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SENECA COENTT COUEIERJOUSNAL, THUBSBAT, FEBBUABT 11, 1904.
LA N D SC A PE PH O T O G R A PH Y .
TRAFFIC rN*SLAVEST
Vbl» Is the Moat Encouragriiis Worlc
For the Camera Amateur.
The most encouraging out of door
subjects for the beginner In photogra­
phy are landscapes. The most impor­
tant point In photograpUlng a land­
scape is the selection of it; the choos­
ing of a bit of scenery which, when
translated to black and white, will
form an interesting picture. You must
always bear in mind that the beautiful
colors which you see in nature and
upon the ground glass will not be pres­
ent in the photograph, which must
rely for its beauty upon form and light
and shade. When you wish to photo­
graph a landscape, take plenty of time
to think about i t After you have
chosen your subject, determine the
IK)int of greatest interest and then de­
cide whether the picture will look best
with this point directly In the cent<
to one side or toward the top or b(
If you live near the spot you Intend
to photograph, it will pay you to notice
a t what time of year it is most beautlful. Some landscapes look very com­
monplace in summer, but make stun­
ning pictures when half buried in the
snow. Waterfalls often look best in
•early spring, because there is a greater
volume of water pouring over them at
-that t i m e t h a n at a n y o th e r .
A most interesting series of pictures
lay be made by choosing a beautiful
may
Tait of landscape and photograph!]ing it
from the same point at frequent '
vals throughout the year. The first
picture, we will say, is taken when the
ground and trees are covered with
snow, the second when most of the
snow is melted and the rest lies in
patches here and there and the third
.when the fields are fiooded with rains.
'After these would come pictures show­
ing the trees in bud, in leaf, in blossom,
with fruit and later dismantled with
the frosts of autumn. — Philadelphia
Becord. ______________ ^
WHITE HOUSE STABLES.
•riie
Ftrtit of Them Wme Destroyed
hy the British Troops.
The original White House stable was
located about sixty yards south of the
White House,
luse, in
i] which are now the
private grounds of the executive man­
sion, and was the first thing destroyed
When the British captured the White
House during the war of 1812. Presi­
dents Monroe and Adams kept their
horses at a livery stable, and when
General Jackson came to the White
House he had a stable built at a point
some distance from the presidential
mansion. This stable was also used for
a time by President Van Buren, but
later he boarded his horses at a livery
stable.
President Pierce kept his horses in a
stable which was erected in the White
House grounds at a point comparative­
ly but a short distance from the man­
sion itself. When President Buchanan
came to the White House he had the
stable enlarged, and it was again en­
larged for President Lincoln, who kept
a lai-ge number of horses. President
Johnson also made use of this stable
for his horses and carriages. Up to
Lincoln’s time there was no water in
the stable, save the limited supply
obtained from a small well, and it was
customary to take the White House
horses to the Potomac river, fully half
a mile distant, in order that they might
be watered, and frequently the White
House carriages were taken thither to
be washed.—Outdoor Sport.
A S e n a to ria l T ilt.
Senator Reagan of Texas when he
was in the senate was one of the men
who strongly objected to being inter­
rupted. On one occasion Henry W.
Blair, then a senator from New Hamp­
shire, tried to ask Reagan a question
durln.g the latter’s, speech. ‘T do not
want to be interrupted,” said Reagan,
“but I will listen to a question.”
“It is not exactly a question, but a
statement,” said Blair.
“Then I refuse to yield,” said Rea“Weli, the senator has missed an op­
portunity of greatly Improving his
speech,” remarked Blair as he ambled
■toward the cloakroom.
A B a d T i m e t o C o afesH .
“Here,” according to the Warrens-;
burg (Mo.) Journal-Democrat, “is the
iway a Benton county man confessed at
a revival: He had been pressed to re­
pent and fin a lly got up and said, ‘D e a r
friends, I feel the spirit moving in me
In his article on “The Slave-Market
at Mairakesh” in Harper’s Magazine
S. L. Bensusan gives a vivid picture of
this terrible traflJe, wliich goes on ap­
proved by the Moroccan government.
He describes the be^nning of the sale
as follows:
“The crowd at the entrance parts to
the right and left to admit twelve
grave men wearing white turbans and
jellablas. They are the delals, or auc­
tioneers, and the sale is about to begin.
“Slowly and impressively the delals
advance in a line to the center of the
slave market, almost up to the arcade
where the wealthy buyers sit ex­
pectant. Then the head auctioneer
lifts up his voice, and—oh, hideous
mockery of it all!—he prays.
“Now each delal has his people sort­
ed out, and the procession begins. Fol­
lowed by. his bargains, he marches
round and round the market, and I un­
derstand why the dust was laid be­
fore the procession commenced. Some
of the slaves are absolutely free from
emotion of any sort They move round
as stolidly as the blindfolded horses
that work the water wheels in gardens
beyond the town. Others feel their
position.
“ ‘Twenty-one dollars—twenty-one!’
cries the delal at whose heels the one
young and pretty woman who has not
found a buyer limps painfully. She is
from the western Sudan, and her big
eyes have the terror stricken look that
reminds me of a hare that was run
down by the hounds a few yards from
me on the marshes near my country
home last winter.
“ ‘Why Is the price so low?’ I ask.
“ ‘She Is sick,’ says the Moor coolly.
‘She cannot work. Perhaps she will
not live. Who will give more in such
a case?’ ” ________________
THE BROKEN VIOLIN.
An Incident of the Childhood of the
Maater Ole Bull.
t h a t ’s r i g h t , ’ s a i d t h e p e n ite n t, ‘b u t h«
7: ”
ain’t on the grand jury.
H e W o u ld B e L e ft.
“Huh,” grumbled Mr. Skinnay, who
was
was being uncomfortably crowded by
the jolly looking fat man in the trolley car,, “these
'
cars should charge by
weight!”
weight!”
“Think so?” replied the fat man.
*'Then they wouldn’t think it worth
while to stop for you.”—Philadelphia
Ledger.
W e ll P o s te d .
Niblick—Solomon was a wise man.
He knew all that there was to know.
Foozle—Naturally a man with his ex­
tensive assortment of wives must have
heard all that was going on.—Boston
Transcript.
One AdvantJUire.
Knicker—Do you believe in a college
education? Bocker—Yes. It teaches a
boy’s father how to take care of his
money.—Life.
Once actor meant a person who could
a c t Now it means an appearance on
the stage.—Baltimore News.
Bryant’s “Thanatopsis” is based up­
on a passage from Horace.
Queer Korean Ways.
The women of the commonalty are
voluble and v ix e n is h and e v e r ready to
slap a handful of stars Into the eyes
of a husband or into those of a timid
and shrinking tourist should the oc­
casion arise. The women of the upper
class are rigorously excluded from mas­
culine eyes, and a hearty vote of thanks
Is due the committee who fathered this
unwritten law. The dainty little Jap­
ing along In san­
anese musmee, teetering
:eta, is a genuine
dals or on wooden geta,
ge
relief to the eye after a view of tl
comely
»mely Korean woman.
Until Korean boys are married and
acquire the pseudo dignity of the topknot their hair Is worn girl fashion In
twin plaits down their backs. So much
do they resemble girls that It Is some­
times difficult to determine the sex, and
one Is oftentimes uncommonly surpris­
ed to observe what he is positive are
two girls sprawling and viciously fight­
ing In a Korean street.—Outing.
Ole Bull, the great violinist, was born
with a genius for music. To him the
swaying of bluebells, the wind and
rain and waterfalls, the music of birds
A Wife’* Stratagem.
and bees—all these were the voices of
A London journal tells an admirable
nature, and he tried to reproduce them
story of beauteous Kesa, who loved
on his violin.
It Is said that the musician’s first her husband, but who was herself
violin was given him by an uncle when sought by her wicked and powerful
he was but four years old, and his de­ cousin, Mollto. Knowing that Molito
would take her husband’s life unless
light at the present knew no bounds.
terri­
“My father wanted me to be ?, minis­ circumvented by guile, she laid a terrishe told
mmonlng 'Molito,
.......................
ter,” said he in telling the story many ble plot. Summoning
years after, “and I thought I must do him that on a certain night her hus­
as he wished. But when I was eight band would be sleeping in a certain
years old he bought me a new violin room and that she Intended to unloosen
and arranged to have me study under his hair so that under no circumstances
a teacher, ‘for,’ he said, ‘a minister could he be mistaken for another man.
ought to know a little about music.’ On the night in question Molito entered
That night I could not sleep.. I rose the room, severed the sleeper’s head
in the night to get a peep at the pre­ with his sword and, holding it up
;ld the face
fs
of
cious violin. It was so red, and the moon by the hair—beheld
pretty pearl screws did smile at me so! Kesa herself.
I pinched the strings just a little with
Cnatom* of Colliers’ Wives.
my fingers, and it smiledI at Ime more
The wives of north country colliers
and more. I took up the bow and
looked at it. It said to me it would be observe a very touching and pathetic
pleased to have me try it across the custom when an accident occurs in the
strings. So I did try It just a very, p it Directly it is known to the wife
very little, and it did play so softly.
softly, I of a collier that an accident has hapforgot that
it was midnight
la tit
■■ ■ and■ every­ .pened in the pit where her husband
works and that his fate is uncertain
body
ly asleep, aand the next minmte I
shoulders. she throws open the house door, and,
shoulc
father’s whip across my
i
little red violin dropped on the fiooi however Inclement the weather may be.
and was broken. I did weep very much She keeps the door open and a candle
for it, but it did no good. They did burning In the window, night and day,
le next uuj,
uui. n
have a doctor to it the
day, but
if till the man is brought home, dead or
never recovered its health.” — Detroit alive. In some cases the door has re­
mained open and the candle alight dur­
Free Press.
ing several weeks.—^London Chronicle.
W a n t e d , a L ib r a r y .
Many persons laughed heartily when
they read the following advertisement
In a recent issue of a German newspaper:
‘Wanted—Some French books which
a young girl may safely read and
which will fit into a small bookcase.
The height of each book must not ex­
ceed ten Inches. The price is of no im­
portance provided all the books have
handsome coters and are of the same
R a th e r P ro s a ic .
P h ilo s o p liv .
She—I suppose you attended the ama­
teur theatricals last night? He—Yes,
and there wasn't a dry eye in the
house. She—^The idea! I never heard
of “Macbeth” affecting an audience
that way before. He—No. You see, we
Simply laughed till we cried,—Philadel­
phia Ledger.
“and I put fresh cheese In the mouse
trap every night until I had caught
that mouse In the pantry.”-Judge.
Parental Solicitude. "
The M other-^on’t you think the ba­
by had better go to kindergarten,*dear?
Father—Isn’t he too young? The Moth­
er-Y es. But he never sees either of
us long enough to learn how to talk.
And don’t you think he ought to know
how?—Town Topics.
Round and Fleaaant.
‘
May—Last night was the happiest in
my life. It brought me one round of
pleasure. Fay—What do youi consider
“one round of pleasure?” May-rAn en­
gagement ring.—Philadelphia Press. <
Volcanoes can easily be extinguished,
says the New York Herald. A New
Zealand man claims (and there are
many who agree with him) to have
discovered a liquid by means of which
volcanoes may bo extinguished quicldy
whether active or threatening.
Many diseases o£ the human body
act in the same manner as volcanoes.
Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Kidney Dis­
orders, Female Diseases and many
others all be^n with a slight rumble
of pain and mstress, and if not treated
in time will bunt forth in all their
fury, causing all who are so afflicted
the most intense suffering and making
life a complete burden.
That a liquid has been discovered
that will extinguish these volcanic
eruptions of disease, whether active or
threatening, is not only certain but a
material fact.
__
_ __
JRA'
pow enof this famous remedy have cut
a new path through the field of media startling
i success.
Druggists sell it in MmwBtFOmni Wlmm
and the regular $1.00 size bottles.
MacUetli. as a ComeUIan.
A Reminder.
Singleton—I say, old chap, what
have you that string around your finger
tor? Wedderly-r-To remind me of
something I am to get for my wife.
Singleton—What
are you to get?
‘
et? WedHeriy-Why—
ly—er—I’ve forgotten what It
was.—New Yorker.
T h e y W e re N ot T h e re .
“Are these men the future husbands
of our daughters?” said a matron at
the afternoon swell wedding reception.
“No,” said a knowing mother. ‘"The;
liey
are downtown, making a
Cleveland Leader.^
Too Much Chin.
Gasaway—My razor’s in pretty poor
condition. I believe it’s tired. You
know, they say razors' get that wi
Sharply (wearily)—Ah, yes; tired
your chin.—Pittsburg P ost
“Lots of men,” said Uncle Eben, “kin
look wise an’ lots kin talk wise, but de
men dat kin act wise is mighty scarce.”
•^Washin^ on Star.
L E G A L
N O T IC E S .
Seneca Connty and Surrogate’s Court.
As C ounty Jud g e I do hereby ORDER and
APPOINT, two term s of the County Court, w ith ,
a Ju ry , and four Speetsl Terms, to bo held In and
for the County of Seoeoa for the year 1901, as foL
4^SHOES^«•
“If you want to see
“how much style can
“be crowded into a
“pair of shoes, try the
“ ‘D o ro th y Dodd'—
“t h e y bristle with
“style. They are the
“shoes of distinction."
Yours truly,
Qn the Third Tneaday tn February, the Flxet
Tuesday in Juno and. the Third Tuesday in J u ly ,
at the Court House in the Tillage of Ovid.
The F irst 'Tuesday in April, October and Deoember at the Court House la the village of W aterloo, A Trial and Grand Ju ry will be in attendance at
the June and December terms. Criminal bnsinesa
not requiring a jury may be moved by the D istrict .
Attorney at any Special Term.
As Surrogate, I will be in attendance for th e
transaction of business at my office In the village
of Waterloo, every Monday in the year, except
during the Month of Angnat, and at the Court
House in the village of Ovid, on the Third Wed- •
nesday of each month, except August, or a t any
other time or place agreeable to aU parties.
.
’* ■ d, Waterloo, N. T ., December 30th, 1903.
S T A T E OF N E W YO R K , \
StHtea
OjSfce, | t t
I, PATRICK SAVAGE, Clerk of said County
of Seneca, do hereby certify that the foregoing ia a
true copy of a certain original Court Order July
flled,entered and remaining of record In said office;
that I have compared th e same’with said original,
and find it to be a correct transcript therefrom
and of the whole thereof.
WiTNXBS XT HAND AND SEAL Of Office, thie 23rd
day o f Jan u ary , 1904.
Notice of Sale.
Sample bottle, enough f o r tr ia l, f r e e by mail.
Dr. David KenntdjrCorporation, Readout, N. Y.
Dr. Daria KeBaeay’s Xafle Eye Salre fo r all
aiseaeee *r InflaaiauitfeBi *f the Eye. S8c.
A Clever Fialt.
A R A H A M LIN C O LN
The salmon seems to be gifted with
much Intelligence, or “hereditary fore­
sight,” as it Is occasionally called,
which is more particularly acute when
danger signals are abroad, says Wil­
liam G. Harris in Field and Stream,
'hey have been known, when congregated In the upper pools, to become
frightened by poachers approaching
them with net or spear and to Imme­
diately dash down stream to a distance
of thirty miles in one night, not stop­
ping until they had reached pools so
deep that they could not be taken with
the appliances of the poacher. They
seemed to know that if they went high­
er up the stream their doom was sealed.
When coming from the sea in schools
and on entering the estuary they have
been seen with an old leader at the
head of the school, the rest forming a
triangle about two and a half feet be­
low the surface of the water, and on
calm days, guided by the old patriarch,
)uld swim around the fisher­
ley would
ets, never approaching
men’s nets,
approaching them
nearer than ten or twelve yards.
Said: “You can fool part o f the
people all o f tlie time; you can fool
all the people part o f the time, but
you can’t fool all of the people all o
the time. ” There is no fooling about
his:
Teddie—Pa, where do we get our milk
from? Father—From cows,- my son.
Teddie—And where do cows get their
milk from ? Father—Why, Teddie,
where do you get your tears? Teddie
(after a long, thoughtful pause)—Do
they fiave to spank cows, papa?—Judge.
A s h a re of your p a tro n a g e
is so licited .
A M a n t o B e A v o id e d .
A. M. Shepard
HOME TELEPHONE NO. 141
A. M, SHEPARD.
Foley’s Honey «i<r Tar
Very Like HI* Dad.
M. Crapaud—Ah! So zis ees your
leetle son? He look to be similaire to
you. Popley—Yes, he’s very much like
me. M. Orapaud—Ah! How do you
head,” ees eet not?—Philadelphia Press.
C. Chapman la d lv W a lly and as soft
A dm inistrator of the goods, chattels and credits
of Hugh Chapman, deceased, Louisa S. Chapm an his wife, Sarah E. Dickey, A nna M. B arnum a nd P atrick Fitzsimmons, Defendants.
P u rsu an t to a judgm ent of foreclosure and
sale, rendered herein, on tbe second d ay of
Jan u a ry 1904, and dulv entered in Seneca
County CIerk,8 office on the fifth day of Jan u a ry
1904, 1, the undersigned, the referee duly a p ­
pointed for such purpose b y said judgm ent, will
sell a t public auction to the highest bidder, on
Tuesday the first day of M arch, 1904, a t tw o
o’clock in the afternoon of th a t day. a t the fro n t
door of the C m rt bouse In the village of Ovid,
town of Ovid, Seneca County, N. Y., the real
estate directed by said judgm ent to be sold and
therein described as follows:
A ll that tra c t o r parcel of land, situate In the
town of Romulus, County o f Seneca and S tate of
New York, beginning on the northw est co rner of
lot No. M, i^ s a id town and running thence sonth
THE RELIABLE GROCER,
Sells Black Diamond Coffee including
ten Green Tradings Stamps for 28c
per pound.
W e have exclusive right for Seneca
Falls for the celebrated “Angelns”
flour- A ll kinds of canned goods
Olives, Pickles, etc,, and a full line
of groceries and all goods found in a
first class grocery. Yon can send
your children or come yourself, and
all orders w ill be promptly and
carefully attended to.
Briggs—Here comes Gidson. Let’s
cross over. Griggs—Why, I thought he cures colds, prevents pneumonia.
was a friend of yours. Briggs—He used
fjo be, but now he’s my deadly enemy.
He’s the unspeakable villain who rec­
ommended a place for me to spend my
vacation.—Brooklyn Life.
Like Old Friends.
Thrifty Mother.
“She named her baby after all four
of its rich uncles,”
“What good will that do? None of
them will feel complimented when they
know the others have been so remem­
bered.”
■ ■
“Oh, but she ±tas- trained the child tc
answer only to tbe name of the uncle
who happens to be aroimd.”—Oincin. nati Times-Star.
Argument Was 1Jsele«a.
S ta r tlin g D iscovery M ade b y An
A u stra lia n .
Dog:* a s C o lle c to r s ,
If we would realize the fact that life
is pain, not pleasure, our quarrel with
It would be gone, and we would accept
thankfully a little scrap of dripping on
our daily bread, but we go on expect­
ing happiness, stand, empty plate in
hand, beggars to an invisible cook, and
we grow old standing there, but we
won’t b u d g e .—^Helen M a th e r s .
“But,” protested the loving wife, “be­
fore I was married I always had a new
bonnet eveiy time I wanted one.”
“Yes,” answered the brutal husband
E. W. RlMlSDn.
Dogs with collecting boxes attached
to their collars are comparatively com­
mon In Europe. It may not, however,
be generally known what large sums
they earn, for the charities they repre­ rhe Longer Seneca Falls People I<
Them the Better They Like Th<
sent. It Is stated in the Animal World
that one which used to beg for a hos­
A true friendship is a friendship that
pital In Ireland collected in five years
nearly $15,000. He had a special bank­ stands the test of time.
It’s the same with a medicine. If
ing account, which was submitted peri­
its a good medicine its effects will be
odically to a chartered accountant.
A lady who was an ardent votary of
modern culture happened to sit
evening party next to an
s eminent com­
an orchestra. In
poser and leader of ai
the full expectation of eliciting from
the maestro a particularly brilliant and
intellectual pronouncement, she inquir­
ed, “How do you feel after conducting
the N in th S y m p h o n y ? ”
“Hungry,” was the laconic reply.
t o t a l k a n d t e l l -w h a t a b a d m a n I h a v e
been, blit I can’t do it while the grand
jury is in session.’ ‘The Lord will forgi-i
give!' shouted the preacher. T guess
TBe Hardlneas of Treea.
An expert nurseryman says the hard­
iness or nonhardiness of trees depends
upoj
Which the trees in question sprang came
from. Satisfactory results are seldom
ting a seed obtainexperienced by planting
obtain­
ed from the sunny 1 iuth,say. By plant­
ing seeds generally
ally farther north, how­
ever, trees may he at length hardened
and acclimated until a seed from such
a tree may be reasonably expected to
thrive and mature its fruits.
Trees, like people, acquire their hab­
its from the climate in which they live.
The northern tree knows instinctively
when the time has come to ripen its
fruits. The southern tree follows the
same instinct, being in no hurry, as
there is little likelihood of real cold.
With transplantings farther north its
habit changes.
The great trouble with most people is
that they want to jump a tree from
south to north at one move. This same
Idea is evident in the attempt to bring
various fruit trees from Russia to the
northern United States,
Apples and plums from the land of
the great white czar have taken kindly
to the below zero conditions of the gen­
tle Dakotas.—Philadelphia Record.
Fine Horse Bianlets,
Far Robes and Coats,
For Mittens and Cloves,
The Bishop Robes,
The Galva; Robes,
Bells, CMies, Strings, Team,
Bells, Etc., Etc.
A large and elegant assortment of
Ladies and Gents
KID GLOVES
and bounded and described as follows: Begin­
n ing at a point in tbe center of the highway
running east an d w est between the towns of
Ovid and Romnlus where the highw ay leading
sonth from H ayt’s Corners intersects the afore­
said highway, a nd said point being tbe sontheast corner of tbe premises herebv conveyed,
and running thence north to lands form erly
owned by Daniel Clough, and thence west along
said Clough’s south line to the southwest corner
thereof: thence north tn A . B. Johnson’s land;
thence west along . said Johnson’s south line to
the lands form erly owned by John R. Smitb;
thence south along said John B. Smith’s
line to the center of the highway first above
m entioned; thence east along the center of said
highway to the place of beginning, containing
one hundred a nd fifty (150) acres of land, and
being the premsles where Hugh Chapman and
wife resided In 1891.
Also all th a t certain other tra c t or parcel of
land situate In the town o f Ovid in said county
of Seneca and bounded and described as follows:
Bounded on the north by the highway (town
line) and on the east by the highway running
north and south from H ayt’s Corners, on the
south by lands form erly o f Herman L eonard
and John C- L eonard (the estate of William
Leonard) and Jacob DeLoug, and on the w est
by lands of said DeLong, and containing f o r ^
seven (47) acres of land, more or less, and situate
on Military lot No. 4 of said tow n of Ovid.
Subject to th e rights of the Pennsylvania and
Sodua Bay Railroad, if it has any rights therein
or thereto.
The f ir s t a b o v e .d e scrib e d tr a c t o r p a rc e l o f
land w ill be so ld S'^parately.
Dated J a n u a ry 7, 1904.
GEORGE W. PONTIUS,
Referee.
Stella E . Burt, Cady Sllsby B urt, George Webb
B urt, M ary B rt, heirs a t law, and next of kin,
of Em ily B. B urt, deceased, send greeting;
W hereas, Stella E. B urt of the village of Sen­
eca Falls in the county of Seneca has lately
applied to ou r Surrogate’s Court of our Oounty
of Seneca to have a certain instrum ent in w riting,
bearing date November 1st, 1900, relating to both
and personal estate, duly proved as the last
and testament of Emily E. B urt late of the
.-v,w'n of Seneca Falls in said County of Seneca,
deceased, you and each of you are cited and re ­
quired personally to be and appear before the
Surrogate of our county of Seneca, a t his office
in the village of W aterloo in said County, on the
21st day of March 1904, at ten o’clock In the fore­
noon of th at day then and there to attend the
probate of said last will and testam ent. And i f
any of you are under the age of twenty one
years, you are required to appear by your g uar­
dian, If you have one, or if you have none, to
appear and apply for one to be appointed; and
In case of vour neglect or failure to do so, a
guardian will be appointed by the Surrogate to
represent and act for you in these proceedings.
In Testimony Whereof, we have
caused the seal of our Surrogate’s
Court to be hereunto affixed.
[L. s.]
W itness, John E . Richardson,
Surrogate of said County of Seneca,
lasting. Medicines which relieve only
are mere makeshifts-pain-killers and
when you stop taking them the trouble
suitable for Christmas gifts.
returns
at the village of Waterloo this 1st
Doan’s Kidney Pills are like tried
day of F ebruary In the year of our
03^
W e have just received a car load
Lord one thousand nine hundred
and true friends.
of Gutters, made from best materials
They never fail.
‘JOHN E. RICHARDSON.
Surrogate.
Here follows the experience of a wo­ and finest trimmings.
G, and W. M. Wilcoxen, Att’ys,
man who was cured by them in 1897
Seneca F alls, N. Y.
and is a well woman to day. Such
PRICES
RIGHT.
te s tim o n y is c o n v in c in g p r o o f o f m e r it.
Notice to Creditors.
Mrs. A. A. Gillmeister, wife of A A.
G illm e is te r , n ig h t f o r e m a n
at S
K.
Nesters’ malt house at 77 Lake S t ,
and who lives at 185 William St., Ge­
neva, N. Y., says:
‘-Six years ago
when I lived at 223 Exchange St., T
made a statement for publication re­
garding the benefit that my husband
had derived from using Doau’s Kidney
Pills. We think just as highly of thpt
remedy to-day.
Before he used the
medicine my husband was continually
suffering with pain in his back and
loins! The aches were so severe at
times that he could not stand erect and
at night he could not rest well.
I got
him a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills and
before he had used the contents of this
one box the backache left him.
That
was six years ago and the trouble has
not returned. Remember that this was
accomplished after liniments, plasters
and other remedies had failed to do
him any good. I can certainly repeat
my former recommendation of Doan’s
Kidney Pills as a sure cure for back­
ache or lameness and weakness of the
back.”
Plenty of iust such convincing truth
in Seneca Falls. Call at Davis & Sea­
man’s drug store and ask what their cus­
tomers report.
For sale by all dealers.
Price 50
cents.
Fosjter-Milbnrn Co., Buffalo,
N. Y., sole agents for tbe United
States.
Remember the name Dhan’s and take
no snbstitnte.
Enos & Whitney
114 Fall St., N ext to Postoffice.
X H E .
BA N K
of S en ec a F alls, N. Y.
CAPITAL, $ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0
OFFICERS:
M ilto n H oag , P re s id e n t,
S e a b u r y S . G ou ld , Vice-President,
A . R . P a l m e r , C a s h ie r
C ha rles A. H a w ley , A tto rn e y .
Seneca Falls, County of Seneca, New York, de­
ceased, that they a re hereby required to present
the same, w ith the vouchers therefor, to the
undersigned, the executor of the will of said de­
ceased, a t the office of M acDonald Bros., In the
Village of Seneca Falls aforesaid, his place for
the transaction of business as such executor, on
o r before the 13th day of A ugust, 1904.
D ated F e h ru aiy 4,1904.
CLARENCE A , MAC DONALD,
. Executor.
Notice to Creditors.
P ursuant to an order of Hon. John B. Richard­
son, surrogate of the County of Seneca, notice is
hereby given to all persons, having claim s
against Eliza A. S ing, late of the to-wn o f Seneca
Falls, In the Oounty of Seneca, deceased, to preit the same w ith tbe vouchers thereof, to the
undersigned,
derslgned, at the
tbe store of J . H. ft G. B.
Crowell, No- 71 Fall Street, In the v
Seneca Falls, N. Y., on or before the 1
^ s t e d , December 18th 1903.
Geobge W. Pontiui
NTIU8,O
George Bf Crowell ,’
Executor.
Attorney.
DIRECTORS:
Wilhelmus Mynderse,
Clarence H. Williams,
Milton Hoag,
C. A. W. Becker,
Josiah T.
|A. R. Palmer,
S. S. Gould, J
M. V. Seymour,
L. S. Hoskins,
Miller.
FoIey*s Kidney Cure
makes kidneys and biadder right.
Seneca Pattern Worica.
A ll kinds of job work, such as
Accounts of merchants, manufactorert. sawing, planing, turning, etc. AIT
and others solicited upon favorable termed kinds of crates for sale.
Money to loan at all times upon ap­
J . D. B oardman,
proved endorsed notes.
C o p . Bridge and W ater Sts.,
Dii
Disraunting
desirable business paper
Seneca Falls, N. Y.
a specialty.