1
aartBtiTi -ifrnyniwrw n^nmn,. HOTi IMMIHIKIH » i ii mOrn-niiiT'Hiliqffl) -ffirTjr"" ni rn;"i" rr . !."L JJ'.w^fl 1 .' ''*',!"^'l' | !J l| JtWJ | i L Z L - / : Ttoe Slosf Extravagant of million-' •' '*hrea«e», " la the niati&r of spending money oa fine raiment, perhaps Misa Guila Moro- sini, daughter of G, P. Morosini, banker and former partner; of Jay Gould* i s act- mittedly the moat extravagant of million- airesses," says Anna Steese Richardson id Women's Mome, Companion for March. "She confesses" that she spends two hundred thousand dollars a year on. clothes alone, and her interest in life ia divided between her horseaafidtbe gowns that match her turnouts, Misa Morosini's gowns are* generally the sensation of the Annual Horse Show at Madison: Sduare Garden, and a daily study for sightseers along Bfew Yorfe's million-dollar speed- way. Every gown and hat she dons is built to harmonize with either vehicle or harness. To harmonize with one pigskin set of harness she wears a princes frock of tan-colored satin chiffon. For another pigskin harness, With; blue satin rosettes and gold mountings, on chestnut horses, she wears a pale blue rough silk trimmed with Irish lace. Recently she decided that she wished to wear royal blue, so she sent to London for matching harness; to be used when shf drives with her fa^ moos three-abreast team. The royal bine harness is of the finest kidskin, dyed to match the broadcloth of her gown. Her basket-weave vehicle has wheels of ox- blood red, and when seated in this vehicle Miss Morosini wears an onion-red chiffon satin. For each of these gowns she ha* matching hate and shoes, many of the latter dyed to order, but with every har- ness she uses lines of white English web, and she wears only white sued gloves in elbow length." GOOD ROAI Legislators Are Studying the $50iOODj0Q& May Best ie Spent. Laws of importance to Ail the People:—* Ballot Law Changes. Thieves' market. In the United States we appeal to the police or search the pawnshops for articles that have been stolen from us, bat in the city of Mexico you wait until Sunday, and then hie Jaway betimes in the morn- ing to the Public Market, or volador, just a few steps from one corner of the Great Plaza. Here you wander through narrow crooked alleys, among queer little piles of vegetables, second-hand hardware, new and old pottery, heaps of good and poor clothing, stepping oarefally all the while to keep your feet off the various wares that are spread out on the ground ia ir- regular fashion, according to the whim of the market man. Here you may discover, openly dis- played, the silver sugar-bowl stolen from your bouse. " You must not try to con- fiscate it nor offer to prove it is yours. You sedately begin to bargin for it, and when you have haggled the price down to what you can afford to pay, strike a bargin. band over the money and the bowl is yours again. Take a good look at the fellow who sold it to you that you may be on your guard if ever you see him about your bouse, for in all probability h. is the thief who robbed you. Strange as it may seem, the thief is protected by an old custom, which says that if he on the Sunday morning after his oritae, display his booty in this mar- ket, he may be exempt from punishment. This old custom has given this voladar the name of "Thieves' Market."— The Travel Magazine. *, »—• m a l o n e f t e t a l l OTartcet. ...85.00 ...4.73 .. ..Oo - ..L25 .... 1.40 1.35 .... Lao 55c ...15.0e . ..90 rLOCB, FEED. ETC' Spring wheat flour, per Barrel. Pastry Soar, per barrel Graham, per pound Cornmeal, per owt. Feed, corn, oats, etc-, per cwt. Middlings, per ewe Bran, per owt. Oats, per bushel. Hay, per ton t Hay, baled, per hundred Hl$b&LLXtrSOV8. Hops >. 16@18c Potatoes,per bushel. joe Beans, per bushel sw»5 Oranges, per dozen.. 8U@50c Lemons, per dozen 25@3ui Honey, per pound lor Batter, dairy, per pound 3ft- " creamery, per pound. 33c Cheese, per pound. ,. ..18c Eggs, fresh, per dozen. 32c Maplesugar, per pound i0c Maple syrup, per gallon LUO Firewood, per cord, stove. 700 Kerosene oil, per gallon .& S05A3S,«TC. Pork, per barrel 18.00 Dressed hogs, per cwt. 7.50 Beef, dressed, native, per owt.. 5.00 Western, per owt. 6.50 Hams, whole, per pound 18c Hams, sliced, per pound 20< Shoulders, per pound. ia- Sausage, per pound I0@l2c Bologna sausage, per pound. iOr Bacon, per pound I8r Corned beef, per pound 8@10< Lard, Kettle rendered i6 c compound u< Chickens. igj. Something Just as Good. The manager of a Bell telephone ex- change recently gave employment as an operator" to a young woman whose pre- vious employmentfaad been in a depart- ment store. The girl seemed so bright and willing, and possessed such a clear and distinct voice, that the manager re- solved to give her a trial. » The newcomer, who was all amiability and willingness, rapidly learned her new duties, but one day an accident occurred that betrayed her department training. In answer to a ring, she had asked sweetly: " Number, please ?" " Let me have 325," said the patron. " I am sorry that 325 is busy just now," said the girl, " but I can let you have 324 or 326." Buttons are a fad. Carloads of them are being sold in the shops for the decora- tion of new spring suits. They are not „.-t>nly very large, but also exceedingly small, both extremes meeting with favor. In the very tiny varieties, which are no larger than a pea, they are frequently set with imitation precious stones, the color either matching or being in decided con trast to the material %f the gown. Iu the larger styles there are effective re- productions of old-time miniatures framedin quaint settings. To trim a smart.coar or suit with these ornate aco ssories will cost in the neigh- borhood of g75, since each button costs $5.—N. Y. Sun. Got What Be Would Keep. Two London stock exchange men re- cently were dining a t a Paris restaurant, and the waiter brought in two soles, The carver politely "helped his friend to the smaller, reserving the larger for him- self. The proceeding did not please the friend, and Be said so in plain terms. " Why, what WQU1§£ yon have done?" inquired the carver innocently. "Given yott the larger one, of course,'' was the answer. " Well, Fve got it, haven't I? What more* do yon want?'—London T. P.'a Weekly. ' -'.1 -• ~ 4 . i On Monday of last week, for the first time this winter, a show plow was. sent oat from Oswego to work on that divi- sion of the Some, Watertown & Ogdens- burg Railroad; There has been little difficulty in this. Northern, seotion, occa- sioned by snow, in running trains this winteri It has been just about two ypars since the Panama canal was to be constructed without delay, and here we are waiting for the appointment of somebody to suc- ceed somebody so something may be doae.—Exchange. In the treatment of piles; it becomes necessaryto have the remedy put up in such a form that it can be applied lie the partsaffected. Mac Zan Pile ; remedy is encased in a collapsible tube with nozzle attached; It can not help but reach the' spot. Relieves 'blind; bleeding; itching and protruding . piles. - 50 cents " with- nozzle guaranteed. Try it. Sold by Hyde Drug Co. " I write because I am impelled to do so—impelled by a power I can not resist, " says Marie CorellL, WiU an expert kindly tell us what kind of insanity thai is:? An"Ob 16 man -iadying from blood poison from a hen peck on the tnurab. Most hen-pecked men get It in the : uieok and «Urviye. to tell about it. Improper aqtjob of the kidneys causes backache, lumbago,, rheumatism. '-• Pine- ules" i s a kidpey remedy that will relieve these disease? Pleasant .to take and guaranteed to give; satisfaction, or mofiBy refunded, " Relief in every dose,"' Sold by Hyde; Drag, Co, 3, P. Morgan is investiag large sums In oil painting*. There is no water la them. Subscribe for the PiiXAOttrlt, $1.00, How to spend the faO.OOO.OOO author- ized for the improvement of highwaya in New i'ork state Is receiving ;a great deal of attention at the hands of the legislature. The state engineer's niap of all the counties, which in the aggre- gate shows all the contemplated to- . provements. Is Just coming from the press and- will be to the bands of the supervisors in each county aboftt ithls time. These maps present the results of a long and careful investigation as to what is needed to meet lie waiita of the greatest number of people aha to make a most compact and service- able system of thoroughfares through- out the entire state. s The proposed Improvements on the map, however, are not final, and it Is expected that each comity, acting through Its supervisors and represent- atives in th» legislature, will have ear- ly opportunity to suggest desirable changes and to present arguments in favor of their adoption before the work is actually begun. May Change System. One year ago the proposal to put this road construction under the manage- ment of the superintendent of public works was seriously brought forward and discussed. It Is renewed this year, with more likelihood that -favorable' action will be taken upon it Under existing conditions the state engineer and surveyor has entire charge of It, so far as the state is concerted. He makes the plans, gives out the con- tracts, sees that they are executed, passes upon'the work at its comple- tion and during its progress and certi- fies as to the expense of each particu- lar highway improved. There is no check upon him from any outside source. It is the opinion of leaders in legislature that so great a work as is involved in the expenditure of $50,- 000,000 for highway improvement should be under the charge of men who have nothing to divert their at- tention from it and that its expendi- ture, so far as the execution of con- tracts and the settlement of the details as to the construction and improve- ment are concerned, should be most carefully scutinlzed not only by those who may do so In the public records, but by the legislature Itself. As It stands now the expenses.for the ad- ministration of this work and for the execution, so far as it involves work by the scate engineer's department, are taken from the proceeds of the authorized bond sale. Under the pro- posed change there would be a branch of the department of public works which would devote its entire energies to highway improvement. The office force would be maintained by appro- priations specifically made for the pur- pose from year to year. Election Law Changes. A great deal of discussion has been heard over proposed changes in the election law. Governor Hughes in his L first message recommended the adop- "tion of the ballot like that In use in Massachusetts, Oregon and one or two other western states. On this ballot the names of the candidates for the various offices to be filled appear in groups, arranged alphabetically, with the name of the party or parties by which they have been nominated print- ed after them. The method of voting is to mark an X in a plain space oppo- site each name. In One Column Only. Hearings have been given on some of the proposed election law amend- ments, and others are yet to come. One change which is under serious discussion provides that the name of any candidate for any office may ap- pear upon a ballot but once. Assem- blyman Phillips of Allegany has a bill •n which a hearing has been had which proposes this change;. "Under his bill^he party column would be re- tained, and the method of voting would be precisely the same as with the pres- ent New York ballot Should bis bill become a law It would not be possible for a candidate nominated by any par- ty and indorsed by an independent or- ganization, as was the case with Mr. Hearst with the Democratic state tick- et last year, to appear in separate col- umns. Provision is made that if a candidate is thus indorsed or nominat- ed by more than one organization his name shall appear in whatever party column be may prefer. For Instance, if Democrats and Independent leaguers >\ure both to nominate Mr. Hearst again, Mr. Hearst would be compelled to file a certificate with the secretary of state stating under which emblem he desires his name to be placed, 'and the other party desiring to vote for him would be compelled to do so tn> der that emblem. Provision Is made that if he does not file this certificate stating his preference the secretary of state shall make up a ballot by placing his name under the emblem of which* ever party nominated him first Ae to the Judiciary, Just how such a bill would work: in all localities is under discussion. Un- doubtedly it would have a tendency to" prevent nominations of complete tick- ets by independent organlzationa. For some years In electing Judges of the court of appeals Democrats and Ee- publicahs have united upon a ticket, as Was the case when Chief Judge Cullen was elected. Of course if Mr.,.Phil- lips* bill had been in effect then Mr* Gulden's name would have appeared but once upon the ballot, and those, who wanted to vote, for him would, have had to do so by voting for him as a Democrat assuming that he would have stood as the candidate of that particular party. This would not have been a, serious consideration. The sen'' timent seems favorable ,tp a measure of this sort. * Carriage*; For-8ick Voters. MJr. Phillips baslntroducadianother bill amending the law of last year with, reference: to the hiring of car- riages for conveying sick and Infirm voters; to the polling places. This bill proposes that net exceeding four car- riages: for each election district may be so employed; by any political party> Poubtlfss Ihis bill will p;ass, as the 'feeling la: general that the' prohibition against hiring carriages' for this- pur- pose last yejiu- rt'sultBd la the practical aisfranchisenient of a COhsldernWe numhrt- who afo unable tp go to the I.y.lliug, plaoti*. . ,j, Amending Conjtitu-tion. ' Qht-uvf the tnrtst sismlficant measures which bar? <#ojc:fccforoeither hornse' k Un<> wticurmit resolution intmduceit by Assemblytnail Hammy which pro« pojfcs to . e i i a ^ the method by which the ni&tty consUttttion may be amended. The•: fujPOatHi-ut&l law now provides for its own amendment fa this* tray; i. «ncarrent resolution giving « pro- poised! change must be passed by two legislatures and; tWsu'submittea to the people at & general; election. If a plu- rality/of votes cast Is favorable, the change Is adopted. Owing to laek of Interest a»d lack 0* Information It hiss been a rule that proposed changes in the constitu- tion have received only a fraction Of the vote cast, for candidates to* office, and it has been the rule that any -amendiaeat once submitted to the peo- ple was reasonably sure to be adopted; The average voter facing the proposi- tion to amend the constitution a s a rule votes "yes*''rather than "no/" so that many amendments to the consti- tution have been adopted wbere the total vote for and against"was only a minority of the legal electors of the state.. A year ago Speaker WadswOrth favored a change, and a resolution was preparedaimilar to the one. Intro? duced by 4tesembiynMn*iBtomm this year. Mr. Hjamm proposes, that when an amendment la submitted to the peo- ple at a general election, before It shall be ratified and become a part of the organic law of "the state, It shall re* ceive the affirmative vote of electors as many in number as constitute a majority of those who voted for mem" bers of the assembly throughout the entire state at the election when the proposed amendment is submitted, Mr. Hamm'a resolution passed the assembly with ninety-six favorable votes and it is believed will receive favorable action in the senate. NO SENSE OF HUMOR. * A Scientist's Criticism of a Comlo Book For Children. Charles Monselet a Frenchman of letters, published a comic "scientific dictionary" for the benefit of children, who found no little amusement In his odd accounts of things In the animal world which were perfectly familiar to them, but which were described in a rather fantastic way in M. Monselet's book. The editor of a certain scientific jour- nal, however, was much surprised and shocked at M. Monselet's ignorance when he too'.: up the book, and he wrote an article about It In his paper, which ran as follows: "A certain M. Monselet has publish- ed n dictionary for the use of children, which contains definitions showing the most extraordinary ignorance, such as the following: " 'Sardine—A little fish without any head which lives in oil.' "As if a fish could live without a head and In oil! "Another definition: ' " 'Parrot—A bird somewhat resem- bling the pigeon, generally green when it is not red or yellow or blue. Cocka- toos sometimes live to be a hundred years old, except when, they are stuff- ed, and then there Is no limit to the length of their life.' "Now, it happens that the parrot is not a pigeon at all and never has the colors that M. Monselet gives to him, and, to short this M. .Monselet knows no more of natural history than he has grains of common sense," THE MALE OPERA HAT. Why It Rises Superior to Any Passing Fashion Dictates. Men generally protest against the changes of style in hats, and one of the sex has written to the New York- Mail this complaint: Why attack as a "collapsible, many named pretender" the opera bat or chapeau de claque? I have such a hat and also a silk hat in which respect I think I differ from most Gothfimites. Whenever I have an option I wear the opera rather than the other. Ifs more convenient At the theater or opera you can car- ry it better on your between the- acts promenades. If there is no rack for your hat under the seat you can tuck It in your overcoat and put it on the floor under you without destroying it as you would do with a silk hat If you put your hat in the rack un- der your seat and then rise and stand close to it to permit a late comer to pass an opera hat suffers no damage. A silk hat would be either ruffled or crushed. The opera hat looks as well at all times as the silk hat and requires much less care. Indeed, I think it looks better. The glossy surface of a silk hat, like the glossy bosom of a stiff white shirt is an uncomfortable survival of the time w h e n men wore polished helmets and breastplates. There is so much reason'in the opera hat that men of discrimination will continue to wear It the style of the moment regardless. A Dog Habit. Have yoo ever thought why Itia that a dog turns around and around when he jumps up on his cushion "or starts to settle himself anywhere for a nap? Now that you are reminded you can recall that you have seen a dog do It many times, can't you? This habit Is about all that Is left to our tame little doggies of the- days long ago, when they were a race* of wild animals and lived to the woods; Their bed* then were matted grass and leaveB, iuhl It was. to trample enough grass andjprop- erly arrange theleayeilaat thettojf al- ways trod around 4 narrow circle be- fore he would lie down. The dog of today keeps up the same old habit al- though there i s n o longer any iieea for It and of cotpfge. the animal has no notion why he does it A Bond of Sympathy. " While the new maid tidied the room the btisy woman kept on writing. * - *D0 yon make that all but of yonr own head^' naked Jane* "x"es," said the bjttsy wdnwi; "My;,." said jane, a&nlringly, "yon muirt have brauis?' *Brain»P' BlghiKi the woman ;d«- .epohdently^ "Ofc Jane, I. hayenft »jn ounce of brain*." :; > For a moment Jane TigardfeJ bei; with sincere commiseration. - "Oh. weU," she •aid presently, Vdbn't mind what 1 wy; I ain't very amart my|ffiIfc''-~New, Sork Prew. A Normal Disadvantage. **Wby do reformers so often come to grief r '*t have, often asked the question," answered Senator 80rf hum* '% think it must be because they take up poll- tics as an incidental diversion Instead: of a regular business. It's/ the differ- ence betwwn the amateur and the pro- feMional,"-Washington Star, State Engineer Wants the Bar* t e t Down by iJiyil Serv- ice aii 'amy C»e*»for T«m •*•!<•• Asa Srir^i, Then He: Woulrf Appoint Numer- ous Political Friends to Fat Offices. the -, Shopping Pelitenesa, "Js'ever fioint* my dear," said mother gently. 'TJut, mamma,' objected the little girt "suppose I don't know the name of the thtogr* "then let tbc salesman nhwyoa nil •e, has in, stock until be ^conies to the article that js> "deslrtsd."—Uev Sot* An Inference* Pfttiier-~'YQ«Uft Up£*rten 1* gotnjr to propose for yoariand soon. Daughter --Haw tb you]know? Ftfttoer-1 hear he hsafceenroafcWfnqutrjpa m to my financial BtawaiBfj.-UItwfratcd Bits. Wisdom provides things not »uperfluous.*-SoIon, necessary, Albany* Veh, 26. -s- State Engineer Skene Is having troubles of bis own 'with the. stajteicivil sen Ice commission.- If he had his way about It the com- mission would have a comparatively easy time, so far as preparing an eligi- ble list for his office is concerned* He will be perfectly 'willing Oventually to dispense with the clvil^ervlce entirely if he keeps nj> h i s present gait He thinks that the Interest of the state jrlll be better protected if the com- mission will let him select his own Uppointees without any reference to the qualifications that might be dem- onstrated by such an examination as the civil service law now requires. Mr. Skene hails from Queens county, which Is the borough of Queens In Greater New York, where, the borough president was for many years Joe Cas- sidy, a Democrat Hearst man, con- tractor, political boss and an all round worker for Cassidy and his friends In politics.^ Mr. Cassidy was at Buffalo when Mr. Skene -was nominated, and there have been stories published from time to time ever since that when he selected Skene he, with Murphy of Tammany Hall, who is in the contract- ing business himself, and "Flngy" Con- ners of Buffalo, who understands what there is hi contracting when the con- tracts are handled properly, and Mc- Gulre of Syracuse, had his eyes on the spending of the $100,000,000 fund for canal Improvements and the $50,000,000 for good roads. ,. Mr. Skene submitted his general proposition designed to take the starch out of the civil service, so far as his office is oncerned. on a recent date. He asks that three additional division superintendents, a secretary and a spe- cial examiner be placed on the exempt list He asks also that the salaries of the division engineers be $4,000 per annum each. Mora Places Wanted. A representative of the Civil Service Reform association appeared before the board and made a strong protest against this raid of Mr. Skene. Mr. Skene also wants to appoint a lot of additional officers. He would like to have three confidential clerks at $5 per day and six supervisor of highways at $5 per day each, in addition to his divi- sion engineers. All told, his proposi- tion means an increase in bis salary list of about $24,000 annually, and this In spite of the oft repeated Democratic protest against the great expenditures in the last few years for state govern- ment He has the men picked out whom he would like to appoint as supervisors of highways in case his application is received favorably and granted. The state civil service commission did not act at once on Mr. Skene's propo- sition. It considered the question some time ago. when the request was made, and reached- the conclusion that the law provided all the help the engineer needed and that there was no particu- lar reason why the civil service bars should be let down in this case. It is said that Democratic politicians, such as Murphy and Cassidy, are crowding Mr. Skene very hard to sup- ply places for their favorites. They had an idea that there were over a thousand positions at their disposal, it is said, and they were prepared to give an example of the "how the faithful are rewarded" Idea. Their disappoint- ment when they found" that there were less than 100 positions all told to be filled is said to have been something pathetie Whatever recommendation the civil service board makes of course will haVe to be approved by the gov- ernor before it goes into effect Attorney General Jackson is willing to do the best he can to help out Skene, and be pas given the state engineer the opinion that he has the authority under the "public officers act" to get this ad- ditional help if necessary when it is not otherwise provided for. . In China te* loaves are need in sweep- ing floors, bat this does; Hot end their utilitarian; purposes. In, rogrons where fuelIs scarce the refuse leaves are pressed Into bricks, dried and used in the same taanner a s -bloOkai; of. p e a t . This fool ia partloularly prised for porkourlng-^ah4 the teacured or tea smoked meat is tp the Chinese what beachnut and sugar oured bacon and hams are tons. The ashes from the fuel are used a s a fertilizer. But even before its use as fuel the ref- fuse tea serves another purpose. 'Ti»e leaves are vigorously; stewed or allowed to Bte^P in cold water^ in order to recover the tannic acid which they con tain (about 12 per cent). This lapsed la tanning: leather and inttyeingteitiles, J|igivei# fine, permanent put btomtmtoiiteaiiites no mofd^nt«nd"i8nnaffectedby sublight, bleaching or washing. : . Sometimes the refuse tea leaves are used as fodder fc? farm stock-^at least pfovidipg biilk if not nutrition. Again,, they may be dried, hyxed with the low grade, factitiously saented teas of eom- -merce, and are then known as lie tea." The decoetion resulting from such.tea cannot be far superior to one made'from, the common bay with which we are all acquainted. The queerest use to which brick tea has been put in *ftxe Orient is in the capacity of money. I t 4 s still in circulation a s a medium of exchange in the far inland Chinese towns and Central Asian marts and bazaars, southward to the Pamirs and Thibet and northward across Mon- golia to the Siberian frontier. Between the Mongolian town of Urga and the Siberian town of Kiakta there is usually as much as half a million taels of this money in circulation. At the latter place it ceases to be u~ed as currency, and enters into the regular brick tea trade of Siberia and Russia. As brick tea it is largely used in the Russian army, by sur- veying engineers, touring theatrical com- panies, traveling hunters and sportsmen and tourists in general.—Scientific Ameri- can. The Sew Immigration Law. The new immigration measure will provide for very exhaustive investigation of many points. Meanwhile, great efforts are going to be made to distribute the newcomers more thoroughly throughout the country, as to test thsir fitness tor success, particularly in Southern agri- culture and industry. At present we are receiving immigrants at the rate of con- siderably more than a million a year, one- quarter of them coming from Italy, an- other quarter from the races of Austria- Hungary, another quarter from Russia, and the remaining quarter from Ger- many, Scandinavia, the British Islands, and scattered sources. The .situation re- quires the most exhaustive study and an- alysis. If these new factors that make up the bulk of our immigration should be sifted or restricted in some radical fash- ion, public opinion will support Congress in legislation after the argument has been sustained by a showing of unde- niable facts. At present the country is in great need of labor, and a good kind of immigration is welcome. 'But in the long run our industrial life' itself, as well as our social and political institutions, must depend upon the character ,of American citizenship, and it would be a fearful mistake to bring here classes of people permanently undesirable in vast numbers merely to meet a temporary de- mand in the labor market.—American Monthly Review of Reviews for March. "The Best is None Too Goodi'» This applies to As well as anything else. If You Want THE BEST Apply To S.&BK1NN£R The Leading Fire Insur- ance Agent of Northern New York. : : : : None bat the Strongest and Best Companies Represented. II0RT0S BLOCK, MAIN STREET, Malone N. Y. John T. Connell, of Cartbage, has a pipe which he carved out of laurel root while hi was in the army and which is a very interesting souvenir of the civil war. The wood was obtained on Lookout Mountain, and he whittled it out while in camp in the winter of 1864 with a jaokkhife and a needle. It is a fine piece of wood oarv- ing. On the front of the bowl is carved the Star Spangled Banner, a fort and battery, the American eagle holding in its beak a stsamer, on which is out the words, " Union and MoCIellan," showing Mr. Council's preference for the pet of the army. Around the sides and on the face of the bowl is carved in raised letters the names of all the battles in which Mr, Connell took part with his battery. The names read, in rotation, Fort Donaldson, Shiloh, Cornith, Chickasaw, Bayou, Arkansas Post. Champion Hills, Vioks- burg, Jackson, CbafSanooga, Big Shanty, Beseoa, Dallas and Kenesaw Mountain. These names are all put on with a neat- ness that would do credit to an artist of tbe first magnitude. The whole is beau- tified by the laurel leaf out .in between the words. Besides the names of the battles on each side of the base of the stem holder are the Masonio 'emblems. Mr. Connell was a member of Company A.Chicago Light Artillery, and served through tbe four years of the war com- ing out without a scratch, and this relic of the days long gone, he says, no money would buy. One of his old comrades in Chicago offered him §100 for it, but he says that the best block of buildings would be no temptation for him to part with it. . m . Florists' Frost Bells. NE3VYORK M^Hir?^ LINES ADIRONDACK DIVISION. In Effect November} 25, 1906 8OUTH BOUND. Lve. Arr. +85e A. H. Montreal.. .. 8.20 Valleyfleia 9.23 Huntingdon... 945 Malone. 10.27 Loon LaBe .... 11.29 Gabriels 11.51 Saranac Lake. 12.05 Lve. Saranac Lake. 11.35 " Tapper Lake.. 12.40 " Fulton Chain.. 2.33 Arr. Bemsen. „... 8.40 " mica ..... ?!... 4.15 " Albany. 6 57 •' New York.... 10.00 " Syracuse 6.55 " Rochester. ... 7.39 " Buffalo I 9.30 P.M. Fr'gnt A. M. 6.45 11.25 1.30 3.25 Fr' +61 P. M :ht 12.10 L55 2.60 4.20 P. M. HOBTH BOmro. P.M. •654 P. M. 7.40 8.65 9.18 10.05 1L01 11.21 11.58 11.00 12.12 2.17 8.20 3.55 6.30 10.10 6.45 9.42 11.45 A. M. Tie World's Bmuroad Mileage. With the announcement that the 6,000 miles of railroad built in the United States last year brings the total up to 280,000 miles it is realized that this country possesses nearly half the railroad mileage of the world. A large portion of the increase in this country was in the Southwest, more or less contiguous to St. Louis. The total mileage of tbe World is about 835,060. How insignificant, in comparison to the United States are continental pretensions in this direction is revealed that Russia and Germany, vying for second place, have only 34,180 and 34,000 miles, re- spectively, to their credit. India, Austro- Hwngary and France are all tbe superiors of the United Kingdom, wbioh can only boast of 22,634 miles at metals. Begarding gro*g receipts, however, Great Britain occupies a more enviable position. While the United States totals a sum of §1,975,000,000, with receips per mile $9,300, the islands can boast of 1559,000,000, with receipts per mile §24<700; and Russia's gross receipts, with about 12,000 more miles of line than Great Britain possesses, reaches less than a third of her figure.—Kansas City Jour- nal. The A8r Cure For meningitis. That ordinary air isan effective remedy for cerebro-spinal meningitis is the sub- stance of a statement made before the Salt Lake County Medical Society at a meeting called to discuss the epidemic which has raged here since the beginning of the year. The treatment indicated has been suc- cessfully employed by Dr. Harry N. Mayo in a number of oases. It is based on the knowledge that oxygen is fatal to the bacteria which causes meningitis. The activity of the bacteria is confined to the spinal column. Dr. Mayo, as soon as possible after diagnosis, 'inserts a hypo- dermic needle into the lumbar region of the spinal cavity at the top of the ilium and extracts ten cubic centimeters of tbe cerebral fluid. He then injects three- fourths of a gram of cocaine to relieve the pain. The injection of three cubic centimeters of air completes the treat- ment. Where the conditions have been at all favorable, this treatment has been followed by rapid improvement, although a long period of rest is necessary to com- plete the cure.—Salt Lake City Cor.. Feb 38. For many months past large quantities of jewelry, women's shirt waists, pattern waists, watch movements, fancy combs and shoes coming from Syracuse and New York have been smuggled into Canada from points along the river in this section, says an Ogdensburg corres- pondent. For some time the Canadian officials have been trying hard to locate the point where they crossed the river. The goods were shipped to L'sbon and Madrid, stations on the Rutland Railroad, a few miles from this city. It was finally learned that large quantities of silk goods were being shipped from Montreal to Iroquois and smuggled across the St. Lawrence into the United States. The river between Iroquois, Ontario, and W8ddington, N. Y., was consequently patrolled carefully with the result that Richard Condor, ot Iroquois, was arrested. It is said that he received §20,000 of smuggled goods from the United States, which he shipped to two firms in Mont- real. If Yon Read This It will be to learn that the leadim, cal Writers and teachers of alitSJU! sehools of practice recorameni^l Strongest terms possible, each and, ingredient entering into the coma of Dr. Pierce's Golden M'-dicai pj£ for the cure of weak stomach, dya catarrh of stomach, "livir coaL torpid liver, or biliousness chronic fii affections, and all catarrhal dlsea^l Whatever region, name or natnreT* 1 also a specific remedy for all such<i or long standing cases of catarrhal tions and their resultants, as broi throat and lung disease (exo pt coni™. tion)accompanied with sever,, cooja^ is not so good for acute colds and CM bnt for lingering, or chronic cases? especially efficacious in prodncto? feet cures. It contains Black Chemw Golden Seal root, Bloodrom. Stones,, Mandrake root and Queen's root-J| which are highly praised as rproedi a f all thv. above mentioned yJTi- mincnt medical writer ^.-.^ VV^OIHSJ Prti. Bartholow, otJJ^ r- .. MS/ lege; Prof. Hareytff the T'nv. 0 j 1 Prof. Finlejr-BHfngwood, M. n., ni i nett Med.jCpllege, Chicago; Proti King, M. 5Lof Cincinnati; Protj M. SeudderrM. P.. of Cincinnati { Edwin iOHalC M. D., of Hahnem Med. Girflege; Chicago, and scons] otherjyTjp/laily eminent in their Bchqgjs»o? practice. 'be "Golden Medical pi?™v<>ryj<;.! § giststor like nj vrojeesvonal mrnoses. tf^ w.^^^ ... ^. .~w.~.~~. endorsflmpnTr—*"nj fnore than any numiieXJil-urdiiiarT'T" moniais. upen publicity ot h* fori is the best possible guaranty of its mend A glance at this published formula* show that "Golden Medical I) - w e contains no poisonons. harmf'i' rr habll forming drugs and no alcohol—<-h.-mici pure, triple-refined glycerine If.ng Instead. Glycerine is entin-ly '.nobjjJ tionable and besides is a most u~«-f-.1 agt" in the cure of all stomach a* v. 1: '• a* bro chial, throat and lung affection-, is the highest medical authority fori use in allsuch cases. The"Disf"\pry*^ a concentrated glyceric extract of r.atiH medicinal roots and is safe and v liatj A booklet of extracts' from » medical authorities, endorsing it- inpsg dients mailed free on request. Ad' Dr. R. V. Pi.-rcV, Buffalo, N. Y. ITOLU&E LXXII JSI^THE PALL, Itf fllatoqe f alia Published every Thursday M>-t:!r.ir b IBM PALLADIUM C O N I* (FREDERICK J FE.'.vr;.. pALLa»Il.1I BULII1M. ornerof JIalB and Catberioe Ptrwu- M&.J IEB.H*: |ne Vear, : jHonths. - . - - Sirt<tly in Advance. RATES OF ADVERTISI1 two Inches. ) inches our inches.. .ftve inches.. 3nartereol lie'.oulai'.t*' Ua.ouiss.uo, 3 ttf&l Fr'frnt Fr'gbt *655 A. M. I +681 +091 ! p. M. Lve. New York... . 8.30 I A. M. A. M. I 7 30 " Albany 11.13 | . n'05 " Buffalo 7.45 ' goo " Rochester 9.19 950 " Syracuse 11.15 11" 40 " Dttca 1.05 7.00 125 " Remsen 3.01 8.80 2° 20 Fulton Chain.. 3.15 11.10 325 " TupperLalte.. 5.10 -3.50 7.00 e"l4 Arr. Saranac Lake.. 6.05 6.20 Lve: Saranac Lake-. 5.15 5 go *; Gabriels ..... 5.54 8.52 e!o5 Loon Lake .... 8.15 9'50 6 26 Arr. Malone 7.06 1150 716 " Huntingdon... 7 38 t'fa " Valleyfleld..... 8.04 , e Arr. Montreal 9.20 930 P. M. P. M. A. M. A. M. •Dally. tDally, except Sunday. Sleeping cars on nlsht trains and parlor cars on day trains. O. F. DALY, J. F. FAIRLAMB, Passenc^r Traffic Mer. Gen'l Passenger Aet Grand Central Station, New York. F. E. BARBOUR, General Aoem, Montreal, Que. All the good qualities of Ely's Cream Balm, solid, are found in Liquid Cream Balm, which is intended for use in atomizers. That it is an unfailing cure for nasal catarrh is proved by an ever-increasing mass of testimony. It does not dry out nor rasp the tender air- passages. It allays the inflammation and goes straight to the root of the disease. Obstinate old cases have been cured in a few weeks. All druggists, 75c, includ- ing spraying tube, or mailed bv Ely Bros., 56 Warren Street, New York. ' IWK. n«s 4stt. 2mu. 3mo. SetaCh - Sl.r», gl.^ ST"T5"&i U) 1^ |J5 &6j - i'«i ;; 50 aim 4.50 oi»' 9 •S~h 3.5li 4.0H 6.00 7.51' 1L .) S11 4.* 6.0U T.5U »& 1 ' 4uu 5.uu 6 > VW 11 .i»- 16 5.0U JS.50J S.OKJ10.5U112.0U l^ U tsolumn B.UU^ lo ou w.on 10 c^mmnJ^twU^oul au»| adverttslnR at the rat*s presc rtbed Business Oaras. not exceeding Bve am iar Even MMiiiuuai ,m<r. •••••*" v »- Business notices Inserted in the loca.1 . •>I notices designed to promote Individual be charged ni the rate "I tLTT" »* B„ Une aud T£-N CKSTS for eaeb su«*« _e week; and FIVK C S M S per Une tor "AS'aSnts lor advertising are due at first lnseraoa of tbe adTertteemem. enM should be marked the length of u mi ig^ed; otherwise they win he oontmued fat the option of the publishers, anc c| SonUngly. BUSINESS DIREXT WELLB & MOOJ.^ UWKERS. BBSJ. L. WK'-LS- '"' CHARLES W . C O L 1 J3E2STTIST- 6 W. Main St. Tt-1 ' HARRY M. CHAMBE1 ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT ^™i Tintntlce. loans and r..lierii •!.». era! practice, loans and Symonds 4 A.IIVJD bic»-t. •West Mala sir"" . MaWne. •XI !•' FREDERICK G- PAD! '-^ Officii lll8t°ne block. son place. Room a. When Chloroform Was New. Here is a curious little story about Sir James Simpson, the man who In- troduced the use of chloroform into surgery, and a peril which he escaped, ag recorded by Lyon Playfalr. Simp- son when busy with his researches In- to the subject of anaesthetics called one day on Playfalr and asked if he had anything new likely to produce anaesthesia. Playfalr had just pre- pared a liquid which seemed worthy of trial. Simpson, who knew no fear, prepared lnstaatly W teat it m hM- jselfc $h# Efayiajtt retniBecl io'ftVoVr, ontl} It haa first ixafett tried, ok rShbita. * T570 were procured nad placed' tinder the effects of the anaestnetlc,' Ne)ct day Simpadttplroposed tovttHJ^'&hife' •elf. "We might as well see how thfc rabbits nave; fared," saia Pfefyfalr. They fotmd: both the <anlmais 4eaC Th« Christian 8unday. The teeplng «f Sunday, thee first day ,of the^weefc, as a sacred daif in mem- ory of the rcBUtrectloii ahot of th? de; scent of the Holy .6bo*t dates from this beginning of CjuJliBtJaWtjr. It waa called Ahe lord's day la all the cltareit- es r bnt gradually ^acquired: the name of Stm-day from: the J^toaijB, <wht> called" the first day .of tb$ Weelr dies aolis, of day aacred td'thejenn. TJhe first oniclai recognition of Sunday as a holy day la to an edict of the 2&miut Bmpeior> Con- •tajatln* In $2£ o^lerlnsf that *$t work should ce#j* in th» dtiw "on the ven- erable innd*^'* but ptanltthli neces- sary farm work to be attended to.—St Louis Bepnbllc. An electric bell tinkled sharply beside the florist's desk. *• Frostl" he said, and ran hatless to the greenhouses. "Thefires had sunk," the florist ex- plained on his return. " The watchman bad fallen asleep.* But for my frost bell Pd have lost hundreds of dollars. " Frost bells are now pretty generally used by florists and fruit growers," he went on. "An electrical contrivance is connected with a thermometer and when the mercury falls t o a certain point—you regulate this danger point to suit your- self—a bell rings a warning in your house or office, "Many a crop of winter fruit and flowers has been saved in the last year or twp by the clever Jittle frost bell."—Phila- delphia Bulletin,,.-;.. /u •iiiii'iji Siisi t ntj 11 ,T 1 1 1 ;„ Heasori for Odd Prices "There*aa reason for everything," said the dry goods merchant. ' * There's even a reas&n for o4d prices—$1*12, S&99, $8M, etc.. "The reason for these prices is that they keep the patron waiting for change, and while be waits he loofcs around, see- ing, two to one,, sottething else that be wants to bpy* ** (?dd prices, causing the customer tp e^amin^ the stock*, are responsible for some iUtefiq or twenty peieeht. of each day's sales."-- Net? OrkaM. Timea-Jimd- etoti • '•• . ' '•''.-'- '• -. ' ' •,-•,•-! -.T'.t" i- - -1 ' - - -•= O N AND AFTER October L. 1906. AND r/NTtt farther notice, trains will leave Malone dally except Sunday as follows:— GOING EAST. A?' 0 . 1 •%„* n *«""**Pi?ess connecting at Booses PointtorPlattsburgh. Through coaches to Albureh. Pnaman parlor cars and coaches Alburga to Albany and Albany to New York also to Boston via Rutland without change. SSsaO P. M.—Passenger tor Oherubusco and mtermedlate staaons. 6s45 P. HI.—Express IBaU with through •ctwohea to Alburgh, conneonng at Atourgh with Nlgitt Express tor Troy* Albany and N 5'L y £ rlt A a l l80 i 01 Boston and aU New England ?^ n ?l v ^? at ' an J- KegantPuUuuwsleepuigcara AlburghtoNew York and Boston and coaches to Troy and Boston via Rutland without change. OonneotBat Bouses Point with D. St H. O. OoTtor Plattsburgh. GOING WEST. 8:36 A. 1HI.--BI*U stopping at all stations. Motea with N. T. ft o. B. R. for Tapper Uie. potote souui and east. At Ogdensburg with terry tor Preeoott, where connection la made with through "^la^ttralljpotetawert. ' 8 »h J ll ? f^ 1? iL. JM; •!^5*P lro •• tOT Ogdensburg and the Weat, arrives Ogdensburg 8USP. a. B *«?*? P.M.--BxpressjtorNorwooa,Oe(ien»- DMB and the Wot, Arrive at Norwood 11JZ5T.B.. Ogdensburg 1&20 A. M, Tictotetoall points east and west on sale at the acres office. The running of trains on this division of the New York Central has ceased to be a thing of any kind of regularity, and many of the trains are abandoned long before they reach Massena. The time table has become a great joker and the information is about as reliable as to running time as a last year's almanac. It is reported that the postmaster at Can- ton has petitioned the authorities to have all letters forwarded by freight, as freight trains have the right of way and make better time than the mail trains.— Massena Observer. When the editor penned the above he was probably think- ing of the free passes he used to enjoy, but which the railroad has ceased to grant. » m * There are many kidney remedies but few that accomplish the result. " Pine- ules"isa kidney remedy that contains no alcohol or opiates of any kind, com- plies with the National Pure Food and Drug Law, guaranteed to give satisfac- tion. Thirty d y treatment for $1.00. Inquire about " Pineules." Sold by Hyde Drug Co. mmimm, Prescription orpr. » . » . Dennis Heals tfe«t 8kln—many Cores Heported. A Hardship. ! Favored Walter—rni. goto* to leftte here when my week Is u*. Kcgular Guest—Shi Sou get «ood pay. don't yont . •'Yea, 'bout the same's everywnere.'* "And tips bosldesr* "A good many.'I "Thcirwhat'a the matterT* "They don,'* allow no time for foto* ont to meals. 1 have to eafc here."— London Mall. Q. Ths Danosr* A lawyer white coadopting his case cited the authority of * doctor of lair yet allvo. •*My learned friend," Interrupted th» Judge, '^ott should never W upon the authority of any mw that of the dead. The living may change their minds.*'--' No* JJotslw, Th» Plrst Thoua' 1 *' ^Wlwt wanld your first thought if you ivtw to strike «il <ir la some other way feocoine suddenly -wealthy?*' "Well, I suppose,- like all th# rest of *#Hti. mr first thought would b* coa- eerafn' the Bhortest and quickest wsjr to New York. "—Chicago Record-Hsf- ald. The medic*! world Ja itirred by ths great number ol ec«m» ourss now belDgeflected with the method discovered by a prosilDens skin. speetallsW Dr. D. Q. DennU. of ehjosgp- «e»e»l year* ago Dr.]>enni» annpanoed to the medical world t b « when tbeJttn is diseased, it Is BorabJethroQihUie skin alone, and xhstif the-pwieathi ia go«d T^to otbenriss, l t l i ooesepsetotlosBtbestomsoS of a person iuSerlng from«^B^psoriiurft,orMyil(«u>d tninent. T». Dennis eonjpo-.ndtd * prescriptloo of regeUble mliuiree, pertectly Usjmlsss, »OOUI1D»- »od rotresli- ingtoUie«kln, sod qutctlj srsdloiulrjg the disease. Tbit prescription bst now been pat up in bottles *& msv be se«r«ddi«rt from druf stores. K a y woBdertal reports 1I%T» bees eotBlng in from *U psrw pt the toootry s»d soo>e rttht from this cRy astothe remarkable carat effected by Dr. Dennis's preK5rtpUoc,es»*danyTrtieeUtouee^ wim D. D. D. soap. This paper Is able to-dsy to punt the followinr.— Tbe D. t>, p . Presoriptioo may be bad at tt* Hyde Orttg Oo.'s drug store. Call and umsUfste—no one U urged to bay. T HE farm of the late Michael Daly, situated one mile west of Bombay Cbrnersi Franklin County, N. Y. oonaistlnjg-of 186 acres of good ldndi 180 acres tiuableland, can ^eep 40 head of cattlet baa 850 maple trees* five acres choice prphar^/gobd spring .water, fine hfinae^md tteras. Only one-half niile from depot,, threevfouttbs mile from church, sohool house amd factory*. Price |l6,tf00. If desired, will also sell stock now on place." A fine onrj^rtanity to buy & first- Qlaearwma^elstipoJK. Borfnrtbeepar«o- ulars inquire of Attorneys, ' « •. fttmldne 3T. A well known citizen of Eiverhead, L. I., died a few days ago, and the under- taker waited upon the doctor in attend- ance to get the customary certificate of death. The doctor was not in, so the undertaker requested the doctor's wife to inform her husband what was wanted. A little four-year-old girl was present. When the doctor came in, the little girl, instead of the wife, told the doctor of the undertaker's visit. She said, with a wise shake of her little head, " Papa, that man what buries people was here and he wants Mr. —' s ticket."—Brooklyn Eagle. «• « WILLIAM'S KIDNEY PILLS. Have you neglected vour Sidneys? Have you overworked your nervous svs an and caused trouble with your Kidneys and Bladder ? Have you pains In the loins, side, back, groins and bladder ? Have you aflabbyappearance of the face, especially under the eyes? Too frequent desire to pass urine? If so, William's Sidney < Ills will cure you. Sample Eree. By mail 50 cents. Sold by 0. W. Breed A Co. WttMAMS MFG.CO., Prop's, Cleveland, 0. In the recent ice race at Glens Falls between Blackbird and Wild Wave, the former won in straight heats, the best time being 2m. While this time does not equal the previous record made by Wild Wave of 2:14 on ice many old horse- men are of the opinion that Blackbird can lower Wild Wave's time by quite a few-seconds. While many firmly believe that Blackbird is the fastest horse on ice in the United States, and will hold the record before the season ends, the rivalry between these two fast horses is very keen, and other trials of speed will be made. PHUBST PILES? PILES! . J ^ s WJU&nja' Indian Pile Ointment win cure BBntU Bleeding, T/lceratea ano^Behtag p u k ^ n a^teM^nw!*. ."Haw «>.% Itchlngat onc&iacts as O. 5. Lawrence Malone, : N. Y. —TRY THEM— Messrs. Sherwin & Jones, dealers in coal and wood have SOME- THING N E W I N Fire KH.J- lers—144 for 2 5 cents ! Cheap. Safe and Economical. We handle the celebrated D. & H. COAL We can also supply yuur wam- Hard and WOOD. ••urnrr Main stre| buiL 'ph"n«. MEARS & COON: UMTERS. 1 East Main St., Maloi J.-3IEABS. A. K. "ATTORNET AND nao lake N. Y. BOTSFOR] COUNSELOR Al WILLIAM S. WAJ ATTORNEY AM' COUNSELOR AT ] Lake, N. Y. Personal attention piu at Plercefleld, acd Mood FausU Aitun. Lierrid N. PORTER, D. MAL"Ni. R EiST MAIN STREET. Phone 47. B. A. SOPER. R.l GRADUATE OF ROCHESTER sClKol ewf- Exclusive attention flven 'o| Won of the eyes an4 adJusUnK o Ml Flanagan MOCK, over Lipresa oin- DR. D- A. DILTZ, D] OFFICE IN THE NEW »YMi»SI>s block. West Main bvmi. oil,.* > to W:00 M-.and from 1..« I. « u CHARLES A. B U | LAWYER, 55 WEST MAIS STREET Allison Blocfc. next W '-oiirt n-use. S. D. WILLIAMS PHYSICIAN AND SCRuEON. nFJd oence No. 96 W»t MalD «r[ BUY. Hours, 1 to a P- M. ana Both Thones. FRANK E. TAY| DENTIST, HAYES BLOCK. EA?T Malone. N. Y. Th« uew Porct-uan | well as other methods of aiim«- OO YEARS' EXPimiNCE TRADE MARKS _ COMTRlOHTtAO. Anr«M>«nalii«**k*(riiaiMld«*<!HMk>nmat _._ -^—whmimrva ommanlo»- QOPM4WU1 •-Ktrnt*. .reettt* 4nt«kly UfltirMii our opinion inventi'^i UwobaWrfnt Ikitif ttrMtlr Ooofd«nU»L «ntfr«k.oli~ PatanU " inventi'^i WiwobaWrfi ltat»ttrtaUr«oMMmtUL-, •wit fnrn. OJdMt MMaer for ttmtiagUatiDvt. t*k«B throach Munn £ Co. roe«U net, wtthw« A*n% UJ tht ^^ iy*c(4l«e<4f(,i Sckwtific fldKikan. A liandiKimaIr HhutmMd wwkTr. f*r«««t Mr. estaiioti vt mnf tAemlSo loarna). Tenui n • B t frawg w m vxxmam isarjED am oftt$ropremeponw of«te StiSebfKew ITork; to me directed and delivered a««lnBt the property of ;m«n»n M..VUi«..I bare telxed upon and taken Wthr^KUtteandUiteiwSwiB-ch the said tree^ hmK.Vj^b«dp&:tot,M 8»r^OotobeO®C?r itaoe»cqulred, lnand toteafoUowtex described real taf&seonv « th« tmi door ot 'eo^ThAnw to l l t o w i r l l ^ H ^ ^ i M u s a y , Ne»Tortt,to^rtt " Vila* in and to »u that certain piece and narcei of land, aituwe m Uie town of Srtrttoru FMSH D mif»poinb>purcn»i^i!eM5S|«» Ho.one: ooml. onttot orBpttflre Pond, runnlhi-jouth elttht i«n^ elthtj-twooVeereoiand unity minute* weattwii« ajto. todjdSvlnfa; thence n ^ S t t V ^ S ^ ttm a ^ thirty « n n u » e««:«our c h f i s i W a r a ^ •ttttwartt ot 5 nips weemarked tolfteaoiti^hwe 8WtlrePoM;leVBnchalMand twenfr-three llnii PWJ»poiaSnN.-V: ^ "** gfrfc aponlHce,givejInitaht'rejlrt. Dr.^TOUams*Indian 'Sh.*^* 8 ^* »5?pareff tor Pifee and ttehtoR^ WgJJAiia M3ge. CO., Prop's. Clevelana. o. WotToo Pattlcolar. An all-round printer can jreta perrba- nent position in this office. One who has a^ record for honesty preferred.—Fort Compgtav. Stm. S fktK Of NfXV TOEK. flBKOOOi OOtTRT t o t6*«^venarn«d4erena|Uli;-. jrftur mfterthe » t ^ « ot aui iuiaK^i^wSiS^oV'Sa 4»yo|«enrlee,MKl,tne»»eolyo«r naiumto upear orjMwer.jnagBientwu he taken avaloM X M default lor loerelleldMoanded in the oooiDlalnt. ItmtttjbeiieMinuwieonawor ftwutlto, Ae«on ( Dated M Miion*. N. Y.. thlt 11th daj of iannart, B.A. BKMAN, PBUotut'* Attorney, Hatooe, N. Y. To Samuel Bv«o*. *«e«ia»«t- "*""•**• *• The mttotrnt itrinmoM U served- on TOOtarnbU- oauoo, punaaBt to a s w d n o( non. a. T. XeUon. a IwUce ot mtrvoM court, d«ed JBfch day of IvttwoitMaliftattMeoaBtrof TwSa*. Toon, 1 " iAM-L A. BSKA1I, Aft^llr &££&, lUnS A painter in Kankakee, Hi. insane because he could not understand Vhy his wages were raised from |33 to P » month, Most persons would have retained their reason by not stopping; "to eason why.' ? ^ SprlDj? winds ohap, tan and cause freckles to appear. Pinesalve Carbolizsd applied a| nijjht will relieve that burning sensation. Nature's own remedv. AtS lit© a poultice^ and 4t$w$ out in"fl»iaB»« tion. Sold by Hyde Br«g Co. jperlutpg the decreased use of eiwm* pagnein tbia country is mora apparent than real. It is possible that much of it is consumed in $t$ original form of eider. It is cheaper that way. .in 11. 1,1. III-IT j, |,ig igli^ '1 , 11^1,,, , 1 ,, „ h SarriedJaeals.laclKofexerciue are the main causes of dyspepsia. A Rings Dys- pepsia Tablet after each meal aids diges- tion, improves the appetite. Sold by Hyde Drug Co. Aptop«» 0* t*»»t New Jersey preacher's assertion that" bell is full of people that use tobacco," how long will a pipeful last do wit there? W~ THE CHIEF SEASON « g i why you should send your shirts, collars and cuffs to the Malone Steam I-aundr? is this: It is not an a n t i q u a t e d pianl- The modern, practical iaaetumjr> useS for washing and ironing actually saves wear and tear on your linen Your shirts, collars and cuffs will la»t you longer if you send them here alwa>s. FORTUNE'S rialone Steam Laundry. "jff^ B . W . BERR1 ^ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL!>R ATI over F. W. Lawrence & Co. s su^r* Makes a Bpeclalty ol drawing and I and seullnK estates. DR. J. F. WAI VETERINARY SURGEON. 100 EAST Telephone connections. Speeia dogs. KELLAS & GENJ ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELOR* ^floe over Clark S Son's st-.r* ' pie's National Bant. J. P. KKIAAS. Maiont\ N J J. %m MoCLARY & COtJNSELLORS Over People's Bank, BADGER & CA3 ATTOKVTT« AND 00UN8SaA>B tloe over J. T. McFarland'Bstore.| V°BM»st.i- Taos. CAHTWBli. COAL... $7.00. H. D. HICKOK, DENTAL OFFICE. K1M-"? BLOC TWias rea^-nabieanC an work ' GORDON H. ATTOaNE^ MALONE, iNL JB.. H. STICK] TVE AND MECHASUA| Btabie. N. V. _ __ O R. J. & A. O PHSSIOUN8 ANU s-l'Hi.&'Si Buiirv-f* >»••» OJB.ce over PtolBU. wherv nlcr. . tdione connecUout.- S. A - B E 1 & LIGHT ER CO. A.fiDK!E? AND «.' OOTUiaonae, Ma ' United Stales arc.- . Ss-F.' A' .HENRY p AND ^"R | I'WBA resldeo" s nl2fetoaU**aonM tx- u.u- WEDO it*: Everyone knows that spring is the eeaeon of Weyear when the system needg cleansing. Dade'e Little Over Ptllslre ptinting <5f all kinds and at prieee tto* are mm te make you a regaH* ewtomer. We guarantee «B%, faction in tttry ease. Poster*, Tickets, (Hreular^ it. A fW utoek of mankt-Road Warranto, Vortomjes. B e d s . <tc ••:-.. t«K PALLADIin COM PAN* ADISONOACK 1 ' " i^aAS* PBiirr.r.i -".;,..,. &,^BT. HEN O p m day"j (SOaiKMtMain! Onpoaitecon NOTICE: fi,^ TMtc4 November T S I W ' .

GOOD ROAI aii 'am y C»e*»for T«m •*•!

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Page 1: GOOD ROAI aii 'am y C»e*»for T«m •*•!

aartBtiTi -ifrnyniwrw n^nmn,. HOTi IMMIHIKIH » i ii mOrn-niiiT'Hiliqffl) - f f i r T j r " " ni rn;"i" rr . !."L JJ'.w fl1.' ''*',!" 'l'|!Jl|JtWJ|i LZL-

/

: Ttoe S los f E x t r a v a g a n t o f m i l l i o n - ' • •' '*hrea«e»,

" l a the niati&r of spending money o a fine raiment, perhaps Misa Guila Moro-sini, daughter of G, P . Morosini, banker and former partner; of Jay Gould* i s act-mittedly the moat extravagant of million­airesses," says Anna Steese Richardson id Women's Mome, Companion for March. " S h e confesses" t h a t she spends t w o hundred thousand dollars a year on. clothes alone, and her interest in life ia divided between her horseaafidtbe gowns that match her turnouts, Misa Morosini's g o w n s are* generally the sensation of the Annual Horse Show a t Madison: Sduare Garden, and a daily study for sightseers a long Bfew Yorfe's million-dollar speed­way. Every g o w n and hat she dons is built t o harmonize wi th either vehicle or harness. To harmonize with one pigskin se t o f harness she wears a princes frock of tan-colored satin chiffon. For another pigskin harness, With; blue satin rosettes and gold mountings, on chestnut horses, she wears a pale blue rough silk trimmed with Irish lace. Recently she decided that she wished to wear royal blue, s o she sent to London for matching harness; to be used when shf drives with her fa^ moos three-abreast team. The royal bine harness is of the finest kidskin, dyed to match the broadcloth of her g o w n . Her basket-weave vehicle h a s wheels of ox-blood red, and when seated in this vehicle Miss Morosini wears an onion-red chiffon satin. For each of these gowns she ha* matching hate and shoes, many of the latter dyed to order, but wi th every har­ness she uses l ines of whi te English web, and she wears only white sued gloves in elbow length."

GOOD ROAI Legislators Are Studying

the $50iOODj0Q& May Best i e Spent.

Laws of importance to Ail the People:—* Ballot Law

Changes.

T h i e v e s ' m a r k e t .

In the United States we appeal to the police or search the pawnshops for articles that have been stolen from us, bat in the c i ty of Mexico you wait until Sunday, and then hie Jaway betimes in the morn­i n g to the Public Market, or volador, just a few steps from one corner of the Great Plaza. Here you wander through narrow crooked alleys, among queer little piles of vegetables, second-hand hardware, new and old pottery, heaps of good and poor clothing, stepping oarefally all the while to keep your feet off the various wares that are spread out on the ground ia ir­regular fashion, according to the whim of the market man.

Here you may discover, openly dis­played, the silver sugar-bowl stolen from your bouse. " You must not try to con­fiscate it nor offer to prove it is yours. You sedately begin to bargin for i t , and when you have haggled the price down to what you can afford to pay, strike a bargin. band over the money and the bowl is yours again. Take a good look at the fellow who sold it to you that you may be on your guard if ever you see him about your bouse, for in all probability h. is the thief who robbed you.

Strange as it may seem, the thief is protected by an old custom, which says that if he on the Sunday morning after his oritae, display his booty in this mar­ket, he may be exempt from punishment. This old custom has given this voladar the name of "Thieves' Market."— The Travel Magazine. *, »—•

m a l o n e f t e t a l l OTartcet.

...85.00 ...4.73

. . ..Oo - ..L25 ....1.40

1.35 . . . .Lao

55c ...15.0e . ..90

rLOCB, FEED. ETC' Spring wheat flour, per Barrel. Pastry Soar, per barrel Graham, per pound Cornmeal, per owt. Feed, corn, oats, etc-, per cwt. Middlings, per ewe Bran, per owt. Oats, per bushel. Hay, per ton t

Hay, baled, per hundred Hl$b&LLXtrSOV8.

Hops >. 16@18c Potatoes,per bushel. joe Beans, per bushel • sw»5 Oranges, per dozen.. 8U@50c Lemons, per dozen 25@3ui Honey, per pound lor Batter, dairy, per pound 3ft-

" creamery, per pound. 33c Cheese, per pound. ,. ..18c Eggs, fresh, per dozen. 32c Maplesugar, per pound i0c Maple syrup, per gallon LUO Firewood, per cord, stove. 700 Kerosene oil, per gallon .&

S05A3S,«TC. Pork, per barrel 18.00 Dressed hogs, per cwt. 7.50 Beef, dressed, native, per owt.. 5.00

Western, per owt. 6.50 Hams, whole, per pound 18c Hams, sliced, per pound 20< Shoulders, per pound. ia-Sausage, per pound I0@l2c Bologna sausage, per pound. iOr Bacon, per pound I8r Corned beef, per pound 8@10< Lard, Kettle rendered i6c

compound u< Chickens. igj.

S o m e t h i n g J u s t a s Good.

The manager of a Bell telephone ex­change recently gave employment as an operator" to a young woman whose pre­vious employmentfaad been in a depart­ment store. The girl seemed so bright and willing, and possessed such a clear and distinct voice, that the manager re­solved to give her a trial. » The newcomer, who was all amiability and willingness, rapidly learned her new duties, but one day an accident occurred that betrayed her department training.

In answer to a ring, she had asked sweetly: " Number, please ?"

" Let m e have 325," said the patron. " I am sorry that 325 is busy just now,"

said the girl, " but I can let you have 324 or 326."

Buttons are a fad. Carloads of them are being sold in the shops for the decora­tion of new spring suits. They are not

„.-t>nly very large, but also exceedingly small, both extremes meeting with favor.

In the very t iny varieties, which are no larger than a pea, they are frequently set with imitation precious stones, the color either matching or being in decided con trast to the material %f the gown. Iu the larger styles there are effective re­productions of old-time miniatures f ramedin quaint sett ings.

To trim a smart.coar or suit with these ornate aco ssories will cost in the neigh­borhood of g75, since each button costs $5.—N. Y. Sun.

Got W h a t B e W o u l d K e e p .

Two London stock exchange men re­cently were dining a t a Paris restaurant, and the waiter brought in two soles, The carver politely "helped his friend to the smaller, reserving the larger for him­self.

The proceeding did not please the friend, and Be said s o i n plain terms.

" W h y , what WQU1§£ yon have done?" inquired the carver innocently.

" G i v e n yott the larger one, of course,'' was the answer.

" Well , F v e got it , haven't I ? What more* do yon want?'—London T. P.'a Weekly.

' - ' . 1 - • — ~ 4 . i

On Monday of last week, for the first t ime this winter, a show plow was. sent o a t from Oswego to work on that divi­sion of the S o m e , Watertown & Ogdens­burg Railroad; There has been little difficulty i n this. Northern, seotion, occa­sioned b y snow, in running trains this winteri

It has been just about two ypars since the Panama canal was to be constructed without delay, and here we are waiting for the appointment of somebody to suc­ceed somebody so something may be doae.—Exchange.

In the treatment of piles; it becomes necessaryto have the remedy put up in such a form that it can be applied lie the partsaffected. Mac Zan Pile ;remedy is encased in a collapsible tube with nozzle attached; It can not help but reach the' spot. Relieves 'blind; bleeding; itching and protruding . piles. - 50 cents " with-nozzle guaranteed. Try it. Sold by Hyde Drug Co.

" I write because I am impelled to do so—impelled by a power I can not resist, " says Marie CorellL, WiU an expert kindly tell us what kind of insanity thai is:?

An"Ob 16 man -iadying from blood poison from a hen peck on the tnurab. Most hen-pecked men get It in the : uieok and «Urviye. to tell about it.

Improper aqtjob of the kidneys causes backache, lumbago,, rheumatism. '-• Pine-u l e s " i s a kidpey remedy that will relieve these disease? Pleasant . t o take and guaranteed to give; satisfaction, or mofiBy refunded, " Relief in every dose,"' Sold by Hyde; Drag, Co,

3, P. Morgan is invest iag large sums In oil painting*. There is no water la them.

Subscribe for t h e PiiXAOttrlt, $1.00,

H o w to spend the faO.OOO.OOO author­ized for the improvement of highwaya in New i'ork s tate Is receiving ;a great deal of attention at the hands of the legislature. The state engineer's niap of all the counties, which in the aggre­gate s h o w s all the contemplated to-

. provements. Is Just coming from the press and- w i l l be to t h e b a n d s o f the supervisors i n each county aboftt ithls time. These maps present the results of a long and careful investigation a s to what i s needed to meet l i e waiita of the greatest number of people aha to make a most compact and service­able system of thoroughfares through­out the entire state. s

The proposed Improvements on t h e map, however, are not final, and i t Is expected that each comity, act ing through Its supervisors and represent­atives in th» legislature, wil l have ear­ly opportunity to suggest desirable changes and to present arguments in favor of their adoption before the work is actually begun.

May Change System. One year ago the proposal to put this

road construction under the manage­ment of the superintendent of public works w a s seriously brought forward and discussed. It Is renewed this year, wi th more likelihood that -favorable' action will be taken upon i t Under exist ing conditions the state engineer and surveyor has entire charge of It, so far as the state i s concerted. H e makes the plans, gives out the con­tracts, sees that they are executed, passes upon' the work at i ts comple­tion and during its progress and certi­fies as to the expense of each particu­lar highway improved. There is no check upon him from any outside source. It is the opinion of leaders in legislature that so great a work a s is involved in the expenditure of $50,-000,000 for highway improvement should be under the charge of men who have nothing to divert their a t ­tention from it and that its expendi­ture, so far as the execution of con­tracts and the sett lement of the details as to the construction and improve­ment are concerned, should be most carefully scutinlzed not only by those who may do so In the public records, but by the legislature Itself. As It stands now the expenses . for the ad­ministration of this work and for the execution, so far as it involves work by the scate engineer's department, are taken from the proceeds of the authorized bond sale. Under the pro­posed change there would be a branch of the department of public works which would devote its entire energies to highway improvement. The office force would be maintained by appro­priations specifically made for the pur­pose from year to year.

Election Law Changes. A great deal of discussion has been

heard over proposed changes in the election law. Governor Hughes in his

L first message recommended the adop-"tion of the ballot like that In use in

Massachusetts, Oregon and one or t w o other western states. On this ballot the names of the candidates for the various offices to be filled appear in groups, arranged alphabetically, w i th the name of the party or parties by which they have been nominated print­ed after them. The method of voting is to mark an X in a plain space oppo­si te each name.

In One Column Only. Hearings have been given on some

of the proposed election law amend­ments, and others are ye t to come. One change which is under serious discussion provides that the name of any candidate for any office may ap­pear upon a ballot but once. Assem­blyman Phillips of Allegany has a bill • n which a hearing has been had which proposes this change;. "Under his bil l^he party column would be re­tained, and the method of voting would be precisely the same as wi th the pres­ent New York bal lo t Should b i s bill become a law It would not be possible for a candidate nominated by any par­ty and indorsed by an independent or­ganization, as w a s the case wi th Mr. Hearst with the Democratic s tate tick­et last year, to appear in separate col­umns. Provision i s made that if a candidate is thus indorsed or nominat­ed by more than one organization his name shall appear in whatever party column be may prefer. For Instance, if Democrats and Independent leaguers >\ure both to nominate Mr. Hears t again, Mr. Hearst would be compelled to file a certificate wi th the secretary of state s tat ing under wh ich emblem he desires his name to be placed, 'and the other party desiring to vote for him would be compelled to do s o tn> der that emblem. Provision Is made that if he does not file this certificate stating his preference the secretary o f state shall make up a bal lot b y placing h i s name under the emblem of which* ever party nominated him first

Ae t o the Judiciary, Just how such a bill would work: in

all localities i s under discussion. U n ­doubtedly it would have a tendency to" prevent nominations of complete tick­e ts by independent organlzationa. For s o m e years In electing Judges o f the court of appeals Democrats and Ee-publicahs have united upon a ticket, a s Was the case when Chief Judge Cullen w a s elected. Of course if Mr.,.Phil­lips* bill had been in effect then Mr* Gulden's name would have appeared but once upon the ballot, and t h o s e , who wanted to vote, for him would, have had to do so by voting for him as a Democrat assuming that he would have stood as the candidate o f that particular party. This would not h a v e been a, serious consideration. The sen'' timent seems favorable ,tp a measure of this sort. *

Carriage*; For-8ick Voters. MJr. Phillips bas ln troducad ianother

bill amending the law of last year with, reference: to the hiring o f car­riages for conveying sick and Infirm voters; to the polling places. This bill proposes that net exceeding four car­riages: for each election district may be so employed; by any political party> Poubtlfss Ihis bill will p;ass, as the 'feeling la: general that the' prohibition against hiring carriages' for this- pur­pose last yejiu- rt'sultBd l a the practical aisfranchisenient of a COhsldernWe numhrt- who afo unable tp g o to the I.y.lliug, plaoti*. . ,j, Amending Conjtitu-tion.

' Qht-uvf the tnrtst sismlficant measures which bar? <#ojc: fccforo either hornse' k Un<> wticurmit resolution intmduceit by Assemblytnail Hammy which pro« pojfcs to .e i ia^ the method by which the ni&tty consUttttion may be amended. The•: fujPOatHi-ut&l law now provides for its own amendment fa this* tray; i. «ncarrent resolution giving « pro-poised! change must be passed by two

legislatures and; tWsu'submittea to the people at & general; election. I f a plu­ra l i ty /of v o t e s c a s t Is favorable, the change Is adopted.

O w i n g to laek o f Interest a » d lack 0* Information It hiss been a rule that proposed changes in the constitu­tion have received only a fraction Of the vote cast, for candidates t o * office, and it has been t h e rule that any

-amendiaeat once submitted to the peo­ple w a s reasonably sure to be adopted; The average voter fac ing the proposi­tion to a m e n d the constitution a s a rule votes "yes*' 'rather than "no/" s o that many amendments to the consti­tution have been adopted wbere the total vote for and against"was only a minority of the legal electors of t h e state . . A year ago Speaker WadswOrth favored a change, and a resolution w a s preparedaimilar to the one. Intro? duced by 4tesembiynMn*iBtomm th is year. Mr. Hjamm proposes, that w h e n a n amendment la submitted to the peo­ple a t a general election, before It shall b e ratified and become a part o f the organic l aw of "the state , It shall re* ceive the affirmative vote of electors a s many in number a s constitute a majority of those w h o voted for mem" bers of the assembly throughout the entire state at the election when the proposed amendment i s submitted,

Mr. Hamm'a resolution passed the assembly wi th ninety-six favorable votes and it i s believed will receive favorable action in the senate.

NO SENSE OF HUMOR. *

A Scientist's Criticism of a Comlo Book For Children.

Charles Monselet a Frenchman of letters, published a comic "scientific dictionary" for the benefit of children, who found no little amusement In his odd accounts of things In the animal world which were perfectly familiar t o them, but which were described in a rather fantastic way in M. Monselet's book.

The editor of a certain scientific jour­nal, however, w a s much surprised and shocked at M. Monselet's ignorance when he too'.: up the book, and he wrote an article about It In his paper, which ran as follows:

"A certain M. Monselet has publish­ed n dictionary for the use of children, which contains definitions showing the most extraordinary ignorance, such as the following:

" 'Sardine—A little fish without any head which lives in oil.'

"As if a fish could live without a head and In oil!

"Another definition: ' " 'Parrot—A bird somewhat resem­

bling the pigeon, generally green when it is not red or yellow or blue. Cocka­toos sometimes live to be a hundred years old, except when, they are stuff­ed, and then there Is no limit to the length of their life.'

"Now, it happens that the parrot is not a pigeon at all and never has the colors that M. Monselet gives to him, and, to short this M. .Monselet knows no more of natural history than he has grains of common sense,"

THE MALE OPERA HAT.

Why It Rises Superior to Any Passing Fashion Dictates.

Men generally protest against the changes of style in hats, and one of the sex has written to the N e w York-Mail this complaint:

Why attack as a "collapsible, many named pretender" the opera b a t or chapeau de claque?

I have such a hat and also a silk h a t in which respect I think I differ from most Gothfimites. Whenever I have an option I wear the opera rather than the other. I f s more convenient

At the theater or opera you can car­ry it better on your between the- acts promenades. If there is no rack for your hat under the seat you can tuck It in your overcoat and put i t on the floor under you without destroying i t as you would do with a silk h a t

If you put your hat in the rack un­der your sea t and then rise and stand close to it to permit a late comer to pass an opera hat suffers no damage. A silk hat would be either ruffled or crushed.

The opera hat looks as well a t all t imes as the silk hat and requires much less care. Indeed, I think it looks better. The glossy surface of a silk hat, like the glossy bosom of a stiff white sh i r t is an uncomfortable survival of the time w h e n men wore polished helmets and breastplates.

There is s o much reason'in the opera hat that men of discrimination will continue to wear I t the style o f the moment regardless.

A Dog Habit. Have yoo ever thought why I t i a that

a dog turns around and around when he jumps up on his cushion "or starts to settle himself anywhere for a nap? N o w that you are reminded you can recall that you have seen a d o g d o It many times, can't you? This habit Is about all that Is left to our tame little doggies of the- days long ago, w h e n they were a race* of wi ld animals a n d lived to the woods; Their b e d * t h e n were matted grass and leaveB, iuhl It was. t o trample enough grass andjprop-erly arrange t h e l e a y e i l a a t thettojf a l ­w a y s trod around 4 narrow circle be­fore he would l i e down. T h e dog of today keeps up t h e s a m e old h a b i t al­though there i s n o longer any iieea for I t and of cotpfge. the animal h a s n o notion why he does i t

A Bond of Sympathy. " Whi l e the n e w maid tidied the room

the btisy woman kept on writing. * -* D 0 y o n m a k e that all b u t o f yonr

o w n head^' naked Jane*

"x"es," said the bjttsy wdnwi; "My;,." said jane, a&nlringly, "yon

muirt have brauis?' *Brain»P' BlghiKi the woman ;d«-

.epohdently^ "Ofc Jane, I. hayenft »jn ounce of brain*." :; > •

For a moment Jane TigardfeJ bei; with sincere commiseration. -

"Oh. weU," she • a i d presently, Vdbn't mind what 1 wy; I ain't very amart my|ffiIfc''-~New, Sork Prew.

A Normal Disadvantage. **Wby d o reformers so often come to

grief r '*t have, often asked the question,"

answered Senator 80rf hum* '% think it must be because they take up poll-tics as an incidental diversion Instead: o f a regular business. It's/ the differ­ence b e t w w n the amateur and the pro-feMional ,"-Washington Star,

State Engineer Wants the Bar* t e t Down by iJiyil Serv­

ice

aii 'amy C»e*»for T«m • * • ! < • • A s a S r i r ^ i ,

Then He: Woulrf Appoint Numer­ous Political Friends to

• Fat Offices.

the -, Shopping Pelitenesa,

"Js'ever fioint* my dear," said mother gently.

'TJut, mamma, ' objected the little girt "suppose I don't know the name of the thtogr*

" t h e n let t b c salesman n h w y o a nil • e , has in, stock until b e ^conies t o t h e article that js> "deslrtsd."—Uev Sot*

An Inference* Pfttiier-~'YQ«Uft Up£*rten 1* gotnjr to

propose for yoariand soon. Daughter --Haw tb you]know? Ftfttoer-1 hear he hsa fceen roafcW fnqutrjpa m to my financial BtawaiBfj.-UItwfratcd Bits.

Wisdom provides things not »uperfluous.*-SoIon,

necessary,

Albany* Veh, 26. -s- State Engineer Skene Is having troubles of bis own 'with the. stajteicivil s e n Ice commission.-If he had h is way about I t the com­mission would have a comparatively easy t ime , s o far a s preparing an eligi­b l e l ist for his office i s concerned* H e will b e perfectly 'willing Oventually t o dispense wi th the c lv i l^ervlce entirely if h e keeps nj> h i s present g a i t H e thinks that the Interest of the state jrlll be better protected if the com­mission will let him select h i s o w n Uppointees without any reference to the qualifications that might be dem­onstrated by such a n examination a s the civil service law now requires.

Mr. Skene hails from Queens county, which Is the borough of Queens In Greater N e w York, where, the borough president w a s for many years Joe Cas-sidy, a Democrat Hearst man, con­tractor, political boss and an all round worker for Cassidy and his friends In polit ics.^ Mr. Cassidy w a s at Buffalo when Mr. Skene -was nominated, and there have been stories published from time to t ime ever s ince that w h e n he selected Skene he, wi th Murphy of Tammany Hall , who is in the contract­ing business himself, and "Flngy" Con-ners of Buffalo, w h o understands w h a t there is hi contracting when the con­tracts are handled properly, and Mc-Gulre of Syracuse, had his eyes on the spending of the $100,000,000 fund for canal Improvements and the $50,000,000 for good roads. ,.

Mr. Skene submitted his general proposition designed to take the starch out of the civil service, so far as his office is oncerned. on a recent date. H e asks that three additional division superintendents, a secretary and a spe­cial examiner be placed on the exempt l i s t H e asks also that the salaries of the division engineers be $4,000 per annum each. •

Mora Places Wanted. A representative of the Civil Service

Reform association appeared before the board and made a strong protest against this raid of Mr. Skene. Mr. Skene also wants to appoint a lot of additional officers. H e would like to have three confidential clerks a t $5 per day and s ix s u p e r v i s o r of highways a t $5 per day each, in addition to his divi­sion engineers. All told, his proposi­tion means an increase in bis salary list of about $24,000 annually, and this In spite of the oft repeated Democratic protest against the great expenditures in the last f e w years for state govern­m e n t H e has the men picked out whom he would like to appoint as supervisors of highways in case his application is received favorably and granted.

The state civil service commission did not act a t once on Mr. Skene's propo­sition. It considered the question some time ago. when the request w a s made, and reached- the conclusion that the law provided all the help the engineer needed and that there w a s no particu­lar reason why the civil service bars should be let down in this case.

I t i s said that Democratic politicians, such as Murphy and Cassidy, are crowding Mr. Skene very hard to sup­ply places for their favorites. They had an idea that there were over a thousand positions at their disposal, it i s said, and they were prepared to g ive an example of the "how the faithful are rewarded" Idea. Their disappoint­ment when they found" that there were less than 100 positions all told to be filled is said to have been something pathet ie Whatever recommendation the civil service board makes of course will haVe to be approved by the gov­ernor before it goes into effect

Attorney General Jackson is wil l ing to do the best he can to help out Skene, and be pas given the s tate engineer the opinion that he has the authority under the "public officers act" to get this ad­ditional help if necessary when it is not otherwise provided for.

. I n China te* loaves are need in sweep­i n g floors, bat th i s does; Hot end their utilitarian; purposes. In, rogrons where f u e l I s scarce the refuse leaves are pressed Into bricks, dried a n d used in the same taanner a s -bloOkai; of. peat. This fool ia partloularly prised for porkourlng-^ah4 t h e t e a c u r e d or tea smoked meat i s tp t h e Chinese what beachnut a n d sugar oured bacon and hams are t o n s . T h e ashes from the fuel are used a s a fertilizer.

But even before i t s use as fuel t h e ref-fuse tea serves another purpose. 'Ti»e leaves are vigorously; s tewed or al lowed to Bte^P in cold water^ in order to recover the tannic acid which t h e y con tain (about 12 per c e n t ) . This l apsed l a tanning: leather and i n t t y e i n g t e i t i l e s , J | i g i v e i # fine, permanent p u t btomtmtoiiteaiiites no mofd^nt«nd"i8nnaffectedby subl ight , bleaching or washing. : .

Sometimes t h e refuse tea leaves are used as fodder fc? farm stock-^at least pfovidipg biilk i f not nutrit ion. Again,, they may be dried, hyxed wi th the low grade, factitiously saented teas of eom--merce, and are then known a s *» l i e tea ." The decoetion resulting from s u c h . t e a cannot be far superior to one made'from, the common bay with which w e are all acquainted.

The queerest use to which brick t ea h a s been put in *ftxe Orient is in the capacity of money. I t 4 s still in circulation as a medium of exchange in the far inland Chinese t o w n s and Central Asian marts and bazaars, southward t o the Pamirs and Thibet and northward across Mon­golia to the Siberian frontier.

Between the Mongolian town of Urga and the Siberian town of Kiakta there is usually as much as half a million taels of this money in circulation. A t the latter place i t ceases t o be u~ed as currency, and enters in to the regular brick t ea trade of Siberia and Russia. A s brick t ea it i s largely used in the Russian army, by sur­veying engineers, touring theatrical com­panies, traveling hunters and sportsmen and tourists in general.—Scientific Ameri­can.

T h e S e w I m m i g r a t i o n L a w .

The new immigration measure wil l provide for very exhaustive investigation of many points. Meanwhile, great efforts are going to be made to distribute the newcomers more thoroughly throughout the country, as t o test thsir fitness t o r success, particularly in Southern agri­culture and industry. A t present we are receiving immigrants at the rate of con­siderably more than a million a year, one-quarter of them coming from Italy, an­other quarter from the races of Austria-Hungary, another quarter from Russia, and the remaining quarter from Ger­many, Scandinavia, the British Islands, and scattered sources. The .situation re­quires the most exhaust ive study and an­alysis. If these new factors that make up the bulk of our immigration should be sifted or restricted in some radical fash­ion, public opinion will support Congress in legislation after the argument has been sustained by a showing of unde­niable facts. A t present the country is in great need of labor, and a good kind of immigration is welcome. 'But in the long run our industrial l i fe ' itself, as well as our social and political institutions, must depend upon the character ,of American citizenship, and i t would be a fearful mistake to bring here classes of people permanently undesirable in vast numbers merely to meet a temporary de­mand in the labor market.—American Monthly Review of Reviews for March.

" T h e Best i s None Too Goodi'»

This applies t o

As wel l a s anyth ing e l se .

If You Want THE BEST

Apply To

S.&BK1NN£R The Leading Fire Insur­ance Agent of Northern New York. : : : :

None ba t the

Strongest and Best Companies R e p r e s e n t e d .

II0RT0S BLOCK, MAIN STREET,

Malone N. Y.

John T. Connell, of Cartbage, has a pipe which he carved out of laurel root while hi was in the army and which is a very interesting souvenir of the civil war. The wood was obtained on Lookout Mountain, and he whittled it out while in camp in the winter of 1864 with a jaokkhife and a needle. It is a fine piece of wood oarv-ing. On the front of the bowl is carved the Star Spangled Banner, a fort and battery, the American eagle holding in its beak a stsamer, on which is out the words, " Union and MoCIellan," showing Mr. Council's preference for the pet of the army. Around the sides and on the face of the bowl is carved in raised letters the names of all the battles in which Mr, Connell took part with his battery. The names read, in rotation, Fort Donaldson, Shiloh, Cornith, Chickasaw, Bayou, Arkansas Post. Champion Hills, Vioks-burg, Jackson, CbafSanooga, Big Shanty, Beseoa, Dallas and Kenesaw Mountain. These names are all put on with a neat­ness that would do credit to an artist of tbe first magnitude. The whole is beau­tified by the laurel leaf out .in between the words. Besides the names of the battles on each side of the base of the stem holder are the Masonio 'emblems. Mr. Connell was a member of Company A .Chicago Light Artillery, and served through tbe four years of the war com­ing out without a scratch, and this relic of the days long gone, he says, no money would buy. One of his old comrades in Chicago offered him §100 for it , but he says that the best block of buildings would be no temptation for him to part with it.

. m . F l o r i s t s ' F r o s t B e l l s .

NE3VYORK M^Hir?^

LINES

A D I R O N D A C K DIVISION.

In Effect November} 25, 1 9 0 6

8OUTH BOUND.

Lve.

Arr.

+85e A. H.

Montreal.. . . 8.20 Valleyfleia 9.23 Huntingdon... 945 Malone. 10.27 Loon LaBe.... 11.29 Gabriels 11.51 Saranac Lake. 12.05

Lve. Saranac Lake. 11.35 " Tapper Lake.. 12.40 " Fulton Chain.. 2.33

Arr. Bemsen. „ . . . 8.40 " m i c a . . . . . ? ! . . . 4.15 " Albany. 6 57 •' New York.... 10.00 " Syracuse 6.55 " Rochester. . . . 7.39 " Buffalo I 9.30

P.M.

Fr'gnt

A. M.

6.45 11.25 1.30 3.25

Fr' +61

P. M

:ht

12.10 L55 2.60

4.20

P. M.

HOBTH BOmro.

P.M.

•654 P. M. 7.40 8.65 9.18

10.05 1L01 11.21 11.58 11.00 12.12 2.17 8.20 3.55 6.30

10.10 6.45 9.42

11.45 A. M.

T i e W o r l d ' s B m u r o a d M i l e a g e .

W i t h the announcement that t h e 6,000 miles of railroad built in the United States last year brings the total u p t o 280,000 miles it is realized that th i s country possesses nearly half the railroad mileage of the world. A large portion of the increase in this country was in the Southwest, more or less contiguous t o St. Louis. The total mi leage of tbe World i s about 835,060.

H o w insignificant, in comparison to the United States are continental pretensions in this direction i s revealed that Russia and Germany, vy ing for second place, have only 34,180 and 34,000 miles, re­spectively, to their credit. India, Austro-Hwngary and France are all tbe superiors of t h e Uni ted Kingdom, wbioh can only boast of 22,634 miles at metals .

Begarding gro*g receipts, however, Great Britain occupies a more enviable position. While the United States totals a sum of §1,975,000,000, with receips per mile $9,300, the islands can boast of 1559,000,000, with receipts per mile §24<700; and Russia's gross receipts, with about 12,000 more miles of line than Great Britain possesses, reaches less than a third of her figure.—Kansas City Jour­nal.

T h e A8r Cure F o r m e n i n g i t i s .

That ordinary air i san effective remedy for cerebro-spinal meningit is is the sub­stance of a statement made before the Salt Lake County Medical Society at a meet ing called to discuss the epidemic which has raged here s ince the beginning of the year.

The treatment indicated has been suc­cessfully employed by Dr. Harry N. Mayo in a number of oases. It is based on the knowledge that oxygen is fatal to the bacteria which causes meningitis. The act iv i ty of the bacteria is confined to the spinal column. Dr. Mayo, as soon as possible after diagnosis, 'inserts a hypo­dermic needle into the lumbar region of the spinal cavity at the top of the ilium and extracts ten cubic centimeters of tbe cerebral fluid. He then injects three-fourths of a gram of cocaine to relieve the pain. The injection of three cubic centimeters of air completes the treat­ment. Where the conditions have been at all favorable, this treatment has been followed by rapid improvement, although a long period of rest is necessary to com­plete the cure.— Salt Lake City Cor.. Feb 38.

For many months past large quantities of jewelry , women's shirt waists, pattern waists , watch movements, fancy combs and shoes coming from Syracuse and New York have been smuggled into Canada from points along the river in this section, says an Ogdensburg corres­pondent. For some time the Canadian officials have been trying hard to locate the point where they crossed the river. The goods were shipped to L'sbon and Madrid, stations on the Rutland Railroad, a few miles from this city. It was finally learned that large quantities of silk goods were being shipped from Montreal to Iroquois and smuggled across the St. Lawrence into the United States. The river between Iroquois, Ontario, and W8ddington, N. Y., was consequently patrolled carefully with the result that Richard Condor, ot Iroquois, was arrested. It is said that he received §20,000 of smuggled goods from the United States, which h e shipped to two firms in Mont­real.

If Yon Read This I t will be to learn that the leadim, cal Writers and teachers of alitSJU! sehools of practice recorameni^l Strongest terms possible, each and, ingredient entering into the coma of Dr. Pierce's Golden M'-dicai pj£ for the cure of weak stomach, dya catarrh of stomach, "livir coaL torpid liver, or biliousness chronic fii affections, and all catarrhal dlsea^l Whatever region, name or natnreT*1

also a specific remedy for all such<i or long standing cases of catarrhal tions and their resultants, as broi throat and lung disease (exo pt coni™. tion)accompanied with sever,, cooja^ is not so good for acute colds and CM bnt for lingering, or chronic cases? especially efficacious in prodncto? feet cures. I t contains Black Chemw Golden Seal root, Bloodrom. Stones,, Mandrake root and Queen's root-J| which are highly praised as rproediaf all thv. above mentioned yJTi-

mincnt medical wri ter .-. VV OIHSJ Prt i . Bartholow, otJJ^ r- .. M S / lege; Prof. Hareytff the T'nv. 0j 1 Prof. Finlejr-BHfngwood, M. n., ni i nett Med.jCpllege, Chicago; Proti King, M. 5 L o f Cincinnati; Protj M. SeudderrM. P . . of Cincinnati • { Edwin i O H a l C M. D., of Hahnem Med. Girflege; Chicago, and scons] otherjyTjp/laily eminent in their Bchqgjs»o? practice.

'be "Golden Medical pi?™v<>ryj<;.!

§giststor like nj vrojeesvonal

mrnoses. t f^ w. ^^ .. . ^. .~w.~.~~. endorsflmpnTr—*"nj fnore than any numiieXJil-urdiiiarT'T" moniais. upen publicity ot h* fori is the best possible guaranty of its mend A glance at this published formula* show that "Golden Medical I) - w e contains no poisonons. harmf'i' rr habll forming drugs and no alcohol—<-h.-mici pure, triple-refined glycerine If.ng Instead. Glycerine is entin-ly '.nobjjJ tionable and besides is a most u~«-f-.1 agt" in the cure of all stomach a* v. 1: '• a* bro chial, throat and lung affection-, is the highest medical authority fori use in al lsuch cases. The"Disf"\pry*^ a concentrated glyceric extract of r.atiH medicinal roots and is safe and v liatj

A booklet of extracts' from » medical authorities, endorsing it- inpsg dients mailed free on request. Ad' Dr. R. V. Pi.-rcV, Buffalo, N. Y.

ITOLU&E LXXII

JSI^THE PALL,

Itf fllatoqe f alia Published every Thursday M>-t:!r.ir b

IBM P A L L A D I U M C O N I*

(FREDERICK J FE.'.vr;..

p A L L a » I l . 1 I B U L I I 1 M . ornerof JIalB and Catberioe Ptrwu- M&..J

I E B . H * : | n e Vear ,

: jHonths . - . - -Sirt<tly in Advance .

R A T E S OF A D V E R T I S I 1

two Inches. ) inches

our inches.. .ftve inches.. 3nartereol lie'.oulai'.t*'

Ua.ouiss.uo, 3

ttf&l Fr'frnt Fr'gbt *655 A. M. I +681 +091 ! p. M.

Lve. New York... . 8.30 I A. M. A. M. I 7 30 " Albany 11.13 | . n'05 " Buffalo 7.45 ' goo " Rochester 9.19 950 " Syracuse 11.15 11" 40 " Dttca 1.05 7.00 125 " Remsen 3.01 8.80 2° 20

Fulton Chain.. 3.15 11.10 325 " TupperLalte.. 5.10 -3.50 7.00 e"l4

Arr. Saranac Lake.. 6.05 6.20 Lve: Saranac Lake-. 5.15 5 go

*; Gabrie l s . . . . . 5.54 8.52 e!o5 Loon Lake. . . . 8.15 9'50 6 26

Arr. Malone 7.06 1150 716 " Huntingdon... 7 38 t'fa " Valleyfleld..... 8.04 , e ' «

Arr. Montreal 9.20 930 P. M. P. M. A. M. A. M.

•Dally. tDally, except Sunday. Sleeping cars on nlsht trains and parlor cars on

day trains. O. F. DALY, J. F. FAIRLAMB,

Passenc^r Traffic Mer. Gen'l Passenger Aet Grand Central Station, New York.

F. E. BARBOUR, General Aoem, Montreal, Que.

A l l t h e g o o d q u a l i t i e s of Ely's Cream Balm, solid, are found in Liquid Cream Balm, which is intended for use in atomizers. That it is an unfailing cure for nasal catarrh is proved by an ever-increasing mass of testimony. It does not dry out nor rasp the tender air-passages. It allays the inflammation and goes straight to the root of the disease. Obstinate old cases have been cured in a few weeks. All druggists, 7 5 c , includ­ing spraying tube, or mailed bv Ely Bros., 56 Warren Street, New York. '

IWK. n«s 4stt. 2mu. 3mo. SetaCh - Sl.r», g l . ^ ST"T5"&i U) 1^ |J5 &6j

- i'«i ;; 50 aim 4.50 oi»' 9 •S~h 3.5li 4.0H 6.00 7.51' 1L .) S11 4 . * 6.0U T.5U »&1 ' 4uu 5.uu 6 > VW 11 .i»- 16

„ 5.0U JS.50J S.OKJ10.5U112.0U l^ U tsolumn B.UU lo ou w.on

10 c^mmnJ^twU^oul a u » | adverttslnR at the rat*s presc rtbed

Business Oaras. not exceeding Bve am iar Even MMiiiuuai ,m<r. •••••*"v»-Business notices Inserted in the loca.1 . •>I

notices designed to promote Individual be charged ni the rate "I tLTT" »*

B„ Une aud T£-N CKSTS for eaeb s u « * « _ e week; and FIVK C S M S per Une tor " A S ' a S n t s lor advertising are due at

first lnseraoa of tbe adTertteemem. enM should be marked the length of u mi

ig^ed; otherwise they win he oontmued f a t the option of the publishers, anc c|

SonUngly.

BUSINESS DIREXT

W E L L B & M O O J . ^

UWKERS.

BBSJ. L. WK'-LS- '"'

C H A R L E S W . C O L 1 J 3 E 2 S T T I S T -

6 W. Main St. Tt-1'

H A R R Y M. CHAMBE1 ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT

^™i Tintntlce. loans and r..lierii •!.». era! practice, loans and Symonds 4 A.IIVJD bic»-t. • •West Mala sir"" . MaWne.

• X I ! • '

F R E D E R I C K G- PAD!

' - ^ Officii lll8t°ne block. son place. Room a.

When Chloroform Was New. Here is a curious little story about

Sir J a m e s Simpson, the man w h o In­troduced the use of chloroform into surgery, and a peril which h e escaped, ag recorded by Lyon Playfalr. Simp­son when busy w i t h h i s researches In­to the subject of anaesthetics called one day on Playfalr a n d asked i f h e had anything n e w likely to produce anaesthesia. Playfalr had just pre­pared a liquid which seemed worthy of trial. Simpson, w h o k n e w n o fear, prepared lnstaatly W teat it m hM-jselfc $h# Efayiajtt retniBecl io'ftVoVr, ontl} It haa first ixafett tried, ok rShbita. * T570 were procured nad placed' tinder the effects of the anaestnetlc,' Ne)ct day Simpadttplroposed tovttHJ^'&hife' •elf. "We might as well see how thfc rabbits nave; fared," saia Pfefyfalr. They f otmd: both the <anlmais 4eaC

Th« Christian 8unday. T h e t e e p l n g « f Sunday, thee first day

,of the^weefc, a s a sacred daif in mem­ory o f the rcBUtrectloii ahot of t h ? de ; scent o f the H o l y .6bo*t dates from this beginning of CjuJliBtJaWtjr. I t waa called Ahe l o r d ' s day l a al l the cltareit-e s r bnt gradually ^acquired: t h e n a m e o f Stm-day from: the J^toaijB, <wht> called" t h e first day .of tb$ Weelr dies aolis, o f day aacred td'thejenn. TJhe first oniclai recognition of Sunday a s a holy day la to an edict of the 2&miut Bmpeior> Con-•tajatln* In $2£ o^lerlnsf t h a t *$t work should c e # j * i n th» d t i w "on t h e ven­erable innd*^'* b u t p t a n l t t h l i neces­sary farm work to be attended to.—St Louis Bepnbllc.

A n electric bell t inkled sharply beside the florist's desk.

*• Frostl" he said, and ran hatless to the greenhouses.

" T h e f i r e s had sunk," the florist ex­plained on his return. " The watchman bad fallen asleep.* But for m y frost bell Pd have lost hundreds of dollars.

" Frost bells are now pretty generally used by florists and fruit growers," he w e n t on. " A n electrical contrivance is connected with a thermometer and when the mercury falls to a certain point—you regulate this danger point to suit your­self—a bell rings a warning in your house or office,

" M a n y a crop of winter fruit and flowers has been saved in the last year or twp by the clever Jittle frost bell."—Phila­delphia Bulletin,,.-;..

/u •iiiii'iji • Siisi t ntj 11 ,T 1 1 1 ;„

Heasor i for O d d P r i c e s

"There*aa reason for everything ," said the dry goods merchant. ' * There's even a reas&n for o4d prices—$1*12, S&99, $8M, e t c . .

" T h e reason for these prices is that they keep t h e patron wait ing for change, and while b e waits h e loofcs around, see­ing, t w o to one,, sot te thing else that b e wants to bpy*

** (?dd prices, causing the customer tp e^amin^ the stock*, are responsible for some iUtefiq or t w e n t y p e i e e h t . of each day's sales."--Net? OrkaM. Timea-Jimd-etoti • '•• . ' ' • ' ' . - ' - '• -. ' ' • • , - • , • - ! - . T ' . t " i- - -1 ' - - • - • =

ON AND AFTER October L. 1906. AND r/NTtt farther notice, trains will leave Malone dally

except Sunday as follows:— GOING EAST.

A ? ' 0 . 1 •%„* n*«""**Pi?ess connecting at Booses Point tor Plattsburgh. Through coaches to Albureh. Pnaman parlor cars and coaches Alburga to Albany and Albany to New York also to Boston via Rutland without change.

SSsaO P . M.—Passenger tor Oherubusco and mtermedlate staaons.

6s45 P . HI.—Express IBaU with through •ctwohea to Alburgh, conneonng at Atourgh with Nlgitt Express tor Troy* Albany and N 5'L y £ r l t A a l l 8 0 i 0 1 Boston and aU New England ?^ n ? l v ^? a t ' a n J- KegantPuUuuwsleepuigcara Alburgh to New York and Boston and coaches to Troy and Boston via Rutland without change. OonneotBat Bouses Point with D. St H. O. OoTtor Plattsburgh.

GOING WEST. 8:36 A . 1HI.--BI*U stopping at all stations.

Motea with N. T. ft o. B. R. for Tapper Uie.

potote souui and east. At Ogdensburg with terry tor Preeoott, where connection la made with through " ^ l a ^ t t r a l l j p o t e t a w e r t . ' 8

» h J l l ? f ^ 1 ? i L . J M ; • ! ^ 5 * P l r o • • tOT Ogdensburg and the Weat, arrives Ogdensburg 8USP. a . B

*«?*? P.M.--BxpressjtorNorwooa,Oe(ien»-DMB and the Wot, Arrive at Norwood 11 J Z 5 T . B . . Ogdensburg 1&20 A. M,

Tictote to all points east and west on sale at the acres office.

The running of trains on this division of the New York Central has ceased to be a thing of any kind of regularity, and many of the trains are abandoned long before they reach Massena. The t ime table has become a great joker and the information is about as reliable as to running time as a last year's almanac. It is reported that the postmaster at Can­ton has petitioned the authorities to have all letters forwarded by freight, as freight trains have the right of way and make better t ime than the mail trains.— Massena Observer. When the editor penned the above he was probably think­ing of the free passes he used to enjoy, but which the railroad has ceased to grant.

» m *

There are many kidney remedies but few that accomplish the result. " Pine-u l e s " i s a kidney remedy that contains no alcohol or opiates of any kind, com­plies with the National Pure Food and Drug Law, guaranteed to give satisfac­tion. Thirty d y treatment for $1.00. Inquire about " Pineules." Sold by Hyde Drug Co.

mmimm, P r e s c r i p t i o n orpr. » . » . D e n n i s H e a l s

• tfe«t 8k ln—many Cores H e p o r t e d .

A Hardship. ! Favored Walter—rni. goto* to leftte

here w h e n my week Is u*. Kcgular Guest—Shi Sou g e t «ood

pay. don't yont . •'Yea, 'bout the same's everywnere.'* "And tips bosldesr* "A good many .'I "Thcirwhat'a the matterT* "They don,'* allow no time for foto*

ont to meals. 1 have t o eafc here."— London Mall.

Q. Ths Danosr*

A lawyer white coadopting his case cited the authority o f * doctor o f l a i r yet al lvo.

•*My learned friend," Interrupted th» Judge, '^ott should never W upon the authority o f any mw t h a t of the dead. The l iv ing may change their minds.*'--' No* JJotslw,

Th» Plrst Thoua'1*' ^Wlwt wanld l « your first thought if

you i v t w to strike «il <ir la some other w a y feocoine suddenly -wealthy?*'

"Well, I suppose,- l ike all th# rest o f *#Hti. mr first thought would b * coa-eerafn' the Bhortest and quickest wsjr to N e w York. "—Chicago Record-Hsf-ald.

The medic*! world Ja itirred by ths great number ol ec«m» ourss now belDgeflected with the method discovered by a prosilDens skin. speetallsW Dr. D. Q. DennU. of ehjosgp- «e»e»l year* ago Dr.]>enni» annpanoed to the medical world tb« when tbeJttn is diseased, it Is BorabJethroQihUie skin alone, and xhstif the-pwieathi ia go«d T ^ t o otbenriss, l t l i ooesepsetotlosBtbestomsoS of a person iuSerlng from«^B^psoriiurft,orMyil(«u>d tninent.

T». Dennis eonjpo-.ndtd * prescriptloo of regeUble mliuiree, pertectly Usjmlsss, »OOUI1D»- »od rotresli-ingtoUie«kln, sod qutctlj srsdloiulrjg the disease. Tbit prescription bst now been pat up in bottles *& msv be se«r«ddi«rt from druf stores.

K a y woBdertal reports 1I%T» bees eotBlng in from *U psrw pt the toootry s»d soo>e rttht from this cRy as to the remarkable carat effected by Dr. Dennis's preK5rtpUoc,es»*danyTrtieeUtouee^ wim D. D. D. soap. This paper Is able to-dsy to punt the followinr.—

Tbe D. t>, p. Presoriptioo may be bad at tt* Hyde Orttg Oo.'s drug store. Call and umsUfste—no one U urged to bay.

TH E farm of the late Michael Daly, s i tuated one mi le west of Bombay Cbrnersi Franklin County, N . Y.

oonaistlnjg-of 186 acres o f good ldndi 180 acres t i u a b l e l a n d , c a n ^eep 40 head of cat t le t baa 850 maple trees* five acres choice prphar^/gobd spring .water, fine hfinae^md tteras. Only one-half nii le from depot, , threevfouttbs mi l e from church, sohool house amd factory*. Price |l6,tf00. I f desired, wi l l also sel l s tock now on place." A fine onrj^rtanity t o b u y & first-Qlaearwma^elstipoJK. B o r f n r t b e e p a r « o -ulars inquire of

A t t o r n e y s , ' « •. fttmldne W» 3T.

A well known citizen of Eiverhead, L. I . , died a few days ago, and the under­taker waited upon the doctor in attend­ance to get the customary certificate of death. The doctor was not in , so the undertaker requested the doctor's wife to inform her husband what was wanted. A little four-year-old girl was present. When the doctor came in, the little girl, instead of the wife, told the doctor of the undertaker's visit. She said, with a wise shake of her little head, " Papa, that man what buries people was here and he wants Mr. —'s ticket."—Brooklyn Eagle.

« • «

W I L L I A M ' S K I D N E Y P I L L S .

Have you neglected vour Sidneys? Have you overworked your nervous svs an and caused trouble with your Kidneys and Bladder ? Have you pains In the loins, side, back, groins and bladder ? Have you a flabby appearance of the face, especially under the eyes? Too frequent desire to pass urine? If so, William's Sidney < Ills will cure you. Sample Eree.

By mail 50 cents. Sold by 0. W. Breed A Co. WttMAMS MFG.CO., Prop's, Cleveland, 0.

In the recent ice race a t Glens Falls between Blackbird and Wild Wave, the former won in straight heats, the best t ime being 2m. Whi le this t ime does not equal the previous record made by Wild Wave of 2:14 on ice many old horse­men are of t h e opinion that Blackbird can lower Wild Wave's t ime by quite a few-seconds. While many firmly believe that Blackbird is the fastest horse on ice in the United States , and will hold the record before the season ends, the rivalry between these t w o fast horses i s very keen, and other trials of speed wi l l b e made.

P H U B S T P I L E S ? P I L E S !

.J^s WJU&nja' Indian Pile Ointment win cure BBntU Bleeding, T/lceratea ano^Behtag p u k ^ n a ^ t e M ^ n w ! * . ."Haw «>.% Itchlngat onc&iacts as

O. 5. Lawrence Malone, : N. Y.

— T R Y T H E M —

Messrs. Sherwin & Jones, dealers in coal and wood have S O M E ­T H I N G N E W I N Fire KH.J-l e r s — 1 4 4 for 2 5 cents ! Cheap. Safe and Economical.

W e handle the celebrated

D. & H. COAL W e can also supply yuur wam-

Hard and

WOOD.

••urnrr Main stre| buiL 'ph"n«.

MEARS & COON:

UMTERS. 1 E a s t Main St., Maloi J.-3IEABS.

A. K. "ATTORNET AND

nao l a k e N. Y.

BOTSFOR] COUNSELOR Al

W I L L I A M S. WAJ ATTORNEY AM' COUNSELOR AT ]

Lake, N. Y. Personal attention p i u at Plercefleld, acd Mood

FausU Aitun. Lierrid

N. PORTER, D. MAL"Ni.

R EiST MAIN STREET.

Phone 47.

B . A . S O P E R . R . l GRADUATE OF ROCHESTER s C l K o l

ewf- Exclusive attention flven ' o | Won of the eyes an4 adJusUnK o Ml Flanagan MOCK, over Lipresa oin-

DR. D- A. DILTZ, D] OFFICE IN THE NEW »YMi»SI>s

block. West Main bvmi. oil,.* > to W:00 M-.and from 1..« I . « u

C H A R L E S A. B U | LAWYER, 55 WEST MAIS STREET

Allison Blocfc. next W '-oiirt n-use.

S. D. WILLIAMS PHYSICIAN AND SCRuEON. nFJd

oence No. 96 W»t MalD «r[ BUY. Hours, 1 to a P- M. ana Both Thones.

FRANK E. T A Y | DENTIST, HAYES BLOCK. EA?T

Malone. N. Y. Th« uew Porct-uan | well as other methods of aiim«-

OO Y E A R S ' E X P i m i N C E

T R A D E M A R K S

_ COMTRlOHTtAO. Anr«M>«nalii«**k*(riiaiMld«*<!HMk>nmat _._ -^—whmimrva

ommanlo»-QOPM4WU1 •-Ktrnt*.

.reettt*

4nt«kly UfltirMii our opinion inventi'^i UwobaWrfnt Ikitif ttrMtlr Ooofd«nU»L «ntfr«k.oli~ PatanU "

inventi'^i WiwobaWrfi ltat»ttrtaUr«oMMmtUL-, •wit fnrn. OJdMt MMaer forttmtiagUatiDvt.

t*k«B throach Munn £ Co. roe«U net, wtthw« A*n% UJ t h t ^ ^

iy*c(4l«e<4f(,i

Sckwtific fldKikan. A liandiKimaIr HhutmMd wwkTr. f*r«««t Mr. estaiioti vt mnf tAemlSo loarna). Tenui n •

B t frawg w m vxxmam isarjED am • of tt$ ropreme ponw of «te StiSebfKew ITork;

to me directed and delivered a««lnBt the property of ;m«n»n M..VUi«..I bare telxed upon and taken Wthr^KUtteandUiteiwSwiB-ch the said tree^ hmK.Vj^b«dp&:tot,M 8»r^OotobeO®C?r itaoe»cqulred, lnand to tea foUowtex described real

taf&seonv « th« tmi door ot a » 'eo^ThAnw to l l t o w i r l l ^ H ^ ^ i M u s a y , Ne»Tortt,to^rtt "

Vila* in and to »u that certain piece and narcei of land, aituwe m Uie town of Srtrttoru F M S H D

mif»poinb>purcn»i^i!eM5S|«» Ho.one: ooml.

onttot orBpttflre Pond, runnlhi-jouth elttht i « n ^

elthtj-twooVeereoiand unity minute* weattwii« a j t o . todjdSvlnfa; thence n ^ S t t V ^ S ^ ttm a ^ thirty « n n u » e««:«our c h f i s i W a r a ^ •ttttwartt o t 5 nips weemarked tolfteaoiti^hwe

8WtlrePoM;leVBnchalMand twenfr-three llnii

PWJ»poiaSnN.-V: ^ "** gfrfc

aponlHce,givejInitaht'rejlrt. Dr. TOUams*Indian ' S h . * ^ * 8 ^ * »5?pareff tor Pifee and ttehtoR^

WgJJAiia M3ge. CO., Prop's. Clevelana. o .

W o t T o o P a t t l c o l a r .

An all-round printer can jreta perrba-nent position in this office. One who has a^ record for honesty preferred.—Fort Compgtav. Stm.

S fktK Of NfXV TOEK. flBKOOOi OOtTRT

t o t6*«^venarn«d4erena|Uli;- .

jrftur

mfterthe » t ^ « ot aui iu iaK^i^wSiS^oV'Sa 4»yo|«enrlee,MKl,tne»»eolyo«r naiumto upear orjMwer.jnagBientwu he taken avaloM X M default lor loerelleldMoanded in the oooiDlalnt.

ItmtttjbeiieMinuwieonawor ftwutlto, Ae«on

( Dated M Miion*. N. Y.. thlt 11th daj of iannart,

B.A. BKMAN, PBUotut'* Attorney, Hatooe, N. Y. To Samuel Bv«o*. *«e«ia»«t- "*""•**• *• The mttotrnt itrinmoM U served- on TOO tar nbU-

oauoo, punaaBt to a s w d n o( non. a. T. XeUon. a IwUce ot * » mtrvoM court, d«ed U» JBfch day of

IvttwoitMaliftattMeoaBtrof TwSa*. Toon, 1 " iAM-L A. BSKA1I, Aft^llr &££&, l U n S

A painter in Kankakee, Hi. insane because he could not understand Vhy his wages were raised from | 3 3 to P » month, Most persons would have retained their reason by not stopping; " t o

eason why.'?

^ SprlDj? winds ohap, tan and cause freckles to appear. Pinesalve Carbolizsd applied a | nijjht will relieve that burning sensation. Nature's o w n remedv. AtS l it© a poultice^ and 4t$w$ out in"fl»iaB»« tion. Sold by Hyde B r « g Co.

jperlutpg the decreased use of e i w m * p a g n e i n tbia country is mora apparent than real. It is possible that much of it i s consumed in $t$ original form of eider. I t is cheaper that way .

. in 11. 1,1. III-IT j , |,ig igl i^ '1 , 11 1,,, , 1 , , „ h

SarriedJaeals . laclKofexerciue are the main causes of dyspepsia. A R i n g s Dys­pepsia Tablet after each meal aids diges­tion, improves t h e appetite. Sold by Hyde Drug Co.

Aptop«» 0* t*»»t New Jersey preacher's assertion t h a t " bell i s full of people that use tobacco," h o w long will a pipeful last do wit there?

W~ T H E C H I E F S E A S O N « g i

why you should send your shirts, collars and cuffs to the Malone Steam I-aundr? is this: It is not an antiquated pianl-The modern, practical iaaetumjr> useS for washing and ironing actually saves wear and tear on your linen Your shirts, collars and cuffs will la»t you longer if you send t h e m here alwa>s.

FORTUNE'S rialone Steam Laundry.

"jff^ B . W . B E R R 1 ^ATTORNEY AND COUNSEL!>R ATI

over F. W. Lawrence & Co. s su^r* Makes a Bpeclalty ol drawing and I and seullnK estates.

DR. J . F . WAI VETERINARY SURGEON. 100 EAST

Telephone connections. Speeia dogs.

KELLAS & GENJ ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELOR* ^floe over Clark S Son's st-.r* ' pie's National Bant.

J. P. KKIAAS. Maiont\ N J

J.

%m

MoCLARY & C O t J N S E L L O R S

Over People's Bank,

B A D G E R & CA3 ATTOKVTT« AND 00UN8SaA>B

tloe over J. T. McFarland'Bstore.| V°BM»st.i- Taos. CAHTWBli.

COAL... $7.00.

H. D. HICKOK, DENTAL OFFICE. K1M-"? BLOC

TWias rea^-nabieanC an work

' GORDON H. ATTOaNE^

MALONE,

i N L

JB.. H. STICK] TVE AND MECHASUA|

Btabie. N. V. _ __

O R. J. & A. O

PHSSIOUN8 ANU s-l'Hi.&'Si Buiirv-f* >»••» OJB.ce over

Pto lBU. wherv nlcr. . tdione connecUout.-

S . A- B E 1

&

LIGHT ER CO.

A . f i D K ! E ? AND «.' OOTUiaonae, Ma ' United Stales a r c . -

. Ss-F.' A'

. H E N R Y p AND ^"R|

I'WBA resldeo" s

nl2fetoaU**aonM tx- u.u-

W E D O

it*:

Everyone knows that spring i s the eeaeon of W e y e a r when t h e sys tem needg cleansing. Dade'e Little O v e r P t l l s l r e

ptinting <5f all kinds and at prieee tto* are mm te make you a regaH* ewtomer. We guarantee « B % , faction in tttry ease.

Poster*, Tickets, (Hreular^ i t . A fW utoek of mankt-Road Warranto, Vortomjes. Beds. <tc ••:-..

t « K P A L L A D I i n COM PAN*

ADISONOACK 1 ' " i ^ a A S * PBiirr.r.i

-".;,..,. &, BT. H E N

O p m day"j

(SOaiKMtMain! Onpoaitecon

NOTICE: fi,^

TMtc4 November T S I W ' .