25th, although no hint was contained in the call of anything more than the nomination of town officers. It is very painful for us to chronicle sucht untoward proceedings on the part of these two political brethren of a truly good party —the editor of the Sentinel confessing in his extra to having assaulted an inspector of election, and the management of the other "organ" resting under charges of wilful misrepresentation, and with the fact standing forth in bold relief from the accounts of both that riotus and unlawful proceedings characterised the conduct of the Republican primaries in the town. But our duty as faithful chroniclers of the times compels us to put these disgraceful facts on record. Let the people judge for themselves.' Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomeness. Alore economical than the ordinary kinds, and c»H- DOt be s ild in competition with the multitude of low t e s t , s h o r t w e i g h t a l u m or phosphate powders. Sold only by cans. KOYAL BAKING POWDKK C o . . 106 WalLstreefcyH. V. Taxation of Personal Property. There i s n o good reason why a man's personal property should not be taxed as well as his real estate for the payment of State, county, school and village ta.ies- JSvery dollar of personal and real estate should bear its share of taxation of every kind, and the chief burden of taxation should not, as BOW and heretofore, be upon real estate. A man has real estate worth a thousand dollars, and it is assess- ed and taxed for a thousand dollars, While his neighbor has a tbousaad dollars in- vested in mortgage security and is not taxed one cent upon it for taxes—village, •Cbool and county expenses—while the real estate man pays some f 50 to 175 a year taxation on bis real estate. A bill is how pending in the Legislature of this Stat* to bring personal property upon the assessment and cause it to be taxed along with real estate. Is this not right ? The Governor says it is, and such a law should be passe i this session. A man loans hia money and gets his per cent and keeps it, while another renta hia ho»ae and pays all hia renta on taxation. More UalteaaUsa. The following ia from the Ilarrisburg, Pa., Morning CM of Apill 14, ao out) and out Blaine or'an: Conkling, the magnificent, Ilea on hit death bed. Blaine, the man he ao igno- minious!" deserted, still live*. The atilla of the gods grind slowly but surely. Probably BO creature under heaven abort of Maniac could be found capable of •SBibttifgsuch M UlcoBcealed spirit of triumph over tbe death bed of tuck a Conkling. ••• BLUftHBD haw faee was«•*- •mux. i M new eats If seu -wat a rtak an* WBJM sasMHsslaa _•**_••»**» •*••' ameetB The Pope to the President. New Tor* Freeman's Journal. His Holiness Leo XIIL has addressed Ihe following letter of acknowledgment to Cardinal Gibbons. The sentiment so powerfully expressed by the Holy Father ought to disarm the most inveterate and ignorant Evangelical bigots: ''To Our Beloved Son James Oibbon*. Cardi- nal Prittt of tilt Holy Roman Church, Archbishop of Baltimore: "W_I.l-Blf.OV_D SOJT, IlKAITH AND THK APOSTOLICBKSEOIOTION: Amongthecount- lefg congratulations which We have re- ceived from all parts of the world upon the occasion of tbe fiftieth anniversary of Our elevation to the priesthood. We have, as was natural, set more store by the evi- dences of courtesy and regard sent by the rulers of the nations. For by these marks of their good will toward the head of the Church they manifest, and this We ar- dently desire, their kindly disposition toward their Catholic subjects. Since, then, the lllustiious President of the Unit- ed States has, through yon, Our well- beloved son, seen fit to exhibit a like courtesy, accompanying tbe expression of the same with gift of a superb copy of the Constitution of that most powerful Re- public, be has, in doing so, afforded Us a most peculiar pleasure and satisfaction. "Moreover, as it is fitting that We should return to Hia Excellency the expression of Our gratitude, We commit tbe discharge of that duty to you, both on account of your exalted rank in the hierarchy of the Republic and the personal esteem in which His Bxe—lleocy holds you. In fulAlliog this duty We desire that you should assure the President of Our admiration for tbe Constitution of the United 8tates, not only because it has eo-bied industrious and euterpriaing ciliiens to attain so high a degree nf prosperity, but also because un- dr.r its protection your Catholic country, men have enjoyed a liberty which has so confessedly promoted the astonishing growth of their religion in tbe past, and will, We trust, enable U ia the future to be nf tbe highest advantage to the civil order as well. '•You will be pleased to add that We will pour forth fervent prayers to God for your country's eoaetaat advaaoa ia giory and Droeperity, aad for the health mid bappbeas of Ike President asd hia worthy h>^uL|^ ."'.^iS- f*^*5hm_i mm, aad to lk« fate-J«i aatniatod to yaw pastoral . " < _ • » • • * — * » » • » « * l » » r _ , - » « > -•-•• jmj,- A STATEMENT nr the tsecetpu and »i«'»iir«enieiil- nf tbe Treasurer of Clinton County for the rir-l Quarter of ISSS: RECEIPTS Balance on band January. 18S3 $2,Grs 95 Kec. or Guynup to Oct. 1,1S87. 11901 " Barnes - "• 28139 •' Geo Chahoon, Suji'r, for taxes.. 13 05 •' from toe different towns for taxes 56,514 os J69.559 4S DISBURSEMENTS. raid eountv audits t3.546 S2 '• cei-utlcates of county cleric 218 3D " bill J. \V. Tutete _ Co 3 75 " orders Sup : t ot the poor 5,070 72 " asylum bills. 363 39 " gas bills 126 22 " salaries eoanty officers 1.3^7 50 " non-res. school tax returns H'2 9S " six Clinton county bonds 3.000 so " coupons county bonds 3u0 00 " non-res. highway, Black Brook... «3 75 " •' •• canton 3125 " telephone bill 27 0« " water bill 32 50 " expenses court O. _ T. April. '88.. 503 OS " luneral ex.. soldier Andrew Baker. 35 00 " notes of county treasurer 13,000 W) Balance on hand - 3t.r»5 w J59,559 49 I hereby certify that the foregoing account Is correct. JOHN M. \V£V£R, Treasurer ot CUnton County. Dated, Plattsbtiifjh, N.V., April, I881. Subscribed and sworn to before me April 1S, 1888. AG UIBOKD, Notary Public. THE CHEAT German Remedy.) TRUTHS FOR THE 8ICK.1 ~T^rTiio_!jTc_uiiv TT3»^Ji!rTo|Hiidj DllkmnSpcHtdcpeml foracaMWhereevL- mSitLPHcaUiTT-as ratm lirrr-its win it will cure you. aotasslstorcure. Il| LoyousJlerwU •«*«"-»*• t_attire<landaUaoii« faUl-C; If so, 3tHJ-HUB BlTT UwUl cure you. . .. w a Cleanse tbe vlu-Wdl (•alia*; If so. tw ,100,1 wbe _ you aeel ^purHVM Burma*; u __,»__,. i. un t-f ww cure you. ng through tlie sklu W-fi-HS-fBBP-S laP-aplm. Blotches. IVLTHtrB BlTTB-S, -4 keskh wlU fol C-O—lr UM milk »«d wort m •Struma 1 to curs, *r»n _, wlw ___ l_Hn4-M_r_---ri__-ii__-i 1 sll shops; eleris.who • o t |TOcureMUBcfc _^_^_*kSr__L^^" u " ^""••r' _5S__r-SSTKI! rfflTl£rt__m* r BrrrBBS. They will L___-H. _.iu,__ bawss-awt »«r*(edittwUlcar«| atiu-iirk BrrTs -Uiballd yMlt ^it-haad vearhlaedl rrSV-VUVBI a ie-r "' wttt ita'-wr. •eapjr. r*Uu, W oeBBtevaad raattfrfMtor>Mi OFFICB OF LlGHT-HOUSIt 1 JJSPKCTOIl, IBIJtD DISTRICT, A T T0MPKiK9Vf-r.it, X . Y . , April 16, T88S. P ROPOSALS will be received at this Office until 12 o'clock M*., o h Tuesday, t h e 8 t h day of H a y , 1-88. for maintaining a l l t h e Buoys n o w i n t h e H u d s m R i v e r b e t w e e n New York and Troy. Luke ChaniplaiR, Pawtucket River, it. I , Fire island Iiirfet. south siae* Long Island, K Y . , Hew In'lst. south side Long Island, >'. Y., J o n e s I n l e t , M ) u t h side Long ialanoVS. Y., Cable (Hog3 Island Inlet, south side Long Islajid, » . Y , Housatonic River, Conn., and s u c h o t h e r s a s m a y b e a u - thorized, for one year, from the first day of July next. Forms of proposal and printed specifications, showing whal is required, can be had by applying to this Ofllee. The right is reserved! to reject any or all bids, and to waive any detects. FREDERICK RoDGEBS, Commander U.S.N., Light-House Inspector. J^OTICJC. T h e a n n u a l m e e t i n g of the Stockholdersof the Chateaugay Ore and Iron Company far the election of Trustees for the ensuing year. will be held at their office in the village of Lyon Mountain, on Wednesday, M a y 9 t h , 1SSS, at ten o'clock A. M. Polls will be open thirty minutes. 15w3 SMITH M. "WEED, Secretary. NOTICE OF REMOVAL. O N a c c o u n t ol loom and convenience, we have removed our Cigar Factory to tlie spacious Lofts, No. ll-'.9,3d Ave., between 821 and 86d streets. New York eily. A continu- ance of your generous patroaage will be kindly appreciated and promptly attended to, hespeetfully yours. 1. 9CHEIKR & SON, 1-159 3d Avenue, Sew York. April 12th, 1888. 15w4 SOW BEADY AT Cady's Drug Store, GARDEN SEEDS JTrorp. tlie Best Growers in the Ooiintry. Some vary Early and Hardy kinds for hotbed and early garden planting. A refill, iii if B OF FLOWEK SEEDS From plants of the Eicli est Bloom. Yellow Danver Onion Seed. CARRIAGES. HARNESSES, ApaliiraMfflptais Jc, fe. Yaughan & Parsons Have for sale a large variety or Carriages, comprising Stirreys, Phaetons, Carta, Buggies, Backboard*. Jogging Carts, and various other style*. Our goods are made b y t h e Whitney Wagon Works of Syracuse, the Wateitown Spring Wagou Co , the fsham Wagon C o . , a n d others. We are also Agents for the of the CELEBKATEDJACKSOfl FABI AO KOA]) WAGOKS, We have a Fine Line af HA&NESSES of all descriptions. In Agricultural Implements we have a full stock:, including the well Iniawn Oorbin Disc Harrow, Lawrenct ft ChapiH Spring Tooth Harrow, Hoyal Horse Hay Rakes, flows. Broadcast Seeders and Drills. Land Boilers. &c WI AKB SELLING Crokei'- Buffalo Superphosphate, "One of the b e s t h i g h g r a d e fertilizers." It is our intention to keep a full line of poods, and sell at KKASOISAliLF. I'KICtS, fully guaranteeing everjthing as repre- sented. Call on us at the Rink BuildiDg, Clinton St, PL.ATTSBTJHOH, X . Y . C. W. VAC OH A X. W A L t S P-AKSOJ.'?. GREAT Closing Out Sale! AT A. SCHIFFS Store, DANNEMOBA, N. Y. I ofier rny entire stock of Dry and Fancy Goods, CLOTHING, Hats aiici Caps, LADIES' AND GBJiTS' Furnishiag Goods, CABPETS, OIL CLOTHS, Wall Paper, CURTAINS & FIXTURES, Watohas and Jawalry. I am boand to reduce my stock to make room for N1W 8PKINO GOODS. I wall sell for (kit) at Colt. OWIOK to tbe success of my closinr out sale, 1 will contiuue ilia S_MM until April 15th. P, 8. I will also make reductions ia OKOCSRLE8 aad PROVISIONS "_«„._ UiWtaaJe. KcepecUuUv, _ A A. scmrK. naaassaofa, April IS, 18-8. TIERNEY & SH4RR0N, •anartt St., PJatlsbnnrh. IY. - • - Main Si, Clamplafji. 1 1 - . —a^^^» -^___B»»~ - Dry Goods and Carpets. Complete opening of New Spring Goods, Bargains in every Department. Special Sale during the month of Hosiery, Gloves, Dress Goods and Carpets. 40 inch A.11 W o o l T a i l o r - m a d e Suitings 47 cents per yard. All Wool Henriettas, all the new shades, 4.8 cents, worth Go cenis. 4# inch Wool Suiting 25 cents. 40 inch All.Wool Check Suitings Bli cents, worth 50 cents. 54 inch All \Vool Checks only cents, formerly 8» cents. 46 inch tine Serge (Henrietta Cloth finish) 75 cents, worth SI 00. Silk Warp Henriettas in Black, Brown. Gobelin Blue and Mahogany, §1.00 per yard. 40 inch All Wool Debiege 4*3 cents per yard, regular CO cent"goods. 50 inch Tailor-make Suitings 85 cents, cheap at $1.25. Colored Dress Silks 50 cents. Black and Colored Satins -50 cents. Moric Silks, all the new colors, $1.25 per yard. Silk Plushes $1.00 per yard. IJace Curtains SI.25 a pair, well worth 82. Turcoman Curtains $'..'50 a p.itr, w.rtii S4..70. Clienille Pontrics 88 50 a pair, f.rn.rtlt SI 1.90. AH Wool Jersey .Tuckets, Plaitnl link. 82. IS 7. Ladies' Balbripgan Hose, fyll rcguler made jro«ds, 10 cents per pair. Ladies' fane? Striped Hose, regular ma-le, 10 cents, worth 2S cents. Ladies' Fa»t Black Hose, regular .'W <ert goods, at 3o cents. Brilliant Lisle Hose 371 cents, worth r,i),-. Silk Hose 75 cents. Finer grades Silk Hose 81 00, SI.25 an.l $1.50. Our line of 25 cent Hose in Blacks an.l Fancies, is tbe best in the citv. !)G dozen Misses' French. .Ribbed *H•ise 111 cents, wortli 30 cents. Ladies' Kid Gloves, New Spring Shades Embroidered Back, 05 cenls. Ladies'Heal Kid Embrdidcred hack <il.jvts Welt Top, 89 cents, worth 81 25. Carpets, Oil Cloths, Rugs, &c. Our line of New Spring Carpets is by far tlie largest and fiaest in this section, in. eluding Ingrain, Tapestry, Body Brussels and Three Ply. and we respectfully invite every one in need of Spring Carpet9 to visit our Elegant Show iioom before pun li t«- iBg. Special bargains in Smyrna Hugs at 81.00 and upwards. Respectfully, TIERNEY & SHARRON. ICE, COAL, WOOD, AND j Hay and Straw, New Garden Seeds. aad obliging teamsters. WILCOX & BOSWOBTH. 'ea, FeafcaMcr a- lakstaae all la one. SMITH & LaROCQUE Have received their sti ck of Farm, Vegetable and Flower r, !• j .ii e i Seeds from the well-known Delivered promptly by careful ..^-i; i v /- « , _.. j -i .• • . l , , reliable firm of seedsmen, Peter Henderson & Co., New Torir, comprising Dwarf and Pole Beans, Garden and Field Beets. Early and l a t e Cabbage. Garden and Field Carrots. Early and Late Cauliflower, Early and Late Celery. Early and Late Sugar Corn. Early a n d L a t e Cucumber, Early and Late Lettuce, Early and late Water A Musk Melon, 0ii ions. Parsnips. Dwarf and Pole Peas, Kadisii. Spinach. Summer and Winter Squa&i, Early and Late Tomato. Gsrden and Field Turmp,. Henderson Lawn Grass, Ac , A c . And a very large s.-i •••i!.,_ „t FLOWER SEEDS. iy pen or fctnd or ink; rilled by the •utom-.ti.t at-tion *f it.di_-rur.lM-r rcMfiroIn; fecii itself by the pn'Mure t.f writ- 1I1(C; carries ill the iKiefcet mi&ly; will iigtk-sk; tinrfv made »ml ff»i-huel in mckrl-plaf;; sup^riortou *-SiylMinrflfiJirr IH'Il »rlli with l rush. I will .,-nd you the p « n free rect-mt of B-W cents fora •.!» mont|| K siibst-riptif.il tu Ut« _% r l s a a l us, «hehand»otit«at jiuptrriu th«)CMiiutrv; 'Ml5t'.<r!_sy»*rJv; «arue •ize anhe iSM atorv iwpi'n: Jo.u«J .ub-.-nh.-rs the rtr>"t »....0u_. AUdr^- G130. O T l S , i'ubil-lii-r, lJl-cJi-ral al., liustuu, UM_, . -Vii.,,, a II. -, .«..u,i | 'j , . . . For Sale or to Hant M0ai_aria« Uteaal, wMk eashM Uvea Me NOTICE. '|"HE undersipned, duly appointeti Comnila- sioners by Uie County Judge, to make the estimate or expenses and assessmems f o r t b e OlMrningnJ Him Street, i n t h e village of riatts- bwr KIi, pursuant t o s e c 6. titles, of Die Act IIIcorporalinu the *a!<l vjliape,do hereby give notice lo the partlt-g interested and Hie lax- | f ajers In the district fixed b y t h e Bo»n1 o f I rustees. viz: "All of that p i r t o t t b c village ' l>ln_ west uf Saranac River," a s t b e said dis- I Uict of a a s s e s s m e n t f o r s a i t l e x p e n s e o l upeu- I He s a i d s t r e e t , t h a t t h e y h a v e c o m p l e t e d s a i d estimate aDd-oaaessmuit, pursuant to ?>eelioi} 7 01 said titles, anel that the sattiecan be seen i an.1 ciaiuiiicd by Uie uxpiyeru and p.irnes f interested, for and durili>;,ai.(l until Uie.'litil Cabbage CaulilowiT Ppler. P.„„. day of April uext.at which date the saiac.m ^»""*^ e . ^auiJaower.^eiery. .feppe mtssioners shall metl lo hear t h e proof-* a n d allegations of thepaities iuteresied, a t t h e Corporation Kooms, in said village, and ad-' j itirn from time to time as they deem pri.j.er. ' £tiati said Kstimate aud Assessment li^.k e;ui be seen alT. Melfarnan's Lnsurance oalee, in saia village, lo said Apill 20, lii-S. Dated, April loth,it«s. i CHARLES O. liARBKit. JOHN J-. KlTZPATltlCK, yti> iJiKKit, ! Comnjissioueis of ihe Villaee Of Plaits-' bnrjjh.H. V. is STATU OP NEff YORK, > COVNTV OJ-- l I.LN'TOS. ," Thereby appoint a term of the County Conn and Courtof sessions forClliiton county to Oe held with a Orau.i Jury and l'etit July, a t t h e Court House iu PlattsburKh, o n t h e lsih dav of H a y , 1SW. Dated, Apiil 12, lBSij lc. S.J ri. A . KELLOGG, Cllhtoh Co. Judge. STATE O F N K W VORK, 1 Clinton County Clerk's Ojliee, j w ' 1 h e r e b y c e r i i l y t h a n h a v e eompared the foregoing copy of Order with the original thereOt us Bled April 12 USD, In this ofllee, and tbat the same i s a trae copy of said ori_ inal a n d o f t h e whole thereor. I u w i t u e s s wbeieof, I h a v e b e r e u n l o s e t my hand aud otticial seal, this IVih day of April, ii- S 1 J. 1». 1JKEX A X, Clerk. and Tomato Plants, In great verietj In the season b.r then Smith & LaRocque's CITY PHARMACY, PLATTE £ IT JtOB, N ^ A CARD MILLINERY AX J) An Work Material. DROWN Against the Field WITH Boots, Shoes, ANO RUBBERS, In the Little store Kound the Corner, Where for the n e x t s i x t y d i n s be Is lif.und u. break all previous record In scoring leading UatUalllS al lowest prices /or Winter j»nS P_ncy Footwear. The-y that buy Speai's preniluin warm *-..* Coats t__t .quip the body io face Zero lit. well, but those whogt. to DUows'S ana tC | sole comforts that so warm and clothe the feet that they may pass through winter's wet and told "dry shod" do better. As purveyor lo the public iu .shoes prlee> in the Lltile- Store round tbeCorner are.tll- evidrut facts that to UKOWS -Cusioui due.-and Iu proof ol fidelity u> Ills patron^ best good he tenders them ten grails word. H a v e r a i l - i n t h e uian of whom y o u b u \ shoes. ' ' The Sign of the Boot. No. 3 Cliaton street. W e t a k e p l e a s u r e in ealili >r t » . - ." » o l L a d l e s our --prlug aji ,i , „ , , , of Milliner) , im ludlng Pattern Bonnets and Eeand Ha The Latest Xoveltiei in Triiiiiii.:.? Material, U'hleli f.jr ltiehi.fi.svt <ju^..t\ ai. i ): . 4 rro.lu.-tion ctnn.jt t-e rx. ei;t.i* Misses E. A. &G,TILJE.I.«:, "I'1<><11* the TrYi'Ltrbi II i. utt i'L.»rr,ai_«ii. N T. P a i i t l i l , Papering and GlaziDL Wlf. SQUIRES'* 80H 4 liaprepared to « , »J 0 -»OIP_l«U««,P_D«r ^ l u g , a n d U l a z i i i g . a l a b o r t u.tlce*udi_a t k « r o u _ k , w c r k i u a n l i k e w a i i u a r - Leave or. ders at t h e r o s ^ m e . . o , ,t i_ elr ,^" 0 ^ Hagars new build ug on Cllulou slreef oi laqutreai th.lr reslde Uce t N_.«J," 0 d^t.«i Kala.wlalug.ion.iu %u «,olof § '»u fc mmmt . Prauared Paints for sale by l b . »«.__« Warkinthcc.Mntr)solla||c_ A _^ vra| •ManasdtO. "~»prei proaiptlT HARNESSES. A Vt. 1 liBf )e Haraaas far $1100 Hlekal iriuiwad aud Oak sl__k .u _,.»..«. - a , , .ora ^-gf^gtWjSi -»li-tlar Falla.JsjiriTMse, * * * •***• P LUiniaoTajii» A t i T i i i i , - or _e» ^ ••t*.4a»twM_aaa»aaar^yJLj25 IJIIUI't SALS K.iK SllLITiia HI i l l U - l Ofllee •IIM.Iiji.ilrimuIri !• k s i ' Ihe Allauti'-, ii..wri.. i > 1. JI I \ \ i Apill j.l, i»is M. .ii. ,j j.r.i ,-,.».M 1, j * , t I i«g »».i deliver II ,.• !..,, 1. .( ,_i,T i.« s > t • l-,,r.lfje Ml .1 ^1. uv ahu.i\ i - J . j ' f ' lllMsi.'H ,.l U.<- Allll.lh-'billhglut tl- •< .'..mixiei,. ii >: J ,.,\ i,iK^«. wni i^- t, ,i U.isi in. e, .m.i ui i Hi. t -s ..1 Ij jaUei. . - • • .1 H_ltln.ore.Md , li -.t. n. M„.., , i . r •• i New ur:.ji,n, L^x , ^..rt Kr— .1> M . ' Mat kluar. illrli , r. il waju, M t i Nl^l*_ra. N. V-. Jr"«.rt o i , u n . . , N \ ^'* tmia.ks v « . Ha>t«bm„h.li_iii *» \ « I...JI l - x ^ l I - . M e . ; > - n . _.,l»ms> K . f rruiub.ll < ~L.li , F o i l Mi.M<..« \* J. raneas, *"!_ , 3_iijt >rancis huxt-%. - a r » SeHja.rt KarraeVs.K) . LlUUk.ck). *ric .1 M . . u m V.U.KU Barracks, A a UoVh.ek i..-..n,ea,'-terli uur, , t. twi tlieH3da>ol Siaj, leiij,_nd ope-e 1 » ately theie.iflei In j.re^euer . f ' * r«l.rri.i- 1 .jiT.im,jilI, IfSof d lie-' , inelien, i-ihillllm x ,.J jrt.'e ai .1 , « • «> l a g o p i a l , and sitli pirletttit-r t- e.in pr<.»! t h e .Hat-1, the I'ousumpilou required by the t '' v i c e t h e r e . H, >c ,-in._tn»n», genera > nous t- bidders, and blank Lvruis . f i i will be furnished on appll.-_U,in u. tl i ..r l o t h e Quarleriuasiers at the ^- »i> abjve. f-.s n TOlirw»s,ij,Wiii.i tciuiasler-Oej.cral, L . s . Aimy •'""i AiurrUMn prcdurtiii, a i ,1 u, i produced o n t h e Paeul.- <- v -st I., u.e W-.TKK CO.MMlSSlOKExt.^ NOTICE. Th« assessiueutforwater and n>r l " loll, f o r t h e quarter ruilitig Mai. • • -' w i l l r e m a i n in th.om.e of theMij. W l l . ( W i n s l o w ' s Hloek.i for tbe t« - * »" •ucliwaterrentsas mav be\..ld(-l <• »i for two w e e k s , H o r n )li.„_a*. .»i i -Satu»_ay, Ai.ril mil, 1»*>, It-lb d»" elasivc; a n d o n 'Jue«da>. i j . i i * i » Water Comuittsieners wt'il at »»' ' " haar ami consider any _t.jevtu._s tk-» '- :S, b e m a d e lo said ASlrsillltnil K. S. \VlNsl..%\ W. »• MtHiHUH C U M * t ' « A J . ! " 1»»3 S»inCo-ti.»>."" '€>/&J- • U I I 4 I U «f |_« Albany «-•'-"* ; mm+ fK^.„ r . - < e i i i _ » - Tk* H»w HulMi V-1U_. .mi _V_,»-i _r sh. n i l . ' ••4 TytM-Wrltiag _. #? M. W w»., is ife« b«ii siruviuia -svoied to «••"»'*". -.lucallou la lb. worlX C_»a).fiu- J *»*" aieus <M iwaaiaaalilp ir_«. A.t.iie.. JOSS K.'CtK«i:l.l-. I'Tli.t'tP- 1 ;. ».,i»aa4«S_rtar._»i.S4..ALi.->» > r *ar otiaaift aav ^AIfJ^^J;V. ,
Transcript

THE PLATTSBUKGH REPUBLICAN. SAT¥RPAY MORINlflG. APJMI. 21 . 1888.

(Tljr Ulrjinbliriin. - U r R P A T M O R . N I M - . A r K I I n 1KW.

O R V V C & B \ < \ \ P r o p r i e t o r s

[•etiioettUIc Xat iona l Convent ion .

T h e Xjvti.•>•.«: r » f m » - - a t i < - « ••nra>!t<'p b a r t r t - n . f t IT. t t ' f r t t y >'f Ma<tMrpt"Ti . u p I h e I W f M i »M-..r. . i a « T i:r F p l . t u i i r y . I l i f f . h M x p -V . t M T i F M - A * . t h i F i r r s t I > A I I T Jr>i»c . r . e x t a t t . r . n« t h e I U I . P . »t<d c h o s e n t b e < ~ T T \ i r H T I . , i i « «« t).<« f l a r e , f o r h o l d i n g t h e K a t i f r . A [ . i n . - r a l u I , > n p u t i n t . K a c h 8 t a . t e in er.t .t.«-.t «<• a r e p r e s e r U H t i r i r i t h e r e i r . . e a; l . . i V - I <> t h e r . u m b e r n f I t s s e n a « e r s a . 1 r . ; r p ^ f t : i t - t . K ir» t h e e'«.ricrre<te ».t I b e I M P M d e * »'"1 e a c h T > i r l t t - r > a n ' t i e L> o ' t ' . l i-f i •• x u . M a s h a l l h a v e tw-.> rtplc-£-«tf i A I»*-n..>ftrait.' ( o r i s r r v a i i r p t i l ' / iM * t>f t> •• t i . i f e . l s t a t e s , i r r e s p e c t i v e « f p a s t p , . : I . T . x.^.uw-i.i.1 U.T.-S HTM"! d< fTerpr . fe* . ^ 1 " ' i -a ' u i Itf w i t h i n Sr, tVie «II . r t ft r p u r e , e c o n <tr ."t»t *.r.d c o n s t , l u l l . » r t a i p o r e r n m e n l - . a r e c v r b a . i y I n r l i M t<. j i l t , l i s i n s e n d i n g d e l e c a t p « t • t h e c o n v e n t i o n

- i .gn*»1 W t L L l A H R . B A R N C M , C h a i r m a n .

>i . co rB i rK O TRTvrK, . S i - ere tarv N"JU1, . I . IU i i e m t . . n . m l U e e .

\ \ A S n i s o r « " v . F e b r u a r y £i, i * < '

Democra t i c S l a t e Convent ion ,

T l . e r » e m i » - r a t i r f l e r l i w o f t b e S t a t e i f N e w V«.rlc a r e r e q u e s t e d t . . u n i t e i n c h . w . f l i g t l . rpp d p l P E a t e K a u . l t h r f p a l l e n . a t p i l t - l " e a t p s . f r . iii e a ' r . a s s e r u b l v d t s t r i - t . 1. a. t e r d t h e M a t e ( ' . . u v . r i l l . r. l<" I P b ' : . l a t \ < - w 5 o r U . i r t b e A r a - i e n y >>t Mn<d.', "H t h e F j i - T J - - R > T H I > A \ <.l WAV. at t w . - i * e « . • : > . k i i . m n , t . i r i l i e p o r j x . s e i f f u t i i . p f o u r rteugates a t l a r g e , t w o d p . p p a t r s a i .1 l w . i l t t rT i . - i i e •]« l e g a t e s f r t i h «a> \ c u i r r c * - ' .* «-ti~trift. ti> a t l p r . i l t».i-• • r i .nrr iu l ' - C t ' i i v e t i l t i i n tu tie h e l d a . . i — m s , l . . n r f . !«<>*. a m i t o t r a n s a c t «u, h c t l . p r t . i i s m t » s a s , a n - o r . H r . t r t" iru u * a g i s o f t l i p p a r t t . i n b e b r o u g h t b e f o r e i t .

r i > W A k l > M l R I ' H Y . j K . C l i a l r t u u i i . W i t I IAM L. M r t t F B . net r e t a r j .

> t > t l . r l c . A p r ! . *. l i * ^ .

A n t i - f l r l b e r r In t h e L e g i s l a t u r e . Tkt Rfpublleaa Party Mil Tf-mperaace.

A m i Bribery was u p in the A w m b l . r Tbc policy of the Rrpublicftu leaders

The Secretary Can Baj Bond*.

Both Houses of Congress h a r e a! l-t«.t r s

last Tuesday." T h e vir tuous solons whose with regard to tbe temperance question is plicitly declared tha t the Secretary of the while souls are shocked t.. think that evidently settled for the coming cam- { Treasury hos the right to use the surplu

sn rh wjcfcrdncsR as bribery at tbe polls paign. The word has been passed along tbe line that one more mighty effort must be made to retain the temperance element winch has been drifting a«-ny from it at, a steadily increasing rale for Hie last few years These leaders a ie fully alive to the fact that in this movement of Repub­lican v. ' ters to the Prohibit ion ranks lies the chief danger to the Republican party. Standing in a minori ty a« they do, they rcaliyp that a temperance element holds a balance of ] o n e r which threatens their destruct ion. iSn a rallying cry has been passed along the line that this out-setting t r a d e n f t e m p e r a n c e v o t e r s m u s t b e s l o p p e d

at all hazards. How do they propose to do i t ? F i rs t by a rigid and uncompromising

boycott ing of everything tha t tends towards a third par ty movement . T h a t word, " thi rd par ty" has t remendous ter­rors for these leaders of the modern Ke-

P e m o c r a t i c County Convent ion .

can exist anywhere on this fair earth, have arisen tn their might and pas?id one more bill to ft >p political bribery. How many of these honest fi l lows c o m m i m d forgery whrr. they took th<* iron clad os tb , swear­ing that they contr ibuted no money to p r o r n r r their e l ec t ion ' t ' n e would think there was too mileli anti-bribery law al reaiiy for ibe avfragr legislator.

I n t h e d e b a t e o n t h e b i l l M r . U e o . 8 .

Weed ufferf.l an anifinlment prohibiting employers from influencing or coercing their employe* at elections. But tbe Re­publican majori ty would have none of that. They knew it would strike a death Mow at modern Republicanism in the "rcoral dec-striclP." In Clinton county, said Mr. Weed. Republican employers are in the habit nf Compelling their employes to ro te the Republican ticki t on pain of dismissal. Then Assemblyman Ainsworth undertook to dodge this home thrust by a little abu*e of ,Mr. Weed on accnuDt of bis own family being interested in the iron bip-ness . to which Mr. Weed prompt ly Hung back tbe reply that the iron com­pany to which reference had been made was managed almost wholly by Republi­can* and the imputat ion cast upon himself and his family had no basis in fact. On the whole Mr. Weed appears 1" have fully dcnionslrat i i l the ability to defend him-

T! '• Pi-ro. • ratlr eieriors or the county nr i Sl.)f. The bill was finally passed by a vote ( r - t . . i . a r p h e r e b y r .< iuesr , - . l t o s e n d f lvp | - r , . I r f f n t M f r . m rs< b t o w n i n a C o n v e n t i o n b ' , o f <J4 t o <l, t h e J)( m n c r a t s c o m i n g s o l i d l y b e l.t ,.t a t l l . p C o u r t i l o u s p . ' » t b e v i l l a g e <.f i = t j J n f r „ _ . ; i , r j i „ . r v . r .s - ts i„ , rgt i ,oR .Saturday, May U l W . n t 12 , l n l " l i n t I 'T anii-nrtlii r ) . o'l'M-'k 1. *- r.. t o <-b K . S P t h r e e d e l e c a t e s t o r e -j . r p s r i i t t t . p p o u r . t y a t t h e P l a t e C o n v e n t i o n u . 1 P l i p i d In U i P i i t y o f N e w Y o r k o n M a y 1.1th f o r t h e t . i -c-tb.n «.f d e l e > r a t t s t o t h e N a t i o n a l I>ehtin i . i t l e C o n v e n t i o n t o b e U r l d a l S t . t . o u i s M ; . tnr .p . ' . ih . i s s - . a n d for t b e t r a n s a e -

Repubi ica i i s P iSf ranch ls in jOlc l So ld ie rs

The kind of friends the Republicans are to the old soldiers was shown by the vote of the Republican State As­sembly on the 12th of April. T w o pro­positions were before the Assembly: one being a report re commending a simple bill giving the 1,100 veterans in Soldiers" Home a t Bath the ' r ight to yote in Bath, which they have always enjoyed until a short t ime ago when the-y were shut off by the a«tiun of Republican politicians: and the other was a consti tutional Amendment to be submitted to the

T h e bdl al lowing women to vole tit people, having the same end in view, IH at municipal elections has been de- j but which cannot reach the people until

t l . i t t of su> b o t h e r b u s i n e s s a s m a y c o m e b e -JOre t h c C o n v e n t l o r . -

W A L * S P A R b U . V s . C h a i r m a n . M. y P i R K H f B S t , S e c r e t a r y .

TOPICS OF THE WEEK."" t ..-'• n l.'. unty Hi piiblic-an Convention

\\ t ,ir ..lav.

1'r. t'• rn t ' ius Agni w, an eminent pby-

Sii ,itn of New Vork < ily. d b d at his borne

l l i i r e . April I s .

in the Treasury to buy TTnited States bonds. T h e Senate last week voted to that effect, and on Monday of this week the House did the same. An act of Congress passed in 1SS1 apparent]}- gave this authori ty, but the President in his last message expressed a doubl as to whether that act was intended to do more than apply to an exigency which then existed. But this action of both Houses of Congress clears awa\-al l doubt , and specifically gives to the Secretary ihe right to "apply the sur­plus money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, or so much of it as he may consider proper , to the purchase or re­demption of United Stales bonds, provided that the bonds so put chased or redeemed •hall const i tute no p a n of the sinking fund." This action of Congress is import­ant anel should remove all immediate clanger from surplus accumulat ion. I t is understood that the Secretary will at once

publicatiisrn. The alarm with which the begin to buy bonds and proceed according Whig leaders of 1848 and 1852 viewed the to his judgment , so that a considerable movement from their ranks to the third reduction of the national debt may be an-par ty of that period is fully equalled by ticipated in the near future, tha t c f these Republican politicians, as they watch the steadily increasing Prohi ­bition vote year afler year. They have i The following extract from a speech by tried to keep" this movement down by fair Chas . O'Conor is commended to those promises. The plan worked Tor many ' Democra t s who were defeated in the scye-years but empty promises made before j « ' towns of the county last Tuesday : election to be broken immediately after " P a r t of the vile code advocate 1 by the have lost their potency. So now they try hirelings of misrule is, that direct and im-t h l ' b i n C f t t . T h e v h a v e u n d e r t a k e n t o ! m e d i a t e s u c c e s s i s U i e first a n d p a r a m o u n t

siamp tlie third party out. They sharply j aim in every human effort. On the con-scrutinize every temperance movement to ' t rary, my morali ty inculcates honorable

see if there is a third par ty taint in it, and

if there is they will have none of it,so they

Charles O'Conor,

f i a t i ' l in Ihe Assembly.

^e< notice of Democrat ic convent ion find forward, notices for town caucuses for the tli< tion of delegates.

The Kmperor Freder ic of Germany is re­por ted to be near his end and his son has been advanced to the Regency.

Ei.rb.iy breweries in. New York c losed their ,1 • TS las* Monday on account of the uiiioT, - boycott , and ."000 men are out of u - rk .

1> th *!.' Pn - iden t i a ! nominations will ).. madi ia less than tvr." r m n t h s and the fab* of the c .untry ..nee more decided live m- rKhs later.

A handsome porrrair of Samuel J . Til-d. n ha= ju^t been presented to the State bv prominent ci t izens of Albany and will be L'.n.; :u the gallery of C i v e r n o r s in the < > , : •'.

D.irrium ha-- _, i>t imported iwo African l.viD.c- f.-r hi< gri at show, and it is re-p . . r r e ! : h a f hi. k o p f to clo-e au ctisr.ige-n.t i.*" with Senator In. 'iuls s.mn after the .V yi n .b t r i-it < t ion.

M a b - C h . l S.-rvice Ev t tn ine r J o h n I>. J t i b y f.m.Im ted ait examinat ion tor State ib part i i i tut s tenographers la.-t Tuesday in A . ' t r . v . n'.ne candidates appearing', v. inn. and foor im n.

1SSD and cannot give the soldiers a chance to vote until 1890. N o w , s t range to say the Republicans united to kill the bill re­storing to these maimed and aged depen­dan t soldiers the right to vote at once and passed the measure which at best shuts them off from voting until 1H90. Tbe Re­publican pa r ty whip was cracked a i d the Republ icans fell into line, voting against the measture which gives the ballot, to these soldiers at once, while the Demo­c r a t ' voted for it. The reason of the R e ­publican action was of course purely po­litical. These demagogues in the Assem­bly were afraid that more of the 1,100 old soldiers would vote for the Democra t ic t icket than for the Republ ican. And for this reason and no other they vote to dis­franchise these old soldiers.

And this is the par ty which professes to be the soldiers ' friend ! And to this depth the once proud and " g r a n d " par ty has fallen. I s it any wonder that honest men all over the State and all over the country are mak ing up their minds that the coun­try has little more use for the Republ ican par ty so long as it remains under its pres­ent corrupt and demagogical leaders?

'II.I- Wnl .w . f i b :i. Haa

1 with a ' .'i !•> i.i r friend-. It i i n . H I , -ro' .e fi..nt and -t:tnd< in one

t'.i Hi •-' desirable quar ters of the city.

Mr. I ' t . i lp- , the American Minister to l. _•'»•. ! a r r i v e . ! i n N e w Y o r k . A p r i l 1 3 ,

. [ • . r a t h r e e J I - J I - ' a W e m r , I t i s s a i d

',' i ' iii I- L o l l t i ' l o r a t h r e e w e e k ' - , v i s i t

wr. . t, i: i- no pi litic:il sigiiirif .trite w i n ' .

A Long Wednesday .

Wednesday, April 4th, was one of the longest days ever made in the House of

f j v e | Representat ives . The occasion was this :

j On that day wha t is known as the direct

tax bill came u p in the House for consid-k h-is ju s t : eraiion. This bill proposes to refund to

<>-• i. pre-, ii'.-.l -with a hi.u»e in Washing- ( the States a certain direct tax which was four story j levied during the war, and by a precon-

f ' cer t td ar rangement Wednesday, April 4th,

: was fixed as the day on which the measure should be considered, to the exclusion of other business which rightfully had the

precedence. T h e bill was s tout ly opposed tit the s tar t by fifty Democra t ic members , who were able, by making dilatory mo­tions, to stave oiT action on it from day to day, anil all «ight sessions were the rule , the House taking recesses from time to

ii-i of Representat ives time but refusing to adjourn. The bill Mr. Mi l s m o l e a s t rong had a large majority in its favor at the

start , bu t after a week spen t in rillibuster-ing the opposition g r e w from fifty votes to ninety, and finally April 11th a Democrat ic caucus decided that consideration of the bill should be deferred till December .

As light is let in upen this subject the conviction grows t h a t it is a piece of job­bery which would set a dangerous preced­ent. The Republicans have made a solid par ty issue of this bill and were at first able to br ing to their aid a number of Democrats , bu t Ihe latter have forsaken

: .av; . i : i C o n g r e s s m a n , w i l l t h e i r u n w o r t h y a l l i e s . T h e p r o p o s e d

t ' . ,>•! States Senate from measure is one that should not be rushed (.;..-.• . t SH.u'.jr habin 's through wi thout due considerat ion, at any

ion t h e

•Tl t i n

H M.i l a r . l l b i l l W a s

1 . . - i ,

- ; . . :• : u . ! - l a v . r , M r K e l l y " f I V n n s y l -

> _ ' * - ; • > . . . . r.g ii tl»p o t h e r - i d e . T h t -

.;.-• . ' • v.. j r . b a b l y l a - : .i t u i - u ' b o r m o r e .

- . . r e l a r y o f t i n 1 l u t e d S u i t e s T r e a s u r y ,

1',- r. .i 1. . * - ' i i - l • n i h e 1 7 t h o f A p r i l a

< •• . . ' * r - i - n . r i i : l o i t e n d e r s a n d u n l i m i t e d

. i . i . ^r.'.s ,.J 1 h . t e . l M j . t e - b o n d s >•£ t h e

A . "s o f . f J M ; V 1 4 . 1 ^ 7 0 . a n d J a n u a r y 2 0 .

'.•'.' I '.'• surplus in the Treasury ^ IJ"W t - .;; j . ' t 1 a ' SIOVOUO WW.

- X p . ,1 that Kuutt- Nei-on, i l i u -

t ; i . M i

: l o t .'

j . ! ' h .

. NLI.-

. 6 « ! l

-'- r. g

i d o l - in.* t'o the mod- ! ra te . I t would take abuut.-felT, 000,000 out

lea id tariff for prntcc- j "f the* Treasury , and might open the door

i - . - h e n e e d o f r e v e n u e , f o r h u n d r e d s o f m i l l i o n s m o r e . F o r i f

t h i ? t a x i s r e f u n d e d w h y n u t t h e c o t t o n

t : i \ , and the income tax, and other war t axes? j f our Republican friends could nave their w a y the United States surplus would be disposed of pre t ty quickly, re­moving this pretext for reducing the direct War taxes and thus protect ing their friends

•i , re-..!'-i >p -i. t h - oountry •>{ twenty- | tfae monopolists and the mammoth trusts with their systems of organized robbery .

A i . . i r . i . i u A . l . a i . « e , - u - <

l l r . - . y . N - '1>."S p a r t y . h:i

. ! T • t h e A r u . i n a i t \ o ' t - r 1-:;.*' - '.•„ wh :i h .ts pu rp •-

• s . . r t "

i - - u e d

i n t h e

. - e i s - l a t -

i : ; . e r . - t ' u r a l : / I U ' . I I l a v * - ,

..<• r . _ ! . : o f - u f l ' r a j - e o n l y

e . i . t i i - r o u n t r y o f t w e n t y -

l! _•:

.' . i . \ . '.,' I h i h o l ' t a ' H l a - t T l l t s -

!r :.i 4 O K . I I ' . ">o."iiHj m a j o r i i y .

. i.t ! t l . i > • . ' ! . . r u M : i t i - t U i a t

j . ' . . • .:. i r . ' .nr . -n L iy<- b e e n e x -

' - : , . - L •) i - ' f i • U l J i U ^ . T h e

' . . ! i »rj•'-' ba^ ru... i- a li'.Lle - h . N ' Mi:- i - e h f . r . . " . . " ' l l i ' . ' l h f T

I . . . e i . - e i s re . t u l i e i y t o g e t t h r u U g h

' . . - • ; . * ' e . L u i i i i i i - I . ra . s - \ J i e p u b l i e a n

i i . < h b a i ' l o - :.r U.e ub-urdity of the i i,i.. tii C by i r.d •r-^.uf th i - pr i ra iple the JCej ib:,i..:» j . a i ' y will be i ntitled to lem-p r . r c --ipp -r' a'id a- the main object . f 'i,.- move wa- t-> make a tub of it to tl.r .ft (•• tie- b mperatii e whah* the motive c!i» ifpe' ir- f..r pa-- iug it.

There appears t-j b< troable brewing

. vf-r in Frat iee. j ioutangcr after being ' . r . h r i d t o t h e re - . r b y t h e n e w g o v e r n ­

m e n t h a - b e e n t a k e n u p o n t b e v e r y

M . i . h ' . d e r s o f I h e p e o p l e a n d s e n t b a c k t o

Par i - into the nauouul Legislature and it rr.-iiiy looks to-day as if another F rench Uevolution wag impending . Bu t arter a g . ..1 nij-hl's re-l the unstable Republ ic nciv wake up Hober again .

erne o£ the late sensations in New York c dv is furnished by the case of a woman i.aiucd Dm Debar . She professed to be an artistic medium who painted pictures u n d e r the inspirat ion o£ lUphae l , MIcb.*el Augelo ami other old masters . In some w a y hhe got Hon. L u t h e r Marati u n d e r he r influence and h e deeded valuable real es ta te to her, bu t she now lies in the city prihon awai t ing her trial for swindl ing. She professed to be the daugh te r of a king , bu t this also, of course tu rns ou t to

be un t rue according to tbe tes t imony of

he r brotbt-rg, and her course of deception

appears to be ended .

• • r e KepHfclleaa GaittaNiSM. A prominent Republ ican of Chicago is

• r ed i t ed with thin talk. Whi le the be»t m e n in t b e nation, regardleM of politic*, were p n y r i n j for the recovery of Mr.Conk-Hnjr it remained for a modern Republican poli t ician to (peculate tuui gleefully on the probable effect of the impending ca­lami*./ on Blaine1* chaaees. It U the old Ouiteau apirit, wtten you come to aeore it down: it Coakl iaf die* that aaaaaa Blaia«,aa aura

aa the woriX Bat a* i oa* aa Coakliag U*m ha will aiaaarw hia eaaaity for the a n a f roaa Maiae a a 4 aerer let w». Taare ara

ay MloaMf* of C o a h J i - i i . *mw York tewkowotaUaa » l U l a f l o ktary the chat far awi-eVe aaha, a« t tfeajr will

) f « - L U . . JU A a a . i — u

t o

Mlate'

Death of Roseee Conkling-.

Roscoe Conkling died at his rooms in the Hoffman House in New York city a t 1:50 P . M. on Wednesday of this week_ The cause of his death was aa abscess formed in the e-ar and extending ta the brain, the abscess being the effect of ex­posure dur ing tbe great blizzard, or of a cold subsequent ly contracted in an office which was not proper ty warmed.

Mr. Conkl ing was born in Albany, Oct. :;o, 1H20, bis father having been J u d g e Alfred Conkling, who had moved to that city in lHi'.i, on being appointed by Pres i ­dent Adams J u d g e of the United States District Court for the northern district of New York. Rnscoe Conkling received an academic education and then entered his father 's oiBee and engaged in tlie s tudy of law. J n 1S4G he entered the k w office of

Francis Kernan, and was admitted to the bar in 1850 and was soon afterward ap ­pointed Distr ict At torney of Oneida coun­ty to fill vacancy. I n 18'1iS he wa9 elected mayor of Utica by the Republicans and the same year was elected to Congress, being elected in WG'i serving till 18C4. I n 1806 he was a£4in elected to the House of Repr*sentatives but before t ak ing bis seat was elected by the Legis la ture to the Unit­ed States Senate, in which body he served till 1880, when in consequence of differ­ences w itli Garfield he resigned his seat in the U . S. Senate and appealed to hU o w n par ty for vindication and was defeated in the following election for Senator, since which t ime be has been pursuing the prac­tice of law in New York city where dur ing these last seven years he has secured a very large and lucrative business. Mr. Conk­ling, when qu i te y o u n g marr ied a s ister of Horat io Sepiuour w h o wi th the i r only child, Mrs. Oak man survives h im. I n personal appearance Mr. Conkl ing was very striking, and as a publ ic spaaker be was excelled by few men of bit own time. He was twice tendered a place on t he . Supreme Bench of tbe United States, once by P res iden t Grant and once by President Arthur, and decliued tbe honor both limes, Ilia great fight in tbe Republican convention of 1889 for the aoa inat ioa of Gen. Grant for a third term may be aahl to have bcea the but act of his political career, and tbe auaaar i a which held the famous paalaai " • * • " together till U M very close of that eoateet forma a atrikiag page of tk« political biatory of toe C M * try. Ilia las* public appaaraaos w a t a t eoaaaal of U a Haaati Iaraatigaiiag Oam> mitt— ia taa aaoaaeatioa of I** Broadway railroad fcamda. Mr. Coakliag v a a a faat M e a d b i t • Uttar, Ifcoaga mat aajoat aav

.aadlaaataafdrfafcarlttaat .akiafk iiirm-watba ^ Mtaf twl l f eaa**

djpajiitha vfnala Bjajaaa tmtttm§,

mm'

ria.-s the word to crush it at once. This is evidently lo be a very severe aud summary process. As if the Republican leaders should assume lo themselves complete control of everything per ta ining to tem­perance business. No temperance move­ment mus t go on, the}* declare in effect,-unless it has their approval , and in order to have that approval the men engaged in it must satisfy them tha t they will scotch and kill any and everything hav­ing the appearance of the hated third par­ty taint. This we saw il lustrated a few weeks ago in P i t t s b u r g h when the editor of the P i t t s b u r g h Sentinel, a Republ ican organ of Clinton coun ty refused to pub­lish a notice of a temperance meeting which had been sent to mm for publica­tion from the town of Mooers, for the reason as be freely stated that be did not know whether there was any third par ty taint in it . This was frank. Tbere i i no secret about it. Orders had been received to s tamp ou t the third par­ty, and he was obeying orders . T h e meet ing was called to nominate an ai*ti license excise commissioner, but how was our l imorsome friend to know that ?

But these shrewd Republican leaders have another s t r ing to their bow. They are once more set t ing up their decayed organization as the real Simon pure , genuine, Original Jticobs temperance par­ty. The eilort is enough to merit the scorn and derision which it is meeting from the best temperance elements of the country . Bu t i t is being made neverthe­less. H o w do the-y propose to satisfy this time the temperance people whom thev have gulled so often ? Why by High Li­cense. We have had it sounded iu our ears by the united temperance chorus , lo, these many years , that license was only legalized crime—a league with death and destruction which should never be counte­nanced. B u t now come these cunning Republ ican politicians and cry High License, and with many of these temper­ance people the word " H i g h " appears to have a sanctifying effect and we now see these people shout ing for the Crosby High License bill pending in the Legislature as if they really thought it was a genuine temperance measure .

Does this satisfy the genuine temper^ ance element of the count ry . I t will un­doubtedly satisfy the people who pu t the ascendency of the Republican par ty first, and the welfare of the temperance cause

second—the " t emperance" men who would rather vote for a Republ ican drunk­ard than a Democrat ic temperance man. B u t this is not the temperance clement, however loudly it may preach temperance and pray for temperance .

H o w then does high license satisfy the real temperance e lement? T h e present indications appear to be that it does not satisfy it at all.

Harper's Weekly, always on the side of t rue temperance says that in this high license policy " t h e Republ ican par ty is playing fast and loose with the temper­ance people.

The Cincinnati Commercial Gazette, a leading Republ ican organ of the west ridicules the movement and says " i t will not succeed."

The leading Republican papers of Min­neapolis and St. Paul recommended the

High License law of Minnesot as friend­

ly Ui taloon interest*.

And now comes in the testimony of l iquor dealers themselves on High License.

T h e Weekly Bulletin, a l iquor organ of Louisville, Ky . , says the "dist i l lers and brewers of this State are pretty generally in favor of a $500 license for Ken tucky . "

The Yolksblatt a liquor organ of Cincin­nati glories in tbe high license law of Ohio as " a n effectual barrier against P r o ­hibit ion, giving tlie liquor traffic a legal standing.'"

In this State , the Liquor Dealers ' As­sociation bring out the fact that the brew-e.-s of Nebraska City, Omaha, St . Lou i s , Peor ia , Qnincy, Chicago and Cleveland derfully agree that that tneir business has increased and improved under High Li­cense, that "itijnoiit Prohibition and gives their business a legal s tanding ," that in shor t they prefer H i g h License.

After doing business seven years unde r the Nebraska H u h License law of *1,000 for any kind of a saloon, Pe t e r E . Her, Pres ident of the largest distillery iu the west , and a most influential Republ ican says " H i g h License is one of the grandest laws for the l iquor traffic."

T h a t such men should be R e p u b l i c a n s is not s t range, when here in New York w e find Republ ican leaders and their poor little aUiject followers set t ing up the R e . publican par ty as a temperance party on the s t rength of the fact that it supports High License, as a temperance measure. W h a t an infamous league is t h i s ! P r e ­tended temperance reformers jo ining hands with the leaders of the l iquor in­teres t ! Is it any wonder that the t rue temperance elements revolt at SUCh an al­l i ance? I s it any wonder that our Re­publican friends should be discouraged at t he j oor succes or their attempts to make

p e o p l e b e l i e v e t h a t t h e R e p u b l i c a n p a r t y

i s t h e o n l y t r u e t e m p e r a n c e p a r t y ?

Str ip off y o u r poor tattered rags, y e po­litical hypocri tes , for they* do not at all cover y o u r moral nakedness. If your sal­vation by ballot depends upon such poor t r icks as these it is indeed past praying for. T a k e warning from these burning words of a true temperance man:

Moreover, is it reasonable to suppose that men who have given up home, sacri­ficed fortune and refused political honors —men who have suffered alaoder awl ridicule, been burnt in efflgy—are going to aive way in the hour of triumph to a party so faithless to a great trust ? Did those who founded tbe Republican party and led it to victory try to resurrect the old Whig party aa better prepared to maintain the Union and destroy slavery? It would only have resulted in a divided country and the perpetuation of the slave power?

So the Probibitioa party says. Ho met, n o compromise, and demands aa nacoa . dUioaal surrender. T o use the agure of the M. Y . Bv. "The elood of t h e l o r i a o a

A storm ia brewiag,

' and manly struggles for the right, how­ever slight the prospect of immediate ad­vantage to the actors , or even to the cause. Every man of ardent mind, who is afforded an access to li terature, selects in early life from history or fiction the demi-gods of his idolatry, and with more or less earnestness bestows upon them through life his constant leverence. Sline were not the heroes whose victorious char io t wheels, stained with the blood of vanquished millions, conducted them to power and renown. My ideals were Troy ' s champion at his last s tand beneath her walls, Leonidas in the Grecian pass and the dissenting consul at Canna?. Without any claim to the heroism that could imitate them I could still yield them my homage. T o spend in one's allotted place a blameless life of honest effort; and, at its end, to perish nobly contend­ing in the Thermopylae of an honest cause, has ever seemed to me the perfec­tion of a happy individual dest iny."

Chips.

SOLDIBIiS' HOME, OB SOLDrKUS' POOliHOCSE?

At Bath in this State there is an institu­tion termed " T h e Seldiers ' H o m e . " I n it reside about 1,100 war "Ve te r ans ; " in 18S0, the authori t ies of the town of Bath, made the g rounds including the " H o m e " an Election district, and for five years the inmates of the " H o m e " were per­mitted to vote unquest ioned. Las t year some of the citizens of Bath obtained a judicial decision, that "ve te rans ; " were not legal voters in said town. Last fall some of these old soldiers voted notwith­s tanding the decision, and 150 of them have been indicted by the Grand J u r y for illegal vot ing. Ear ly in J a n u a r y Governor Hill brought Uie subject to the at tent ion of the Legislature in a special message, asking that body to grant to these "vet­e rans" the right to vote. The mat ter was referred to the " Jud ic ia ry Commit tee" of the Assembly; after a month ' s delay the the majority of that Commit tee , all Re­publicans, made a report declining to give this right; and proposing an amend­ment to tbe Const i tut ion of the State, al­lowing these veterans to seal up their votes and send tham to the place of their former residence, to be there counted . Their r ights under this amendment if it was adopted, coultl not be secured until 1890. In their report they character ize the veterans as "waifs of fortune" and class them with the inmates of alms­

houses and lunatic asy lums. The minor*

ity Of this commit tee , all Democrats , made a report in opposit ion to the claims and recommendat ions of the majority repor t . If the claims of the majority are to pre­vail; then the name of " H o m e " is a mis­nomer , and the Republican Legis la tuie should a t once change the name; to be consistent they should term it the "Sol ­diers ' poor house , " or if this sounds " r o u g h " say "a lmshouse . " Don ' t insult the veterans by calling it a " H o m e . " If these War veteians had homes elsewhere they would not be inmates of the so-called "Soldiers ' H o m e . " Does not tbe word " H o m e " imply all the rights of citizen­sh ip? and a m o n g these r ights is there one more prized than the r ight to vote ? Arc the leaders of the g. o. p . fallen so low that they are ready U exclude from the ballot-box the men Who periled their lives in suppor t of a Government "Of, by, and

for the People ? If so, keep r ight on

"poin t ing with the pr ide ."

Republican Progrr«*.

P r - g r c s s i s r e p - t o .1 b y C.f V v t o »*J A

managers of the modern Ref tj"« i an p a n y Tbe Republican primaries cade.j f.->r nom­ination of town officer', assembled on Thursday n igh ro f last week in the f ur P i t t s b u r g h , districts. The Pla t t sbur^h Sentinel reported the procetdings of these p r i m a r i e s t h u s in i t s i s s u e o f 1 i s t w e r l ; :

[ F r o m t b e P l a t U b u r g h S e n t i n e l o t A p r i l 13-1

PtATTSnCROIt PRIMARIES —AN 1 I I E O U AM> DISGP.ACEFTL AFFV1II.

The laws of our Stale, when enforenl . throw around our primary elections every possible safeguard for a free and fair bal­lot. They require that before entering up on their duties the inspectors shall take a solemn oath to enforce those laws: that there shall he a locked box, to prevent "Stuflinit" and fraudulent votinir. and thru there shall be a poll list, to prevent re­peating aud other illegalities.

How wax it iu I'lallsburgli last n i g h t ? In District .No. 3, not one of these provis­ions were complied wilh. There was no oath, (except ordinary profanity,) no bal­lot box, and no poll l i s t ! A broad, flat, drawer was placed on the counter , the signal was given, a rush was made for it, and in less than ten minutes it was half full of ballots, deposited singly, and in pack­ages of from live to forty each; A row en­sued, one of the inspectors seized the drawer and rushed for a back room, fol­lowed by the crowd. The liglit was blown out, and for a time there was total dark­ness.

After a general rumpus of about an hour, order was restored and the ballots were counted. There were probably 150 persons present, not more than 7.5 of whom were permitted to vote, but the count showed that 54S ballots had been cas t !

In view of this outrageous aud disgrace­ful proceeding, we respectfully protest a g a i n s t t h e d e l e g a t e s b e i n g p e r m i t t e d t o t a k e t h e i r s e a t s i n t h e C a u c u s o n S a t u r d a y o f t h i s w e e k . O f t h e 3 9 4 v o t e s c o u n t e d for them, not fifty were legal. Had there been a fair vote not one of them would have been elected.

On Piat t street there was no oath nor poll list, and a hat was used for a ballot-box. Large numbers of illegal voters were cast.

At the Town Hall the inspectors under­took to proceed witliuut a poll list, but voters insisted that the voting should not go on till one was provided, and the in­spectors were compelled to yield.

The responsibility fer these outrageous proceedings rests solely on the town com­mittee, of which J . P . Brenan assumes to be chairman, and who, with others put up the job , to keep control of the town or­ganization, because they know that by a fair vote they would be voted down and o u t !

T h e following morniug the P i t t s b u r g h Telegram, tbe twin of the Sentinel in the organ-ship of pure and undefiled modern Republicanism in Clinton coun ty played this choice piece of music: [From the I ' l . tUburgh Telegram of April 14]

TUK rLA.TTS!!tTKGU PRIMARIES.

A cljaiacteriaiic article appeared in the Sentaiel yes te rday . ' I t was the wail of a soul bubbling over with indignation that it was not allowed to have its way. I t was an ill-advised article, such as comes from men who write but do not tjjintt. It was a bold piece of bluff, reeking with misre­presentat ions. I t was a groan that came rrom the heart for it told ho A* the voters were " o n t o " tbe editor 's peculiar methods of carrying primaries. • * » •

The Sentinel writer , presumably the halting, vascillating figurhead of the coun­ty committee, finds irregularities i n two districts, NTos. 3 and 4. Regard ing the primary in N o . 4 the " o r g a n " says " the re Was no oath or poll list,and that a hat was used for a ballot box." T w o direct false­hoods 1 T h e inspectors were sworn and a ballot box was used, and had there been any call for a poll list, as the law requires, one would have been kept . As it was ev­erything was regular, quiet and orderly.

The pr imary in Dist. N o . 3 wras far from being satisfactory. A mob of heelers packed into the voting place by the editor of the Sentinel anel his l ieutenants created considerable disturbance. A "broad flat d rawer" he says was used as a ballot bo.t, and he ought to know what it was after forcibly taking it from the inspectors and holding it up for his tools to deposit their ballots., in number and manner to suit themselves. As il lustrating the mendac­ity of this man: " N o t more thau 75 were permitted to vote ," he says, and yet 194 ballots were cast for the delegates sup­ported by the Sentinel editor and his friends ! And the editor had the box in his possession! And one th inks of the past and smilingly subs ides !

Accusati 'ii of political immorali ty and crookedness come with poor grace from s u c h a s o u r c e . T h e s p e c t a c l e i s p r e s e n t e d

of a man precipitat ing strife in the party for the gratification of his own selfish in­terests.

closely following this came an extra from tbe Plat tsburgh Sentinel, from which we take the following extract:

X PemfMTatic >"n,ite in " * 0 .

r •- • - •

, . - . - i«. n I ^ J f ' • i i v . r s . n s -j- i R. i ' ? r e i n I i i r p

TT.- -----: • k f r i !»• u -• vt r y r » -r "»— _- ' t. •!•* ft «• I»» rn • ' i ' ' f s . h t w » r U '. w I »f ' I ~i i r. •, tv f < F.J f i . . r % » r , i rr»- fr n « » v b j s " " > I • ' s ' . r t P I I T I U ' . * - . ' » ? V . ' I T T ' I A r k e r -« » s , I>e - T w i n l,< r^ i K - r • h i I • >< ' - -l a n . i . H . - t V - 4 . M » - - - , :• N -r- i f a r o . t i i . "• • r u ( f . • i i | . • . l o i s / T . T i xa.<, w i t h Y i r ^ o , , i _• c. •',> f>. m • c r a l s , w i t h i w i u*r i. 1 i r - - . i t i r y t h i r t v - c i t r h t v o t e s i ; . u< f t ' e - S . - n t f < -T o h a v e a m a j r i ' y t i e v m . i - * «•.>•<-r a n o t h ­e r M n a t ' T f r o m ( ' ! ' r t i i . I h i n t - . I " W H . K a n s a s . M a m p . M i . * . « a r b u - r t t " . M o b ' ^ m . M i n n e s o t a , > V h n s l \ t , N Y , y H i m p > ! l . r e . N e w J e r s p y , ( > r c i i - ' n . o r H b o . i , I s l a n d . » r i f l l i e y e l e c t a V i c e P r e s i d e n t o r l a ' r y N . w J e r s e y t h e y w o u l d h a v e a r l e a r m a j i l T }

T h r e e Chi ld ren Burned to Hea th .

By the burning of lile hoti-e of I) A. Uollman, near Jaeksnn , Mo , last Satur­day, three (if his children lost their lives, and Hoffman and three oilier children were badly burned. Several months ago Mrs. Huffman died and since the father has been acting in an insane manner. I t ia believed Hoffman set the house on fire with tlie intention of destroying himself and his family.

* ' X f t e r a v a r i e d e x p e r i e n c e w i t h m a n y s o -c a l l e d e a t l i a r i i e r e i u e d i e n , I a m c o n v i n c e d t l i a t A y e r ' s P i l l s g i v e - t h e m o s t s a t i s f a c t o r y r e s u l t s . J r e l y e x c l u s i v e l y o n t h e s e P i l l s f o r t h e c u r e o f l i v e r an .1 s t o m a c h c o m p l a i n t s . " J o h n B. B e l l , S t , A b i l e n e , T e x a s .

L I N K S O S ' T H A V K L .

U A I L K O . U I S .

Corrected to Oct. 24, ]Ss7. iDEhAWAKK Jt HUDSON CASAL COMFAXY

Js'OltTUJSRX DEPARTMENT. CHAMPLiAIK OrVISIOX—.MAIN LINK.

Trains arr ive and leave Plattsburgll as follows:

j t 'OKxn u n u X D . E x p r e s s a r r i v e 5:30 A . M . d a i l y — l e a v e 5:35 A . M . M i x e d a r r i v e 5:d0 !• M . — l e a v e 5 .20. M a i l a r r i v e 7:35 V. M . — l e a v e 7:55 1'. M.

SOC'TJJ BOUN.D. M a i l a r r i v e 7-A5 A . M . — l e a v e 7:50 A . M . M i x e d a r r i v e 11:45 A . M — l p a v e 12:00 r . »r. Express arrive 7:20 p.M.dui'y—leave 7:40 P.M.

M O O K R S B R A N C H . L e a v e P l a t t s b u r g h € : 3 0 A . M . , a r r i v i n g a t

W o o e r s J u n c t i o n 8.-00. . L e a v e M o o e r a J u n c ­t i o n 9 : 1 5 , a r r i v i n g ai P l a t t s b u r g h 11:10 A. M.

A T 7 S A B L E J i K A N C p .

L e a v e P l a t t s b u r g h 1:30 P . M., a r r i v i n g a t A u s a n l e 3:20 1". M. L e a v e A u s a b l e a t 4 : 0 0 r . s i . , a r r i v i n g a t P l a t t s b u r g h 5 : 1 5 P . M .

CHAT1UDGAY RAILROAD. F r o m D e c . 5 , 1887.

GO TNG W B S T .

Trains leave Jriausburgh 7:00 A. M.and 2:10 P . M . , a r r l v i H g a t L y o n M o u n t a i n 8 : 4 9 A . M . a n d 5:25 P . M . , a n d L o o n L a k e 10.15 A . M . , a n a S a r a n a c L a k e II :a5 A. M

GOING JSA8T. T r a i n s l e a v e S a r a n a c L a k e a t 1:00 r . M . ,

L o o n L a k e 2 : 2 0 p . M . , L y o u M o u n t a i n 7:00 A . M . a n d 3:46 P . M . , a r r i v i n g a t P l a t t s b u r g l i 9:45 A . M . a n d 5:35 e . M.

LADIES, y. Mrsi^prttteraTtw*

( . J P T P I Tb» >*<•*«• f T -ur h--"ii<*- '<!.

,h.- >.-i .sr-l«- f«.» l» f r r- r - r a l tfr,-j,UW*.

V.s l . a l l a ' " " . » I i \ r .t»i» ( 1 . V K ' i j t —*» . ^ «***m r f l '

j - * < . r l * - t > ' - - - I i'« w - » - . i o t a t P - 1 . WT r . - r . i - l l t i j . o l ' ' <k » » | ' -ill f 1' >

j - , l - , . t , , r , I TJ 1 , . i f f t . . th*' c t i ^ . r . t a : »;j~ -1 ' y wM»fcw«« r r' p x* i r p i * a- T

t ' « t r [ - a * H ! r v t . ' r " ' ' - -1 ; h " l r r - r . - l <•" r

r - p . - i t - i t 1 - . £r t 3 1 • - *t*- t-K*rl; ' •.v-.r--.-t.-t • ^ [ , - '

, p __,.,., i r ra^> 1 A— t, I .

t - t , a« I rP t - w * , t». I . i . r l i ' . i . f O * fct. nr.-o. h H-.-xl. a' 1 Ut . r Y u are * '-v . I- t i d t a w d > - -.l it! .- is . f itii-w r-K-lf.slri.-.-TT.n'.'ll'n ' . all Ii in-emltT ^ t lnvpor l i .Tar . . l f ' h t r «nH>rlt.K-< I r**mp.^r f.-r ^ . " f •»rtiifT n t l ' f v '•' \ . . u n i . t - l li.-ot 1^"- * 1SIAHI V . '"•'" < ' theuM* "f llet* I'* -!„ f p n i . i l . - - , U R " W > .SABSArARrlXA

PARENTS, Remember » t t i l I * season tlie peculiar natures of ypnr chil­dren. A limn Tvlrit' r ef study an.1 cpnlliic-mrnt l ins j i a w i l . t h " kl-viltutlf) Of SlTlllU m a c k s t h e m ; It Is weeks ye t ere t l i e y will have rest an.I rc-reatlmi which the Mitnnu'r h o l i d a y s l.riiiil- A id t h e i r -treiivtt*. purify and enrich i l ielr Dined: Wtal lzel t . <:Uri i |> ih i i r shatelsh. Inar-t tve l lvers ; lnawi ir . t , e lve H E A L T H a n d ST1VKW3TH t o t h e i r linille*, that t h e i r b r a i n s m a y «.!-... <>e i>i., by Know A" a S.\ KSA PAiU LLA.

Breadwinners "Whether you be en­gaged In the oBIca or the - w o r k s h o p •w-helbcryour duties he professional 01 mercanti le , d o n o t let tno spring nimiuV pa^s wi thout forti'y fnjr your s j su-m* and I m p r o v i n g y o u i health by using

BROWN'S SARSAPARILLA,

l*rcpared only by

ARA WARREN k CO..

l i a n g o r . M e .

Sold by A L L dealer* in medic ine .

CHARLES HALSEY MOORE ATTORNEY ANO COUNSIUOR AT UW,

l * m l i - > - I C ' l t i >

! „ , , 4 « . o < i»»t"r> « o . l . i f t h e (*r . .«> ' i t? •»••-! T l « . > ' • '» i r n i l « » n » t i ' r « « l l i ' r n V « » " i k ' • * 1 . -»rt ! . » » K . . .

w i l l C. . l lPCtI.>n K*<-Sn»n»P, N o i » r T I ' I ' .Hf n> • Ii '«(•« '

1888. W i . f.<V t o f '»

SPRING- ANNOUNCEMENT.

•r J .*. tl-uit a - l .^ thpr w

t l !

I 1J. • f «i r • ' , , t i , r . ( , . . •

o »'

W .

C E N T R A L V B K M O N T . O a t o b e r 30, 1887.

CBNTKAL A N D W E S T E H N DIVISIONS. T r a i n s a r r i v e a n d l e a v e B o u s e s P o i n t a s

f o l l o w s : Going West.

M a i l a r r i v e s a n d l e a v e s 7:10 a . i n . E x p r e s s " • ' •' 7:20 p . m .

Geing Kast. E t p r e s s l e a v e s 9:j5 a . i n . M a i l " i : 5 0 p . ffi. -

C A N A D A . A T L A N T I C R A I L W A Y . fVoiJii? West.

L e a v e R o u s e s P o i n t 7:15 a . « ] . , a r r i v i n g a t C o t e a u 9:24, a n d O t t a w a I t :35 a m .

Going Kast. L e a v e O t t a w a 1:20 p . i n . , a r r i v i n g a t C o t e a u

3 : 3 1 , a n d R o u s e s P o i n t 5:40. C o n n e c t i n g a t R o u s e s P o i n t w i t h C e n t r a l

Vt., l>. & H., and O. &. L. c . t ra ins ta and from the east , south and west. PlatUburgh and Burlington Stage Line. Leave Plattsburgh daily (Sundays except­

ed) at 10 a. m., arriving in Burlington a t 2:30 p . i u . L e a v e B u r l i n g t o n a t 9 : 3 0 a . i n . , a r r i v i n g i n P l a t t s b u r g h a t 2 p . m . F r e i g h t a t r e a s o n ­a b l e r a t e s .

f s , f . «,-

• n - I . . ' I U 1 ».

r I . I - *

« j . ' ( ' . - ' t l . - V

V t r J . 1 - t ^p I ) • wr i n . I . I . t

I - T»l> ' • . i I I- .

M l - V l . j v r . 1 ' .

. I l l I - . -i-r t r^*- 'V

I . I P P w i t h t b e w .. ' . r f .! '• * t h a n 11 .»n etrpr '•*' -rf.

T . . l i T . ' . t ' r « , f i t TV * i r i ' f

T \ . '• . r i ' H " " . >'" I »• " ' ' T.t (Ti5i ,rMr5, Ot*rf • ' - ! * • " .

I *»• l t , . l I o , . . . , , , , . , „ , , ,, I V P c i T . l i a ' f v i ' " l '*-" '

t u i ^ i n c s w . K U t r t T U h l ' U ' l U T t i n T II . . •«. .« .

t i ipitrcm y L . t - n t . . , HI m i:» i n i n i« i . i u v n n ' i R T M P r i ' i - i i . n . >"•

uient r,.mii,iii> r . V S 1 * a \ N C E P K P A H T M A E T - O o n i a t i T r s r. ; f . r , ' .

l i . r n n n A n . c T i - n . . . . r ^ . r v y . r k r . r r o . • ' . . . • '\<n'' . ' 1 n l t l . l V Ht M . . r N . u \ U I •>•• r-Ma . r M i . . i . . ( , r - . l i n l . - b • t S o t V . i k M . r. , . t i . F . - o i ^ ' i '

I . - r o . - i ( 0 \ if \ P W It-T^. %

. \ r n n r V T . TI • i- .("•' *' >• ' • ' ' ' ' *•• r •" M *" •' •' ' I \ \ V P M ' l l ' . n i K M i . '• • « •• ' • '•' •« '"">•'' ' i - 1 ••'• ' • V " ' » '« ' T

1 > H S I I I P ' « i n 110= . l p i . : i r ' i n - r . t , v •• « | - ' I | . o « t l I ' t o ' i n \ H . > > . i> i - . \ „ w l - . - l l , - l l n i P l o I . U " . I . • . v - , . .1 « w 1 '•- ' . . I U - l i - 1 . 1 ' . - ^ ' ' ,

f l t i It - n n o w . N" 11 n •»• I • w s t i. 'W II o r . w r :\ j - ' i s t i 1 ' , ' 1 C H »> . .^ • „ , . « I > > T . I <>l . | . . w t . n n . j iv I >. .- O i i i i - t i n I o i l - 1 ' . v n V' 1 ^ 1 • • • n n r e e n Uii i n I a i .« . : . o e fct.- « i,-.',-.- r . . . n ' m . . . m I ' n o ! ' i i . i n > • . i . p x p p r l i - i --p. w l • II tl- P t o n '•• o • m . i ' | . . I I H r . l . i i o i i . -1 i . . i - l t \ p <• I t . yi.lM.I . . . i t n o i l " l o I" « 'P «»-.- . 1 P M ' I l y , v l . . 1 . ( I . 1 St J. r , , , - , i b ) a l i i n i p l i n g l o .I.i l l n ili^t- i i « l o r D o i. -• t t i ^ II • 1 - m i . m w l . . . g o t , , , ^ , * u n u . i l i a i i t i n - j w. i i b l 1 m r !•• |«i> *>* n t w , - i , i \ \ . i n .

HOUSJES TO H I N T . I I . . u s e N o I V M a r f i r i t ' f i i i J'r'" • f''«' ]•< r i e t r H o n « n >'" l . i l ' o u c i i s i r . - , i 1 'Ul i a n d i ! "ii I P n i ! ' i i | . - r K i f N o n h a j M H U l P l l , N l c l m l s « p « li . u s e . m . I s l . l ^ . . I I V e i < l r . w I ' r . = 1 " . { - r * , Ka-ii np . i r i in t - t t N o r m a n . ' , in »i ' " ^ - « « n i . | « l V i n i | . . i P n c - J . , , _ , , , . , , W e M i i j w r i i n i ' i ' t n r s i II i m . \ | . h > i - \ e t l i b . k . I t n . l t ' p > ir . • t p . » . . M i • r \ . ( . l l o i K C S o . 1J PI l i t s l i p p i . n i . l t ^s | . r . - . - n ' t p i . m l l o p f . - r i J • k . » j . t.. l ' i ' J i j .

T h i s j i r n i u n j i s a l s o for ^ a l p . P r o •- $1 .IHI. I . . . t r x i i « i . C H A K L B S H A I / - E Y 3 1 0 0 K r .

K n s , n C l i n t o n S T e e t a n , I .1 l l r - ' l I M P »f , 1 I l l ' i l L't'.N i

ADV1CK TO M O T H B K S . — A r e y o u d i s t u r b e d a t n i g h t a n d b r o k e n o f y o u r r e s t b y a s i c k c h i l d s u f f e r i n g a n d c r y i n g w i t h p a i n o f C u t t i n g tee th ' ! it su send a t once and get a bottle of "Mrs.Winslow" 8oothing8yrUp" for Children Teething, i t s value is incalculable. I t will relieve the poor little sufferer Immediate ly . Depend upon it, mothers ; there is no mistake about it . I t cures Dysentery and Diarrhoea, regulates t he Stomach and iiowels, cure* Wind Colic, softens the.Gums, reduces In­flammation , and gives tone and eaergy to t be whole system. "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup"fof children teething is pleasant to the t as te and is the prescription of one of the ol lest and best female physicians and nurses in tbe United States, and is for sale by all druggists throughout t h e world. Pr ice twen­ty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for " M a s . W I N S L O W ' S SOOTHING s v a u r , " a n d take no o t h e r .

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla, W h e n s h e w a s a ChUd, s h e cr ied for C'aatoria,

Wlten s h e b e c a m e M i s s , s h e v l u n g to Cantoris*

When alio had Children, the gave them C'sstotl*.

WHO PAVS.

Several years since in discussing the so-called protect ive policy; a member of Con­gress ased the following language : " B u t suppose the operat ive must haVe a bounty or protection to his labor ? Who pays i t ?

'•Foreign nat ions do not pay it. Our Cov­er n men t does not p t y it. T h e manufac ­turer does does not pay it, for he asks t h e Government to provide the bounty . I will tell you. They are the poor boys de ­prived of the means of educat ion, the poe r men the toiling millions of tbe fields,whom you see melting under a burn ing sun. and larding the ground with their d r ipp ing sweat. These are tbe men who love their count ry , love its very ear th , for the ear th has been their only foster mother , w h o has given the breast of nour ishment and life to them. They are t he count ry ' s s t rength and when the country shouts to them to rally for i ts defense, the Valleys heave them up, and the hills pour them from their loins ." RGITGH HBWEK.

*r«

M M chip aauM g o to oioooa. A u the Umpmt M M M by, U M oM

L P l a t t s b u r g h S e n t i n e l E x t r a , A p r i l I I . ]

W e do not propose to wai t a Week be­fore replying to this morning 's Telegram.

I t s charges against us are false in every part icular . We had nothing to do with gett ing tlie crowd of men to the caucus in District No . 3, and did not know who had been placed on either ballot till we reach­ed the hall. We did not t ake the ballot box into our possession, and to charge it is an Imputat ion on the moral , intellectual and physical s ta tus of both the inspectors . I t never went from their hands for an in -s tant from the t ime the balloting com­menced until the rumpus was concluded. When one of the inspectors t ightly hug­ged it in his a rms and declared over and over again that not another ballot should be cast , while 75 men were s taad ing out­side who had not voted, we did endeavor to pull him and his box over where the men could reach him with their ballots, and we have no apologies for so doing.

The only addition to be made to the record is that the Republican caucus met on Sa turday and not only nominated town officers bu t proceeded to name town dele­gates for the Republican County Conven­tion which meets April 25th, a l though no hint was contained in the call of anyth ing more than the nomination of town officers. I t is very painful for us to chronicle sucht untoward proceedings on the par t of these two political brethren of a t ruly good par ty —the editor of the Sentinel confessing in his extra to having assaulted an inspector of election, and the management of the other " o r g a n " rest ing under charges of wilful misrepresentat ion, and with the fact s tanding forth in bold relief from the accounts of both that r iotus and unlawful proceedings character ised the c o n d u c t of the Republ ican primaries in the town. But our du ty as faithful chroniclers of the t imes compels us to pu t these disgraceful facts on record. L e t the people j u d g e for themselves. '

Absolutely Pure. T h i s p o w d e r n e v e r v a r i e s . A m a r v e l o f

p u r i t y , s t r e n g t h a n d w h o l e s o m e n e s s . A l o r e e c o n o m i c a l t h a n t h e o r d i n a r y k i n d s , a n d c » H -DOt b e s i l d i n c o m p e t i t i o n w i t h t h e m u l t i t u d e o f l o w t e s t , s h o r t w e i g h t a l u m o r p h o s p h a t e p o w d e r s . Sold only by cans. K O Y A L B A K I N G POWDKK C o . . 106 W a l L s t r e e f c y H . V.

T a x a t i o n of Personal P r o p e r t y .

T h e r e i s n o g o o d r e a s o n w h y a m a n ' s

personal p roper ty should no t be taxed as well as his real es ta te for the payment of State , coun ty , school and village ta.ies-JSvery dollar of personal and real es ta te should bear its share of taxat ion of every kind, and the chief burden of taxat ion should not, as BOW and heretofore, be upon real estate . A man has real estate wor th a thousand dollars, and it is assess­ed and taxed for a thousand dollars, While his neighbor has a t bousaad dollars in­vested in mor tgage secur i ty and is not taxed one cent upon i t for taxes—village, •Cbool and county expenses—while the real estate man pays some f 50 to 175 a year taxat ion on bis real estate.

A bill is how pending in the Legislature of this Stat* to br ing personal property upon the assessment and cause it to be taxed a long with real es ta te . I s this no t r ight ? The Governor says it is, and such a law should be passe i this sess ion . A man loans hia money and gets his pe r cent and keeps it, while another renta hia ho»ae and pays all hia renta on taxation.

More UalteaaUsa.

The following ia from the Ilarrisburg, Pa. , Morning CM of A p i l l 14, ao out) and out Blaine or'an:

Conkling, the magnificent, Ilea on hit death bed. Blaine, the man he ao igno­minious!" deserted, still live*. The atilla of the gods grind slowly but surely.

Probably BO creature under heaven abort of • Maniac could be found capable of •SBibttifgsuch M UlcoBcealed spirit of triumph over tbe death bed of tuck a

Conkling.

• • • BLUftHBD haw faee was«•*-

•mux. i M new eats If s e u -wat a rtak a n * WBJM sasMHsslaa _•**_••»**» • * • • ' ameetB

The Pope to the President.

New Tor* Freeman's Journal . H i s Holiness Leo X I I L has addressed

Ihe following letter of acknowledgment to Cardina l Gibbons. T h e sent iment so powerfully expressed by the Holy F a t h e r ought to disarm the most inveterate and ignorant Evangelical b igo t s : ''To Our Beloved Son James Oibbon*. Cardi­

nal Prittt of tilt Holy Roman Church, Archbishop of Baltimore:

"W_I.l-Blf.OV_D SOJT, IlKAITH AND THK APOSTOLICBKSEOIOTION: A m o n g t h e c o u n t -lefg congratulat ions which We have re­ceived from all par ts of the world upon the occasion of tbe fiftieth anniversary of Our elevation to the priesthood. W e have, as was na tura l , set more s tore by the evi­dences of courtesy and regard sent by the rulers of the nations. F o r by these marks

of their good will toward the head of the Church they manifest, and this W e ar­dently desire, their kindly disposition toward their Catholic subjects. Since, then, the l l lusti ious President of the Unit­ed States has , through yon, O u r well-beloved son, seen fit to exhibi t a l ike cour tesy, accompanying tbe expression of the same with gift of a superb copy of the Constitution of that most powerful Re­public, be has, in doing so, afforded U s a most peculiar pleasure and satisfaction.

"Moreover, as it is fitting that We should return to Hia Excellency the expression of Our gratitude, We commit tbe discharge of that duty to you, both on account of y o u r exalted rank in the hierarchy of the Republic and the personal esteem in which His Bxe—lleocy holds you. In fulAlliog this duty We desire that you should assure t he President of Our admiration for tbe Constitution of the United 8tates, not only because it has eo-bied industrious and euterpriaing ci l i iens to attain so high a degree nf prosperity, but also because un-dr.r its protection your Catholic country, men have enjoyed a liberty which has so confessedly promoted the astonishing growth of their religion in tbe past, and will, We trust, enable U ia the future to be nf tbe highest advantage t o the civil order as well.

'•You will be pleased to add that We will pour forth fervent prayers to God for your country's eoaetaat advaaoa ia giory and Droeperity, aad for the health mid bappbeas of Ike President a s d hia worthy h > ^ u L | ^

. " ' . ^ i S - f*^*5hm_i mm, aad to lk« fate-J«i aatniatod to yaw pastoral

. " < _ • » • • * — * » »• » « * l»»r_ , - » « >

— - • - • • j m j , -

A STATEMENT n r t h e t s e c e t p u a n d » i « ' » i i r « e n i e i i l -

n f t b e T r e a s u r e r o f C l i n t o n C o u n t y f o r t h e r i r - l Q u a r t e r o f I S S S :

R E C E I P T S B a l a n c e o n b a n d J a n u a r y . 18S3 $2,Grs 95 K e c . or G u y n u p t o Oct . 1,1S87. 1 1 9 0 1

" B a r n e s - "• 2 8 1 3 9 •' G e o C h a h o o n , Suji'r, for t a x e s . . 13 05 •' f rom t o e d i f f erent t o w n s f o r t a x e s 56,514 os

J69.559 4S D I S B U R S E M E N T S .

r a i d e o u n t v a u d i t s t3.546 S2 '• c e i - u t l c a t e s of c o u n t y cleric 218 3D " b i l l J . \V. T u t e t e _ Co 3 75 " orders S u p : t o t t h e poor 5,070 72 " a s y l u m bi l l s . 363 39 " g a s b i l l s 126 22 " s a l a r i e s e o a n t y officers 1.3^7 50 " n o n - r e s . s c h o o l t a x r e t u r n s H'2 9S " s i x C l i n t o n c o u n t y b o n d s 3.000 s o " c o u p o n s c o u n t y b o n d s 3u0 00 " n o n - r e s . h i g h w a y , B l a c k B r o o k . . . «3 75 " •' •• c a n t o n 3 1 2 5 " t e l e p h o n e b i l l 27 0« " w a t e r b i l l 32 50 " e x p e n s e s c o u r t O. _ T . A p r i l . ' 8 8 . . 503 OS " l u n e r a l e x . . s o l d i e r A n d r e w B a k e r . 35 00 " n o t e s of c o u n t y t r e a s u r e r 13,000 W)

B a l a n c e o n h a n d - 3t.r»5 w J59,559 49

I h e r e b y cer t i fy t h a t t h e f o r e g o i n g a c c o u n t I s correct. JOHN M. \V£V£R,

T r e a s u r e r o t C U n t o n C o u n t y . Dated, Plattsbtiifjh, N.V., April, I881. S u b s c r i b e d a n d s w o r n t o before m e Apri l 1S,

1888. A G UIBOKD, N o t a r y P u b l i c .

THE CHEAT

German Remedy.) TRUTHS FOR THE 8ICK.1 ~T rTiio_!jTc_uiiv TT3» Ji!rTo|Hiidj D l l k m n S p c H t d c p e m l f o r a c a M W h e r e e v L -mSitLPHcaUiTT-as ratm l i r r r- i ts win it will cure you. aotasslstorcure. I l |

L o y o u s J l e r w U • « * « " - » * • t_attire<landaUaoii« faUl-C; If so, 3tHJ-HUB B l T T UwUl cure you.

. .. w a Cleanse tbe vlu-Wdl (•alia*; If so. t w ,100,1 w b e _ you aeel ^purHVM Burma*; u _ _ , » _ _ , . i.unt-f

ww cure you. ng through tlie sklu W - f i - H S - f B B P - S l a P - a p l m . B l o t c h e s .

IVLTHtrB B l T T B - S , - 4 keskh wlU fol

C-O—lr UM milk »«d wort

m • S t r u m a

1 to curs,

*r»n _, wlw ___

l_Hn4-M_r_---ri__-ii__-i 1 sll

s h o p s ; e l e r i s . w h o • o t |TOcureMUBcfc

_^_^_*kSr__L^^" u " ^""••r'

_5S__r-SSTKI! rfflTl£rt__m*r

BrrrBBS. They will L _ _ _ - H . „ _ . iu ,__ bawss-awt »«r*(edittwUlcar«|

atiu-iirk BrrTs -Uiballd yMlt

^ i t - h a a d vearhlaedl

r r S V - V U V B I a ie-r "' wttt

ita'-wr. •eapjr .

r * U u ,

W oeBBtevaad raatt f r fMtor>Mi

O F F I C B OF L l G H T - H O U S I t 1 JJSPKCTOIl, I B I J t D D I S T R I C T , A T T 0 M P K i K 9 V f - r . i t , X . Y . ,

A p r i l 16, T88S.

PR O P O S A L S w i l l b e r e c e i v e d a t t h i s Off ice u n t i l 12 o ' c l o c k M*., o h T u e s d a y , t h e 8 t h

d a y o f H a y , 1-88. for m a i n t a i n i n g a l l t h e B u o y s n o w i n t h e H u d s m R i v e r b e t w e e n N e w Y o r k a n d T r o y . L u k e C h a n i p l a i R , P a w t u c k e t R i v e r , i t . I , F i r e i s l a n d Ii irfet . s o u t h s i a e * L o n g I s l a n d , K Y . , H e w I n ' l s t . s o u t h s i d e L o n g I s l a n d , >' . Y . , J o n e s I n l e t , M ) u t h s i d e L o n g i a l a n o V S . Y . , C a b l e ( H o g 3 I s l a n d I n l e t , s o u t h s i d e L o n g I s l a j i d , » . Y , H o u s a t o n i c R i v e r , C o n n . , a n d s u c h o t h e r s a s m a y b e a u ­t h o r i z e d , f o r o n e y e a r , f r o m t h e first d a y o f J u l y n e x t . F o r m s o f p r o p o s a l a n d p r i n t e d s p e c i f i c a t i o n s , s h o w i n g w h a l i s r e q u i r e d , c a n be had by applying to th i s Ofllee. The right is reserved! to reject any or all bids, and to waive any de tec ts . FREDERICK RoDGEBS, Commander U.S.N., Light-House Inspector.

J^OTICJC. T h e a n n u a l m e e t i n g o f t h e S t o c k h o l d e r s o f

t h e C h a t e a u g a y O r e a n d I r o n C o m p a n y f a r t h e e l e c t i o n o f T r u s t e e s f o r t h e e n s u i n g y e a r . w i l l b e h e l d a t t h e i r o f f i c e i n t h e v i l l a g e o f L y o n M o u n t a i n , o n W e d n e s d a y , M a y 9 t h , 1SSS, a t t e n o ' c l o c k A . M. P o l l s w i l l b e o p e n t h i r t y m i n u t e s .

1 5 w 3 S M I T H M . "WEED, S e c r e t a r y .

NOTICE OF REMOVAL. ON a c c o u n t o l l o o m a n d c o n v e n i e n c e , w e

h a v e r e m o v e d o u r C i g a r F a c t o r y t o t l i e s p a c i o u s L o f t s , N o . l l - ' .9 ,3d A v e . , b e t w e e n 8 2 1 a n d 86d s t r e e t s . N e w Y o r k e i l y . A c o n t i n u ­a n c e o f y o u r g e n e r o u s p a t r o a a g e w i l l b e k i n d l y a p p r e c i a t e d a n d p r o m p t l y a t t e n d e d t o , h e s p e e t f u l l y y o u r s .

1 . 9 C H E I K R & S O N , 1-159 3 d A v e n u e , Sew Y o r k .

A p r i l 1 2 t h , 1888. 1 5 w 4

SOW BEADY AT

Cady's Drug Store, GARDEN SEEDS

JTrorp. t l i e B e s t G r o w e r s i n t h e Ooi intry .

S o m e vary Early a n d H a r d y k inds f o r

h o t b e d and early g a r d e n p l a n t i n g .

A r e f i l l , i i i i f B O F

F L O W E K S E E D S F r o m p l a n t s of t h e E ic l i e s t B l o o m .

Y e l l o w D a n v e r Onion S e e d .

CARRIAGES. HARNESSES,

ApaliiraMfflptais Jc , fe. Yaughan & Parsons

Have for sale a large variety or Carriages, comprising

Stirreys , Phaetons, Carta , B u g g i e s , Backboard* .

J o g g i n g Carts , and v a r i o u s o t h e r

s ty l e* . O u r g o o d s a r e m a d e b y t h e W h i t n e y W a g o n

W o r k s o f S y r a c u s e , t h e W a t e i t o w n S p r i n g W a g o u C o , t h e f s h a m W a g o n C o . , a n d o t h e r s .

W e a r e a l s o A g e n t s f o r t h e o f t h e

CELEBKATEDJACKSOfl FABI AO KOA]) WAGOKS,

We have a Fine Line af HA&NESSES of a l l d e s c r i p t i o n s .

In Agricultural Implements we have a full stock:, including the well Iniawn

Oorbin Disc Harrow, Lawrenct ft ChapiH Spring Tooth Harrow,

Hoyal Horse Hay Rakes, flows. Broadcast Seeders

and Drills. Land B o i l e r s . & c

W I A K B SELLING

Crokei'- Buffalo Superphosphate, " O n e o f t h e b e s t h i g h g r a d e f e r t i l i z e r s . "

I t i s o u r i n t e n t i o n t o k e e p a f u l l l i n e o f p o o d s , a n d s e l l a t K K A S O I S A l i L F . I ' K I C t S , f u l l y g u a r a n t e e i n g e v e r j t h i n g a s r e p r e ­s e n t e d .

Call on us a t the

Rink BuildiDg, Clinton St, P L . A T T S B T J H O H , X . Y .

C . W . V A C OH A X . W A L t S P-AKSOJ.'?.

GREAT

Closing Out Sale! AT

A. SCHIFFS Store,

DANNEMOBA, N. Y.

I ofier rny entire stock of

Dry and Fancy Goods, CLOTHING,

H a t s a i ic i C a p s , LADIES' AND GBJiTS'

Furnishiag Goods, CABPETS, OIL CLOTHS,

Wall Paper , CURTAINS & FIXTURES,

Watohas and Jawalry. I am boand to reduce my s tock to make

room for N 1 W 8 P K I N O GOODS.

I wall sell for (kit) at Colt. OWIOK to tbe success of my closinr out

sale, 1 will contiuue ilia S_MM until Apr i l 15th.

P, 8 . I will also make reductions ia OKOCSRLE8 aad P R O V I S I O N S " _ « „ . _ UiWtaaJe. KcepecUuUv,

_ A A. scmrK. naaassaofa, April IS, 18-8.

TIERNEY & SH4RR0N, • a n a r t t St., PJatlsbnnrh. I Y . - • - Main Si , Clamplafji. 1 1

- • • • . — a ^ ^ ^ » • -^___B»»~ -

Dry Goods and Carpets. Complete opening of New Spring Goods, Bargains in every Department. Special Sale during the month of Hosiery,

Gloves, Dress Goods and Carpets. 40 inch A.11 Wool Tai lor-made Sui t ings

47 cents pe r ya rd . All Wool Henr ie t tas , all the new shades ,

4.8 cents , wor th Go cenis . 4# inch Wool Sui t ing 25 cents . 40 inch All.Wool Check Suit ings Bli cents ,

wor th 50 cents . 54 inch All \Vool Checks only 5« cen ts ,

formerly 8» cents . 46 inch tine Serge (Henr ie t ta Cloth finish)

75 cents , wor th S I 00. Silk W a r p Henr ie t t as in Black, B r o w n .

Gobelin Blue and Mahogany , §1.00 per yard .

40 inch All Wool Debiege 4*3 cents per yard , regular CO cent"goods.

50 inch Tai lor -make Sui t ings 85 cen ts , cheap a t $1.25.

Colored Dress Silks 50 cen ts . Black and Colored Sat ins -50 cen t s . Moric Silks, all the new colors , $1.25 per

yard . Silk P lushes $1.00 per ya rd . IJace Curta ins SI .25 a pair , well w o r t h 82 .

T u r c o m a n Cur ta ins $'..'50 a p.itr, w.rtii S4..70.

Clienille Pon t r i c s 8 8 50 a pa i r , f . rn.r t l t SI 1.90.

AH Wool J e r s ey .Tuckets, P l a i t n l l i n k . 82. IS 7.

Ladies'Balbripgan Hose , fyll rcguler made jro«ds, 10 cents per pair.

Ladies ' fane? Str iped Hose , regular ma-le, 10 cen ts , wor th 2S cen ts .

Ladies ' Fa»t Black Hose , regular .'W <ert g o o d s , a t 3 o c e n t s .

Brilliant Lisle H o s e 371 cents , worth r,i),-. Silk Hose 75 cen t s . F iner grades Silk H o s e 81 00, SI.25 an.l

$1.50. O u r l ine of 25 cent H o s e in Blacks an.l

Fanc ie s , i s tbe bes t in the citv. !)G dozen Misses ' French. .Ribbed *H • i se 111

cen ts , wortl i 30 cen ts . Ladies ' Kid Gloves, N e w Spring Shades

Embro idered Back , 05 cenls . Ladies 'Hea l Kid Embrd idcred hack <il.jvts

Wel t T o p , 89 cents , worth 81 25.

Carpets, Oil Cloths, Rugs, &c. Our l ine of N e w Spr ing Carpets is by far tlie la rges t and fiaest in this section, in.

e luding Ing ra in , Tapes t ry , B o d y Brussels and T h r e e P l y . and we respectfully invite every o n e in need of Spr ing Carpet9 t o visi t o u r E legan t Show i i o o m before p u n li t«-iBg. Special bargains in S m y r n a H u g s a t 81.00 and u p w a r d s .

Respectfully, TIERNEY & SHARRON.

ICE, COAL, WOOD,

AND j

H a y and Straw,

New Garden Seeds.

a a d o b l i g i n g t e a m s t e r s .

W I L C O X & B O S W O B T H .

'ea, FeafcaMcr a - lakstaae al l l a one.

SMITH & LaROCQUE Have received their sti ck of Farm, Vegetable and Flower

r, !• j . i i e i Seeds from the well-known Delivered promptly by careful .. -i; i v /- « ,

_.. j - i .• • . l , , r e l i a b l e firm of s e e d s m e n , Peter Henderson & Co., New Torir, comprising

D w a r f a n d P o l e B e a n s ,

Garden and Field Beets. Early and late Cabbage.

G a r d e n and F i e l d Carro t s . E a r l y a n d L a t e C a u l i f l o w e r ,

E a r l y a n d L a t e C e l e r y . E a r l y a n d L a t e S u g a r C o r n . E a r l y a n d L a t e C u c u m b e r ,

E a r l y a n d L a t e L e t t u c e ,

E a r l y a n d l a t e W a t e r A M u s k Melon ,

0 i i i o n s . P a r s n i p s .

D w a r f a n d P o l e P e a s , K a d i s i i . S p i n a c h .

S u m m e r and W i n t e r S q u a & i , E a r l y a n d L a t e T o m a t o .

G s r d e n a n d F i e l d T u r m p , . H e n d e r s o n L a w n G r a s s , A c , A c .

And a very large s.-i •••i!.,_ „t

FLOWER SEEDS.

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l > l n _ w e s t uf S a r a n a c R i v e r , " a s t b e s a i d d i s - I U i c t o f a a s s e s s m e n t f o r s a i t l e x p e n s e o l u p e u -I He s a i d s t r e e t , t h a t t h e y h a v e c o m p l e t e d s a i d e s t i m a t e a D d - o a a e s s m u i t , p u r s u a n t t o ?>eelioi} 7 01 s a i d t i t l e s , anel t h a t t h e s a t t i e c a n b e s e e n i a n . 1 c i a i u i i i c d b y U i e u x p i y e r u a n d p . i r n e s f

i n t e r e s t e d , f o r a n d d u r i l i > ; , a i . ( l u n t i l Uie . ' l i t i l C a b b a g e C a u l i l o w i T P p l e r . P . „ „ . d a y o f A p r i l u e x t . a t w h i c h d a t e t h e s a i a c . m ^ » " " * ^ e . ^ a u i J a o w e r . ^ e i e r y . . f e p p e m t s s i o n e r s s h a l l m e t l l o h e a r t h e proof-* a n d a l l e g a t i o n s of t h e p a i t i e s i u t e r e s i e d , a t t h e C o r p o r a t i o n K o o m s , i n s a i d v i l l a g e , a n d a d - ' j i t i r n f r o m t i m e t o t i m e a s t h e y d e e m p r i . j . e r . ' £tiati s a i d K s t i m a t e a u d A s s e s s m e n t l i ^ . k e;ui b e s e e n a l T . M e l f a r n a n ' s L n s u r a n c e o a l e e , i n s a i a v i l l a g e , l o s a i d A p i l l 20 , l i i -S .

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T h e r e b y a p p o i n t a t e r m o f t h e C o u n t y C o n n a n d C o u r t o f s e s s i o n s f o r C l l i i t o n c o u n t y t o Oe h e l d w i t h a O r a u . i J u r y a n d l ' e t i t J u l y , a t t h e C o u r t H o u s e i u P l a t t s b u r K h , o n t h e l s i h d a v o f H a y , 1SW.

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f o r e g o i n g c o p y o f O r d e r w i t h t h e o r i g i n a l t h e r e O t u s B l e d A p r i l 12 USD, I n t h i s o f l l e e , a n d t b a t t h e s a m e i s a t r a e c o p y o f s a i d o r i _ i n a l a n d o f t h e w h o l e t h e r e o r .

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Boots, Shoes, ANO RUBBERS,

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The-y t h a t b u y S p e a i ' s p r e n i l u i n w a r m *-..* C o a t s t _ _ t . q u i p t h e b o d y i o f a c e Z e r o lit. w e l l , b u t t h o s e w h o g t . t o D U o w s ' S a n a t C | s o l e c o m f o r t s t h a t s o w a r m a n d c l o t h e t h e f e e t t h a t t h e y m a y p a s s t h r o u g h w i n t e r ' s w e t a n d t o l d " d r y s h o d " d o b e t t e r .

A s p u r v e y o r l o t h e p u b l i c i u . s h o e s p r l e e > i n t h e Ll t i le - S t o r e r o u n d t b e C o r n e r a r e . t l l -e v i d r u t f a c t s t h a t t o U K O W S - C u s i o u i 1« d u e . - a n d Iu p r o o f o l f i d e l i t y u> I l l s p a t r o n ^ b e s t g o o d h e t e n d e r s t h e m t e n g r a i l s w o r d . H a v e r a i l - i n t h e u i a n o f w h o m y o u b u \ shoes . ' '

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