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JUDD, ATTORNEYS otLajv. Thomas N.Jtfurphy ..„'. Office lijWale's?Block, north ,m Junction, N. V. - IT M H4M?VIOND, PHYSICIAN \JEJL» aim Surgeon! Chase's Mills, Hi Y. Office cor- ner Htat|i|mdMfflit4 " "" itreets. opposite JBarnett's Store. SiFCHAMBERLAIN, ATTOR- KJ KlCY and Counselor at Law, Madrid, N. Y. Iinlliftlsnl 'of alii Wiids will receive prompt atten- tion,, Sffeflal attention given to foreign collections. '[ . ATTORNEY amf <$ouu-.el,oi'ut Law. Notary Public, and Res Hti>rin BMikruptcy,,potsdam Junction,St. Lawrence cu., N. I. /• L LC JCTEA JPELucriKfc p>|5tistS- IUKB wipwt.in tnj that I hjwSoperffct Dental ;m'qoWs ; H thisplacejfinclstai . preparednp devqb uiytimejaiidv alien tion to i»ljf5rptmij|mi »w er, vices in Mrttisttpth ullIteur|n.ohes.' i tion of Meffli.byUif ins; (iairfifilorofifrn required, * aisasiini the beslf e S e s nOiVj Plates ten tadnutssi KOUU Bt &mvL>Jr- jaw and reMr Rfi examlheQ r aree 0:, Union BWat.ovei PermuhefiEfost; ,N.Y„ I ' | :i ;p oFNltrous Oxldo or Laugh- Ether and Narcotic Spray, tf jrt beautiful Artificial Teeth on u use.: also inserts Temporary Iter -extracting., and warrant.a . base. The base-Is-Htted to the le-in that length of-tlme. Teeth itfrgei Office In second jtory of Ightthgale & MCLeod's Grocery. ' :e Address, Potsdam Junction, ' ' t-ly J 1 . " MOTELS m OPp||jf F,jfIfE PAHSENC) EB" OETOT.^ " KEMP-1 H©tlME8.„..PROPRIETORS. k "€$•< II'—"—^ Vi This irjM, fprnterfr thelJunctionlTdu.se. lias been atly erjfifged bSf Jge erection ofa new three-story •k buiiaifflgJ«a(,lcl|.nott1 forms the main structure. greatl, a liasTefnlcSpnly'BpTciiased^ by the present pro- prietors aldjiiewljjiujnisliipd and equipped through- rfjut. a ,§", y 'II The Majsigaf Stage,runs ... ,. . Hi>itse. Alf*;gooftLlvemaecommodations, The pal^^age; or the traveling pul $£&. ijiiOTEL.. MA'DKIJD, C oium N-. YiJft L. I& •Refitted aftlBefurj (Free Carr|jigea|.t,o l>, Proprietor. Thoroughly ^A good Livery attached. allTrains. j ! l-ty„ / "A'^HN m$TEL; ftEAK RXlfr J%- ROA^STAfifctt.t'Orner of Washington ahtl PattersonSMreejts.Ip&densUurg, N. Y. JAMES Bo- PnttersonSs«regts.. V.UBD, ' MflbrfrtQl Travo>ersM-rid;. ml kinds. ,'S .* , ...sours, N. Y. JAMES Bo- Sllaslill accommodations for hours. Lunches ofall ^""MASSENi, N. Y. .H. B. WHITE, odern style. Free Car- l-It HOUSE, J. S. BENT-' Mjassenaj Springs, St, Lawrence ' M^-J f •• > - )TEL.—J,. BART- tamp^ €l|aMeliers, Vases* ftS, ijriRROR& est assortment.' of l i f A L CASKETS iujsrr&thern'lire« v •*+ I ' J- i \ &£• Bwtwulaj'atteiil Jfic for C'atpollcfiiheri |Yorki, ulwayioitliund.' _ in giyento trimpiliigt'ofliiis, *• J .' 5-tr BATCHELDER & SONS •WhliiiSflle au^l Read! I- MA VOLtJUTE 2. ffOTSDAM JIJNGTIO^, N, Y THtTBBBAX JXjkE ! _ DRfr GOODS. •_• .^fdj. INFLATION, BUT IJOW PEICIS j IS T H E MOTTO AT NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Acting on thla principle, wo tvvailcU dursclves of the.opportunlty to purchaao A NEW AND FULL STOCK DBY GOODS OF AT THOSE | Wlilchi ruled In the market last week. ., Call and examine our new stock of Eiresa Goods, Linens, G rasa Cloths, Piques; Whit* and Colored Mns- tas; also, full stock of Domestics. All the best irands of 5?rlnt3,_Merlmac and Cochlco, lttc a. yard j ther goods In proportion!.' , A new stock of Ladles* Fancy i . uch as Fans, Parasols, Neck Tics, Gloves, Hankor- A new stock of Ladles* Fancy Goods Jnst received. hlefa, Belts, and the now style of Ladles' Silk Lacv carft.Just received. Also, a full lino of Guipure :es, Parsetuentrb Headings, Cloak Loops, Buttons, See. . " ' . * OWN OUE GOODS CHAP! And will-give ouifouStomeis the beneflt pfour Late For.tiunate Trip* to the CitjL An examination of our stock. Is solicited. a. E. HOLBROOK! Potsdam Junction, June 18,187'!, •' ., 2-tf TTENTION, EVERYBODY. « «MR, OF LOUISVILLE, , « 'ould inrorm the public that he keeps'cbnstaiitly 1 on, hand; a rail and complete stock of •r> Goods! anil Groceries, J ]. i • . BOOTS AND SHOES, jfats, ('ai/s, (flovea, Hosieiy, SStationei'j' Ready Made Clothihg, , jf" : • • 7 < • --•' |Oi' , ' o c ; l i < i r y , j G t l a s s ^ w a i ' e , HARDWARE, &C, vfliiijl) will -be sold as ldw m at any other place in the qountyil s MILLINERY. pOTSDAM JUNCTION # MILLI3STEBY . j jkSin - | 1 ladies' Eanoy ^6-oods STOKE. ! STRAW GOODS S^wed, Bleached and Preised, • POTOTSKI & HGWDEN ould respectfully inform the nubile that they have 10 :ate;d themselves In th> store lately occupied by SI pari & Sanb6rn, . " * ''. First Store JHorth 61'WhHiiey Hotel, la^re now ready, for Spring and JSummer trade. 11 ivirig Just returned from the city with all the New st fieri Tor the coming season, we have no Jiesitation ' saying that our stock is complete, ana that any „. elr/wantofMUlIndry Goods, or anything in our Hi ie, v rould do well to call on us before purchasing Ul orders given us will; receive" our prompt and p( rsofial attention. We solicit public patronage, and re raafii respectfully. £ ^ W. DAVIS' Threshing Machine. otrr ^ AT BRASHER FALLS, I RE-BUILD AT POTSBAM JUNCTION,, Where, on the Ursa das of August next, I oiler my \VELL-KNOWN iPATTENT HORSE PO^ERJ' Threshing Macjhiiie For'the coming harvest. These machines are too well known In every town and hamlet In Northern New York to require commendation here. SuAIco It to iay that, my machines arc doing mora than three-fourths of tho threshing through these northern comities and that their reputation was never better than now. Here where tho two great arteries of commerce meet. 1 have looated, desiring a broader field anitl freer communication for and wltb my potrpiiSi With ~ [ New'and' Improved Machinery, tJnrlvailed railroad facilities, and a flxed Uelormlija- 'tlontcteiscel, I invite all Wishing to get X- A Superior Machine to give tmeacall. I sell directly to the purchaser, vyltnoue iigents, thereby saving him a heavy tax. . Repairing pleees for machines cnreiwntly on hand. Orders by mall or telegraph forwarded by return train. 7 . . ' Old machines thoroughly and quickly repaired. ; TEETH W I T H MTDTS Rl&DUQKD TO.EIGHT CENTS EACH. 8. W. O&SJB. POTSDAM JnHcnoHAanictn.TunAL'WoitK8,Juiioa). \ Being about to remove from Potsdam,' we fflfer for the next thirty days a Clipice Assortment of WHITE jGEANITE CRQCKEEY, LAMPS, Ghanflelier^ Table Cutlery, PLATED WARE, "Vases, 3Bi-sn.oJkets, Jt<». ** Which we will sell at Actual Cost Tor J NO HUMBUG IN THIS OFPERi By callling on us you save from 25 to 50 per cent. THURSDAY, JUNEi 25, 1874. l-t; f- POTJOTSKI, & HOWDEN. A4so, a large assortment of Furniture, Mirrors,-&o k, <E|LLrNO AT COST ! MISS HATTIE F. LANG ] J Would announce to the ijltizens of \ PiotMlhm luiictlon *V«I Vicinity TbntsliB nowielfs ' . : All $traw .Goods at CdsTt During: the Balance of the Season. j Also, 3dst arrived FLORIDA HATS, JffiW stock of FLOWERS', SILK RIBBONS, LAOES, Ond <»MK KIbl^oii«. jfjaf Leading Shapes' for Summer Styles.-St* ., . i-rimmed Hats and Bonnets, Plain Hats,Sun.Uata, Tostly celebrated Cary Kilns, at Chaumom, N. V Filames,Trimming SllkSjnnd an extensive assort- •—-— '• - - - - —- m >nt Of Ribbons, Laces, Flowers, arid everything.In Having mode arrangements for new styles ....... .^_ Jity eyery weeTc, my patrons may rely upon hr viri* their work done In the latest and beststyle. Sy strict attention? to business,, and fair dealing, I ' •' •• -•• *—*-"• *—lago. ojUpinlng Par- i*j pe to merit a share of public patronage. •-: itore,third dooxnoxUi of Railroad, ojljol k( ?sfirug Store. N MISS HATTIE>. 'atsdam Junction, N. Y., May 1,1S74 MX DRUGS. a'oUND^-THEf STAGE HORN! ~? ^ BLOW THE TRU^ETl TJiat the Willing World Way know | ipiHffi, I PARK!, \ > "".(LatoofW'ater{own,N.Y.) alwavs'ready to-supply the wairts of the afflicted, and r the.publlc generatly, at his f Iffew Drug Store^ ond Door hDrth of railroad, adjoining the Com- mercial Advertiser Office, JPotfSdftin OTunotion, 1 riTH A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF And in !the Undertaking Line, su- perb Caskets,'Coffins, &e., at the low- est possible prices for cash, as .we de- sire to close out pur stock on hand. - A respectable Hearse subject toorder. Our sltore ill Potsdam will lie open during the summer. ^ GORRIE & DELONGY. Potsdiam, June 12th, JL&T4. jr IME ! 'LIME! LIJV1E! 1JME Would Inltorm the public tbgt he keepscohstantlyon hand. In qnoiiUtles to suit purchasers, Hani from the THE LA-EEST IQBWS. BotU Houses of Congress, adjour on Tuesday atfto'clock p* M. As q a number of bills were rushed thr< during the last days of the session considerable business was trausactedjon Sunday, it will not b o surprising if gome juggling ,was done. The tra|is- portation bill and several other im- portant measures failed to receive (he sanction^ of both Houses. -! On Tuesday last a boy named CKw. Post, about fifteen years Qf a£e, ^'la, fatally injured while attempting to i;et upon a pasaing^train at Little Falls.i K. Y. He lived in an unconscious stjtto about three hours, after ilxeacoide it. Unless parents put a stop to their cl; fl dren jumping upon the fars as tliey pass Main street we may have a aifl ii- lur accident to ehroniele ip our lojial soon., Anothor. cable lias jbeen added I to those between Europe; and Ameri !a, and now So'uth America has tee- graphic eomiQunication; with the rist of tho world. The success of 1806 t{ as been repeated oVer and over again, a|id the laying of ocean cables has beeoino almost as easy as the construction |pf land lines. i Mrs. Cameron, wife of the Hon. Simon Cameron, died on the morning of the 10th, at Harrisburg, Pa. Two men»were buried by the cavijig- in of a drain at Hamilton, Ont., on tjie 19th. One of "them, named Zehiflg, was dead when taken out. The; other will-recover. " . Heavy rains are,reported alStf. JohJl s, N. B., overflowing rivers ajid streanj s, liidparrying awayjbridges. Tlxedaii- 'agf isjieavy. ; ,:\ } \ TTli NEW CUliRENCI! DILI/. The new currency bill, the produc- tion of tlte last Conference Committt e, has-reeeivCd the signature of the Pre i- dent and become a law. It was pie- s.ented iu Wie House on Saturdi y last, by Mr. Dawes, wlio express 4 his regrets that it did not c o n t a i n , life the first conference report did, any provision, either Tor an early resump- tion of spe,cie paymeiit, or for any rj tiremeht under aiiy cireutnHtances, The new bill is a modification of the former one intended to settle the qifts-| tion so far as this Congress is coneerneft; but it by no means disposes of t h e ttna: eial problem. To appease the wrath the contractionists, it uses the nia: mum of the greenback circulation it ?380iOOO,000; but requires lit to be kept in' circulation instead of having paft of it ih tho Treasury as a reserve Ju: to l>o i|oo<l «t tKo'iJl,)t.»-oti«>» (>f t>»oJf»w<j dent and Secretary. If also states th|t there .'shall bd no further increase If national baiili currency, and pravidi for a redistribution of the $80,000,1 now.held by one section of the count more than it was entitledto.Of coursj as the section referred to-is the stjroni hold of th,e contractionists, tl}ere will be no opposition to giytog up thj amount, as it furthers the/ends th •have in view, and throws the "irrf deemable stuff" among the Westei] expansionists, who mast: suffer t evils which their Eastern friends ha\| warned them an increase in the vo; - umev of their currency wotild prodjici. A lively discussion took place upoji the provisious of tho bill, which dis- played a strong opposition by. the re|- resentatives-of the moneyed centres «f the East; and although it did not melt the views of the Western members, t wits' accepted as the best terms'their could obtain during this session. /Pfi J bill passed .the House by a vote'bf 251 to 40, and the pressure wa> so heav, that'the President thought best to ij cede from his platform. Good by< Jones. the State. A resolution .was passe pronouncing intemperance a great evil { ' bufi the convention was not pre[ pared to grapple with itj, and the ques| tion was, left to the people to debid whether ithey will take their dxih hot, cold'or mixed. The past recpri of the administration *was endorsed and the convention adjourned. . J In Illinois,-the political atmospblerj was no clearer than fri Indiana, anc. pretty, mjuch the same tactics wein resorted to." After the riominatioijt o: State officers a platform, of resolution* was adopted favoring; an amendmen to tlie Constitution,, ojf the TJnijtedj Spates providing, for the 'election! oi Ifeldeat and Vice President by jthi •^rect yotje of the people, without jthi intervention of the Electoral College, also such legislation as shall secure t< the people reasonable passenger and" fjieght rates-over 'the railroads. It also ' |*na»t*e«^li»«>present' banli system as the best ever before oflered to the peo- ple, pronounces tlie pVesent eurreacy ^afe and (convenient, in. favor j oi free banking, and opposed' to any con- traction tf the circulating medium. An: excitihg debate took^place on the resolution! referring to the finance, smd the original clause to retire the legal tenders wps stricken out. SenatorLo- gan addressed the convention,"defeijid- ing his acjtion in Congress, at the oW elusion off which an adjpurninent took place. - •-'- The Vermont State Convention adopted a platform of resolutions en- dorsing tho Presidential veto,,and con- demning the action of Congress. It also recorriniends"sueh a'change in the tariffas will protect the manufacturers of the east. . '»*!•-,*• 25, - '^ ^FMIKEB^ =9 INFORM A,ND E(JOjN'OMV IN GOVERNMENT. ( x , t THE WATERTOWN 1 ; <* WfiEKLY EE-UNION A flrstrclasis Weekly Democratic Journal, devptod to Che InteresitHofitho masses. FlIIcd»to tlis brim with' tBemost interftitlng hews of the day. C4mplete| cor- respondeniee ttom every part of the couety. Latest "'olenranhllc n«ws. NAgrlculturjil and it nlnj Qnod Hoi hand. Drivi veyoiirany ril on con- ,'^Mh§M,ptoilc «uarry,« stone fun all frizes, dr| shipped to dri liir uttentio f - JBases, FOR C. -EVtrroor,! Tbfegraphllc n«ws. vAgflcultural and il Best advertising medium in Nqrthern N ONJTyY TW« jrXOM^R.S PER lg riewi w York. JTEAH. ALSO,, THE MORHP D E S P M ! A livo dally, containing all the important news from abrowlanill throughout thecounty. Latest telegrams and correcitcd Markets every momijng; Terms $8.00 Per Yep,r. n ««]qo" %ir'>»yAlrt'E. STATE TEMPERAiNpE CONVENTION A State bonvention'Qf|.the advocates of temperance inet in A(.uburn in this State on Tuesday last alid nominated an independent State, ticket to be voted for atthejfall election. , The Republi- can party inay well dread the resuft of the course this convention has taken. It was tc "take tlie wind. out of their sails',' that Gov. Dix's letter on his tenipemnce record was published in •five Syiacuse Journal*. That com- niunicatio: 1 w i l l ha*>4 no efiejCt w h a t ; ever on tie question at issue. Gen. D t ix Was evidently led to believe tljat the object on of the prohibitionists was to hin personally. This is a mis' take. Tlure is ho objection among them, to Governor Dix. The r§al ob Prohibition State Convention. The Prohibition Convention 'which ass ambled at Auiura on the 23d insi, adopted the platform! giveh below, and nominated the folW i n g State officers: I THE piATOOBM. * f" Resolved, Eirsti TMt we are more than ever persuaded that the legal pro* hibiiion ot the manufacture and sale of ardent spirits for beverage purposes is the only effectual remedy for the un- paralleled evils resulting, from r their •use., - ' :''-'• Eesolved, That we are as firmly per- suaded that such; remedy can only be secured through'a separate political party that, while iequally"competent to aealFwith. all btner public questions, slialjl make prohibition the paramount aimpf its organizatioaj ap$tothat con- clusion we are impelled, among others, by the follogving reasons: ; First—Qf the two gireat parties we .havie the fdemocifaeyl which neither pretends, nor could with justice pre-, tend, to favor regressive interference with the-rum interest - > 0tfewud-4-WhhBttneJTCputoUc«Mi;.y«.»«y has i claimted to b,e t h e party of great moral ideas, arid sa tme friend of tem- 'peranee, it has forfeited all right to be recognized as such.. Third—It has had possession'through itg.gqvernment.anji two successive leg- islatures of the State administration for nearly the whole, of the past two S ears with full jjower to grant'anti- quor legislation ilf' }t had been dis- e into fiower fully el measure, of prohibi- posed to do so. Fobrth—It committed too; tion>by a pledge Wihic. and has since failed tc " Fifth—It has refusi voted upon by the pi menjt to the. constito t it nrst.violated redeem. I to'Bubmittobe- plcl an am'ehd- on of the State, rohibiting the vujn t|afilc|as asked for y the leading t^mperajupe organize tions Sixth- tection api entire Re] ears to be opposition to t h e ublicali party of tho Statu liqupy sellers, so modified the law< of New Ywk. Having failed to ac- complish ; inything by working for their cause! inside the party, they have determine^ to make jthel.r ^vc^ight felt outside of jit. The record of \General not now Mve the least effect on the action of this prohibition convention i find a separate "and distinct. ticket has been placed in .the| -field. JThe leaders in tl lis movement (willfl'oIopger consent to play »" second fiddle'* to either of t i e old parties [in the State, Their convention meetifag thus early in the yeai will give the republicans anddemociats tlie oppoHmiity of as certaining yhat may be Expected from these movpments, whil^ it iwlll also give the prohibitionists "plenty pfiime to canvass the State in support of their ticket. '' -It has, at the i4stigation of intejrfered with and f e^ciselin existence whejn it came intoj power, so far as civil penalties go, as td give practicai free* teade \h r.um in our larger cities and remove th'e principal restrictidns'upon the traffic on the Sabbath iday. Sepenth^—It hasb.ufflupo|i the statute books a law unprecedented in its sup- poi-tiof the rum,interest in an act. incorporating the Wine.] and Spirit Tradf rs' Society of thte United States, as thereby it (has given the highest legal j sanction land pjrbteetion to the r u m Ifraffics and cbnferred upon those openly and actively ehgaged therein mostlpxtraordinary pirivilekes and pow- ers, including those piUonging to the courts" of justice and directly affecting the liberty of the citizen, as well as au-, thority to raise and use l|trge sums of ere •Intel. Zlnche 3 Inches »4 Inches 5 Inches 6Inches 12Xnches Zffnches lOP'OO Business Cards of ftve lines orJess one ye»r^|5.po; slxmonths, |3.00.-'Every oddfUorud Me, ft cents per year, or 60 cents for six months. , -IV)calNoU<»8WilL be charged at the rate often centtper line for the first insertion, and five cents per line for .each subsequent Insertion. Transient advertisement payable In advance. Adverttsemjents tbrwardid tons byzecnlarcosto' mars without Bpeclttc'instrnction«, mOXT» Inserted until forbid, and Charged aqcordingly. ,. - ^•!i £ •1, I . awrenrieburg, where, they taken in charge by the undertake) The hab% Mary Stella, When foj wSs moaning pitifully o h % e blood bespattered floor,, lying £1 two feet from }ts mother. If 1 der took phice on Monday; night, been a night and a day in thai tion Without food or care. Ifs Was pitiful, and: the sightOf its serves to awaken the strong^ ^ ings of vengeance against the Who wrought all thisliarm. It once removed to the 'hpuse |oj maiden" ladies named Gage, erously undertook to care for suffered Last night it was sle^pinte or unconscious, its mutilated face Iwolfen and blackened from.the injuries received in the awful struggle beitween its mother-and her murderer] It is hamjjf possible that it can ? live, ICoronerSMinnerlield an inqu,e}sy. A post-mortem examination made byPra, Gatch and Miller, disclosed the fact that an outrage had been perp^trdted upon the mother, and the murder of the childre'n w,as to conceal, tho .critoc ThAinat.r'ntnent with which the mur- ders were coinmittedwas fou^^^Taitne margin of P-arrner's Cree"k. It jyas the a?e belonging, to Bradley's hpuSe,' It was covered with blcipd, in whieh'coiild- be seen bits of the l(air of the-vijctilms. At the same place were seen tmefcs of the man who bore the; ajfJe. He had removed' Ms boots to wade the'ereek. Accurate measurements were taken of the'traeks, and thusa clew to the mur- derer may be found. This was at the corner of the field next thq wOods, and indicated that the man came and went In the same way. .' j Self-preseryation, as wellasthe plain- est demands of justice, require tiratthe perpetrator of this threefold crime should be soiight after by all ayailable means, and that, in the language of the kind lady who has charge '(of that motherless babe, " no stone should be left unturnjed to bring the; crtniinal to justice, and to vindicate the goqp name o/ the eommnnity." i Were standing. T^o were enveloped ih : the. dreaclfUl hot blast, anfllgas JSrom the moiten,metal, and were'Titwdly "charied to "a ebider rnstantaneously, their remains having to be raked out. Two.others who weipe h e a r at the time were fearfully burned, and have since died. Iii. the same worksv a few hours afterward? an explosion of dynamite Occurred. While preparaliiQhfe were beihglmade to blow oiit a furnace, Un- der the direpjapn of Mr. TJfqUhart, an e^plb^ion, from some uhaccountable cause,'suddenly Occurred. * Ohe man- was blowh to atoms. Mr; UrquMrt Was fatally, injuredi dying- sooh^aftejr the, occurrence, and several i suftering ffoni. sever i injuries. ti TEIJEGRAPIIIC NEWS. ^ _^_ CON An A suit ha: the New River tie aB' Cand WOO,' 'breach ot plaintifls cially, ander'sj casi May 28th, i ye'La 1 BRIGHTER BETTER THANj EVER. Address w. c. HAVEN &.CO., Prop'rs, \ - " Watertown.N. Y. ,GEO; M06S,*EdItOK . 7-2m PERFUMERIES,, 6ed in iSii'desireduuaiinty.ofnnyaini Sidressexl,on short nouce.anjl. Si- part of the country. Tartlcil; I '. '! |ilARBLK DEALERS j l^cS Posts, CurbinJ, jRY AND OTHER EENfES. KEB, JEWELER, FIRST? fithiof « Clo- MeCormicle' _._ thing store^iaiJdrid, N. V. Al mfids of Watches, CYbcftSi and .Jewelry,, re- paired prorMjtfy; at ~*jowprices. f> . 'FineWaMhes • -^ A spEtaAEjEy. The *best SJtaerl- can arid Kflreign Watches onfiftndor »ught to order-. MT? assoi PSTENT MEDIcnnSS, FANCY AJRTICIIEH, and ayprythlng, usually kept In a first class Drug store. Kin-e Wines and ILiiqiiiirs 1 FOR StBDICIKAL. PT3POBE3., Bhyslclati3 Piescriptlons accurately compounded, at'all hours, day or night, persons wanting Pre- scriptions In the night time, by ringing the bell on right hand side of tlie door will be promptly waited upon* i_ ' Qhaunccy S.-parkerjmakes aspccln/lty of the pre- paration ofDVfe STUFFS, and warrants every color prapated by hun. to give entire satisfaction, or money refunded. , n the Grocery Department wlU be found a good Ortnjent of CHOKTS SHELF OROCERTES. Also, ertfpepfertj fCHOKTS f Best Bnnds or Cla*rs and Tobacco', •^yriLLrAM SCOTT, /BOOK BINDEE,,. Blank Book Manufacturey, AK»' PAPER BOX MAKER, . BURLINGTON, W"T; / J. n uxcelk'iit assortment of .Parlor and Lapips, Lamp Chimneys, &$., always-on hand. Hand , « Don't fell taglvo him a call and examine his Goods a prices before making your purchases. l-t P S. WESTCOTTjJDEALER IN -i-s» SICAL I1SISTBTJMEJSTS, Sheet Music, Mu- slc Books, 4c. Ac., corner Market and Depot streets, Pojsdam, N. V. Orders promptly attended to.- l-t RULING AND BINDING \ Of every descrEjitJOu donctO ordw. /I ' Ixteusijre'Law Sui^ been commenced against rk Central and Hudson ad'Company by the *' Cat- f.the.West, John T. Alex- illiam Fitch, for $250^uX)0 respectively, for alleged contracts, whereby The money in controlting and eormpting legislatron, •** ! : ' '. j. Eighth—It has refubed to remove or modify obnoxious statute^ of its enacts ing, when protested agaiust and apy pealed to for that jpurppse by the temf peraucepeople/treatiifg their petitions and drafts of bi|ls withlmdisguised in- difference and iepntemUt. Ni^th—It has shown itself by its en- tire administration trfjpubllc affairs, to be & friend of runi'dealers; and chiefly concerned in. securing their supj>6rt. NosrisfATioisrs; For Governor—Jttyr >n H. Clark, y Lieut. GovernorHJtihn L. Bagg. X Com-t-of.^rj'"*'^wmw V. fttfwr | landl " i •/ Canal Commissioner—PanJel Wal fdrd'. " I.. j \y State Prisoii Inspectoi^flra Bell Terrible Catiwtrophe—One Hnu«lre«l Persons Killed or InJUreU. SYBACTJSE,' J u n e 2 3 . M A h appalling catastropnTBiOeeurred here to-iilght. A strawberry festival was being held at the parlors of the Central Baptist Church, when, without any premoni- tion, the 'floor gave way ;aboutf half; past nine, precipitating the rodrn ful,l of ^people into the story belowj« The parlor was on the second floor,-and the room underneath was. also full, The fire alarm was'immediately^g'iven, and the firemen hurried to the §cenel; Soni! 10,000 people were th^re. Fi-^edead bodies nave bee.h taken out an^fthe Work has hardly commene«d". bly a h u n d r e d p,ersonfe wrase x THE AMERICAN PILGRIMS. ,7 less injured, many Very se> /following dead dodies were recc Dr. Ef Waihwright,"" Miss ^innie Ostrander,ali] a little girl nai JEJcflmes. anjj'" ThO! . \^ainwrighfe me Collins.'' pastor pf the af„a'ch'ild ]ia| 1 named lid HortonsM'rs] little giii namei George ^P. iDojv ihurch, is ,aang(i H0BBIBI.E T l S l E MURDER, A.ivo.n»n AIIO^TWO Cliil|dred Killed to . /Coi»cc«| .Celine. Thef Cmeinati < Jaz^tte thas full der- laijlsjof the fearful and bloody tragedy. atjLwrenceburg,! :nd, f bnMonday, By ... aich a woman and h »"children were sacrificed owing to tli e licentiousness of a fiend or fiends,"who p a v e n o t ' a s yet been identified!. ] The woman, Mrs, William T. Brad^ ley, lived in a jcabih wjith her children about two miles from the town, and had been alone wffib. tbjem shice Feb- ruary,, when her. husband, went to a n adjacent county to work. .\ There is^no house near except thaf; occupied by a neighbor, 300 yardp distant. The last seen of. t h e familyialive was on Mon- day .evening, but iihe jfacts. show that the murderer enter'ed the house during the night, and, after! outraging the mother", killed he: then, to prevent t with an axe, and o -l|ttlef girls, .Eliza aim-to be ruined finiiri-f Jane^ aged eleven,sand Rokanna,' aged ti* A1&- nine yeara, from betraying] him, they riT^niE VERMONT STATE FA|B. Books left for Binding at the office of this paper WlU be forwarded tad returned free of any freight or express charge. , : 8-ly C H. GIFFORD, AGENT FOR • THE HOWE: SEWTNO MACHINE-the best In the world. Office nearly opposite Yale's Hall, Potsdam Jinactlon, N. Y. *\ THE REPPIiLICAN STATE . TIONS. I n - b u r iflsht* of June 11th we Htalefl tlixit seventeen State con veutions woul< I be held previous to August 2Gthj ah^l that noheof these could well avoid! lni> expression of an opinion on the finan- cial! problems. Three of•'these havis beep held on the 17th of the preseii; month, all Republican, in Indiana Illinois and Vermont. In tin? former State* several questions Were- before thj people that caused a difference, o; \ opinion between the* membors of thi! same political party. The crusader;- had" overrun the State, and'waged ji bitter warfare against the liquor in- terests, the farmers' movement nvalj fast gaining ground, and a majority qf the people sanctioned the action cf their Senators and Representatives ih Congress, upon the financial ciuestiorj, and were opposed to the President^ veto. Politics were pretty evVniy di- vided in this State, and two years agj > a democratic Governor was electee. With this state of affairs, it required j t careful^system of herdiiig to keep th; ? rank and file together. Nothing couli 1 He more critical «nd ticklisji than ill'} political situation in this State, and it division upon these questions Woull I portend a general overthrow of th? Republican party. Principles must li ? laid aside and a,plitfprm^idopted tj) sui|,the partj' leadeb^instead of the old-fashion.ed way>»fmaking the pla -' form first, and then finding the cand; - dates to stand upon it. "Grant anil JHorton^nitust both be endorsed by th] convolition, ajid the resolutions befl ^ar-poated so that all could swallo tlrem. witliout producing nausea. TJ platform favors expansion of'the cu|- reney to meet the requirements of tl: people, and at the same time expresa entire confidence in the integrity an|l honor of the President of the Uni States; tenders the thanks of the co: vention to theSeriatorsand Represeni atives in Congress from that'State, an| Views with especial pride and heartf approval the course of Senators Mo ten and Pratt, and the fidelity anil ability with which they have-renr*i- senfed the sentiments of the people <j f declaration in Mr. Al^j says that On ilondajy, 70, Jphn T. Alexander, on his own be|ialf and that of hte part- ners, George p>* Alex-ander and Wil- liam Fitch, ithen doing business under the firm naipk of J. T. and G. p. Alex- ander & ^ 0 4 in New York citjy, made an agreement' with Willjlam JH. Vap- derbilt to ship, for one year from June 10th following, their horded cattle and hogs over th/e latter road to New York. At that-time the Vanderbilt combina- tion controlled the New York Central, Hudsq,n Rijapr, Lake Shoneanr) Michi- gan Southern, and theToljedo, ^Vabas^h and Westerrl rbadsL All gbj^ companiejs, the plaihtiff clalmsj Weife bound 'by this c6ntrac|t; jit wasstjpulajted th^t during the (life: of the contract, me>:- eliandisfe shbulfl be .carried at eertailn rates. Soon:after they began shipping under this (contract the _comjpetltlo|n i»etween the. different roads for this branch Of tode* reduced the rates con- siderably. Tjhe^great reduction of rates, loweredthe pride of stockfarNew York, •rati their brother dealers, who were bound by no contract, profited- by i|t, while they lost. - T,hey paid the con- tract rates on aR their shipments, tl|.e defendants |ref-Jising any;o*}ier. This r ruin, and <jm Mareh s l!r, ntifis..being unable to v.. _ iroj injured; also Ins-wife, Whjo is"f o pectfed to live. Rev, H. J. Edv., jseriously injured. Two hundred 'sons are injured, some ^seriouslyl Midnightr-The.followln^ were t ^ fr»i; lir- OvW&inwright, Mri Austin Barnes, Mts. jaimStjrow, J. E. Karr, Miss Gussie Carpenter, AbijahVedder,-of tltica; Miss j©3 Holmes, Winnie Cqllins aged thin Ha^tie Leonard, aged- sfx ^ John . tin Ostrander, aged nine;; Mii Thomas, Frank Collins,; agcot '14 Horton, aged 12. Mrs, D,r. ^ainivijight will undoubtedly diei Ex^Ald;|er|han Austin Barnes is veryseriOusly iqjuped. Rev. Dr. H. Eddy is slightly-injured. A Murde-feM*3Cyncfc(edV-'{ 1 ST. Lotris, June 24,~Clark Havis who murdered Halbert in ""Greene coUn^j 111., Was taken Jfrorn jail in Carrolton on the 21st by a large ^nob of disguised men and hanged from a tree .. .. . ....... >. ,.. ....... «6:' "" The Address **Pio JTono »nd Hls'Be- ply—A Solid Staff from » Colored Con- grreKitflon. •,:. , L.- "• . , - .[Rome (June9) Correspondent of Ikradon/JHmesJ. The Bishops Dwetiger and Thread wafted upon Cardihal Antonelli yesterj day to express the very great desire of the American pilgrims to pay a visit t o l h e PjOnei .T^y were eon,s6quenLtly received "by His HiaUrueaaTat Jifi^l.to- day, 1 together With] some- American Catholics residing in Some, the total number present being about 200. Sev- *- era! Cardinals, prelates ah^ distinT guished Rbm'ah personages attended theaudienco. Mgr. Ifwenger addressed ^ the following:speeehito the Pope: Ypu. see at y o u r Jfeet s o n s of yours from the West. At this periodof your " afllietion they have dreaded neither sea ' nor distance in theijr endeavor to see thefatjier ofall the faithful, the Pontiff most exalted/by, his labors, perseeU- tiohs''ancl oatience, his hope and faith in Go'di 'j'We.wishedlto see, Your Holi- nes% and the distance to be traversed •> increased rather thab diminished our desire. Though abandoned by the princes of the earti and reduced to prison We have hot abandoned you, We have come to proclaim before the whole world our devotion to you, tEe infallable pastor .of t h e Church, the centre of the'unity 0,' Ou^ faith. This is-ithe long Wished for j|ay wh^nTwe jfeap. ^ee you and receive your blessing,'not only for ourselves, butforall those who cannot be present,, and Who a t a disT » tarieepray to God with tears for you in j. youTfirison, They, aawellas ourselves, •loying -honesty ajad••ffivit liberty, con- demn with all tfieir jhearts the tyran- nical Ipersecuiaon of, the Church by those braggarts of thd false liherty who are s estrajrged from God, MgryThread then ijead an address in ^reneh, expressing the devotion of the piigrhns' an4 : all American Catholics. "/' THE POPE'S BEPI,y., . Amid the darkness; of the ^Orld-this is a ray of light. The enemies of the Church ai'e numerous; but great eon- solatiohs reach nle from the Old and New Worlds, .where the tfue faith has been soamarveiously developed that it ha^ been necessary to increase the num- ber of dioceses., Still a Jgreat part of the Continent remains, Occupied by false religions, and you must pray God to bring all-back to the true faith. "l The Pope afterwards descended from Ms. throne and passed before the pil- grims giving them his hand to kiss; (They presented<)fferings to HisHoli- nfess, the Revi Mr, Miendler, in/tlje nanie of his black parish6ners v rpreseht- ing a stick filled with gold qojnsi worked th> 1871, the carry o n b canceled, the refusal isiness, the contract w*s Alexander claims that f the defendants to give him the benefit of the reduction in rates, whiclt was specified for in the agreement, caused him damage to the a m o u n t of 3250,000. Mr. Fitch's decla- ration is identified with that of M*. Alexander, for $100,000, and closes with a.demand -*!»•• 1— GOOD AGENTS WANTBJO.—The im- mense circjulation of the Christian Union has, been built Up by, active canvassers. No other publication com- pares with It for quick amd profitable returns. The public eagerness for Mrs, tic premiUriis for immediate delivery, light autfltland complete 'instructions' to beginners, assure repeated success to agents, and offer active^ intelligent persons unusual chances to make money. All who want a safe, inde- pendent business Write at once for terms, or send $2:fortchromo outfit to J. B. FOBD * Co., New York, Boston, Cincinnati Chicago, or San Francisco. ' i- ; ' « were also dispatched. The report Says: The same instrument|wasjused on all. The mother seemed tcjmave struggled against her-fate w8thiher1babeinher> arms, a little; girl seven months old. The brute dia noHkilli the jnfant, but its head beark marks of his violence, or of wounds Ipceived otherwise in, the struggle. On the left ( side of its fore- head is a g&h nearlyj ansinch long, but sot deep. The right side of its head is alSoscut, and i% face and eyes are bruised, until la^t night its features were searceli discernahle. Its eyes are "blackened apd swollen, nntil they are The only*m^mbe|- of !the family who escaped' is - James, ft ^ijttje boy nearly four years old, who must have hidden under the .beds or [otherwise have es- caped tbe'axe of thfe murderer. The murders seem to have been com- mitted, eariy on Monday night. *The victims were all clothed when found, showing that it was nojt after they had gone to bed.. It do6s nbt seem possible Chat it could have been done on Tues- day morning, because prr. straniey's man was ploughing c-bm in the field very near the house aJL day* He observed. Ithe; bay James often during" the day. We followed him a good deal fin t h e field, sand s was crying and crying. "Mammal" but the man did not think ifejunusiial. The boy is not as bright as phildrdn usually are at his age, and cannot sayr anything be- yond a few simple-words. He, °* course, could tejl nothing pf the hor- rible fact which wasjeonnected witli his desolated hqnief ^.ateij in the day Mary Strahley, theMaUghtdt of Frank Strabley, the £eighbbr, Jaw James down at the creek.lmd, thpkmg that he was in dangeir, she took}him u p to the house, but did not go in with him. The door was slightly ajar.. He went in, but came oiat again"at, once, and acted sostrangelytnat'Mary'weht with him. She had to pu^sh thei door toopen it. The boy had preceded her.aMtle, and when she had affejjted an entrance she saw him-sifting! in ;a chair, looking alternately at thelftreplace-'and at his dead mother lyibg 0n|he hearth, With no sortof appreciation of the situation. The little girl wa|s porror stricken. Her playmate^ Eliza Jane, lay deadMn a pool of blood behind, the door. Mrs, Bradley, mutilated|n a frightful manf ner, lay with her head pn the hearthj, near the table, anjd the other girl, Bosanna, was deadjoiiithebed behind the door. What a sight ffor such a child! I • ' , . 'Sheran at once ftojthe hired man ploughing in- the 4elg ahd told him the dreadful stjoryi He went to the scene of blood, and at once' gave the alarm. As soon as' the word reached Lawrenceburg, .a crbwd of people started out, and before' night hundreds had visited the fatal lcjcafity, in the outskirts of the toSvn. N o n e of them.can-be recognized. ': [ • Fatal Railroad Collision. | ALBANY, N. Y., June |4.—Thef-e was a collision between freight trains four miles from St. Johnsville on ,Sunday morning, by which Petefr MeGregory, cattle shipper of Brighton, Mass.; lost his life, and jGeo. Wishing, ship*p sr of Buffalo, was seriouslp injured. C has. Little, brakeman, had au a$n bjw ken and wks otherwise 'seriouslyinjure d in the back. - ;-. I . ' -. • •; —r-— , , y ,Tbe Erie Canal, Western IMvIsP-o n. BtJPFALO, June 22.—The Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, troller, and other State and canal bfiV cials, arrived in/th^s city this evemng, to make an official inspection Of the- western division the Erie Carnal. They will proceed ,in a tug ovejr'iihe course to-morrow, under charge of (Col. Richard Flaek, canal collector. ,, . . . „ ' ; > _—^ ."'" i J| Shooting Affary near Rochester. - , ROCHESTER, June 21,- i -Aboufl ^flve o'clock this afternoon Captain Walter, A. Fowler, of the yacht Ariel, shoti&ud dangerously wounded a laborer nfjiaed Byron Co©k,aged twenty-eight yekrs, on the wharf at Charlotte Harborp The affair was th| result of- a drunken quarrel. '. ' i( . i Fatal BoilerExplosion in Ont4W CHATHAM, June' 21.^-A sad accident occurred at Baptiste Creek,, on the] St? Clair River. At noon yesterday'the boiler of the Great Western Kail Way steam dredge exploded, instantly! fill- ing "VjZiilitwnJOav.tiorjiof tliO'Stoiiy J'oint and severeJy iUJUriag flVe othem One of Whom, natoed Bemara,' has pijnce died, , , \ , Sunday Horning in Congress. WASHINGTON, Juhe21.ATheSehate, at half-past three' this jnorningi :ad- journed the session of Saturday, which legally includes the hours which -"were stolen from the Sabbath by thel^pro erastinatrng lawmakers. The House Committee on Appre pWa- flons Svere in session to-day consider- ing the Senate's amendments to . bills making approprlationsforsu a cfvll expenses and for rivers and{ 1 bors, so as to present their irepo morrow morning for the action qj House, The only other. generaf propriation bill, pending betwee two houses is that mabifig jappr< tioUs' for the Post Office Jteparti The^Senate has appointed ia,gomn to confer with that to be Appoint* . theHouseon disagreeing a1m£hdmfeUte The prospect is that theiabove " fc "*— tioned bills will be definitely aci On by both, branches to-morrow, clerks were engaged to-Hlayengr* numerous bills andjotheirwise tfrai ing business pertaining to Cop. Dtaang.yesterday about fifty-bills of them of a private eharaeter,, .. presented to the President ,for Is proVal. The ipommittee of confere: on the Geneva Award Distributic A have hot yet been able to agree; the probability is that it;will g> until the next session, with w Others of a pi^blic charaeteri ' . " " - ' - . < • > ' - ; . •'••' - ; ~ Two fatal accidents occurred at thyr Tydvil ih Wales, a few dayss Mee. Four men employed at -the C^^na Ironworks met with a dreadfur Coroner Skinner was immediately by the bursting of ^/httastofj; embodies removed I nace within a. few feet of where notified, and had tfhejbodies removed f r.JLifpsiA jil ALL."—We have .at last received a^py of that hlOst extraorr dinary work, which has excited' so . much interest and attention in all sec- tions of th.0 country,' We' allude, to- Mrs. T. B'. H,- Stenhouse's neW book, ? entitled, "Tell it All,\ It is with great pleasure, that we hailNthis remarkable wbrk^-tiie igenuine hiBtory' of a real Mormbn woman. TwO v years ago the* author published a little pamphlet on " •Polygamy, 'which attr^cted^cOnsidera^ ble a{ten'tioii, , and created quite a sen- sation among the Saints; The>MorBion - papers took upthe,sUbjec"t, and alluding derisively ijp the delicate reticence, so natural to a sensitiveWoman^isplayed by the author, spitefully iUvited; her to/ "Tell it All." Men and WOmeri of pe^ sjltion, iii all parts of the country, wh* had visited^ier iU Salt Lake City, urged her to s'eize the opportunity, ,r Write a book,"" and lay the whole truth;before the world, Mfs> Harriet Beecher! Stowe whose earnest introduction to this Vol- : ume is a guarantee' of the delicacy,, as well as purity of the Work, personally , added her persuasions. MTSiStenhouse ultimately consented, and choseforthe title of- heri new volume, the words of derision us>d" by her -Mormon Oppo- nents---*'Tell it All." "**"!' ' < In this way this singular work was ihtrodnbed to- the world. - Itjs a book " unlike any other work on the>sUbjeet ever penned before. And, although , we WoUld riot spoilbur readers' pleasure^ •byrtelling Mrs. Stenhouie's facinatmg , story secphd-han.d we will state (that it ". is just what it prbfesses to he-^the -hisr- tory of a life in Morfttohism, written by a lady of education and J refinement, who, through the influence of religious. sympathy, 'misdirected, beeame the" victim attaVslave of one of the most ex- _ traordihary superstitions which! thfe world'has ever seen. In her own fas- ' cinating style, she tells ail-that can'be - told of that strange system, not as a isito^to Utah might relate it, bUt With hat thriliing eloquente and "pathos of one whose whole life I has been dark- ened by its deadly shajdtfw. Real men •and women—^thestory Of real liyes^, the sayings, ithe ^o&s* the events of to%ayu«moug a'clafesSf our own coun- ti*yinen and women, much talked of, ' butflittie' known, are painted before us hy this taiehted woman', with touching fidelity; and when fthe reader lays down me volume his dnlxregret is that lie has'arriVedatrtherlast page." The , book possesses all the vivacity and thrilling interest of thefinestworks of flejloh., In point of mecbanieal skill, it eduid not be! sUfpassjed, Thehinding is elegant and substantial; the illus- tiatiOns, on wood andjsteel, are eostlyf -and fihely executed;,and ajtogethef it is One of those, subscription books. Which one so rarely meets, Whigh give the purchaser full value for-hisnioney. This Work Will be soldOnly to those ' Who order of the agent, who will soon introduce it to our citizens^ We be*.. speak for it ajmost eoijdial reception—: for it is worthy of it. d ] , _^_—_tl -*-•-•——-•' •-• •"- '— COI-OttlNG KEJCIPES. ^}§EEN ON 1 L B . W O O L E N . — 1 l b , P=US- tio, 2 o2."Alum; boil m minutes, enter the goods and let theni remain 20min- utesj then take out the goods and add Indigo conipoUnd till you have the shade required; -rinse in. cold.Water. O^eortwobz. eonjpoutid will beenough :forthe above, - *, , % - r itfABBEB ItED.-JOne lb, madder for. two lbs. cloth. Soak the madde* over night in a brass kettle With warm^va- te*; esnough to cover the cloth. Next morning, put in two ozs, madder com- pduntd • for tivery pound qf madder , soaked. Then wet your cloth and wring out in clean water; then put the cloth in'i;he dye and 1 put over the;flreand ' bring slowly to scalding ^eat. Keep atfthis heat-; for half an hour!. The color igrows deeper the longer it is in thfe d y e . W h e n the ioior suits, rinse inicoldwatei'i • [ ' j- ,. iViiiE CoiJoB,—For five lbs. goodsr- eamwqod, tv^o lbs,; boil fifteeh^mto> utes ahd^dip the goods half aU hour; boil again and dip half an hqu^then darken withMuevitrfol, one and a half ozs.; if nqtdark enough, add eobpems, t|iey;';One^half oz. « " ' ' •'jt.p. i "'i , t / ' I l"if ler-

Actual Cost Tor J - NYS Historic Newspapersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn85054395/1874-06-25/ed... · 2012-01-02 · national baiili currency, and pravidi for a redistribution

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Page 1: Actual Cost Tor J - NYS Historic Newspapersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn85054395/1874-06-25/ed... · 2012-01-02 · national baiili currency, and pravidi for a redistribution

J U D D , A T T O R N E Y S otLajv. Thomas N.Jtfurphy

..„'. Office lijWale's?Block, north ,m Junction, N. V. -

IT M H4M?VIOND, PHYSICIAN \JEJL» aim Surgeon! Chase's Mills, Hi Y. Office cor­ner Htat|i|mdMfflit4 " "" itreets. opposite JBarnett's Store.

SiFCHAMBERLAIN, ATTOR-KJ • KlCY and Counselor at Law, Madrid, N. Y. Iinlliftlsnl 'of alii Wiids will receive prompt atten­tion,, Sffeflal attention given to foreign collections.

'[ . A T T O R N E Y amf <$ouu-.el,oi'ut Law. Notary Public, and Res

Hti>rin BMikruptcy,,potsdam Junction,St. Lawrence c u . , N . * « • • I. /•

LLC

JCTEA JPELucriKfc

p>|5t istS-IUKB wipwt.in tnj

that I hjwSoperffct Dental ;m'qoWs; H thisplacejfinclstai . preparednp devqb uiytimejaiidv alien tion to i»ljf5rptmij|mi

»w er, vices in Mrttisttpth ullIteur|n.ohes.' i

tion of Meffli.byUif ins; (iairfifilorofifrn required, * aisasiini the beslf e S e s nOiVj Plates ten tadnutssi KOUU Bt &mvL>Jr-jaw and reMr Rfi examlheQraree 0:, Union BWat.ovei PermuhefiEfost;

,N.Y„ I ' | :i

;p oFNltrous Oxldo or Laugh-Ether and Narcotic Spray, tf

jrt beautiful Artificial Teeth on u use.: also inserts Temporary Iter -extracting., and warrant.a

. base. The base-Is-Htted to the le-in that length of-tlme. Teeth itfrgei Office In second jtory of Ightthgale & MCLeod's Grocery. ' :e Address, Potsdam Junction,

' ' t-ly J1 . "

MOTELS m O P p | | j f F,jf IfE PAHSENC) EB" OETOT.^

" K E M P - 1 H © t l M E 8 . „ . . P R O P R I E T O R S . k "€$•< I I ' — " — ^ V i

This i r jM, fprnterfr thelJunctionlTdu.se. lias been atly erjfifged bSf Jge erection ofa new three-story •k buiiaifflgJ«a(,lcl|.nott1 forms the main structure.

greatl, a liasTefnlcSpnly'BpTciiased^ by the present pro­prietors aldjiiewljjiujnisliipd and equipped through-

rfjut. a ,§", y 'II The Majsigaf Stage,runs ... ,. .

Hi>itse. Alf*;gooftLlvemaecommodations, The pal^^age; or the traveling pul

$£&. ijiiOTEL.. MA'DKIJD, C oium N-. YiJft L. I&

•Refitted aftlBefurj (Free Carr|jigea|.t,o

l>, Proprietor. Thoroughly ^A good Livery attached. allTrains. j ! l-ty„

/ " A ' ^ H N m$TEL; ftEAK RXlfr J%- ROA^STAfifctt.t'Orner of Washington ahtl PattersonSMreejts.Ip&densUurg, N. Y. JAMES Bo-PnttersonSs«regts.. V.UBD, ' MflbrfrtQl Travo>ersM-rid;. ml kinds. , ' S .*

, ...sours, N. Y. JAMES Bo-Sllasl i l l accommodations for

hours. Lunches ofal l

^ " " M A S S E N i , N. Y. .H. B. WHITE, odern style. Free Car­

l-It

H O U S E , J . S. BENT- ' Mjassenaj Springs, St, Lawrence ' M ^ - J f •• > -

)TEL.— J,. B A R T -

tamp^ €l | aMel ie rs , Vases* ftS, ijriRROR&

est assortment.' of

l i fAL CASKETS

• iujsrr&thern'lire« v •*+ I ' J- i

• \ &£• Bwtwulaj'atteiil Jfic for C'atpollcfiiheri

|Yorki, ulwayioitliund.' _

in giyento trimpiliigt'ofliiis, *• J .' 5-tr

BATCHELDER & SONS •WhliiiSflle au l Read! I-

M A

VOLtJUTE 2. ffOTSDAM JIJNGTIO^, N, Y THtTBBBAX JXjkE

! _ DRfr GOODS. •_• . ^ f d j . I N F L A T I O N , BUT

IJOW PEICIS j IS THE MOTTO AT

NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.

Acting on thla principle, wo tvvailcU dursclves of the.opportunlty to purchaao

A NEW AND FULL STOCK

DBY GOODS OF

A T THOSE

| Wlilchi ruled In the market last week.

., Call and examine our new stock of Eiresa Goods, Linens, G rasa Cloths, Piques; Whit* and Colored Mns-tas; also, full stock of Domestics. All the best irands of 5?rlnt3,_Merlmac and Cochlco, lttc a. yard j ther goods In proportion!.' , A new stock of Ladles* Fancy i . uch as Fans, Parasols, Neck Tics, Gloves, Hankor-

A new stock of Ladles* Fancy Goods Jnst received.

hlefa, Belts, and the now style of Ladles' Silk Lacv carft.Just received. Also, a full lino of Guipure

:es, Parsetuentrb Headings, Cloak Loops, Buttons, See. . " ' .

* OWN OUE GOODS CHAP! And will-give ouifouStomeis the beneflt pfour

Late For.tiunate Trip* to the CitjL An examination of our stock. Is solicited.

a. E. HOLBROOK! Potsdam Junction, June 18,187'!, • ' ., 2-tf

T T E N T I O N , E V E R Y B O D Y .

« «MR, OF L O U I S V I L L E , , «

'ould inrorm the public that he keeps'cbnstaiitly 1 on, hand; a rail and complete stock of

•r> Goods! anil Groceries, J • ]. i • .

BOOTS A N D S H O E S ,

jfats, ('ai/s, (flovea, Hosieiy, SStationei'j'

Ready Made Clothihg, , j f " : • • 7 < • - - • '

| O i ' , ' o c ; l i < i r y , j G t l a s s ^ w a i ' e ,

H A R D W A R E , & C ,

vfliiijl) will -be sold as ldw m at any other place in the qountyil

s

MILLINERY. p O T S D A M J U N C T I O N # MILLI3STEBY

. j jkSin - | 1

l a d i e s ' Eanoy ^6-oods STOKE.

! STRAW GOODS S ^ w e d , B l e a c h e d a n d P r e i s e d ,

• P O T O T S K I & H G W D E N ould respectfully inform the nubile that they have

10 :ate;d themselves In th> store lately occupied by SI pari & Sanb6rn, . • "

* ''. F i r s t S t o r e JHorth 6 1 ' W h H i i e y H o t e l ,

la^re now ready, for Spring and JSummer trade. 11 ivirig Just returned from the city with all the New st fieri Tor the coming season, we have no Jiesitation ' saying that our stock is complete, ana that any „. elr/wantofMUlIndry Goods, or anything in our Hi ie, v rould do well to call on us before purchasing

Ul orders given us will; receive" our prompt and p( rsofial attention. We solicit public patronage, and re raafii respectfully.

£ ^ W. DAVIS'

Thresh ing Machine.

otrr ^ AT B R A S H E R F A L L S ,

I RE-BUILD AT POTSBAM JUNCTION,,

Where, on the Ursa das of August next, I oiler my

\ V E L L - K N O W N iPATTENT

HORSE PO^ERJ' Threshing Macjhiiie For'the coming harvest. These machines are too well known In every town and hamlet In Northern New York to require commendation here. SuAIco It to iay that, my machines arc doing mora than three-fourths of tho threshing through these northern comities and that their reputation was never better than now. Here where tho two great arteries of commerce meet. 1 have looated, desiring a broader field anitl freer communication for and wltb my potrpiiSi With ~

[ New'and' Improved Machinery, tJnrlvailed railroad facilities, and a flxed Uelormlija-'tlontcteiscel, I invite all Wishing to get X-

A Superior Machine to give tmeacall. I sell directly to the purchaser, vyltnoue iigents, thereby saving him a heavy tax. .

Repairing pleees for machines cnreiwntly on hand. Orders by mall or telegraph forwarded by return

train. 7 • . . ' Old machines thoroughly and quickly repaired. ;

T E E T H W I T H MTDTS Rl&DUQKD TO.EIGHT CENTS EACH.

8. W. O&SJB. POTSDAM JnHcnoHAanictn.TunAL'WoitK8,Juiioa).

\

Being about to remove from Potsdam, ' we fflfer for the next th i r ty days

a Clipice Assortment of

WHITE jGEANITE CRQCKEEY,

LAMPS, Ghanflelier^ Table Cutlery,

PLATED WARE, " V a s e s , 3 B i - s n . o J k e t s , J t < » .

** W h i c h we will sell at

Actual Cost Tor J NO HUMBUG IN THIS OFPERi By callling on us you save from 25 to

50 per cent.

T H U R S D A Y , J U N E i 25, 1874.

l-t; f- POTJOTSKI, & HOWDEN.

A4so, a large assortment of

Furniture, Mirrors,-&o

k, <E|LLrNO A T COST !

MISS HATTIE F. LANG ] J Would announce to the ijltizens of \ P i o t M l h m l u i i c t l o n *V«I V i c i n i t y

TbntsliB nowielfs ' . : All $ t raw .Goods a t CdsTt During: the

Balance of the Season. j • Also, 3dst arrived

FLORIDA HATS, JffiW stock of FLOWERS', SILK RIBBONS, LAOES, Ond

<»MK KIbl^oi i« . jfjaf Leading Shapes' for Summer Styles.-St* ., .

i-rimmed Hats and Bonnets, Plain Hats,Sun.Uata, Tostly celebrated Cary Kilns, at Chaumom, N. V Filames,Trimming SllkSjnnd an extensive assort- • — - — ' • — - - - - —-m >nt Of Ribbons, Laces, Flowers, arid everything.In Having mode arrangements for new styles ....... .^_ Jity eyery weeTc, my patrons may rely upon hr viri* their work done In the latest and beststyle.

Sy strict attention? to business,, and fair dealing, I • ' • ' • • - • • * — * - " • * — l a g o .

ojUpinlng Par-i*j pe to merit a share of public patronage.

•-: itore,third dooxnoxUi of Railroad, ojljol k( ?sfirug Store. N M I S S H A T T I E > .

'atsdam Junction, N. Y., May 1,1S74 MX

DRUGS. a 'oUND^-THEf S T A G E H O R N ! ~?

^ BLOW THE TRU^ETl TJiat the Willing World Way know

| ipiHffi, I PARK!, \ • >"".(LatoofW'ater{own,N.Y.)

alwavs'ready to-supply the wairts of the afflicted, andrthe.publlc generatly, at his f

Iffew Drug Store^ ond Door hDrth of railroad, adjoining the Com­

mercial Advertiser Office,

J P o t f S d f t i n O T u n o t i o n , 1 r iTH A FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF

And in !the Under tak ing Line , su­perb Caskets,'Coffins, &e., at the low­est possible prices for cash, as .we de­sire to close out pur stock on hand. -

A respectable Hearse subject toorder. Our sltore ill Potsdam will lie open

dur ing t h e summer. ^

GORRIE & DELONGY. Potsdiam, J u n e 12th, JL&T4.

jr IME ! ' L I M E ! LIJV1E! 1 J M E

Would Inltorm the public tbgt he keepscohstantlyon hand. In qnoiiUtles to suit purchasers, Hani from the

THE LA-EEST IQBWS. BotU Houses of Congress, adjour

on Tuesday a t ft o'clock p* M. As q a number o f bills were rushed thr< dur ing the last days of the session considerable business was trausactedjon Sunday, i t will no t b o surprising if gome juggl ing ,was done. The tra|is-portation bill and several o ther im­por tant measures failed to receive (he sanction^ of both Houses. -!

On Tuesday last a boy named CKw. Post, about fifteen years Qf a£e, ^'la, fatally injured whi le a t tempt ing to i;et upon a pasaing^train at Lit t le Falls.i K. Y. H e lived in an unconscious stjtto about three hours, after ilxeacoide it. Unless parents put a stop to their cl; fl d r e n j u m p i n g u p o n t h e f a r s a s t l i e y p a s s M a i n s t r e e t w e m a y h a v e a aifl i i -l u r a c c i d e n t t o e h r o n i e l e i p o u r loj ial soon.,

Anothor. cable lias jbeen added I to those between Europe; and Ameri !a, and now So'uth America has t e e -graphic eomiQunication; with the r i s t of tho world. T h e success of 1806 t{ as been repeated oVer and over again, a|id the laying of ocean cables has beeoino almost as easy as t h e construction |pf land lines. • i

Mrs. Cameron, wife of the Hon. Simon Cameron, died on the morning of the 10th, a t Harr isburg, Pa .

Two men»were buried by the cavijig-in of a drain a t Hami l ton , Ont. , on tjie 19th. One of "them, named Zehiflg, was dead when taken out. The; other will-recover. " . Heavy rains are,reported alStf. JohJl s, N. B . , overflowing rivers ajid streanj s, l i i d p a r r y i n g awayjbridges. Tlxedai i -'agf is j ieavy. ; , : \ } \

TTli NEW CUliRENCI! DILI/. The new currency bill, t h e produc­

tion of tlte last Conference Committt e, has-reeeivCd t h e signature of the P r e i-dent and become a law. I t was pie-s.ented iu Wie House on Saturdi y last, by Mr. Dawes, wlio express 4 his regrets that i t did not contain, life the first conference report did, any provision, ei ther Tor a n early resump­tion of spe,cie paymeiit , or for any rj t i remeht under aiiy cireutnHtances, The new bill is a modification of t h e former one intended to settle the qifts-| tion so far as th is Congress is coneerneft; but i t b y no means disposes of the ttna: eial problem. To appease the wrath the contractionists, it uses the nia: mum of the greenback circulation i t ?380iOOO,000; bu t requires lit to be kept i n ' circulation instead of hav ing paft of i t ih tho Treasury as a reserve Ju: t o l>o i|oo<l « t tKo'iJl,)t.»-oti«>» (>f t>»oJf»w<j

dent and Secretary. If also states t h | t there .'shall bd no further increase If national baiili currency, and pravidi for a redistr ibution of t h e $80,000,1 now.held by one section of t h e count more than it was entitled to. Of coursj as t h e section referred to-is t he stjroni hold of th,e contractionists, tl}ere will be no opposition to giytog up thj amount , as it furthers t h e / e n d s t h •have in view, and throws the " i r r f deemable stuff" among t h e Westei] expansionists, who mast: suffer t evils which their Eastern friends h a \ | warned them an increase in the vo; -umev of the i r currency wotild prodjici. A lively discussion took place upoji t he provisious of tho bill, which dis­played a strong opposition by. the r e | -resentatives-of the moneyed centres «f t h e E a s t ; and although i t did not melt the views of the Western members, t wits' accepted as the best terms ' their could obtain dur ing this session. /Pfi J bill passed . the House by a vote'bf 251 to 40, and the pressure wa> so heav, • t h a t ' t h e President thought best to ij cede from his platform. Good by< Jones.

the State. A resolution .was passe pronouncing intemperance a great evil {' bufi the convention was not pre[ pared to grapple wi th itj, and t h e ques | t ion was, left to t h e people to debid whe the r ithey will t ake the i r dxih hot, cold 'or mixed. T h e past recpri of t he administrat ion *was endorsed and the convention adjourned. . J

I n Illinois,-the political atmospblerj was no clearer than fri I nd i ana , anc. pretty, mjuch t h e same tactics wein resorted t o . " After t h e riominatioijt o: State officers a platform, of resolution* was adopted favoring; an amendmen to tlie Constitution,, ojf t h e TJnijtedj Spates providing, for the 'election! oi Ifeldeat and Vice President by jthi •^rect yotje of the people, wi thout jthi intervention of t h e Electoral College, also such legislation as shall secure t< t h e people reasonable passenger and" fjieght rates-over 'the railroads. It also

' |*na»t*e«^li»«>present' banli system as the best ever before oflered to t h e peo­ple, pronounces tlie pVesent eurreacy

^afe and (convenient, i£ i n . favor j oi free banking, and opposed' to any con­traction tf the circulating medium. An: exci t ihg debate took^place on the resolution! referring to the finance, smd the original clause to retire the legal tenders wps str icken out. SenatorLo-gan addressed the convention,"defeijid-ing his acjtion in Congress, a t the oW elusion off which an adjpurninent took place. - •-'-

T h e Vermont State Convention adopted a platform of resolutions en­dorsing tho Presidential veto,,and con­demning the action of Congress. I t also recorriniends"sueh a 'change in the tariffas will protect t he manufacturers of t he east. . ' » * ! • - , * •

25, -

' ^ ^ F M I K E B ^

=9

I N F O R M A,ND E(JOjN'OMV •

I N GOVERNMENT. (

x, t T H E W A T E R T O W N 1 ; <*

WfiEKLY EE-UNION A flrstrclasis Weekly Democratic Journal, devptod to Che InteresitHofitho masses. FlIIcd»to tlis brim with' tBemost interftitlng hews of the day. C4mplete| cor-respondeniee ttom every part of the couety. Latest "'olenranhllc n«ws. NAgrlculturjil and i t nlnj

Qnod Hoi hand. Drivi veyoiirany ril

on con-

,'^Mh§M,ptoilc «uarry,« stone fun

all frizes, dr| shipped to dri liir uttentiof-

JBases,

FOR C.

-EVtrroor,!

Tbfegraphllc n«ws. vAgflcultural and i l Best advertising medium in Nqrthern N

ONJTyY T W « jrXOM^R.S P E R

lg riewi w York.

JTEAH.

ALSO,,

THE MORHP DESPM! A livo dally, containing all the important news from abrowlanill throughout thecounty. Latest telegrams and correcitcd Markets every momijng;

Terms $8.00 Pe r Yep,r. n««]qo" %i r '>»yAl r t 'E .

STATE TEMPERAiNpE CONVENTION A State bonvention'Qf|.the advocates

of temperance inet in A(.uburn in this State on Tuesday last alid nominated an independent State, ticket to be voted for a t the j fa l l election. , The Republi­can par ty inay well dread t h e resuft of the course this convention has taken . It was tc " t a k e t l ie w i n d . out of their sails',' tha t Gov. Dix 's let ter on his tenipemnce record was published in •five Syiacuse Journal*. Tha t com-niunicatio: 1 will ha*>4 no efiejCt wha t ; ever on t i e question a t issue. Gen. Dtix Was evidently led to believe tljat the object on of the prohibitionists was to h in personally. This is a mis' take. T l u r e is h o objection among them, to Governor Dix . T h e r§al ob

Prohibition State Convention. T h e Prohibit ion Convention 'which

ass ambled a t A u i u r a on t h e 23d i n s i , adopted the platform! giveh below, and nominated the fol W i n g State officers:

I T H E p i A T O O B M . * f" Resolved, Eirst i T M t we are more

t han ever persuaded t ha t t h e legal pro* hibiiion ot the manufacture and sale of a rdent spirits for beverage purposes is t h e only effectual remedy for t h e un­paralleled evils result ing, fromr the i r •use., - ' : ' ' - ' •

Eesolved, T h a t we are as firmly per­suaded t h a t such; remedy can only be secured t h r o u g h ' a separate political par ty tha t , whi le iequally"competent to aealFwith. a l l btner public questions, slialjl m a k e prohibition t h e paramount aimpf its organizatioaj ap$ to that con­clusion we are impelled, among others, by t h e follogving reasons: ;

First—Qf t h e two gireat parties we .havie the fdemocifaeyl which nei ther pretends, nor could wi th justice pre-, tend, to favor regressive interference with the-rum interest

- > 0tfewud-4-WhhBttneJTCputoUc«Mi;.y«.»«y has i claimted to b,e t h e par ty of great moral ideas, arid sa t m e friend of tem-

'peranee, it has forfeited all r ight to be recognized as such . .

Third—It has had possession'through itg.gqvernment.anji two successive leg­islatures of the State administration for near ly t h e whole, of t h e past two

Sears wi th full jjower to g r a n t ' a n t i -quor legislation ilf' }t h a d been dis-

e into fiower fully el measure, of prohibi-

posed to do so. Fobrth—It

committed too; tion>by a pledge Wihic. and has since failed tc " Fifth—It has refusi voted upon by the pi menjt to the. const i to

t i t nrst.violated redeem. I to'Bubmit to be-plcl an am'ehd-

on of t h e State, rohibit ing the vujn t|afilc|as asked for y t h e leading t^mperajupe organize

tions Sixth-

tection api entire Re]

ears to be opposition to t h e ublicali par ty of tho Statu

liqupy sellers, so modified the law<

of New Y w k . Hav ing failed to ac­complish ; inything by work ing for their cause! inside t h e party, they have determine^ to m a k e jthel.r ^vc^ight felt outside of jit. T h e record of \General

not now M v e the least effect on the action of th is prohibition convention i find a separate "and d i s t inc t . t icket has been placed in .the| -field. JThe leaders in tl lis movement (will fl'o Iopger consent to play »" second fiddle'* to either of t i e old parties [in t h e State, Their convention meetifag thus early in the yeai will give the republicans anddemoc ia t s tlie oppoHmiity of as certaining yhat may be Expected from these movpments , whi l^ i t iwlll also give the prohibitionists "plenty p f i i m e to canvass the State in support of their ticket. ''

- I t has, a t the i4stigation of intejrfered wi th and f e^ciselin existence

whejn i t came intoj power, so far as civil penalties go, as td give practicai free* teade \h r.um in our larger cities and remove th'e principal restrictidns'upon t h e traffic on t h e Sabbath iday.

Sepenth^—It hasb.ufflupo|i t h e statute books a law unprecedented in its sup-poi-tiof t he r u m , i n t e r e s t in an act. incorporating t h e Wine.] and Spirit Tradf rs ' Society of thte United States, as thereby it (has given the highest legal j sanction land pjrbteetion to t h e rum Ifraffics and cbnferred upon those openly and actively ehgaged therein mostlpxtraordinary pirivilekes and pow­ers, including those piUonging to t h e courts" of justice and directly affecting t h e l iberty of the citizen, as well as au-, thori ty to raise and use l|trge sums of

ere

• I n t e l . Zlnche 3 Inches

»4 Inches 5 Inches 6Inches

12Xnches Zffnches

lOP'OO Business Cards of ftve lines or Jess one ye»r^|5.po;

slxmonths, |3.00.-'Every oddfUorud M e , ft cents per year, or 60 cents for six months. , -IV)calNoU<»8WilL be charged at the rate often

centtper line for the first insertion, and five cents per line for .each subsequent Insertion.

Transient advertisement payable In advance. Adverttsemjents tbrwardid tons byzecnlarcosto'

mars without Bpeclttc'instrnction«, mOXT» Inserted until forbid, and Charged aqcordingly. ,. -

^ • ! i

£ • 1 , I . •

awrenrieburg, where, they taken i n charge b y t h e undertake)

T h e hab% Mary Stella, When foj wSs moan ing pitifully o h % e blood bespattered floor,, lying £1 two feet from }ts mother . I f 1 der took phice on Monday; night , been a n igh t and a day in thai t ion Without food or care. I fs Was pitiful, and: t he sightOf i ts serves to awaken t h e strong^ ^ ings of vengeance against the Who wrought all t h i s l i a rm . I t once removed to the 'hpuse |oj maiden" ladies named Gage, erously undertook t o care for suffered Las t n igh t i t was sle^pinte or unconscious, i ts muti lated face Iwolfen and blackened from.the injuries received i n the awful struggle beitween its mother-and her murderer] It is ham jjf possible that it can? live,

ICoronerSMinnerlield an inqu,e}sy. A post-mortem examinat ion made byPra, Gatch and Miller, disclosed the fact t ha t an outrage had been perp^trdted upon t h e mother , and the murder of the childre'n w,as to conceal, tho .critoc

ThAinat.r'ntnent with which the mur -ders were co inmi t tedwas fou^^^Taitne margin of P-arrner's Cree"k. I t jyas t h e a ? e belonging, to Bradley's hpuSe,' I t was covered wi th blcipd, in whieh'coiild-be seen bits of t h e l(air of the-vijctilms. At the same place were seen tmefcs of the man who bore the; ajfJe. He had removed' Ms boots to wade the 'e reek . A c c u r a t e m e a s u r e m e n t s w e r e t a k e n o f the ' traeks, and t h u s a clew to the mur­de re r m a y be found. This was at the corner of t h e field next thq wOods, and indicated t ha t the man came a n d went I n t h e same way. .' j

Self-preseryation, as we l las the plain­est demands of justice, require t i r a t t h e perpetrator of th is threefold crime should be soiight after by all ayailable means, and tha t , in the language of the k ind l a d y who has charge '(of tha t motherless babe, " no stone should be left unturnjed to bring the; crtniinal to justice, and to vindicate t h e goqp name o/ the eommnn i ty . " i

Were s tanding. T ^ o were enveloped ih : the. dreaclfUl ho t blast, anfllgas JSrom the moi ten ,meta l , a n d were 'T i twdly "charied to "a ebider rnstantaneously, the i r remains hav ing to be raked out. Two.others who weipe hear a t t h e t ime were fearfully burned, a n d have since died. Iii. t h e same worksv a few hours afterward? a n explosion of dynami te Occurred. Whi l e preparaliiQhfe were beihglmade to blow oiit a furnace, Un­der t he direpjapn of Mr. TJfqUhart, a n e^plb^ion, from some uhaccountable cause, ' suddenly Occurred. * Ohe man-was blowh to atoms. Mr; UrquMrt Was fatally, injuredi dying- sooh^aftejr the , occurrence, and several i suftering ffoni. sever i injuries.

ti

TEIJEGRAPIIIC NEWS. ^

_^_ CON

An A suit ha:

the New River tie aB'

Cand WOO,' 'breach ot plaintifls cially, ander'sj casi May 28th, i

ye'La1

BRIGHTER BETTER T H A N j EVER. Address

w. c. H A V E N &.CO., Prop ' rs , \ - " Watertown.N. Y.

,GEO; M06S,*EdItOK . 7-2m

PERFUMERIES,, 6ed in iSii'desireduuaiinty.ofnnyaini

Sidressexl,on short nouce.anjl. Si- part of the country. Tartlcil;

I '. '! |ilARBLK DEALERS j

l^cS Posts, CurbinJ,

jRY AND OTHER EENfES.

K E B , J E W E L E R , FIRST? fithiof «

Clo-MeCormicle' _._ thing store^iaiJdrid, N. V. Al mfids of Watches, CYbcftSi

• and .Jewelry,, re­paired prorMjtfy; at

~*jowprices. f >

. 'FineWaMhes • - A spEtaAEjEy.

The *best SJtaerl-can arid Kflreign Watches onfiftndor »ught to order-.

MT? assoi

PSTENT MEDIcnnSS, FANCY AJRTICIIEH, and ayprythlng, usually kept In a first class Drug store.

K i n - e W i n e s a n d I L i i q i i i i r s 1 FOR StBDICIKAL. PT3POBE3., Bhyslclati3 Piescriptlons accurately compounded,

at'all hours, day or night, persons wanting Pre­scriptions In the night time, by ringing the bell on right hand side of tlie door will be promptly waited upon* i_ '

Qhaunccy S.-parkerjmakes aspccln/lty of the pre­paration ofDVfe STUFFS, and warrants every color prapated by hun. to give entire satisfaction, or money refunded. ,

n the Grocery Department wlU be found a good Ortnjent of CHOKTS SHELF OROCERTES. Also,

ertfpepfertj fCHOKTS f

Best Bnnds or Cla*rs and Tobacco',

• ^ y r i L L r A M SCOTT,

/BOOK BINDEE, , . Blank Book Manufacturey,

AK»'

P A P E R BOX M A K E R , .

B U R L I N G T O N , W"T; /

J. n uxcelk'iit assortment of .Parlor and Lapips, Lamp Chimneys, &$., always-on hand.

Hand , «

Don't fell taglvo him a call and examine his Goods a prices before making your purchases. l-t

P S. W E S T C O T T j J D E A L E R I N - i - s» SICAL I1SISTBTJMEJSTS, Sheet Music, Mu-slc Books, 4c . Ac., corner Market and Depot streets, Pojsdam, N. V. Orders promptly attended to.- l-t

RULING AND BINDING \

Of every descrEjitJOu donctO ordw.

/ I '

Ixteusijre'Law Sui^

been commenced against rk Central and Hudson

ad'Company by the *' Cat-f . the.West , J o h n T. Alex-ill iam Fi tch , for $250 uX)0 respectively, for alleged

contracts, whereby The

money in controlting and eormpt ing legislatron, •** ! : ' ' . j .

E igh th—It has refubed to remove or modify obnoxious statute^ of i ts enacts ing, w h e n protested agaiust and apy pealed to for t ha t jpurppse by t h e t e m f peraucepeople/treati ifg their petit ions and drafts of bi | ls wi th lmdisguised in­difference a n d iepntemUt.

N i^ th—I t has shown itself by its en­tire administration trfjpubllc affairs, to be & friend of runi'dealers; and chiefly concerned in. securing the i r supj>6rt.

NosrisfATioisrs; Fo r Governor—Jttyr >n H . Clark, y Lieut . GovernorHJt ihn L . Bagg. X C o m - t - o f . ^ r j ' " * ' ^ w m w V. fttfwr |

landl " i •/ Canal Commissioner—PanJel Wal

fdrd'. " I . . j \y State Prisoii Inspectoi^f l ra Bell

T e r r i b l e C a t i w t r o p h e — O n e H n u « l r e « l P e r s o n s K i l l e d or I n J U r e U .

S Y B A C T J S E , ' J u n e 2 3 . M A h a p p a l l i n g catastropnTBiOeeurred here to-iilght. A strawberry festival was being held a t the parlors of the Central Baptist Church, when , wi thout any premoni­tion, t he 'floor gave way ;aboutf half; past n ine , precipitating t h e rodrn ful,l of ^people in to the story belowj« The parlor was on the second floor,-and the room undernea th was. also full, The fire a larm was'immediately^g'iven, and the firemen hurried to the §cenel; Soni! 10,000 people were th^re. Fi-^edead bodies nave bee.h taken out an^f the Work has hard ly commene«d". bly a h u n d r e d p,ersonfe wrasex

THE AMERICAN PILGRIMS. ,7

less injured, m a n y Very se> /following dead dodies were recc Dr. Ef Waihwright ,"" Miss ^ i n n i e Ostrander,ali] a l i t t le girl nai JEJcflmes. anjj'"

ThO! . \^ainwrighfe

m e Collins.'' pastor pf the

af„a'ch'ild ] i a | 1 named lid

HortonsM'rs] l i t t le gi i i namei

George ^P. iDojv ihurch, is ,aang(i

H0BBIBI.E T lS lE MURDER,

A . i v o . n » n A I I O ^ T W O C l i i l | d r e d K i l l e d t o . / C o i » c c « | . C e l i n e .

Thef Cmeinat i < Jaz^tte thas full der-laijlsjof t he fearful and bloody tragedy. atjLwrenceburg,! :nd, f bnMonday, By ... a i ch a woman a n d h »"children were sacrificed owing to tli e licentiousness of a fiend or fiends,"who p a v e n o t ' a s yet been identified!. ]

T h e woman, Mrs, Wi l l i am T. Brad^ ley, lived in a jcabih wjith h e r chi ldren about two miles from the town, and had been alone wffib. tbjem shice Feb­ruary,, when her. husband, went to an adjacent county to work. .\ There is^no house near except thaf; occupied by a neighbor, 300 yardp distant. T h e last seen of. t he familyialive was on Mon­day .evening, bu t iihe jfacts. show tha t the murderer enter'ed the house during t h e n ight , and , after! outraging the mother", killed he: t h e n , to prevent t

with an axe, and o -l|ttlef girls, .Eliza

a i m - t o be ruined finiiri-f Jane^ aged eleven,sand Rokanna,' aged ti* A 1 & - n i n e yeara, from betraying] h im, they

riT^niE VERMONT STATE FA|B .

Books left for Binding at the office of this paper WlU be forwarded tad returned free of any freight or express charge. , : 8-ly

C H . G I F F O R D , A G E N T F O R • THE HOWE: SEWTNO MACHINE-the best

In the world. Office nearly opposite Yale's Hall, Potsdam Jinactlon, N. Y. * \

THE REPPIiLICAN STATE . TIONS.

In-bur iflsht* of J u n e 11th we Htalefl tlixit seventeen State con veutions woul< I be held previous to August 2Gthj ah^l tha t noheof these could well avoid! lni> expression of an opinion on the finan­cial! problems. Three of • ' these havis beep he ld on the 17th of the preseii; month , all Republican, in Indiana Illinois and Vermont . I n tin? former State* several questions Were- before thj people tha t caused a difference, o; \ opinion between the* membors of thi! same political par ty . T h e crusader;-had" overrun t h e State, and 'waged ji bitter warfare against t he l iquor in­terests, t he farmers' movement nvalj fast gaining ground, and a majority qf the people sanctioned t h e action cf their Senators and Representatives ih Congress, upon the financial ciuestiorj, and were opposed to the Pres iden t^ veto. Politics were pret ty evVniy di­vided in th is State, and two years agj > a democratic Governor was electee. W i t h th is state of affairs, i t required j t careful^system of herdiiig to keep th; ? r ank and file together. No th ing couli 1 He more critical «nd ticklisji t han ill'} political si tuation in th is State, and it division upon these questions Woull I portend a general overthrow of th? Republican par ty . Principles mus t li ? laid aside and a,pl i t fprm^idopted tj) s u i | , t h e par t j ' l eadeb^ ins tead of the old-fashion.ed way>»fmaking the pla -' form first, and then finding the cand; -dates to stand upon i t . "Grant anil JHorton^nitust both be endorsed by th] con volition, ajid t h e resolutions befl ^ar-poated so tha t all could swallo tlrem. witliout producing nausea. TJ platform favors expansion of ' the cu | -reney to meet t h e requirements of tl: people, and a t t h e s a m e t ime expresa entire confidence in t h e integrity an|l honor of the President of the Uni S ta tes ; tenders the t h a n k s of the co: vent ion to theSer ia torsand Represeni atives in Congress from that 'State, an| Views wi th especial pride and heartf approval t he course of Senators Mo ten a n d Prat t , and the fidelity anil abili ty wi th which they have-renr*i-senfed the sent iments of t h e people <j f

declaration in Mr. Al^j says tha t On ilondajy,

70, J p h n T. Alexander, on his own be|ialf and tha t of hte part­ners, George p>* Alex-ander and Wil­liam Fi tch, ithen doing business under the firm naipk of J . T . and G. p . Alex­ander & 0 4 in New York citjy, made an agreement ' wi th Willjlam JH. Vap-derbilt to ship , for one year from J u n e 10th following, their horded cattle and hogs over th/e lat ter road to New York. A t tha t - t ime the Vanderbil t combina­tion controlled t h e New York Central, Hudsq,n Rijapr, Lake Shoneanr) Michi­gan Southern, and theToljedo, ^Vabas^h and Westerrl rbadsL Al l gbj companiejs, t he plaihtiff clalmsj Weife bound ' b y th is c6ntrac|t; j i t wasstjpulajted th^ t dur ing the (life: of the contract, me>:-eliandisfe shbulfl be .carried a t eertailn rates. Soon:after they began shipping under this (contract t he _comjpetltlo|n i»etween t h e . different roads for this branch Of tode* reduced the rates con­siderably. Tjhe^great reduction of rates, lowered t h e pride of stock far New York, •rati the i r brother dealers, who were bound by no contract, profited- by i|t, while they lost. - T,hey paid the con­tract rates on aR their shipments , tl|.e defendants |ref-Jising any;o*}ier. This

r ruin, and <jm Marehsl!r, ntifis..being unable to

v.. _ iroj

injured; also Ins-wife, Whjo is"f o pectfed to l ive. Rev , H . J . Edv., jseriously injured. Two hundred 'sons are injured, some ^seriouslyl

Midnightr-The.followln^ were t ^ f r » i ; l ir- OvW&inwright, Mri Aus t in Barnes , Mts . j a imSt j row, J . E . Karr , Miss Gussie Carpenter, AbijahVedder,-of t l t i c a ; Miss j©3 Holmes, W i n n i e Cqllins aged th in Ha^tie Leonard, aged- sfx ^ J o h n . t in Ostrander, aged n ine ; ; Mii Thomas, F r a n k Collins,; agcot'14 Horton, aged 12. Mrs, D,r. ^a in iv i j igh t will undoubtedly diei Ex^Ald;|er|han Aust in Barnes is veryseriOusly iqjuped. Rev. Dr . H . E d d y is slightly-injured.

• A Murde-feM*3Cyncfc(edV-'{ 1 S T . Lotris, J u n e 24,~Clark H a v i s

who murdered Halber t in ""Greene coUn^j 111., Was taken Jfrorn ja i l i n Carrolton on t h e 21st b y a large ^nob of disguised men and hanged from a tree .. .. . ....... >. ,.. ....... «6 : ' " "

T h e A d d r e s s * * P i o JTono » n d H l s ' B e -p l y — A S o l i d S t a f f f r o m » C o l o r e d C o n -grreKit f lon. •,:. , L.- "• . , -

.[Rome (June9) Correspondent of Ikradon/JHmesJ. The Bishops Dwetiger a n d Thread

wafted upon Cardihal Antonel l i yester j day to express t h e very great desire of the American pilgrims to pay a visit t o l h e PjOnei . T ^ y were eon,s6quenLtly received "by H i s HiaUrueaaTat Jifi^l. to-day,1 together With] some- American Catholics residing i n S o m e , t h e total number present being about 200. Sev- *-era! Cardinals, prelates a h ^ distinT guished Rbm'ah personages attended theaudienco. Mgr. Ifwenger addressed ^ t h e f o l l o w i n g : s p e e e h i t o t h e P o p e :

Y p u . s e e a t y o u r Jfeet s o n s o f y o u r s from the West . • A t this pe r iodof your " afllietion they have dreaded nei ther sea ' nor distance in theijr endeavor to see thefatjier ofal l t h e faithful, the Pontiff most exalted/by, h i s labors, perseeU-tiohs''ancl oatience, his hope and faith in Go'di 'j'We.wishedlto see, Your Holi-nes% and the distance to be traversed •> increased ra ther t h a b diminished our desire. Though abandoned by the princes of the eart i a n d reduced to prison We have hot abandoned you, W e have come to proclaim before t h e whole world our devotion to you, tEe infallable pastor .of t h e Church, t h e centre of the 'un i ty 0,' Ou^ faith. This is-ithe long Wished for j | a y wh^nTwe jfeap. ^ee you and receive your blessing, 'not only for ourselves, but for all those who cannot be present,, a n d Who a t a disT » tar ieepray to God wi th tears for you in j. youTfirison, They , aawel las ourselves, •loying -honesty ajad••ffivit l iberty, con­demn with all tfieir jhearts t he tyran­nical Ipersecuiaon of, t h e Church by those braggarts of thd false l iherty who are sestrajrged from God,

MgryThread then ijead an address in • ^ r e n e h , expressing the devotion of the piigrhns' an4 : al l American Catholics.

"/' • T H E POPE'S B E P I , y . , . Amid the darkness; of t h e ^Orld-this is a ray of l ight. The enemies of the Church ai'e numerous ; b u t great eon-solatiohs reach nle from the Old and N e w Worlds, .where t h e tfue fa i th has been soamarveiously developed t ha t i t ha^ been necessary to increase t h e n u m ­ber of dioceses., Stil l a Jgreat par t of the Cont inent remains, Occupied by false religions, and you mus t pray God to br ing all-back to the t rue faith.

"l T h e Pope afterwards descended from Ms. th rone a n d passed before the pil­gr ims giving t h e m his h a n d to kiss ;

(They presented<)fferings to Hi sHo l i -nfess, t h e Revi Mr, Miendler, in / t l je nanie of his black parish6nersvrpreseht-ing a stick filled wi th gold qojnsi

worked th> 1871, t h e carry on b canceled, t h e refusal

isiness, t h e contract w*s Alexander claims tha t

f t h e defendants to g ive h im the benefit of the reduction in rates, whiclt was specified for in the agreement, caused him damage to the a m o u n t of 3250,000. Mr. F i t ch ' s decla­ration is identified wi th tha t of M*.

Alexander , for $100,000,

and closes wi th a.demand

- * ! » • • 1—

GOOD A G E N T S W A N T B J O . — T h e im­mense circjulation of the Christ ian Union has , been bui l t Up by, active canvassers. N o other publication com­pares wi th I t for quick amd profitable returns . T h e public eagerness for Mrs,

tic premiUriis for immediate delivery, l ight autfltland complete ' instructions ' to beginners , assure repeated success to agents, a n d offer active^ intell igent persons unusual chances to m a k e money. Al l w h o wan t a safe, inde­pendent business Write a t once for terms, or send $2: for tchromo outfit to J . B . F O B D * Co., New York, Boston, Cincinnat i Chicago, or San Francisco.

' i- ; ' «

were also dispatched. The report Says: The same instrument|wasjused on all.

T h e mothe r seemed tcjmave struggled against her-fate w8thiher1babeinher> a rms , a little; girl seven months old. The brute dia noHkilli t h e jn fan t , but its head beark marks of h i s violence, or of wounds Ipceived otherwise in, t h e struggle. On the left (side of i ts fore­head is a g & h nearlyj ans inch long, but s o t deep. The right side of its head is alSoscut, and i% face and eyes a re bruised, unti l la^t n igh t its features were searcel i discernahle. I t s eyes are "blackened apd swollen, nn t i l t hey are

T h e only*m^mbe|- of !the family who escaped' is - James , ft ^ijttje boy nearly four years old, w h o mus t have hidden under t h e .beds or [otherwise have es­caped tbe 'axe of thfe murderer .

T h e murders seem to have been com­mitted, eariy on Monday n ight . *The victims were all clothed when found, showing tha t it was nojt after they had gone to bed.. I t do6s nbt seem possible Chat it could have been done on Tues­day morning, because p r r . s t r an i ey ' s m a n was ploughing c-bm in the field very near the house aJL day*

H e observed. Ithe; bay James often during" the day . We followed h im a good deal fin the field, sand swas crying a n d crying. " M a m m a l " but the m a n did no t t h i n k ifejunusiial. T h e boy is no t as br ight as phildrdn usually are at his age, and cannot sayr any th ing be­yond a few s imple -words . H e , °* course, could tejl no th ing pf t h e hor­rible fact which wasjeonnected witli h i s desolated hqnief ^.ateij in the day Mary Strahley, theMaUghtdt of F r a n k Strabley, t h e £eighbbr, J a w James down a t t h e creek. lmd, t h p k m g tha t h e was in dangeir, she took}him u p to the house, b u t did no t go in w i th h im . The door was sl ight ly ajar.. H e w e n t in , bu t came oiat again"at, once, and acted sost rangelytnat 'Mary 'weht wi th h i m . She had to pu^sh thei door toopen it . The boy had p r e c e d e d h e r . a M t l e , and when she had affejjted an entrance she saw him-sifting! in ;a chair, looking alternately a t thelftreplace-'and a t h is dead mothe r l y ibg 0 n | h e hear th , With no sortof appreciation of the situation. T h e l i t t le girl wa|s por ror str icken. H e r playmate^ El iza Jane , lay deadMn a pool of blood behind, t h e door. Mrs, Bradley, m u t i l a t e d | n a frightful manf ner , lay wi th her head pn the hearthj, near t he table, anjd t h e other gir l , Bosanna, was deadjoiiithebed behind the door. W h a t a sight ffor such a ch i ld ! I • ' , .

' S h e r a n a t once ftojthe h i red m a n ploughing in- the 4elg a h d told h i m t h e dreadful stjoryi H e w e n t to t h e scene of blood, and a t once' gave the alarm. A s soon as' t he word reached Lawrenceburg, .a crbwd of people s tar ted out , a n d before' n igh t hundreds had visited the fatal lcjcafity,

in t h e outskirts of the toSvn. None of them.can-be recognized. ' : [ •

F a t a l R a i l r o a d C o l l i s i o n . | A L B A N Y , N . Y. , J u n e |4.—Thef-e was

a collision between freight t ra ins four miles from St. Johnsvi l le on ,Sunday morning , by which Petefr MeGregory, cattle shipper of Brighton, Mass.; lost his life, and jGeo. Wish ing , ship*p sr of Buffalo, was seriouslp injured. C has. Li t t le , b rakeman, had au a $ n bjw ken and wks otherwise 'seriouslyinjure d in t h e back. - ;-. I . '

• -. • •; — r - — , , y , T b e E r i e C a n a l , W e s t e r n IMvIsP-o n. BtJPFALO, J u n e 22.—The Lieutenant

Governor, Secretary of State, troller, and other State and canal bfiV cials, arrived in/th^s city this evemng, to make an official inspection Of the-western division p£ t he Er ie Carnal. They will proceed , in a tug ovejr'iihe course to-morrow, under charge of (Col. Richard Flaek, canal collector. ,, .

. . „ ' ; > _ — ^ ."'" i J| S h o o t i n g A f f a r y n e a r R o c h e s t e r . - ,

R O C H E S T E R , J u n e 21,-i-Aboufl ^flve o'clock th is afternoon Captain Walter, A. Fowler , of t h e yacht Ariel, shoti&ud dangerously wounded a laborer nfjiaed Byron Co©k,aged twenty-eight yekrs, on the wharf a t Charlotte Harborp The affair was t h | result of- a d runken quarrel. '. ' i(. i

F a t a l B o i l e r E x p l o s i o n i n O n t 4 W

C H A T H A M , June' 21.^-A sad accident occurred at Baptiste Creek,, on the] S t? Clair River. A t noon yes terday ' the b o i l e r o f t h e G r e a t W e s t e r n K a i l W a y s t e a m d r e d g e e x p l o d e d , i n s t a n t l y ! f i l l ­i n g "VjZiilitwnJOav.tiorjiof t l i O ' S t o i i y J ' o i n t and severeJy iUJUriag flVe o t h e m One of Whom, natoed Bemara, ' has pijnce died, , , \ ,

S u n d a y H o r n i n g i n C o n g r e s s . W A S H I N G T O N , Juhe21.ATheSehate ,

a t half-past three' th is jnorningi :ad-journed the session of Saturday, which legally includes t h e hours which -"were stolen from the Sabbath by thel^pro erastinatrng lawmakers . •

The House Committee on Appre pWa-flons Svere in session to-day consider­ing t h e Senate 's amendments to . bills mak ing approprlat ionsforsu a cfvll expenses and for rivers and{ 1 bors, so as to present their irepo morrow morn ing for t h e action qj House, The only other . generaf propriation bill, pending betwee two houses i s t h a t mabifig jappr< tioUs' for the Post Office Jteparti The^Senate has appointed ia,gomn to confer wi th t h a t to be Appoint* . t h e H o u s e o n disagreeing a1m£hdmfeUte The prospect is tha t theiabove "fc"*— tioned bills wil l be definitely aci On by both, branches to-morrow, clerks were engaged to-Hlayengr* numerous bills andjotheirwise tfrai ing business pertaining to Cop. Dtaang.yesterday about fifty-bills of them of a pr iva te eharaeter,, .. presented to t h e President ,for I s proVal. The ipommittee of confere: on t h e Geneva A w a r d Distributic A have ho t ye t been able to agree; the probability is t h a t i t ; w i l l g> unt i l t he nex t session, w i t h w

Others of a pi^blic charaeteri

' . " " — - ' - . < • > ' - ; . • ' • • ' - ; ~

Two fatal accidents occurred a t t hy r Tydvi l i h Wales, a few d a y s s Mee. F o u r men employed a t -the C ^ ^ n a Ironworks m e t wi th a dreadfur

Coroner Sk inne r was immediately by t h e burs t ing of ^ / h t t a s t o f j ; embodies removed I nace w i t h i n a. few feet of w h e r e notified, and h a d tfhejbodies removed

f

r.JLifpsiA j i l A L L . " — W e have .at last received a ^ p y of t ha t hlOst extraorr d i n a r y work, which has excited' so . much interest and at tent ion in all sec­tions of th.0 count ry , ' W e ' allude, to-Mrs. T. B'. H,- Stenhouse's neW book, ? entitled, "Tel l it A l l , \ I t is wi th great pleasure, t h a t we hailNthis remarkable wbrk^-ti ie igenuine hiBtory' of a real Mormbn woman. TwOv years ago the* author published a little pamphle t on " •Polygamy, 'which attr^cted^cOnsidera^ ble a{ten'tioii,, and created quite a sen­sation among the Saints ; The>MorBion -papers took upthe,sUbjec"t, and al luding derisively ijp t he delicate reticence, so na tura l to a sensi t iveWoman^isplayed by the author, spitefully iUvited; he r to/ "Tell i t A l l . " Men and WOmeri of p e ^ sjltion, i i i all parts of t h e country, w h * had visited^ier iU Sal t L a k e City, urged he r to s'eize the opportunity, , rWrite a book,"" and lay the whole truth;before t h e world, Mfs> Harr ie t Beecher! Stowe whose earnest introduction to th is Vol-:

u m e is a guarantee ' of t h e delicacy,, a s well as pur i ty of the Work, personally , added h e r persuasions. MTSiStenhouse ult imately consented, and chose for t h e tit le of- heri new volume, the words of derision us>d" by her -Mormon Oppo­nents---*'Tell i t A l l . " "**"!' ' <

I n this way t h i s s ingular work was ihtrodnbed to- the world. - I t j s a book " u n l i k e a n y o the r work on the>sUbjeet ever penned before. And, al though , we WoUld riot spoilbur readers' pleasure^

•byrtelling Mrs. Stenhouie 's facinatmg , s tory secphd-han.d we will state (that it ". is jus t wha t i t prbfesses to he-^the -hisr-tory of a life in Morfttohism, wri t ten by a lady of education and Jrefinement, who, through t h e influence of religious. sympathy , 'misdirected, beeame the" victim attaVslave of one of t h e most ex- _ traordihary superstitions which! thfe world 'has ever seen. I n her own fas- ' cinat ing style, she tells a i l - tha t can'be -told of t ha t strange system, no t as a

isito^to U tah migh t relate it, bUt With h a t thr i l i ing eloquente and "pathos of

one whose whole life I has been dark­ened by i t s deadly shajdtfw. Real m e n •and women—^thestory Of real l i y e s ^ , t h e say ings , ithe o & s * t h e events of to%ayu«moug a'clafesSf our own coun-ti*yinen and women , much talked of, ' butflittie' known, are painted before us hy this taiehted woman', wi th touching fidelity; and when fthe reader lays down m e volume his dnlxregret is t h a t l i e has 'a r r iVedat r ther las t page." The , book possesses al l the vivacity and thrilling interest of the finest works of flejloh., I n point of mecbanieal skill , i t eduid not be! sUfpassjed, Theh ind ing is elegant and substant ia l ; t h e illus-tiatiOns, on wood andjsteel, are eostlyf

-and fihely executed ; ,and ajtogethef i t is One of those, subscription books. Which one so rarely meets , Whigh give the purchaser full value for-hisnioney. This Work Will be soldOnly to those ' Who order of t h e agent, who will soon introduce i t to our ci t izens^ W e be*.. speak for i t ajmost eoijdial reception—: for i t is wor thy of it. d

] , _ ^ _ — _ t l - * - • - • — — - • ' •-• •"- ' —

C O I - O t t l N G KEJCIPES.

^ } § E E N ON 1 L B . W O O L E N . — 1 l b , P=US-tio, 2 o2."Alum; boil m minutes , enter t h e goods and let t hen i remain 20min-utesj then t ake out the goods and add Ind igo conipoUnd t i l l you have t h e shade required; -rinse in. cold.Water. O^eor twobz . eonjpoutid will beenough : for the above, - *, , % - r

itfABBEB ItED.-JOne lb, madder for. two lbs. cloth. Soak t h e madde* over n i g h t in a brass ke t t l e With warm^va-te*; esnough to cover t h e cloth. N e x t morning, p u t in two ozs, madder com-pduntd • for tivery pound qf madder , soaked. Then wet your cloth and wr ing o u t in clean w a t e r ; t hen p u t t h e cloth in'i;he dye and1 pu t over the ; f l reand ' br ing slowly to scalding e a t . Keep a t f th i s heat-; for half an hour!. T h e color igrows deeper t he longer i t is in thfe d y e . W h e n • t h e ioior suits, r inse inicoldwatei ' i • [ ' j - ,.

iVi i iE CoiJoB,—For five lbs. goodsr-eamwqod, tv^o lbs , ; boil fifteeh^mto> utes ahd^dip t h e goods half aU hour ; boil again a n d dip half an h q u ^ t h e n darken wi thMuevi t r fo l , one and a half ozs.; if n q t d a r k enough, add eobpems,

t|iey;';One^half oz. « " ' ' • ' j t . p . i " ' i ,

t

/ ' •

I l"if

ler-