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HomeMy WebLinkAboutH. H. Huntting Newspaper Clippings Scrapbook "A" LONG ISLAND RAIL ROAD. Southoldcadeiny- Winter Arrangement. NOTICE IR hereby ylv• n, that lhls Inali- ON AND AFTER October 13t,1857,(Sundays tution will open on the let Monday in May excepted,) next, under the superintendence of a well PASSENGER TRAINS Gn1NG FAST cimilified and competent teacher. Leave Brooklyn for Oreenpnn,R1,10 A.M. pupils will be instructed in the various Leave Brooklyn for Riverhead, at 10 A. M. Leave Brooklyn for Farmingdale,at 30 A.M., branches usually tanght in Academies- and 345 P.M. The spacious and elegant Building re- Leave Brooklyn for Yaphank at 30 A.M Slid Gently elected,in one of the most healthy 3 Leave Brooklyn for Eyooaet, at 4 90 P.M and conspicuous sites in our town, renders Leave Brooklyn for Hempstead,at 10 and 12 It a desirable location, and peculiarly nava A.M 4.30,and 5 P.M. tin{;. - I Leave Braokh•n for Jnmoice,8110 and 12A.M. and 8.46,4.30,6,and 6.30 P.ltf. 'Perms of tuition will be moderate. ". PASSENGER TRAIN'GOING WEST. Board cRn be obtained, in the vicinity Leave"Greenpnr0 for Brooklyn,at 1030 A.M, on reasonable terms. Leave Ynbpauk for Brooklyn nt0.10 A. M. As the object of this Notice is merely to Leave HempSyossstead, , fBioor Bat 7.20 A. M.rr Leave Hrmpstrad, for B.noktrn, at 6.uJ and inform the public that our school will open 7 25 A.M., and 1.18 Rod 3 60 P.M. as above, a more minute deseriptiou will Leave JRmalca for Brooklyn. at 6.40. 7.40 and hereafter be published. 8.09,and 8.40 A M,and 210 and 4.40 P.M. daily. N.B.—Oa and oiler 150h November, the Irwin IOSEPH C. ALHEATSOP, 1 leaving Brooklyn at 4.30 P.M.,will be dlscontin- GILES WELLS, I - ued,and the train leaving Brooklvn at 3 46 P.M., SILAS HORTON. Trustees. will run W Syosset daily,and to Yahpank on Sat- JoSarH GOLDSMITH.H. GI urdays, Wht. E.MORRIS,President.11pp GZRA C. l ERRY, )- B H.TOWNSEND,Agent. Rensselaer Horton,Secretltry. — Southol&, ,March 349h, 1£S5. SID LONG ISLAND RAIL ROAD. Sommer Arrangement. I0N AND APTPR THURSDAY,JULT 4J lot,1868, trains will ruu as follows, [exnpt Sundays:l PASSENGER AiNs doltig FART Leave Bronklyn for QTRI'benpbrt;at Ida no,daily; and on 8amrdays at 3:80 p m. Lenva Brooldyu for Ricnrhead; Still n M,ends 8:30 p m. Leave Brobklyh for North Islip,it 10 a m; and 8:30 p m. Leave Brooklyh for tathaingaale, A a in, and 3:30 and 6:15 pin. Leave Brooklyn for Syosset, at 12 m; 4.30 p m., Leave Brooklyn for Hempstead,at 10 a in; 12 m; 4:00; 4:30,and 6:1¢.p m. Leave Brooklyn for Jamafca,at 9 and 10 a m 12 in,and 4; 430; 6:15'and 7:15 p in. P'e SENGER TRAINS GOING VEST. Leave Greenport for Brooklyn,at 11 a In,and on' Mondays at 4:60 a m. Leave Riverhgad 6:47,and 11:69 a in. Leave North Islip 7:10 a m,and 1:23 pm. Leave Farmingdale Gand 7:50 a in, and 2 p Leave 8ynsset7:20 a In.and 4:30 p in. Leave Hempstead 6:28, 7:36, and 8 a in, and 2:18,and 6:10 p m.. Leave Jamaica at 6.40. 7.10,8,09,8.48,and if a in,and 1:00, 3.10, and 6:65 p in. Special Sunday h;rra+igement for Greenport: Leede South Ferry for Greenport,at 9 a m'. 11 Syosset.at 6:15'p m. Leave Greenport for Brooklyn,at 4 p m. "v Express trains do not stop west of Jerusaleu. WM, E. MORRIS,President. Suffolk County Court, LOO�gNfG ISLAND RAIL ROAD. In the mai ler of.the?•ealestate -- Spring-Arrangenaend, I Arthur ,W. , Smith, Prede>ieh N AND AFTER SATURDAY, Fb Sncith, Alien M Smith, 4j 0 1st,1859, tlaioa will ran as follows, [except Bhziahelh M E 8milh, in* Sundays:) fa'rtls, and the application jot PASSENGER TRAINS GOING FAST the sale llieregf. Linve Broklyo fill'GI cenporgat10it. in. N PURSUANCE OF AN ODDER w Lee, Bloul 1{n for Yaphauk at 10 a. m. and . of this. Court nude by'..J.Lawrence Smith. County Judge,I,Clio subscriber,Special Guard inn v o Lune Bi onklcn for ct onset, at 12 m; 4.80 p.m. of tiro infanta named in this shit offor at private LGivr B n kit n ler Hempstead, at 10 a. nt; 12 sale,together or do percale,Clio following d6suril• ,��4 it).; 3.45 mol 6 0 p. m. ,.ad promises: i. ra . . Leant Bi ookivu I,,-JAunaka,all n.m.; 12 m; - .All that certain A tract;or-piece,or parcel, of 3.44,.4.30,5.30 Hurl 7 p m.• Land, situate in the. village of Southold,in tbo m•s' PAe RNOPM TRAIN t mon wr.ST• -County of Suffolk and State of New York, and v A' Leave Qwugnnl for Bi Le,klyji,pt 10 n,an. bounded as follows viz:Northerly by the land of 1,3 Leave Ynh1 Tulcf for B ...ddyil 12AG and 6.05 pm Samuel 6 Vail;•,easterly by land of Samuel S. rn 4 o'I Lemm Svessetflr Bio kIYu 47.16 a. In. Vail tied southe,f•ly by the highway, Roil again 0 Leave Item{sten at G,6,7 50 A. m., 2081) in southerly and westerly by Tucker's lone, contaia- d. Leave.Janadcn at 5.401 7.10,8.40,a• m;, and: Ing' len aeras mora or teas. Also all that carte in m 3.08 p• II+• Ricco or parcel' of,land situate In the Town or F On and after 1st July next,treble will ho moth- Southold,in the County of Suffolk, and,State of d fled to run as bile,e T6o'3 46..p m:Train willbe NoN York'and bounded northerly by.Tuekcr'e . at 3 X30 p m furl Rieoall ht l I'Dort Yr,ar�ralul will leave Lsfie; easterly by land or B'Rrnabas 11. Booth, F-i >,~ nnLry ui_hte rubel run Ihion_h.w GrP.onport, ro•, southerly by land of Jonathan Bettor, End west. to luriibnlon hfoodny innunng W Brunitlyu;'also a eery by lltolNorLh road,.cnntRinlo+ about flfloar a o •a Dillon' and ad TIa'in at 4 n nu, and one for Forming- Such be tiro same more el'ices. l I Such sales to be in conjunction with the sale or -C-0 ,`�, dole nt L ; in. the richt of dower in the premises of Agnea Smith, 'fire Pur I t Train bel sterol leavilic each end the petitioner in this mutter. of Lit,read m the mol Ring, will be chnnged to If the said premises should not be previously) Cho afternoon, and rue an ns to mmllo a NOW sold at private sale,the same will he sold.at Ph1-I' Train daily to the cil-v, arriving there at ONE lie Auction,oil title premlins—lire old tavel'n stmud@ o'cloek a in; and m'riviug at Grneupovt at eleven in Cha village of Southold—on Saturday, the 81st' o'cloclt ll'IN. day or July next,'at4 o'clock P.Id. m This HIT. goioont (Or running FroiRbt Train.is I Dated Southold,16th June.1868.' Cn dike effect an the 1601 01' 6Lry(aod to continue � J. WICKHAM CASE,. to 15th Soptonf6o•,snit I$intogled'to,he n peraia. 43-6w Special �l .Guardem of s id Infanta. gent Hera nRrmen(,and will be I'nll with a passon- a, R en car attubed when required. Sag Harbor, �1'00n nOrt Passel erstalchol the 3.46 p in Train for Yap s r h•,uk,'enu take the.above Train at Yaphank for' NEW LONDON &`IIARTFORJ).. ,' Greenport or intormedilm points. The Now England Steantlrolit IV 1I• E.mottR'IS,President. Company's splendld and danndh aca- S. IL TovermENn,Agent. 37)' going stegmm'GOLDEN GATE; Capt. Royal$: -------- --- " i ito„is Dow running regularly between Sag IMPORTANT IMPROVEMENT &ECONOMY' Harbor,Giconport,New London and Ilartford: 1N THE MANUFACTURE'OF FLOUR.' and d Sails Sag Uarbor every'Pnesday,Thursday, i atnrdny;nt 7,80; Greenest 9,30; New L'oE- don 10 30 for Hartford, making the usual land- CONICAL FLOUR MILLS dngaeathe river. U Returning, eav'o Hertford Query Dfonday;.Wad•+i Riverhead, Nr Y. neaday and Friday, at S oldlock, arriving at 9qE, TI1BE UNDERSIGNED NOULD..INFORM TEB Harbor at 6 p on 1 l s public that their Mills are non in This Iroot connects with•'the ?i el'LJIT,'$'n<ots -Lily mid Mystic,for Norwich,W Lit, Stonfpgtoo+ FULL OPERATION, and Providence. and are prepared to receive grain, 1,—e-Freightend passago sn the Golden Gate: FOR FLOURING. • will be charges at ougt• OO rotes `S'C. OSOOOD;General Agobn .They have introduced the most recant impr,o¢,e.I for the N E. Steamboat Co. mats if 11 tont line, till cim'with a Liefac ion Lo Loveay� ':Grecaport,7unq,1868. • 488 e Levies! or Gann Daeen. The dContent posse fiI'llla whreh Ehey, , nn A NKLINVITTT, ,AC A 74nn,{v. have ln'uso, aro new and pnseostllgdvn"I I as oder l Plbtil'1' 11'1 P LPJ� Vti11LA41-1 the large stories which have been 111SAI lmanyl t1 71ID SUMMER ITERM'OF 1111IS INWITV- )•oars,and they would refer to yliq folldw n'grte til Cay tion wiltcolnmeoce ou.Tl onci 0610fh day[i neurals in their favor ' df:64Aa,a-.4t C4utiaeu 0floomu'eeks, a: Li' Grain taken to and from.Etfo Rgtlroad`jreei -,; 'L EMILIE IIASLO.CI{ of charge, "^ i March,1868: 81 lR q 'FLOUR and FRIED on hand aq•iir(oc anlit;, _ .. Ian€•. Cards for base will be`lfoi�lfl at E aogvnfil- eut place for.each 6alionpn 4heaRnilroad "` •' MALLETT'&• BFrNEDIOT�,"r Rivorhoad,Fob.j,7 pa` u�10�1� 1V111L17L1'L� -COI�WIN do MUNSrl,:r,, SYTiJ;r1T,TD .AT ' '.m� ARM O U T RI O L D, L. I. I Long Island Rail Road I� P PROPI[IETORS OF THE, SUFFOLK De, ,EXPRESS OFFICE, –WA IIRSDRY oRbr for cola n large lot of rr' ;. 72 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. nit aT"id Ornamental Treee, Fx „ Evergreens, Hedge IRA II. TUTI-IILL, Theli•'a W'atock consists of Fruits'.Plants, &G. ' (ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Apples,. Obarlias, NotaryPnUliop and 'Standard Pears, Apricots,. Dwarf Pears, Nectarines, COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS. ` Plume, Quinces,..Peaches, Also,duly appointed.to take Grope Vines,&a. DEPOSITIONS, ACKNOWLfDOMENTS OF DEEDS, &0, 4 De'C dtlons OrnamenA Forest Trees V&e,Naw Jersey, Pernat Ivan ia, Wisconsin, -Sol foe Streets,Pa,ks Lawns, &a-, all of the, yOhio, Iowa, Now Yalk, RhodNfiche usun� 1,rie lien found In Nurseries, Massachusetts, -J Tennessee, J Rhoda Island, d Alen,Deciduous Flowering Trees;Shrubs,Flow. - ' I Indiana,I irginle,and other States. elntg�?m'doo Plants,dpmmnn Rases;.Romontants' tr10FFICE,.NO. 10 -WALL ST., NEW YORK. or Evm'-,Blooming Rases, Vince.mid Creepers:,. 1.11—Mr.T. will.nthmet at anI purt.•.oflhe wiffiN(,holjusnal^sorta of small bottled PRUITJ; City,to telco acknowlodgmeets,&c., 1f rognested. fou01st:'othur;large.establishments..'. `i tpusiness aflmided to promptly. 40-11m . PECK,&, MOURE. Soy¢ti¢Id ,March, 5, 18V 32-6w - - --.._ _ W.8.COURTNEY, - nI X.FIYNE,I NOTICE TO�ISHERIEEN AND OTHERS. ivp 7co�Tu7npTlvz�iY a P7Ai�YTplv7i ; 1 N ANI) A R THE FIFTEENTH DAY OF ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS ® AprN,inelu�. the'subscriber will be pl spared AT LAW. to ICaolyO.FISH in any quantities at the Omens :—No. 346 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Loran IPieND ,Frscr GUANO AND OB,WORKS, AND N0. &COURT ST., BROOKLYN, eAT,�'-OUTNOGD, L, L, [7' MOMS COURTNEY&PAYNE will divetheir for Wbich.he will pay Cash or Guano, at the op- attention to the :prosecution of claims, and all Won o tl`9 Fishormeu• other,Nosiness pertaining tothe profession,in all W. J.BRUNDRBD, the Crfurtp,af Naw York, Brooklyn and the ad-` Soutbold,L.1. joining Mottos; by their prompt and Undivided A. LL Fa4. — attention to business theyhopeto deserve their' RM FOR, rS�. F.�tj "share of the patronage of the public. 26V CON'IAINII& ABOUI`T44E\fY 7} t I L,ml, urolel a eneJ salts of,only. D I S S O L.U 1'I O N . V1.Iluu, HOU6B;B;d•n mol nul.11iti brio a In eoo,l r,Gob•, 1'he nd aro is sialmad hl the vilingn of HE FIRM OF WELLS&C0:'" u rot11 Id, mid Ivill he Sul i cheap, it apppud fey. dissolved by mutual coc id THIS DAY luunedimely, duo to or by the nadorsi•- dent: All accounts. Pm•particulaia engeim of 'II.WELLS,who is 0 •gncd era assumed by W, DANIEL 0. CORWIN, 'same. �u1y authorized to settle the S,mthold,.Jmnnnvy,34, 1868, all the pu.,nfses, ' W,.11. WELLS, __. 82tf W Y. FITHIAN.. SHO WANTS A HOME 4 J. ALBERT WELLS, Southold,Jan.26,1868, THE HO\IESTEAD -Y,ATE OP JAMES,', I to,All persons having any unsettled accounts DOWNS,deb'di in;the,heantiful village of ', with Wells&Co.,or the undersigned individually, S 0 U T 11 OIL D i L, I.i are earnestly requested to call op d eettlo the same Is otfurarl for Snle. It cunsists of TpYdo Acres of without delay. }V. H. WELLS. tan best gunlity of Laiul, under R bl h Tto of .:SODA WATER MANUFACTORY &utlivatiog,.wall atnekadwlth Fruit Trees,shrub•. bony,Ste• ,Tho Bnildin_s, n one sun y.Cotta, I IIT; SUBSCRIBiat IS NOW PRI'% Bnrp,Ugd ryut J+nlldhlgs;are in gond ardor, Terms land.easy. �.pired to;furnish SARSAPARILLA,.RASP- W W, REEVE. BERRY and LEMON SODA, In quantities to suit ptattituok,Aug. 26,-1867, Itf purchasers. Also,BOTTLED ALE and PORTER. -••--••— -=---•— All cedars filled.at the shortest notice,and do- livered I ARNI TrJii SALE j free of charge. F 'J.•C. MERRILL•' THE SUP„OCRIDER OFFERS FOR SALE Southold,July 18tb,1868,, 1 47*6t his term of 60 Acres [Homestead Situated - mi thri main road,] the Buiidiggs•thereon, Stoct;,, Hay,liarroin6.7y{Igpplemeots &n &a. Termseasy. 6 FoC feather pnrticulnrd agflmle of the Jallbaceiljor. . 011AS r+lII RAINE - i Southold,L.L,P.�U,12,r 1868n `'• 26 2t== REAL AND PERSONAL ESTATE FOR SALE', " OLD YELLOW." WILLZAnl LITC AR.D I THrSUBSChIBER 1S STILL AG'T r,.,, NOW OFFERS FOR SALE, ALL' :fo''the Nelbknonn firm of 13ATEs &GowvtN, celeln Find' TIN Dlannfeetwers of Riverhead,go• biu.Personal and Real Estate-in the Town of Ing his rmunis in selling Tin, abs,, II rd and Southold,village of Greenport, consisting of sav Woo d:n Lfm•e. prugsnnd Ynnhec Nulious,—The brut Due,selected Bn tol,je Lots Tiro Stores,20 largest and best selected assortmentof any paddler by 60 feaE,eack, two e[oiies krait,situmed on lira,;, nn the cast end of Long Island,or in Soiolic Co, street,and are suitable.far most env bind of bull-I "a also falces nrdnrs for Staves and fixtures,and ness. One Dwelling house and lot'situated on delivers at any part of the County,free of charge Front street, Bald lot is 76 feet front and learned fur delhery,—having g lamp nasnrtmm;t of the one hundred and fifty taut drop ;;on flit premises latest inrprovelent ie patent Ouolt,Parlor,ohm cli e , •o n groat varioty of Choice Fruit and Oronroen- Stora and S111001110040 Salves, from the most cele. Cal Trees. bra Led meud'uctlum B, and at tho most reasonable ALSO, $7,000 WORTH OF prices. rR- CAIIINI•;T FUILNITUItL'` V.r The subscriber is now on Shelter Island T with his h01'Ba and earl,selling to those that wish orall kinds.. Wood'and Willow Ware, lInrdwaro :o purchase his Warne and nierchanrliso. Will and Trimmings M all kinds. . A general assort. visit.Oreenpmt from Clio 30th to the 6th of May I meat of Feathers and.Bendy-bfado Dnds. 71 Inrgo 'rmu thence M Oriont Point until the 10th of Mac; assortment of Looping GlnaaeS,.of all.Sizes and eturldria to Southold.Cuteltoatu, Oregonand i, 'qualities 1 also Looking Gloss Plates, single or.by. ermediate pinees to Riverhead. the box, v _. The hh,hest market prices paid for Rags,Cop- LV� A great variety of Corpse and Coffin mr,and lithe•metals. Goads sold oschuap Be mall '.Trimmings,:which.will be Bold at Drat cost,or less, as bony_ht elsmvhoro. A shm'o of the public pat- 'it circumstances iopuiro, Tongan solicited i enstuurers cheerfully waitod bX-All Persons having any claims ngainst the, upon without extra charge. snbaorihm•will plonse'pi ego"t'tile no by the First 1 shell be lit Moriches about the 2011, or May, of JUNE next. all.persons Indebled to the.same, and Fhoplace, Ballport. Yaphm;k, Esst Middle, will please call and settle the(same immediately. Island, Miller's Place,{fading River,Bating flat- All persons indebted to Clio subscribe• by note of low,&r., hand Or bonds null ium•tgngos.ofoneyear's stand. April 2801,IF68, 111:.SALTER. .. log,will please cancel tlmoa by the Fist of Juno 7� n '�T text, it all accounts that aro not settled by that. P 1f� C e p I\I I C II O U S E, date will bo leD In the bends til'Laarynr Wickham.. 1.1 ll lY 1 WILLIAM-LITCHARD. Greenport,April 27, 1868, 86-6t GI{EENPORT, L, L, Will be opened-for Permanent and Transient TO"THE PUBLIC. Boarders on May tat, NEW TIR111- ---NEW GOODS . sfitr . L.0,RICHARDSON, Proprietor. TIE UNDERSIGNED HAVE F RMEA A CO- artneship tinder the name and style of . S • C• FISHER, I-I, I-I, & s, A. WELLS• HOUSE, SHIP, SIGN AND ORNAMENTAL have rented the Brick Store cut nor of Main and P A z N T E R, Front streets, formerly occupied by Wells.&Car- GRAINif7a, GILDI6G, MARDIANG, &C., EXECUTED penter,-and.having returned from the cit with a. y large nsaortment of NEW GOODS' hereby give'a WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCH. cordial layitatlon to the Inhabitauts''.or this village M Shop on FRONT street, opposite C. Bates and the public generally to call and examine their &Co„GarENPUuT,L.I. 36 our stock of —_ ...._ _.. GRROVITPS,SIO I N0TICE . PROVISIONS, CROOEERY, A LLPpRSizj8'IIAVING. CLAlM3 AGAINST HARD WARE, A the DI m I•I 1VELLa&CAilPENTER, or Ind ivid- WOODEN TIrA$E tel claims,are rarluestad to present the samo to that,Assignees, stel..all.indebted to the said firm SH IP'.CHANDLERY &o, will confer n Sive•fly maluna immcdlale payment, bo roared at the lowe at of which virl Ist poasible BENJAMIN WELLS, ))) prices for Cat or BaaTEa, D l VID.CARPENTER, .Assignees, They hope by strict personal attention to their; D 0. PRATT, business to merit a shareor the patronage public. .of the March 12,1868, 80Lf W The highest price allowed for all kinds or Country produce, -GROAT INDUCEMDNTS- . - BENIiY II,WELLS, TO TATCE A DAILY PAPER THROUGH THE J.ALBERT;WELLS, Post OfBco, to wit: having them come by the Greenport,.April 1,1868. 821P „ way.of Greenpolnt and being lodged there until the accumulations amount to soma 1I or 20, and GRAND RUSK I I, than have them all coma at once.—See editorial lir the Sus•Pot•x WC:FKr.v T;mse of Feb. 18, 1868, T T)IL HAT, ,CAP Ar'D CO w N.B.—Tho subscriber furnishes the Nsw York: factnnary store, Now is rho I(mo to secure' Dailies one dollar less titan they can be procured g ant Bntaains m r through the Post.ODico,and they will be received ' ,Try I3t}ta, Caps nnrl Confection'4y, '1 ovary day vin Lrog Island Railroad giving Grace_ point awide berth, L k100RE.`;: 1 g etylo of Haig end Dar 'knpwiraa Urolmpott,Feb.23., 1868. 271r' wMla, 4fy Capstorat Ffon, neon m � G. W. LYON & Co., GROG RMS, HARDWARE Main Streets Greenport) L. L� PAINTS, OILS, &C, S BD SUBSCRIBER OFFERS BIS STOCK OF I� r EDP CONSTANTLY ON.113ND A LARGE Grecorks at reduced prices to snit the times. amazrtmeptof In his stock of I1aldware may;be found DRY GOODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Out, Clinch and Clout Nails,BRUS,Brass and Iron CLOTHING; Screws, Lacks,.&Q.;.Barn 'Door Rolls, Compost. MILLINERY, tion Illness for.vessels,Brass Butts, &c.,&c:' . CARPETS,MATS AND RUGS, MECHANICS' TOOLS, OIL CLOTHS, _ - WINDOW SHADES, among which are Axes,.Adz, Hatchets,Hammers TRUNKS,VALISES&CARPETBAGS, Augers,Chisels,Saws,Planes, Bench Screws,&a PAPER HANGINGS&BORDERS, FARMING TOOLS, ' TA13LE CUTLERY&PLA 1'ED WARE,' each as Ploughs noel Plough Coatings, Forks, CROCKERY&A BEGLASS S WARE Rakes, Hoes,Spades, Shovels, Narrow Axes,&a. WOODEN WA RE do S1A3RRODS, GROCERIES-&.PROVISIONS. MEAT CUTTERS, t7' A very large stock of the above Goods,at far cutting hlinca Pio and Sausage Meat. lowest market prices. 1'-y A -good assortment of Pocket Cutlery,' B. 'CLARK'S Butcher Knives,&c. I�r Fish Basks and Lines and n variety of CHEAP BOOT AND SHOE STORE, other apparatus for billing Fish. IN' MAIN "STREET, . I:•Powder,Shot and Gun.Caps, (FIRST DOOR NORTH OF G. w, LYON'S,) - PAINTS, TFIE SUBSCRIBER HAS ON HAND A LARGE consisting of White and Red Lead, White and Y assortment of Boots;.Shoes and Rubbers, of Brown.Zinc, Whiting,Paris White, and avariety everdescription, and Intends,keeping his stuck of colors; Raw and Boiled Linseed 011, Whole renewed as often as evaded. 011;Spirits Turpentine,Varnishes,Dryers,&c, M All kluds of Alen,}Vumon and Cbildren's - J._0.CHAPMAN, Boots,.Shoes and Gailors;made to order from.the Corner of Front and let streets. best ntatelals and warranted to give satisfaction. ' Greenport,Nov,6th,1867. 11-6m N.,B—All kinds or country,produce. taken in exchange for the above articles. IF YOU WANT YOUR ROOMS Greonport,August 26,1867. , I 1-yNEATLY•AND EXPEDITIOUSLY PAPERED, GRBENPORT call on WM,W,WET5I0110. CHEAP BOOT AND SHOE STORE. Grecapart,April 1st,1868; 82tf A. KRANCTIER, MRS. CkURCEI, Next door west of.Wells &.Carpouler's store, in UTAS PLEASURE IN ACQUAINT- FRONT STREET. ,11 Ing her friends that rho has again visited THE SEBSCItpgER.PIAS NOW AND Now York,and returned with A choice sesartmout. V . ®will hoop conetxmlylon hand,every do- which the N.e sv e a t and ')tenet Tastel'liL 'soripCion of Lndice',,Gentiemon and Goetls,which she is cangdent will Import sat- f Chi k,,ran'a Boots and shoes,concept which will be rderaon to her.many to witcustoh the ythoso strict ro. fou �r=� �^ orders will ho attended to wiih Who some airlGt ro- h 1 I Led I' and Gentlemen a Boots sheea,slipparm,&e. gal to punctuality and economy. Lad lea'atjfj'i artisans,61.11 bbor--shoes and boots„ Greenport,Juno,}866, .. 42-8t 1,a11]s ren s hoots nod shoes,every style. ICs CREAM ,, �'.Gentlemen's Pine Calf Boots tnanufact urad '' �l CREAM I of avert'd stock Anil of them n•Owfashion' ge-WITH CHOICE FLAVORS,-un ' Every description of custom work to t give entire satisfaction. W. BEEBE WISIIES'TO SAY TO 1I18 Ropahing'In all it's branches done with despatch" Ds friends and th Vilblie:that the Saloon over npil.;nn the moat reasonable forme, tire list store,-'will bo opened:on MONDAY, June. Couirtry.prdduco taken In oxchmrgo either, 114ih, 1'ar the season,a$avinGmndo;m•rnugemontfl; for boots,Area or work 14-8m with D.WleeNefor asupply, the subscrFbar will he in readiness to wait upon all Bahl %,he will OLD LINE AND NEW ARRANGEMENT laver him with wcall. 42tf D.W.BEEBE.', AT THE BIG ®Boor, FRONT ST. MARINE RAILWAYS, - ANIRS CLARI{'1,VOULD INFORM IIIS CUS- Y��IIO +�I �EiLt IGNIJi� 4IA"V1NG J tomes and friends and the publlo that ho'will tnkgghYic f�tr"pore£ i Three SeLW of N-i•1n0 commence business on thu,Flrst of Aprjl for Crab Ri llway 'lulely.4nf1 oil thoatiparvisron of•Mr. D. or Barter only,at:'ednsed,pr lees,and with a largo LNi RYoaa,rlen'p r 'Fell to haul.vasaola at,ahort.no• And t5plendid assorlmmit me Boots and Shoes ileo,mrd on IN,, terms. 1 All persons Indebted ta't" sahagrlbnr pra•� �All ki ids of:materials furnished,�'rrnd'Re- rat of January, aro requested to mnkoi pairing done witk dispatch, A liberal :share. of immediate paymelit. I JAB,CLARK. l the public patronage Is soliclled: Gicanum t,Dinesh 16,11868- BO-lv r::, J.CALVIN WELLS,Spent. :.Greenport,1uno 9,1868,-': 42Lt llti_TS AND CAPS, -s*1 FRONT ST.,NEAR 2d......OREENPORT,L L. TIIE SUBSCRIBER,HAVING PUB,' DEALER III chased.the stock And trade of D.Winar,rs, '.J1)r"ge7 Meddetnes, -Oise, Alcohol, Would mrorun his friends and the public generally, Bnrntng rinid, Calllplaene, .that he has an hand ns;good an assortment:of WINES FOR MEDICAL USE,. HATS .AND CAPS LARIPS, GLOBES, CHIMNEYS, . As can bo found in the Cmmty. Book9 BlancBeales Pa el• M Ho has also on baud nngxt,n,f.. ..sort• ) " s Paper, moat of PATENT MEDICINES, PERFUMERY, SOAPS, CONh`ECTIONERY, . otc.,oteMeta. FRUITS, NUTS, 97'All articles sold at the lowest cash prices, AND TOYS,, Call and Soo. 20-1y which will bo sold Cheap for Cash, ry 7,7, fy 071 ��OI �T D. W. BEEBE. l7 11 U 1L 1. , Groonport, 1858. - 36tf _ Comer Marra and Front streets, LOOK AT THIS I GREENPORT, L. I. J. A. WILLIAIIISON)S Offers for sale nmur,,A good assortment of Se*BOOT AND SHOE STORE. -Wa DRUGS; CHEMICALS, PATENT MEDICINES THE S.UB80RI13ER DAS:,TAKEN THE LAMPS AND FIV URES,. : - store on Front street, opposite tile he Greenport F UID, CA111IPIIRND, .COAL OIL�',� Hodso,and is now:prepared to accommodate all that am In wftetofBools and shoes. - Perfumery &Toilette Articles, ' All kinds of Men, Woman and Children's Boots, I'ANCY'GOODS, shoes and Gaiters; made to order from the best maturinla and in the latest styles,and warranted to Books, Stationery,&c,, &e- give satisfaction, Greonport,February 10,1868. _. 26-1y ' [,N'Also,Rubber Boots and shoes of all hinds,. and of the Infest.styles. in the os ;a all kinds AM'BR,OTYPES ALBATYPBS AND at lila eborlest mance and in the neatest manner, ) H. B. Most all kinds of Conray Produce taken 1VIT LAINOTYPT S. to exchange for the Above orticlee Greenport,Nov 14,1857, 18-SmTERRY TAKES THIS OPPORTUNITY L L Y N S - ifl A..1•� to interm. tiro people of GAeseronT and e `'vicinity,that he has again located himself In the: :MARBLE WIOI-i,$ S , ARCAD'"! BUILDING, - Greenport, L, T. over'T,'si Patti sstore,-for filo purpose of mekiug�. THE SUBSCRIBER SEEPS CONI Clio.:,s$pve-named pictures. I ; Is flatters himself, elaOBy on-hand - ,Chef hn ns able togive entire enuafaolinn 1nAllrj - .,Styles of Pictnres, Aef lie as'? 11 4ingnJ"; Ri: A ITALIAN'&AMERIOAN MARDLE. ( y•ara t•4acriencn.inthnum c,apfide LI,KJ -j this usurpnssed style of AnilirTABLE TOPS made to.order, Mar-' a6d'Alhatypes in:this place. nod IdOat• nandhis And Drown Store fur Bases, ` As the ArcadOhuilding is=a g 1S,&c:,&c. hos a 8{i0 shylieht,still All the Axture's necessary I orders directed to the subscriber pone- to milk@;Ids i•o0ma nurnclivo as well as adopted "tually attended to. {to_tho jngst:sacceasfnl prosecution of the:art,.be IV,J,fiexnig Youlm,Agent,Orient would invite all to give him a call,and examine ,1-y C. F. ALLYN. ,the speeiunen liI turbs, All bo asks Is a trial,And '.he will'puaranlee to give entire satisfaction,and GENTLEMEN AND LADIES, i make pictures as good as can be had in the city 1V OULD:AGAIN INVITE YOUR ATTENTION or elsewhere,and at prices to suit the purch06er. Plclure5 taken').All hinds of weather, Old Da I to a select. Lot of Stoves of file Weet and gnerreetypes copied end cleaned,copied on glass mustimproved patterns,comprising the or metallic plate, And aularged if desired; ,Pic 'Banner,;Harp.Orion,Sweet:Home, . tines insertud' in rings, lockets, medaligns Lilly Dale,Premium,Our Favorite t racllels,-In'fiie neatest manner, ' Green Mountain Rotaryi and+ Also,Instructions given in all the variousbranche. other COOK STOYESnot mentioned, of the arta, - Parlor and Shop Stoves of tho following hell �•,f Ren3pmliar the place, Main Sty two .Ruby Franklin, Radiating Costs, Laurel Coral'' .door@ ahove borwi,I�'a Drug,store.,P.a Parlor Oven, Parlor Cook Fanny:Fern, '{ Apnl 1, [32a2mJ. 11. TERRY. Excelsior Cylinders,from b to 20 In. - W Alao,:T_he `({lass Brittannla d�nd'Japauned, COFFINS ! COFFINS �.- Were,Pncllof and Table01111ary Co¢I HodsShov-`,,. bis;Stove olish,Jit}mise,d a &qr&c,:whiLb era I B� BOTU GREAT AND §`;MALL.—fi30; be found on MAIN Street;at,+blue sign of the <� BE SUMORIBER WISHES TO INFORM.0r B1'G COViVnp POT, -�( the public"Allat he lifts connected the COFFIN . �' Jobhinq and R ,flu` uaC udllyy ntfendstli tiFmnufnetory with tile"Sash.and Blind business, t0 Festh re;.for Mania, ,. TEIROP and Crops on hAntlSLL sizes And hinds:made of r 4 F '�! the hest of Dfal�o any,}=tBlnolt Walnut, RosO WoOd -�3ree0port §apt 29 1867: , , ,: 8L( •, , sill rWrlltto 1Ybad,which ie is prepared to finoleln a4[I Qaf'ortese notloo, At his,shop on Front street, opposite qh ti Groonport 110,160 and Wiggins'store., ',f 'Pion Ejgor will be dunit with on iessonable, - teram , C. L, CORWIN. Groonport,Match 24,1868. 81st Fa lm y D o?y,$etail Price' L. 'lY1QDdDaiB 7S Current. �1tWS AND'Pli1tIOD1CAL OF . GBFrNPORT Jan. 21 7853. �tW $6 60 U IlTUER Al00RU IS BAPPY TO INFO RAC b7% Flnnr dnpble crh n I er b1 1 ais trends and Lho pttI'll,, thathe cominues i41n s..• 57{Rsufipll milers from alt sections of the roomy , „ 20 <a9'I elso,iht re, fm'Newnpapnre,Mngazinms,Music, 1 tii,ie l oz 22 Batts Ib......... .... :.' 1'23 beldl I3noks oeoornll}' The.follow mg aro a part OL 1'L?/s Rhis lisp: - L u 1 .... .... .... ... .. iO,' Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper; t,ln r s........ .• 18 '. New York Journal; Pnik,Mesa.... .... .... .... I zS0. pd n �� 1ribmteinBenne per final .... •••• •••• ' . 78Nuw 1LshioNCrraed ... .. Weekly Herald, ] Brown shnt,bust... ....WCey, g;� �e er Times, tWrt' sur.... .... 28NI)uhly, '... .... .!. Ii, st u•ffee,Jnvn....,.•• '. 10 ,3allou'8Pietorml, ,, . Evening Post„ ,It. D„rii,eo...... .... .... .... 40 , " N10llthiy, I N 0 \Ldas+ts Prr:;all.... ...:..111" .. 7 1llollar Newspaper, Spiritnnl.'Ce1i• pilot b-cwl 11r ... .... .... .... .... 8 Lady's I3nolc,IVuverly Magazine, 8 iGotl(.y'+ lepllolis 111. dti. hies bisC eL•,ta...... .... .... ..... rollam'•i Magazine Mrs. , 8 Ir hiscun.... .. Sn10 'S cp per hat.. ......... .... .. 121n I, `r'LY'ew York Lrd,,er, Putnams tlltigariue, I lt;naine Ih.... .... .... .. ... ...... — „pslou LPue FIRg, Peterson's I Castile ear p.... .... ... 26 Y?In of oar Unrou, Musical Review, z"'m cut ala 4 t tileri ine Union Nlu••ic, for the,lllillion, = Copps . 18 ;� Police Gozett.e, C,coa.. 14. unket.PrISaLLet .. .... .•...••.. 60 1 Candles ,Sr1F tU SViilay'Pirnis,lLepn4he,nr 1V,atclPn, Cider vme nr.... .... .... .... 20 1.C, are Tartar.... .... .... .... .... 8 `P+i'itti's bpirit, Sunday Mm•1hura it rarh ands.... .... .... .... ....... 'tS'unday DI-patch, with many oillrrs• 10 T g L,NIDoro also Creeps all llm vririeLiw of I Wino ctnckm's.... .. .. .. 9 119ahaol BpIUICS used Lu tills m is section of the comity ;t Senl,.powder 76 We elter8ldte Entice.... .... ..... 4 „t,filr un nssortment of miscellaneous Woths ohild= Wnaphtg soda ... ........ .... 10 1U !�Y•oil's.Toy Beeks and Siationr.ty eencr Elly. Also,, .;:' .", .,•. ,. 'I Candies,Nuts,Puut,Toys,and Panay floods with- 'tallow '.r6q 1111ei1t. tiCAT MARILET, 14 +, L. M®ere)a.Pre"llatilixg 1]diff IT- ' Beef.st0nit9 'lost.... ......... .... 14 aa,mo Ptononncod' IL"I 11 soler'tiotts tbalich arencro by good luduas to Ile first rate—the subscriber hue'. Om.no&beef,best .....••. 12+1h •i aledn pill"to malto It so. veal,.. .... .... .I.. .... .... .,•, 14n1,6 E if retained but one+; Lamb.... .... .... .... .... .....•• 12,t Terms,G cents per vol, "weak,nail 6'cents for ever a(1114101101 week— Mellon..... .... .... .• .. .... ..... 3 r'llfese Ler m$my tntenrlerl to be atrially Gdhr.r StYp � --•—� +N iQre sport SopL 81,867... - Cp PA�TNEBSHIP. FIT.ANNUAL MN>;TING OF THE ------ DISSOLUTIONlCOART RSH gEBETOPMAYNARD, n� SUFFOIAC CGUN1Y 1'fnTUAI.IN$inANne COMPA-. I(1 dissolved J„ isting Radar the arm of T,AweoN & 'NY,'for the electiop of tell Ulrocters will be. in ilia village of Grestiport, is this day r-11a1d2,at the))ruse of 1V111lem II.Wells in Southold,. h mutualbopsout• a'on rt hp second Taesday ofIvIsy next: Polls or the- y •L. P,NIAYNARD, ;elpefion to open e da past 11 A,M., and close at„ et 1868, L. LAWSON. 112 a'f ,to open, January A , The Board of Directors Ivill meet tit rho' the o ll Outst going goPany�a°uu0t° d Willi � same lace,on the same dny,at 10 o'clock fore y Ybll wb re Mr. u,', L M. now 1. LI:Il.CASE,President, ho assmned and settled In r n t sires Ia Ooaosurlrw, SWtY. at the OLD STAND1�t�mos utoeserve bite customers.I Southold,APtil 7, 1868• 84-1t Will be ready at end be refriends with the choicest. in the Market, and i �{ �T ry T.� on the most cessonablo terms for cash. 2S 8t SM P E C o N 1 HOUSE ,,p 14 9 January 21st, .9 IJ .li S�DT,�S, GREMATPOR L L, N.1V1NQ TAlcEN TFLE'. Will.be opened for Permanent and, Tranelo"L IIs SUBSCRIBE p�;pnK's Root;&,$Ileo store, Boat dors on MIXT 18t. T ,pu,opp ET olfera l7is sorVicos to '''Love' L. 0.RIQIIAI4DSON, on MAIN STah , 866E Proprietor. Zona of Uroenpott and Vie loltgi amI roepootfally, -- - Relicits thob, patrouo e. g r 1n11e Best Of 6tt)m ffided! ' All work warranted, Repairing neatly ted .done,and Promptly o8ecu . HENRY.KAN1:.1 28tf l3raon 60,Jab 22d,1868. ---- Conferonee. Appoltitntell A. &• O. F. BRO IN, The fallowing are the it ointments f the WOULD B.ESPECTFUM:,LY CALL 1HR AT pP Q WOULD a' tho public to that, I�Tmy Iork -rant Methodist Conference?fpr PALL STOCK OF,STOVES. the Long Island District :-B. Goodsell;P. Hnsing made solecttgges from the latest.and most E.—Sands street to be supplied ; York,St. , approved patterns,orr't ounbled to offer a better ns- '.'sortmentof Cooking Stoves than on any former J. E. Seniles ; Washington' street, J, Kell- occasion. lionlyi.Centenary, H.Bangs; MrstPlace,(G. '.They would call attention to St,wotrt's.new C. Robinson; lledding Mission, to be Sap, Choking StOvc, with Extension Top, Reservoir, plied'; William street Bethel, E. 0. Bates . &a. This is the most perfect cook stove mad,,and Carlton Avenue, G, A. Hubbell'• for convooieuco and economy is unequalled. , Fleet St., Also, the Prn e Airtight, a new Provideuce W. Lawrence ; Hanson Place, J. Law ; Stove,.very heavy castings, of superior style and Eighteenth street. P Y J. HCIISOIIj De Ii;x1GQv finish,rot'Ad wood and coni, entle1,G. Duubnr; H. Cnmp�cup ; wasl;iug- Tho Arlvnnce, ie nnothOrdso nosy store; similar to ttin Avenue, W. S. Studley- Natbau Bangs tUo Dntorpr;se, of handsome design—a perfect Yi ' opm•atm•with wood or cons. Mission, S. .11. Platt, sup,; South Second Also,the Roger Williams, Metropolitan, Enter- !,act, Al. L. SOudder; Nor Lh Filth Stl'eet priso,Victor.SL,Nicholas,Magnolia,Clipper,Oak, IVi, StopIa. Greenpoint•, S. Landon ; Sutith; California Premium,6uc. Third street, S,,:w,. King 1'.Grand ah•Cet, L'Star.of the North; a splendid new coal burner, .O. T."Hallo arranged to consume the gas'arlsinafrom the coal, yI Cook Strect,'t0 be supplied ; Evening Star,another naso coal'hurnM, Ruby SOUth Irlfth aLr°et, R L. Junes, sup ; New Franklin, Laurel M4Cic, Album, wood parlor's, UtretCht and Gravesend, R. Walin, Fiat- Union Parlor Cook for wood and coal-. Artel'Dow bush -.and ;Flatlands, to be supplied , New Prop,six plate,box;,Russia and cast iron Cylin- Low'n,. Aliddle Villag dors,'&ee, and Mn&In,tlt,,:,U. „Vic, -liner• IJaIOU Phtca w be Supplied • Moto. 'Coal Units,Shovels,Sifters,Brushes,Btovo ' c , LI r Polish,.Braes and Eunmolled kettles,&c, rim, t0 be supplied ; Flushing, J. L, Peck; ' LV'Stoves re-]fined and repairedat sbort notice. Clintonville, D. Tuthill ; \oi•tll Hempstead, - .IJ-Reeve Goldsmith is our agent for the J- S. Haugh; Glen Cove, W, Plattsl �'.or- Salo of the above stoves 8a wichand Oyster Bay, to bn supplied ;<Cold Spring, E,'S. Hebbm•d ; Huntington, Si P. ' 4,TuH QUICKEST PASSAGE TO CALIFORNIA: Johnson; NOrth,'POI't and Centro Part, N. dIOII believed, says the Alta California, that Orchard ; Smithtown, to be Supplied ; Port ILtI4e,0oldmiAAge, on her ArrivalFeb26th, Jefferson, J, P. Booth; Riverbead, J. '0. ;r�trolsom street wharf,completed the quick: : °4 tit; Matlrtuok and Jamaspol t, to be sstpassa e ever made to Califoinla from N. a,�IR Itr ;�rr�y0°lHll°g!- 0,Redfield , Middle' s. , Itlr^rittt�,Erjl� 1�4ae r=�tto, ° stip Ieyt, s;° owever, is partly owing to:the S tlhold, R I , Reynolds, Greeapot , :�;V,' great speed ,of the new steamship'. Moses He fangs, Orient, E. Sall" Sub Fl Air or, Tdylor, fico N. Y, to Aspinwall, She left J' w•`D•-wood ; 'Am Aspinwall, I C.,U.ill,; �Ghe;'dock, at N, Y., ata quarter before 8 Brldgellontpton, W, wnlin; $onthnmptou, q to be supplied (}cod Gronnd, 11 ROberfa; ,4oleloick,P. M.,on the 5th last,and the Age Wostha'mpton niid Moriches H. C. Glover, �topched Folsom street wharf yesterday, at a Pa(obogue, C.Stearns; Farmingdale, R lir; %o Ag9,arter before two O'clock,making, (includ- Pruning; Hnntiugtml South, R. Codling ; tqg=tberthree hours and thirteen minutes ad- Hempstead, B.Pillsbury; Bethel to besup. defhfor difference of loci etude ) two ono pled ; Rockville Contra, W. Gotbald*�A•Fat• g Y ). Rockaway and Poster's Meadow 1� or- days; two hours and thirteen minutes from rye Jnmmca,J.1). bouton �• T � dock towharr, This includes,�of 'course,I 611g''detection at Aspinwall, (12 Hours;) for On Th rsday evening,fat instant, at Southold, \Tat 4he Presby lerlan Church by Rev.B Whittaker, .� Lhe' ow Orleans passengers, the putting hi Mr Gilbert H. Lester of Durand, +Wisconsin, to at•the ports of Acapulco and Mauznnillo, -Miss C•rrolisc H.Horton o1 the fnrmgr place l I On tiday,erch lnIDth,at Southold,Mr. Alvah pndr'Lh° stopping off North Beach for the . 8 -Iulfard late Cashlor, of the Atlantic Bank, �te\vs, b0afs. lPIle actual running time of. , Brootclyn,aged 60 years and 2 months, �tsJte 'ftp, nt sea, has been within,a fraction ^^ �Of netCCn days:'and twenty-three hours, NANGE or NAME:A NEW POST OFFICE, the 16th{natant,at Southold,Serena,daft U.I The village heretofore known as "Forth `ter;of Mr,George{y,and ClarindnlPhill(ps, egedl NeCk;'•lh this County, has been change(] to �,;h]ears and 21,dpys, 4 A yr L ` the name of+"Atlantleville," and it Post Office established there on the 1st iustaut, community, and if under their direction such an institutioncaunotbe made to flourish and .ronv J,mm�eLti, ea AND raornrsron. redound to the well being of our community, - than it would be in vain to seek for others. OREI;NPORT, L. I..;`FEIIRUARY28, 1868. COI-Only such men are to be preferred to strangers. We know that ibis said"distance _ AW—We perceivo tbat the petition for a,i ]ends enchantment to the view," and custom Savings Bank to be located in Southold,was (and lack of conveniences) has hitherto in. presented in the Assembly by our member daead our people to sendtheir money,to dig. from this District, Mn. HOWELL, nod it is taut cities.. . It is time to see what a change now, probably,before its appropriate(Bank) of circumstances may produce ; it is time to ;Committee. What the report of that Com- seo tvhcthcr confidence can be found At home mittee will be,ire,of course,arenot advised, as well as abroad, though we can.perceive no reason why it Thus far wo;have heard but one opinion should .not be unanimously,reported upon or:wish expressedin relation to the applica- Favorably. We bold that every community _ tion for this Bank, and,that is for its olecess, should protect itself, and when the means to Thereought to be some place where any that end are.Asked for, (As in this ease) itperson can obtain money without travelling should be granted..., Itis well known that from house to house, whenever he can give thcro is a ]urge surplus capital in this Town, the requisite security i and we understand and if the moneytilow in the hands of indi- that it is the intention, if successful in the viduala In ,the cities of 1.New Stork and appligntion, to first accommodate those of Brooklyn; vera well invested here, in a our own County, and whatever excess there Savings ,Bank, (as, scores would rejoice at) may ba, tor invest in State or United States no lack of circulation:would be experienced, stocks,or suchotber stock as the Legislature If such au institution had boon,iir-operation' may authorize. We boyo the Committee 5 years ag0,alpneh.Of, the mgnoy;sent out of f will make a favorable report, and that the the place (and Nlay never return):would now. Legislator@ will pass the bill unanimously,,ns be in a healthy.eirculation, among our own f we believe the application is, a meritorious inhabiGmits. one and deserves success. While we shoal& not feel ioelined to favor — an.application for ra bank of issue, we are A&-In the House of Assembly the South- stronglyInclineil to encourage an enterprise old Savings Bank bill,and the Easthampton of this kind. There.should be some place, Road bill have.been ordered to a third read- . _ of deposit in this vicinity for the convenience) tug' �] 2 ?F,farand ethers (a great - - gFoportiga of whom have surplus manna) THE SOUTHOLD SAVINGSBANIC and where they can have easy access At all ILL BE OPENED FOR DEPOS- times, for depositing or drawing their none hes on MQNDAY,the 8th JULY next;from Y• ONE to Tile EE o'clock P.M.i and will be open We see ROF reason why we must send our '. every SATURDAY Afternoon thereafter, during money to distant cities, to be used by others; the some hours,at the onica of the Treasurer,,to the village of Southold. while we have the meaus.of taking caro of, Dated Southold,June 24,1888. i and rising it in our own neighborhood. RENSSELAER T.,GOLDSMITII,Pres. IILNrtY EUNTTUM;Treas.and Seo 44tf Savings Banks, if properly conducted,aro -- - — — — - about;the safest Institutions for the deposit of money ; and when tinder the' direction of men of known character and integrity, call- ) not but, prove beneficial,; besides;' the de- - positors may know daily the precise condi- thou of its affairs,which they,seldom,.if ever; know fit city institutions,<' The proposed'Di- rectors of the Sontbold Snvinga Bank, are ..metra in whom As much confidence call be - t placed, as in any other class of pion in the § poration shall 4. The business of saidcot -� cues:%1I8., be managed and directed by the said board Au A,et to Incarpotatf .the South of trustess, who shall elect from their num. Old Slavinga Panic.' ' Passed,Apvil 7;th,t1858,Ahroe-fifths being', her a president, two vice-presidents,acid such other officers as they may see fit ; eight of ,l`he.Pea,Is of the State of New York, repre-. the said trustees, of whom the president or seated in sennte Said Assembly,, one of the vice-presidents shall be one, shall do enact as: follaws : form a quorumfor the, transaction of bud, `;cormx 1. That Muses C..Cleveland; ,.ness, and the affirmative 'vote of a majority; William H. Wells, Joint S,Holvell,Joseph �of membob present at a meeting of the l3, Goldsmith, Rensselaer "T. Goldmith, board, and.in all cases at least seven went. names 1';. Horton, Emu, L Goldsmith, Na•. bud Shall be requisite in .making .any order Chartist Corwin, HenryHuntting, Albert Al- for ov authorising the inderstment of allyl bertson'PFauhlin H, trorton,Alvah S. Mill-i moneys, or the sale or transfer of any stock' ford;Pavid L,Horton;.* Hutchinson H.Case,i ,or cecoritins:belonging to the corporation, or Theron B.Worthh fHhry, H. Terry, Israel' the appointment of any officer receiving any Peck, Ira,B.Tuthill, Henry Pike, Thomas' rsahiry tlierefl•om. J. Coukliii; Jmelmah;Goldsmith, and their §5, The persons named in the first section successors;, are oollstitki iedll and created it of this net .shall be the 6rst'trustees of the , R body corporate and,fidlitic, by the name said corporation, find all vacancies by death, of h'Tho-Southold:Savings Bank,uand 'byI resignation or otherwise, in the office of Chat name shall, have perpetual Succession, - ' trustee,shall:be filled by the board by bnlloG, and way one and be sued in any coun what- without unneccussory delay,and of least elev, ,. Cvor i`Sind said institution ehallUo ionated on votes shall-be necessriry for the election in Southold, Suffolk bounty of any trustee. Tiro said trustees shall hold §i%,The real estatewh c6 ik shall be law- a regnlar1meeting at least once in' three tal for the said corporation to purchase,hold months, to receive the �reports of their obi• j ap 1.convey,ph>all be;, cers as to the business anti affairs of the cor. 1; Stutll ns,sllull,or;may he requisite ford., .potation, and to trnnmet such business as,; Its imrhsdidto achrgodatiou�PorChocoavon may he pec s,sa,ry,; nod,'angtrustee 'omiOngi od to attend Cherregular meadags of the beard;' ient traosriotion of its:business.:. - for nine months in succession,may thereupon,:: 2. Such as shall have been mortgaged to at the cleetPdnof ilitid board; be considered', it in good faith, tor"money loaned:in porsu 'as,ljavmg ad,ur>;ied bk,place, and a successor anee of the provisions of this act, tnay Ite lelocad to 1111 the Same. The Bit- 3, nS, Such as shall have been purchased at proms court may at anytime, for due cause. . ` t sales upon judgments-or decrees, obtained or 'remove any trusteo, on proper notice tosuch trustee,:,aud afliordjgg:him an opportu- rendered for money so loaned ; and the said dry W bcliegru ie,itis defence. •corporation shall not purchase, hold or con- •''§ 8 The .general- business and object of: Vey real estate in any.:other case, for any. tiw corporalibn hereby oreutad;shall' be to tse¢ervo-on. if P's auchsumaof money as . other purposes ; and all such real estaCc as l may be front time to time .offered therefor„ is described in the second and tl}irdspbtlivi-: uy tradesmen, clerks, "mechanics,:laborers, cions of this section, sball;.be sold by'the] minors, Servants, and "ouI iers; and investing •said''corparation within five years after the the'.snme ,in-thasecurities or stocks of Oho flaw eshall bevestedfn'itUypurchase moth= state ofNe,w'Yol•k,orofthe United gtates.. or the storks oi• bonds of the ,counties or v crwise ; and,the suid"corporation shall not; Sutfolk;,Qoemrs and Dings, and the:cities of directly or,indirectly,deal or trade.in buying; New York.and Brooklyn,"or of the town of. or selling,any goods, wares or commodibes� ,$ouibold,ppthorned to be.issued by the lege ,whatever;except in cases wbore ftas author• rslgtni a ofthis.state , or,to,loan thesame aFP on;the secuptlea qf, the said Stocks or boods;l ised to do so by the term§ of this a4G, 4pc�• - exce t siigh persons,t to rm•t as ma be r's and also epos bonds securer]by moetgago on. P P P I ,9 9 e?' d�proregd„ productive; grinon.oiberred' real' gnii•edfor:itat immediate aceommoGlatlon for" estatu located within, this state, worth at� the,agtl a lent trace oP its buslnesa- Toast doable the amount.to-bo secured §3; Tlie trustees of said uorporI'llatron shall'; 'bp exclusiveof' buildings; but no loin upon not, as such, dneotly. qu in�dn etl recmve; '�qnd find[mortgege, of n,,'larjer Sum them or am euchfive thousand mannedollars, aaslrel!abthor•isod�liotthris 1 , .4 Y act,.lol- tup, use, nrcerest spa,advantago;.ot; ..§ $• The board of directors may appoint thcaiid,depositors had therIegal represette. 'stash subordinate officers and agents of the • tives..on deposit allAnd t '°sums o he�saicl corporation shall re• ,sp.id corporntioa as theymnydeem necessat�y, cello-. , f'fngney, whicht who shall give such security respectively,.for may be. offered fol•falle pnrpose;oP beirsg iti-;i thgir fidelity and good conduct, as the board vested ps aforesaid,-.but;;not to exceed,t 'e, of trustees luny from time to time require, sum of five thoUsaltd dpllaff'front any 11A - 'and said board shut[ fix' the salaries of such •'officers and agents. vlda>,al,.whrch shall as sofa as practicable U, o" § fi• The hoops of the said corporation invested. nopordiugly„and phalli Ue repaid to such depositor when, required, aE such timesshall at all times during their houraofbusi- and with such interest, and oil or such regii. ness, be open for inspection and examination lations, as the Wild of trustees shall from to'..the comptroller of this state, and such It me to -time presr;k•iUu ; which tegulaflohs I other persons as the legislature or the comp- shalt Ife'pat'up Ili some public:and conspfcu.. I troller shall destgnato or appoint as their nus plate to itis ronin where [ilio busiiress of agents for that purpose. Whenever any of said.corporation,shall be tyansuated, but i agent shall be appointedto make any such shall not be altered to as to ag'ect any depos- examination, he shall be paid for his services wpt�evitiaaly mule, - IVa presidp'at yioe presti ''i by such 6orporatioh each sum as the aomp- rdq it,;'tivstoe, oQicci•'or savant of said car: troller shall certify tribe reasonable andjast. poration, shall, directly or indirectly, borrow; §10, Wheueverany deposit.shall be made the funds of said corporation, evils deuositg'i,. by any minor,the trustees of said corporation, or in any manner use the eamg;pr any part: may, at their discretion, pay to such deposit- thereof,jexcept to 'pay necease ;axpeasesi or'suclt'sums as may be duo to him or her, w although no guardian shall have been ap- undgrAbe'direction of said board of trngloss,' pointed for. such.miam•r, or the guardian of Algertiticatea or othereVideueea of depoaiE: such minor shall not have authorised the made byi tllo proper nlil�el' gf'siich coapora; drawing,'of the same ; and the- chock,re• tion shall be as fiinc4lirg�,,pn said;oorporstion; they were Cut thea common', ceipt or acgaittanco of latch minor,shall seal ,It shall he the„duty nf',tI trustees;of, aavalid ns if,the same.was executed by a guardian of such minor, or the said minor tUe said'cotporatton Gfq, regnlaCo the rata of was of full age, if such deposit was made niterost to,•bo allowa'df�o' tbo dupositms,so , that,theysliall receive as near us passible a personally,[y'said •minor. And when any ratoW'k'-poriion of.,the proli to°-of the sold: deposit shall Uo made by a m rried omen, aoapqudfiibn; after deducting all necessary or thereafter ,becomiug a-•married .woman; the said corpmaeion may,in their discretion, expensep Im ail cases of loans neon ta�}f tray to suohlaat mentioned depositor; such }estatu;asu[flu 1. bond, or.otfher saUhfaato,Cyi sem as may be duefto such fmnale,.and the personal' severity, {eh"all lie required of,' noceipt or,;acquit�ance of such femaile shall the borrower, and;' all rho expm#s oft mmgtl4e o sufficient discharge tp, said corporation, son phoaY exagns P` d c rtaficatea f �r � � q! 11. Tho board of trustees shall, ort or tttlq, ad of drawings Petfeo4}jgz and reeord d Am o$ shall be and+ht' sac4 barrawar bdlpre the Lwenty'fifth day of January, nedi, Ptweoiy-fifth day of July, in use year,make rrdWt �'pflall Ue tire, duty of the trustees ora•, s�ldlcdpph ,hlpn dtto`ipvesE�gs' $bonus practlh, such report to the bank supecintaudenG>ns is 4¢Uldl iaripaUlaq stocks aurid ipuUl„m geverltrwc eatl required by lulu, and shall be snbjoo,fto all >'^�ot nr bo da'and mart a os�asq; rovtdad artlr -the provisions and requirements or the act r i r 1. brthN acli a'Ilasrlma,icgcely tl boy ehppm, boyo'gd oatitlod An not in relhtion t0 saving-back , .s,Wavnfl•'alila +fundr,br.,uot, exceeding twenty ; passed March twentieth;'eighteeh hundred and fifty-seven. The misnomer of said car- 4 thopaftnd dgllars f+lthch that' met' kcepj nrnttaa fir an instrument shall not Vitiate ` to meat>;the em,renE': paYmelos of,sard oar for im air .the same, if it be sutficioritl 'rde - poratrorj; and "whao�l}Tgrtuy,fbj,tlj,� be kept' 'scribed to ascertain the inteutiou of the pur• on depp"sttacoa wtef`es'$i on o'Uherty'I"se, rn sue r' - avnalalyla'rform as t o t ust a ma direct ties Tho; §,f{�r tllg: Unar �otj to ybtFesi of r,he rsatd� on§the p pl,ioation oU ally ttrust e a,at 'depgsf-:v ,cot�PpraEWu�r,yahalvl have pp flo f tame to. Lor ln4abi-corpo ationi"upon, reasonable on• inner,to2mnite, a-R ftrVtttutg„;nf ai ,pk4ldi,pataU,i ties to said coappration�or to those who may A isp pflnh1A, y l awsr ul+es vend, �agalnillons aa� be ulfaoGed.thr<ruby„al¢uch intandedntipliao- 'they s,Fl I�)udpo ,pagpar Ia "Elie,• electloh of t[on,and on reasonable oaatse shown tosrufor, Wtob+otieta,forprragatltagthouaas 1., 1 ave; I Ponctmi`fr'�and Uie•>utgdo gt�disuhargIn thr; lontl7 to tor�more j torsions to to eznnlpeon or said r uia�to appoint is Is ame;.for rho regi` to ,ioP{tlie umes of r�r' vestments th'ereot, and its affairs and bhsi• meetutga of the oe st,,apdusteps, and. r tress generally the books 'pupere and Uusi- geilecnlly for tranpanEfngr,manngip +and dt beds of said corporation shall be open and teptliabf.tlae atf¢us oki t16pJpprp"d14ron, ptayr ', led such Usy laved-.tr'h�es fµ'adr;tpgn�µtsons`+aSo¢ subject to thee,xaminatio,n of such•person-.or noG tapItgnµtlt tp+Clltst t t 1piconatlGuti n¢ persons , a¢dltho traleCeena off cera sari clerks f dieacof err anyt yahaf=p. son, may.tlse ex- on lakYs of this ria oto,lora pfr .Gha IIo; lj such person or Pei'. R F minbd on oath ,Y 1” gats and ,4he";court smay copier' such further powers nu the person or. pereoni ho appointed,appointed, ns they may consider et,- evioury for the nmru thorough and porroct examination of the alruiia and business oV .. said corporal ion. The sold person or por• y. sous so splroiuted sllull report the result of Lheir invostigulion to tiro said eom-t,Who, if satinfiml thereby that uuy officer, trualue or inrvunt or sold corporation line well ff ,r,r' �. t.y er tiny fraud or uiiecundnet, onlyproper OOLIW re such perwn Unit Dire Rism him an opporuuoily to be Ihew•d in file dereuce,' I , romuve such person or Timmis, and nmke such further order, and take such l lydler.. Feet h inking Quanere, 18$8-1861 wcur•omce for eecnrigg Lie hunl:{and proper- , ty of said corporation as the court that[duuml expedient'. - Tho corpora�ihn hereby creaLed shall 414 Jy�. be Subject,to the pruvIsiuns of the eightneuila t ' chaptur of the ftrst part of the Rovisad Statutes. as far as the same are, or may be applicable. § 11, This net slmll telco effect hnmedi• alely. iitate of Now York, �I have compared the i Hee etory'8 OBI-te^. preceding with the 's origi unl htw ou file In this office,end du hurt• l by certify that the same Is it correct trans. ! 1 cript tborerrom and of tiro tvbole of said original law. r: v given under my hand and soul or omee, at the city of Affinity, title twuntythird dup of •Second Banking Quarters, 1861.1891 April, to the year in thoasand eight Iruu• derd and lirty.eight. S. W. MORTON, Hen. of State. , * At a snbsequer,t roneling of''the Dnard. hot May dab, 1888, John 0.Irolawl sed Josoph L. them were unaalmously oloctod It uatmea In plae of Alvah B. Mulford,doomed,and DayId L.loo; ,. ton,;pafg4od, THE SOOTHOLD SMUNGS BANK, 11 PEN EVLRY fttmdtty Ver.'1 nobn,renin ONE to T IEEB Wr soli, n4 the omro of tlae Trrnsurar, in tho vllingo or 4taltilold. ., ref rst:p. Third Banking Quarters, 1891-1927 lW-,X5511LAER T. GOLIIB.MITR,fres. First Southold Savings Bank Building TIII:RON R iCul'fat. a^ati, � �';.i FRANR'N IL Ol'ERTON,i Viet,Prat,. p HENRY HUNTTINO, e9nns:and Bile. - I. JOS.H.GOLUB6111•l1,A tt'y sndUounsel. Albert Albertson, Wm. 11,Walls, .Moxas C.Cleveland, ,Israel Pock, Jeremiah Goldsmith, John 0. Ireland, Nath'I Corwin, Henry 11.Torry, ,l Joseph Where, 11.11.Casa, John B.Howell, Jamea E. Hinton, X 1..Gnldnmllh, Le Il. Tuthill, Thus.J.l;mhlln, Henry Plata. i Haled B ulhold,Oct. 1,MS. " 44tr •aarM k a.. ,s Fourth Banking Quarters New Southold Gavin a Bank Boil in . Erected 1 27 j 0U'I'fIOLD SAVINGS BANI. `fMITHOLD SAVINGS BANK MOPPORMIA) MIN. r, Iartd 01-'1'1 :r;l2.ti ['IfE BANK'S FOUN1)ERS Ii 1NLI t MII1.e, 11 a 1.111 Klill NI 011 IC I',Itb 11,If fli IN I it lr K1K II I:Illlil b lCf 14tP sIIt 11NI �I '.I r A1I 14111 AN[) Iltl III ASSELAI41 11gl L„ail111 Plt OWINiIIIL 41',1.:11:114 11RIM. HIy11V' Iltl td It IVNKI.IN II `tl Lli l(r5 till Iltl SIIII.A' II,lLI P FERItY ASlilsIAN'I lltl 141111 In R0 % 13 lv9yNlll VII C,PIII'=:1111 NI 1111N111 IW',]I M. rhr:ncultl(k 1RU,S'1'I'.IS; II. qtl W,l N fl IIIIN l'll VG TItUS'fCCI'a r.ownwl W. I,AruAll j rl.nul.rvrr, r rlu.rs.r, u AIAh.11I AI.11L 411,,,,1 GROW%IS II 11.11111' IMI(Mra40z II L.13F. I'm WitI.IAJI A 1'I I I,I Mni14 t t L4 f.1,ANIL I' LI'll r. Il ALL ul'.1, 1'II IA, f -LAND itAI ;'ll b IIIAAI.I. SAIIIANII1. rnNWI h' �'lld 111 I GIL u111 'I. I'4RA L 6uLIL4411 hflJoillAlllt ICtI CII In 1P.Itl 41411 Pi If I ' .f AAKLIN 1. U1'I'.K InN' In Yll rl II 1 1.❑ q'.Ill I N4`d. A I. 1 I, q P'.'-11111 ':I:UIIGII II I'Ii llAlniv la'I I.yi l, ., IUHN I(P.NNIIy I'llf P 11 IRI Itl YS4il Thar � ! yr,r, t'I I f �[;I t I'It ! llt �a'.I HIi.I. � 1aal rr uv.I,r,s I+f�ILIl1'IP` LRp f I�hlll 11 IiII I:IIJ„i Li,hl ihn I „ 1 I j' 't IX l� S � l)1 I ', Ire-ThelN Y Herald of'.Thursd#6., t cop-. wHo immediately hove-her to� nod brought Mains the following°parGrculars of`I�fe capture her to anchor, and put' 81 men oa taf.the yacht�g 'derer aEPort7,eQey on:' ;board after, which ho .towed her;over ,k � To little Burp ii ions occnsioned� t eye. oto the; Long' Island shorn, ,off Eaton's nrng fn the ( Ea eriver by Ihd,gp}iearoalo of NeclR, and anchored•her in Huntington bay. 'Elio,new-revers 'cutler Han riot Lane,:ghclor about seven o'clock yesterday morning. tb 1pmmaud of,Capt. Paonce.headed down the . then stood down the Sound in search of the: 'llvor,':and Having-iii tow the yacht Wanderer Wanderer, and Came tip with her about ten {s`nd;the eegooder:Gaiter I Oidia:% Tho,filet doloplCOw Old Picid Point; with all sail set. that Capt, P. had been ona cruise up. IIo :stood for her, brought her to without Sognd,,and,hsd seized the llranderer on any ditficutty, and. sent an li icer and five g,lt�+picidn'of being shout to s6il on a slaving men 01 board Lo tak0 charge If her, which 'expeditonrandtile-CharterOnk,loaded with: was el without resistance. He then etpros,which it is-nll.eged,were to be put on. took .the Wanderer in tow and proceeded to boor the.Wanderer. J'i,nV JD,I WK Eaton's Point, where the .Charter Oak wits ' Tho;Wanderer has, Uegu ,for days hitched on, and -tile three proceeded don'n ,cruisingi`about tile Sound, andexcited the Sound to New York, 3sheee they arrived thspicions of. Surveyor Norton, of Port about half past six P. 111;.,.ocrns'oning.as e su deffersoil, and others,its did ulsp the selmon. before stated, no little surprise in East river.; er'Ne I, ter Oak'. „`1'ho voaselI I.wara.vigil¢n G• ': DnoaKr,vN,N Y.,May 39, 1868; y1y wahebed, and after ow•pful surveillance it To IhoEdaor of the,Sudnik Tines: b ¢detenmined,.tllyE, R,illegal .voyage was DEAR SIR :,--REGAR.131NG AS,A Co'htCnl pl,aLed 15tOlie, wP,rG;acpgrdIngly.tak• tdirty the pmdormnneo of nap act by which ., ,,... wood of otbees can be sonuretl 'ur snfioring eh�.a+arpeaG them, anti onaik'effldavlt of Mr, ameliorated•we tells much FRttafagE10c In benrino atop;sl n tiPorth the facts li r(,d his susp, i- testimony to the areet slop in Ihn tientment' of pr • ' i g dlspnses posgossod(by;JAMES JENNINGS,M.D,; 0 ,ur the:,ITnrtod a,t£(.t0a I)iatrlot.nAttlgl nCY. into of Brooklyn and Dow aresl(lent ePrSour1141,11 ' 7�,tt,,,�,r oltn"rststet7- tq at `r'e �emonyibnnded upon thaea e„r ietendtematter-promptly, wtPttnee osome a0s.ah ' physician!in nor families and to those`:of 7A'l10%'pON' rCve ilea PutterH rrfet Lane was several_ of our friends and acquaintances,,and " whioh warrants us recommending R �ln�'Eo➢"Stnten Island, and Capt. Yaunce; a Lin, to uie:. hi¢heeV'tenma to all who may 6e-stn need of'or tiyl'lo has hea0m0 somewhat celebrated for would,appreciate .the services;of i a ekillul physt- s,m vvi a rn:catchill alleged slavers, re man. Vevy respectfully, t 'RICH,S.11.DIiEILTS, Clinton Avenue. �a¢avkgtti ordela•to take a arnrse to.,Search of : SMITq J,EASTMAN, „ ' I,Clte3suspecto, vessels, 1 Accordingly, shortlyMrs AUGUSTUS M.DASTbIAN, 41r 1'dtt.. lP rfd'er 11 o'clock on'j.`ucedµy morning, be got Clinton ave. _ ddnt lyay,and slowly made his;way.ufitherA 1IE UND1;11SIGNP�;D;. CL'fUM OF. t� 1 4as + river, through:. Hell Gate, into the 4w Toieleox of the bletboinst Episcopal; y r Church m Catchna ue, will sell at Publio Anclir u plind AbOat eIg11t O'CIOCk he received in. on TuEsDAY,tat tiny of JuNr nese et ono o'cb,r ,BSlIlnona&6'om the captain of.the Lightship P.Al.,tha OLD MDP130lltSf CPURCH in Gdu h- eRne, with nbmrt ono Ilion for of an nave of baud tlld�.Jthers'i-woe another yessol Uesld¢a the . ? rr attuuhed '-JOAN P CCD.PK,;: y lW¢udei•eT•carrying stores, intended for the Clark of the lrusreas of thn�9PuthodinL ^ I 171atter killhad Usell Jnying off Port Je(fer- 4t1'St .Spiasolnrl Came3a Cntch,r son, 0 rdIngIy sLopd up the sound - f11 .The great .rains of the Inst six weeks maearch;of her. IIo ran near Port Affor are unparalleled in extent and the amount sop-4nd sent elf a amall boot; about 1,2.,P,. that.has fallen, all over the countt•y., Tlie eo se's whether the Wanderer was still, i ., average of observations gives 15 inches in Tbe,i " 'rowed around!^her without 48 days, commencing May 1st:. The Buffalo g lbeing observed and returning;coportedgthat Express says the water in Lake Eric is high- aho'`vas r(drp �afe tit anchor, Ontaprlvmg., or than it has.fever been before within the rvt Eatbo's N� off the Comrectiyy othare memory of the "oldest' inhabitants," The - 4n Llie barb'or along the southernshore ore suffering ary'oesae�Uy iLhe�,wrl Capt h�aGnco �riaofe. from an overflow of their banks and docks. up1 wl4h'" the"yQhar$ir, OaIE Illomg, rhaq. -- s ehoee, t6n'ugh rapptinptly heavily loaded? ` avis e t jtc Atlantic Cable, Voto�nt thoTownrLi`}lection The following fa filo number of pates +royka Pour hundred miles of cable have been, ceived by the .several candidates +tai ordered, to replace the 350 lon last fall, nnd(' Election on the 6th inst.:— i it isintended to add 300 miles more, The'. -:Supervisor—John 0. Ireland 365 , T,( ships.will be loaded and pressed to midi Wickham Case, 228; mnjority,'187, ocean by the middle of June,at which time,.: Town•Clerk -Jonatlim Hanttmg,. it is said, there are five or six.,days during-. 866 ; Ezra Goldsmith, 224 ; mojority, 14'2,; I which agalo on the.Atlanticwas seldom ord Justice of the Pence—Lother Moore, IT;' never ]mown to occur. 'Pilo line will bo�l James H, Reeve,:260; majority, 52, •jj joined and laid firom the center of the ocean,;] Assessors—David Terry; 306.; Edwin P?,w' the Niagara taking her end of the cable to, ,Brown,. 222 ; 'majority, .144, - P110mas J:'I Ireland,and the Agamemnon conveying hers: .Conkllu,,359 ; Oliver Corey, 224 ; mnjli ti to America. . On this occasion the cable will, 135. ru not be piled away'in one huge mass, but rvillz - ' be distributed equally-in the fore, midsbi Overseers of tliePoor—Jeremiah Moore,. . P. 8G8; Daniel T, Terry, 223 ; majority, k45,{ mid after parts of the vessel, in coils of five 'John Wickham, 867 ; Silas Horton, 218xi11 hundred miles each;. Itjs,to be hoped that' majority, 149. - a11�W+ if after several hundred miles of the cable' Commissioner of'`Higliwnys—John Shn.r; are sunk, it is found impossible to telegraph 34�4�� Joshua W. Torr 227 inn out?" signals through it, the cable will not be ac- 111. , R , J 9t 117. . cidentally broken and left at the bottom.- Collector—Jamesi Rhohmond, 304 , Gc, 4 The ships are provided with machinery for P. Horton, 276 ; majority,28. ., , 'wp, raising and coiling.the cable, and it will be ` Constablos—Robert H. Thompson, 3fa�, worth saving, oven if it is demonstrated that D,antel DIckPrson, 222ma or t 13cJ a tele raph across the Atlantic is an imposs- ,11 George II Allya, 864, Lovt Pr"extant7}r0 ; bility: mnjority; 145 Daniel C l7 rw�fnm, 28f1� ) The London Times,alluding to the diG•mul'-: " '+ ""`` • t of sending .telegraphic si nals throe h a Frame 6 Daod ny,Ase X19 $Y 4 JahaF' Y g g s '4Yella 33h+' Bar'•'nubae Wine0 247 a• long circuit, states that Mr..Whhtobouse�the. i ,t. tt +. t r Ja „ i nit ' electrician of the Atlantic telegraph compa- 1'tQ I epe„h tore of Eioctwn 1st `-Die's' �i +�71. ny; has been experimenting`through the, ' Browa; 3G7 ; James �Wnog ,n3 �{a 2,200 miles of cable all winter, and has so' Jnhn O:'fCerry, (appmntOyc)) 22 .? nLij+Sjy� improved his apparatus that five words per J ism gh aero 366 Au ¢ pea Jor m ; minute can now be seat through the cable, hinted ` and lie hopes soon to be'able to transmit' 868, Phomas IIcmpatp4d �tnpp; � r d�Disty, John tiO:l7ory,iJr,t 36'1 i T eight.words par minute. This is a very slow: k I{v`.Cerry, 365 Thomas S,� eaer o _ ,rete oftranamiasioa. When the cable cornea., pointed)224. ' 4th Dist Jose U WeIIpG+� to be sunk it will be.exposed to another and: p , Ajemsou Hallock, 36 , Barnal5's Pike (w'v greater souroo of, retardation,and the Times, pointed) 220 y ;,. � '+ f` 7 7,. may well say it will require three m' four ca Average mI, y for the ILepabhcan ttcka bles to do the telegraphic business across the 142, b'eibg an increase of nearly;double ovo}g Atlantic, If It works at all, many scientifo "� men wih be happily''disappointed. last year. I . _ BO>\RD OF SUPERVI90nS Ae fur as heard Lisa Roijlna-The steamer'Island Belle, ++frorri,tlio next Board of�,Supei'visora will bo 'apt,.'J. DT. Saunders, is note canning in as fgllows t connection with thm.L,ong Iolaacl Railroad, h,+ SoutJ old Johu 0 Ireland, carrying the U. S. Mail between New York, S ieg er Island Samuel,B ipoll Greenport, Sag Hrxbor, Now London and RIverhea{1 8ylpe x' Miller' Stonington, Iare from Mystic, Stonington Soatl am�ton+vJunq aD�a�t!�ia° sud,New London to Brooklyn, $2,00; from. ast4amptoq i Igrgi 1 sw rJ�jIplli=ta�wi>NIte�A�b„oa�a $r '� .P'„�u�rsetiUoy�os oloodookdl,y)n{$t2o25New;Loudonka4., (direct in I� id STEAMBOAT NOTICE.— SEVENTH ANNUAL TOUR. Now ROUTE I3) TWE7N fI1UE "CONTINENTAL VOCALISTS" WILLI STONEW R&-iI6RTBET b way s.. elve one only of their Miscellaneous,Vocal 9ffdi Y. andInstrumentalCONCERTO At orNEW LONDON and GREENPORT, connectins: •Iylililary FIallr on Tuesday :Cvesngr at preapport byat8amer to Sag Harbor,and by- Long Island Railroad to Now.York, August Will, 1868, An entire new programme ' aThe well known and favorite steamer ISLANDwill bo prestintedt Young LEWIS, the talented BELLE, Capt.J.N.Saunders;will leave.Stouine- 8010 Violinist,will Appear. ion on Tuesday; Thursday and Saturday. at 7:80 Canis of admission,26 cents; to be had nt L. a m; New London 830,;. Greenport 10:80, coo- Moore's Book Store, Peconie House, Wyandank, necilug at Lyme with the 1-p in train from New nod at the door, hover,landing at all stations'an.the River, and Doors open at 7%; Concert to commence at 8. arrive in Hartford at about bpm, Particulars in programme. Its turning,will Icaye Hartford on hfondny,Wedr1•. 601t W.M.BATES,Agent. nesday and B'llday ftv 80a„m; Greenport at il% p in; Now London 9p"N,"8;""anal":arrivo._In sluumg=• s5Y L00KATTH%S! -�a ton at 6 p m, , THE STEAMER . On arriving at.Greenport nt8p m; the :"Island - ALBANY Belle”will connect with steamer"Ban oso," By -" leaves Pier 11,North this arrangement'passengers will arrive at She River,Neto York, every Wednesday Bud Satnrrlay 'Harbor at 4 p an, twchboura in advanceof,anyat o'clock P.M.,for Orient, Gnenpm't and Sag other lino, Paswngere ItIona Stonington or New Harbor. Returning. leaves Sag Harbor for New London,ticketed through to Now.York by the 11 York,(stopping at Grcanport and Orient,) every a mtrain from oreonport for s]. btoaday and Thursday,at h o'cinck P.Al. Oreemport;July 6th,1868, 471f. FARE—$1.50. Hartford New London Greenport 1�'CUAMPLIN do YOUNG,L•'xpress Agents, a s are In sitondan s to du liver Bananas soil Freight ankZag Harbor. of nil kinds,toany part of the dtyor New York R E"fx U L A R LINE. THE or Brooklyn. well known favorite and fast steamer Particular attention paid to small errands and L, BUARDAIAN, Capt,George W.Bates, has to, Bank business. Qhnrges light, sword her regular days on the above route,bar- I The voyage is.pleasant and free from dust, Ing Hartford Tuesdays,Thursdays and Saturdays, All kinds or Freight taken at mnderaTe rates, and:Sag harbor, Mondays, Wednesdays and'.Pri- I 60tf D.G.REENEY,Captain.. 'days, at 7X o'clock I Greemportat8; atopping New RoutetoNew.York, ' each way, at all.the landings.. Will also connect at Now London with the Stonington, Mystic and; fare only $1.50,. Nsrwalk atenment; making It a cheap and pions THP, F A V 0 R I T L�' AND 'ant:route to either of those.places, and will ha:: TFu HP, L. BOARDMAN, Cnpt.0. found the same;:for Providence, Fall River, Now W.Dates, leaves Saa Hnrhor'MoejloyB; Wednes- Bodfard,Nantucket and Boston. I days and Fridays, at 7:80 Rod Greanport at 8:30 The "L, Boardman"having been built with. A,Dl,and will ticket passengers Ibrough by.the great strength,expressly.for running on Long Is; steamor land Sound, and having recently received- the. GRANITE'. STATE' rough Improvements, aho 14 oxcoadingly well to Now.Yorlt:for one dollar andflay cents. Pas- adapted to the route,and cannot fail to plateau all sougera from Now York can take the steamer who pat'onizo liar. Her officers are wall known Gjrp OF IIARTFdRD to:be competent,careful and obliging - THOS-GROSS,Jr.,Seely from Took Slip, on Mondays, Wednesdays and ' flat tford"and L I'S B Co. Fridays, at 6 o'clock P.hl, and receive tickets Gpodspeed;'s Landing,May, 1868. 470 through to Greenport and Sag Harbor,by the L. -._ Boardman, fertile came fare,'viz:—One dollar and will C ® A L T flftp coils. This be found a most desirable route, OF SUPERIGK QUALITY, L. In the hot and dusty cars of the liongls land Railroad. Itis a great luxury.to -KOW DISCHARGING AND FOR SALE AT take a G•ip through the Sound on such largo and fulh, from aplendid steamera as the Granite Stale and City or 81001)FLylr.a Cnuon. Hartford,,Anti needs only a trial to be appreciated. Apply to the Captain onboard, or of the Agent, Atrangaments will also soon be made to carry) J. GOLDSMITH. freight through nt very low rates. Southold,July 20th,1868. 48*64 `Sag lUrbor,July 26,1868. 5011 .TTIr ISLANFD.BrLLU.—AN-. '7 O'IAM C11ItWVO TE UB-. 'IdC.•—We tire highly.gtatilied tit the "Card .el CARD TO TI3 i PUBLIC. to the Public" published in the papers by one —Learning that my friends and the Capt. G Washington Bates of the L Board. ' Mile 'hong 'the route' of the "L. Board. Aran, Alias the old Cricket, disclaiming 'ally man,i'have by'some means received the"im. aconneximr whatever between saki beat and tpression• that ,Ue Island•BelIs acid the Lf nthe new and beautiful steamer Island Belle Boardman are now ruodle in connectionlVe should'not -desire nay connexion with-a with each other, uniting th drbhsiness, prof- 'boat Lhat has to change its name in order to its, etc:, I beg leave,to ills as the public' .mala the public ('who had got tired of rho mind of this erroneous hapression by stating "old tab") think the owners "had furnished that the two Beals have no a nuection what -a new boat for the route„anti which, not. ever,and that the owners of the steamer ander avidistandingits ehangebf.rumic,sAnkAlong my.command consider the�Belle nothing less side the dock At JisSgx,. last winner: ilre than an opposition boat placed oil this route, avant,no connexion with sudh a craft„.aod if which it is well known one support but one, we had supposed for a moment, iaiat the solely for the purpose of coercing us into an •pafilfe harbored such nn idea, we should arrpngemeat which will satisfy neither us nor Imveomaelves taken clip. earliest, moment to the traveling public, hale corrected an impression •I,llat would'; Fon eight years have Ibeen on this conte, have certainly been injurious to "`I'ht Bellu"� endeavoring to accommodate all who have As regards our being An opposition boat,! bad' 'occasion to patronize us,. either with we'have yet to barn that G: WrviliinAton passage,or freight and it is a fuck well known Butes les the exchisive, right to this i i irlej to the.public that:our Boats: have always, notwithstanding his.eight years' experience commenced earlier and have con tinned to run as wheclsman"and commander oil courboats," later in the season than the receipts will meet i, e, the old Cricket, mins tim new Board. the current expenses,merely to,Accommodate mar♦,” Thq Bcllo runsor,'dppdsito"clays, takes the' :puhlle and. tho. generous.It of the hc•s11are of the travel and freight, slid, will $oat,-and every other reasonable care has , ,Mntimie todo so,notwithstanding G. Wash• been;taken' to 'aeeomplisli the game end, ington Bates' Card, And in view of tlihse facts'the subscriber IT. We'intend•to satisfyAlle public in all our apect0illy yet earnestly solicits the continue- a,,,We: rangeme,iits; if the owners of the Cricket tion of ,past favors And patropage ogrecing •(eee stern of Boardman,) are.not, W&iiou't kor himself and the gentlemanly officers of ,particularly,care. " lhis Boat to render the -auto a pleasant and For trivo .years Cupt Sicunder, of .favorite one for the.ruturo. 3110 To".has been engaged in sailing ves.� Carr.:GE 0. IV, BATES, "sets of every description ; i; an "old' sailor, Or Steamer L. Bom(lumm . It ong it up "on: deck" did not crawl ii)tu, Steamer L. Boardman, Jud 20; 1868. the cab in:windwv, is an honest, li;dnm-abla' man, and capable. The public have only to l CHEAP. TnnvgUNG.—Wo art,.requested iomake his acgnaimence`to see the difference state that lmssengers•wlll hereafter be tleket-' :between a iced captain And a self"edacefted sit bhrongh to Ner-'York from.Sag Harbor, *ie, Mr, Bassett, thi Clerk, is also'a-very Greenport and Orient, by thefavorfte a4gentlemanly olGce;soare!it racta.11000nected fast steamer "L. Boardman," Ca t.-13atiuc i avlth the Belle in ally capacity,and we intend p to always have it thus. ' eonnecting with U4stoamers "CityofdIjart-! Now a word fn relation to the boat itself, ford's and "Glra lt'o-'State',".'iso antfjfreI ;,The Island a3e1le was built live years ago os. New York fm•'thia low fare of'$160 " ' �':opresnly: for' this routq.,,. Site is\a staunch �raft; nnexcellent j;w,hoit, one:that aPer- son �rsr 'travel in withont the liability of beingdetafnad at Saybrook by every:little breeze, or being sea-sick at.'every:fresh hlow.l Sheds:large and roomy,,capablo.of (carrying arest•i,y double the freight and,passengers uf. itho Cricket, nlias the Boardmao;'and is A! - • )very fast snfl,or, The Belle is,on the route permanently, nnd it shall be the consta.nt endeavor of the own. ins, and officers, and all connected with Lc', to Promote:the pleasure,:the comfort, and to ensure 11AIafety of the passengers, " We trust that w,c:shallcontinue to receive a liberal share of,the.public patronage and ' out,friends:may'„,.rest.Assured that we shall eparq no efforts to make their"stnyon board Iho Belle a piensant onq, In behalf of Lire owners of the steamer 1slund Belle, SAUNDERS, Captain ` ,�Jn1w44-1558 . �h� Iatf011 �ZI1YC5. lJOUTftOLD COLLEGIATENSTITOTE. ' 'IIS SCYIOOL IS LOCATED IN JOHN J. RIDDELL,ED: AND PROPRIETOR- the villago of" Southold," at the east endOf QREENPORS TN471L86AY,JULY 28, 1868. (Long Ixland.,- lgJ)frers,.adperiar ll cuss toper- sons preparing for business or for college. A Lind and .constant supervision wlll.bo 0 urnigodl THE SUPPOLR WEERLY Tiuss HAS'. over the Doling during filo hours of reereaLion ns THE LARD EET CIRCULATION OP ANY WEEKLY well ns of stud} ,and no aff,Il will hu apnr,d.W promote(hair hds appins Rad secure a hm'meoioust PAPER PRINTF.D.,ON LoNn I$I.AND, ADYLRTl" imelloctual moral And I!hysloal den—pinont. l WILL PLEASE NOTA THIS, Tho instruction will be tlmrOngh;. aiming to M 111M WN,SILTP-R is our authorized Agent, store the mind with knowledize,loRMANTFAr. Rrld to retabre,subscriptions fur Too Tum Ea. PRACTICAL, rather than nup,firie1AL and snowy; to stioullato all its facilities to a healthful activity, per'•The second expeditmil lofts failed to and to cultivate habits of pntontInau and careful Invostfi ntlon. 'Phe government .will be Iny the ILI.antie-tnlegrnph cable, after three arm and uncompromising,.yet mind and pntornal, attempts, and this. frigate Niagara with inculcating life duty of golf-COml 1, and seeking ,to lofluenco the pupil by the highest and purest, the=English -tender, Gorgon, returned to motives, Queenstown, Ireland, on the 5th or Joly, I The BealitY Of the.Scene'll After the cable had Parted twice, as uIrcludg11s proverbial lleaRhrulness and frearloul, from vi- afi)no'InHeonceA slid its easiness of+ceoss, randor reported,it was joined fol•the third time on IIlia location nnesually inviting and desirable. .the,$&th olttiff When about two hundred .TLe,yoaris dibided into thrre terms of ld wedhe 'sod fifty miles bad been aid out from both. each. Tm•ms, 66, p 00 into thrlo t ms able in lid• vessels; messages from the Agamemnon yance. This INCLUDES TUITION ,xcopt;la Ancient and 7vloamp LaQueses,;Maslo'cud Drawing,'for ceased on the evening of Alta 20th,,at which. which an 'addltonal atimgd twill^bpi Matic. To time the.eable elthml Pal tIld*or was cut, M1d those dosi'rin�:instra,tori'in it theory and re of- tpe"Niagara Bailed f0N4 the rendezvous at tic,of Vocal Music, uddsuel rtdVadtngos m'p of- unusual �ghr fered. To onaa o place's',or for circulars, Gork Jjv- Addl,ss Yho Principal, SON, O.RO.W.D'Ol{IN 'By, the'arrival of f(Ie''Agamemnon food 61y S,ULhold,L.I Valorous at Queenstown ou the 12th inst., IFF is SALE," it is reported that the telegraph cable suns SH OUNTY OF UFFOLI{,ss—B`<'tIll Su T-0F broken near the stere of'tba Agamemnon,'.- �C a, e,,cugp,'n iesnad out of Ind Supreme wbon ono hundred and forty,miles or�lit had I court of this$Late,against Lha goods And chaulcq, been payed out of theft vessel 'On'Lite land' and emm�mlls of Simnel 0, (Iartliner,. I hove sel arl all the right and lite, o'hfell the said arrival Of the A.at QueeoiftowD it had been S nnuel a.Gardllbr had on an..,seVentil-day.of dgEermin¢d to make a final attempt t0 llyfj mad toe;ll e6folloNing described preMlocol"Oat any flumi llich 1 the cable, and the -fleet,was. mumanCedu' r 'ehall,exposa for sale.am the law.,dir,ots,at,the still,again-.on the-11tb'inatl for that purpose. tvyunah`'Idly°mp Saplemharinnextr.atr2 o'clock P The cause ofthe breaking of the cable is M. All that certainpiece lir Derail of landshin hnklloWn, ' ato-is Lha Town of.Southold,county aforesaid, �-- bounded and described as follows:—On the wesL MILITARY:Tho Oltleel's and DOL•'Ammis- by land of John Stark; n,rLborly and.Aaesdtesre�lhY landin4hn promises Of.Francis Cady, stoned officers of the 16th Regimout.N..Y. arly s by t`1 highway;:cgntpinillz one:more more or. `0,Al are t6 assemble in this village,Tor ex- �less. Alto ne CAR9IAN,Sheriff, J,Ri(teLPBNITII,.AI.IIOI,oy,• excise and'improvement, on Thursday'.next,- I ted Riverhead,Atol id,1868, 6Pmw 51h proximo„at• 3 1-2 P. M., by order of gol. P ` ', !s . tIi tib,:bc. their bed• nnrtors, On Pl1duy monng, ( Whthoj,60mental � reEs, . Band are to'essembl In midless..1inifoi'm,'Of . ..8 o'clock, at the armory of Company„G., at 'which hour the officers.will Dorado. ' 'inee the' last paiade,of the Reglmenf, tboi:i lowing,;.Chill tlave"occurred..!if the RegirnegtniStnff vle;-;,r” EIt hicer VVIn. Z.I iag; has been appoint,, ed Adjutaut, with Punk of first Lieutenant,' Pay AllastW,9topheu B.French,;1ms; been^ -,app p appmuted,' a Hreer, with rack of @npinill. — [For the S❑(folk Weakly Times.] milk in abundance close by wherewith 'to, .supply theirwmite. We cannothelp look. >� Ihitotest Against Sabbatli.Cars. -ing there�oroppon these Sabbath.. cars as a: Mn.1•;mroa; The follotJingreasons pppear .wholesale nuisance, and a moral pestilence to us' satisfactory why theso-called milk• sweeping through the Island once a week, in is train should not run through the Island on order to corrupt the population. On this the Sabbath. - account, we-bog the company to stop the I, Since milk is not,generally sent from evil at once. The good of all concerned, the eastern part of the Island by this train 'the law of the State, and the law of God ,we cannot find a shadow of a reason for its I doman1d this. _running. Why call it a milk tram, since this is the fact 7 Would.it not be more tlnaexronT,B°pt.28,18G8. This is to ramify, that „•e, the andorsianod, 'truthful to Call it a passenger train 7 If the: burs sold to Ambrose T.ICing, oar Cohlnet bnei- company intend io.run a milk-train,in future, nose,and tako pleasure in reeommanrline him to .and use the Sabbath this ,year to.advertise oui.former patrons and iho public eouaroily. Glf WTI.LIAGI LITCHARD ds SON, .the people of this fact, then the matter is --- - i made still worse; for to_trample ,on this sa- cred day..for such a reason is certainly cool, 'calculating,wickedness. _ _p.-� z_ W 2. Fven admitting that the cars do carry ,, milk,we can find no law of necessity,or.. ;�- '9w° r '-mW w •� c rc m mercy:by which to uphold the measure. It 'g 0.5 is a fact that the milk,.cannot be carried,to orW o 00 a 84.a°-;m.- ,t110 elLy BO a8 LO Ue sold on the Sabbath for o; .W R ; w d v d,bb n-e Monday,land athen y�sold.but which ust bcertainly tiisl '� y W e��2.i:In ; d 0o argument at ail fortha movement. For, p-' �3 „°,rzx it tile duaign is to..furnish milli for Monday, - - W = ° ;,mwHA the we say there are please enough at n r e °(� <�` c 9 reasonmb,49 al9taPce from Now, ork from " �tO 'S which m(Ik cite be brought on D?unday morn.I � N pq .^>p z n 6 = m hus,which. = E eo 11,14 for the vao'of thntday: Fa�ivwwUFGQ coot way we look ata the schen?a Ivo Gna,!f� [to,be entirely unneccessary ° rub .S.'IF theprocticenf Culling milk were to he• ° ,o_ a 9 b .94 „ 'come general on Sunday on this part of 00P. .land, an:almost universal desecration of the:, Lord's day would be the result, hafternmell as a'. verylargo number of the people,are farmers, an therefore e persona who would have to �, o,°° th furnish the milk. : Six days' labor would,be _ 'o _•"° '°5 a extended to seven ; regular attendanceon o°ooh;" 3 g divine worship in the church would be hrok• en up; driving of mi wagoes.-i4ioughthe �.`:-u. �p•s� ocelS' differentvillages,and to and from the differ- ent stations, would.destroy icrest,:oi' the 4oy entirely,not to mention the collateral evils that would be sure to be connected with the general practice—all going to show,that the price is too,great to pay for the small moneyed bonellc received. Better that al1. the mou in New Xork,and, prooklyn should drink water on one day instead of ilrilk,.;thap that the morals-of the peolle. should bode• 1 stroyed. As to the ehildrou,_there is.good. ' $llbIMRR ARRANGEb[f nT. STEAMER ISLAND BELLE. STEAMER ISLANDBELLE. NEW LINE RLTwErN. - Daily Lina,(Sundays excepted) hotSvean NE TV LONDONr1ND NEWYOIt1 ,' New London, SawHarbor, Green- VIA port and artford, LONG ISLAND:RAIL ROAD. Also between The steamer(eland Bella,Capt.J.N.San,deco,. NETV•LONDON A1VD NEW YO.PIf, -will run on and after %YLIb uday,.Aprll 27th.as, Via Long Island Railroad, follows: Leave steamboat- wharf, Now L vloul On and after Wednesday, July 13, 1869, the -daily at 7 o'clock A.M; Sag Harbor At 9 A.M,, sleamor Island Bella, Capt. J. N. Saunders, will errivingat Greenport In limo to connect with the. leave New London,daily at 7 A M; Sag Harbor train for Now York, , nt9 A Elf;Arriving at areanport in time to connect RETARNINs—Leave Oroenport at 8 P M,or on with the train for Now York. Leave Orconportat arrival of the 10 A•M trein from Brouklyn; Sag 10%A M, for the Connecticut River, connocting Harbor at 4 P M for Now London, At Lyae with the steamer L.Boardman, Capt. G. The Island Ballo Will connect at New-Landem W.Bntes,to and from Hartford and all places on with the New York and Norwich lino of ataamers; the River,. .and will litho passengers`through in both dlrec- RETURNING—Loavo Lyme at 1 P M, for Green- tins. The Bello is it complete order through- port, Sag Harbor and New London, connecting out and is provided.with comfortable Berths for At Oroonportwith the 10 AM train from Brooklyn.i passengers trilling or leaving the Now York and The Island Bella will continue to connect at Now Norwich line of boats. London with the Now York-And Norwich lino of O'The Island Ballo will also connect with steamers to and from Now York, and will take the steamer L. Boardman, Capt,.0 IV, _Rates, ai pnsaeagere and freight through in holm directions, Lymo,for Hartford and all places on the Oomicat- The Belle Is in complete order throughout, icut River,on Mondays,Wednesdays and Fridays, and Is provided with comfortnlo Bmlbs for having Nov London as usual et 7 .1 AI(Sag Har,,. passengers telling or leaving Clio Now York and bar at 9 A hf, and Greouport at 10%A Al. Rc= Norwich line of boats. turning; leave Lyme same days at I P M I;ojr The Bello connects nt Lyme Perry with the Greenport, Sag Bother and Now London, Pn's'- train of tho Now Ilaven and Now London Railroad l eengcrs inking Ibis Ballo at Sue II rborand Green, to and hom Boston, port on the above'days,can take Clio trnlus goipg, By the above Arrangements a daily communica- both East West at Lymo Perry,on the Naw tion is opoued between Sag Hnrbor and.Greenpmt, Haven and Now London'Railroad. L.I., and all the Eastern cities; viz: Norwich, N.B.—Froight carried betweob Now.York;Sag Now London,Now Bedford,Providence,Newport, Harbor and'Orcenpart, also between Now Loi Boston,&c..&c, don and Hartford,on the most iesemtable't¢rms. The Island Bello will atop at the Pcquot and Conl.ractsfor same,And all other business Imlcoo. Ocean.House,Now London,both ways on signal, neclion with Cho Island Ballo will bo made by PXCURSIONS DAILY. ,S. II.TOWNSEND, A,o,t, Excursion'tickets sold from Now London toSag Grcon orf Aril 20th;1869. en - 32A"} Harbor tied Greport and return sane day, also p from Sag Harbor And Greonport to Lyme and re- T0 FARMERS, ITERCMMS, ICC, torn l who day at 961 each., FARMERS, I r All who wish n pleasant sail across the Sound will do Well to avail themselves of this opportunity TIIF .NEW ,AND SPLENDID N:B.—Freight'cm•ried between Now York,Sag SLOOP IDA E. VA.IL.7. Harbor and Greenport, also between Now Lon- Just beth and hUrolmd for Capt.Crus.E.VAIL, don And IIartford,on the most reasonable terms. will rum a Rearda pietist from Riverboad and Contracts for some, and all other business in ce.,- Jamesport,to Now York via ch vanillin C. Aeolian with Elio Island Ballo will be made by. Will carry to Now York, Wood, Farmers' and S.11.TOWNSEND,,Agont, blsrhotProduce,and till kinds of Merchandise, Greenport,July 1401,1869. 32s Returning, All bring Merchandise And Stora Goode of all kinds; also, Lumber, Brick, Lima, N,-YORK, GREENPORT AND SAG HARBOR Guano,nt o All Fortner desirable at ship a that , EXPRESS, PER STEAMIER CATALIK Merchant or Partner may wish to ship on board, ' We wish it understood that we will bring LIME The subscriber has made arrangements to ran or ASHES as low as any one, and at the lowest An Express between tko above places, and will market prices, 'It will bo brought on freight or promptly attend to All orders entrusted to hiscaro. bought and sold to suit on stoners, , Packages,letters &o. expeditiously dolNored.— We thank the public for past favors And.re. Charges moderate. W6i. H.WILCOX, spectfully solicit Chat"patronage for the future. Orders any no left at lbo following places: 9v-Passougers.will be taken on the following James L. Davis,184 South-Sl.,Now York. terms: ',John Short;v, S,gg Harbor,Iassage through one way .... .... ....$0.76 H. Il.&.J,.A 1 olls,Greonpm I. and back.... ....... .1,00I, T, 11,&J. B,.Young,_0,lack, 40*tf Board¢rid Lodging pet day 60 -— Gr.NE IAL AGENTS—RUICHINSON & VAIL,j W I Cr G I N S Riverhotid,L.I,; JOSHUA WOOD, Esq,,74 and. 'BIAS OPENED HIS SALOON, 76 Rutgos'Slip,New York. Oj'POSITE THE PF.CONIC HOUSE, Riverhead,At ay 9,1869. 38-6m 1 C E CREAM Furnished to Families, Parties,'Pie-Nice, Excur- sions, Steamboats,Hotels,Pairs,&a,on reasoua- '-ybbe terms,at shoat notice, Greenmi1juno 16, 1869 43tf ,r SPRING STOCK OF SOII`PIIOLD INSTITUTE,. "` � co Punt Term of this InSNLutO will '"'Y' CARPETS j '� �emnmonco on il10NllAY,the 22d of August. AT. LANDON!S,e Teems liberal, Band for a circular. 374 Rudson Street New York. C.D.CE ,1859ER, A. B.,Principal. Street, Southold,August 8th,1869. 61tf Amon which aro the following: 1.Tapestry}Velvet.... .... ....10m and"lls per yrd: - GreenPert Retail Market- English Tapestry Brussels...8s do CAREFULLY REVISED AND CORRECTED WEEKLY. handsome do I .69 to 79; do': Flour Der Chi . ...$On0 Linseed oil prnnl.,.76c Impeiial S ply .....7a to 8s do, .Sugar per Be . 8a12ri Roiled oil...... ....81m Sups Sna ingtain . .r.. ..6s 0d.to as do Molasses ,. ....46 Corn for bush..... ..88 j ilandsomo do bright colors,from 2s IJ to 4s do Boner...... ,.....19a'LO Oafs ....... .... ....60 • A ver large assortment of OIL CLOTHS, of every possiBand ble description, scr B tion, rom 2 to 18 R wide. 7,uusCheep.... ...... . Is'powt hs .. .. ....1 26 yP, I ' Pegs pr dnz ..... ....101 Onions. ..... .. ....60 "Also,Oil Colors and :Transpariencies of every Cocoa ...• •••• • OOninns. .... ......1 00 I;Variety, together with.every article;kept in a.first Rates .... .......l3a1411),led a...es p....1 10 26 "class(,fly Carpet Establishment. floors .... .......13a 14�Drierl apples.. Ib...66 J. R. .LANDOIV : Simuldois,...... ....l IFlod pr gal..•: ....06 874 IIudeon st.,lrenr Ririg,N. Y.Ciy, Polk pr Ib.. .... ....11ICanq,heno., .... .:..2r) '�;Take the roll (8th ave) oars at St. Paul's Tallow .... .... ....1. 121Ti nl ro .. .... ....1 2fi Tallow . .... .... ....121Turpo set , .,.. ....76 church,ntid in 10 minutes you will be at the store.�i 6 mOl:ed boot... ...,1dlCon+ meal pr IC....'2% D r,, O M g W halo oil ur b .. ....761'1'.1.soh pr Cobh ..10 FRONT ST.,NEAR let•...o..GBEBNl'ORT pincl:orol pr iC .. ....12 Pica beat Co'co 12 14 ,60 U a D 0 ' Oak wood card 3,60,1.1,6o Pica wood p+ cord 8,60 L1. DEALER IN. fUS'L'ItPC1 IVSD, AND FOR SALE, DRUGS, MEDICINES,. OILS, ALCOHOL 0111 n aupmiur article of Esau Bleached WIiALE Ilairnipg bPlnida CgnopLenea Feb.22,1869. C. RATES&CO. PATENT MEDICINES, — PERFUMERY, T WOAD T'0 THE WISE, COMBS, SOAPS, EROSENE WILL NrOT°E.KPLODE BRUSHES, K—it will horn one-third longer;and is thorc- LAMPS, Peru CHEAPER than any other Coal Oil. A.now GLOBES lot very fico,Just 1 revived. CHIMNEYS,_ Greenport, April 18th G. 11, COR\VIN. STATIONERY, OOr SKIRTS;BEST MAKE, AND COSME'CICSi 1 I�Floops of all kinds.. G,.IY. LYOV &Co. TOILET.' AND FANCY ARTICLES, WINES lankBFOR BICALus1 NEW JINELIIY ST0R-E1 Bookaf Blank Bookd, Pa,Pery LTJBIN'S FX_TitACTS, &a. ON MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE LYON's;STORE, l7'All articles selected with the greatest on re, - and will be sold at the:lowest cash prices. Call H A M M 0 N D TAKES THIS and see. - 20y a method to inform the,peoplmuf. Greenport —' and ria public in ganera% that he has returned 'p'1 ,�'t after aabsenco of three,.years and a half,and Ig�l Guano.7I®e n opened his business again, where ho, hopes to TaIiE UNDERSIGNED WOULD ILP' meet his old friends ma customers. no is in inform the Farmers of Long Island readiness to supply them with any a,tido in Thu that ho lies made.arraugemonti with film Zino of ; Brundred Bsq.,(solo mauul'aclurer of"PatentL�+sh 01,00ka, WateheS, Jewelry and Gnson") for the sale of tills iR'L is valuable ferttir, Fancy G'OOdS,, and that ha is prepared to receive orders for the at the most tonsoupble.prices.. IT,bas made sr Harris am]deliver it in quantities to unit purchasers. rangemnnts with tho.best importing houses,.where It is deemed unnecessary to go into particulars ho will Select any style of.Watch Alovemonfe and concerning case them to order at the lowest'possibl3 rales, r PSH GUANO, and ernry otheraiticla in bis lino furnished in the Its qualities having been thoroughly and satisfac- same mannor, , terily tested during the past year. TTZW locks,.. 1Vatebos, ,Jewelry., 'Acem,doona, Price per ton of 2000 Ills Guano,Oroand Sell in Music boxes,mnpmoos, and all.kinds of Nauti. Bogs$36.00; Unground in Bags$20.00; do. in cal Instruments repaired and Warrantod; on the' Bulk at the pactnry$17,00. Terms Cash, most Iensonablo loans, AND DONE WHEN-raonnsso. WILLIAM 11. WELLS, Southold, Greenport,Ann.29, 1869. 97 89-tr Sule A_eut for Lou,Island. -- _ -- - -- —'— -- deo has • n NEW FIRM,- AND - Z_ bid ly overloregan - N E W G O O DIS 1 � tlioroughly overhauled and painted white from stem to stern, bulwarks and all ; white f�+IIG subscribers have recently purchnsed horse and white dog, white male and stow. .3. tho balance of CHAS.1VtoatuS'Stock of ard, Capt. and all hands rather dark. We DRY GOPDS, have been under the necessity of converting the Ladies Saloon into a store-room for beef whiah'they dhor to the public at a grant sacrifice. Soft- and park, and that Cheap losses, and those Remnants of DoLnines, Callcoa, Mushns,.Sott- neds, Caaximeres, VesLinge, Poplins, Lace and 'splendid hams, and in order to make room, needle-work Edgings,Linen Handkerchiefs,Tow- we sometimes stow In a few barrels of, that eking$,&c, for Salo cheap. ..chenp flour. Tamarinds are very cheap andl L-In addition to.the above they have also we have got'In.another package of that.stuff 'a complete assortmentof new AND e,.GaANT eoaDS, what makes the halt grow on white atblack such as DeLaines, Valon rias, Diarinos, Paremet- tas,Linens,Caselnrores,Vesdngs, &a, &a., which, heads, all done without Shaving,.Hard Ware will be sold LOW for cash. I and,Cutlery, course, line and fish Snit; and IV-All kinds of Country prodnee taken. he fact if you will,stop at the old.'1Ticondero- Please call and examine our stock,at Lite OLD go you can .get almost anything ou;want STAND on FRONT etmet. Y 6" Y W.G.YOUNG, even to•blowing, if you can't get that from A J.WIGGINS, Cimn,plin, Bates will tell you wliore you Gan Greenport,Sept. 28, 1860. —otf .get it, so- don't fail to stop. The Capt. is _ry--- o very pleasant and is sure to treat the ladies Lf aid g iconde age" ' well—se good night. GOAL OIL, ' We still remain ready to give you more ®F the.finest quality and as clam a8 water;. of n similar kind in some fwUrro number of Cmnphouo, Fluid,Whole nal Bleached.011; this valuable paper', J. G. CIIAHPLIN. nI'D Nentsfoet 011,and the very best or N.Orleans C, BATES, Molasses; Brow❑, Relined, Poadorod, Crushed and Granulated Sugars, Cheese at wholesale and "_ —'---- retail. All this at the oldTiconderoga. BATES. Aza AUCTION! d f[�HE well-known Sloop SWALLOW,of Green- Greanport, Sept,,10,'69, Y. ngrt,aq tons hm•tbon,will be Sohl at Auction SPECIAL N O-�I C E s�. on TUESDAY,the 2Oth of September instant, nl. ".t o'clock P. M. The sale will be made on beard of the sloop,at Main Wharf, whore she now lies. D169olutioll,--Tho Co-partnership of .1,7'Salo positlro. Torras Cash, 'Lite subscribers under the firm of 0. Bates IL&N. CORWIN,for the Owners. ,& Co, is this day dissolved by mutual con- Grounport.Seld.3, 1860. 3-2t 'sunt. Those indebted to this company will , Iplense settle the snow with Darius W. Bee- A 31 FOR ALE. be, as we have left the Books in his hands A BARE OPPORTUNITY. fol' settlement. CnARLEs BATES, T13P undersigned offers for sale his vale%• Sept, 27. J. G. CHAMPLI-4, his Farm,together with the entire stock nod — - — -- oppurtenances,consistingof flonves.Cons,halves, ply-The firm of George W. Lyon & Co. Car'rlaaes, Wagons, Iinrnoss, Fn,'niin2 Ulinsils, is this day dissolved by mutual consent. All &o. The Farm contains about 100neres,bounded firm I h f tthe Into rm w accounts o partly by the Sound and Inlet.barna wall n•ntorrrl ill be settled by Bad having rare privilease for seadrift,fishing, George W. Lyon. G W. Lvox, &r,.,and located near,the Dapot, Store and Post W. G.Yousn. Office. . Greenport, Sept. 21, 1350. If not disposed.of previnus to Monday,Clio lid of October next,it will,Be that clay, be offered at Police Auction,nt 10 o'clock A M. New �q I,Mageg.I.1.ents For further particulars Inquire of Ilia under- 51 fi. Signed on the premises,or of Rr. 11.Walls,South. IUE co-partnership heetofc ra existing under• old. EDWARD GEERoDETTF.' rhnteo aro of G,Bates&Co„being.dissolved;f[erwitngn,Southold,Sept.B,1860 is-4t r I subs6ri11 v is transacting baeiheesCfm himsall', On tae 2 t all.,by Rev. Epbor Whitaker,at anti has rcmovad,tnto the store next 'door to Mr., tho residence of the bride's father,Peconic,L. I., C Whgina'1lfeat lYarkct.-photo ho will be pions• Mr. Appleton 1V,Rackoff,of Bast Mellon,to Mas ,ed(.o son all who ,tiny 'favor him with a call; Mary H. Haynes,daughter of.191moon H.Haynes, 1 where:111 yially find n'good nr'ticle and a,i:assort. of the former place. t, ���• -prnit of goods na are "Snails kept In a Grocery At the Presbyterian Parsonage in Southold,on r and Provietoil store. the 2d Inst„ by the Roy. Ephor Whitaker,.Mr. i A Tito.h, host market price paij in cosh or Walter Garponter,of Now York, to kris Jorusha batten fat all kinds Guard) Produce. P.`Ovorloa,of Southold, 40 C"� - I l rSeaport;Oct §, 1560; C• I1pTpS. At Now Snffant, ad met., Susan If„ wife of Sohn Id.Buxton, aged 42 yeas,- ,,-� U ,..^• ' "'yts,cAGTlatrno`vn�2r>,rs�ThC}•e are sever' •�ST®VES ! STOVES ! pl imprn'vemente noey going on i❑om viLla;o,l j_ Y R ' 14Ir, Charles II. Tuth111 is building a newI vRT.AT ARRIVAL 01 b2'OVES!l tlwehing house for `Vin. D. COfe ou AIa11I� BP, undersigned would respectfully announce y ¢o Llie citlacas of Greenplin,and vicinity,Lhnt street, '4�m. Z.ICiu�has,iti t made several, do has just received a large nssortment of glteratipys in his Su ll and Ofind Factory, COOK, P-A.RLOR AND OFI'ICE. bnilding'au addition in the rear, pnttmg'in STOYI';S, RANGES, &-;e., . . newmnChlnery, Std. Df. D:'. F. BI'owuj decidedly Slie bcat in mnrkot,mnmrfacturod.by Bnratow,at Prgvb nqo. - having'pnrchased the building and lot Corner THE ILLLP ffiliDT, a now Bret claw.Stove for Front and First streets, is making extensive 'coal or„wood,and can be used with or Without a large nater ionic, withoutextending ilio stop or improvements ; the old storC hits been raised, displacing, any of ilio wave,.. It allows the use of two or throe feet, and is -lmdergoing a On cc boilers over ilio fire,nod two baolc. It ties 'a large square oven,so nicely balanced that it.can thorough overhaulileg; an addition is alsobelle bisenit in ton mioules without the use o(m bClyg.n,mde on the eaat -aide. When coal: damper. The plan adopted;in this stave,for'pre pleted;-Dr'. Browti will rOmon his Drug carving the i¢eido(Ire.plates,6y the admission of external air through.the bottom,and dischaging atom to this corner. The whole block, from through a register in front,in used in no other ;Alain to First street, on the north Ride;is,.. stoves. - -. TIiD AARP.=This stove, intended for coal or now.connected. Chas'Batos is to remove twood, is no good as any in ilio markeL; hasp I' splendid;oven and Is very economical - his GfOCCTy.te the 6i•pTe Ileal 06CupICd (ry! The Banner is a firstrale stove,and needs no Dr._Bcown, John.Q, Champlin has llryon, a alod recommendatiThe Tolcon— new and been. •4Ut rho”"Old TlaoUdCl'egai' la'Ffollt Btl'CCt� ;alb"liNypet.lfomntannd file others,rall goLilly od Cook SLovcs. aid, after':a careful Survey, glib wag foniid i TIID VINL,a nely and...beauttral Parlor stove, to be sea-wort tv tl ere or lie has had her, ,';eon that can On rolled oil,and will give good sat �„ . l f 8 ';isfactlou. -Tho wocd•Parinr Oven, a,tip-top arti- st ,;cls and.ii good assortment of other Parlor stoves, sLrippedp re-caulked and newly copperod,." .?,Oyfiudors,&a.,all of which will be sold chew — Several new timbers tvero at it` she has p p. t ';Ilnviny;tllo;:axclusivo solo of Burstow's.palrern to been paintad throughout, by.friend Davis, ,4hie conoty;all those wishing to parcllase stoves will de well to call and examine my stock. and now looks first rate. The" Old Ticow J. T, GALLUP;'.'., doroga't will make her first trip next waalit Groonport,'Oct.8,18G0; By. freighted with amow stock of choice Grace, In the Presblleuan`Oiniel, at Sa."Imb],Ron ye IneydayPlmum th'4 10th Irisk,bf•rho ev. 'rles and Provisions. For freight and pas- Ephu whitnl m ill Albert M,ICiug !ss Phm ;Gage apply to Capt. Champlin, Ebenoler ffbq,,jdXlea,both of Soii,ptiold, W _ .Clark lias found it:neceesary to build an fid pp2f�Op �/ (�O WUW� W tl s 'ditlon:,to,the rear of hie shoe etgrq in,oPdgr )I�UU'IfQi�IN,..VuQR �f�fUlfl� . . INII to keep up with tie incrcaeo"of his bttsinessr /I''((A�RD Sraprictor of.lbu ahoyo Ngs,his naw m - jL bB handpund rowdy'for Rale, good n ood. toaloof tiro aro glad to' notd these improvements , hIvVIT 'I)EOTDUOUS, OLtNANIEN— , U fou ut otic villagq,,and hope the various (a r 1' Eli.q�tDLrN TRECS 'branehc'sof mercantile and'mechameal F7, TAL AER.I�u. ' ' ' �,Deciduous, Ornavrenial, Floaaeri'agantd v ,n4aa.will ivaretta4aorauch�au.extent sRlvill� t- fe1d,_een,'Sh+ubs, G?'arevirres'I lLaspber••. oompcl,_ua All to eu1ar�o oar feel it as, '; t saes,"Cr,ry a?tG 'U"aosebevrles;Blark- �v _--1.. berries, . .Enerbloonting and w"94D9atlif9',�d� pll�5� a p I Ri6nivingRoses; Taber-' ' mus, Bulbous, Ilefi- 8011THOLD, Ii:, L, "baiedus, Per. At P4 P, Tlees,Qlnpo Ihof Giasl hcrri�s, .. and Btenvtial, T�Rmapbo des,,Culvanl9. SO•aw bmllea liver 1'la4eel'ifi Plants;.Dahlias; c�`G., 'pr's.n,and Decil,IQ?aria 0r onmgn Lal Piccs Plower 'Tiro Proprl pr returns Ills thaolcs to ilia patrons mg, lnnw7 'rhrwbsR.oaas °'do 01.sal non Drat➢ for their former lavers;and hopes tomorit their . +1`j�era+dir;9Vtatj as alio- n , ,h1]LlS Sng I7nt bort it,It will`receivo paomµt, 'juWro regnieoments. Elm; CUchlar.catalogues taut to all coi•rdspondonl9 ¢ltanLidn "'` on.oppllcatlou. All packages will be donvorod at Surdillold Dapft,Or at Gleenpmt,.rise of charge'. N,B. tawin Russ,of Brldgalr¢nipton,is Aannt tfar'tIlat silo of Oho Island ISILAPL MIC. #pi'dImdl Oct'.IS 4.b,1850, 'dOtf s "iktii _ CA`1 ALJN.EjJk Good News. CHANGE OP TIMD AND TRIPS. CHAS, BATBa dealer in Cineol lea,Provisions, The steamer Catalino will c�nimouoo '•nnuing i.J C))ogleery Rini Hardware,Front street,area[]. Tuirs Ri•twaen San Harbor' Grr.un- orPt,is i would racountry a infra m. the people )iorl, Orient and Now fork,air'Monday,'Gutuber or this village and country around that ba lea :47th,and continua ler im thoroartm• en foliews_.1 removed to the store formally occupiud by Doet. Leaving Sag Hmbcc']it.3 o'clorlt P,01,linslend D.P.Brown, and has now on hand and for sale _ of 4 P.DI) Greenport atA P:M., and Orim.t ah u fresh arrival of 4:30 T, M., for New York, on MONDAYS And SUGARS of every grade, %THURSDAYS, Leaving Now York at 4 P,M. MOLASSES that is new, {instead of, 6 P. M.) on WEDNESDAYS and _ 'PEAS that can't be bent, SATURDAYS for Orient, Greenport nod. Sag COFFEE that is pure, Harbor. FLOUR chef is warranted, O i3- Should the onNyeather prove too stormy to BUCKWHEAT that i; fresh, laevo will leave Harbor(weather rondays end Thursdays,( shorvill leave(won tiler parmilthrg)on Tuesdays CORN DJ UAL that Is sweet, and Fridays next succeeding herreff Alai• daps. HOMINY that is good, 3m AV,S7 11AVRNS' SAMP that is clean, CAUTION TO TRAVLLLIIS. SPICE, Deer every kind, iv {LERS. 'clrsnse, ]aid, smoked beef, poll hams,l ' 13E.Baro hall norer. pass by the soap, cundIoa,.butter,soda and sweet erad:eis,, "Ticonderoga"without stopping to ° Ilot broad, powder and shot,mackerel, codfish, ushmina her cnhlns and Runic- ralains, prunes,dried fruit, apples by the barrel ur before you tnlre passngo on' board some inl'o•Iar -or bushel, 6'mh ground feed,corn, oats, patent craft. I can assure you she is In good order. 0. 'coal en, aperm and reftned whale nil, burning Ih'f;leaves•hna shad the oeperoision of all her ro- 'fluid, cnmphoae, together with a general assort- s pairs, Hall whoa oho was on the se•aw dock ho meet of gouda usuallyy kept in a arocory and pro- Bttedshe now heal and Examined the mn bluer vision store,which wlllbe suld at rile lowest msr- ' 'And says all,is ,just as capable of 4 y' lest price for cash or barter, CIIA9. BATES. voyage now as oho over hna been, If P the Cairtnia REDUCED, I DRY GOODS REDUCED, 'and Mate Aro ell right I and he says she is n•ell Irrovidad with Prnvisiona• .Toa and Cofrea are 13ARG 4INS FOR THE ilrstrete; Subpar and Mulasaos no better can be POPULAR TRADE. found, Flour is so good that scolding waon All Wool DoLeines,2s,88 6d,4s,per yard. Reye to abut their mehths. Butter and Led of 100 doz Linen Napkins, 10s. per dozen. rhe. 'hast kind, That new orate of Craclomy is 160 pas(Pablo Linen, 4s,6n,Bs,and 7s,per yard. ,just opened and' the Aisle Is nrranging it. lye firiarl our own Co(f,e slidhnvo.it fresh, and 1. 6 cases ]Leavy Amoskoag Canton,1s, " bav,got. A Mill for 91!tiding Sausago- or Mince 6 11 M4 Wnmautta Cottons, 1e. " 100 PCs Poll DuChavre, Is.or]. ' mentor Hash,one of the-Oaost things for family 20 ' Lyons Silk Mantilla Velvets $6;00,$6,00 Wan that.I.have ever seen. It is easily.I'ostenad and$67,06 per yard,' to nap.table.oe bsuch and will .not occupy.more Y00 prat Lace Curtains,$0,$4,and$6 per pair. room then.ono oCthose.coal al coal Irwra,and 1,000 pas Merrimack and Best Prints.lac list yd. i vvill�.griod one hundred pounds par hour, null MORTON&SONS, Weighs only 12 pounds. It, you would lil:o to l6tf 279 Fulton at,,Brooklyn. sea:it;etap,on board'of the Ticouderogn, the Cap- — taln:will explain the Whole yoni tbey aro very -----�— `I10n1'• Singing 3011001 in Southold'- -Food, Corn Ment Mr. IL ICANC's class for instruction in vocal I 'Starch, Soap Raisins, mesio will commence on MONDAY Evexfva, Tabs elid'Puils, Polk and.I3eof..Hauls, Dec. 5th, at 7 o'clock, in the Lecture Room Creepers and Choose, of the Presbyterian church. Pickets one Powder,Shot and Caps. dollar ; to be had at the store of wm, 1b 1 V Any.h[ntl of Protlacu'or Cnab taken la ox- wells, or at the room on school evelling. r'change, Tho Captain's.on board, -- - ' Withhis bravo little lfato, They're flexing things'round , At a terrible rate •JOF1N G. CHAMPLIN, Capt. Tlcondero-oy wont street,Greenport• Otf AW- Yesterday morning the steamer "An. goal&," Capt, Ilavens, Arrived At tills port, from New Yolk. This boat is to take the Place of the"Catalino," (recently hauled off) OR the route between Sag Harbor and New York, - _ - -- -- .Lrxhibition at the, Southold inatY Dggling Bessie-•-Song. . 'I taste Amtton--Several small.bays, .. duihata-Soag. Mn: EDITOR, Wo take lip our pan to tell gnmor--Composition by B. T. Payne. -yoc, in few words, somethingabout anoth-1 The Will--E. Landon, A.W. Case,G.S, i or "good timet), which we had at.the Insti- ,Goldsmith and B. T. Payne, title last Tnnraday afternoon. Vacation--Seng. The lower room had been "fitted up"+ The pieces were well soleeted and very out quite tastily,,and looked goito. uttiactrvo- spoken, considering,that the pupils had on.y I oven morn so than usual A wreath of.oak,'. one week's notice. ':,The singing, entirely by leaves surrounded tho,roors;hnd also extend•'• Mise Halo's Department, was with a will. ad through the middle;-some smaller wreathe," As there lied been no public notiee given, with hers and there a rose, encircled the (except by the children;) the visitors were. pillars, The clock, too, had not been for, (ll co fortably seated. We suppeso all were gotten, hough:it "pointed" to the r®ey'.pleased- at lenst, wa heard of ■o d(ssatis- wreatha,onoirclitig it,:with rather a sober factionbeing. manifested. Success to the "faceP At the cast and of the room a -Institute,. Yours, Anus FORMS, stage,had :been:areeted and docently air Southold Southold•-Jnr 3,_l.&09. --- ed,; oil one side of it,in "leafy"charamters;'-•-- -- — was the motto "EXCELSIOB,f' and on-'I Schoolmates of Long Ago the other," W L'LCOME." Soon after I o'eloek the pupils took thorn'I The following were pupils in the seats and the exercises commenced Here-1 Southold Institute, December 22,- iis hepregrammot 1851.), The room WEIR Oil the second) Neckar Vale-=Song. `l,floor oT what is now the Catholic Enem(es of Texas—Willie H.Terry church, the front was lit tho cast ' 'Dog:Tray—compos(tiou:by, Bounio Bran•,: end cull Elio deals were in Tour rows+ drThe Frolic—Mary II.Hantting anal Bloc.,,I front front to back. to B. Terry, t:•.1 i 1Vorth row L. T. Butler, Lizzie I'd"bo a Buttmfly- Song. ' Ili Diller, Adol ido Robinson Louiso. - Dying Senooa—Willits F.Terry. I F1nQtt,ore, B, Its TOM, r Jag. Thom Curl of Golden Hair—J. Addie Aaten , I (1, S. Ptllm;,'haht• �harlea 13. ..Cramming is III Feeding—Carrie M Peoko: • 8e1 1. Amanda Hobart and Bel Mulford. rTuthill, Clareuce H. Tuthill; D:. H. Lexington-Floremiw,B. Smith,. Htmhtiug, l oorBe S. Goldsmith, B. Fox and Grapes—song+ T. Payne I{ Triss Kringle,-IIanaa B, Hopton andtSecond row. Maria Tothill; IInt- Emma Californian: I tie lviuoro Eleeta B. Terry, LBnra }Igme—Composition by A.Amelia Topry; A. l3ooth, Lizzie RnShawro, Dnuna The Formals Smog, Why Dealt you Learn to Dance 7—Hklen+ + C, Cole, Alonzo W. Uase, William '$d� AibeSEegn,aid Hattie Bosch.. r. Terry, V. B. Golysuiith Chas, E. The_A(rit6metiaiati-W; H,Terry sad_F; ; Torry, D. T. Conklin,Henry D.IIor• Ir-'sue it Iton, Edward R. Ackerly. BenritifolZion Soagl Third row. Lizzie Danko), Jnliai The School Girl-Phea(e A, Goldsm(tla' .B Wella Mary E Terry, Mary ' and & Augusta OorpanAnnie tiar. Moplo AM Peck, Hannah E.+I C hyetabelle Wil'lio Whittaker. 1 t i Horton, John Por-I " Newemonger -W. II lorry,.A. C. Send r {xnld , , B. i i ford;cud W. F, 'Perry. ret, il:*"U6'Pt :Cuss, Georgo ' The Flowers- Anpie M. Smith, Wells, Elijah Landon, Silas Y µw A Msa'e a gaulUe a' That-song. Overton. The Sea—Dannie Terry. Fourth row: Kate h Tuthill, M. Studding Army-Several $mail boys Flattie.Goldsmith, Sarah E. Albert- : 'What One sees coming down,the Street— son,.Hannah..M. Richmond; Helen '11. T. Goldsmith. DI. Albertson;Sarah E: Peck, Theo- 'Night,Soog. ' - 7�60 liSodel Husband—B. T; Pnyun cad; dorm W. Prince; Robert JetFeraou, A.41lle e0k, Wdlre,Whittaker and An. Michael Hayden, Charles E, Over- nie;'11�'"=Smith, and A:W Cnse and d ( ) ton, J N. Dickinson 9/ nthold M: Ha'tEle Golds ith, (neighbors) Traveler. ,7 ; Pilgrims=A. C, Sandford. ` -- The Might and tipo Right-song. Intellt we IstCo lor, A.A Terry, , E.,Altiertson, Mgg V�eIle snd E. L. Simone: Thunderetoree-Composition by` Maggie Conklin. a 6 i • 2 G� THE; STEAMER i, i PIIE STE®MER.' `. �� I�SSb01USE� FS,.` MlCSACIIUSETTS, ' CAPT. l�'. S.'Hi1V�10'5r CAPT. W S, YI:e1VL1YSe, $'](TILL for the present; and until further no- '6 ma hereafter nad daring the season,metro �' VV - 12r make.three tttpv NE2DAah ldnFt(ID Sig Liao,:run as •tallows,v(z: Leave TII Iinr Ilarbor hIONDAY WEDNESDAY,and Flt I17AY �bor TUESDAX Mol oineaaf8 Walk.and TIIURS• AReroomns at4 o alncl:-and 1ea.ing Non' York ,DAY Afternoons at 4 o'clock. '' (Jamas Slip)-oo TLrESDAY, THURSDAY, Bud 'Leave-Now York WED Afternoons at Si1TURDAYAftonivars6 hat o'cWek 5 o'clock,and SATURDAY Aftsinoons at 6.'alik:. -Tho. -MBesachusotte hat 6 at Greenport and The DfnssnchuagLla will comnaace:making-3' Client°acpWRY, Tripe per week in April, She will hereafter, and Sag Harbor,April 11th,1860 86Lf for the season,leave Now York from James'Slip,. foot of James street, instead of Oatharino Slip, - — as hmatofore, �,TOl IC G.-The annual treating far the shit tim Sag Harbor,March 8th,1860.. 33tf _L q of Director$of the Southold Manufactm'itig _ Oompnny,will be held an Tuesday,the(list day gyI of May,a4 Lha o01ao(.f Lha Company,in Southold, House.ousf e I I betwe o the hours of 3 end ha clack• (1, Su 24 Wild.IV. NyETMORV Secretary. R.John Lilly tvouldlecpeeefully tafocm h., YL frioads and the public that ho has leased thoi 9ai•go nod commodious house in Southold, be '�6CGlllli HOnSG.-- Mt.C FT. \faTttCn,. laingiug to-Mr.Goorge fiction, which he ban fit- "To0g1tilly,of.tho Teapot House,New°London,: ,tsiduP es a Hotel. C1oot}, having leased the Peconie House, or ;'�ha bouea`is pleasantly situated and within fire ":(}yegnpopt, L 1„ is now l'efittln6r:,and ful n nlioums walk of Peconic Bay and Ilortoa's point. c' ';7facilities for fishing and sportingi are unsur- passed htlio promises, end will OfieP the sumo, passed io the vicinity. He would be happy to see ,-..Aa.tho,lGth.of JON$,.for the reception of m .his friends and all who cony favor,him with a Llsi tors during' the season call. The table will be fmuided with all the GreenpLitt,.May 15, 1860 puff delicacies of tile season, JOHN DILLY. N.B. Dinner will be furnished for all who wish l y on Town Meeting day. f y (,-�ysteM i Southold,March 20, '1860. SOLE t '®aJ �tP' '� J q�'1 fi�' THD undorsignad having leased the ;N O T. I R./ Ef . '4 promises long and ftvorablyjlcnowr ml fp MrLITA uv H$w; in Graeu[.irt writ o�ty THE.UCEANXb OIL and gUANO Co. ®ioxya3�he markatg offer 1s861T1 a saltineths ngun ACorporation organised and established under ,f8sslq fa rho coca minodatlon,o£,partial' and by.P(rEuo'ef rho Tawe of blaseacbusetts, IpLadb a and Ga,tl,man;whore they mm,be served relating to joint stock companies, and located in wi(< Gyatpre In any style dOdrad—sLow(Id,roasted` Boston,having purchased the patent of Messrs. bt 0 the ahe11, t Decoction. andThmmeyareo, dated Ilerch 60, ,�tamilhoist,ppile d}vith oyretorebytho quart„ 1566;for troBWog'fld for certain purposes, r,' Q� orlU"shel. ' HERBY:GIVR NOT1011, °rD Tito largo Ha14 on'tho second 08m Nilll LUnt they aro prepared tof rant Liafe�r has tract. - hie+sonle"d on reasons 19 iters Or public meetingat Y P P g 0,L VAIL,' ing fid under said patsnt,:suit also, tCReports,&.c. CAUTION ALL PERSONS Gr°B0p0L 16, not to lofringo*upon said patedt, Los wits will to I �"or New yolk• msLlmled'against all f lfeing6rs, Communications may be addressed to the Corn- THE STEAMER Pony, Poul at., box No.1897,or to J.B,HTdai. f Na,8 P ins at.,New York. ,1p� A0AA B. W. DRIGHAbf,Prost, 9 Boston,April 4th,1860. 36-¢t.. I CAPT. D. G. ITEENLY, 1 [7' The stammer Catalina will commence bort ''77ff'�p""AVINO been exPreadY fitted_ up with eom•' regular trips between Sag Harbor and New York,;, J[�•fortable heaths, &o., will leave Jamespor4 on Monday,16th of April. 'every Tuond coy, Thursday and Saturday,for New, POR NEW YORTS, York,atoppiog at all the landings oll the Bay.— The well-known and commodious Sloamar Leavo'SnmospnrE'at 1 o'clock,. a Pnru to. �-1 Ig� g�7 New Yorlr SS1d I hiouls 26 cents. Rata 5 cents, CA H AL11.9 JE Jamaspart nntl all landings on the Any 2G4C2Erte;; Juno6th, 186 _ - CAPT. WILLIAM A. VAILt WItiD leave SBR Harbor every, MONDAY;; 3YHDNESDAY and FRID,AY-aftornoon,,at 4 o'clock', lending at Greenport •aud Orient,'arri- ving in New York about daylight• jReturning-Lenva New York every.TUESDAY, TIIURSDAY and SATURDAY afternoon,.:at 6 e cloch. Freight taken, B D WEBB,AtzoqL at Croenport OEO W CORLIESJ Agent N Ytok- April Dill�7860 1 ' ,Shtf i the fee in the trustees of the First At. C. Cleveland 60:00 Forty Years of Southold Academy ' , Church of Southold, of which Mr. J. Halsey Tuthill 60.00 PAPna No, 1 'Hunttingwas the Treasurer, as he was. Samuel M. Terry 26.00 In 1866 the wallets and' safes of of the Southold Savings Bank, an In- D. Philander Horton -100.00 thrifty, provident and patriotic people stitution that under his .care had for Cash 26.00 ;:contained many United States' Prom, eight years been steadily rising in Catherine Peters 26.00 ises:to pay money. These"promises Public confidence. The Church Trus- J. Hazard Horton 26.00 `,were printed on� slips-,of paper with: tees had been faithful for more. than Rene Villefeu 6:00 .green ,backs. They had taken the'eighty years, and were intended to ,be . Samuel Hutchinson 60.00 _ place of money, and had been.put forth :.Ifor along time to come. All these James B. Panning,._ 26.00 to pay the expenses of destroying the ;persona, who were concerned about the Charles E' Case 20.00 .:slave-holders' Confederacy in its war proposed Academy, were also desirous Nancy Beebe 60.00 'against the nation. During-afew pre- that the conditions of its opportunities, Mary A,.Rose (2nd gift) 26.00 " vious.years, these notes had been worth advantages and benefits should be.most Fourof the above subscribers Bur 'forty to fifty cents on a dollar, As generous and accessible. These condi-i,vive at the end of forty years. Isgonasthe Confederacy.was thorough tions,.presented by the pastor, were; While Mr. Whitaker was obtaining Ily-dead, they rapidly increased in val- ',prescribed when he wrote them in these''these subscriptions, Mr, Huntting, ,us. Thus men ,could afford to use words: - ,treasurer of the building committee,: moneyfreely, "The subscribers will severally con- received directly from hie friends and At.tbat time,... Southold Town con tribute as follows to establish in South- ,business associates more than five bun-' Itainedno school between Franklinville old a good .school of high scholarship ',dred dollars for the purpose in view. ,and,. Orient Point in which studenvi I and Christian morals, the house to be So.the subscription became payable, t`,could.prepare.to .enter- College. The 'erected under the direction of Mr, 'eland could be purchased for a site, and ipastor'of the First Church of Southold Barnabas H.-Bootli, Henry .Huntting, 'the undertaking proceed. 'had lived and taught through all his Esquire, and the Rev. Epher Whitaker, ----- --- --- College course;and for a year and a and the buildings and other property to When five thousand dollars had beeni, half thereafter, to an Academy which be held by the Trustees of the ,First made sure for the proposed "school of� was then one hundred years old. It is Churchwithoutany sectarian or' de• i high scholarship and Christian morale,"' ` " g ''nominations]hindrance to the admis- ;now flourishing at the age of one bun. '. Captain Ira Tuthill of.Mattitvekowned: 1dred and sixty years. He desired l,o...,sion, government,instruction and train-., the land on the east side of Horton's: 'give the bright boys and girls`of South- ingof the pupils of the said school. ,I Lane from the Main Street.of Southold old Town better opportunities for edu- The Bums which we severally sub- north to the Long .Island railroad. It cation:. than the State schools were scribe are.payable on condition that the is an interesting locality. Here is the providing for them, There were then ,whole amounts to five thousand dollars. "eastern half of the house home lot of no free schools in the Town. He un-, Southold, Nov. 16, 1866:" -`Barnabas.Horton, who was born at dertook to Beek and obtain the buildings This heading was entered in a small Mously, England, in 1600. He and his .of an Academy with a prospect of per book (now as heretofore in the Posses sons were the wealthiest family in the manonee and usefulness. cion of Mr. Whitaker), and subscribed Tewn during the first half century of First of all the desirableness H the 'undertaking was proBento to Henny. _with their owhhande thus ; Southold's history, and their descend- He ca a w�tho it, Henry:Huntting $1000.00 ants have been among its most prom-' Al Esquir@, " Theron B. Worth 1000,00 inent citizens until the Present time; {ghe�t delay_int o'accorrl witfi,lls pastor , The astor then began to obtain other On this half of the Horton shouse onJthis subject, and said he would give'. P subscribers and gathered them 'as fol• home lot havebeen in succession or at gone th�oueand dollars towards the build-' Iowa : I the same time several.schools of dif- mg of each an Acaeemy as`..was pro 'Alvin Squires $100.00 I ferent :grades, ascending from the 'posed: This:. generous offer greatly J Goldsmith 260.00 Dame's School or Kindergarten o4Mles cheered the pastor: He said to Mr. Gordon Case 10000 Jennings eighty years ago to the else- Huntting that .lie thought. he knew Daniel Terry 100,00 another man who would match it; and. Y, aical Academy'of later:years. David L. Horton 100.00 Just at the west of this locality, o.. if.so, he would proceed with the under- L: R. Case 200.00 the other aide of Horton's Lane, stood taking. Chas. S. Tillinghast 60.00 for least two hundred and thirty; He,went forthwith to CaptaiaTheron Silas Horton 100.00 Bunker Worth and made known to him Barn until rt the dwelling built July Alfred H. Sandford 100.00: Barnabas Horton. He died irk it July the offer of Mr. Huntting. .Thereupon Henry . Tillinghast 100.00,. 'I the;Captuin said,in hie masterful way: y g 18, ch it This residence and the site Stuart T. Terry. . 60.00 I which it occupied descended by inherit ,'Sit d'oivn thereand tell me what you .00 Thomas V.Tuthill 100 . " soca to his posterity without sale for want and what are your plans," This Albert B, Terry '100:00- g- ,was done with some fullness. Then the '. y more than two centuries: di the ori Mary A. Rose 60.00 inal dwelling he built amaddition,for a Captain said; "Tell the 'Squire that'. W Y. Fithian 60,00 County Court House, and it was used "Iwilimatchhis thousandwithanother.". Theodore K. Horton -260.00` for this purposeuntilahe county seat It was the desire of the persons who David A. Horton 100.0,0 was established at the head of Peconie had thus consulted that,the property'' Alfred Wells 66.00. River. eh'ould be held by a corporate body Ezra T. Beebe- 60:00 The,committee,to whom was-iptrurt-t likely to be-'trustworthy and perms Henry . Beebe 50.00 vent. It wits the refore deeided to.vest y ed the bmlding_of the new Academe^,J ___ ---- - .). . VJflliem Well's: '26.00 —=— - .. I 'd by Imperative duties to�the task of "- -+ eiCamining textbooks, m order to make The. Principal invited the latter to determined td erect:it on the east sib Proper open the school with,prayer. This was', of Norton's Lane, somewhat more Cheat! ,a.. ro er selection; for some school;, one hundred yards from the Main Stre°et ;booka are made.to be easilyrecited,and"done. Then the roll was formed and.'. .' of the village, provided the lana could ,,others for substantial education.' His with the arrangement of classes the be purchased for this purpose. seven years of teaching had given him work of the new Academy was begun! -Mr. Huntting with.his pastor went ;I experience in nearly all departments of Some of the Principals of the school' accordingly to Mattituck, saw Glaptain 'I academic instruction, andthis practical and their Assistants have made teach- Tuthill, and succeeded in buying the i�.experience afforded him desirable fa- Ing their permanent profession..Others ilities for the work of selection,- have not. site which they desired; somewhat lege c than an acre, at the rate of:one thous- After he had mastered the subject, Mr. Comings has been a pastor,. a and dollars an acre, This purchase at be bought at wholesale prices,and with publisher, an editor and a printer. so.great.a price and the clear prospect 'the publishers' reduction to the found- The second in the Principal's chair, of the permanent and prosperous'es- ers of a new Academy, enough books :now the Rev...Dr, Martin D. Kneeland, tablishment of the Academy forthwith of the best quality to supply the insti- has been a pastor in Boston and else- raised the price of building lots in the l;tution for a considerable time. These 'where, and is at present the Secretary village one hundred per cent. The As- were sold by the Principal atcurrent ''of the, New England Sabbath Union, sessors' books may not show this fact; rates and the difference between Cost ''active and zealous in promoting the but the sales made shortly,thereafter and retail prices was used for inciden- observance of the Lord's Day for rest make it certain, - tal expensesof the school. 'and worship. - The purchase was made in the. sqm- Mr. Huntting made proper inquiry His successor, Mr. Thomas A. Ab- mer of 1867, and the value of land in :and then purchased desks, chairs,maps, butt, after one year, turned to other the village has ever aince'eontinued to booka of reference, and other furniture, pursuits, and has been a prosperous be high. The building of the Academy Three came to Southold some time be-. merchant in St. Paul, Minnesota. also caused:changes without delay and fore the building was ready for them. 'Mr..James R. Robinson, like his pre= for the better in every school house The desks and chairs were placed for a. decessors, was graduated at Hamilton for thhfibe ter ofit. r Those of hHgsh�ouse while in the old Lecture Room which' College. He was the. Principal ten amu in five Greenport and Bay View had been used at various times as a years,.end Mrs. Robinson gave him the: were enlarged; and those of View school house by Mr. John H. Brodt, best of aid. He resigned the place, ' mommuck, Locust -Grove and .East Mise Harriet A. Whitaker and others. prepared for the ministry and entered; Cutchogue were moved to better Bites...>, On the 12th of December Mr.. Cum., upon faithful pastoral work in Elmira Thoseof Locust Grove and Peconic had rags.came to Southold and remained r and elsewhere. their.grounds enlarged and other !m-i thereafter for some daysa welcome' When he resigned; he was succeeded.) provemonta effected.' So the indirect guest in the Presbyterian parsonage. for the remainder of the academic year proveenadvantages a effected. d influence of ectthe' He saw light for.the first time in- pal" by Miss Sarah Whitaker. After her;. new Academy were at once conspicuous) myra; New York, a place` which was graduation at Mt. Holyoke, she. and unquestionable. inits-earliest;days a kind of.Long Is1- pursued post graduate studies for a -Mr. Barnakas H. Booth had been for,'. and settlement, He had the*.highest year and more, especially the Latin a considerable time largely and pros- commendation of the President and language and Latin and English Liter- perously engaged as a practical archi- Professore of Hamilton College as to ature. She made teaching her profes- tect.and builder inBrook)yn; but had; his character and his standing in his sion until her health failed: ' more recently returned to Southold, hisI College class. He was young,: strong, She was succeeded by..her cousin,: I.alert, fullof merriment to overflowing, Lemuel Whitaker,A. M. and Ph. D.,a took charge of He tbew mostionener theusly l Ile soon proved that he was diligent graduate of Columbia arid-Pennsylvania building. a contract the ere made for thele.and persistent;.that he had a heart Universities. He has been a long time ui use:with M, full of kindness and courage, a. will of. active in the work ofeducation in Phil-'p Greenport, and before the ndc of Buckley force and energy,and other fine ,qual- adelphia; where he has recently been year the edifice•was completed.. It was ities that, in.union with these, gave chosen the Principal of one of the city's I designed for use and not for ornament.' him fitness for his place. Training High Schools, The original plan did not include even On'the 14th of December the building Among other excellentPrincipals may .a steeple: For this oddities. was substantially completed,.. But the well be named Miss Margaret S. Say. Hubbard made special.;col snow had been falling heavily for near- der. She studied five years.in the Con-: lectionofmoney:enough to-buil d it,and ]y_two-days, and Norton's Lane was tenary Institute, where she won great much to the,:gratification of all con- filled two or three feet deep.with it, honor, and later in the Harvard An - corned.corned. S .Some of it remained there.remelted nex. She was an energetic end akillfulc Mr. Whitaker went in November to until the next.April, However,shovels ;teacher. Hamilton College in the expectation and shovelers'were brought to work,".. Her successor was Miss Louise Car- (after correspondence with Professor,and away was opened; and the desks olyn Pond, (than whom the Academy' North),that.he could make a satisfaF'I and chairs were conveyed to the new i hashad no better Principal), who is toryarrangement with a building and put in place on,Saturda now Mrs.. Jewell. She studied for g . The man afternoon. yyears in Smith College, and then fin- qualified to be the Principal. The:pur- On Monday morning, the 16th, the' ished the course and was.graduated at. pose was attained. Mr. Elbert Wilmot principatcame to his desk with.nearly .College, of. which her father: Comings accepted the offer made to Keeore of pupils •before him. The e him. - was a Oberlin,rustee, :She came to the Acad- During the summer and autumn--Mr f were also present-two of the.:Building, emy mainly through the activity--of Whitaker gave all the-:timenot demand pg and I,Mr, Jesse G. Case, who madedesirable . _ _ wimim itis- Mesere, `Huntti improvements in the building and added about nine thousand'dollars'to Aheper- 'petual endowments of the school,whiah •Legi;ldTors :- Mrs.(ReV )E. Wilmot Comings 9 Ihad received seven thousand from;the Hon. John L. Havens II Albert.T. Dickerson ii'' .Rev. Carson W. Adams, D. D., and Hon.Joseph N, Hallock. Robert V A. Fitz more than three thousand from .Henry„ College Professors.; Mrs. (Doctor) S.E. Fish Huntting, Esquire. George H. Fleet Miss Pondwasablyassisted b Mrs, Isaac Franklin Russell Y William A. Fleet Joseph N. Hallock and the Misses Par-i Eva Terry Patz Frank L. Goldsmith - P sons and Bennett. - Oliver B. Goldtmith - Other teachers have in succession Clement G. Elmer. Howard W. Hallock well filled the Principal's place, and Authors r Mrs.(Doctor)Jos.M,Hartranft' might fitly receive high praise. I - Mrs, (Doctor)Charles Hildrelh . But the Academywas not built and Annie R. Aldrich Isaac F. Russell Mre, Charles DeWitt)`-ledges endowed for the benefit of the teach- Mrs, Charles H. Hommel ere, (though it has doubtless been high- -. William F. Whitaker Mrs. Charles Hudson - 1 effective in this way.) It was de- George W. Fitz y y) Robert Wilfred Jefferson .signed for the advantage and welfare Grace Eleanor Marlys - Lewis W. Korn - ofits . u pupils, and .hundreds of them Frank A. Overton - P P , Mrs. (Rev.) H. Edw, Latham have thereby reaped a richharvest. B Louis M. Sweet P Y Daniel H, Overton.. John Jo Lehr the aid which it has given them, they. Mrs. John H. Lehr ' have .prepared themselves to. begin Artists Mrs. Frank M, Lupton .many and various callings and pursuits; Alva Glover Salmon James M. Magee - - 'for they have become housekeepers, Benjamin Rutherford Fitz Mrs, Roland P. Marks farmers; mechanics of different kinds, Metta (Horton) Cook. Edith Marks. !telegraphers, railroad agents, train In addition to I of the preceding,, Mrs. A. D. Matthews ;despatchers, mariners, merchants, and the following persons,have prepared for' Stuart'H. Moore - workers in manifold employments- and College in the Academy,and the greater Mrs,(Lawyer) D.P. Morehouse .professions, '. part have been graduated. at the best.' :Mrs. (Prof.) Herbert V. Neal Not few of them laid ih the Acad- Colleges and Universities, including. Mrs. (Rev.) Daniel H. Overton jemysuch foundation-stones asdiligenoe, 'Hamilton, Williams, Lafayette, MountE.OtiaPayne , order,attention, thoughtfulness, court- Holyoke, Smith, Wellesley, Packer,`;' Orrin F.Payne esy and courage, on which they have Harvard, Radcliffe, Yale, Princeton,j .Mrs,..(Rev.) Charles E, Sharp 'built themselves.up to strength, prom- Columbia, New York, Pennsylvania ; Frank D. Smith inence and honor in the esteem of their -Samuel L. Bennett Mrs. Frank D,Smith `fellow men, Charles L. Case Mrs. Egbert V. Strong Amongthose who have won conspic-. I,. Mrs. Mary B.(Case)Berresford Mrs, Joseph H. Randall 'uous,standing may,be mentioned Gordon Case Mrs.,(Doctor) Arthur H.Terry Clergymen: - -Orrin Case Frederick K. Terry LoweWM.'Hallock Sarah Whitaker George C, Terry Charles E. Havens Martha Whitaker Helen Maud Terry. William F. Whitaker. Ellen Bertha Whitaker Mrs. (Doctor) Henry P. Terry ` 'Daniel H, Overton Emma Squires Mrs, Jesse H,:Terry 4 Louis M. Sweet, Nathaniel S. Tuthill Mrs. William H. Terry, Eugene L, Conklin William H.,Wella Harrison H. Jay Forbes Robinson William L. Elmer - Mrs. Henry P. Tuthill Theodore'M, Shipherd. Henry M. Payne Mrs. Philip W. Tuthill Lawyers: Mina (Hommel) Edwards Martin B. Vandueen Benjamin H. Reeve Frederick C. Williams Mrs. Martin B. Vandueen Isaac F. Russell .Mrs..Julia F, (Overton) Bell Anna Osborn Abram B. Havens Mary Landon Dayton George H. Wells CtiarlesB.,Dayton 'G. Frederick $ommel Mrs."(Rev.) JohMason Wel'.s- Jesse L. Case Henry R. Shipherd Martha A. Wells Charles R. Lyon Harold Skidmore James Wickham' Silas A. H. Dayton. .Arnold P. Danz Mrs..Frederick,C. Williams. Physician;and Surgeons : George.C. Terry, Jr. �.. Y P Arthur H. Terry other@ Pursuits may be have won rom— Inence in various named George W.`Fitz W. Corey Albertson Paultarrington Brennan C. Hampton Aldrich Melville'Skidmore Mrs, (Rev:) A. B. Banks James A. Squires Mrs.,Fred, E. Booth - Herbert A:Squires. Mrs. (Doctor) Josiah C. Case Goldsmith Robinson Herbert.R.Conklin William,H. Ruesell Mrs.,(Rev.) Abram Conklin JosiahC. Case - `. Burton D. Corwin Frederick,Corwin 1 Frank A. C:verton. Ernest D Qorwin'_ ��//nwp'$-'`"Lmrartes•• �- � �liore;) Theliooke were 16W" in -nam- The books in our library have t up. �'4et and were,,kept in a .small case in At first session six new members pearance of being,'read-more.than those the hall, were admitted,of whom four remain.: we"recall in the old district schoolhouse. I But• we should had to L. T. Butler, S. Viola Merrill(Butler); ui'o remember standing on tiptoe in a back towards the a ttlement"of farther Amanda '(Conklin Hobart (Horton); Henri. chair by the shelvesat the ],end of the (town to find the. library with -"ne etta.Terr ) The second ses- stairs, reaching for books shot added twenty-two, of whom the covers as dr , Lhe.,duet on 'novels in the collection"I Thaddeus eleven are living: J. R. Tillinghast, y as the contents in- of Warsaw, Paul and Virginia, Alonzo 0, A. Prince, H. Side seemed'2o our child'sN, desires. C. Prince, Josephine Southold has had a t .and Melissa, .Children of.. the Abbey, Goldsmith (Conklin)„ Emma Canter- somesort from aw,a public.. library o David Copperfiejd, Oliver-Twist, Vicar men (Vail), Victor W. Booth, Nat. 'S, y back through 75 of Wakefield, Scottish Chiefs and'ever Tuthill, M, yeare'at least. For a time it Scottish m 80 many more of that kind were in the T. Horton, D. T. Conklin, 'the northwestroom attsched to W. H. old library kept b at kind were Thos. I, Thomasson, Gilbert Peckham, Wells' store, corner Main St. snd y P y ,(On The next six.sessions.added thirty. Road AV. The books were Rail my first visit,to. Brooklyn—in. 1856— three, of whom seventeen remain- kept a once kept,, I'boughtthetwolastnamed..books, but, Susan Cantermen (Wilkinson), T. W' rushaHorfon,and a in n a win Je- was 'advised to return them to the Wood, Julia L, Conklin, removed) of gain a wing (now store I This I did without dela i Terry Elects B. Mra. Rebecca ', Y• So I; y (Williams), Elects B. Corwin, house. There were no Downs have never them; but I have no Catherine Prince, Julia B, Jennings; the collection novels among doubt they are as unobjectionable ae. -John P. Wells, J. B. Young, Hattie B. but'history and biogra- very many of the libraryYOU P9,and "solid reading• ' The L books of our 'Terry, Caroline E. prince, Geo. 11, library contained a p Selection day which are read largely to while ;Terry, Geo. F• Hawkins, Louie B, books Popular selec ion of time away 1) Adams, Mattie D. Horton (Bolsseau), which Fere donated to the pub- The.library of a Jcundred years ¢flo lie School. They used to be kept in the was mostly of "history, biography and Rebecca L. Peters (Downs), Sarah C. rear,room of the drugstore. F Hahn (Murphy)';. large market basket rom the solid reading", it is true- but the books .At the ninth session, Feb, 27, ;there. classes in Sunday S passed.. to the were read for instruction rather .than a"me trooping into the basement of the classes ern y School we remember .for amusement. Then, too, the one Methodist church thirt 'age y` grabbing for books with a co of the. (weekly) news a ex was U-fcvo candi- 1? y cover, but PY p p dates I Of this number nine remain:' the reading inside '-"circulated" throughout the neighbor- IJ. Addison Goldsmith, E. L. Boisseau, was not always so pleasing to our ;,hood. youthful fancy, E• T. p I Wm. M.Horton,,J. B. Terry, Daniel While our rented library' $oLthold, Jan_. 80, 1907• Terry, B. F. Moore, Amelia H. Wells,.- Pleasant and neatly- rooms are The •Survivors' ---�B• W, Case, Mrs. Benj. H. Terry, -kept,When cgnnot The nett four sessions brought in repress a feeling ofenvywhen we see Nearly seven years ago "H G. H." Shelter Island and Mattituck libraries, wrote for THE TRAVELER an article in., I twenty-seven; of .whom fourteen are; with well stocked reading rooms; We whiph he referred to the Sona of Tem- living Horace G. Bennett, C. G. trust thetime.is not far distant when Perance and treated more fully the, Corey, CarrieM. Hutchinson, Mrs; J, Southold::too shall haves library Good .Templars;. and in it he spoke of: `B.'Tarry, Mrs. E. L. Boissenu, Chas..' ing worth of our a Y add- the faithfulness of p; LC Fanning, John A. Beraenger,Hattie Y en beautiful. 'village, H• Cantermen .Books are good friends. The (who had died some twenty months ba- penny (Jefferson), Lucy J. Tuthill tired body; relieve the:weary rest the fore '(Gordon),. Wm. F. TerrLydiaY mind and ) and said of him: ' He was y, L A. feed the hungry soul Some d about the deet survivor of those who, I Moore; W. H. Vail; Carrie Fanning build for them ahome.whitherweecan loinedatthebeginningof the order.". (Bersenger), .Deborah Tillinghast. 'resort and find entertainment and re- At that time'l,thouecorght L would ex_ (Rogers). creation in.the variogs,periodicalj Ghat amine whatever records I had of the The one meeting im:Dbeember added: shall be available to ver bo Sons of Temperance and report but I :'six members, making twenty-eight;I e Y dy, ll g have just now taken u J but in the quarter fohowin to all cheery wel,ddmthatry,6a)I give P the Sol j g, one Hun- to all a cheery welcome. and the list .has been considerably; dred seventeen came,in, raising„(the9 1¢i H. C• shortened since that article was pub-'- ':total to one handrail fort - In a eontrlbutlon td.THE TRAVELER, hahed, d Y five l And: now thirty-eight years later—sevent'v Published two weeks ago, M. H. C,,, ' Southold Division;�No. 266, w s _ 'of, them are living.some in.tereating facts as, to then 8anizedr:Dec, 19, 1867N at a wsor. 8•_ I am surprised Public libraries of our village, I have hand in the e, 19, x ' at one 'to find the"survivors" so numerous. meeting Ever so many joined in.later very pleasant In of the district of the coldest one time the total was years—at" s5"hoo] library, as we11 as o windiest evenings of 2 —but.of�. which were established, in later yearse� that winter. There were twenty-two them I have no special iecord. I hen`s charter-members, of who the follow- written only 'Of "those who joined at ' The books were largely such as were i" fifteen are still living: ;.the beginning of the order". lnrptructive as.well as interestin 8 f g: S. .B, '.thtIY were read by old and youn g, and 'arch) ''1 YH''Boisseau.,(Worthy,Patri= .Southold, March 22,,.'06, B• T. P. )r dt M Ledyard, John 1D.;Cleve- L— oma eighty years ago Salter S. ]a"d G CORRECTION•—In the third paragraph H6'rton ke t the Oase loon `G. Terry, Lucy `Woad I o€ -my last week's article a "The: I P. public librar in y ( Scribe „ horse—now the home of, Gilbert his lrfre P�' a TChae •ne Rec, ), I Survivors, I should .have stated that. Tet'iry. (Mr. HOrion was town clerk, award C ie I A ' Weoks, J Ed ;$,. `B, Core" wa Postmaster; librarian and farmer• he aor' riy� t" R, Vail, W H, err Y. s. Worthy Patriarch,. and J. H. Boisseau was Worthy Assn-: alsor wrote man ' r ,a4ayn�"'CGon�uctor) Hannah L o his nei b- Pe t d ciate _. Y wills for 8 . g.r„/ dison Goldsmith: 3-3• -___�-E T. e:: February 2d, The wife of.Mr. King - September30. .TheRev. George I' Long. Inland Gi enenl .� died, Whitfield died at Newberry, 40 miles March 7th. Ichabod Cleveland died. March 16,-1807 24th. Old Mr, William Vail died i Send beyond Boston, '. Sept. The,widow of aged 84. Noah Tuthill " April 2d. Old Mr. Jonathan Horton, diol'Nov, - NOTES died, aged 84. - ember 10th. Deacon Benjamin Note 780. THE DIARY OF THE REV. �I Bayley died. 1771 EZRA NORTON, OF BAY.VIEW, Son2x- .8th:16th. Nathaniel Tuthill died. ,OLD,-Part L uel Reeve died: March 26th. William Hubbard died, ' A 1764 20th. A child of Stephen Bayley April ri129th. Jonathan Conklin's child September. Several persons dieddied, named Benjamin, died. -with camp distemper as.follows: !' 18th. Widow Prudence Landon died. July 29th, Benjamin Conklin, Esq., Doctor Moore's little son Joseph died, 26th. William Moore died, died. John Vail, Jr,'s, son William died. 'a May 20th. Mr, Milliken died. 28th! Mary, the second wife of Syl- 16th, Nathaniel Youngs' young nMoore's wife died Friday child died. . vaep Davis, died: morning. g. - o 26th, Isaac Youngs.died. September 2d, Isaac Hubbard,Esq., 7th. Lazarus Hortondied Lord's June 10th. Zaccheus Wells died. died. Day morning. - { 7th: Doctor Moore's" son Abraham .16th. Nathan Penny died. June 16th. John Pack died. Idied, July 16th. Peter.L'Hommedieu died. February 24th. Mr. James Sawyer '.12th of Sept., .Nathaniel Overtoh's� 28th. James Davis',ebild'died. died, 'daughter died. - October 21st, Widow Mary Corey, 28th. Mr, Ebenezer Fanning died. 12th of Sept., Daniel Overton, Na-' died' .March 10th. Rev.Nehemiah Barker, thardel'.s son, died, November 18th. Daniel Tuthill, Jr.,' at Mattituck, died. 18th...Lazarus Horton's daughter .died, . 1772 Mary died. December ild.. Mr, William Nicoll March 21. Deacon Horton's wife 16th, :William Moore, Jr., died.' died on his journey to New York. Mehetable died. 21st, Ann, the daughter of Lazarus 18th. Mr. Benjamin Youngs died, 22d. Josiah Youngs died. Horton, died. aged 90. April 16th. Elizabeth Horten died at . Cains 10th. Lucretia, Nathan Moore's � 18th. Capt.' John Wiggins died. Jonathan Norton's. . . daughter, died. Dec. Daniel King died. 21st, William.Landon's child died. .10th. Mary, the wife of Nathan 1769 May 24th. Sarah Griffing, daughter Moore,.died. January 6th.. Mary, wife of Nathan of John Grfflng, died. Her child was 27th. Deborah Dickerson died an -Haines,died. ! three days old, old maid. February 9th. . Old Mr. Samuel Junellth. Elizabeth, wife of Moses October let. Selah Dickerson died, :Conklin died, aged 93. Cgntent, died. 14th. Old Mrs. Corey died, 11th. Ye widow Gardiner died, July 24th, A stranger at Abraham ;14th. Selab,Dickerson's wife died. 20th. Joseph Moore's child died, '.'Corey's, named Jacob, died. ;,January 24th. Capt, John Prince March9th: Old Mr. Matthias Cor- j August 27th. Major Silas Ilorton 'died, win died, aged 93: died. F";'27th,. Susannah Budd died. 21st, Rev, Mr,Allen Fox(7) died. September 7th. Joseph Horton's son :.'.'November20th. The widow of N. 26th." One Richard Taylor died, a David died. ,Youhg died, stranger, .October. Joshua Reeve lost three 1766 March, Old Mr. Richard Howell. daughters and oneaue. "April 9th. .John Wiggins, Jr.'s, wife died,.aged 85. December 16th. Elton Overton's died'. - May 8th. William Case's wife died. child died, -.October. Ye Rev. Mr.Thomas Pain, 14th. Widow Love Youngs died. 18tb, Robert Hempstead's son Sam .Jeremiah Vail's second wife died: LSu'm22eedieu die Gillum died. us] Benjamin died. . .. :minister of Cutchogue, died, June lltb, Old widow Freelove _ - 1773 1773 1767 y May 13. Old widow Vail died.. June 1, Nathaniel Youngs' daugh- February 13th. Widow Windes died, August 30. Mary, the wife of Con ter died. " . .Feb.. Widow Dillard died. ;stunt Booth, died. 4th. Old widow Glover died. April. Capt. Richard Brown died: November 1st. Susannah, wife of Sept. 4. Lucretia, wife, of Joseph Pack,Bayley, died. Pack, died. March: Mrs. Storrs died. Oct. 8. Joseph Landon died. :,,May 10th.. .Capt. ,Thomas Moore 11th. The .widow "Naomi Torrey 22d, - Deacon 'Phomas Goldsmith's died. died. '. 1770 wife died. . 1774 19th. Dr. Baniel Way died. July. 6th: Susannah, the wife of Feb. 4. George Booth, son of Con- December. The wife of Richard - stant, died. Terrydied,. Benjamin Bayley, thi died. Brown 27th. John Tuthill'a negro was - "6th. Dorothy of died. 10th. ' Richard Terry died: A negro man bf Justice Youngs died. Dec. . A'child of Gatnaliel, Bailey drowned, 9th., Susannah L'ilommedieu died, died. .August 12th. Capt. .Hubbard s wife 21st." Benjamin Babcogk died, 1768 Betkiah died. March 27. Constant Booth died. 10th. The Rev. Jeffrey Smith, sup- April 1. Died at Aquebogue this 'January 10th, My wife Mary died, weeK; three people,.viz,: Old :widow, •, 10'q'clock Lord's Day morning. .posed'he shot himself. - Corwin,:age, 86; ye widow of .James .'20th, John Mo Day mo 14th: "The wife:of Gersbom Aldrich Torreyy; aged 70 and a boy of Benja- __._ .. _-___.__._ _ -" shot herself, inin You�e, 7 or 8 years old. , � 2 12th::: Isaac Goldsmith died , - llee wAbraham Cooper,of South AO)oast H'atppton mMS the hgme:of 13th.; Daniel Tarrey'e daughter died' ! empto , diednat!Saybrook;Conn. Mr un B en ing.e boyhood and yputht ' i7th. BenjaminHatchinaon died:' 24th isPhomas Terry died at goodlynumber of friends and relatives 29th; Justice.Brown died., Saybrook"Conn 'where they fled for" or wished,to be present at his ordination;:. June 9.- Widow Wiggins died, fear of the King's,armies,- Oct. 17. Margaret Landon,Jr died, Oct Joseph Halliock lost three hence a sloop was chartered,and the 21st. Isaiah Tuthill's widow died. children at Guilford same time. party started on the day previous to 2gd. ..Out•negro'Flore died. ' Nov. -, Benjamin 'Case and Ben- the event, The old time sloop was Nov. 23. William Youngs died. jain Case, Jr., 'died at Lyme, Conh:, 14th. Benjamin Case died. 'in the same month. more affected wind and weather Edmun Howell's wife died: - 1474- tlinn the modern n sailing vessel, and 1776 Jan. 19, John L'Hommedieu died at they spent the night on the way, some Feb. S. Old Mr. Wrakott, aged 89. i Aquebogue. of the company, Dr. Lyman Beecher 6th. John Case died. I Jan.-. Young Sawyer died of small I among the number, lodging at 'a has - I My brother. Stephen..Hemp-I pox. . pitable Iomenear..the shore.. In the, stead died at New London. ! Feb,.-, ' Daniel Clark and Old Mr. April 23, Old William°King died,! Sawyer died of small pox, morning while Dr. Beecher eat medi aged 88. ! May -, Peter Vail died of small tating over his discourse, to :which he: 26th.: Martha, 70 wife of Jared Lan.! pox at Aquebogue. had just added some paragraphs; the) don, died. 171h: Benjamin Beckett's daughters captain appeared, summoning them at 28th. Old Mrs. Rogers died. died.- I once .to the boat, explaining,- "We' Mr.:Daniel Warner had four sone die', 18th. James Downe died,one of the in March and April I town's poor at Joseph Horton'ssurely must not be late on so import- May 3,.- My wife's brother James ii 26th. Stephen Bayley died at Guil-I ante an occasion." In,passing the) (Hempstead)h ad a child,.die. ford, Conn., it is said. . small tattle at which Dr, Beecher had 15th. Elizabeth the wife of the -26th: Obediah Vail's wife died, ! been writing, y party.ob- Jew, Mr. Ddvids, flied. - July The widow Desire Conklin'I alad of the July 2. Mehetable, daughter of died; served that he had forgotten his:manu- Lazarus Horton, died, Dec. 5. The wife of old Mr. Webb' script, so tools.it with her, quietly con- 9th, 'Samuel Conklin, son of Joseph; died.of small pox, and wife of William) fiding the fact to the captain.' When died: Rogers died at Hashamomock. Aug, 24,: .John Buaha's 'daughter Jan. -. The wife of.Joseph Gardi. some distance from the shore Dr, died• nerdied with thesmall pox. Beecher discovered his loss and prompt- 24th, Henry Tuthill's wife died, 1778 :� ly called out to the captain that they Henry Tuthill died soon aftet, April 20, Jerusha, daughter of Doc-! "must go:back,". and explaining. the, Sept. 13. Capt. Daniel Griffing's for Moore, died with small ox -at Mr. child died. , I reason. , 141h. Joseph Peck's eon Joseph died. Gardiner's, and was buried p at Matti- Calmly the captain replied:, ','We, Aug, and Sept. Hoary Younga and tuck. can hardly take time, and you can' wife and three or four children died. July 2. ..Alethia Ma� ppes died. Y Sept. 80. Israel Moore died. Aug. 27. William Wells died.. Preach all right without,your mann- [Twelve of these ]sit died of cam -Sept. 27: Ann, the wife of. Simon script," Mr Beecher.was rather ex distemper.? p Moore, died. citedly urgent, explainitig.that "much James Balliock died. [Salmon Rea. Oct 14. Thigh, the wife of: Barna- time and. thought had been: expended. ord eaysPeter.77 bas Terrill, Eeqq., died. , Oct. 4. Mr. John Hubbard died. I Davide, the Jew, died Oct. 29 upon this discourse, and he could',phi; Jonathan B. Horton's wife died on! ' Matthew Hallock's other wife, Mar-I do without "Oh]'" said theca the same date. tha Reeve,died Oct. 81. ! tain, "the people will like quite as: 7th; Mr. Daniel Booth died, i Hannah, the wife of John Wickham, h- died the 6th of Nov. � well to bear you preach';withuutnotes(" Nov. 6, Deacon Goldsmith's dau ter Sarah died. g Ahnar, the widowof John Conklin I Naturally the lady was not willing"t,o:' 1776. I called Skipper John, died the 9th of seriously annoy the good dominie;: °eo' Jan. 25. Doctor Moore died. , 'Nov: stepped forward and:relieved his anx Nov. 28. Benjamin Sawyer's wife! iet b g g April 4. Widow S Bayley died.. .died. Y Y handing him the missing ser April 4; Widow Salmon died in the 6th. Rachel.Youngs died. ! mon. ' 70th year.of her age. .1779 At the close of;the ordination sex.:,, The second w week in April„ David ..,Jan, 20. Doctor Con,41in's child died. g asked of Wells' second wife died; she was the vice the Rev. Mr. Hunttin daughter of Richard Howell. - Feb. 12. Negro Darby died at Wid- Dr, Beecher the privilege of copying May, Mr. Samuel Wells died in the 0 Moorp's, . the latter part of the sermon which:: 70th-year of his age. _ THE END + .,. June 2:. Ye wife of John Rackettl " ,' "^ was addressed to him personally,_ died Sabbath night. - Rev: 'Jonathan iHilnitingfa Ordination ;whereupon Dr, Beecher promptly Ric=' Esther'Wells died: OnThureday, Aug ?0,SSOg thaiRev , seated to him the manuscript entire.; 'Sept."14. Two children of .Richard Sonath`n Hunttin w 's'ordained'itg he Y,eare later Mr. Hunttin remarked>to- Hudson died. 4 v g a 4 ,n g 16th, -ponklin died. pap�orai'�411r .ey�ofx sdRflret ypongre It 'Dr. Beecher that he had read that ser- 2bth. doe]Overton died. jtioh�i_hrntlfo id}rfi `h+"1`� GI'drl"�s,�$u mon over times with much pleas 2d Sarah, .the wife of Deacon inade�.i;he larvirod4etgYy,�lrnyer v are and profit. "Did I give you that William Horton, died Sabbath evening Mr ,Beech"erprenchadstio aeriaon f5om) manuscript'?" Dr. B. replied, "Why;. 2ster Ensign Richard Brown, at ' } 1•have looked for it in vain on several Oyster Ponds, died. I T3Cor: n,+ 1, 2, the Rev ;l1lr hold 30th, "John Conklin, called Skipper tltith;- made the•'.consearatitig prayer, oceasione; wishing to make use of per- kg,, John died at Lynn,,as it is said., Ehd� �� ! v, ," the -tionsIofit," i h o Mr oolworth def l Guilford, the wife of Samuel Hudson ar tsh w __ _ at the beginning of October, - ,cb¢rgo ,,,th ,exhorted' -- - Oct 23 Irene Way died !1t.� ) l;iel'nh�d`made t e concluding 'died.Nov 16i. Moses Contents daughteril�l?rg�,on�enlbher-4).�evs Mr as Huoth�ag - -..T_ prnoq� dbhe�bemg ��The�>Rbo(� eie�l'�witlS ,deoeacy� end 3nT -�,+�rran 6 ,ikl�7grieat eolenioity Long Ial>Lnd . idonenlo ' hived,`now the home' of Mre.`$e'bec ro ,Lucretia Case, who died Oct. 6, 1823. gY L Downs: this statement comes fro Their children: h John'-Jan. 10,1774- June 21, 1907 :, a member of the present generation of'Nov. 23, 1836. 1h Polly born Aug. 29, J ® o _ the Princes who has examined the 1448, IIL,Ezra March 1,.1782-May 18, NOTES book, though it is now lost. . [James 1826. IV,„.Betsey Oct. 19, -1786-Nov. may have owned that place,an there is 8, 182% married March.4, 1813, Abra- Note 799. . THE SOUTHOLD PRINCES, no record of ownership between that ,him Mulford. Oct. 18, 1781-Dec. 29,:; For Some of my relatives who=have,of Col, John Young' and that of Rich- 1864. V. Martin Feb. 1S, 1792-Oct, ,not seen any printed history of:.the!and Peters.1 28; 1866, married .let March 4,1816, Payne family I have :been preparing,' John' Nov. 1, 1687-Jan. 24, 17661: Cecelia Field.1794-June 26, 1823, and for publication a sketch of the South-1 h a d five .children : I, J o h n'; married 2d 1824, Phebe'Mulford 1794- old- branch .running back to ThomasrMay lo, 1716. If. Joseph', April 10; March 18, 1878. [Hie home is now the Payne, born in England in 1640, and 11719, III. Rebecca, Aug. 9, 1721,] property of James Thompson.] !embracing the generation of my: fa-,IV. Samuel, April 24, 1724. V. Han-1 John', 1774, married .Feb. 28, 1799, ther:. While,at thin work I became in- nab, Dec, 12, 1725. (John' is said to. Mehetabel Horton March 1, 1778-Jan. ''terested in-my' neighbors also.I Thin havesettled in;Boston, Joseph. in 11 1848, Their children: I. Benjamin is;mycxcuse-for the following'article. 'Southold, Rebecca in Connecticut,. R. Sept. 8,.,1800-Jan. 28, 1878, married It isnot agenealogy, and therefore, is Samuel In New.York State, and Hang let Sept. 1, 1823; Sarah A, Foster Jan.! not'put into"regular'"form: itis on' nab in Aquebogue, L. 1.) " 26, 1807-Jan. 1, 1848, and married 2d !lya{memorandit But it will be of! Joseph', 1719-June 1; 1804, married Jan. 4;1849,Temperance Brown Aug, amore or_less interest to the Princes, Nov. 22, .1746, Mary Vail, who died 18, 1813-June 1, 1890. II. Eliza A, (th6maeI so, and of value tothe his-! Feb. 12, 1804.. Their children: John',June 24,1802-Feb. 13, 1876,- married torian of The family in later years as al Joseph', Thomas and Benjamin. Joseph' Edwin,Harrison. III. George W. born record of dates which would soon have married Jan, 29, 1776,-Elizabeth Baker; Jan. 28J1804, married Frances Doty. �tlenn peat finding out, Even now aomThomas married Oct. 7, 1804, Mary IV.'. Salem G. Jan.17, 1807-Feb, 1, gueetione could not be settled, as4asni=' Vail and died Jan, 19, 1819, In his 73d 1872, married Jan. 8, 1833, Louisa ly recorde'have been lost and memory' year. Benjamin married Feb.13,1783; Buell May 17, 1809-July 27, 1866. V. cannot fill the gap, But my, Prince Hannah Moore and died. March 26 Adeline Dec. 10, 1810-Feb. 18, 1897, "neighbors" have kindly helped me as, 1789, aged 33 years. I married Prince H. Foster Aug. 10, 'far as they could. Benjamin and Hannah had one eon;? 2-Jy,�21,::1896. _VI, Martin L. ',A record which I have been permit- William, Dec._ 6, 1786-Oct. 20,: 1877,' Nov. 17, 1812-Oct. 13, 1883, married ted to examine begins thuet "The married 1809 Eunice Jennings 1786 May 10, 1889, Lucretia Cartwright first of the Prince family that settled rApril 14,,1866. Their children: I. Nov. 1;1820-April.4, 1877. VII. John in Southold was .Capt. John Prince ,'.William B. Oct, 20, 1810-Oct, 2, 1888, ,Oct. 6, :1816-April 8, 1869, married ,Prom11 ,Boston. He was born there Nov, married Nov. 29, 1862, Mary Decry March 26' 1838,.Caroline Merrill March 'lyj4637. His son John, born May:10, 1820-May 19; 1883. IL Thomas Ed- 14,:1619-Aug. 26, 1900: VIII. He 1 1,716,settled in Boston; hie son.Joseph; ward July 1S, 1813-July 8, 1882, mar- C. Oct, 6, 1816-Feb. 18, 1866, married k Min April 10, 1719, settled in South rind let Oct, 14, 1838,' Mehetabel M. Oct; 6, 1836, George Stayley .May 21,. Salmon 1817-Nov:8, 1899, and Married 1816-July, 29; 1867. IX. Jane M, rfVA glance .at the dates reveals .:the 2d. Aug. 8, 1860, Betsey L. Salmon to Betsey Aug. 23, 1819.` kfact that either,a generation has been born' Aug. S, 1827, III, Mary A. Ezra, 1782, married Feb. -, 1804,'. :o tttea,or the first date is not correct, Dee, 19, 1814-Aug. 18, 1880, married ' RI Pfiebe Horton -1784-Jan, . 26, 1849. rGri,]Tn'a, Journal says, "James and April 21, 1883, :Albeit J, Tillinghast i Their childron: 1, Martha Nov. 9, ^,: 361mPrince were brothers. John set- March 19, 1808-Sept. 20, 1,869. IV. 1804-Sept. 29, 1891, married 1848(?) �'tled,in Southold, where be died 1766: Sidney A. Nov. 20(7), 1817-Nov, 4(7),. Grover M. Cook May 6, 1810-Feb. 2, [[San, 241, aged seventy-eight years;. 1836, lost by shipwreck off coast of 18d8 IL. Albert Dec. ]6, 1806- Aug.. he was born to 1687; We do not know South Carolina.` William, 1786, mar- 30, 1874, Married March 31, 1830, Mary whether his brother James, ever, came ried.2d June 23,. 1866, widow Welty r Tuthill June: 4, 1806"April 23, 1874. to America: Joseph Prince, an'..in- (Case) Wells. Hie widowed mother III, Betney M Sept.' 24, 1809-Nov., habitant of Southold, ,was Johns"son merr[ed April 19, 1796, Thomas Led- 2a 1897, married Jan26, 1837, John' and was born in 1719. He died in 1806,,yard, ho died Sept. 16, 1820, Conklin Dec, 12, 1815L Dec. 22, 1873. in hie eighty-fifth year." =From tine it Benjamin was a silversmith, and.his IV' Lucretia April 14 1811-.Oct ,29, appears that the date first above given,house stood where is now the reeidonce: 1901, married March 9, 1841,Henry D. ,should be 1687 instead of 1637. So.the'of Mrs, Henry G. Howell. His father Orrin "1166 to�the:Southold Princes rune thus gave him, March 7, 1753, the northern• Glover 10-Nov. 21, 1881. V. - i N' Nov. 14,'1818 Nov. 7, 18890, mar- I John' 1687=1766. II, Joseph' 1719 Iijif of bin property-the original home, !� tied 760, 17,'1839, Maria L. Wella Oct. 1804 , HL,Johns 1749-1822, and Benja- lot of Paeter John Young-and`,his eon 1886. VI, Phebe 17 1816 Feb. 22, mm M(6-1789. William later sold it to William Hart- A, born Oct. 16, 1821, married let It wasstated,in THE TRAVELER ing. ;The southern half Joseph seems Sept. 16, 1839, Benjamin W. Case 1820 nearly tbirty years ago that John, orlto.have left to his eon Johne, from: -Aug. 10,1846, and married 2d Dec. ;Captain Jobn, sailed the aloop Southold whom it descended to John, .then to '.23, 1866,Jacob H. Tuthill, born Aug. between this place and Boston. I have Benjamin R., and then to'Benjamin L. 31, 1814, [Ezra's House was on the been informed that his brother sailed)who still retains a part of it as his. southern pert of the lot now owned.by with him, and that James' book ofrec-),home. his grandson H. Carpenter Prince on i ord was found in the house where bei Johns May :26, 1749-May 30, 1822, the corner of.Boiaseau avenue and the -- ,eonafJoeeph', marrled,April 21, 1776 . North rosd,._and now_etande-on Her- --" Ragw biockaad ;or ton laneQ. L" �seon�ar�t#tn :0#4 t}v 1868 3 wee'-aur rise$ to,fit tha4•,he Of the last generation treated :here t'toe s�5s m�ptjJl bsq ,�ti"+t 9y 'other and I were about thwon yt on left:of. in I have in mind .only three livingRodj ;Ghe numerous Company that were Princes, Mrs. Helen L. Beebe, Orient, ��tYYb�e51" hO Dart as Pwe qu ceeded - ears ago. W. W. a - .railroading forty ,y 73; Mrs. Pbebe A. Tuthill, Southold, rn jrgot�tlnq"to +Fa& rt�dsle with our ;,•Crim lately refired, was n small 86; MissJ'ane M. Prince, Babylon, 87 npngrn@�,Yea"vind�tl er:,Ecdin'ntiHigk�Prlle. _boy his fab�er being freight master, ( Mrs. Betsey L. _Prince, oY Baitru I+the�triltelegxaPh4d xto Cre Sngerrht6a- -at poo time. There may be others Hollow, 79, was a Salmon.) idenE2ae smarla New York,pbat olfioe. ;living poeaibly, unknown, to ,mel;11. L,. R T� 'PAYNril '�fqr ofderef reoerving a rpply>,b go on think the snow blockade of 1888 has - -- ,rj J'rposerble AfEep:Ratting vrood and never been eganled and nivat Terrain Snoti Block Fort Years Ago �Faillr,;we burnt wood m•those •days, 'a record breaker up to this time: It The.)set. of December 1868, :for 40 bagkod up,to .Hicksville,,;Coupled must be rememberedtliab wo had no:. rJ,yeara q a, I was Mal on th4bil fibo;marl car arid'gut W Farming- 'rotary;plows in those days. I3onanIlfend' Railroad,' At that.`time oa)e L�then hrredJa re)n and sleigh .� --- 'bo take me to Pa`t,h I' from Pat. "Doe" Haynes- eat on the last flour there was uo postal clerk ;out instead , barrel along , 4t,xo'<rouEe!, ngouGe appointed by,- the Ch Daus oontraoted with the old g the line-next to the bench i � "'^' r veteran eta a driver Sd Id to take me hi,front of the stove in Jefferson's, one afternoon geunral for forty:- years g i, nightlastweek.. He was tr in his 'T ;5�'e�e two maiLtraius,•one:'19av to Riverbead leaving my 'way •mails hgipthe' - y g r1�al7Dgng Islago City in,the morni'p? at the nearest post'dffioee, on she way. beattoawoke a.cigarette from speck=- and £he.'`I,bcr .leaving Greeupol;G'to Riverhead, I met Billy, Webb who. g which one of the boys had given 'rboeE tlr,'same timo: On this Derem= tod lust come froln"Greenport with ,him, but most oP Doc'a teeth are gone. r�g�orng;I left thepost ofhce; eor uload::of delegates to a Sunday School and he was making. rather ragged nx B an' and Liberty streets, on Convention; at Rrvern±ad.,, I soon work of the amoking,:although he said q 2' "mails arrangements with It At", taker, it was helping the cold he had in,his tart; 1pgt) ogpn rn a big snow storm head. + p'is's ha�5l om„s Yprtv pauobea contain me to C}reenporG. We arrived Iota at +ip `}rPali`�g9ton pY moil It waasuoyv dlght and called Hban Clark, the post I He was, as usual, in ,the mood for �irfg,§�os'har,dllet tan Jhmee'slip goats mastor, wad wae-_'grven tae enxpriee looking backward, and, when it was �pqu`)d4pto6'f4�nd,therr. r'vey ' '.Htratere of hte„1}fa. ' He ast h hardly believe collision n with t he AuntthHit," for the; r ' nt, congsQuently I;tCld the driver) hie,eyps as the last he henrd of the. tpZgo,`v�n; 4Gli,istroet'-•when wsgot $aatbound mail"it was somewhere 'benefit of_the.newcomer, heatarted'off ' at`Lon '°betwnon •Farmogdele and Deexpax)Ki, without preamble, Beit known that. to the dsRRot g Island Csty, Ttlwas u6iegpla dllzzard AfWr,taking and 'tho West bound was ;between l Doc was in his time the most famous the Cld tnehronnd,snow. Southold and RiverheadS,�ItSmvas some , runnerof these parte, as will bent- pig s,wxnE¢ Alb4h beokmR a thea Rood'ton days before the Lraige,2Efinblly tested by any old resident who can re- pieuRhm2ahsad�for q abort aiefanoe got through and,.,ran regular;, Oliver 'member pack fifty-five years or more;. �,kglncoaeS�edrpf �reaohmR what„was Cbar�tok was at that time prediident of and be has a number oP:wonderful tales t en"o llcd Iiem�s£ead PlamI'lla when the road anQ when be eame< o e�`v to relate of hie prowess in that dire Yeah¢ iok ville'we a° a s£o a su,deur the,bils;I,had oontxnoGed rnr ga�4rng tion. ' d 4 ,1 up}g'dtain w`sr-soon`;nQprlv� ;tbom@�Ie�pthrouSli a'greeh 9,4had of "Theywapholdingprotractedmeet• ooy� bsl� iEp ano`W the;wind blowing the�rtbme He was a L£tle, jnNdd,'and ding in the MethodfaE Church at South t,b�gfsn'honE and enowink so)noalledrpetrsome4(1 uuea ' b £ be old;" commepcedDoo. ye ogil` ss,), qt @ee the' lea¢th of the soot',, q�ovor 14 and rI �believe,rt;'wgs. How long ego-waOhat 7" broke. tnai)i y,:�ZE" gae also Rxowinq sold very;bhe+means of hrs,,snbsequantily milk m Louie. dnotok, j "Well, Iwas 17 and'I'm 72 now, so ft , lan ,�as'l+t+was�rmposelble E4 pro l KimQ 9 083$v+rth ' 'the+paseengere abaadonedi `ThHpre`�`was no. Seats Sia@route you can figure it out yourself." twos�fratd,'isud;found,refuge rn Ghe; gne�fgrty,•`Y§�re,ngo, dor qoh frogth H[cke< "That makes it 66 years ago," said hot"�l�gatjN�HtakylleBReeveeMears apresalneol� StoQsHe"y�epeGdsdaoAYfgTt my .the nAel�fightsaid Dog. "I attended £he�oon ° ✓;onr, r a 1 , 4 ' - Jis e s m rl pgon4 ea rred I ran (school at the Academy, .which was,=af=' mdesantjor and myself after malitn '�eer`�x rn" Ehe road, 4'(,ommeno ,terwardturnedaround,and ie'now,the a1Yee nre iin the mail, eapreee: and"FJg y�', a �. �+ ba�ga�p qrp, ietarted to-find aogom im 'wlEh sa"ovento¢ train tov North Catholic church, and I used to moat m'odotrdti oTlfba^night, as the hotel Igl�pzQt'ymg a114o)gh s r�h.,oldti2ja t ulwaye rw.when I went to SouEh¢ld; was fubltande'Lut few .dwellings Agar r� yPg an��ti haon`td nAas000t tt� kee"talon with me I tell sm0i any ¢you, Welcoull' Ithatation ltwas with great d1.81uultyt M ,s t� �i t p"" p - g 'the arly y ' th, bsxepa#boally sugnepded rn ,flndinRwev ire traihr`o;NRrtihm,Ie' PPG £ter lMar6 several� �of my friends andpart yffnmily who had seoently t! r noon'au�Iyfranl st4q,'`.conll �Eq­111,(#roenport self went to the meetin, whtoh was gttled spa those barren ylam-8-1 hoq bhe ex 'All , ed ttO Yooq i d lodslnR,Fq° a( § n e Ybein held by the Rev, R. S. Leat in give us orp,fiy�mprng Poronxe' tLroagb'� roof anejnt fetv�ttok@t�'o' 14ea 'and the Methodist meetin'. house at ,the , ow drfte from two to, era fYept in+ not, �gn'�sinpomm'on thing to seat end of the village, where Charlie pfhi,gllth;t�he thgemom„eter 8 bgl ' il� lrgl arap w�y, etas�,Barth afterward had hie_ billiard room and Will Cochran had•his`store, Well;, � + �� oy�t w tipa;1,},� 1g,9+mpg Px,oyin4 =vee `��?myt<`r(bl�d rorlrood fries 3i or , fd and the othor, agk,Q,tpf2wsnLexiG� 9�11. $gg, in¢sem - aQ� ,�£h� �4thor+�ifay and }'tioye"eteyed toward the�aback, T}lera) n� were.,� `5 arnga 1 r4 , i ��@��tOh homet � ��g�r_e"Rl � _ �1� �,'a�eht'toa+eailed��to o�urg`v`•ys� Ambroee�Goldemith, Benjamial i Wells, George W6118 and Frank. Gold ''. �: Joel Romeya 194119ry Tiit:'SofdfeW Monument: smith. The' meetin' let out a little Di`niI` at;his residence in:,Livingsten after 9` no, it wasn't halP•peat 9--c - "The Ladies' Monumental Union" and the'other boys got out first and�Place, N: Y. City, after a brief fllneas,�l was the.name of the Society organ. started,for home. 1,had to wait until Feb:'13, 1908; aged 73. - ,zed June 10th, 1884 for the purpose There are a'few persons. living ink..of getting a.monument upon .which the folks got out ahead of me, so I was Southold who knew Mr. Mallory sixty; the names of all soldiers who enlisted Ila 9, starting. "It was a fuggy of lit; you couldn't years ago as a;student in the Leath in the town of Southold shoutd ho in- years see-more when four or six feet 'ahead er Academy.' He .was `a native of�.scribed whether living or dead unless ofyou,.and the frostwas.'juet corrin' Troy, N. Y.,ras teas the Principal, Mr:.l already upon some other monument in out of the ground; but-I was 'bound John Henri.Brod t, a graduate-of Rem- the Lown. The names of the officers or they wouldn't get ahead of me, so I selaer Polytechnic Institute' and of committee were: President, Mrs, D. didn't stop to think of the water in the Williams College, T; 'Oankhn; Viae President, Mrs, R. water-course, but I pot out down the Mr. Mallory's funeral;was in Grace, Jefferson; Secretary, Mrs. H, W. fpotpa,Mr, Church, New York,Sunday, Feb. 16. Prince; Treasurer, Mrs, H. 0. How- „ - I was in the city at the,, tiarao Thel oil. How fast were, you going that - tivie 7" asked someone. interment was in Troy, N. Y After throe years of hard work giv. :IW liit off the.wet end .of his cigar. � The L. I..:R. R.,was finished to'� Ing' suppers dinners, ooncerts, etc.,. 'Ott and puffad on the other half, He Greenport,and opened to the public, the Indies sought contributions from ;epatinfthesandunder the .stove and ,August,1844. Rev,.;George F. Wis- friends and mostgenerously responded 'answered. .. well was ordained pastor of.the First, among. the largest sums: Mr. Oliver "I was going belts r'n a 'minute ,.Cl urchin Southold, June,. 1846, Dr.. Jennings $60, Gen. Stuart L, Wood- dlJp that' time. Well, oe I was eoyin',. .Franklin Tuthill was the village phy. ford, $26, Mr. Renssalear L. Oold- cI'mas,goin' up the footpath and;'I was sician, with Ira Corwin, M.-D., on the smith, $60, Mr. L. R. Uses, Irn Tut- sI'll,11 iW�Aike is steam engine. Aunt Hit retired list, About that time my fa-. hill,.B. H; Booth and others, smaller i enninge-gran walkin'galong ,the foot- ther, Moses 0,Cleveland, had retired. sums until about $160, woo raised ad• ' path ahead of me.and gain',(in the from business as a cordwainer, and his: dod,to the$1,460, the ladies had about same direction, but.I did't know heIt, shop and store were fitted up for a_ $I,00o.�in the bank, and various mon- end justice I :got near Ben''Wells' select school' to accommodate Mr., umemad men sentindesigns, and-at cgatmstub' which was a few rods: from Bradt, a cousin of my mother, who last Frank Hill &Bros, of Riverhead, was.visiting her and desired to teach. furnished exactly the design desired phare"Baumann a is now, I struck her .I.well.remember several shoemakers' and the ladies at once ordered it as he bqu ie in the back, As I bad put both, that had been employed by my father. aald he:would place it at cast rather hapde'out;in front of me to protect, ].'hineae ,Fanning, Joseph.Multhoup, than have us Ret one out of the County self; I was not hurt, but Aunt Hit �{ Josiah Dee, James Clark. and others—,i and on May 30th, 1887, the Edward 6was knocked clean over into the water` w4so funny. sayings and doings are Huptting Poet, G. A. R., of Green- rg%ypryrpg as she fell Oh,Ineray I, - P�m't see who it was and I didn't, indelibly impressed on my memory. port, were invited to be present and. } fhaek any queettohs, "you` may, The No. 6 District school house Of assist in nnvaihngthe beautiful mon• t those days is;now the pleasant chapel i,I ument at the spring town meeting. The Jae „+", Iput out for home. I caught of the Presbyterian church. Seiner D.o town gave Budd's Park, upon which with the other pots and didn't let, I)ayton.was,theteacher, he became a���the monument stood to.the society, o i sanything,, had ,happened. ;Next, Jawyer ane settled at Riverhead,where,, and the ladies began to secure funds �t L•,heard folks talllin' abouts 'died, Jerusha W� Horton and .I i for a suitable fence 'which was 0 ody running into Aunt Hit and he` - rthat�t a allow was I were gra note from the public school soon placed axouud the .grounds. A h ,'f goin dike,' i'g4 M ' and`-joyfully entered the Academy -at ]riatory of the monument and ooius Heng,^ and;: that it moat hate been theaopening:r term; -,scall also the. were.placed in a box and put. under Haynes, as nobody else could -have names of Mary Louise Hillock,Jerusha I the monument, Rey. S. H. Uamp, of been,goia' so fast; but I was afrald,of her'huaband, an l didn't sa a-`-word• W.Horton,�$grriet Jennings, Hannah � Brooklyn:gave the address at the dedi- y r ' Goldsmitb Matilda Landon D. Philan- � cation, and little Edith Prince and and the other boys said it oouldn't ''}lavebeea:Haynes, as he hadn't; been I`der'Horton, Frankhn W. Taber, J, Fred Homnet, children of soldiers, r s „ j,lhdrew Halloek, WMu Fuller Horton, Pnllsd the string which removed the ,running, an I was safe. r JF„S �IIow fast did you:.say you could go Frederick R. Stow J: Rohie`yn Mal= oauvase and thus unveiled the mous• tjN t<hose;days,aDoc 7" asked one of,khe lary, Thomas B. Wella. mane, Thousands were at this ocos- �bstgn�xe These students, my friend, Jerusha Nion, one.a veteran of the War of 1812, ir?¢++nIicould'go,'and did go many aaime;I W' Horton'excepted, ;and every other IMr. Samuel Vail by name,. who was s name mentioned in this paper, have', 07 years of age at.the time. It is con- In P'a mile in lees than two; gone to that "undiscovered' country' weeded a fine monument and coat minutb� mmd, I `don't say I # ant a whole mile; but at'that rate " from whose bourne no traveler re• 'Doo hta fresh cigarette, and as;the; turns." How tempus does fuptf f S4hmitted by President. ' .Z epI i1DDARD CLEVELAND ebuttera were up they at left' the _,�L f .._ South-old In ye Olden Hines � h HUBBARD CLE:VELANU � . • �e L) In the fall of 1907 Iona Richard `I S. Sturges torn down and rebuilt the j steeple of the Universalist church. It was an exact copy of the old decayed ! eteaple which had become unsafe to y , stand longer. The late Barindus H. Booth, who was an architect and builder, once said to me that be eon- - sidered the architecture of that church perfect In every detail. The church was built by Wm. D. Cochran, tho grandfather of William,. Edward and Frank Cochran. Mr. Cochran came from New York to Southold in 1834 to build the house Por my father, 1n which I now roaldu. He kept the Notal opposite my home, now known as "Hupttinghurat," from 1834 Lill 1841, when he bought the Gil- bort L. Davie pla(e, where his grand- daughter, Mrs. Helen Cochran Eustaco, �. now hue her elogant summer home, "Thalian Hall" was erected by Mir ` Cochran in 1836.6. It stood next-wes>i +i - of the universalist church. The first I floor was used for his carpenter shop' t r and the hail above was a concert room,i The Southold Tippereanoe Club met' Ithereduring tho memorable campaign of 1840. 1 remember a mass meeting that year on the green lawn. The ,speakers' platform was erected against the rear of the church. After Mr. I Cochran bought the Davie place he go"Ttrut,i) ttxtvKnHAraH-r Duuiunt, FROM A WATER COLOu DRAWiNU moved Thalian Hall to the east side ofnY RICHARD LATURitta ABOUT 11W.the old house, which was torn down a I. 'There are two or three very aged nh.etiethyear, I recently stood by his few years since. The hall was again'I persons now living in Southold who grave near Trinity Church, Now Ro- moved to the rear of the lot and Is now knew Mr. Lathers. He was associated chelle. I also had tile pleasure ofmeet- Used by Mr. Eastern as an automobilewith Mr. Cochran and came with him ing Richard Lathers, Jr., and his sister garage. Several months ago I chanced from New York to build my father's Agnes, whose residences are in Now to be in this hall when a circular win- house in 1834. I have often heard my Rochelle and Now York respectively, d goomother speak of Mr. Lathers as s 'Vow each was taken out to glaze, and I I was shown every courtesy by thorn my attention was called to a name gontlemanly,reflned and studious young and presented with a picture of their written with lead pencil in a plain hand, mon. IIe wait a lover of art and de- Pother, together with a biographical "Richard Lathers, April 12, 1836." voted some than to drawing, architec- sketch, furnished by request of Flan' The Universalist church was dedi• turn and landscape gardening. Thecut dreau Post, 609, G. A. R., on hie eigh-'. Gated August, 1837, by Rev. Abel C. of the Universalist church, which ap- ty.first birthday, This may interest Thomas. Rev. William Fishbougb was pears in this article, has been made those who knew him and others who the first paotor. A musical instrument, from a largo water color drawing made have heard of him in Southold. I take called a.seraphine, was placed in the more than sixty years ago by Richard the liberty of quoting from it freely. choir gallery. Albert G. Case, father Lathers while living in Southold. At a pariah forty years otter date Mr. Lathers was under the When HSturges razed the church He Bays: "My maternal great- of Mrs. Henry Cochran, played l as cht. tuition of Alexander J. Davie, the tile- grandfather Dawson was an English steeple last November, the damn of tinguiehed artist in New York LJnivor- roctor in a small , Richard Lathers was again found writ- city, where be made the acquaintance, pia son died a member of Parliament. and profited by it, of Professor Morse, My paternal great-grandfather was a tenA. Tseveral places, also the names of ThenalsAA. Tarry, Frank Wells, Henry inventor of the electric telegraph, then '. Scotch Highlander, a colonel in the n distinguished painter, whose works British army. My parents settled in Corwin and others. Terry, Wells and rank with the first in American art. South Carolina,in which state my early Corwin but are old family y penes in South- Richard Lathers probably passed three'manhood was passed. (Nothing is set(] .old, but I have been repeatedly asked, Whn was Richard Lathers 7" useful yearn in Southold. Habout his boyhood or being in Southold Ilia death; occul'red Sept. 17, 1903, when in his'with Mr. Cochran 1839-7.) Ilnder the ' r tcommission ofGovernor`Pierce Butler, :the hero of our Mexican War, Ibecame B colonel of the Thirty-first Regiment of the State of South Carolina in 1841 and about the same times became the y;}rl senior warden of the Episcopal .church ?;tt of the pariah Prince George Winyah By the assistance of friends I earl 'embarked as a junior partner in:an exII - temelve mercantile business in. George- town, eorge town, South Carolina, and in 1847 I ..opened a -commission business ab 67 Broad St„ New York, branching into r�,' insurance and banking, and becamel .agent for cotton manufacturers, banks,1 ,� and insurance companiesIt of the South ' land ultimately president of the Great',, aVIsstermMarine-Insurance Co. of New 'York, with agenie in London, Liver- 4pool,,Havre and Antwerp, as well as e in'the chief maritime.ports of Amer- , lea, I was chairman of the Finance i= %Committee.of the Directors of the Erle , oRailroad in 18154. From all.-of these ecupatious, including. my, connection _ �riib,the Dine Railroad,I retired in 1869, when I received the sumptuous dinner- feet ofativerpresented to me at.. New '. Rochelle by Hon. William M. Evartson - behalf the Great Western Marine COLONEL RICHARD LATHERS, IV110 DIED SEPTEMBER 17, nba Insurance Company, after. an otRcial --and successful service of fifteen years. it with the able,assistance of Richard iconserve popularity in the many ride- fihie in brief is my business record: ' Lstl ars 1834.6.-_ _ __ •:tii ns Lhave held in either stntr. 1 hnvr r statsd�an a former-paper,.the-first ',never allowed party fealLy to pervert '• " {yeuYQzfgcted in Southold by William • �w- Amy principles in church or state, nor t have I deserted either for non-essen• hal 11"�,an was for'] father, Deacon tials. The first public record of my la"�'& �This'wgs'followed by. the a Union proelivites will be found in-my 6 e YSYI thold'Academye (now 61; . t 5i - , ` i 'Fourth of. July. oration delivered be- Church)nn whieh:my father:was $ y� 'fore the military, the citizens; and the I Mayor and City Counail of Georgetown od�'-1,I,dor ,Salah 'Hammond .wasg,,, td C f;}r ttprtadipal He,dted tat twenty, •?` tli�!. in 1841, I represented the Democracy JJ -1866 at till's a `of Weetcheater County: as their dele- 5 �.iateram tnuary, , d r . i� ( .gate to t State Convention at S ra- p1�ity' even , I 31 gtonB Palmer, I 4F tease in 1860. In connection with en. I�eobAtitman and`others-followed I Q Dix, Governor Washington Hunt, Wm bar distinct) the da I entered B Astor, Mayor Wood Gerard Hal- i­ yy 4nde',11e tuition of Mi3sJulia A.Wells ( lack and others,',a circular letter .was e,'lpagnitude of the edifice itnpreesed a � ',sent to theieadmg men of the state, e greii ,,,1 My des11 was Sarah !I, t , asking them to convene at my office, rower„a girl some years my 'son v s'_SO17TnoLD IxSTITU'CE . .33 and 86:Pine St.,.known as. the"Pine I r I”esteemed her highly and cannot Mr, I;athers'probably returned to hie, Street Meeting, to consider and eug- - uow hecall the name of an other,gupi) Southern home m 18366 or 7, and en- gest some remedy for the threatened the shd her husband, V✓illiam Y :Fltha tared mercantile business there and in rupture of,the Union. This meeting, i a Pi are at reatein Willoyy Hhl •Gema; N y. 'City. I 'quote again-from hie co osed'of'.eomethreehundredprom- ,My teach@r, Mies Wella,became yiographical sketch: "I moved to New ,anent conservative men of both parties, lleSwi ,e of;.Henry Fitz, of New ygrkS Rochelle 'N, Y.,op leaving�South Car- ;was opened iby meat the request of n u01,,1W ty yThey y TOOa uy Dap le) W olina:in 1847 having married July 9, Gen. Dix in'a short address, followed ��rsju onge"was roprietor of t}ie:Aced- 1346+Mies Abb"":Thurston, of Bond St; by the reading of the.fetter of Gen. "a"'"' d op ...�. ;August 23 1868;with New:York, an�Newport, R I ant) ,Dix to Secretary of the Treasury,Cobb yy purchased my present, residence Wm- ',of Georgia.and the letter of myelf to GebrgetlW;;'Dickeon ss principPal The all-Park,'at which time I also re- !Jud a Magrath and four other prom- ,qll ung year Cordello D Elmer, ofI si ned my military and church appmnt-.Iinent statesmen of South Carolia in hliwN�y waShott propv19 Yr audj mentis in South Garolma.,-'I have been behalf of the Union and against Seees- me r and the name was changedh hoporad ever since as warden of Trinity ''i cion. After reading.these letters and spfIndipa ,� Institute I ahava, Church, New Rochelle. Ivfy political fromt thediscoura in ; yfrom,»iAgademY s State` Ri ilia" xon, Cliaxles O'Connor-for chairman. had theyeutm this�artiden 1$Od„It is earnests Free Trader,chsracter. An At the close of hie address anditt!ose Ia<mrc�q]ar�seued by> Fns, D'emocrat,r.of'intehaeUmon roclivi�ties,,. .of.othex dietinguiehed speakers, a Goth- et gr ph d,lianae a correct P €viev{ofpE egirst iAcademy las�,ej le- Fussnde throe to oY�modified piyaction to” mittee of ,thirteen was appmnted:to wbed'ilPuhhasedbyitlelCalio7i arab a , Y �, �, r,-,_,�-.. reportproper meaeuree;. expr@gyive'.of ria¢etobefi I,$66 a� t IQ,oa nt,»>th t+rdgl�.,i� the-sense of the meepng of which. ')_w_nadby�MT hoc` ra'p w' 9.ha '��11.a- committee Wm. H, _Aepmwall_;waa;;;. c Iafsg g The committee reporteq ,�iF'p'lutidna and thelebi'ateN, at(agees " asac)tuaette agd,Qharleefon werehhemamty—but m,reaults-for land-grab ilia toijth as prepared y,,W6n Z,,Di1' '�iaoos where 4he:'more extreme"of:both bing has brought us no glory and In L Ilder these resolutions 'ex Rrealdep I sl esi'oame together, ahowing after all volves us in.numberless perils, What' t oto and myself'wer ap Ol ed'P,W, a.senate also to settle the many prob- 'g foithe South and preeenCtt�iem Mr tltatblood is thicker than water. It iemel Oh for, one hour of Abraham F511PnoYe,'un aceounttof,his�'dalicate was,'at his`; home in Charleston that Lincoln !holilth,$w,ae, unable to undertake' the 1 m7,liam Cullen Bryant met the South-� I write in haste, as I am just off to misslgn;and'I was requested,to go on ern lyrist, the author of "My Mary,-.preach to the students of-Princeton�, :rye behalf of'themoeting., In�the pperform- land;" Perhaps the meeting of'�Misa .University. anceiiof this mission I visited Waehtng '' Winnie Davis, daughter of Jefferson `I am my dear Colonel, ton and had confidential relations I na:with th`e Peace>Congress in behal8 of thel Davie, at Winyah Park, at a dinner Yours heartily, Union I-also visited Richmond; Au- given in bar honer, with the Republi Txeo L. CUYLPR._ _ gudta, Charleston, Savannah and Mont, can.etatesmen,anion them David Dud- LONG AGO IN GRDENI'ORT.� go#rrory, deliv11 ering the address ineach ley Field and Genoral Joseph James, plaeo With?proper remarks to the offic- Greenport, Feb. 28.—It is nbEful ials, iMy address to President Davie of andagain at his. York .residence; if any sea coast village on the ragged the.Confederacy, in presenting thePine .i tbe;,meeting of the accomplished Baugh- Long Island shores has undergone great- Street•'appeal, was'.,delivered duly a Irtereof Geserala'U. 3. Grant and R.-E, er changes during the past s:xty years couple;of :days before the attack on than has Greenport,the eastern terminal Fort Sumter, after which I went to LeeJmay be said; to have closed the. of the main division of the Long Island Mobile byy invitation of.the Union mer I bloody+gulf of secession Railroad. There are, however, quite a chants of-their Chamber of Commerce Col:: Latl#ers' earl married life was number of the boys of those stormy and whiles addressing'there'.a large i�x`'as;� YkP days alive, and still living here to tell meeting of.the citizens, the newscame '+<''�",.pd in°.Bond.St t.,'N; Y City, which of the experiences of their youth and of by teleggraph that For Sumter was P $lmoetexclusively a social center. the great changes in the social, political. at¢acked; which of couras brought my -- -- and industrial conditions• address to a premature end. It is due It extended from Broadway to the One of these is Charles L. Corwin, a the courtesy of theSouthto say that Bowery, aainglelong Klock in. which contractor and builder, now in his nine- the presiding officerof the meeting, a tieth year and vigor bus and spry as a leading Secessionist, requested the en- lived some-of: the leading citizens of q g g_ boy. Every morning he reports at his t@amen to wait Iong enough for a'..reit these times, such as Gena John A. Dix, of ice on South street for his daily task, olution of thanks, but declaring a ,non. Dr,,john W. Francis, the Pell and Although nearly four-score years and concurrence with my Union :views. Sampson families; and the 'Ward fain- ten he looks carefully after his business From there I went tokeepa like ap- interests,draws hie own plans for his pointment-:is New Orleans. On my ily, including the famous Julia Ward buildings, and oversees their erection arrival inthat cit 'Iwas met b the Howe. y personally. He also assists in the man- Mayor,with a polite but firm order to. Tome the:most entertaining of the ual work of his various buildings, and quit the city at once'?' _ _ can walk up a ladder with as stout a 400 pages of "Reminiscences of :Rich- beam as any of his men, On,`returnmg to New York, Colons] and:Lathers" are those devoted to Old One of the most startling questions Richar!1,1athers largely occupied hist NewYorl# Days:r' He purchased and l or rather topics,for discussion inGreen- time'.withtthe Union Defence Conl it-'f improved nearlytwo hundred acres of port and adjoining east, end villages tee.:}1n.,Arganizing.,volunteers-for the land in New Rochelle and.Pelham, He sixty years ago was the, litigation in army and;.with the Chamber of Com-1 also purchased nine farms in:Berkshire, the courts over the divisio�r of the Brad- mer , - ley Wiggins estate,.which extended from e and clubs of thecity- in rat eing Maes.,between Pittafieid and Lenox,and. South street to the. bay and embraced furdiVoi tha'government, co-operatipgl erected a neat villa having a picture a large area, now occupied by hundreds wrttt",�aSegrstery Chase. His address gallery, called .after Mrs. Lathers, of residences and the.local school build- '' bef ref>?realdent Lincoln and his -Cab--' "Abby Lodge." :He was err earnest, inge• u 'r�t'I - Bradley Wiggins had two wives, and met#�nl WOahington was printed in the I practical farmer, and delivered more by his first wife he�had a son and by his i�otf afgrohihe day He made speeches! practical addresses on agriculture in second a daugliter. The.relatives held i#I(�a �eT'9r, England EdinburghylI Berkshire than any New Englander, 'that the daughter s1iould not beentitled 3d and+ an'd Lucerne '3witzerland;qh He.wae a member of spine thirty seep to as great a portion of the immense .�.�_ ostate as the son,t oleaused she was a r1# cis £,oftthe.defenoe of-the :Un ctatioga, clubs and buaipeae organiia- child of the second wife, The courts tong epart!cular]yvalued his good weregreatlyperturbedover the peculiar I tione'uand m;his three residences ex-:I situation, and the gossip of the town ,P,6falle,�gfter thevictory for the +Un1 tended hospitality Irrespective of pol- was something unheard of before. The to t eilig ogle in histhree tnteretato court finally„ itica,gr section, y decided that as the son and sae e,rioe, -Fsr +entertain distinguished daughter had the same father, and as c r ' I hsve�written enough in this paper. the father had earned the estate, both ;m oP¢�bgth aides, imbued with alis - 's �o�PiGeneral`Grant:in giving us-the 'to ei#owltSouthold geople that'Mr.Lath-. children should have an equal share, If era was no I'Copperhead,' As.charged., they had both been children of one ;past g1:aG sentimept, , Let us have1 He once 6lietied a pamphlet en--= mother, instead of one father, the of- .✓ s ada]egate;from Charles t titled" I'l l , r on the Social end po•, fair would have ended differently. �,Mb �6"bnade`speeehes at the national i httc 1 r ., dot Of course there were the days of the tt� la ¢ �� gra ion;of,the Times, that`I whaling industry in Greenport,and sev- eanti conventions,held in Buffalo calledrtfxom his'ol8.friend, Rev. Theo eralstartling revelations of that period more. At one:of [bees con acroL 'Cuyler, D„ .D., the:followings are still being talked over by the old y I t#s,a'reaolution was passedithank letter aelta at the old headquarters in Tram ` r t '' Preston's atone, at the foot of the Main 'in '�}iarleetop fol sending so consan', a ,� Brooklyn, Oct. 1, '98. street dock. The one most remembered ai'delggat0. On eneml ,cease#ovist �1lTYJRear Qld Friend; : 6 the old-timers, ;tae haYleaton residence ''�y'sr + �, Y however, was the y11; became blie„e�"g4•, r r, Amen I„ and Amen r td: failure of Wells & Carpenter, agents ,f x t4' raternel meeting place of,tti s9f' @!' °�ne,of yoyr'pungent and ower, for the big whaling which made FAQ sof�ttot} armies and aleotrof iva�e " ts4gl;``� "hl@tai It ought to go on wi s� _ their headquarters in Greenport more i + ,t< , ` gr •..r € qg than half a centuryago. It was about 11 �i f the Cabinets sof o ¢ 'g a 0.8' eaefin o every,,house and heart - - g a'�i,��FlzhisIl'l ts, none for im.) - _ ,....... . . 3y this time, too, that-the slave question After conaideting the history of Lliel was being intensely agitated through- 'Suitable rest teems for depositors out the land, and Greenport was the community, 18theperiod in which the will be found on either aids of the main hot-bed of eastern Long,Island. After town was founded, together with the 1 entrance.vestibule. The rear mezzanine the failure of this firm, in which the Jorge plot and ideal setting available, lede3oted to D(rectore' Room and Com- turned lost their fortunes, Mr. Wells the.Architects conceived a building of turned his attention to regaining his enuine earl American Colonial archi- mittee,Room. Here Again American share of the lost fortune quick y by A Y walnut'is used for Bide wall panelling bringing slaves here. It was at the tecture set well back from the'street and floors, time that the good ship Swallow was intersections. The building was further Centrilly located in the rear of the pplying between Greenport and New planned for its setting among the old Yoric, carrying freight and the few work space, there will be.a security passengers who traveled in those days. elms and moues With a aeries of-drive- vault 8 ft, wide and 1B ft, deep. This Mr. Wells had the vessel enlarged, and ways to preserve the luxurious growth 'vault will be constructed of materials he started for the west coast of Africa of trees now on the premises. Taking far in excess of those demanded by the after a load.of slaves. Herealizedthat cognizance of theeverincreasing traffie. if he once got them into this country g insurance companies. The walls, floors 'his shrunken fortune would have been and lack of parking.facilities, provision and Ceilings will he of massive, heavily regained. has been made to accommodate.. de reinforced concrete lined with 11 in. of With a foreign crew he set out. He positora' cars in the parking Space at drill-proof steel. The vault .entrance. loaded the big ship and started home- the rear of the building.ward, expecting to dispose of his human h The building t bull rove a frontage on door will be of 12 in, solid steel con- cargo along the southern coast. That g struction, equipped with all- the latest was the last ever heard of Mr. Wells, Main Street'of 50 ft. 4 in. and a depth .improvements including time lock, the well-known ship agent of the east along Railroad.Avenue of. 83 ft.. 6 In. I pressure system and massive epee. end. The crew, however,arrived safe- genuine Harvard bolts. ly in this country, sold their slaves,and The exterior will beef . The entire. vault will be pia• the vessel, and getaway with a large ,fAe brick trimmed__w th Indiana _lime-. tected with an alarm system which will amount of.money. It has always been atone, The entrance feature consists operate in the event of an attack on the belief here t a$the crew fell upon of appropriate limestone columna Sur-' 'either the walls or� the door. .This Ca L. Wells, killed''him, and tossed his '.mounted by a limestone cornice and alarm system pie further designed for body into the sea. ediment in which will be carved a Together with- all these sensations P use in.connection with daylight holdup, on the sea there was another on the ,:bee-hive, aymbolllc of theIndustryand Provision is also made for a future. land and right in the heart of the worthiness of,both the :depositors end !, vault in the basement of the building. village. At was a firebug who set fire_ the bank. Oneither aide of the bronze, to two of the shipyards and other val- An added feature of the bank service• noble property before his identity be- main entrance doors will be the usual to depositora will he found in the Bare came known.. His nems was Hemy expause.of brick work so familiar to, deposit boxes to be installed in the Horton, one of the best known citizens architecture of this type, withbronze vault, of the community .is well as one of tablets extolling the worthiness • of Tire work apace for the bank officials the most highly respected, His identi- ty thrift and date figures setting forth " caused much surprise in the hustling is,completely equipped with all the old whaling port. After considerable that the bank.was founded 161858 and latest devices and the mechanical evidence was gathered and the man the new building constructed in 1926. equipment throughout will be of the questioned about the crime, he is snid Over the main entrance doors and to have confessed, saying that he at best obtainable, The electric, plumb- . times grew crazy to see a fire, and that below the pediment there will be: n Ing,heating and ventilating-work have he set them to see thetblaze. This sort balcony which leads from the interior all been given due and proper con- of incendiary was something new to the mezzanine, sideration. old-fashioned stock of the settlement All the :windows will be a United A,survey of the plane and specifl and he was placed under arrest. Ilis .States Government bronze,,glazed with son came down here from the middle estionsleadli ustobelieve that the bank, . of the Island to help him, and the man plate glass:. officials have met the occasion in ai was.allowed the freedom of thephaco. .The entire:building will be of fire- mostworthy-way and that the'ir..new One night night however,. he took Opium proof construction with maeglve concrete building will be a distinguished addition and died tows next meeting. Charles , llunder floors 'Corwin, now living in this village, sat .foundation was, concreteto the architecture and progress of the' allwith the man until 6 o'clock the and roof.supported by steel framing, town, Their depositors will be afforded next morning and the victim died at 9. i Extrancewill be through a vestibule every convenience and safety and the. "lined with into the main .bank- - --- bank should, enter upon. a period .of yy 9 ..L6 ing room. Here the depoei tot's eye will even greater prosperity than has been Ground was rol.en this week forwthel meet a room of rare beauty, 23 ft. high theirs in the many successful years Thebalconies at either end, The floor Savings since their organization in 1868, pow, home of the Southold g +Bank at:the northwest corner of Main will be of genuine Travertine stone The general contractors are the Wllls LStreat and Railroad Avenue, Southold, :With a border of black and white Egelhof Co., Inc., of N, Y. City. - New York. This event will mark •marble. . The aide walls' will have a The Hubbard and Lange, Inc., of N. end of months cif planning by the ;Tavernellq, mprble wainscot with Y. City, will 'install the .heating and Architects and the Bolding Committee Travertine atone above.` Cornice and ventilating system. of the bank, and it planned,-•that lha ceiling will be finished ittulaatar_.mieb book will take possession of its new Colonial ornamentation in the form of William H. Raiford of Southold will I baChk ill t or about April 1, 1$27. taloa frieze and, plaques. The dental do the plumbing and drainage, The Architects, Francisco &Jacobus, and trim will be of genuine American Thomas A. Stacy of Southold'has the walnut su mounted by,pediments- an contract for the electric wiring:., with oflicee�n New York; Chicsgo end .e . . 8 I The Diebold Safe and Lock.':Co„ .of trimmings of Tavernelle marble. liaok Detroit,, have solved^the problem,aP screen will ba of Tavernelle marble New York City has the contract for} design in a-most satisfactory _menu n�.r 'wtth bronze.trimmings. _ _ __.. __ th_e.ins alling af_the_v_ault, ., __3 110 ill! OR i The New Southold Savi£no,-s Bank BRd*ng 1,10 L qty �3 Yrs� `Ru°�/✓ `y�9 �G�tSvgt'�''�"`y �y Y x�'�"a .�xc. ..p. fir`)C 5 The: New St Patrick's Church 3 1� ^r x t ; ; s ''u'x y Y" x ex x .;3Y�h ��� it x ,F%•^��� e c 1° ca ex �'k ,�¢�` s i` kx ' s x : •� �. !,' �'§&s�£ >3 kY Y�r �s/Y �5l>Y SS�� 3 e A e •i� ... t L S3 t "V > �,The�goj(tract to build the new 8't.I will measure 62 feet The church build- pacify of:600, not including the specious tPatick's Church and Rectory was ing.:will be,106 feet in depth. choir mezzanine. Yp@lydedto the Howes ConetructionCo.• The roof will be Spanish tile. . Color. Both buildings will have a set-back '.. �nPNew`York City, : ful"tile bands; cast stone and stucco of fifty feet. - 001Fridav, next, at 9:80 a. in,, the will add to its'oinamentalign• A wide walk will lead to the three ,ground'M I be broken and work,will The auditorium will bave:over 4,000 rosin entrance doors of the church. begin a's;soon as the contradicts can square feet of dancing.- space. The The front steps, having.awidtit,of 21 get men end materials on the place. stege will,be modern in`every respect, feet, will, lend dignity to the front The•buildings will be of brick and There will be tWo large dressing rooms,' elevation. steel construction end will be built ec two rest rooms, a large kitchen fitted Special attention been given to cording Go<the New York City building up;witb every modern convenience, hat �, the lightf g and,ventilation, A:aeries Jcod0 and'will comply:with:'evtry law of check -room.,'and boiler room. Four P ofceilingducts evil permit a complete. urns Bpilt� ng,`Health-and FireDeport- spacious exits add to the safety �2 t - change of air in lees then three min- ', +mgnts of:-New York:City. :, and comfoxG of.the people. The eudi- Otte, if-necesesry. The design willmodern ads torium ie so arranged tha4it ie really e �4ton oP,$pameh architecture, rte• e to-, separate unit. Mr. A. F. Meissner of J.armdeap N. trot deteilg to produce the character of The floors of the church property will Y.,.iethe architect. the old,tlpe Spahieh''churcb J- be of Terrazzo. All interior L wall@` of It is expected that both buildings will The Pror�t wtll'fie 147, feet in. WI tb,,4be church will be treated with morene, be ready for. occupancy on or before •end,the'near, w(th^'thesecr'lety;. viiog@, i The church will have @seating ca- Feb.`let,_1927. a /V a%��`dmark atl , ,`{,ly trxorl " ;,, afilag ' A ask f®r A`lmos`t a C'en'tury; emolishe a a e a,' f®r Modern Bank . • l y �tt�ling , I Original Proprietor.Erected First Part of Structure N'utx' YF yMo19 1 k f v n in 1830—Noted as Social Y ' Gathering Place in Stage " t Coach Days. Pb'pecig1 til TMs ba'lcd Southold, L. L, reb. 18-1he march of r4odern; progress ;has robbed this village of another oT its hlatorical; landmarks—the old ^k s ag3 d ,i'y . `; ;Southold ITotel'i0 no'mom and tho 'Es :+ li, ""r`'E�»� u w.ts. .• picture of It as it:once was to all that Sent '01 p sop Is soon WIII have Old South ld` Hotel to remember it Uy,�.[ot as fa Usuah Jo; coaling for a site on - A;Soolu ------ --o---- In such case the byilding as It as whleti to oreet a larger and more l ,Oenter. ' s modern bank,the officers of the It was,tho:,gathering spot of real' Will on aoa fade ,from mem-01 Sou thold Savings picked the l spot `life for many miles .around ea'i ded crow ,{crit,b�v alothgr �t4itdIn6 toy where. rho.„hotel was—and'that the ,pepially to the days when It ;vas.' be ereRteil"qn tNe same she.' ”- canner,altuation, both broad �and Tho,spot wh@ro. Sito hots &tool{ doop, will be,greatly ornamilictpd by considered proper for men to drink' t i the.now banking home, wit .its.la red Ilkker"it they wanted'Yo, for pearly a century, catet•ing;: foul A x - Other notables than William' ,mo§t of,that ttms, to 'man ' ail I out.:of ti u e tto a ' flowspi and Wells olso were co nectefl with tiro boast,"�as�t kph}ase was lathe tvlll continuo to, ba'a. cunepicuotis` n he spot In the village, seems Qo be al= old hotel—men lllco John Wlokham, old stage cos,eh days, will soon ua ready'guaranteed: The vlllsgo put- Charles Honnabury, Ike 'Dtllard, gt11ized'by a`1 .1haoda' ri bew home ple rseem to be pleased,with4tha,lo-1. I" L. Judd'.:and others: Like theI "I Por the'Well na'wd duthold 6av- old�place of enjoyment,- they, too,, foga 'Bank kithe ha¢ beught `the catibn'•aelected by the banlG for°Its�ihave pasaed'on, with their work weq, site' bore{ d1111"!",all ''a few months nen% building. done, .p'or :many years Theodore ago, but lhaving4npnao,far a,•` qt§I ;Exact pate,Not Known., ' Iiotnkisa acted:' as the proprietor'. the wpoden,te@rggtbre:pil;tho alto;was ,Illstory to am d, he n, : little bit and manager of the hotel„ It was: agld to'ti`s",l�ltoy@d aw,¢y. hazy'rlegarding the specific ldate of he who;aold .It to the bank, but that.. Qut.au>ldttA dlfferent, slices ar♦{ll tho' aractloiflof;tho-old e- he might'still enjoy'a near a,esp moved tl}e structure:- will 'still bei ulat cm, with the property Mr. usoPul 1th rho�srage:' of realdgncos' tel, but ae near' ae can+-We tlgured Hoinklss has. built a pretty cottage ap.ltltoygn all aemblapoo of tUo:ho�4e) a,pafE dt th bul}ding;at least, was close by, and to now Ilving there„ .I ttsp)f 'will bojJbik in rho recphdlr eonstr"A d 1n.d 8il There 1e no ,In some'respegts Southold"ppopleI tloil na:"'' " dieagl,e silt mi,Ahe theory that feel that an old friend :has paasell 1;"t,MtnroTaken., `. r Wllllwtn H W@he thad�,lt hpllY for out of their rives In the tentopa'1 oft hlmeelP Ids was-a� ! big map lits the hotel and,they rogret It"oto the Tho plcturp printed herewltha t>te dommvhlpy aY3tTgrbhant•ae woll�one hand, while being pleased wl'ths and taken only a^�flY on so before ae�a,bokpl man 'FWrstd prouil'nenY Irti the fa.cf too,:that on ' Ito^ alto pV{111 the deshi4atton of the old llostslryj marry,lop ways: The general bei�eoop l'lse a;'Uullding to house sn-' r flet there i@ the,tl']telt(rst had;,a resp other, Impbrl;,ant•part of':Southold's was begun le tit a_oofitaln eensg3tf;e last view; lhht many, old friends of ;deuce;on th@ site'; than nJlftip,lntpn history„the;savings bank; This ili., Atha hotol' will have. of what was a 9ko}e atld shortly at{.er ;thnt;he stltutlo❑,hoe long been very ptoml= oncera `,pfominenE„hgtol” anQ Et wpded..very,,mntoflallY Eo lila.,plant neatly )dent{>!led with Southold It; 4avorlte 4endezvpus,gPo�r',amore 'folk g ' maI'llde _111111 of Irk .,Tl{ria has now outgrown its,pr�oent-horiieI .gathering,ter social pgtatll6ne of vn- ne-ha{l a+�hpule ,r a etoie n:anfl' 'a and within,agfew_moetha::eRpeota to. Clous' kinds. To these, and'P to, hotel-and Anan¢ged all.+ ot`_' them have building operations under way scores of,,others who h$w,e boon tot qulte'sueoessfully, 1t 1s.remarkedR, , that will provide for ono of the fin.' 9oUthold only accoslblisjhy jt is Tk was s larke',r bung sfruotura eat, bank buil'dinga m),all, of Long ,6onaldere that, tile+ plRture .will that,ilto�'had for the hotel,'atid filled' Island r<i b}Ing balk a dio0d pY pleaeapl. Tec a bf' sod In later years for the vll pllecWontl. P 1 , In y9�uthold far it provided StY]es change 3p 11 �glr@t + i{,' fs� Ch Qi ��{ r90 wltar0 all aorta o4 larFe agreod and thio+�idt�.Posl °App sPS ab�h ����ar, ba�quoka dapooa rPepularhad e¢mm'ec¢�d�titp+Wal�oj eWo�{Ill aG io ,afid augh',thing4 ,Uotpre tt'pssagd abtiref^ uaN pY,„th@`� , r 0U7(e ri It la .'elated+that ppicture The sit �qks%¢YnahJpred+t�l'y mal+vF`. g ehgld@te end that al 7atsr Years”to t"o fr2Ylghln'tltfi imoet�,lq �etla rn ,phY'gatherlAgs Lol sgaehore to bo popuf• �a rias mnyq � lows �. a h otlypa,Wkt)1, Plo¢sant reg' ', ------------- y3 Robert F'uiton's Work and Ideas,, Howx� r, I ivill•ntot admit thit is so at : de- a Huncixed Yearn"Ago z EB anras thea ft attaok ;t0for dontyof htef 'Will The,i followipg netcapaper alWing, � grow the liberty of the sees; ,an object: h@nd@d'ua u•fety+;cjpys`ago for publjca- of infifiHo importance to' the,welfare of tlori;�spesks for itself : / �J U ,+ ' America° and "every civilized country.', u But thousands of witnesses have now THE FIRST STEAMBOAT IF,. .seen the steamboat in rapid movement, FULTON�S AOOOIINIT OF THE FIRST TRIP _BP- and they liblieve—blit,they have not Seen; TWREN,NRW-YORII AND ALBANY—VALUE,OF a shipof war destroyed by a torpedo,' TORPEDOES AS A'MEANS OF WARFARE FEE and.they do notbelieve. . we cannot DICTEn.. aspect people in general to have a knowl, -- edgewof physics, or: power of mind ouffi In khekluffolk Gazette,printed at. Sag-, oient to combine ideas and reason from Harbor, on the east end of Long Island; 1 causes to 'effects. But in case we have ,October 12, 1807,A6 a letter from Robert war, and the @nelny's Ships tomo igto ur, Fulton to Joel Barlow, givingau acooudt: water,if the government will give lne of,the first trip of the first steamboat on reasonable means of notion, I will Boon �ho'Hodson river. It is as follows: convince the world that:we have surer TO �BARLOw. PHILAD%LPIIIA, Bud 011eaper modes of defense than they Jo Now-YoRR, 22d Ang., 1807, I aro aware of. iMy,,'DEAR FRIEND:. My' Bteamhoa,G u Yours, oto„ - voyage'towAlbany and back has turned ROBERT FuLToN, lout rather more favorable .than I had • -' - " oalonlated The distance from New II �®g�•}��1/@� ® � � y� Sava gs `York to Albany-is,150miles; I ran it tip IAtL ld rl�t,thtrt"14,yAWo hours "and down In thirty' ,yy botiB Tho latteP is just five miles n' dank„�B-utldix g and Presents v �honr'r had a dight breezo,;agryinst lna ".A the whole way going and corning,so that +�`7 - 1 $g!]-g� uo use;was made of my Bails; and the e } �/1 ��b� �r11 �Ss®cy�(9YlA F aroyf-11age`bos been performed wholly by the s a- o ,°,J' ;potryeq"pf .the steam angina: .°I overtookAW - on�y` loopa and; schooners:. bearing to' = - TI rbnccini co I ne a'anll•J nd�dfd; and passed,them as if they r - -- soua,ola T t. Ante 'A' --All of �7�bee8',nt anchor, ' Buys Butl�utg, for Villltg J 8r III a isl elle sutehrg the nr.tOO- w@rof propelliu g boats by steam Iof the teuy Generous but gnttn mod- rOv@[� T11S CIjdrnlB f”1 ell. DL•s. p;rhta Cahoon Boath -toe for ea 7 n P g cause aN her P•ttt tette e t for ✓ Ch �ypey0 , Wer@ It per�gp@ Southold tv liicU PI onlptod her to UuY h "� ereone Iri hive cit who bo= y Yi y . the Southold Sarongs Bnnl Uuildinr""; get t,4the boutwouldever move one t I ror 817,000 and 1,resent it to the � �o>ir or bs a e 0[ the least utility / %,_ II one nmial Tfor aper late ry irattler Gan l '1 d le a were putting off from the li' +w P g „ i mother, lir. and ALIS- 1'3(1 d D. I which was crowded with a eat Ca con, who wore tong active bonsi- �heald a Bomber of•sarta 610r0- me n the social ch la and religious wort.ht this villa e. �ma'�R1 this is the wayo know :in ?y a y 7.'ha Uuilding that wit: helwefot til pjv!UiWA1'&OrRnt. men Compliment w1I4 'I Ila so the It Vary is a Pretty bi lel: they jq ll,•philosOphers and projectors.' sty oture standing an a columand- "F - to eledatiao in the center of the Havfng employed much time,and zeal' vII1aGe. It. is coi,swered to he ad- 1 apd m0Bey in aacompliehing this work,it miranly situated Hord UUilt for It- ,gives me, as it will you, great ploasuro'fP, brae' 1) rnoses. I3ecause of the use i, Lo n•hlch Its. BoetII intended to ir06,,A 'rso,fully answer my eapeotationy'i� 9r�r F x Is -1of the . oporty Lilo saving* 'k ' 111 Ips a nick and then eonve - 1,ant trustees, 111.en+ise Imbued With ereh ndise on the`Miseiesi ,,H the s0rit 44l' Pilings hetnruhless, sot? r P � PP ` it. ror wh"z.t is called hao Uri more it eBOnfl and other great rivers whish t :: ' I;Ilton a nominal'consideration J, tel(noq 1pying Of7en their tri area to Sn behnlY ot! Mrs. Booth tc is setr�i a aerprlse Of our countryman. And f / •- 1 That It ivas In no sillflu of Sitt tcthlg lr q, s. y attontlj�p to ]Mself that she made ajt augh'tpe prospect of personal emolu. - to spS'endid girt to tree lih,uv. but l�qs+'been Some inddoement to me, hrrs. �flna Cahoon 13aoth, 'Pathm•to Perpe[us.te til r. nanla of her etrl'fe91•lnhnitel to ie leasurO"'In ter nprents and In this tv.ry to contuwe o P 'at least one or the 111o.i is that Res lleC�lnd; with you on the•immense ad- _ -- — - gear,to thmr ]rnarre. :eeu„g that utl- Is Ile thiol(; Che)' would III c to have vnntag$thryt my country will;dsrive[qom p typo if Itlex roula,e>P>:oss_-- g st, the tnventlon. ' -- - t til ti!Itig tit Southold hq k , r$gp' 1gviFiH + 18rOTly ,rr,� )Ectty, pp€n lnjTutl odbd�,beaauso ofy an I's Cahoot were'AeaPi>¢r 9ett r e v� oesposur8of Wm M Tweedsrasaal in u' good worts that ted"to be r,y E 4'le e s at' ,H✓ d`Y,��t 1'es and f;he pubic was ia'po mood Go or 'Ines—the church the 'sohoo K.iyoun Ds is deae¢ ed` $o was an`a ltolerate sudh specal legislatron But : class theatricals for .}wliie ll 4 r y,b1Se bunk was oharterad and the Crus' utllold is noted; the Y \i, G. AJ i✓lscelleut" citizen, a- model -in ;uranyl i.ees.met one- 4 ne day in'May (1872) at Che' �.ile Y, w. C, A. and many otlie ways; rile world has never had too i`Lpug Island Hgirse to organize. It 1\iad; undertalchtgs i\L•. Cahoon was pFeq Ysell in 0 kteitt of tkic board of trustees Of tit' many men like him, and never will, Ben ami,uas Pres dent'�bbt,9 so far as hba m y ,'Lfq and airs. Caboen haj f His taking off leaves the tariter the the j, I, knows no ,slate"had been homed a•ad,cheerod, flnancin.By aoi ' helped lsetl;,,.Cheet everPr o.ieIV Hi last survivor of the original Board of� made as to the other oflloers JelmqtI _ S. wits ch tirrul.n of tile. town's. 975tt 'Trustees of the Riverhead Savings Bank, Mnroy was chosen first vice president,', annh ei•snry cotebratlma committee and it might be cod time for you to Dr: A, B. .Luce second vice president; during vvhieh one of the thought,{ g g Y and8ho writer secretary: Hon. James'. was to devote the. surplus fund,iprint'the facts about the early History. H Tuthill -wasrohoseil attorney and; toward.securtrw a fireproof home fm of the bank. I eou,sel, He and tiro writer were made the library. The good work started In flue fall' 1870 James 13. Slade, a committee to prepare bylaws. W@ti by the couple is now to be perpel4-, , pp yy ated by their daughter. then selling sewing machines, anti re tileort bylnwa oflGhe using and I''ulton'. Inherited Lrntcrprisc. lipi•inting.' "' little nbeet to help in the Street 6avtngsBank, tahioh the writer's Mrs. Booth leas n.n On11' child, hnslnesgi advocated the Starting of a 1 happened to.have, Z�hcu hot' parents died she iras a�- g I :Tile other trustees were Jeremiah bI, cutlg`.girl a student in thc. \fury eaviugs`.bank in Riverhead. Nothin Moses 11,iron School in Swn•th more. Pn came of It, however, but that Tittle Fd'wBe jamin, now n Ketcham,uier, John, b'ollotving her gra"nation she mice' ghoot.heoatne The Riverhead News, sled CBement R'. 3coul of.Southold DCwki , John .. Perkins, Simeon 5,1 and they hove spout several veli,l'� On flue Uh of July, 1871, the;late N. Hiiwklns, John R. Corryi,, Nat, W',' p aveunG ht foreign countries, dw nl^ ly. FosEar and the :writer, composing-,Oster,leeao C Halsey, R, Thomas Os- which sirs has chtenv studied tiro y, born,Tholnas Coles,Jonits:Pishel,Daniel w m•k abroad of the F. At, C, A i1' the firm of Poster & Aokerl suaceed- tvhtolt slto is deeply haterested slid ung I3, D. Foster, who had long con- 'A. (3rlffin and our lately, deceased rory active because she feels that •duoted;a store on the corner where D. friend,.J. H¢lssy Y- On"I worts among girls Is one of the fines We".011 ed in"$25 apiece to make things that can ho sono roan..: T i Henry;Brown is:note, met by appoint- ,up,a fund le buy , safe and a few the Y: �V. C. A., tvnrlc she has he1 cent in the store and made up list of -books.Twoof thesugontlemen demuu'ed come widely lmovt't1 and.ctill ta hint promfne¢t residents of the toivnwho, •;to this'flYand PP their names we' sued Yq e.ntla i. we thought, Inheriting her Parents. u'aclih 11 would he suitable cud! businessdon June TYiinDr.e back RH Ben` is also realized hero tt here sir. 1� wtlling to assist.in the organization of I jamin's ofce,. The first depositor w*,es,' beat, knotva that.she also till I.at d the late S uIuel Pugsley Who vistQd, Lboil. enterpriap and above aI els- a saving bank, We included ourselves, ,ins in the County Cleric's b(floe one dttyl their desire to he gallet'a1An and bel,j of course. ' -'• -- r-- we interviewed these people during soog after the organMati¢n and bePoh$; Cul ht every good cause and to 4lint .. ortunity'offered, and June"1, saying he had heard there ,d'aa', aims site Is dei othlg her life, Iter lithe summer as Opp to be a 8aVipge Uank in Rlvorhead and'. neighboya luld her cxtrAnaely•aerllo of their' oonsent (not all Consented,, lie wanted to:Ue lie,tii's t depositor. IIs' cratlgrliospitable, vivacious, lovable, K _ einter, however), The Yate Joshua=L: Wells handed mIr 6iI and when the pace ane, perso and decidedly describe ea'. 'UeoOr wero received from rho p 'is One, person ;vett nunlitlep to aescrtbe declined—thought'a saviage tiank waa __several Jaye.later, Book N•o, 1 was her say's: "Slle la a happy comb/na- sired to'him, tion of youthful enWusin sat ,and not needed, but:rather a bank for die' O B, ACICERLY•. ars sound Anagmmtt. She is alert and him that itewasiter.rerloubtul mtfb the tneloes: YCnkers,, ept 11, 1911. responsive to appeals. always ready .. re give asslstnlce, ns. n•ere her Bary Capital ($50;000) could_be secured — p;u•e iv whore she is convinced the i,the town. I believe ft Yl3tr. pr_olecL Imam. consideration is a ,The'.late J. H.::Tuthill'tras one Of the' good one and worthy of suPPOr , list, and acted as our legal adviser. At She ad1L not, howevmr, lend her ,nnan that.time each awyingga bank-was incor or her influence. to anything that orated b sot of dill Legislature and''. does not appeal to her as sound lir, p Y Sees the to tiro t•igpt.dlreatint as shay as now orgAnd w,e=had to>p ld hanotice l SCCfl t110 l'ig'ht."" At present Mrs,1300th.is ocmlpy Ing of appliaatiopn to tUepLegttjln Lathe loon• the beautiful Cahoon estate, "Over at to°incor orate s e42fy 6. , Sound V111a" north Of this vilh, tion and rop0Bed bIla, lnh-'.$Gate pa making this her Pet ma)leut bout a per a �l�unY tori,a aertgm gunge$ of where she is found to be a most' weeks, Whentihe Legislature t the` gracious •and.hospitable hostess ItI SgpeF�nteudent of Banks 1,Oluid ia, this thite the Y. 'Gtr, C A. work in nus Annual report the fact of ppr,inten tills dountry rind, abroad Is engaging tion,:&lid debflned Eo apl3roveid.t,'sa�i,g nbuli"oY her %ti'nio mrd att)'intipn I savings She is at tits hood of the C.Irls WorkJ there' was a very suo Bios hasd'and DeparUncot of. the Suffolk.'County one bw a hiin,17 AD cogsatyv wekhead and{ Y, W. C, A,. FIpn. John.S, Maroywus Included in It W E be cmisiderablo time Ye: proposed of trustees ana t was- befo rthe llbrn•Y. Which In all tilts- our ro osed list`r'�' y l Y or Suffolk lihopd will now be ofndally colied the elected member yI�es@,pt ) e Cahoon Afelao,inl T ibrnryr.will be Coauty Schen haying gal one member) Fable to o(rupy its Property, fm nc t int;ysgrtaud Ile had g arose and skill tual po session will not pass 11%, enough+ P)yrmgt?akbuG,Lhe passe of ag the U:u,I wocts Its nen lamne,,vv hyo1 the,no§inisPita q'`tllglJ�[lpos}tion of the will, how of lir, probably be done [ ho' r9lS Penny y, Sayip ink pnflite Third Avenue haulq tY to i tt ifli ht at(sr It Is(.alstctmand Pion �:sq p w able, too that a.prrt of the lfbt lir V S�ay(Yi'�sl n` In�roa,e tQ[k had but re building such as the vaults t Iitto;il}0Qd` t'y,1ogS Of many lopot, is ill be used for town ban pm Mon, � , ,,e e b s�iad been ar po es, tit( cmuhuadrtion at 1s bel r 2 s ' he interest of;, hrro, salving' the l''robfInn Of,,a to7at ygR4kz9d o flnmgbagstb t Way. 3,t'a ,gglanpelitiga}',' r anizattm in,1 3ta11 In a haP13' �•--*— — y NEW ENS a x s(' i s s i THE NEW SOUTHOLD SAVINGS_ BANK BUILDING -- The Southold Saving's Bank extends' � 'rne first committee.Appointed 'to story back room in the home of Ed- a cordialInvitationto the public'in remote the Plan of organizing the ward Huntting,a brother of the hank's general to attend the formal opening �urE Albertaon.and John Wlilsam IH Rowell, first s ix montl- first hs showed 7 deposits alg' Ag- of their new building .on 'Saturday, July 23rd; between the hours of 2 P. 'i,The original incorporators were Al- gregating $8;671.27 with withdrawaW m, and 8 p..in, This event will mail: ibert Albertson, Hutchinson H. Case, of $2,400.63 and earnings were sufii-'' the end of months of Planning and ,Moses C. Cleveland, Thomas J. Conk• cleat to pay 41/n interest and estab-I the end It h interesting at this 'lin, Nathaniel Corwin, Ezra L. Gold- lished'-a surplus of $8.68. 'In April, considence time to review the 70 years,since the )L I3orRnsJames E. Horton,it J hn 5. s6l,theof Baan VSr.ved fitting,to the ea other l! founding of this institution. Alvah S. brother, where better rooms located The`bank is located in community '.Howell, Henry I-Iuntting, which was founded in 1640 and the :Mulford, Franklin H. Overton, Israeli on the ground floor were available. town derives its name from the native 'Peck, Henry Pike, Ira B.Tuthill, Wil- I Mr. H. Howard.Hbecame.umtmg, a nephew first' 'settlers, .Jiam H. Wells, Theron B. Worth and th the bank intreasurer, connected community of its 881 and was elected Southwolde, England. A little group rHenry H. Terry.. The bank was formally organized treasurer in of natives ,met at the Southold 1881. This position he, Academy on November 4, 1867 tolat a meeting in the residence of, held conbinuously until April 1, 11i`L4 consider the propriety r 4, 18 7 to 'William'H. Wells on the 6th of May, when he retired as treasurer but re- consider the bank in.their town. Bank-`'',1868 with Rensselaer T. Goldsmith, a tained his position as trustee. Mr. IL ing on Long Island was then confined retired New York merchant, as the Howard Huntting is still actively con- toiBrooklyn. These pioneers were of first president, The honor of Open" nected with the bank in this latter the unanimous decision that a sang Ing the first account was-conferred I rney capacity'after 94 years of continuous 9ngs bank be established and their ''fon Joseph H.or the k, and watshintthehe asun o service, efforts resulted in a .chanter being Following Mr.IImttting as the third ranted through a spec.I rtm of the x'$60.00. Account No. 2 went to-Jesse to hold -the combined offees of secre- Atpr 1 7 egS68turo, which became law',IG. Case, who put in $100.00, A total tary and treasurer, Mr. Frederick It: - _ ''of 13.accounts, aggregating $264.00,., Tercy was elected April 1, 1024, being ---- — w" established on the:opening day' elected as el the Position of Assistant c The bank ofQcially opened for bust•.. treasurer, which he had held since Hess on July.:5, 1858. n lt`little_aecoud' .,February 11, ------------- v ive,prosideuts nava::Tell,owed1tens- the seiner T. Goldsmith-Barnabas 'H neartn: and driill--proof steel. ." Opening of Sathold' Bank4 Booth, Jonathan B. Terry, Silas F. vault is further Protected b a mos- oSavings s Bank, form- Overton, Henry W. Prince and :Dr. sive stee,l deal, tem.and a complete butherglar The Southold Saving,. Clarence C. Miles. e to further. 23rd. The bank The present officers are Dr,•Clan- vault is fully equipped securities, n6 Saturday,o Julys 316. new bujkl- ence C. Miles, President; Joseph"N; safeguard the bank's near, the Safe opened for business in the morning. llallock and Frederick K. Terry, vice. deposit eeboxes are and witlocath Arthur op4pmg Arthur B. Mitchell, of Bayamon, Pox- presidents; Frederick I{. Terry, to Rico, was the first person Co trans- Rensselaer and treasurer, and Rensselaer of new quartors, this additional seheir ri- act business in the new building• Mas- G. 'Perry and Israel P.Terry,assersons s curities it herestant ice is o ree haveO1the same ter Joseph W. Booth enjoys the dis- treasurers. The following P are now serving the bank m the ca- protection as those tinction of being the first person to of the bank' , pacify of tellers and clerks--Carlisle Rest rooms are available at either open all account in the new building, Cochran, Miss Ruth Bloomfield, Miss side of the main entrance. Work After the close of business for the Louise A. Monsell and William L• rooms, executive and committee offices ' da tine public was invited to cone Williams, are conveniently located and bar-,. Ito day, building to inspect the new The 70 years have seen the !Ionic moniously treated. iOverlooking the. grow from total assets of $264.00 and main banking Toon on either end, (quarters; and the new equipment. P 13 depositors on the opening day, to there are spacious balconies: Leading This public inspection and reception 'the Present assets in excess Of $10,- from the one at the rear, is ''he Di- " lasted from 2 to 8 P- in- All the afternoon ami evening, in 1, j 400,000.00, with over 91600 depositors' spite of a downpou s.. rectors' room, treated throughout in r of rain, which i'Of this amount approximately$8,760, American walnut. The floor, with undoubtedly kept many away, the, 000.00 is due the depositors and the its boards of random widths and' surplus is in excess of $1,660,000.00 lengths, interesting paneling, cornice building was thronged with visitors.' a.splendid record for lees than•a cent and ceiling all bespeak the early. A glance at the register shows guests toy in am agricultural region that. period. The fireplace, neatly framed from: Jamaica, Rockville Centre, the !. rook- was declared an impossibility- for with fluted pilasters, window hang- bmnking purposes. ings;" the huge board table with its ' RockawayHn both Sayville,YB'reeport, The design of the new bank build- seventeen chains and other furnish- lyn, Sag ,Greenport, Ing.was solved in a satisfactory man- ings produce a room of decided charm Hollis Port Jefferson stead, Forest Bills, nor by the architects, Francisco & ,and dignity. It is a fit place of as- Floral Park, Hemp Jacobus, with offices in New York, ,sembly for those whese lot it is to Mattituck, Canton, as well as from Chicago and Detroit. Considering direct the destiny of the bank. Passaic, N,J., Montclair, N. J., Baya- the history of the community and the Wilmington, .Del.; Period in which the town 1 k9 and ideal, ,The depositors orsa with endeavored rsafety onville, Ma so, Hillside, mi,N. J•' Let e together with the large p Constantinople, Turkey; Derby , site available, the architects conceived andpconvenience. The building is of . Va•, and a score of other places. a building of gemiine early American fireproof construction, the majorityThen decoration camel-in for much architecture, set well back from the of the furnishings are re metal and , admiration. George B. Preston, of - -treet intrrseeti ons. The building was no expense has beam spared in making Greenport; and Henry P. Tuthill, of further planned for its setting among she vault a veritable strong box. Mattituck, served as a Decorating tho, old rims and maples to preserve( Space has been:provided for the rapid :Committee, and they are to be com- and confidence Lhe luxurious growth of trees on the 'growth ..w°hi�B lead thhistoroas in charge to preulises The building has afront- in the p, p was beautifully depttli along Railroad avenue of.83'1G' oflpcirla arein butgcustodiaitsthof bank mended a entiretbuilcl excellentwork, of flowers, sent from the many friends Tin (along ars ad avenue of ' V- new home andbut it signifies. There decorated. (Phere was vard face brick with Indiana limestone would be no history and could be TO and business associates of the. bank. base and cornice courses. Entrance Futuro if there were no depositors Prominent among order of Is,,through a Pair of Colonial doors, 'To. them the present officials ext`m these were three heantiful baskets from the g executed m -bronze, with limestone their appreciation of the long years ea Henryu Tuthill, of Mattituck, Icolours on either side surmounted• of trust rePosed in the Southold • and baskets from the following; bye limostona cornice and Pediment) 5avings,Bank and pledge their every and the .for the ornamentation of which was effort to guard zealously the future. Bankers Trust Company, chosen that symbol of industry and - opening of New Bank ( Bank of America,:two of the New worthiness, the beehive. I 1, 11 ; york correspondents of the bank; On either side of the entrance there American Exchange Irving is a vidxpanse of brickwork, so Southold Savings Bank will open for I Company; Mr, and Mrs. Pail L.' fdmihn'r to arc}iiteetuxe of; this type,I; business in its new home on the north- �I Troost, Passaic,N. J.; Diebold Sure &' e e with bronze tablets and date figures'., 'west corner Main Street and Railroad Lock Company; Home Title and In-. setting forth.the founding of the bank I, Avenue, in Southold, N. Y., Saturday surance Company; Marines Willett, of and the construction of the new build- '. morning, July 23rd, 1927.- Jamaica, one of the attorneys for the m in Passage.through the marble-lined Oe the afternoon..ofl.the same day.. bank, and."others. Ma Willett' s bas- vt�stibmle with its tablets setting; from 2 until 8 o'clock, the Bank will be ket was worthy of 'lotlantse in lr suchwas. forth the original founders and Pres-,, open to the public for inspection, and made up of entire P ant board of trustees, leads directlyl,i_ the Trustees and Offlcere extend a might be used in the decoration of the into the main banking room. Here L cordial invitation to all to take this grounds, ngnin, the building follows the Colin• The Trustees, tine officers and the fad closely, with floors of Travertine ;opportunity to go through the new res of the Bank acted as a the employ stone, wainscot and bank screen of 't building. I ception committee to elcome Tevernelle. marble and wells of Tra- Upon the opening of the new build• visitors and to show them the many vertine. The space has ;been judici•1, in Safe Deposit Boxes will be for remarkable things to be seen in the localapportioned around: acentral --6, building. located vault constructed re massive rent. Ranee$3.65 per year end up- _ During the reception, refreshments .heavily reinforced knes es walls --- -- lined with several thicknesses of.Qpewere served by Miss Ruth Bloomfield Monsell. -�---•— '., and_Miss Louise:A,___ _ • Ueen' ga, R An interesting sidelight;of the re- a Frederick K:.,Terry, who has earn Tib s ur � caption was the presence of Master .000neated with the Baok'for 19xy / ' x Kenneth Monsell, 3 weeks old, of I as an Assistant Treaeurar for 13 years` M nt, Greenport, the youngest person to st end a Trustee for 10 years;'-wee elected• tend. Probably the oldest person pies Secretary-Treasurer. ' i • „' ent was H. Howard Huntting, now in ' ',Israel P.Terry, who hes been con- _ ___his 84th year,who has been connected „ James V. DretZ., '1�ost—Mrs• with the bank since 1881,and who was Seated with the Bank for six years,wae� Secretary and Treasurer from.1891 to s elected an Ann! Treasurer. the time of his voluntary retirement, The other officers of the Bank Are . Drew Saved—Marshall Drew. j April 1, 1924. Mr. Bantling is still a ,Henry W. prince, President,and.Rese•. Found With Her member of the Board of Trustees. i Seiner G: Terry, Assistant Treasurer• 1. The Board of Trustees express their The name of Henry Huntting and the,, Many hearts were saddened, and entire satisfaction with the work of 'Southold Savings Bank were synono- many eyes were filled with tears: the firm of Francisco & Jacobus of mous'terms from- the organization of''qu this good old seaport town this 611 Fifth Avenue, New York, the. tha;Bankuntil hie retirement. Fortho week, owing to "the, terrible'catas architects who planned the building net thin' three years the same can strophe that befell the giant Stearn- and selected the furnishings, and b y' ship' Titantic, whiofi went to the Stearn- under whose guidance it has been be sit, L he Howard Of you p and 'to the erected;,and in this connection,Lthey, Bank, When, poi{. - Ibottom of the ocean. ' wiried sF1'to express their appreciation of -thought':;of. the other. People would the work of Paul L. Troast, of the think of�the.Bonk as Mr. .Hi atting'e.'with her about 1,565 'souls, one above mentioned firm, who was they, Bank. Both of the p OM's, Huntting "of whom was from Greenport. engineer in charge of construction; were wrapped up in the.eueceseful 'ed- Even.great wealth did; not save and-to J, Edward Corey, whu has so, 'minletretion,-of the B,aak. They he- the rich from the terrible deep. cheerful carried a huge load of de- .minis ,ra ion.a greet' annaflt to the Millionaires in elbows with the ,tail during the erection and comple community..The wonderful growth.and Poon Some of the poor,were Saved ,.tion of the building _ ;euccesaof this institution has been duel and some of the rich. Both died to The present officers air Dr,. in great measure to the of tfieeel, l , two meSaad to the ebeolute confidence gather, too. Clarence C. Miles yrreside it; Jo- It was the most terrible marine I, septi-N. Hallock and Frederick K.` that thepeople had is their ability_end Terry, vice-presidents; Frederick) .integrity. to in the world's history. ItI K.'Terry, secretary Wad treasurer, Frederick. K. Terry, who hnebeen was brought home" to Qreonport, P.ITe ry, assistant a Torry and Israeli P.:'.Terryyassistant treasurers. The., connected with the Bank.for. the..pa4t particularly forciblybedauseShe_was ,follow,ing persons aliq;now serving'. nineteen years,thoroughly understand?. -represented on the big;ship. thebfmkinthecapncityoftollere', thebanklaBbueineae.endisWell .quell- Mr, and Mra. JamoaV, Drewand s and clerks: Carlisle Cochran, Miss fad to fill:the position Of .Secretary_•'.Marshall Draw; the latter being the Buth`Bloomfield; Miss Louise A. Treasurer. Likehis predeceeeors, the ilfonse11 and William.L. Williams. young son of William J. Drew, left ... people have confidence in bin ability last Pall on the steamship Olympic. t Porty�jhfee sears' SerViCe and integrity, to spend the winter with Mr. Drew's /A9.. : The wonderful growth of the Bank p g 11 went well c ,]?owartl auntliSg,-wbo ae b.@eS :'since Howard Huntting hes been con• mother in En land. „ oon3 ,'led with the $outbold SaIltiga oeate� with for the past forty-three until the roturn trip, ,. gk;.for 48 years,sea Trustee,Assiut 33 yearn le shown by the following figures: Of Bourse they wanted to come �oub�,,Tte purer,&SeereteryTreaeuS,er( ; beak on, n the biggest, Ship.,in the { ea kand First Vlee President•(10 L:The amount due depoeitore o,S Jan 1, q„ka2z+ longer able d 1861, was$599,836,89. On Jen. 1, 1924, world, so they secnred`pasewee on years); feeling himself no long ,the amount due depoeltore;Wae$6;762,- the giant Titeptic. So-thQy wero on. tto.apertormthe duties coonected with. !, ..066.39—ao increase of $NQ%230. ,The the vessel when She struck=:an ice- th ,'otAaee of Vice President epd Score- ear lee on Jan. 1,1881,was$109,77263, berg,off tho coast of NMonndlaiii tory-Treasyrer to his satisfaction, re ,and on Jan; 1, 1924, it was $1,337;944 and oak rp water;t,`,w miles in �igned ;both these offipee'l'aet Thera-. '66—an increase of $1,228,172.13. . The de t rn`�'' �” ' ' 'day. Hie resignation wee; accepted number of open saaohnte tocreeeed R, �% : �° � ti n Wer J&mss Q deep regret-by the Board of True- 161 to 8,186,,f The mortgagee t � ,i�s v .r,�r, , ��. , _ t es,'` Idr. Hunttio will remain with trprq 2, ,�,.a ?., o+shave Pit g ember' increased :from $435,264 to.$6,189,020 V-� }', .:lid father. the Bank ee a Trustee and a m poring the year 1880 the. deposits y I of ite',Finance Committee. ,;,, • . ' - amounted�:to $12h,674.,1'3, -qnd in. the ipp, h ,.. i n a ` ant GlaranceC. Miles Was rFromoted - ear 1923 the,deposite,were,$1,242,632, recorded among: ` tl, •frnm.'Second Vice President; which of-. �9, During the forty-three years the to J` to fice lie had held for 10 of they 32 Years Bank received$22,638;839,20,and paid see what he aonldleavn about his oPbie connection.with.the Bank as :e depositors, $22,132,799.21. The interest missing family: Hnnry P. Chrie- ITrustee, to'First Vice Pranident. credited,depoeitora during thin tiros JoeephN. Halloek, who lias,been' a wee$6,368;8832t1��._._,. tian;;fatherofMrg Jae{@S v. Drew, —- accompanied him Mrs Drew is Trustee for 24'yeare and a Mato Or''o4 'listed among thoac whQ'are.Haved: t7 tank's Blxamining Committee !or I,lliyenfe, was elected S'eeond•Vioe -- a=s - James Drew went to iiie�grave on the- - The.steamer �tarpatlifa, wliich ill fated ship. 1'ames'V. Drew was ono oPGFeene-:. was the first ship to answer the `iMy husband had kissed me and Mar- �port's best known bdsrpess mend He, i wireless calls for distress, is expect shall goodnight Sunday night at about `was associated- in the monumental ed to arrive In New York this Fri. 10 o'clock and said he was going to re- works with his brother,:, William.', day with.the survivors. This _ship main on deckfor an hour or so to.trove a smoke and enjoy the pleasant breeze The firm was known As-Diew Bros,, picked up the small boats loaded that was blowing at the time," Mrsa He was a member of the First Bap•, with their precious cargoes. The Drew maid, as she sat at a table in. 'tint Church, and wasamember of Titantie went downbefore any B'lake's Hotel in Clarkson street, where- .; the,church choir. He was it mem-! of the vessels could get to bay .aid. she had been taken by friondslastnight 'her of the Greenport Fire Depart-i' The lone in money is more than "I was 'just dozing when suddenly I ment, and secretary of Torrent $20,000;000,not to mention the mil- heard a 'scraping sound as if the boat Steamer, No. 3. lions,which the life insurance 'com• had struck someting. I looked.through Mr, And Mrs, Frederick M, Hoyt;; panics will have to pay for the lives the.port hole and noticed that my room of New York, well known in yacht of the millionaires who were heavi. was brilliantly lighted. IE was the re-,' Ing circles here, and especially ly insured. flection and at that moment Mrs,Rich- among the summer colony in Green-�� The Titantic was as long as four Ards, who occupied the berth next to port and Shelter Island, were saved.. city blocks. Her passenger. capacir mine, knocked at my door and asked, me if I heard the noise. Mr. Hoyt was formerly owner of ty was 3,600;;:and her crew num- I "There's some excitementup on the the yacht Isolde. bere_860 men,. Thevesselcost$10,• deok,'. Mrs. Richards said, and she re- J. Clinch Smith, of Smithtown,, 060,000 to build and furnish. There quested me to go with her to see what who had his auxiliary cat yacht; were$5,000,000 worth of diamonds it was all about, I dressed myself and Fortimatus at Tuthill & Thorn's on board. There was also a general went out .on deck and there was a .:yards,lost his life. His'wife was', cargo; a lot of. pearls, and $1,000,• ! lot;.of confusion; Several women who not with him. Sheds in Paris. The, 000 worth'of bonds and registered looked very excited told me that my, yacht here is in charge of Broker J,,. mail. The ship was insured for husband was loolling for me, I went, P, Grady; $6,000,000, - back and dressed Marshall and we found: - Mr, Drew'dn the stairs Several mens Reports la est somewhat, but-one The:Titantic was like An exclusive assured us that nothing unusual had of the latest reports, places the hotel. There were elevators run- , happened and I went batsk to my room. Itst''ef dead at 1342, and the surviv. �ning'up and down. her nine stories. 1 Shortly after Mrs, Richards came to me orsas 868, mostly women and.chil-. Therewakeelaborate restaurants, a ,.and said `c gale on, Mrs. Drew: � They _ren, These were taken into the theatre, squash and tennis courts, are lowering people In life boats.' lifeboats first, while the men pas-; swimming pools,. and on the'top Mr. Draw Reassured Her by His sengers waited- until last, There dock;,a miniature golf links.• Nonchalan®e, werepot enough boats for the whole;' Captain'E. J. Smith and all but paslaenger list, and all'those that;l3,fonrof the officers, want down_with "We were met in the passageway by 'warenotfortunateenoagh toget ng',the ship.; myhusband'wbo took us by the arm the lifeboats,;.went down with the,-. The- whole world- mourns over �i .and laughinglytold us that we were ship. " this"terrible 1pss oP]i£e. to be taken to another`ship while the 'M'aI T mr, ionaires were lost, being, �Titanic was being repaired. There was j " l THE BOY SAFE so little confusion about it that we all totg'.away from their carves and', Marshall Drew has been reported thought we were to return to the Titanic famtlies, It was-a terrible scene =� ;j in a little while. Before I had been, : ,among' the missingi°,all- the week,i - Cgl.4ohn Jacob Astor;_ who witb� taken to the edge of the host to be. but`according, a telephone from 'hrspbrI4o'oflastsummer,.'MissMad"� - lowered ifeltthe_Titsni'o pinging and;, Wm Y Drew this Friday mory>ng, iehne Force that was, visited Rob..1 I knew thyt.We had little time to spare' the boy was found with Mrs, Drew " the ht MY h ,bin's Island in his steam yacht ag ueband was coming Noma, is sn g on the<eteajner Carpahra, when sfie with me or I e pposed to be amon the{ s n der shoyld have left the dead ]lira vs. dook9ds ship. Isld�r Straus oP the M&S DREW THO tl T HER "Mrs Draw eoyld net pressed, but r r I ` "1° t :, ' ,R shrieked mdfall iato the arms of Jho , store iI, rooklvvr} and th ! HU°QSAND 'SAFE. K ftiohards, whetiad witnessed the part- M �koreha New Yorkyf,BenlarlS�d ing of hvabaad and wife, and who had it �nherm, $ ,lphayer oY+the 3F,rom the Brooklyn Eagle, April 19 gone with her to the hotel. P rlyanta Ratlrgil � Henty� & 1 AL2 Mrs. Riche took u P the story here, Y ]3. 'y th@ teatt7ca4rwmaa�'�Ma'p`r [ Ona of,the most pathetic and heroic and said with tears flowing down her, 4b�ldBntt�g,�prlh'a �,T� stormea of,the Titanic'di6ster was told 'cheeks. "Don't let us. rehearse that ttl, gqnther, ,end% Ip�iAy;� �lib r by Mre James Drew:of Greenport, L. terrible tragedy," forwe have gone' ux 'YEr ' knKmn Su ,. tI who with her husband Jaynes Draw over it ogainand again in each other's d her nephew Marshall Drew,.was ' aP P a, arms for the past three IonK Weory- eco_IaA a s passenger on '+the ship. 'eights• r '. Gitt'(e Ma;sgh 1Jrew put his arm finally the Titanic sunk out of eight. and;printed in the flret volume of• the around hie Runt's neck and amd Neve rioted Town Records" 'published in mi•d,auntie, Uncle Tim will ,be hers�0oice of Dispair From Titanic as She P t r - Sauk - 1882. Itgivea;the'nampa,4theorginal n a little while and he'll take us tinek owners of tkes0 home lots, and in most to Greenport "l.ehall never forget the shrill cries cases:the names of theirs'at in "No, sonny,,.,wept:Mrs., Drtw ga @'he from the deok of the Titanic Ns she stink ownership for several generations. No recovered herself. -ti'I!e'h!14vorepe hi to and the cries from the life boats at tt:at .other man has ever lived who .could. again. {je'q gone+:down with that,moment. It sounded like one voice of ,have made from his own knowledge and .terrible ,@hip.:that .swallowed -up theldespmr and it took a lot of-begging .surveys a map.,of. this .kind equal in ,heroes.who saved our lives by sacrifi,e-1`from themenin the boat to.keep the excellence to Esquire Case's.` ;ing their@," " {women from jumping into the ocean,. It shows the streets of the village as "My buebsnd assured me that he;The final flash from the sinking ship they existed when the mapwas would soon follow us and he knew'ir'ilighted up the huge-ieeburg ahead of. published. Some of these streets have his heart that .I had kissed him,-for',her, Not until then did we know. how personal:names. For instance,the last time when I left the chip. Chi.„helpless we were when we attack the Tuck- er's. Lane, Horton's'Lane, Beckwith those men who stood there and helped�that monster, l Avenue and more recently Hommel de to get into the:boats and put cloth-, When we were about five hours out Avenue. It is the custom of Southold,' cng on us and their own coats, too,, al. I saw an object in the water. ' It (,,when streets receive ;personal names, 'though they were shivering with cold seemed,to be floating toward us and on to give them the names of.the owners vyere the I greatest .heroes that ever looking I saw it. was a man trying to !of the land through which or by which Yived•"' _ swim toward its. We were not matting ithey pass..:Thus it was in these cases ';+Again the woman fall into a s`yoon much headway and he finally reached I_Tucker's Lane, Horton's Lane, Beek- as not revived fgr'ion or flteen our boat with Avenue, Hommel Avenue. minutes, Ocase' no]ly she would In, a "One of tha women reached out to :Let this Southold custom continue hglf 'unconaaiphe way,:try to relate grasp him and in doing so we were and it wilt'give the name of Youngs 1iVhat! happandd when..the Igont, .$fled nearly overturned. We tried to pull .Avenue torethe stet that runs from •with women, astoo weak and he Worn t b i hi 1 e od to the water, m n, uwe rn Pw C Main Street tp,the head"of Towa,Creek. Flft.in the Lifeboat,Four of them was exhausted, He fell back and nis- 'Whoever looks at Esquire Case's appeared just below our boat. ' .map may 'sestet this street had at first Men. "It was bitter cold and we were get on both sides of it land owned by Recovering herself, she continued.to ting weaker, Two of the women had members of the Youngs,.family, On tell her'stor with. wonderful coura % 'fainted and the brave men were nearly' y g the west side was the home lot of the ;relating everystall from the time the famished with the cold, but they kept .'First Settler," the Rev.:John Youngs. 14feboate,.,rppo togstlaora started an up our courage and constantly pointed On the east aide was the home lot of ftem joy;pg;'1 ,"Phe;e we;@ f(fty of to icSla#leery lights in the distance to .the pastor's great son,.. ,Colonel John 4ga,�,m t�te bag' hogr men, tea children reassure us that relief was near," Youngs;`Commander, of ,the. Navy of ;Qnd thi t"'a When the sent light. of the y ; y: 1r5 Q¢oma". `T@u of - the United Colonies of New England, of ug 'left , oyr„ hy#banda be Catoathia loomed vp in thediatance we High Sheriff of Yorkshire in the Colony, thou ht it contained our dear ones that° of New York, s member of His Majea- aind ¢elieying Chet t}an hour we were we had left,behind and took on new tiy'e Council of the colony and.the chief ;all„widaweQn , , e little toy about 8 courage. We didn't know where, But i. officer of,'the military,forces of Long pyeara.old whose parents were not. with we were soon aboard and gently placed Island He vias undoubtedly the great- ell isleep,and one of the men in its warm comforting Rabin. eat man of the se`emul generation of ,took off his coat and wrapped it around Where is Watterl 'fake me to my I white man on Long Island. th yi and placed him.onthefloor: husband” one woman.arted, Mrs. Downs owns 'end occupies the "Tho ocesn'weeaecalmas alake and -But that waa the last thing she said home whigh he built"'and in which he ;the,t's what saved. us from being for the strain had been too much for ived mlhhik latest years. - - .;drowned,'for several of the women like hor'an' eke died ins few ham's close :' The pioposal~fliAlia't:kke street -run- t: whose husbands had been left to wliere I bad:been placed on th%cabin' •ring through.the original. Youngs .lend -behind,were.becoming unmanageable, floor. Her body,. with three othsra,',I abound henceforth. be called. Youngs. but the reassurances.from the men.,who was buried in the ocean,' 'Avenue. were .rowinq�: us that our husbands Mrs. Drew would any uomore for ,.The Fi'ret Settler" and his famous I would soon follow in other boats quieted she wag convulsed with sobs. % and honorable eon were men of courage, '�us. Suddenly we heai•il a -teTri$c re ----—'^`-`a'--'----- energy.-enEerpria@;.good characterand .;port like:an a%ploaloq,, We Qogld see distinction, who knew how to do-things the 110A 0 the'J'itggiy and she-looked A Proposal and did them. The whole history and C/ U 'like a,�hptel, It @must: have been five J. ,Wickham Caee, Esquire, made, life of Southold will be searched y vain minutse after when the big ship parted with eminent know Is ge,,a skill and .for two other names more worthy than p .taste,.a remarkable me of tWori incl ti 4 in the middle. Then another explosion P g ;these of the,considar6tlohbt•�� el itizens: followedandslowly the huge Lassen be- Thome'lots of the a iliset settlers of of the de old'T ���� 'h+, ,,, gan to stek, Southold. It was made'fof 'the Town Ther@foie with�t{gh'�esp`dt for my "We didn't realize what was been- fellow Fitizene pertyjit rite tp propose. pP - the names pP YougRs.j 4p4yra for the ing• There was a huge blaze,near the' street air k) pr nit rfunn_eler_then anothor` a%p11 iiom:.and I rWdale Slli s„ r,,karogai"',Nplaettt ceye laterlh;gro�e, ii�think they ar "�'My Petther Cliarlee�'H '�I'ame;wen61 ;Workm on t, e�ie)naYato^day. I,hope "persuading the 'oxen; but'flnally h out•on the first`w,liale,A'"ship�sevt from to he home,by,the timetthey hang up." my ,father broke :the stock while I Gvenport the,i'X,otoexYl(�C,ba`U'lgs� Grlf- `A tittle more than three months a f- "correcting" the old mare for nipping `fang) ' She cleared r�vea26� r)r830�'and ter father fieaehed home, my eldest me!) My presentwae a buck+saw 'arrived home Juha 13,7,831, b)jmgmg Sh brother, Jonathan shipped on the about nine inches,dong which '1,=kep,t� 2600 barrels of oi�, (Fifteen years ago 1� $elan (Cartwrighk) ,which,eailed away carefully:many years and unt{If )gave!, furnished for these columna some ex Oct. 17, 1843 soil returned April,;6, it to the rmaker's daughter. N"ori one, tracts from my father's log of that. 1846. I have lately, had-.the privilege of us, was�a canoe with outriggers;( L, voyage.) On thisehip's second voyage; of reading alog of that voyage. The and there were canes and other "thingaS she was lost, Her vane waseaved and fleet mention of him was made .when which he had made. [was ast by Nathaniel Corwin on his' five months:out—he was seasick, for He went that spring to Cutchogue it. harn;.where itveeredfor many years, wae very rough".. A month later and worked on the farm of Henry` and until after he had sold his farm to he had smashed a finger between the Fleet. On the Fourth of July he drove; Henry Tasker. oil barrels,. June 14, 1844, a whale home and took.:brothers Henry end'. Mr. Corwin and his brother Hudson stove the boat he was in, and he was Edwin and cousin Charles Johnson to a` , fitted out—besides the Potosi-.the edjrght in .the, line and towed under circus at Greenport. I think he worked., 'Triad (Nat. Case), the Delta (Seth water a longway,but was able to clear for Mr. Fleet the next season also. In'. Griffing), the Bayard (GEaham), the himself when the.whale came up to November-1847-he went to Illino's;^ Neva (Nat. Case),and the Nile (IBass blow ! He and others were picked up; which was then far "out west". Four'� Case). My father went on,the Triad and later the':whale, though wild and years later he visited his old home; and! also. The voyage was from 'Aug. 2,� ,ugly, was caught and saved. Three when he went back, brother Henry;' 1832, to Feb. 17, 1884;. and the referee days Tater Jonathan was Buffering with went with him. That was. their',final,' were 3200 barrels, including: 600 `1111 toothache and.swelled face I This was goodby to Southold. In 1866; sfather:' sperm. in. North latitude 610, near Kamcbat- visited them. In 1868 brothorl Ed in�7 ka ! " . went, but visited his b I The Corwin brothers were ,f�lowedl birth'plea-, r�`) Tea- by Wells and Carpenter, who Fitted Nov, 1, 1846, the ship left Sandwich 1892 and once afterwards He dto ';bin' �. Islands homeward bound, Two Hien` June, 1904 Brother Jonatbaq out the Sarah,,,"d 17ather (Bennett) ; ' the Ph,l, II S :H Sia on and 't el shipped there.as foremast hands; and 1862; brother Henry mowed ,)to,rl�ff§ -Kenawhap (Ht Babcocka end; E B; Itwo men took passage—one a doctor) souri; hedied in 1878,•; I bays ,geaE`l land the other Giles Waldo, Vice Con- reached the age of my_-father pyQ+�woe Terry). David C. Floydw ahi pa were sul, [Waldo taught in the old South'. accounted'an old7`:man ` the Italy (Held and Baldwin) ;end the ,{ We elle do; 'Pioneer (Babcock). Parsons and Wig: old,Academy in its early history.,' He fade ass leaf 5 B� T Bpytltn, died Aug, 26, 1849, agaa?k l _ Southold March 10 gide fitted out the Caroline 'and the , Roanoke (Baldwin). Other ships were Feb.'12, 1846, the captain threatened Sixty Five 1';eata"Ago jt r tb"e Washington, ;,lie Noble, the rvcy to:strike William Link, but ,Link .told the Seraph him he would:kill h1m,1P he could. So While working the{other day iu the Atin.' (Edwin Brown), (S „(E. E. the captain quit! [William Link was building on Roanoke avenue that;;rank h'-rman) and Elie Barbara tHouae) the brother of Henry L'lnk . who was Mueller is remodeling Bose Georg- B. { r Oas;the"tlaet named, my father made the father'uf-Mrs E ,F, Jewell. After Brown found same old, but well, pr°= rhie`=thrd ands last vo a e their father'adeath, Henry went into sorved, bi19s'for building materials and C Y ge,,as shoat , - - bhe femil of John A lab„ and Wil• laher, dated 1844. 'The goods and;work. 1,893ateeCe Ohr the 6th 114 No ember ul$92 I lien,vvae taken by Albert !nee; Wil- were killed to Davld'Little by various oot after midnight; the 41p'„wase ilia ba n as,perhape.twelve years old,and parties, Mr. LI btle's residence not being le dif after Portland (Pam-) "(Af Sags Bev Ilolder. , Three or given. Herb'o"F;^and grad a yard broea fou; years later, William.'shipped on One hill of considerable length fort. some other damage,.done Th,o,YpSra"g�i ,the R1' I tae stated•above;] materials was Yrmn 73 S,'Smith, show• �w"as not very Ion g; but father Vofkgn� ' ?' 6 aged cltizep'of Greenport stated ing nails at 5}and 6 cants per pound F _ Ino6 long ago thab up to X1844; twenty A bill frons A. Q. & J. Thomp¢on' noted in hie 10 'a' he was y-r9,enx o- k t roue'to:.see is family aspen 'llyt7p a wdale�ahi�e h7 hailed froroxGreenporti charged$3.16 for 1,800 coiling lath.,and. '. 1 �I)have pare)named,twent'y,;some of X51,02 for 12 boards. ' ' little i,boys' and' tho�'Slhtkl-�?&lii ',r >, i > [She was Lucretia IGI-Yee`Isie"tar r' 4,� them earled�from Greenport and some On another bill;,dtrtod at. Clinton, hire: Tawas Bee W ,�r`;�t�; s5�1Irr maemr erbl hl, uotrayLittle:for apd marrenmy brother carpenterkolcat tceuea ' .. a^kdome liow m father took us I Isaac N. Crowell had a better o pini n 4, 1893 stn`s Wrote, db,re�To ups e � g Y 1 P I {ng atrh'ome I euppoeetth-y 'be ppb°1'veJ�ear)y one morning in the of his services, and charged for work ireading'.the tovynr�aegounte and f oil"' �pg}g rt to'ther?I arbor 'to get the Bear at$1 a.'day. iabout the Pgor'1)$'uuse JggoEm "�'i e r o .2�aI,vyaited �m a "horse house!' Sixty-five years ago conditions for than•they expecteilkly Iamgla lig ,I„q„o, itheyji�gad�iwh�le father drove down builders and laborers,were very differ- 'r Epp Via' 61f} ore On the way hor)ie the out from what they.are today. �olear o�such bu6ineee, w�,ien ititze Y 9,:r o r i I tit onto'me egaiti`iQllpi U��e�Eh"e�iae h 8 74 iy�topened and t'e " time, I,euPP�grrb Y� 'n���,:�r,xto a Ivrl Fp;T� fa�he�rt � 'i asp anmeary RIM 7,r1 i �'p$p� PetaomiNt of the Sabina, Huron Pahl Good Dividends to own- 4 LONG lSLA A ]tat of thhe who ,atlas for ora. CoA in the Sabina, sled for The Huron was an old whaler. 8ka members of the 'Soutim 'an and was bought by O. R. Wade and California Wning and 'Trading bthers and loaded with lumber. and'; gIN �� � I ' and trey et?tisYollow, passengers 'commanded>ed Capt. Georgafter eI.reaching Coe- and Is as follows: 'win, who. died soon after reaching' Stockholdors—I-Ienry Green, No California. The Huron paid well, but. than 1-I Dimon, Charles Howell, had the, captain talcon advantage of Barney R Green, David Hand the high market Priceof lumber on. Albert Rogers Albert Jagger, Isaac his arrival and sold out the cargo in ! -C C F R �I Shyre. Jr, Henry Webb, William C bulk the dividends.to the owners' � .0 E�'6. II I,f� 180 Haynes, John Von Votchen, James n'ouid have been much larger. Lam. Parker William H. Peat, Ydtor.H her was setting at the time se high owelt; William Post, David H as $280 per. thousand test. H Hand,;?•— NlcClene, William S. Dent- The Sierra Nevada; a schooner' son, Edward _W, Halsey, Edward H, built at, Sag Hamanrbor ed by Capt. White, John 'Woodward, Isaac S. Wase,. was commandos by Ca ed, Majority Wept by Boat. Van Scoy, Charles N. Green, Thomas Lawrence D. Edwards and loaded'. L. Warren, Henry Rhodes, G, H. with handsomely. T and lumber. She paid: tie' ,F'EW ACi)10Vei�' )~OrtUlle ,Burnett, Samuel B. Halsey, Schuyler of the fastest vessels probably one' " �. P Halsey, Lafayette Ludlow, Austin of the fastest vessels of liar class }v� over ascot. She made the. voyage I,I11 West. J. IC: Fiotd, Souls .Jagger, from Shanghai to San Francisco 1n, n 1 D D. Glover; John D. Green, Jetur 83 days, the shortest on record by a I •; By H. D. SLEIGHT. / f', Reeves, William White, Edwin B, selling vessel. (Special to The Eagle.) iQb lshanr, Thomas L. McE1r•oth; A. II„ , Ann Mary Ann's Skipper Never Saw :J ag.Harbor, L. I., Oct. 26—It has I tia.nford Jededlah Conklin,' Jamail P Home Again. Seen generally stated and accepted Case, , A Sanford, William T, a tact that the 9¢Mnp., an old Sweeney, Albert IIIVy,h, Doyle The Ann Mary Ann was an old Sweeney, WlllinM� Halggoy, A. Jack- � whaler of the firm of Mulford & Whale shlp, was the riret vessel to Ron.Tahor, William W. T`ln r,Salter Sleight. She was sold to Mr. Sleight. !.gall.them Lmrfi Ieland, carrying Ar- S. Dorton, J', Lamphere Dodgai. lie formed a company. Capt. N. R. ''.:I.gOriauts to California, after'news of SubatituYas—Thomas,P. Ripley Jr., Dering commanded her. The cargo ggld dlscovertes had reached the Thomas J. Glover, John H. Cook, was lumber and brick. She laid for Augustus' Lndhiw, W`illlnm W.' along time before.disposing of her I. � 'hl Is not. eoha'.eot. Tho Parker, David F, Parker, George cargo. Her remains still oceuy tho lb 11 sailed by Capt. Wil- Herrick, Andrew L. Edwards,James Place of her mooring: Captain Der- 'll�f(t H¢weq was the„pioneer at the Rogers, John 13. Cook, Eng In Lo returned Calif Home, having dfodtfg ildb clears,� -i'•t crm Sa,� 'Var- Passengers—C, U. Hatch, Thea• I died a Lower California snot a Of Youb wga ey,,l'ij' re docs H. Wood, Horatio R.ogor 1. The Cadmps was another of Mvl- •.the Sabina, f Charles Seely,.George Howell; CN: ford & Sleight's whale snipe. She Sabina cleared.from Sag Har. Howell, John R. TIRIIP N. 134110gors. was sold to a company and Put Into on Feb. 8, 1840. She was Ecom- Crow—Henry Grbon, t0.ster;. tho California speculation, Capt. t! tided by. Ca1Jt,Henry Green. The I•Jenry Rhoden mate, Thomas E, Sohn W. FoWkam had command, bh P's hones now lie beneath Ute Warren. 2d mate; Franldin C. Jae- The.Cosmos was noted for being the ,{f ,f i ship that brought Lafayette to Amer. San Francisco, the harbor smi, William F. Hug,nttinJob , .., lea it -1824. vJn been lilies up and the streets Hedges, Alphonso Boardman, George I Tho Hamilton Capt, Sout by er QyliH. arves esfendad beyond.where W. !Post, Pyrhua Coneer, John Slate master, was sent out by her 0`$W0.8 moored an'dused as a stor- Mellon, Daniel HowgU, N¢ih. Pasta aid whaling owners, Charles T. Der- �Brsh1P• This is also the case with Charles Croak,. James E. Glover, --- +i8 r@}al other vessels.which-reached Robert E. Gardlnm, Stephen B. �i1ng &Co. On.this vessel sailed Hen- ' r�,tc*nalseo. At'that ttme, In the French, Watson C Coney, Absalom !Ing Van Seoy�bY Easthampton and �Q'ei 0m0nt oY lho gold lever. 1L wn S.'Grffdng, .Napoleon Grilring John '.Edwin Bill of Sag Aartim•. ,Both re- 1,?lJe'lat�osslble;to get crews to man vers- W. Hull, Wilitarn'S• Bellows.., `turned to Long Island. They lived to 1§)`every one being crazy to reach Iteached Sall Francisco Bay-Aug. 91 la.great agei almost a hundred. Stew- {J)e }nines. The ships were .turned ,1.849• -art Edward White gained much use storehouses, stripped and'even- In his story of ” Golly" from these t0ally;,sanIt out of sight before the The Sabina reached her sestina old men, Whom he visited on Long -,obatruslv0 step of the new metropolis tion at San Francisco Bay an Aug. 8, Island. 1849, She found the Iowa had safely of`the Qecldent. arrived'several weeks before. Driver Rovgir Voyage of Tiny Schooner. $npina Sailed Irr Gardiners Day, Ross, who used to carry malls and. The San Diego, a small schooner Feb,. 3, 1849, tool the stage coach across Shelter of 68 tons, built by BenJamin Wade The Story of the Sabina to history Island, had accumulated hbout $2; at the Cove, Sag Harbor, was core, now, There Is no harm In repeating 000 In a fortnight trucking, Ho Weeip mended by Capt. Jared Wade. The It although �bose who feel aper_ ill .with dysentery, was oared fAp. San Diego was owned by a company conal or family Interest are growing died. the Sabinaeno d subsequently and was loaded with provisions. The fQtver and fewer. Trier 'story of.the sled, ound gold; few the "diggings"; vessel, although small, wee a good ab na has almost pas dl beyondthe some found gold; few realized their ,sea boat and reached C¢Po horn In llm'oP rs Infaoenae `he hip was desires or grow rich. 78 days. There.meeting with foul Pt weather she weer blown back and 1 it•oh¢eed by a an pony of Sag i, ]Est of vessels soiling from Sag. I weather through the blo n Magellan. poor to California and dates of 1i13ar'bor ans•enst end Long Island clearing, talceti Yi•om therecorda o4� Her voyagato San Francisco was men ,and fltied for :California: Old the Sag°I-Iarbor..Cuatom House, are'. made 1n seven ncontha j meq;'mI tile•ngad men and young as below: Iowa, January, 1849; Sm. Tho Storm was. a line ship built) men,fall desired to t;a to the land Ulna, Fo'b. 3;, 18AQ; IImpn;,,Jrtno 19, at the 'eye Sag Harbor, by Banjo- at of Eldorado, There were 61 stock- rain Wada and others,- She was sold: ltohlees 'who paid in x$600'each. Fifty 3849 Sierra Nevada, AUg. 28, 18491 In Now York at a rest sacrifice, the of them went oil board the%ship Ann Maty Arae, Oct, 2,7„1849; Cad- In becoming Involved. She mus Oct, 20, 1840, Hamilton, Oct,: and 10 ,sent substitutes. Among 123;3840; Robert Brune, May 1, 1860; soiled YromNowYork to California, those on-board were 19 whaling•Acosta, $epi: 14,Bruce, San Aleeo, but cleared from Sag Harbor, captains, 8Th, ship cleared Feb, 3 'then 18; 1860; Storm, for New York;, Other Sag-Harbor Ships Making frorrl the 849 Customs.Hovso, 'then to California, ,May '26, 1862; the Voyage but d(d nSt 1 Rather from Gar- Amelia i v'New York v is California, Among the old whaling vessels diners Sayno _. pig, I2, 1864; Draco Aug.12, ^ 1864 (returned). which left Island: and turned. _ Lthalr bows__toward San_Frandel(Wi_ I and whish have tl'ot been menYloned of gold In C¢llfornla"•had.;readied STEAMERS OF LONG AGO ware the Salem; Thomas Dlckason, Long Island: 1I$ lett•New ,Y,oFk„in �.'�he followirl intor©sting list eon- HenrY'Lee, and the ship:panama, tho".lithe schooner Ira' Bi Gaga r, '� belonging to th'e Howells, which was mound for California by w¢Y of tho tains the names Of many passenger! coal laden. The'(.Panama Isthmus in 1848. Thio w¢a Uefore� -steamers associated:with the port of got away. the sailing of alis,schooner.Iowa ¢ndI Sag Harbor and Greenport, as cam In 1850 but never reached San Fran- the whale slrlp,�Abina and.0Qher ves- B cisco, .but was condemned at Tai-I sets from Long Island in 1849 AF-I piled by the Sag Harbor Corrector: cahuaThames o or Sag raiso. The ship rived'at San Francisco, '�anri Tit a," Our list, (not complete) includes the Thames of Sng lIarbor, Thomas) } Brown; 'agent, and Capt. William I ae.,he was fnmillaily called went, Albany, Pioneer;Naushon; Iotas, Capt, I Payne, master, was on:a whnling --- - Wickham Havens,7,868; Catalina, Ca voyago°in 1849. She went Into San through all the experloneps of iron. pt, Francisco having. upyards oP 2,000 tier life. He sensed.that there was ' Havens, 1860; Massachusetts, Capt, f barrels of o1L on Ugard, Cap,]., more money in supplying food for Havens, Augustus, Capt, Havens, : Payne was roI(eved.by Capt. Theron hungry men than in digging gold. Werth of New Suffolk, L. I; Tho In boyhood he had served his ap- 1862; Iolas, .. Capt,. Jake Appleby, vessel and oil wore sold at San Fran-.Prenticeship establi to & b ttchdr. Francisco 1862; Artisan, Donaldson, 1868; Riv-� cisco; San Lettere of an Argonaut, the Contra Costa Market, In the et• Queen, Suffolk, 1864; -Edward EV-, The Albert Jagger letters are pre-years 1849-63, ,Inclusive, life market erett, Eastern City, 1870; J, B...Schuy served,' He went to California in `9II8 the headquarters of many Long ler, 1873; Escort, Capt. th@ Sabina. Of Long Island mel,, In Island and Eastern adventurers. P . H. S. Ackerly, Oail110MIn not. ''already mentlonedl There they always found a'welcome 1876; W. W. Colt, Capt. George C, Ile alludes to Nat Miller, of Brook- and ,'Sam Tribe" dispensed many Gibbs, 1876-86;"Prances, Capt:Youa haven; Capt Case Shelter Island; kindnesses to those whom.III fortune g, Goo Sayleh 'Jeh(als son." ,In ne- and sickness had distressed, He 1886;Tuckahoe, 1886; Shelter Island, ferring'to Nie'Sabina'a company, he bought his beef of Mexicans. butch- Capt. George C. Gibbs; Montauk, says: "The party at ship is'lm•gen ei•ed It himself, and prospered, At Cat Joshua ,Gibbs; Shianeeock Cit tl 8tly Prom 6outhampton'—Lewlal one time he was associated In bust- p • , y I owoll, StephanJagger, Albert Hal-�i;ness with Joshua B, Nlekersod of of Lawrence,Greenport,propeller'Mon- Long Island; Prentice Mulford, one tank, which ran between- New York soy, Stephen Halsey, Howell Cor- '!of the Long Island Argonauts,.wrote;. With, William Fordham, William ! "The grand rendezvous (in San and Sag Harbor. Foster," Others mentioned: Austin Franctsco) for distressed!.. Long Steamers which ran between Sag, Lewis, fetor Reeves, John Croak of Ialanders,was an old house on the Hog Neck, an@ Daniel B. Glover, of loweh and of Commm•Clot street. The Earbor and Greenport—J, S. Under- poraSoutl for "who have changed tem- bollding In question was rented b;' hill, Capt, ,Charles Dixon; Statesman Under- poral for apt. Th realities," Marchi Sam Tribe Hitdreth of Sag Harbor;a ' ter Cold Capt. Harbor Royce, mss- beef-buying native of the isle. He Capt. D. A. Nash;, horosso,. Capt. 'ter Cold Spring Fordham, whale Marhlp- extended to lits brethren the hand Congdon; Water Lily, Capt. J. M. Sheffield; 'Ell Fordham, John Mar- of.fellowship, When they came down shall,..William French, .Capt. Dab- from the.,,-nnines, broke, strapped. Ross; Sprite, Dixie; Emile, Capt.. cock, Thomas Wallace, Erastus 'sick, weary and discouraged, whither Ross, 1873, Long Island Glover. went they? To the Contra Costa Steamers which ran between Sage. Womatu an Argonnnt.. Market, of course,,- ' A Long Island girl bears the dls•� Harbor and New London Gypsy, sold. friction of being. the first white Rail a Lodging House. to North Carolina, 1878; Mary Benton,.', 3 pmgn:at the scene of the California "Tho building was two atones and ggld',dlsooVet ieeIn 18M18., She was a ka1P high. The second Poor was Capt. Joy Post; Sarah Carey; Man=' folly 6wet, oI Sweet, and was born occupied by the lodgers. Sometimes ballast, Capt, Jim Smith; Sarah at Sag Harbor in 1816.She went West there were four,, sometimes eight, Thorp, Capt. Mark GriiHng; Long �. with her husband In 1833 by wagon sometimes a dozed. They never had .Island, Capt. Beebe, Capt. Elton; Old and Brio Canal and vessel to the any looney. In that peculiarity they Lakes, .She was In Chicago when it preserved a'remarkable uniformity. Glory, Capt, Smith; ,Nantasket, Capt:!_ was a little town of wooden,buildings; They went to bed all hours of the .Burns;, Orient; Wyandotte, with,muddy streets.:From Chlcagothe night: and got yup all hours of the Sweets Went by wagon to St. Louis.! day, There they smoked their pipes Steamers which ran.between Sag Tb 0, met Kit Gerson.' They l and talked of whales and home, for (Harbor .and Hartford-L, Bordman; loft Fort Leavenworth In May, 1846, whales:ung homemore Intimately as- j with a wagon train, and after great soclatetl In their minds. The garret Sarah B. Carey, 1864; Agawam, Capt; hardships arrived at Monterey, There Of the market building was full of (Congdon; Sunsn(ne, Capt:`Bates, were 46 young men, 7married wom, baggage, left during a aeriesof years; !, Bt en and 11 children 1n the party. On uncalled for. There were piles of eween Sag Harbor and South. ,Oct. 28; 1846, they reached $utters trunks,:sea-cheat,':rolls of blanlcets,..(Perry, .Shelter Island team float. 6 Fort, at what is now Sacramento. g�ng, ,ploGols fund all the rest,-of the Gildersleeve, Capt. Conkling power The Sweats engaged In sheep raising needfuls, andmoire of the 9 eedlesa until rumors of gold discoveries came artioles; browg ht b the earl -adven- boat Reba, to them,in 1848, Mrs, Sweet left a turerszto'CflPfoqufa. The owners for record that"no one can satisfactorily the moat part, never ,came book describe the excitement In California Their bbnee fire lying'heaven know 9TEAMERS OF LONG AGO ! during the host six months before where,.Tor, many Waco Hover heard putsiders began to arrive at the dig- from after leaving San Francisco!' Mt, 'Editor:— , eines, My husband got out:b1,800 "Sam T lbe" returned, to.ILmng l' I•u a recent edition of your valualillif in gold the first, week at American Island"`after on aboenae;!of several River, I was the first American years, He was or (IMA In th'Qught r paper, you gave an aceountoP stoam-. woman on the scene of the discovery,I'samowhat of a wag and alwaya to- ers which run to this port in years But 'came.ensy, go easy,, We were mained a bachelors, gone by, I would say the steamer all fools and there's 'no use regret-t -� :.:. _. ..._ ' ting what we nnissed ' j J, di: Schuyler was commanded by i'lret,,Long Islander at Gold Molds. Capt. John B. ,Edwards, of Orient,who The ciatm' 1s made that Samuel also commanded the Escort for one Tribe Hildreth of Sag Harbor was the first Long Island man In Call• _ season,. _ XXX:X_. forma at the time of the gold excite- mmnt, He was the ploneer of the exodus from Longlo_nd_,aYter news' FIRSIT II SAO HA11110nsr The t Subaoubo«eN bein*l1 mac Alt. 111K1 y wag of Qtt`roauti rEhe woxr poli 8otlthv {, much an•- .`gl(11 by cyte of Gevad ITopfi ' n o' elle d Sigh.. ! couraged, ptopag0 to orebE n Stage Waggon to ho v<�yagn urns vory a°ooeaelful , ,rs at loot nayn.. Sha was not but We print bel bursts of sit Oruro [ nvmtlra, drive from Sag 1Iaruour,on Longg Io..`K toTirook• r umrdU -nP hoofs. stun °ml .0 Lurgi 'Tyle Myra ndaural Yrwn Ba f totter desaribin tyro Cony, onto avory Weuk in Sommer, and once 1 } . , N tk,n4hwold, Bal aFmtnlg'I'Tn tea Winter Beatma. Tho Btet will �oWhshi bu t 4 years or ago 114,t_ Iilt orttiothijkr,Nuouorrtwuq�Jlired,urroui�th set out from Brooklyn Ferry, with 1'aalon ere,nt 1 pad ns filet n rfweivud rauout: g Amorinn with C 'ata of 61 }Watt ltfu Jain, aye;had a narrow Aksrly, now al 'Con o'Closk in the MPor l g of Mlonday,the•Ith of apt.'noun Wr(4ao pm•; b[ny nod will Ghat Night put up n1,Sanmol Nicolle This warm renowned captain aavign,"alx frlufralkin �hhdinma soHal the the known to our rel Oil PIemlrateed Plniuo, w im'a n Wuggun NY All he: Jorltteseued the orrw of a shlpwrynkmd bvl cr it ready to em•ry all Passengers to Lou T ussfa junk and ouiiiuf hex vegsa t+ort ,a Jay lonNet, raised ooutrihu likewise Singes aro ostakliehed h} tl}e diRoront into the heretofore nln0ar cud hurter Witold lairs boon bused by the Yung Leland (len Towns in C,os' rind Rhode Island Glovers• of Japan• Bo tileItWith Gila dentl' o fvpvhslo[shite 11 wlmardoetEHyedw�t � H0M. Joeara men 1,g, to carry arr Travellers to Best", Turns for Capt. Haveu" t eurvivar of tial Dear I'sssa�c aro no follows: Prom Brooklyn Ferry to RraG .Amerlent, "hip to enter n ChmOs th0 !'old hood of the von 9mm�ul Nluoll's,4e. each Perron; Prom Samuel Port, passes song. 'T'hn Auuu•fnn toe ofd «"plain cul 'tight inch m your roaders will NMI's to Epinetu" Smith's,4a.; from Epfnetu» 1,6110 here ol" of oil ou this vo x e. mark-S an immoi utor wkh a a account of 80110 Sndth's to Be°jamin Haven's, 4s,; from Bmf °min Capt. Hnvaua ? g eporm Whole, in whieh din nearly I am now a vie 3 was ]tilt wild' t,°pt.l his life. The ugpWtim hill an env ` Raven's to Nathan Cm dhmn's,U".; Cauda per Ifu a. Cooper when Ile first Gnlebon at Jq• repu:hatioll among the.Rset mgston PIs°°our Long] i droll,1 Ponny per Mile; and B°ggago °e count. " pan. HabincIn nttly tho Anmric», (,apt. the a1tl,,sG nritv�u s1,inn ll,.o[ nes Union Pusnongor may,in three Days,be convoyed Coops, of"lted th0 T"tan(I kiugdamreceived Ito nam( 120 Mfiles fa'n pleAnd Iftec Road for ba in n ceuvnn- nail it w¢e than Capt. Ihtveue wog'nsa limve1 eui�H still audw,dvmhlg in nue$e marketTis town an tart Wn�gfvi,mrd meet with tkn lost 1;n1,crtui u- aboard. moot. gh intended the Waggon shall coma once Capt. II¢von» first »ailed On n mos.+ tmirxacl a furious butt whale, giving than 3,000 ihhnbi » 1'minin l by Ielipp,itlihil For Bmncol N[aolls,� ter" lay whoa no Woe 24 dontk at--oke, bill before Che wit Journal, Ililt,(I nreAl a ver icer,Ilan —N uw S,nk rt) the still)Americus, owned 11's the: 110111, gat.°ererl ateru.ray, Cl, wit before the Nor] Journal, or the Geriernl Advertiser, Mny 28,1T12. I luatGluge. IIs s11tlod nrned Uape sintit fu taco byv their'y. 'the bear about 100 miles u - -- flora but fo°n(1 )"hales erarua in the low The narrow riv CAPTAIN,J,ACOB IUTENS. Snuth Pauiltu. Tile Amerlcns touched lIg ldnw by a etnekras struck a nen weld all Island al + t Now '4nalnuct moil the Sand off h Is. an n binR'omne 9i 'tilt, L,ast.�Wlxa1urg"Opptaiu,of,8l, I'uells returning to Salt Harbor. hflv. ffho arhatn was is its dartth flurry t N it) l ltised fourtceo mouths, taking wits smuro.L Capt. Raveitn tkv rlauded by m° Iierbor'» Ouuv lnmoue NJ»Ring Pn all 1,400 barrels of oil. g wits fro turod. He remafhed [cove North Hem, of v Moot, Paiseaylway QaiajY A vlar later Capt. ffavAn s sailed as s,Jous for sevm�ttl Jaya. The My extended view, n1, His Idumo in Ba,{t omelet¢Ed navigutor of the still, War. of a t al ng E.txliade for RiQ 4 a�irgoou aawad l I Some rim, of Warren, R. I., ivith C' the Iowa is a Heath. H° Slitp pod air all ("Joel_apt. 1(Ye. .}the prosperous water of Lfie xv,(It tion Captain, TlY look nennul d CR t+t�iinv<nO'oYset vuynye. �Naa of its sea bathini Vtlygyoa. thea , go. When in .tiro northern ed a g,rover suiro em WaebT objoof»of Internal uroair, go. 94 Earth, near the Y °'�Od ou hfare in Hi I ,Captain,Jacob A. Jinvens. fair, hist Cape, the ahip wits dogteoyad by Rre. iutg thlobusinesss wiith Iis ia son�Aird 1,l Piotnraeggely bet s,loarvrvrrrs nmxtlu t iv w of rdo� Pa- 'Che erety wam rnecusfl by n Now Hod-�R for several vwas. :hbovt 14 ycare as Sags with red tele nil boat of blunt 1,.,i} whale ship e ford whalor nail were taheu to tba, tmadu fag Harbor a hn 1,y hu.-t. Handvvieh Ldn"lls whey° the here tiaPt. Ptavuns r,atlred flow nf,ti ]Bootle preen, h ;Wil !n ml iwxt, doling t+w fir v, handed. lfsa Cnpt. Hnvena r no nciaivl hCaut Ms parents Visited Cnlifami ` Below and bo; ' n uiuhtflgtEtn t"+u n, .,,r� Stranded for eovftrni months. iia last' hid mrtire geflgari'N fiahiu t tee [line of tilt) gold disuaverfre t tushing bouts, an I �K• {• Lief,a'J hlalilal'i lfnii a[I '�hff11- gsil sod Bt Bag Hnrlwr. Hnd he Lvrd many hardships ho ohlanuadga nf[Ht 1g4U, and often gpnk0 of the Han F -t9rgnr port of t ,until the fourth day of May neat Ave ill the Clip or chi Warrou, at p'ttgw. ciset) of 1110 ill's. R Wowd buys been riuoty y°nrs :old. pp lad Havons married Infra, their iii s k'""me ditto a yeas rst Capt, kir town, faro her Wooft. If() enih,d f t -ouThe sow has not 1» 1 in her for two season rtuughtu n1,' 'Chimina 11¢mihun, a vena' health null bona lm llr'g, orad hi s. Th° cayngi n North ITavea, hr lnli7. Slot »oak us we floc outw,eo rvgged coa"tituGinn, wee.kmt� ware very qucoeastnr i'hr onIloa r+ filo full of 11111. Since then as has fey.: i had now bet," absent from bolos num,_ °oagt, hot In a IRE Ed by Old age.au i si all aU Was Oil' fy Pour tears. Ifin calla and fiuuil • aidad with kis"air Arthur at his 3[alfe tergralfng the lar ,able to oombal With ou.nttewk ly grip,: Ella of him nil lost. At II Bauij auu Strout home.—Corrector. defog, Core; Hy now ea provident among elderly tofu'---1 Wilde f"lmndn tea conuvn ml of n line- ."��e m this camnuuri 1,g. I vessel, the (John, '--`" Drunw Ob to rho of Capt. Havear.was borr,i,a.Sag liar- was offered Capt. WHALER ST. LAW R)NCB, Mored moot eerie Ifavens. With roluctaneo It tut oho Tha whnlor oroaohment of the bar, in. iho 1rf51e old hauso un enol uharroa, road leading to ,East Ha.crytou, now go, for ho vunutf+li to mnturn Sag o whor ou.tllwnf,ouce suited Irom j The best view a euc°piuit by tlhrabani Tlniiaou. BAN W bra native vilinga, cud <wma Kama sixty.verve a vOms voyage ono thu,vovngoaG soli of +loo ,late Ja- bS avrgp,of Now Bedford it) the War- of the Sl, g0' Bhe was til° largest bed from tile h cob Idavcllp, one of n finally of four rd°• N Harbor fie was her .rhildcou, Alfred, ,PhOba aE(1 Marin, Far a,short while aftor I,ei°g 626• Title wneld be amnddr'f�dl where one eau ens .all of whom are tanw dead. .Havflne,ra inafat+d in Sag Harbor, 1]l,t, Lawrence u l,3 ae(II1this1Wflndell b lino. it)¢ anmtasnd n comforh+le t' r.um', M. Baker, tints.by Capt When in his eigitteenth yi ew Cup- G S{. 1'he ohiof i¢toYo taih ITaveaa shipluul before the mast yens Ift aaa",lft the 'I10•a when Uapt [Ill,• ugf+nt»moi urvuurs vera U 1 the noble obaroh l owners logo. k1v - on,Gho,whata.shep $•nn, nailer .Cop G. 1 gniu-soiled in quest of wl1fdea, 8110 gnllnd on Sal ook&(IrnW. of gray flint and h .Charles Hov,o1L T,he vessel ulado n' brl eaaaurl:.ap toko charge tit 1,b° lilt!° to Gee hums port 2U, Stili, rehernin thirteen mop[he' cruise In tow l9,mtn A Myl'a.oY Reglan, Ipv oho 1 May ? R Pr(�sive steeple Atiastie, refirning Wadud wiled] J;400 bort Slat}lair, of tilts 11ndr, into till-'voyage of two months long 'than, ioor high, its riobly d huxtats of nit. lie mixt shippod,ilo.tira ail('41 s 2114m, nrpati Y. Capt. ", Who ane of of elm d Years. loflbr4u60 belt 10 300 barrels boautifully oarved "hip Noble, Clier kinyre Un oMk'bis grter.iutolotpPtfn tkn�iy Alla,oAt�oll and At »°n1, on 2(1,0 0lton°do of bo°n,I LnvtnlR tl°gIn the ollt 8 to 1, I ill,Re+ a after s nCH cruise" he Nellie 1,41mmantl h0 bre Lill, nn[I offer n vi nr's cruise flee Nub/.nsva» dace it) Gbs Hire 4, voyn o i°ends previously. Hord roturaed to ting Horlxlr with 1,2ty) 9 7+ d aa. 8 ryas worth over $f16,000renting pinao of I barrols of oil, s 11 1800 to again sailed g' 4pg1e ^� Oorro 1111.(1'undo a but one v' The yougo, father of It ht p du gs sefvmil Ina , Cu thig� et) the chip Iiunmbnl, Clot. Bannett, ry - e.. L 1 b .I• 9r naNY work, -.- _.__./„ Stmt pastor of our °1,r' cayago tiro Call . _r Arst .00Ece!r'er 8otithwo7d, 8ngland —T-� 5~� 1 'iJIAN AGED WHALER. , , Orlgln of Long Islead Names p 19e print below a very"entertaining �'�' mae E. Warren," -Base the 4Tine Brooklyn Eagie's Washington t letter, describing the ottraations of SeuEhaintiton Press, ^was barn in correspondent hue ascertained the HoutUwold, Suffolk County, England,: B aktvn, N, Y:.-, Apr -Is I received rooently from Mies Lnoy D,. oq ski southa❑ipton in 1,326 .and is origin of many Long Island names, Akerly, now abroad, aml,,- fe well cue of its oldest living residepts. In from Henry,Gannett, the United States i '1k33 be "'ads his first whali❑g,'' ovage j geographer, attached to the Geological known to our readers as a frequent and fiegore the mast,in the etiip'.'Hudsou " Survey, He gave the following of in- valued contributor to the column of P 4atve Voyages Green', making son- ca I tereet: Aquebogue, village in Suffolk bony Island Gensalogg ✓ ���y'd3 esive voyages of varying.la❑gtha as i fohow's: County; an Indian word meaning "at .. HON, Josnru: N. HALLOOS:, In,1836 ship"Atlantic", Captain Hunt- the end of a small pond," Babylon, Dear Sir:—PexhapssomeoF tmq_Cooper, as Boateteerer; "Hud• village in Suffolk Count named for lyour readers will be interestedina brief son 1837, Captain Green, as Boat- Y' aocount of Southwold, England, whore stcerer; "Tusoarora," Captain. Eli the ancient city in Asia. Bohemia, vfl- {Shite, as 8rd mate, 1839 and again lage in Suffolk County, named for the Tam-now a visitor, and hem wUlo6 m 1841; "Superior Captain Joan province in Austria-Hungary. Com. place our Long Island town of Southold Bishop, in 1843, as lot mate; "Eliza mach, village in Suffolk County;.. from received its name, both Faith,"1Captain846 to 1848 aslatma(nh The1el'Sn! an Indian word, winnecomae'r "Ueauti- Southwold, acharming little seaport, bina, "Muliteen forW -tuner," Cap• fol place." Coram, village in Suffolk 'market town and pariah of not .more ;fain Harry Green "Allo(;" CaCounty; named for an Indian Chief. Captain 'than 3,000 inhabitants, had an existence Aw.W oQ e, oio2tus gin Lyons,mate; us j ah j.Miller's Place,village in Suffolk County; ;before the Norman Conquest, Bad is Captain y s named for Andrew Miller, ;about 100 miles northeast of London. ,giate; "Noble, Captun William , the eon of Fowler, 1869 to 'G2 aslst mate, an early %oneer of Easthampton. The narrow river Blythe makes South. Moking An almost unbroken sea. Prom faed Lnnd, village in Suffolk i' Wold an island at high tide,.as it stands serviee,of"thirty years in nine differ• Count on a,binff some 30 or 40 feet. high, ear. out abip's: Mr. Warren is unquestion• yf so named because the land for mounded by marshes and,facing the ably the old0st whalemnn, both to factories waspromfsed,butnevergiven, gears and length of servioe, on Long .Shelter Inland off Long Island; prob�- r North Sen, of which it oommanda,an. Island;.if not in the United States. b]y the translation of the Island; Indian extended view,` fie bears his eigbty nine years easily word a ranch tion o the ohs w l India The town is a much frequented and strong mentally and physically, proeperons watering.Place on eoaount ypliderfull.y well preserved after so meaning "island,halteredbyislands." 'of its. ea bathin and resents man lo❑gto r Puritans n career, and he bids Shinnecock; village in Suffolk "County; ,,..s g, P Y fatir to road out manymore years in named for an Indian tribe. Smithtown, ahjeote of interest, The principal thor Jfic restful life be has so honorably town. ]n Suffolk; named for Richard p, glhlare is High Street, which winds ;earned. Universally respected Thomas oEatee eel between low brink dwell. Ily barren is a oredit to Southam ton Smith, an earl proprietor. - ,t q y. . i.. P Y P P `hg'aiwith red the roofs, and ends at the - - ----- - - Muth Green', r=A RELIO OF THE PAST, gIn lry oand beyond, are moored the 11101 g`boats,as;industry on which the The original document, of which this ` p part OP lire population depend is a copy, after tunny wandering, has found its waYto ti( rt U9, Pra.LETnEnu The sea hue not'Ehe clear'green watsr� C' ( saoU? us we 9nd on the DevonshireTlie mo - - County of Suffolk. mother church of Saathwoldia at f ooastj put is muddy, as if olowly diem. Statement of votes taken at the an- is two miles beyond, the Rev. ! niversar Election for Senators, which er'r bis the land which it is real) Y f g"� g y Christopher Yonge having.been Vicar of doi❑g, Covo Hytke to thenorth and, commenced on last Tuesday of April, il' ll'unwfull to t eouth, baving both onf one thousand eight hundred and five. " faced' meet seriously through Elle en Reydon church, although of greater SENATORS ntignity than the one at Scuthwold, is % oroaohment of the sea, Ezra L'Hommedieu, one hundred and ' tt jilt about one•Ehird. its size, and ile best view of Southwold is to be event restoration has given it;a dia. twenty three. f uad ;Prom the top of its lighthouse;, atl tfny modern appearance. DeWitt Clinton, one hundred and j where one can see miles in every d; 1 nineteen. i For many:, years the inhabitants of David Hedges, one �gnthwold were buried.at graves ones g ' TUeble c interest, however, centers in-cUnrohyard there,fs tall of gravestones Joseph Terry esu., one. the noble ohnrohoY St. Edmond; built ' John Corwin, 3d, four. hot as eleewh'ere in England; the older .ofgray Ilint and freestone, with iia im j' James Hallock, one. ones are either gone,gr quite illegible, pr@sive steeple.Eower nearly 100 feet !r _Jared Landon, one. Look of..spaae-ppey�(of ou even. high, its rioblgdeoorstad interior and * We certify the above to be a true "beauhPoll carved screen. S Itouoli ng ogthe his'ory;of Southwold, Y y , �but`to a Loug Islander, no psrt of Eng- statement and Estimate of the votes An the,ohan fel, a email bra dsd measar•. taken in the town of Southold at the load,hue more of interest and no de- , log abont 8 by 16`duohee;marks the 1 t "' ' aforesaid election this 3rd da of May restin 4P soription .can reproduce•rt9 nameless Y Y i i. g'`bxlooe of Eha ROv..<Chriet her aharm, L D. A. 1806. Yonge,`father of the Rev, Jotin Yogng,f _ Daniel T. Terry i SOnthwold, y first past out church at �ogthold,^, Thos, Youngs Suffolk Coagty, England John Corwin Thomas Terry Jr. ------ _._ --- - - - --. _ 'Consm"Ti llan Letts Routh is quietly 'There romniuoth a rest for those who Sonne of our o elks . enjoying the.tender attentions of her love God." children and children's children, and ever "Aunt" Bonlah Conklin Goldsmith "Uncle Sam'Vail passed his ninety- gives herself no more anxiety about the ' fifth birthday feet June. >i0..ie having tried the excitement of city life, iv'ew York Trinity Church property, mach prefers the shot of Ola Southold, bright.at hisplaivint fireside surrounded ,iihn Lav plensnnt t <ol'n"kiCr'a c€ 'The p rs q by three devoted daughters and two nud she is very happy with kindred hero. g Sacred Ma.fc society" and forgets not - - -- - eons-m-law. Time glides pleasantly on, the instruction of Prof. Thomas Hast-I Her oyes sparkle like a maiden's,and the and it nightly call always nffordareal on- ings more than fifty years ago. �joyonxe of Lor pilgrimage rest very gently H . H. . „Aunt" Hanuinh Woodruff Horton: upon her. t H. H. Cassa.Esq.,more than forty years Case bears the weight of four score Deacon Aclmrly has been suffering - the honored president of the Suffolk years.with remarkable grace, and she of- from a disabled foot,slid henca he hue County Insurance Company, and.nouly ten goes lip with these• who worship not lately taken a drive. IIis good wife �twieethat time n successful farmer and God in his temple. Mrs. Case is the seems in bettor health than formerly and merehaut;,wonhl still move with the as. last of the largo family of JonntLnn, eon both are hopofal and happy in relation itivity:of youthful manhood, only that n of Lamina Horton of the "Old Castle." to the present and the future. e I disabled kneo-pan hinders locomotion. "Brother" Samuel Wools is much Capt. Horatio Wells misses the pleas- ".'Uncle"Warren Richmond; fast ap- cambered with caro now that we have ant sittings at the old post-office, but in penciling:the nineties, revels withgrit- another tend, but lie beans it with re- fair weather he is able to call at J. B. nude on his beautiful Bay Side farm, mmkablo resignation, and be is a firm Fnuning's, and so with the kind ntten- and contrasts the present witlrh'.eyouth- believer in overarming Providence. tions of his good wife, relatives and fill days of;more than soventy-five years "Uncle' Martin Ooldsmith has Lacl fritiuds, than glides plensnntly with him. tago. Bayside will soon be lonolybecause, quite a season of comfortable health nod "Unole"Joe Goldsmith in his lonoli- �Mr. Riohmoud.and'his pleasant family as he passes to and fro, his pleasant moss-still laments that "We have no will,sack winter quarters in Jay street, countenance is a benediction. g„ country," "No American flu ,No Brooklyn,liotwoen which 'and the City "IIuolo"Lam•ona IIorton Las unneu-' nothiu'." National Bank "Uncle"Warren will vi- at good health. He has lately returned' "Cousin" Jemima Cleveland retains y brace on pleasant days. from a pleasant trip, and rejoices groat- list youthful appearance ill a remarkable Capt. Jonathan Seth Overton is quiet-'. ly in the prospective business, of Ilia' degree and very much enjoys attending ly enjoying the even-tide of lifa;comfort grandsons. God's house, ad greatly by his devoted nephew, Dr. Richard Landon Peters recalls the Mrs. John Davis has fought life's list- D• N. Brown, and it is n real pleasure to days that are gone and says it is folly to tlo with grant spirit and silo is now en- chat with him, beeanse he is high'up in be so anxious to get 1•lcll. His bead is joying the kind attentions of her pros- ]military tactics, of former days, school- full of interesting facts and in, eonversa- .porous children, teaching, first lossous i oratory, etc., ties lie makes lively times. 'i Time will not permit Further mention, oto. The captain J proud to number J.rl Wickham Case,unusually retains his but writing the above has started a train among hie.pupils, Joun. Barnes Torry, earlier appearance nuusuinlly well, and of pleasant memories which it is hoped Alvah M. Salmon, S. Wells.Hutchinson, Thais more than ever high authority in may be shared by others. _ and.lyanyOther well knowil citizens. genealogical and historical matters. Ilis Barmobas Horton Booth is in the some contributions for the press always cause swore of oitrrold Folks. of%n second honeCol. John Wickham and his estimabl y-moon. Ho nud hie6 a desire fur mora. e stNtely bettor-half make a fine picture of "Uncle" Austin Horton makes fro- wife found the corner mansion all too dignified comfort, anal wo wish them ':queit visits "totown,"and as his faith- large and lonely after .the departure of much joy and length of days. j ful horse ambles so easily thra1197e their only offspring, and so bast anchor Jouatban W.Houl ing seems not to be Brush's Hill, be may truly feel that D. in the elegant home on Bay-ay. Forty Pmm•e than three score years and ten, for Y. Hillock-, Seth Wells and others have years ago the Colonel's well-fed teams "gray hairs are hardly upon him, and graced Bay View with n monument more toted huge loads of bankers to the vir- although he has publicly served a genor- useful than if built of marble ov granite. I'ginfielde of"Oregon,"wherenow are some ation, he poises the scales of justice and Mr. Riches d Carpenter some time of the most prosperous farmers of the says the funniest things with equal fa- since retired from being "a door-hoopor. town. Very pleasant must it be to pass cility in the House of:the Lord," but he stilt the oven-tide of life where Peconia'n lav- "Aunt" Fanny Lodya•d was able to continues to improve the outward ap- '.ing waters are constantly in view. enjoy the Thanksgiving service ; also pomaneo of mon, and also to store his Miss Amanda Horton and her sister, the Jubilee concert. Her.eyes glisten at .mind with.safeutifie and practical knowl- Mrs. Mary Haynes, are,the last of good the mention of "Traveler John," whose edge. old "Uncle Deacon" William Horton's .untiring offorts one hundred yeas ago, Mr..Daniel.Tuthill Torry is the Inst of (family. Both have had a share of afdic. to do what,Stanley and others have late- of:the name in. his generation, .but his '.tion and ill-health, but they are nory ly clone, should not be forgotten and loneliness is greatly softened by the af- comfortable. The former spent many wall army she boast of her aunt of factionsof his manly sons. yearsin New York where she enjoyed the Rovolutionavy facto, who long ago was I'Ainrt"Esther Hallook Terry and her religious teaching of-the good Dr. Lud. laid to rest in the old cemetery, sister dwell uietl 9 y til cozy cottage glow, and all are of pleasant memory. . ..__ Y• quietly ► Y b the road side as you color Ba View, Mrs. Elizabeth Reeve Overton eontiu. and thou h not,alwas free from mw sea the even tenor of her way, and is they.__ao akao_rfril to the _tho_ught that.,punctual in attendance upon the services in God's house. Her father was a well known fninister in Mat tituck many years, ago. 8 His:Easy Hubbard-t01ede1and,gli21$p f 'about bar home and voJ,fr@'"to-olntrch r=.. : <""-"" now, livi ore �), , (colored, n 89 Alanson' ��SomiiOl n Io , with no mumly apparent ease as when qtr 71 H, Rogers 79; Mrs. Mary E. 'Van more than¢half-century since she came It has often bee a bltat in Nostrand 75;,Mrs. Frances Wright, , a bloomiug bride from Mattituck to this I Greenport and vicinity people live to 1(now living), 89; Jacob Dietz, 75; J. pleasant village. a.riper old age than many other Conklin, 7(i; Hezelriah Barker, 75; James Richmond,Esq., has just cum- lace known. . But est.how much ' Cor- mounted the eeoond volume of,41a life P 9 - John B. Terry, 78; Charles L. Cor- j credence can he placed 3n the above. with a better-half somewhat his junior; ; ,win; 92i Mrs. Laura Wiggins,. 75; statement, the writeris .unable to brit spiritnnl.,covgouiality contributes i - � Albert P. Corwin, 79;, Mrs,'. Eva', to happiness. Years ago Mr. Richmond say. However, when one reads %lipp, /8; Mrs, Maty Bushnell, 79; was famous as a debater and the weight what follows, a conclusive opinion Mrs.Amanda J. Verity, (now liv- of years bas not lessened his forensic may be formed for.one's sale. . . ing), 91; Mrs. Thomas Cassidy, 761 ' ability. Some have lived to be septuagen- George C. Fullmer, 77; -John Chap. Jasper Freeman and elong worthyassed£e, urians and some nonogenarians, man, 77; Henry -Graber, 78; Mrs. reapected llby"by all, have long possessed ee golden the ' which certainly averes much toward Margaret W. Raynor, 78; Charles "Mallby" homestead. In the golden - g Y days of banker fishing Jasper rated the heal thyatmospherical conditions Merrill, 75; Mrs. Mary Corwin, 77; of our East End. "A 1,"and lro could play skilfully ou the William Henry Conklin, 76; Mrs. Octavo Flats; hence his children make Of Greenport's manifold health- Amanda Young,77;Mrs.Sally Conk- . music wherever they go. Many"foun- fulness, as well as the longevityof .lin, 75; Mrs. Emeline Skillman, 86; taf is of living water"aro reminders of its residents, we may.justly feel'a Daniel Downs, 79; Mrs. Harriet A. his father's industry and skill, and the i sense of pride rarely if ever indulged Terry, (now living), 91; Mrs. Anna latter showed his native wit when lie said in by mankind. e J• Terry, to the youthful Sabbath-breakers: Most of. the following persons, , 7. 87. ; Henry B. Morrill, .(now '-You needn't ran from me, for there's , living)), 87., have recently passed away but theft n blankor one than I am socia'for youl" If time and place would permit we Cousin Lucretia Prince Glover has integrityandsteadfastness will ling-,''could mention many others who been famous as a housekeoper since our or as'.a monument of everlasting;i have passed the "fourscore years oai9ioet recollections, The snow-whfte memory: and more." but these will serve to. brand, golden butter and other tooth- I Some of our oldest rosidents:Mrs. some substantiate 1.hat she has prepared 1 Jemima Latham lived to be 94; Isaac suffice that the scriptural,w,ords are j would make a mountain-pile. In that McLellan, the poet, 91; Seth C. noticeably applicable to Greenport. iliac her band hue not forg+it its binning, Horton, 89; Oliver%: Buckley, 87; .Some of the old -residents.•aliove, and alio can stillmina yea Sive .horse ;Judge Salem R. Davis, 87; Ansel mentioned, who Are in life;";1}avg':, in the moat oxompl'aty {iianner. A]- Van Nostrand, 81; Mrs. Experience talked with the writer and..relate• though her bonsohold is of the smallest nnmber, bntfew have so many immodi-'Young, 80; Mrs. , Patience Ann' many interesting 'reminicences of ' ate relatives; and these, with her daugh- I Brown, 84; Mrs. Christina Fanning,. the past such as old stage coach; ter and family, add pleasure to the pass- !.85; Mrs. L icinda McKenzie, 85; Mrs. when Col. Moore was the pose iug days. i Rca ebecBeebe, 83;. 'Mrs. ;Huldah ter at Greenport, then Green. HAP Mr. Adam Bersenger was a noted �Hardenbrook,.82; James Lupton;'83; and -Mies Frances Hnntting, lids blacksmith in his youth;aud aftersuccess Mrs. Margaret BAlier, - 85; Mrs. daughter, was assistant, with the in that line he took to farming, whereof - office situated on the North Road his products for market have been of the Nancy A. Julian, (now rge n H. 95; + ` best quality. It is a red.comfort to see Patrick Heaney, 80; George H. Vail, where,oarvillage,was than located, lien smoke his pipe in the true %nicker- [,81; Mrs. .Lydia Floyd, 87; Thomas. of the First Baptist Churok. also booker style. With his good. wife the 4 Foster, 94; Carl Lott,. Sr., 80; Mrs. standing on the North Road; after- book quietly at theft pleasant home I=Maly L. %iug;-82; Mrs. Abbie Carfer,. ward moved to rte,prelsent site,, of on Rail Road-ay., with frequent calla '82;Mrs. Hannah Hallook, (colored), the whaling industry,, anQ,,of•many from their prosperous children. 88;`4rs. Jano B. Johnson, (colored), coincidents Vl)bml-of thosn-days. "IIuole Billy"Prince line been a land- !81;Mrs, Frances Hnnttipg, 87; John marksince we can remember.. Forty - George dotter, 83; Lewis. Homan, years ago he could "pull more nen-weed ! from Town Creek in one day than any r82; .rfH. Hannah ,Gilpin;. 86; Miss other livin'man I" and the amount of Nancy'M:'Wiggins;81; Mrs. Harriet "fenoin'stuff"tbat he has put in right t Jerome, 81;Mr&. Eliza. Overton,. 80; shape is really incrediblol His father Miss Lucinda Sells, (colored, now lived to be "the oldest man about,"and ;living); 97; Mrs, Harriet January, "IIuole Billy"is the last of that family. (nee Talkhouso, a Montauk Indian,:.'. Like every other mortal he sometimes andnn`aw living), 90; William J: finds things "alldown ter the heel but , Qo/oe, 78 Cape Lt�G Gass, (now dutifulbig ttellyeI,' When posts aon is„ l are to be holed �a1 r`1l` Ti 91., ikfry"`lit abet ne'B1ng '761;. rails shurpenod,and these made into fence �r�r4Mary .Ij} nCtbRklF q,.; 7`)�i' `Mrd ?. cosmic . straight to our old' hand t Gec'lta Clark 7 Mrs.;H9ttte M y. n "IIuole Billy Pimao.:" (Tan,�•7 ,thg,ugh ttr had;been the back of �h r01�< t ��� � ���'` ieitfaeron gpalt yi�➢d pd�raG@�l abicktpg bronco ,'E`Wo werwaafe for th; 1t,•,;+�' ,r� 'tp�f ,r�� �`t"' iris >Y>v' toe he quttj rnutlu ' + 6cepsoi'�r Erma ;being, b'ut what of:the future Beneath us seyeral fathoms down wq ' rl + x�e r. + 1 s+ar ✓� ,� I e pYlVllege,ef w@ xan �.. yrub, "$y Dr �, G; HuCLr ,N4+p �sr< �r"nd finding theple�lve'a�z,tw�+. ,t.,5chlleabed of seaweed and spider era r il ,T�'e�oid red mtllrthst�etg,'bd.'j.'ro �h � ' ' g,utas prgp[ietor roP+fAU'e tl��' okoR�',a r around us in every direction, a are r� 1�'utr reared irt@ crownrto, @@!t, aall,catbpat mooned att' re }lead+{of I waste o4 watere6roken iotorue , grlpckl`y'�peare' e`,few feetrabo ,ar,� ,6er cre�@k,.,aud often, +r"w,han' he eouhd ' nwaves dinged:with whitecaps. t; lin +yhe and I , in, beating upon our thin]y ayet of AI wae'e@ y�,inc k r p the gnnding was 1°?}r '�mill.. It towered, above @v,8n, r+�otben�` Muld take the boat and'sailraarose tff@ backs, contributed to our disc omf �t❑"ill�tp the county. As ' oiler+star+,adllljl �tpay3tothe `fishing ground under ,jhe I It,was along swam to the shore •'I tilmeth Prom snott err; so this mill ,der dee0. hills+`of,S6elten ,Island P gd Joseph decided that he would tr - parted(ram the beaten track5,of9?IAdM ' ypk,fiehmg f,Those present never saw to p eferenoe to being left alone 6 .� find] �ar5httecture. 'While q}hgrr mule , n,ati�klCes(of ;t;,and I am a4ratd they w[yh-uncertainty,'astrtde of that,e ry'pex@ co(nparativelyLrshort ildl . Yt t,61't@ver vVill Same.ones whB to moxa ! ring, hobbing keel. He was as t ' h`i one was talk,and 'slime ;Irt,�,wae '�fta rt`q'iltar Wtththe subjeet than I -am, swimmer, end,as he struck out for J, distant shore, never in my life w i ...... nAllnaha�e"and keu"eralretortos "rryestd that there are times when l y�+ ,,ingluding the rbtating uatic dente that, R yy4,L �truth is better than a he anal ,eo absorbingly interested in.an ex' t . W ,�l`ed,thererms that tutne'd the sha£E, yyl enever we'went{felling that was one He got theren of ea11 sigh t�aad after tr i yp"�° 4thttm@e The traditional fiQb ' g P d�' e �glved the atones that. gro [a m u and downtho 6each for 74fh@aG that made the brpad,,ttlat gig yr' is wholly uncalled for MnRXil is is a hours, he, found an old 'tteredtand egregd by a:malox( y timA We hove+ ftlled a� bushel basket bottgmod boat and a pair of r ` ' Fi ele�an@ porgies ,and superlative oere' and" with these,the noble 4 he fopulatinn,oY the oounEpy Bei�a�� 6 affected,my rescue,-13roolfl'Nn Eat fi ¢tje�great arms spun around t�eyy 3ba§s^,tn�lde<of tan hour and eaaEteredi, TAN iWishing, whirring sound that'^ tj�`a'y,,lover C ptata $Yfvester„Snh h s, 't t 'ir`hr e)i bArdoxed the erre@k res�f,thel lien"rd not only: in the tmmedty�Ee "Tho,most active ontor ilaiug rout ' itty or the "Run," but well opt Gh�+ ;(�{ IS �hetlga”nAthod 4f dlepotgmg ,of� I „ P aB iwery Lane ll "` Qpd on to iEh r'Hoa� e it l ay�(erhad no, BifQF�r 3ah I Ilaw uDtrCkmtl[��I-Iot e�evorywl on crier, ��o,nod l`"k"I'd WhenIanaxm+waetiifytaE¢dt' bt 1`r t �a'�anoton oP'7�' sulh y`tnohod s(a share-.twotda ewiLhonC et- - @,;zeroth tt Vgas a g4°a nsb'breds Ifl the flytAS , r @ ,r }y Y Y 3' g a atrr and oge�ttme a h iwg[E!,r, ' t�Se�ottlhWeetvandpeang P1. bila sellspuowslinpelrs, sticks type iu the rY a flwork of n armyj t P�P� k �` p�inting a#,ioos.to help liu't wiled thm•e ���P ,inr 4 �t pAu hith@ elate o4 the;inti{ s n ahaut Your feet ProtnJt'�b,° t �. C 1 q1 the xougd tripGlle, �truvyzed around Eha4tfPor ,1i is a_rueh, and acus torey,olbm things. A''pUy htefiands andaadap, R I �tarF-Fcidple, ,that Dick,l�fr t9.latt, Tho town conldnot livti without him. @ o ttict y to buetnese agd i,El%it$1,;1� Ho is the factotum, Ho line never• peen `t',alr umatnnoeeta` h`r 4 t 7 d t'` 3a` sy Iyati,ibngoygda„ngtdta nPoto�si te, n N h�^�'tendylP klbQ'e not fotud (lie right girvoun21myselP look l yot,and nobody would consent to bier. to is into the upper hay?.+,ilo.� tnkmg a wife tiotn off the island, Hol Y> :nrF G,", S r 7 .ry,.s ' occlirre t melee ue return,@t.$ at'r � �?", � t�$j,U.. d 4 , ,� ✓r1� is vett' nccommodaliug, and docs ]olaM,I �. ha�lr left ~home until w,err�3il '�eforwhioh he gets no pry. Ho know9, i. a tell t�^gg",f, G e�gg'�."...'Q p'`'hi' • � ise+PomG,S ho[peward boun+dc;,��gd, everything thatiagoing on in Naoluc y •I.vptaJfl mr trris [ t kvve"potrced, for; the ,ft st t!Tnie171 ot, and is ready to satisfy nll Ingniciuil,• r pal t +. yg.tyUe; sky was darkene� and.,, ei minds. Ho Boos up tho long dight o" ''* " ✓°� t' 4.; ♦tor itiidtchsnged color from an tjlfra ,r stabs to the South Tower every day f �' ,�osiei�9;� t� re; . oitrtgt;U;�tue, to s soiled bpdraggledli �a�$rnp)[(tY ISromd cif >; y ,r �naiawe„tStepizfipg cloud loomed{ Bud blows hie horn will Is lila Nan { In�', '�nortfiwe'st and the b�h}.ningrl teal[ototioreImplement for noiso,.whoi �ItC,@ t' iM itq say to`r}�ry� 13@„�r 8f yi n' p "", bout tUye church] ;the dormer comes in eight, Ho blow 1 � QRa''m what ouw�� T rdgLa°tha 6rtllaae A crash of,+ z . l a� r his holn and shouts tho� .aiowe in Ills �� Ifin`�lar ondtstn illo$Tei, 'Jank t t s i s @h Arrslpa artltgBly,r srUgB2strve :.'oP' at tt•emendons voice, as a matter of nccom hethei•. '• 1 ndermg u s e d r }�i ex ytard elf Som rte ba e a 4� lie ha(iou to all p within ll oing helms any papers to selh or not, 1Vil- cause-our fin , hum's fortieth birlbdny comes nosL NOV_ l +egmpperlrk oifi a. u,a'li l r�nl9 rttbawae rttn down withou(j� ;umber, andthe.;Public ought to do (he F brat n rp ;a° �V�,exerE�e�,, Ru0elves;fo thin; liaudeomo thing for him;"—Cor Npesa n. -y.. got fouled, and+ gerkford Sttcnl7tN d • - ' 1e ��r�tn ei�ah Sd r r z a , ¢✓ e Vii -' '" � a�aba tf the ga� t f4 i +'s ���+s��,f'��i �..� � o� i"tiall s�tok`iuezt+tgntl when the meet Che fishes the ala s r r Bade waeYf own,h4tPong � adrd and =fslltng � }6i f?�gia 4 t4} f� t't 9 Wp ever had p t .til liN `>aprlaIn i' �U'n�r ons,{o tt sod stuck !, r @ a sN ❑ a�li�'rST$e'°� W9do rt`forever ' W�'en the ttreep q a se tlobbjh ,b,Ez�"re k>ya,x''�s'! War f7 °fir`dzpreeAn�tirj❑ogP9dte. N❑w J 'shaven lawn Ueoome'lar d RUad I f° r fon ounTw '�(t'o Osa r'Wo ''we plies the 'twill a nn attraeEtvo lace xudged' r Oum boprz, soy", ' w 'uIa' YT 'etd�" et t h p "BloopY,Hn nwf" qmd�gpf'` c`kdn'�o toldrwatlupjiront'of whiohrgtood�tlto store neftrer dhe it fend ride west qt Southold vi7lago add"h'44e]a�few ,of °from �l eEmwea$of a whiali�wae.moved L°wyer tenemenf A]UerE'on� 0asos r(� ;many changes that�'.mrleG,tinpe, takod,p J w3eN Caso'e tene•'housa built m;61851 by Daniel aerr��; `place on its principal eEifeok'durf°g our' ment houge, and`�afterward Uarsed. 'onipenter who sold rt to .e ani l Terry;- fflft ears'ua My I liow whit❑ our These laude❑long Ware wars ownod bSlbleokemith and-Ue to J4Up^ Yh fa 'do S S p.. y , g S; 'beards aregettmg, HAD me my five Nicholas Icdes,Stephen Bailey, Nutban-I to Charles Bnrih and go Gra Ganes... You needn't smile; your lege iel.Younge, Ieanc Youngs in 1789, Haz.from wham it was purolinsed by John will get,shaky too when you are as zard.L; Moore in. 1795, John Frankel, Wickham, then by Frank Schaumburg,, ,ninth over a hundred as I nm. Go slew •Jelin Milliken,Ezra L. L'Hommodieu,.later by W. H. Vail, who mold it to Law 'now,'and"we'll start tilis time notfrom- and in 1834 by Benjamin Wails, then byl war Cnse. On its site, then owned,by: D. B. and 0 L. Wells,and now U its y f g "tletUodietLnno" but from Boissemr S. B. L. Peters, stood mad ease Ago tUe fAve., and walk❑p as we (lidwhen you: Present occupants; Now put on your home of Miriam Vail-(who afterward be• were boys, nu the right hand aide to the far off spectacles and look across the came the wife of James D3'r.ut and, her„ "Run." Bight here is the grocery of street down that mnplo-shaded avenue, mother, The former tough Coclnau Bios., formerly the old Metho at the foot of which and near the back home one of the early village eoho> diet oharoh,: which was built on the hill of Town Creel(, stands the pleasant and some of her pupils still remembe,. n 1819 and so graphically described U home of W. H. Joost. Hoav inviting in g p Y her with mach affection. Now we same �".B,T.P."in T❑AVE111% of Feb. 25. It its quiet.retirement. The site and lane to T. Baumann's harness idiop, where b h b ieedingto it were bought y J. Wiok•I ilvas bought by Theodore Sohoenar, > unvarying industry xeigue;.and nfsw mlipped down the hill- and occupied by hung Case in 1854 from"Zebulon Homan,stop, to L Baumanu'e delicatessen; 'him as "The Strangers' Home;' then. on the east and Benj. Wells on tho west, where we Gan find tUe Wawa.from Cuba (bought by Charles BnrLh and used no a half from each. On his retirement J'rom�sad the Philippines Across the street, boor saloon,and Clio"eastern annex built' several years'service as County Olerk'.ls Lawyer Case's cosy, bomp built in on fo5•n;billinid room,. In 1881. J. B Mr. hese built that pleasant home, into 1.1856 by George P J191 o*MB those dsys Perry for•tno Barth estate sold rt t O the psalms of which in sitar years no a:popular builder, on Iontlrboa�hG oP B W. Ponny, and he f i 1886 to W. A and= fly entered except at its peril. He sold I G,.Peters for 'D L rllorilol}'a�d Davr . J. B Cochran, who:Rro.the present own the property to F; L, Judd, from whom Mulford as executors of,ttheyi@,Gate r< era, Neat me oome to Michael Steltzer o, itpftssed+ successively into the. pee,es- Alvah Mulford, as a remdengeyllor hjb i who in 1871 lest in Guo week sevensuil-, sion of David Stevenson,.County Trans. widow Bethi° and her olibildrenl`�Wb drsu between the ages:of 9 months,and�l urea J. H. Newins, W. C.Bucki❑gbftm, later removed...to Brooklyn, but 19 years from.diphtheria. In one atter- homCarroll,Samuel Terry and lastly many years have been s ,Tas ome oPr Bouth i moon Chars Were brought to hie house into that of Mr. Joost,7 Now we come W. moat regular summer;eo,nurner a,•',-. Car outline to receive his dead, WbaO to Oscar's, Well, 'we don't forget the Her home was bought by 0apt, 14 blow.for loving parouts I Many years 'milk he served us nor the fresh flet' he Booth, of him by;John Wiokt'am, whO� ,Ago his li uee was occupied by.;Gilbert l'br'rogs us in summer time, bu't we too], in 1868 sold it to J, Wickham Case, and, Ones, than by his seri Capt. Smith!Case, in vain for the portly form of Capt, since 1872 owned and occupied by Law-j !by Capt. Ephmf n, Overton, •Loanderv�"Ben,".the black;eyes and rosy:face of yer Case. Now we come to the nom-', . Brown, Samuel Weeks A Jab Sutton, Aunt Peggy, and the measured steps me dines residence of Dr, J. M. Hart. John Brown and a Mr. Phillipe,. Jacob of faithful Newton, But there goes the molt,who often on a oold winter night+ " town cloak atrikfu eleven, Now I Nagle, Antoine Fluieohmae, George g in Galled Ont of-hie Warm hod to bundle Fi8oher, and lastly for 38 years by its guess we bad better hobble home We'll up and hasten to the bedside of the sickr'' present owner. Opposite re the home of i atop at Orrm A's on the Way and get one Here on Cha corner of Main,St end BI of has roe steaks for dinner and me H. Ave (then' Galled Coopers Laue);.I William Y. Fithian, =When; in stirs n + S younger manhood "Billy "tendsd store we ll,to her hobble some dd�stand in 1658 the residence of Samuel'' for "Bil]`" Wella Evmybody liked to + r ,4?. ..Qs yonngs, sfEe;wards from 1757 to 177732' trado-withhim, because he, ryas aINaSQy�/ ' '•` l ecohd' , 61e owned'by,Roberti Hempateed, fii a x" pleasant, and they any he hnsu't`got, z ,; ;w,iih the old"rrdveier soya . til'1797 by J•oh`n Gardrner,t,Rollo'jv L�" lever it yet. His bomedead was owuedi z Good merni � n?y fraena Now be_ 1'808 by Benjamin Oolernup;,thetsilpell. ffrom 1658 to 1(466 by Thomas Moore r ++ v' ' , Poxe'we observatrons let me smith. 'Twould be rntereeting to kndltp,�. than in succession by Nathaniel,llpcore , �iI u "�r ' r oq @ G e Sox laeG,week:inspeaking how many fumilles rn SouE¢old and els¢a; John Torr Sumuol Lftndan James3 y r oaf a ,@[,of James Horton nes wid- where, now 6Rve silver s{ioone on tli"e'i Horton, father oR'.Hoetot (fall) I7zrftr r❑ rBennett. I should have books of which is sCamped11118 name o °Polly and`Jmnse(jimmy) the ilRtGeri E>ru( r' ; eondt`.It is an.oki,saying that "-B• Oolemuni Many.;silver oboe 'fttther of ilio present wrdow.t,Fu1 R, 9np ,a sl " the topgue is no fault of the buckles, tankards, oto.,"were in 'thoe;e", Bennett, '`Prodi firm it r ^Uo'gg'li 'liy d✓"" s' r M1minc�; but I''(loo'E think the tongue days changed into what are now mus hjl Widow Al•oularius, EhBq by p[athyGniel `.,wonidt`ehp,ifdthe mind behind of r'jidn't valued heir-looms The houseypd farmjl porwiu,. liy Hudson Cmwrn th"uuK rg13p fleet, do Y.911 7, But we'll leave that agdlnining, were in 1817 boughEby Tab ,I David .Landon Eh e F4t tprtii,,,n ito the,phrlosofibers, LOok aorase the O, Appleby, and in 1889,801(l to Joseph I Fa�uowhre lana Qac pd,Glla bb4se d tre�ttg Cha pretty;xosrdenoe ai O. Alberte❑u, In1885'Squrre);•zra loC;r ellaa�r' T.,a�bnl[t.1n 1p �°ni.]audufoF,x rybeoame its owner snd'abouG #888 r e,I cheerily ae at 18 w,tieny�.i>?s' ia merlyo 'ed Ut9')9`ec4r L} Wells, Tn piodeled ft into lvhat is hoeseetfiajl`y r,[$l� J, plensRnbs EeFnoona Lehi°(7 }f �, gb pi .y, yJ a4, 7,�, pr W, @ Uhe Ih'P s I f Hamm sG eeent form, thou b eR a addtt o�N-� i�� .„ �iobher-sold theA J o, l alotV en °m serosa ' �ont,e_efnw�'�lp r, ".o atm e b,y:"J❑bu�ii,4h�1u6°1',94�lafttir. e P 7 ilo� u4, �prt6ope built hia resentg' 'pr y d t ll;t`�a1,�At y noon s0, 4Ix ljld you ,good" oxtiod detached bade t �Tbe lace was then bon ht `' �moraing'pnd;ho¢ble theme, hyping to: tyrbouso• In 1885,it was puraha<eed b ,Goodaleand Cecil by Issag�Bl ly d, yg6et�6aa am gomp'day ; , iA tl. Dx 11hrhanft. Now look sautkwn followed by John'Stephens O,j Hagan, .,• g �, ru �t^'--"^' across the street at the benutrful;reboxy, Willfem$ands and by its peekeut it `Fourth-f�dbb"Bo • I �F' - With the Old Traveler Boys donoo and,grounds,of W. 0. Alberleonf! landlord,TUeodore Hoinkie, „ )iis house was builtin 1857 by sud for On the oppostia oorner is the home'of Good morning friends:..You.See .my j. Gr.egrge P:.$orton, rather of Benjamin .Mfrg Jerushn Horton, who to lfvfhg two aane9.are'.not to be�despised After] lgOrion, :Hc sold ittoJacob Applry,ignietly niter 35 years,of nervous' etxnin'all, for they have been wafting for you �frpur who it was bought by( John in-public school No, 5, of Brooklyn; n. hexa at the post aflloe for nearly half 'i INickham,. after whom it became they suftloien6 time, one would:suppose, to hour. But I suppose home duties Gave{ property of its present owner. 'Twas, have Accumulated-a stook of insomnia to:kept you a little later than usual. Be, 4quito to be:expected that the little flax,,last for several yams at least, How lit- fOre we start we will step in and ask Mr. on haired boy who always.;kept hia' its her pupils realized'.the amount of Horton for our last night's.mail, books. clean and in order at school,.i;mental and physical vitality they were Have you noticed how generally the, tvonld in manhood apply the name. rules,Iabaorbing from their teacher. Her oar- printed request over. the delivery win to bis home and its surroundings,` 'Tis Ener 1yt, with all Elle lands westward on Ow, not to smoke or spit on the floor, avor,thus. Whethor there a any rivalry, the'main street to W.A. Cocbxan's lino,. ie obearved 7 When I was a boy W. b ,nentnees betweew,his lawn And Dr,fl,snd'extending:back to the -meadow at.caused no speoinl comment to ace on the'. �phitnker's1 remains^e`,queat tion.' Surely'i;the Bead of Town Creek, were in 1040 floor of the Pro byterisIt a uron,..sitar they,are beth'modale of Lid a ago,.and wd;i'presented to Rev. John Yoang, whose Sunday .service, a dozen puddles of all d❑Gjny them nt the oxpeuae of. their" pariah extended from Wading River to bluok tobacco juice on the oarpotleae owbreue; .'Pis in ,attractive home.and^,IOq'stm Ponds, He bnilt his house near floor of the pawn. Surely, public man-I we^pnnsa to'drop n,tonr of eytnpntby.a¢, Ebe'spot now occupied by the residence ❑exs and habits have improved, thdi inuombranco.of`'that vivaoio s And oA'H„enry G:Howell, In 4844 this string Now nearly opposite is"Ito pleasant to 'utast life th¢t Uss gone out from r�Of:rfllage lots from the corner (and in residence of Mrs, Belle Vnndugen. It clndfng,the house)to the Coobran line, was built about 1858 by Charles Bee 6. 'r`"A TIREd" Hobble' ,ways (offered fur-sole by their owner; who for several .years was engaged in, I' ll�µ��,., With the Old Traveler Boys, tBenj;R; Prince, for$3400 When John marketing,:and who afterward opened a' Gaod morning frienda�Sorry�to ave,'Smith Howell proposed to bay them the store in the building now owu`edby Mee.' kept•you waiting 0n this oorner so long, unanimons advice of hie.neigbUore was Nancy Beckwith and occupied b9 P:T. but'then-.yon know'L can't at along do, to do no, "if he had money to throw Wells.. In 1808 and 1600'Mxn, Vandnn•i i EEfaot an I could when S woe only eighty: away," But the longer bead.of Horace en's home was rented to:Geo W9 Lyon'; oh ninety;years old, That train thW Overton said "bay," and':Mr, Howell :.(who for mntiy'yearn was th6 popular t1u'et,whx•zzed'by at the rate of nearly 601 otitntnad a two weeks' refusal of them, dry goods merchant of Greenport) and �„ 'pfhdur is quite in contrast with,lMeauiime Lawyer J, H, Goldsmith. Afterward sold to Mrs. Dr:A. L. Sweet, I tthlity'mile gait of the old "Towel eltirevidly slipped in an4'seoured the who in 1$70,sold ft to glue: Vandueen.: it ji.#,k'Brooks,o „Sohn A. h'ieke, 'andP bargnrd Now direb`tly opposite is our village ` f,tifty,yepra-ago, each of waboe On4l a oite' of :Mise florton'o horns, drug�etmae It was built in 1872 by J. a Yle avian known to every boy in thee,some'.Au to 70 Rears ago,stood the dwel• 0lbert"Wells,for Dr. Amos L, Swee`, i fax 0.e it acrid be heard, Now ling add store of'Strattov �Luutting. n R�°oiieed a drug store in it, 'In the j age R. R. Ave, to the hgtel l8g6•Rensgolser Horton bought the pines wipter of 1878 H, G. Rowell became A. tennally and materially, t a't;aqd,continued the business, In 1886 partner"in the business,.and in the Yol-,i his house and store were burned, but �t ie.cornee h(is beon greatly rry 4 "lowing Mny'Drh week Eold his interest § v di n 'Bill" Wella m 1898 lb6 later rebuilt. Afterward it became the to Moses entoot and he .sold' r pe a 'propertyef Joshua Horton and Nnthanr' , l.,• . nft�?6' 66"',here,.and in inter,, yenra� rel`^$oieseaq, then of Benj: R Prince, out to$espy G'` •jell,who now for 25 2mada, tli�';poutre' of $oulholdle- trad fromlwhom it was secured as above etat•'�years bk`beep�trney dispensing:drugs abti,.ltraffio: In 1051 this property was,ed'by J.:Hull Goldsmith, 'and medic. l tit the "old stand," and- own d .'William Wells, Ehe i8'Set sn NOaw prising .;:the noaft kept hotel' yet-has found time and a disposition to p y groamda, we some to the p easant home frequently express his interest in and aestorl fdtLe latter meroharit, end wlo of H: W, Prince, built About 1886,which, sympatby for ms bereaved friends and d ediiu'1871, leaving his estate tto hla, witbt'the neatly kept store next door, prighhboxe in'obituary form, much to the end thriving buofness,indicate prospers- gratification and satisfaction of Ehoea 1tvrdow Mary whp n'(terwurds marl led ty_which is uevally,the fruit of industry or axially interested. �Pliomae.Map,eo Jr In 1812 it wan m<and eqqusre dealing. We are all glad' : His store was originally to itjxg r easeeeron a Jamee Downs,µfu 1816 when Henry,proepere In 1876,after oo- the etrrot;'but ia;aoneegaenae.of a stipn• I At of.G::H 7ru'ti ill, in SHB 'of Ong oupyfng Eq�,Wells'corner for four years, dation in the purobsee oh the site from '¢toNeil,'nfter whom crime W. Ha Wells he;49ilE Lfe pIntent brick store, mean.. Lawyer J, H,10oldsmith, it wri moved + Jn'1862 the firm 'beonme Wells �l Ex e'.G;F, Hommel ,putting ❑ a like book and lire cellar in bout lilted up; - - gUietpre outhe west nide,of t e party Thegroundfroy J,.B. Fanning's line .. berEnon%5c'.Fithian for fear yearay whoa wall, making the substantial edifice tit% Eo and irolnding Unit a,barber shop, H. walla resumed:the buefaeee , toll ❑ow-ie wunQttoe that Henry has been was in 1051 owns by JJobn Conklin;.in lowed by 8, A. BnokwiEh. John -Wick, makfmg Some fmpportgot obanges,.in hie: 1062 by:Richard Clark, later-by John hanithenalbOught the corner and kept store; whxoh, with a goat of fieali paint ;Salmon, and in'1805 by M.tthew Buel, m ettraotive colot?a tbrongboat nnd^that 'then b William Albor e¢n 4, 10; fol. ,Hforequd:h6tel for several years„ aftor broadstaircaes,4tnviEIng the;.ladles up owed y boma3S : •eat r who lefV,,'-/— whom J:..Albert,W. oI s oaoupied`it Its a iniI cloak de'paxtmyent, hie 4, has to his eon Thomas S.;who sold it to '13�i ,whoa for a time, subsequently sellxnq taken on a rather et li�slih pity oto, Wel'p, Horton'and he to 5 A Beckwith" oaf to PrinOo Bros,subsequent 6h ea sore ire unwxlhgg to )believe+',3 st,Hetlry ip�from"whom it woo bought by Godfrey. • , v ettrng bald and }z� at the pamei iIahn and by him Bold to Joseph Gom, 0 A Prihae withdrew and F, li=Judd,fyme;:pxeferi n xathpp�o�pEtxibyte ,they ez whom 1876 employed Sidney Prince bought_tlieplace fora hotel and H. w improvemonta' 6oi'attic dbmgpde' fzGi'`nl,l�ez band the. toxo fg•wlrfoIt big eon Fran k --­------- 71P 410, '1" va:oar Wq; Uu T M MIU John ,011 1,02 y, d, MIN, neiof .1pic, FIFTS, ,w� eoxT!I W," %, T ,0 07 no , P, ox, I ... ..... lie Sobpaoer 49 It,, , 'a laaw )In ON 119 IEehrl„ In, ied'by','Mrs. 'i7 a 1have donbtleo,n°ottaed bow 'these old ori was onghvby,,J,�;�, In i$66,,� itfine filings rowan in _�V 91"'aall 1 And go it a tell 07"leg r a m on un, wno,w I dito I w blue ill ... Quarty mold,It to kri ranols Landon and Qhbert Ut r's leach other an o'.ltgping to after mne,months absence a Ali the latter' giving 1400'40� '66Hin 0, or returns andbo 9 jags, Hezokfatr who W68'subseeAp run' if sun, and now'Joe"ll con yearn has by Samuel Dickerson, and 'a by' '0 'A�. A been ougaged'in getting big chairs va-!,Prince, followed by Goo. 0. Torry,,'B With the Old rave I ler-,Bays cited for '!next ; now for seven years, mines the don't Good morning friends. -I have, bV611 Again we'sniff pies slid makes and I Mr. Landon, who for thirty ours we a sitting, hero n little while aniffing the oome to,the bakery of Ernest Loiolit. I thostari'ding partner,^ the bmaineea be$, blended odors of fresh brand;I hbt rolls, The dwelling part of this building E wa prospered in the bunds"of IN, 'resent savory pies, ginger 813aps,,8tdoed Oaks put up in 1858 by G. P. Horton. Ton manager, and other dainties for a dyepeipti,6 to.be- years later the store was added, and' inI,-,Now phasing the residence T" ware:of, issuing from Mr, Solimitt's 1874 its owner,Daniel Tarry,rented it In, Conklin. if Y04 list8n.yOu'luay hear the ,even. E, H. Lewis fora tin shop, which she music of cheery whistling that eightyi This building, in the window of which occupied until 1881, when he moved two years have.not Huppreagod, Liston II, flowers and cooking please the"eye and across the street into the newly flniahed�Its one of the bid hymn tunes that were tempt the palate, was built in 1889 by store of W. R, Terry, Here he con tin..:BUD9 seventy years ago in tha.,]Meithbdiotl i' rnestLoiobt,whoflttedtip,andfltooked nod business until his death in 1891, meeting house that stood on the hill op- one of the lower rooms as a shoo store, He was followed in 1898by 0. T. Her• tposite the home of hergirlfL qqd land rented the other for the post Office, ton, then by Jedlicke. Bros., and lastly, —Theaelands from Daniel Terry's`Tinel (In 1801 he traded it for the shoo store of by M. B,' Vandusun, whosel lamented west to that ofHezekioh Jennings, were Joseph Fresh, of Geelen,pork. After 6 death is still fresh in memory.- Ill'1874 in 1660,owned by John'Underhill;!: In; few months the trade wag reversed and W. H. and G., 0. Terry created the 11659 by Thomas Moore, later by Joseph in 1895 the building was purollseed'by furnithre. store, with. dwelling aliovai'lPeck, than by Jelin-Peck' who sold, L. W, Xorn,ita present owner. seven years later the adjoining tin shop;)them to Hazard L, Moore,1gra6I Afath 11 a,r, Now over on the earner of "prince's in 1887 the story above it, and a few i of Samuel H, Moore, now of,m�y;64,,*1 place,"opposite Gomez's grocery,'W& weeks since W. H, Terry extended'it to;'I'In 1842 they were oonvbyed residence of W, H.,Terry, the furnliure,the depth of 78 feet, and underneaffi—ill i Phillips, and by him to Allen dealer and undertaker. His house, now,has a stock of furniture safflaient, op.,Jiff, who06 , Previously had- been, "no " ,B. oba I aged and imp I roved, was built for pireutfY;,,0 supply all'tbe young.,00u., tractor on the L.I.XR and married Sarah, widow of Thomas Terry;in,1852. pleawho-maywish to setup honsokeep.' Caroline, the daughter of oapb�', Later it was Hold to Warren Richmond, iog,in I the village for years to come. Wells, About 1846 he',built a grandfather of the present own I of of I .fifty Will is a steady-goiug business innuo oral years kept a store and oet,ot5ee.:en,, Side Farm; at South Harbon go'eold without fuse or feathora(except in Hall.: the present site,of Pif ktoAtnauda. Hobart and HarrietTcary, ing), just as he was ,:a steady-going'.1854 Wells,Albertson&Fithian bought Subsequently Theodore Wood bought solloobboy some 40 years ago, much to his store, and the post office via're. �Mrs, Hobart's share and�later that'of the gratification of his teacher, moved to theirs, In the same year Mr., Jolas Terry, afterward selling,it to J. B, Do you notice beside the farnituroi,Gaodliff solli'llis lot to'SamueI Cochran; 'Terry, from whom it was bobt by its rooms, the.whadow in which is displayed and in 1867 P. T. Conklin bought the; present owner, :1- some jaunty little bonnets 7 Well, tie='prooent'sibo of big house and meat l;;mar ;1 :Next vest is the M. E. parsopqge;unga man, and an old one at that, I am ket. Lithe gains year Henry,5% " 1, - � ", a I P, whore along line of patient;' hangifil not supposed to be a judge of woman's bought the bank, lot of D.,TJl�onkliff,1 'Befic7lHtors have found a atoe'y*ig'�$llace; headmIgoar,"but I have board the fashion. and In A668 conveyed 'rt to Q60"S"at"it Ppir I 1 I I 1 11 1 1 11 6yh ich reminds me of the reply..of,�a able joHngJadies may, behind those lose old Savings Bank,' -InlAko�'ibe-,',641r) ".� 7- q0ting woman whom Tasked where hot ourteina,,there is' some very fine taste sold the lot to W.,,0.JRuP1 lvghlum ,,�Hnd' . home was, and she said OV,haveu0�ddaplgj6d intfiP manufaoture and trim. in 1882 Mr, BVe a ffiotlh John- early o hinno, ray fatber"Is onlat'retals, ;and at low The same year i Now in,front,of Miss Ca, May, ,"Neat a 1 889,it's lfoxt is the M,'.35. obnrobistore, there stood, in my once ttie,propertyOf the Dun 10 it I "ibb and remodeldd in :OV,'hzy,soaIeo,;built b 8 a u 'a'brink Of as I so safel and 1 '060 whlob,its' votilent (iiam][fither7d qx�po.at, i 'an a I in& itimetward because of only on4,1it, 48V 6 in 0 r mo,� 'V. t year smali restriction in the deed,11o, tbAfr,,timo;',,,1They were) c a Is in once 6 1 y d b fl ob d v 1$14 f be Y a, ill leave the an I theBonds i'Next to the chnroh-a re areful,officara; and 'as I a on, Amcl'Vroved.,more on Ban t be weary,I will bid y on Ida 1871, and the wort ono`my 8'82Q°iwiu�,cottages, bailt,'J�Cuaq OIL ig lagewbig'TIOR 'Of�,h end home, :a. Nowhandles [john wlk gp v r 51 -. - in„(. n ' rF •�v}rfr,I t sa wl at ler,, ,qp , y]f1, t5et]ley oUnnged.tota)thiug Mr. Ldate!wogldr"liabe donee, > x Wc2httgn NOW , ' i gagdilof,tcm�,tt,Q i",on the 3eup if be had loft with the tbovsand>dollars', cod morning frleuds 1t s ;n,god dial' then onl acme tete p F 'for the stook, about five thousand dot.' waa , ok d+ Cyt¢ jeverybody known who yi)u*are chgd in exiles to make it Voider time srwuel,there might.be a sus colon aeJ, ��; are for n town library, But he did,riot; o< h o g p iTbe Eool and store.buildmg now eland so we will:turn our attention to some', No' �� y y,.g were sitting on the..stept'of isg just west of.Mr. Jennings'bnra, has other old-time things; These �landa, t8tevmgs Bank so early in the more-a oft of history.. It was built in 1846 by,along here from Hezekiah- Jenninge' tygri IIndoubtedly the Bank and its�Hampton Youngs for a steam engine,Westline to the Presbyterian chapel, dontente'nre as safe ae human foresight room, attached:to the red wind mill that t g n'make them. Now neat door.west is:etaod where Wells Phillips is now in 1668 lihobuiwere in 16r 3 owned by Matthias Corwin;° @rt urdaue htof Mxe, Carries ewe seenkwis Rnd�building a now house, and which in,I:Bootb, and foby n many yonra�previously e e e g y 1889 Mr. Youngs had .taken apart at to 1835 by Lazarus Jennings, who at is ,�rry;day.;promptly;at S1:h011aeteniug�J:ersey:City, broughtinaslooptoTownI:some time subsequently to'3718 no• t to the poet oMps to,Help in distributing eHarbor, and flonted ashore in sections I' I ' - ' gntrod the remainder of the land to arl, at wlrich'ahIs has become :expert, during a strong South Wind, Steam'!Morton's Lane, This land was' in 1053' Ser bouso was IN by Albert Overton grinding proved. a failure and tbo-en• owned, with large tracts north and int 1888 , The elovatign on which itl gine room was offered for sale. At theweet, by Bnrnabae Horton, in 1690 U etppds"wits known:sfsty and more year9 suggestion of Dr, Prank Tuthill and;Jonathan' Horton, in.1707 by Joeathan"- so 11 And� Tt,sethor'Hill, begansowhen aSxuYe�Rev: C}eo.. F. Wiewili, Eben pastor pf;Horton, in 1708 by Jonathan' Horton: i p k poulhr for market, the Presbyterian church,.it became my (grandfather of the present D. P, Her- lher fo ed bIs ton), from whom it deacondod to Joua y pleasure to solicit the funds for its aur. Ehe ivmd'wonld sometimes get the,beat'abase, and it wan moved in 1847 or 8 to than Goldsmith Horton in 1830 and. ,o ,toe eat ore no wtiirl them flying in Ehe a ot'uet west of what is now Oaks ' al illi Rti pe over the hill. P j was owned by him until his ilea tb in x,q, ,9 Lawn road, and need for a lecture and 1 4't¢,,gop56n the`streebfa W. A. U0011-!prayer meeting.room until 1871, when 1873, ��i Ia6e west part of his bongo was;Mr, Jennings bought ft for q moat shop I'tatitul pareounga W ROrOSS C116 BEorcated reet is the' 8$6 Uby Gly 4eorge Waebingto, Booth,in and now after Home forty years 1t houses', Salter S. Hotton, the father of Mise is-' (pr Jonathan, fnEhm•nf the prgeent the harvesting maehinee Rads thousand:',.,rueba Horton, For the immodinEa ,ocon- v, kia4 10 at Isis lot, with ,Mn, and one tools of the careful former, morea ad anis .and the laude in - ipancy of the then tutelar, Rev, Ralph i` e e r vers owned i. Y852 6 a 1da, i t Now half way to the old.Lazarus Jen. Smith, The material and wnrk put into ,, a y singe:bonne and looking across and bnok.,1t was such, that a competent judge says o tarty, later by a `td r. Disbrow; thgp from'the"street among the abnndant it is good for a hundred years to come. ,$Pastor:John Youngs, by Benjamin shade, trees As the hospitable looking .The addition on the east aide was made nu¢gs Es, , Beath Rud Hazokmhc home,,of SamueliDigkeraon,.whish be in Y859, that on the west in 1887 and the! ago a Then the east.lot and{real has,awned siuoe`•1885, It -looks as r Y u lone on the south in 1878 by the ladies' fJ�, Cilber6'B. Davis;� tban,by WI though it might=.have been built, for �ofthe congregation. . ' + nr (who in 1841 added the tvtelve interesting; girls instead of six: i ,', �: The.main body of the Prcebytorinn ;.;,bulldc,g to the eget Bide) iTn..1852 Ierael.Peok, formerly a builder church was built 1803 nail-the atonploi ' f Annah Mprca Albertson,:'ltomkiu -New York, bought the farm of which�iaddod n tow Years later. In it Wne hen „me)into,th,e ppseessi0u of Sas its site fs a part, of David A. Jennings,f,".the old clevin,” n triangle of stool! i ppphran, Tbe west'lot was an&eraotod the house now the;:home of�'weighing perhaps fifty ponnde,�:aud`hav� ud,kgilt upon by the widowed�Mr, Dickerson, Just in his,big III• * g mg one leg ehortoe than the other, hso e (. Sl 0'PsW Dowse, and aPtorward�gote there wits in my boyhood a pond, that when the hammer attached to the R. ` �yJo6o Skidmore, nail through Fwlione muddy water quenched the thirst.) wooden wheel above struck the .shorts "K,,N) ',baoome'.the property of UAlis':cows in summer, find;on which in.j side it would en "din Thomas Skidmore woo y 8," sail when iE r winter the floolub tof Shouting children's alternated to the long side it wonld'say g36aif yeard_agp built bis;prat',that oame to 611 ont fib the old brio ll- °� R8 It dong,"making a rather monotoupus guns Sud:where taste and Inbor have noboolhouse, worn out eb'oa leather, Ibut not unmusical If ding dong," which E gip, 01'1BADO "beautiful for situation bumper]against one suother, saw stare,'.I ,c lead, Man of us remember II ' Estill rings sweetly in the in metfes of ,�a�� s y nnd','e„oelded when, the blows of -the still who in early life delighted to an- 1qV <and the little plain, black; boa hgpurivitae ruler,againstthe.door case.'. 'lrke windowless'hearse and Cho little twat• its oath tgi ave andRev. Jworship, In, inBD't;lled them bock to drudgery. !those days the grave and HRv. .loanlhnn.. prnstfing 4l pt pulled it; and whioU then Bitt±do yon see;where the bands of llunttinglpreaoheso tygok the plaoc of the box wagon with a the town clock are pointing? I thinkd sound dogtriue,whilo. we restless boys d unanxiously for prmk]cng of straw on d its bottom, twfll,Ue prudent to bobble home now,.lithe "tenthly,” The, the preaaMug 1 7e gomednow to the residence of.:Hez �lest`we keep the,dinner table waiting was mush law Hurl some love, now. the oktnh Jegnmgs, whish Woe built by iagd get our hair pulled (metaphorical- l ondnlnm seems swinging the other 17eveland, grandfather of 1y);'so I will bid you good moraglaorfi*eaflpresent"Moeee Cleveland, for :Dan wny, Tbe clock in the steople Was put l' Booth,.!woo owned large tracts of – — ?II o' in fourteen years ago. It Rost $670 of A SeventhT Hobble the$1,000 left for its �lsod' adjpgont moluding the ;farm oF' pnrohnso U Mr, y j I With the Old Traveler soya Lester. Its pendulum weighs seventy- ; olghtel Dlgkexaon gpop whroh .were My friends,. good morning, I have'flve pounds, and it has worn out live erghE qr,Wu sores of¢l l�l�e orpberd that i been'standing bore a little while, lean-1 springs thus far. Sometimes the spring ifurnlsligd hundledg,o t ] on of'rorder p g every,vear,_and he natd'.tr4tr e rthe'`bus.�l Ing On my we ounce, and thinking how becomes weak before it is suspected,. much tbat.clock over there in'.the Pres,!anusfng a slight variationiu time, which tom of ate;ownerl"and, i ,�onn'to leave bytgrtoo ohuroh steeple would be mieeed�by some, ignorant of its meghauism and the Held gtimrt eleven ".°l.Q°k:t6.drinkl�if 1•t e110gld lio'tnkgU 8i and w At a,mRnagement,:.have attributed to blot �'Eention bo qrG.�e tp(rl040,9tpt d 4+tn g g Harbor) for the"Ifb}nabs(, &tlioUo�most-nttrso id' tees in Oil village of soientioue care can Wake11�+i,t.sgi 1'ohuraU. It was turnad'hnlf way round, Imnny pleassnt ones, But here ie h good Next west tis Cha residence of D. Y,'Igo as to present its end to the stroot,Ilstopping place.and I fanoy you look fSallook, builtia lt)(13 for-wldow Mary',',widonmd by wings added to either sido�hungry, gal will bid you good. morn- Ann Roge. At bar death it became thea and furnished for.Roman Cntholio war=Ling and creep along.home, as my bun. property of its proIsent:owner, Philip.,ship, Since father Brunneman's pan's,dyed yearn and time oaten will allow. Tuthilli of Mattituok. IferBte, there have ofiloiatod in it Fathers', s n u Now we, come to the Presbyterian MoIfenua, Foley, Crowley And at pros '-- The Ninth Hall ble chapel, which is exactly opposite the:'ont O'Roilly, many of our villogergl With the Old Traveler Boys 'batch and on.the Bite of the old dis• will recall the high .keyed tone' of the! Well, my friends;. you seem to be a !trial schoolhouse, which from 1705 to,Asadomy bell as they mingled with little late thin morning,but I can roadi. 11870 was witness to come study and those of the Presbyterian and Universal- Iv imagine khat in those days of pity - muck flogging. Now school ohildren;int churalles on nth of July morning',_,guests there aro oliiokets to be picked,.; are governedJu "a more excellent way." while we boys tool, turns at the rupee;corn to be plunked,.potatoes, beans and, j According to the Rev. Dr, Whitaker, W from two o'clock in the moratug until to be brought from the gar wan dedicated July lh, 1871, with prayer'I enuriao, Then the sleepy villagers,dee Emcuonmbbeexr e sto the overheated and over.' .by Denson Magee 0. Cleveland, Elder,turned over and wished "those boys'burdened housewife, who in addition to 'Ina Tuthill and university student W. could be npauked and -sent to bad,".,the general oversight of her household F. Whitaker. Addresses were made by which performance, by the way, might must plan and cook and do the amoni Deacon Cleveland, Elder Edward Hunt. have woIrc,their gstrfotiern while it had s ties ofpulito entertainment. ting, Rev. E, T.Corwin, D.D., of New contrary effdat in(mother rtirwtion. But let as turn our thoughts from the Brunswiok, N. J„ Rev. George F, Will Now Across there in "the city of the dnyB of pastry and niok•naeks to those well, D. D., of Philadelphia, and the,dead." The first interment ft it was of lof hominy and milk. many a bowl of pastor, Rev. Eplior Whitaker, who coli the remains of William Wolin in 1671. wuiaU was eaten it the old "Horton lected the money for it, The Rev, Dr,; Be was the Bon of William Wells, rector;IIoiob was,eaten i generations that oc•' Corwin is n closaondont of Matthias Car-,!of St. Putor'e, Mancroft, Norwich, Bug.,!eupied it while it stood within a few win, whose original home lot in 1651 in.i Bud prebendary of the noted cathedralfeet of who wo aro vow, standing on abided the site of the chapel, Ciera. He lune a lawyer of ince gifts this historic corner. And now my good friends, I wonderland accomplishments, slid was the guide In 1652 Barnabas Horton drew two if you are not tired of my imperfect at• And helper of the infaut colony and home lots, which extended,from Cho` tempts to recall old-time places Andlobarch of Southold, negotiating their present reefdenoe of D. Y. Hallook woat,� were.things that we before and during our purobnses of lands from the Indiane, to'the east line of Mies Emily Vailhiss long nap. in Sleepy Hollow. If riot, arbitrating Eheirdisputes, etc, farm and woodland extending portb and you care to come again some day,i And now we come to Horton Ave., on ward to the North.Sea,%'to which an'd' we will.continue our "bobble" towardnthe corner of which stands the residence between his lots Chore was laid out the' the 1r Run," But now perhaps we hgdiof.Roy. llr: Whitaker. .The older part tread which now aspires to the name of .better make our way toward whorethelof it was built nbont,7816, by Capt. Lnz•'Horton Ave, On his west lot lie built' smoking hot Bnap beans and peas willl nine Jennings for his maiden sister,ilia house. With the exception of a 'give its a welcome; iGood day, Itato, who in those year' was consid-(brief interregnum this home lot has re-,. au.o, lmed Cha "school maim" par excellence, matted in the possession of ltnrnabns An Eighth Hobble She tangbt in the one front room of her Elation's descendants to the seventh Will,the Old Traveler Boya 'house, and gently tapped the head Of being being now owned and noun.I Well, my friends, I judge from they the inherit'Youngster when he blond•;hied by D.P. [[Orion, who now in the feat that you Are aboad of me this morn•'..Died in bis A, B, 0's. One of bar pit- days of depressing illness And enforced inp„ flat yon are sill sou inter pill, when awee.boy,.wasthelute HOWT:rotiroment from beloved activities, base .'•cnfe, in Old-time things. Huntting, Esq., who for some Uoyiahi the.boat wising and sympathy of a host' Thisballding: of pretty nrahitootnro,',misdomoanor was pb}oed render'a hlgb�.of friends, Just. opposite there stood'. ;with its neatly kept lawn; standing.just logged desk.for punishment. In hfe on• for many years the old cannon house 'west of the Presbyterian chapel, is the foraod, idleness he liethonght him of l that nholtered the nu an turod from; some.strings ft.his pooket, and tying! g p Catholic parsonage. It was built about. :.Burgoyne, Budwhich on every:; 'i860 - one to each big toe he soberly drove his Fourth of July. morning joined with A few stops and we are at the Catholic imaginary team all unconscious of the the clanging belle in ushering in "they ,church, It was built in 183h by`W, D. ',facing. mohme around him.. :'W ho•',glorionefourth." By the way, if any'! over saw "Aunt Yetfe's" keen :bhrnk, . .Cochran for on Academy, And used for one knows what baonms of tint g Tur. that purpose With indifferent,success no. eyes .will not. forget thorn,.; But Ito will confer n favor by tolling Trrc Ithis is by the way, "Aunt..B:htie'n" Tnnvsr,nn !til about 1800, Mauy still livitg teschll arod being wne.bought by Foster Sayre, And iwith interest the onions of its tenohsre: - On or vary, near the goo-henna Bits, i Hammond,. the Palmers, the Waldos,1 later by Denoon Ira Tuthill,from;wham alone Along beside the grave-yard, stands 'Rev, Ralph .Smith, Alkman, Gilbert, it descended to his son,Lawyer Ira Hull the home of Richard Carpenter Bait his •Luoy -Hdla, Dickerson, Burnes;Tnthill,.Audafterhis death bought from ,two daughters. Some people have it �Jnliil Wells and Cordello Elmer.i,his heirs by llr, .Whitaker in 118011. suporatitione drawl.of living nehr a nom When "the old brick schoollavoo" be-�When he began the romodotting And nn-, ,cry, but Mr, 0arpontor says he rather an to be demolished,.piece meal, by Inrgement of his house, a passerby was liken his quiet neighbors. His con- mischievous boys, who thought rt ant"' 'board to. Bay, "He can't never make al tasty Bud tasty bonne was built to ter ment 4Inn1868rtUPagabeontbog y `'erawheualiedmphEUaveBeepoteno�fthelgidm•ednlow priesfor e�coellontmaterial . q it for awhile, 1875 By builder O K. Buckle of bought b dr• Groan ort for $1500 which was con roetlo,_„u ,rot tree }nunomo then(gf_,_�. �.=.- , Gam' - _, _ and fromest work, and will stand for for 4te removal. 111 1885 Samuel Dick.' scrap iron,:whioh after being weighed, many years to come like others in,the erson, having bought the Pack farm,;..was togged in a pile out a back window,' town, ps n mouument fo the msmory of throegh which a portion of the laae'and I havo hoard my grandfather say, :an honest badder. , pgssed;jointly with Moans C. Cleveland, requested a jury. of file town to rocom- that same of it found its way around to Now n little to tiro west and on corner meed the closing of the sup, Which was 'the front door again, to ba rebarterodto' of Oak Laws rond in the residence of R. don¢, Mr. Diolierson fooling the hills, tics unsuspecting merchant, Thisstore y.'8tni•gae, which was also built in 187u'. But new the faithful town.slook.re- building was bought and moved by minds as of Wltnt may cannon should ' In digging his cellar Mr. BEnrgoe struck we'be Into tp dinner, so I will bid you I Henry D. Overton to a spot on Tuoker's a tronoli of cobble 8tonos hoar the surface good moruin j;.__ a u:p, - iLonr close to whore the L,, I. R..R. now and about live feet below found soma, The Tenth Hobble oroesss it, and in it Iiia wife Deziah wood ashes, a stay pipe and the bottom -With tlrc Old Traveler Boys 'brought tip o family of smart girls, four; of an old-fashioned dinner pot with sof whom are still living, Near the front' loge, indicating that a house had stood Good morning, gentlemen, 110110 1 !of his house Mr:Overton erected n eamp -there many years previously,. And, as iu;haven't kept you waiting very long. I!mortar for his own and his neighbors'; 1052 this site, with Hr. .Om peaEor's lot see you look rskanae at my two agr ee,;:free use, The camp mortar was an in- adjoining, was the home lot of Richard 1poeafbly thinking them a Superfluity. Htitution in those days'and it wag said Benjamin, it seems quite probable that I Well, I know when a man gets in hfs',i(though I cannot vouch for its truth)" •this was the site of his house, dotage he is liable to become notional, that their Saturday afternoon clattering Nowjust went of Prof. Horton's is a lbut I tell you when you'got away past al could be lieard along the Connecticut - sample of,what some money and good Ihundredyou will find a deal of Support share, though usually the Sunday din- taste one do, Dentist Hurtling's house from two stout etioke, and beside, these• ner was cooked on Saturday. The mor- was built for Mrs, Mary Tillinghast in iwere out from the head of the grave of tar was made usually of the butt of n 1877 and stnndH afew feet back of wbatlfnitbfnl Snyder, np in Sleepy Hollow. big tree, standing about three feet high eisty years ago was "Uncle 400py'e" Since our lost walk an incident in eon- and dug out to the depth of twelve or pond, between which and tho foot.patb Inaction with Benjamin's Lanehas dome'l fifteen inches, Over it was suspended a. 'Hired a row of tall poplars, How many ito mind; trivial in itself, bat showing it pestle some live feat long, its upper, end; �gwitohings for tardiness at school on the exaotness of the law. The lano hnv-'Ifastened to a long spring-pole which ;Wistar mornings that pond Was' reapou- ins-beau laid out for nae to and from;'passed through Cho crotch of a poet a �siblo for.it would be hard to determine, Jockey Orrek, Denoon Cloveland uat-;I few feet back, its big end being fastened ibut an to come glimpses of constalla. urally thinking the greater included the to the ground, At a convenient die- 1 tion there can be no question. less, need it as a onrtway to his adjacent tanee above the lower end of the pestle Now just over the fence in the next fields. Mr. Peck denied the right and ;a hole was bored, through which a stick yard aro evidences of the levo of fiowern'to afrieudly test case; the court decided ,was thrust, forming the handles to Phot hydrangea is a beauty. Thanki in favor of Mr. Pock. :'which the power was; applied that you, Mrs.'.Terry,for go much that pleas.:I Just west of the.entrance to Bebja-Ilbrought down the pounder on the corn. es the eye, and all without trouble,or ex-, min's Lane there stood Home sixty years ,The eamp bought at the.stores.now is pgnea to as. The house to which this, ago a shoe shop in which W.R Simons, iWhfter, but not nearly,so sweet, ,yard is attnohed was .built in 1854 by.Pliineas Fanning and others mnnufao i Mr, Overton, in Illi moved hie house . Jeremiah Goldsmith, the grandfather of,tured boots and shore for the Into Hoses 'to Horton's Lane, Hoar where D. P. ;Kra Pged Williams, from whom, with 0. Cleveland, Afterward; about 1847.8,11 Horton's cottage stands. It became, inl +tiro fnrm attaolied, it came into the pos John Henry Brodt taught a srleot J882,a store.honso for-J, Azsriah Her 'session.of C. D. Elmor, and later into:school in it and it took the name of.the�f ton,"sod now serves the.same purpose that of Hiram Tarry, whose widow now -,Leather Academy." I, for`J,H. Boisseau. owns and 000upfes it with her noril A few rods west and we come to'Doa-" Now a few steps and we come to the Ohnrles, don Oleveland's former residence. HO'i spot where, during the years eucoeedfng} Next we come to the college owned"died in February, 1888, leaving his.11880, stood in the southeast corner of 8,'; by Mien Emily Vail'and ocmipied by!house with'farm attached,..to his grand J. Mitahel's door-yard, the home of ;Mien Abbie Lodyard, a lineal descend-,,daughter, now Mrs.Elliott F. Peck, of "Aunt" Ithody Taylor, and her aged) ant of the famous traveler, John Led.'',,Bridgeport, Conn, I"mother, Mrs, "Hoet" In apartof itin, yard. 'Itwas'built in 1817 by Josiah,ii Now just at oar right is the home of.;A845.0 Elder Edward Hurtling taught a. ,grandfather of Emily Vail. �:'MissEmilyVail; .Her house stands on,%eleot gohool and gave inspiration and Opposite to this cottage fH the. gator:whatwas in-1865',the eastern halt of the j impulse to such men as J. Andrew Hal- which for many years oponed into i'Ilan_ i,John Budd homeetoad, Here in 1720;;look, who has just rounded out a half jam9u's Dane,"a two-rod right of way, and later, lived'John Salmon, who nt,!pentury of suodesgful teaching And prin- •laid out, by the town obout'the`•pram, hie death bogq rathed to the First church aoipalehip in the public sohoola. of Now. 1700,.through the Yarm now ocprlpied by?,of Southold,''his homestead (now Mies lark, N. J. Joseph Southard,'and!other .lands. to Southold Vatl's),. togotber.with extensive''1 Now three or four rode and we come Jockey Croak, intersecting it at.. a"point', percale of real estate at "Hog Nook,.";to'.the newly purchased;summer home , immediately east of the present brink,around Horton's Point and other looali-'o ilii, Mitchel,, Its first known history houss,'f,built by .Israel Peak, Some'. hien, to the value of going ($4;000 then,begins in 1050, It-was undoubtedly, years ago a bnrn was moved onto this, and equal to about twice that amount nt built either by Lieut.John Budd or his lane, where It Hided for several years,' the present time, I !son John, PA few fix days possessed subject to removal upon complaint, but', A'few feet to the west of Miss Vail's tho means and'entarpriso to erect'so as it did eot 8ariou91y. interfere with tire l, house there stood eighty and 'more'stutely a mansion as that was forAts' user of the Ione, p0a0e loyi g..4nbmere!years ago the only store irk this part of time, and the soundoak timbers in i its, patiently dpove round. t and no one was the town, kopt by her grandfather, JO- framo are,apparently good for.a can LOg ( �QI10.rTOlHOnla ang4 to eomolaib'� giah,Vcil, Who,.With Otbar,barter, took;dred yenxs to come.. It is perhaps the :oma _ .- _..�.__ __ _e Lane v round';t oo-I, ti �we come to the "Ol oldest.'d�wellfug in the town„shun rag pulse to take otF,`mp Nat. A fe days Now ate w acxoed Lester aF,eoe. ae origfnullp•built, "The g since as I wag passing iq two;gentlemen, espies wag in 10x6 a Part of EUo western ,etrangera in our village, stood looking Th corner lot with lands adjoining, k , Ihalf wholeby John Lient whibti add extendod friim Me0 lot, e them remarked np into that on have a 8no mon. from 1084i in sto 1760• sncoee sly, by alet�4 4Susan Terry's went line P to 'Tuoker'a,lame t here of�rwing tl amwhich ga bit of the Bave me the udlPeter Bollocks 2 and In 1700 came iam in Lane, The property lied awed tUrongL '.soveral hands, when in 1702 ft. was history of "Alibis'$man.”the whole of itsto the poeseaion of Sylvester Latex, bought by Hazard L,, Moore and used In inception inich themindof rt womanvoliame. It ' AE 4.his two sisters Polly father of Lawyer U and Hannah, and gas an tan;in 1830 by Samuel H, Moore; the grandfather of the into Col, T. S. in 1844 b; Henry Jennings; after him 'a meeting of the old Union Relief, longi, gin, and in their' by FuI II,Smith, and in 1868 ------1 iltor the 01088 of the civil wax, the queg•I!Letogr, P r m n Hannah lived alone ,by.J, W. Huntting, by whom it was left' on of what to do will'the$leo remain•..old a e, 9 to Shale B. Huntting, ffon1 whom it was�Ing in the treasury was nuclei discus•d in the old bongo 01080 to the main street bought early in tl'o year l'9 Mr.Mitchell' nak0 .,Why not maker it Booth cleus of Back of!at its their wit bones was their straw i IIt must be a comfort to the family, ea.l peeially to Mrs, Mitchel, to have fonug nomination of thatcumetlnsetion became the �eummer pea[ tree,behind oil which fruit often u Bummer sojourning place among qf covered the hon e000es made snared by memories he IftherpresentMonumentaludd's Park. TUnionhe twhichaweboyahadory 0gathereditinto Oe,vend .many generations of her anoetoee. The 'old poet office building. and barn back,;ig a child of the old Union Relief, n't one had tuned his book while a second' lof it aretobe removed, which will Open Jjorganized in 1883, and which in part one should eek "Who shall Unca that?corner of up a one view to the north nod greatly may be gathered from filen of Tum Bnnnab appeared around the cam ex of dmprove that already bontiful home-'i,,pnpvmnmu, would make interosting 'the barn, and "weboys" scampered, tile unds I till but one ,food. Tho post oillce building in my�readil far the pnrohaeeWhileof tbeamonamentdditional fwere (pond in Budd a Pang xk,sod hee north ithe of the boypood stood jnet bank of whore Uleve- land & C}lOvnr's blacksmith shop now being collected, the question of its form nide, es the more direct way to to reach. his home, etude, and in.it "F,quire" Morse Clove-''.ianm Band naturally developing g diffegorm tt''I�Bat Powhose lylweae on guard, ar he was nd sseizing 616', ,land made pine oofl3ns at$3 snob, stain• firmly by Ing them with Vonitian red. Holl(na Duly women plead for)olibrasamry nuidMoto hserrkitchen, anted while.dretining' 'would that do in these days 7 , Now just around the corner in Budd's building, and ao some of the sessions of her;grip o to�emtrBmecE trembling culprit, we! Park, Bud at too head of Tualial Lane, the Union were characterized by stands the mnol' admired Soldiers''warmth.and the adroit use of pnrlia- �.at once hortatory, argumentative and, 'Monument, the style of which was so' tactics that would have done`+eonvinoing, gumsoh go that after sixty, ,leotod by a popular dresamakor, and'oredit (or otherwise).to a brezy Don•�'yea[s�UeUeavivid recollection h toot that fine representation of a soldier it gressional debate. But the tact and).grip and that looture, After the old; Blooding at ,parade rest," ie some- patience of its pxeeidet,.Mrs. J. L. -honed we lou down, Oct. Lester built w tunes rogaiehly spokOn of ag "Alibis's'Conklin, who had been unanimously,a cottage moved to an its site, Egypt"by George man:' At any rate, no mins need bn'�,obosen its first and (so far) only chief'years was d vg now, with h n addition, ashamed of so, tlue a looking fellow;',ofacer, poured the oil of gentle words;Booth, H. 'faithfully holding his Place, day andl,00 tha troubled waters with the happf-floe home of his widow, In 1866, B. it .night, through snusbine and storm.last reenIts. Much credit is Ing to lBootb (who as a boy loft f3outl'nidadwne without murmur or complaint, ',Frank H. Hills of Riverhead, throngU eighteen Dente in Nig pocket), Bndd's Perk was, in Mile early. history whom the monument wag purchased, for jcometired of building Uo¢eos in Brook-' 'lof the town, o poll Pound, ,ffbwerihis painstaking interest in the e8'orts of;',lyn and returned to pes native village to ,longtbg of fence square," into wbiabithe.ladies, without pecuniary advantage i'!look around," It perchance he might!, ;.were impounded all animals illegallyiito himself some were the in-!find ngeYears; and;°fortunatelyPIROO for bforl `running loose, But the sound of thatlable objections were modo to the fn- this y I"NOrth Riper tog'"leeamative whlatlo'eoription "Budd's Park"�on the north- this plas at had him nar corner, on e for many ere,Uin�thee pee-, (i8 a warinng to our forgetfalneg, andieast'ooruer atone poet; but nt it , good session of bin fiend, Alvah Mulford,, Tuoker's Lane lea good Stopping place; iha request of J. W. IIunEtisg, g eo I will bid you good monies. Itaete prevailed. The effort for the col•who had bought it from Jonathan Hor• _ ?II° le°tio° of the funds that bought it;we ton,.to whom Col. Lester had sold it a'. Theeleventh fiobble continued four years and result- few years previously, .Five years later, With the Old Traveler Boys lad in the gathering of about $1800,. the in Oce,86 n Booth built comfort preont res My friends, good morning' 'W elcost of the memorial, without commie ;dance, ur whifr is comfort and peace. meet this morning on only blatnrio!elons, on the occasion of its unveiling he eojove the fruits of those busy yearn ground; for though Budd's Park is not 1887, Samuel S, Veil, EUea 517 years of eoaoeesfal housebuilding m Brook. aps some day he w" extensive in area, yet it, and the'mojiu•lof age(e veteran.of the war of 1812). wa that hi'hhhed a which pe t allyehides !meat by 'which rain UOnoled are ase0-.'wropped in the American flag, g g r !elated with many preofoan momorlee;it drawn in a carriage to witness the care. his pleasant asant home and grounds from Red often whsu passing it I fancy I hear Imooie; II Across the street and a little south is 'the voice of brave young. Hurtling as! Just am, b the suet re the ooluUnversnla above the rattle o1 musketr9 at Olnetee tet church, built b9 W. D UoaUra¢ 1n;1866 from Mrs. Amee of A. Irwin liaoMogen,rg and I n, he ghosted; "Colonel, just tall me w)iatl 1826_ - --- - --" ,second story added TUesite and loads; !to_do au(1I!ICdo iW, sad,I feel an im':=i - " -- — - _,- " Ip $may spend'- the evening of his doge especially so when,''IInolo".Elam did- ' eastward were in 1668 owned by Samuelcrypm�dat the aoenes of hieohildliood. BuEi n t 'aeE very etiddy,' as ocoaeionnlly 'King and later by John Elton, Sleaze I� the house and its surroundings are note ba didn't when he name home weurird ' ]Way, Ann Way and Moses 0. Cleveland.pthe same,an when sixty.Doll more years with theWn's bushwss. .A few steps and we cometothe new l',ogo."'Uncle"Stove and"Aunt Tronis''; Noxt'to`llfrs,-_Prince's.is the freshly, and tasty home of Metros L Booth and it andtheir humorous. family lived there.i painted residence of Mrs.. Mary Ann: wife, with their lusty baby boy. And that summer pear tree that stood, Terry, with its velvety lawn. Strange, But interesting as babies ars, they can near the.sink-room door; what yellow, it everything was not in apple-pie order rdly supply the place of n bearty din, 11,red.oheeked fruit it bore. In pesr:timet around and in her house. 'finer for a hungry man, so I shall bevel,'a long pole stood leaning against the, Just across ber oarriage way is a hum- jto 22211 you good morning and vena it'l.tree,nod"in the hands of "Aunt Fronts ble dwelling half hidden by a limo bodge.. 'home as fast os I can for fear of what,',brought down the beauties for all the; And presenting its side rather than its may happen if I'm tardy at dinner time; neighbors'children that called, elle no;,frout to the public highway, se if in California Bartlett's of these days,uit �mstes. Here for several generations can,jsympathy with the modoety of its In- The Twelfth Hobble 'i appeal as did they, to the eyes of a fr . �loving youngster; and what one ever, have A long ,line o f�Hortona .lived; With the Old Traveler Boys want away with his little chookod.npxon worthies, rich,not in bonds and mort•' Good morning, boys (comparAtivolyll empty 4 Jast across the yard stood the gages, but in sterling character. Among ,you know), since our Inst walking "ram humble home of her two aged bachelor. the Inter ones, and who died in 1863,was 4uiee"I've been thinking of your ap•'uncles, for whom she labored and cared'."Uncle"Jerry, who, while be ohowed ;parently sustained interest In old•tfine during the many years of their lonely ;,that inevitable sliver, built big snows for things, much of which seems to me to bachelorhood, My I if all the loaves of°the banker fishermen; and here also, obe pretty dry. But men differ not only light, sweet bread she baked for thom',during the 86 years of her sing IAunt - !in .their mental endowments and Inside, were stacked up in ono pile, how it iedneae, lived; staid, quiet, witty Goof but in their moral opinions and judg would water the mouth of n hungry''Aahsah; One evening in her girlhood Monte, giving wide scope for the .oxer- tramp I Surely "Uncle" Joe and hie can unwelcome beau oallyd and fnvite11:� nine of that obarity which oovereth a 'brother"Lazzie"fall into good hands, %ber to "go awalkin'," and as A reason; multitude.' of sine, mud which "never I had great respect for "Aunt Pnonio, ' for declining she told him she was tired, taileth," And that reminds me of a story. not only for the pears, but because she and when he proposed to go Home other 1A8 it goes, there lived in a certain City; was the only person who'in addressing evening, she meekly informed him that. two pipe-and.beer-loving German barb- mo prefixed the 11e M "to my lost name, she 11 expected she should be tired then elors, Wilhelm and August. The chief `which quite set the urchin up, you too." characteristic of the former was his in know. The lands from Mrs. Priuoa'e to and .born, unbounded ohnrity, that Dover ,, The lands from B. .H, Booth's south including B. 0. Cleveland's house and (failed to discover come good in all men, c line to and .including the property of blacksmith shop, were in 1664 a part of ,uvea the worst. But the latter was 'Mrs, Kate Prince(now occupied by the,the extensive possessions of Burnabae iaomewhat of a rake and Riven to dissipa- Rev. P. G:Leonard), were ownedby the;,Wines, and later of 2d.Barnabas.wines, tion, Bat the two were .quite- friends,11 Morton's from 165'8 to.—,.when at the IJoeepe Horton, 2 en ssephpart o itt fall 3to d 4n time Auguet3ied, and at his funexsdeath o4Elam Botter Horton, they,with'.;the dwncship of Jeremiah and others I�Wilhelm in.passing his coffin for a fare.I dwelling and small farm opposite; same'.,heirs of fid Joseph, and since 1863 have 'well look,. paused nn instant As if oto into the possession of Joeoph Goldsmitb,W been in possession of his children and. !! P Three-quarters Of a Mallory ago there,grand•cbildren. think of a word of praise to speak ;(aB The lands on the east side of the street was Customary) in Behalf of his old lived opposite to Mre. Prinoe's dwelling, from Melrose I. Booth's to W. H. iohum. But as if unable to do so he .,Uncle"Elam; short,broad-shouldered Glover's, were from 1663 to 1676 a part shook kis head sadly and passed on, but and corpulent. He was oleoted over• of the large estate of John Elton, and I turned back.as if a new thought had on- odor of the town's poor at$I.oo for each afterhimto e i o Ieaao Overton, In; 1763 they came into the poesoeeioa of]at leered his mind, and with hands clasped)day of actual service, "Uncle" Elam Joseph Olevelaud, in 1780 into that of I ;behind him he bent over and.looking was the proud-possessor of"a rarity for 2d Joseph, Cleveland, Dud it 2840 rho tenderly into the face, of his departed those days, viz., 'a white bell-crowned central' Arden fell to Soprouia Jan- &idnd- he said in tremulous tones, nings,.w o left it to her daughters, from. hot, which lie wore off state occasions, whom it was purchased by Mr. Hnrri•� '',yell, he was a goot stancher." :Better i e., whenon the town's business; and son than'harsh criticism to be able to .81111 whenever he. appeared out under that The part of the, Elton .estate next.. even the doubtful virtue of "a,;goot white hat, with ]ovg clay pipe, in his Hoath of Mr. Harrison's in now owned by; y box wagon, holding the rope lines over the heirs of Joaepk.Goldsmith, anis neat ahmoker." But this is only by,the wa . to it the fine building spot of three acres,i Now at the Booth odd';l6YM Mr, BOeth'e''the old blind gray MATO, the.neighbors by Mrs.Lizzie Case,. and the. next ad- ihighbedgo we,come to the new hcmO of would jokingly whisper, "There 'goes JoinI by Mrs. A. E. Tuthill, whose,, j Mrs. Lydia Tuthill, whose abundant another:dollar,"for some pretended to etc a d was m tameheir laborious f e Cwhoghave ,flowers and lawn, closely shaven by'her think that the dollar was o "drawing fore their limbs have become eo stiffened Town hands, show the love of neatneae,card;" gaits'actual to the evgenoes of Do to preclude any comfort for their re- strong in declining years. the town's business.;' But I gu ss "Un-I maluing years of well earned leisure. Across the street: is, the residence., of ole",Elam was all right, the neighbors! But the familiar sound of that North I;Edward Harrison, with whom fs happily had to have their little joke, you know.,River trig whistle is an indication of dinner time for no all, and as the preps•. Idomiciled one of: my;few ,reMaining Rat tliat old blind more, she.was Bore ration of an inviting' inner costs much eoboolmntee;Samuel G. Gardiner, who, to run away:at the flrst sniff of a'buffalo'placing, many steps, and no little dike a sensible Sontholdd" boy, after 41 skin, and'twits thrilling to Fee that big�f ie pthati we should on these r be appyromptly it is Aon. ..years o4 commerdal lifedn N. Y. oily, eightleee.boast oomo lumbering down'hand, so l will,bid you good day. " !bee returned to his first love ' that h- __p__ speed, _-__ _ the sightless at the to of bar wd,` i The ThiorI too wer , os' -IAM„anotherat i r.id. and o third, bble ae nee `oart wheels bymanpairs of oxen to the abo If our rter one, at five o'clock, an•I With the;Old TravelerBoys:` hill on thosonth nide of the "Bower$"ioeetore were able thoroughly to. "mark man, This aot•land is the present residence of.Henxy'and inwardly digest"all that intelleat¢• Good morning, gentle �4 �j ;loge which we find s halo aorttdt of tho,.Oalfga. After the removai.of the store,al and spiritual food in one day, they :Horton Houde (not the."01x2.Harton1building Mr. Huntting built another,.must have been smnrter than their do- 1663 stands on what was in a',elose to what is now the Villifue line, soendauts are, In Hummer time farmers part of )stands Wines estate, Hall land tuit employed several men in the often wont to meeting in plain chip hate was built in 1866 by Wm. F., .son of manufacture of boots and shoes. and shirt sleeves, carrying their noels in, Jeremiah Horton, and is now owned by. The lands from Olevoland. & Glover'si on their arms, and the boys and girls his danghter Virginia, who resides in shop to the residence of Mrs, Emily Si-',from Northaide came Across lots with, Orange0o., but usually spends a few mons and extending westward wall to. shoes And stockings in their hands to. .weeks of summer in it, ward the "North Sea," were in 1668 tba;save their wear, until they roaohed.town Neat Hoath is the residence of Henry property of Thomas Boadder; in 1656 of,street, when they would sit down be., C. Cleveland. A oentnry and more ago John Baylis, in 1665 of Robert True. hind a hedge and put them on; and a, it was owned and occupied by his grand- tram, from whom it wag bought by tai girl wearing a "Shilling coffee" frock; father, Moses Cleveland, who in addi. mon Moore, who made and mended was liable to excite the envy of her working Small farm, fulfilling shoes in the chamber of the old part�mates,wbo wore plain homemade linsay.; lion to wn emduties of a j A Smioe of the peace, And which joined the present residence of J. woolsey, But how the home manufnc-, .the treasurer of the parish,also.toflowed the H. Case, whose grandmother used to i tures did wear I no witness the pretty trade of a oarpeutm•, and it has been point out to him the big black spot on!blue.and-white bad Spreads which were .saidthat he Sometimes walked to the the chamber floor, whareSimon Moore;woven byout grandmothers and great Arsbamomoque ferry, crossed to Shelterjupset his pot of boiling tar while mak- grandmothers, and now in many fami- ' 'ling wax for bis thread. The cause of lies preserved as heir-looms. IHland, did a day's work Had returned at, night: Whether thin be true ornot, it the upeotting was muoh more frequent ^Thia real estate from Mrs. Nancy Tut- ala certain that in those,days the meahan.,then than it is now. Mr. Moore sold Ihill's to 0. 8, Ganglia's north line, was, in did not wait for seven o'clock to piok'ithe farm to Barnabas CaHo, Esq., And previously to 1657 owned by James up his heavy broad-axe, with Which he about 1824 a pnrt of it acme into the Oook; in that year it was purchased ,by !scored and squared the big oak' timbex,'.possession of his son, Charles A. Case,IThomas Mapes and afterward owned by nor was he particular to drop it at the�aad in 1878 into that of Charles E, Case, Henry()see, Matthias Corwin, John III. !first stroke antic ;its present owner, tog, Peter Dains, Lazarus Cloveland,.; The ringing of that Anvil Domes from Tho house acroas the street, now Eiam P. Horton, part of it by Joseph ';the bgey shop of Cleveland & Clover. awned by Rene Villifue, of Babylon, Goldsmith,.who diad in 1803, and dti j Here for forty-seven years Henry's and occupied by Joseph Southard and I Ipresent the homestead proper is held by strong arm haA fashioned and fitted family, was built in 1836 by Leanderihie heirs, :shoes to the feet ofhorses from Green-.Brown, for big widowod mother, Suonn-i The building neat to the Villifue. part to Mattituok. He is Afamous no Brown, known to the people loan d'house.is owned by James B. Fanning, ehoer, bat Will ie a "oleos sooand,"andlaboat by the familiar name of "Auntl and occupied by 0.E. Case&Son, deal. no doubt they willcome nook and neekl8usle.” By all who knew her She IN di in genoral merchandise: It was Iom the home stretch• hold:in high esteem, often approaching'built in 18,46 by Hutchinson Case for his a W, h Clover's residence across.the to reverence, especially among the eon Oscar, used a short time as a store street was built about residence 18Bac ssJ. W,children of the neighborhood, who nev-and then bought by Frederick K, Terry, ituntting, who lived in it until 1860, er failed of a reward for any kindnes who previously had kept a small store when he sold it to Jacob Appley, and a done to her, She usually kept on hand near.the "Run," Bud moved to its pr6s- �few years later through a mortgage fore•a supply of Nagar pinme for the,little ent location. The moving was a same.. 1010sare it came'into the pee Alan' of girl that rail an errand or boy that Split,what different affair from what it would - and from big hells, was some kindltDgaat her door. On Bab. be: -in these days, Tho building. ;Isnao Aokerly, .bath mornings in summer, unless pre-,wits lifted, not by jaok-screws, but by: ?bon ar. s note i on by its r walk present, g ';owner, As noted in onx former walk vented by sickness, she would surely be pries and wedges, until high enough to ':dawn this street,.there stood Home sixty seen with fan and hymn book in heradmit of eight stout wheels, on axles, ',years ago, Door where Mr. C}lover's big lined and s head of fennel or bit of or.'two At each corner, on which were!. �'gate now is, the general merohandtse ange Pool 'a her pooket, wending herplaced skids, and the building lowered, store of J. W. Bantling, which had way to the meeting house,, where Shelogto Ehom, Then were hitched on in. ibeen moved from its former site:near fed upon the strong meat-.pf the word two strings some thirty or more pairs of; : preparedfor her by liar pastor, the Rev,,Iwell broke axon. When all was ready where Ilio universalist church now'` '.stands, And which shared the trade OlFonathan Hunttfug,. while with closed"the baso mover gave the word, and with. the village with that of Albert Oalatin`eyOR she allowed her "meeth"Head-' InI flying ox-gads and shouting-drivers the Oase, the father of MrA,Eveltnn Cosh- winter her cm opanion was her foot stove,'-building moved majestically.. forward, 'ren. Hisstore stood where L. W. whichshereplenished at noon from one attouded by a goodly number of amull' ;Horn's now stands, Mr. Case had,.ai of.the two big box wood stoves that boys„who were sometimes permitted to ' otoed just inside the audionee-room ride, in the.building. It reached its foithlig the honesty of his customerei which might'not in every instance haveldoors, and which-Nester Sayre kept present location safely and was stocked ,been wall founded. I have seen him lwell filled with Hog Neck hickory, in with goods, .After Some dozen years of +take a basket of eggs from one, and hav �IlAnticipation of just such noon.day calls ouccessful business, Mr. Terry retired to n them. 'In those days 'ins asked how many were in It, careful. eggh l ebb th day d t of ons our oon10 en wills, wh isle businessaca eer Wa xsh rt' ❑y pour them into a box aoptaining nth e oongre- his farm, and was followed by Win. G. g s 4 era, withontcounting:.then. TUe stare - _ - `stead to Blasius Simone, h6_10y"Johulitrnedtotheir tiome 10 miles dtetant,� Book etioaeeded him;' fbflowedl, n l�Jevnings, from whom it was parobaeed different lengths of time and with vary Ir ,This on the authority of kis eon J. W. ing oneness by T. G. Levalley, Tall'by Franklin Booth, and sold by him to Snelling, &'Dfokerson, in 1866 b Stafford` Til•,George B. Simone,.:who .loft it to, hie! In those days instrumental mueia was lisghnaE, then by Olank�& Dickerson,''widow,:the present owner. much more rare than now, And a treat' Neat south is the residence of Eleota to most loverso1 it, but sometimes at W, A, Clark, J. B. Fanning, and eiaeel,Williams, built in 1875 on land' twilight in summer, the soft notes ofl 1802 by C. E. Case and 0, E. case ��lfrom Israel Peak, with four; acres 'at Henry Bnntting's flute from his ,open) Ron. 'ltached bought in 1876 from Isaac Aaker-Iahamber window floated out on the still. But the bourse blast of that NOrth�I !air in "Bonnie Doon" or "The Last ,RIvor tug locomotive whistle admonfsb.:I90n the lotalso bought. from 8060 of Summer,' to the delight of list,1 lea on of what is awaitinge no ,ns at our - ,ening neighbors. Israel Peak in ' e home of Pardon this long digression and we - J. whose monument,of indent, is half the will step along past stood, ,pot where Bilge' harass, ell I bid you good morning- n o Moses and numohimneys1872, built annay is cif theli, "'s hat witiluding backh wore eing1G66 owneS by e The Last Hobbleconnected With the Old Traveler Boys lots outside, Thomae Terry, to 1706 by Daniel Terry, Nest to Moses Clevsland's is the Nei- and later by Jonathan.Horton(known all Good morning my friends. You Prem dance of Mrs. Helen Huntting and flood Jonathan), Dalian William .Har• ' quizzical this morula .'ton, Silas Vail, Gideon to look a little salmon, abd lu, 4 morning. Holy. Her farm extending .,1803 were bought by Patrick May from 01 I see. It is because I have left my�!westerly and partly bordering on the (Nancy R. Oady, and in 1803 came into Atdo oanee behind, but it's only a abortiBowery, wall owned in 1656 by Thomas'',possesgion of his eon Patrick, It ie walk to the "Bun." _ (Reeve, Bud from that date 1806 there' thought from the content of Eke laude Tkfs humble dwellingis the home of I i.that-Jockey Creak once extended north• seems to be no record of its ownership,; westerly through his orchard, across the &H.Case and sister, and their long-abut in that year it was in possession oil.lands now owned by Helen Reciting, time friend and indispensable, Mise Vir-(Silas Vail, and two yearn later bonght Blecta Williams, And O, B, Case, cud. Iginfa0balmors, By the neighbors it in'b the Rev. Jonathan Huuttlug, and at. headed up some forty rods west of the y residence of Amanda Wells. `known all "Rose Cottage," from its pro hig death in 1850 left to his son Edward,I But now let us go book a little and !fusion of roses in sammer, and evenli wltodied in 1882, leaving it to hie will•'across the street to the lands occupied now;. at the end of October, the rose.I ow, Helen M. Huntting: here in the by G S. Oonkliu, In 1653 they were.. garden behind the house is not destitute ;earl art of the centurylived a model,owned by Thomas Mapes, and is tut 1848 he ,of.some blushing pink- beauties, - The{of Christian womanhood, A pattern for. Joskns Reevesucceeding eEbonezor Wars until ; Oaks, Sams Ibuilding at the rear of the little lawn,maternal training of children and a ttel Gardiner, and Hampton Youngs,; !was built in 1867 a few feet south ofllpoetege of no menu ability. Her virtues when they were bought by F. If. Terry, (Mrs,Slate Prince's residence for a ose.!Jwere not trumpeted abroad, but in her ihThe father nde of the Mrs. emainingg distance to �I,pouter shop by John Billard, and in ,own home and. Immediate circle they the "Run" wkre in possession of Wm.:' 1868 was bought.by:Charles A. Case and Were pervading like the fragrance of Perrier in 1063, followed in 1654 by 1moved to the spot where ill stands. flowers, and the perfume of Julia Hunt. Thomas Reeve, let Joshua Reeve,.2d, I :Now about fifty feet south is the reel jItly s life still lingers in the memo, of Joshuaetti Reeve, real g Brows (dentist of Mrs. Emily Simone. Her 'i g g y Hunttiug's maternal grandfather), Sgl- those who knew her. She wits the ter S. Horton,Sylvester Smith, and•in 1homeetead'and the lands to Mrs, Helen Ilimother of four Bang, each of whom Poll- 1870 bought of hi,m by Hiram Terry, At'- lHu fitting's belonged in 1653 to Rtobard ossed Individual characteristics all his ter wbom in 1800 they became the prop. ;Tfrn y and to John Terry in 1686, Froin jown and each in char contrast to all snug of t eon Gilbert s Tarryy, the tae(quer date to"1760 their ownership � p 4 song and thrifty farmer, All what farms. the others. Pow men in this town and Terry Is not 7 �It Is also pleasant to an. (s not a matter of record, but from that'loeutnry have-made so marked an im. tido the exceptionally bright epidenoes year to.1817 they were owned by Nathan-�pr Region upon their fellow townsmen, that the stork has Stam and.agBill allot ilei Overton, .later by hie eon Msltieh,I, favoring glances at hie happy home, IIntrtha moralities and Intelleatnalitles And now we are at the "Run," an !and after him by Coleman Overton, then lof those days were of less interest to a our pleasant walks and talks are ended, iby his! eon' Henry R„ from whom 1 small boy than were Mrs. Hnutting's end in the hope that thaw desnitol ;they were purchased in 1857 by-Israel�toothSolna m01asB,e cookies. Ia the foodf r so reminiscences may at least Pts In' yon ;Peck,.who planted a part of it into a;; toad for some pleasant thoughts in coin. eetlmatign.of a growing, ever hungry inn days, I bid you goodbye, ;nursery, out of which, with other fruit:yonugeter, they were only equalled by 'and ornamental trees, were planted the Ihis .motber's, or possibly by "Auutie" NOTE rowih of elms and maples that now Bean- Smith's town meetingginger-broad, But For Some of rho facts In the preceding articles 6 g :under the above title,the writer line been psr- tify our streets And afford gratefulshade their exoellenoe was not merely a matter rallied to-draw on the memories of some of his to the hot days of summer, In Being In- nelghbon,among whom may be mentiolod rbe 9 - of childish imagination, for they had a' Hev.apher Whitaker,C.D.Mr. D. P. Horton, Stances when Mr. Peak saw nudestrable,reputation among t h e neighboring: Lawyer Albertson Cave, Mr. H. C, Cleveland, utrace About to be planted, he with wise p and others,but ie rds. He could al to J, W. 1 hon90wive9,dome o4 whom essayed' t0 his appreciation Moen Heeordth all would also sof vas., ',foresight supplied gratuitonsly the more' hm amade to him the genalemanl- �endurin elms, - ,Imitate them,but only partially succeed- yenta spans made co mm by the gonclomnmy, g. - 'edl Txifl(aB all they may seem to ma.! Involved ally j bol It has been ono of love.(Too Iv About 1882 the Simone homestead., minds, the sweets of childhood are'fact of their having boon nropored largely for was owned by. Capt, Epraim Overton,I' those who have lived ill oouthold and raovon things to be remembered. ,away, will account for some partlonlarltl,s who for many years sailed.a packet from In the early thirties the Rev, Jona. I hichmay avRomee¢ nous. nbyhe to odvagarded Ad ♦Jockey Creak to Sag 'Harbor,; carrying than Hunttiag occasionally preached in'',I nka as a town end county paper,it may be In. ;the farmsrn' chickens,, benne, turnips, teresting to know that it makes its weekly visits' Orient, and, returning one Monday, Ito pearly evens state in the Union, from Maine feta., and usually a number of jugs; that"bnought home in a hen-poop three little iu autiimva o a ow as. Mayts Ittssr(alienation 'ieame back fllled possibly with molasses or ;pigs and put them in a pen, from which tlel, Sod bafpy'eSparleu0ea,in an additional. f vinegar. OapE Overton Gold his home' Ithey_esoa od:.tho+same ni kt.:avd re• All a of mefuseaa and ponor. - - 0 Number 1199 Vol, XLVL BrooklynLife , An Epitomized Life Of George woodshed, and after examining it, he thanked his father and declared lie wouldn't do any more damage with it than he Washington, could help. By J. G. Huntting That same day his father was obliged to be away from home and George took the hatchet from the place where he kept it ON the twenty-second of February (never mind the year) and began to cut wood. In the meantime there was a certain the stork stopped off at the home of Mr, and Mrs, cherry tree on the outskirts of his father's orchard, which Washington and left a little son. always bore a prodigious quantity of fruit, all of which had Little or nothing was thought of the circumstance at the hitherto fallen to the lot of George to pick, whereby he had time, but when George (that was his name) became old taken a dislike to that tree which did not extend to the other enough to play ball in the sixth grade nine it was discovered trees on the farm. He had often wished that something would that he was different from other boys. While other boys had occur to that particular tree and while he was cutting away a way of putting the best foot forward and making them- at the wood Satan came up behind him and said: "George, selves solid with their grandmothers, George would give a now's your chance. Take your hatchet and knock the sap all connected account of everything that took place in such a out of that tree and next summer, instead of picking cherries, straightforward•nianner as to will the respect and admiration you can go fishing." of his father and stir up opposite sentiments among the other George resisted the temptation as long as he could, but at boys; so much so that. whenever anything unpleasant hap- last he could stand it no longer and he took his hatchet and pend to George the other boys were glad of it. went forth and let the daylight into that tree about six inches Before he was eleven years. of age he acquired the habit and all the sap ran out. He had no sooner done so, however, of going to bed early, for which reason he was always ready than he began to wish that he could heal up the cut which he to get up in the morning and all his father had to do was had made. He knew full well that sooner or later his father to go to the foot of the stairs and say "George, it is time to would discover the gash and that the(finger of suspicion would get up," and up George would get. Another thing he used point to himself. He furthermore knew that the hatchet to do—he never talked back to his father. Whatever the old could be made to fit the hole in the tree whenever his father gentleman said went. tried it. He began to feel bad all over and he wished his This line of conduct on the part of George had the effect father had given him a bicycle instead of a hatchet. of making his father think all the more of him and on one At this moment his father drove in and began to unharness occasion, when he chanced to be in the city he conceived the the horse. George saw him and immediately went over to idea of purchasing for George a testimonial of esteem which where he was and exclaimed: he (George) would be likely to prize and preserve for that "Father, I've done it," purpose. Before tide idea had found time to cool off he hap- "Done what, my son?" encouragingly inquired his father. pened to glance at the show-window of a hardware store on "Gone and busted a hole in the shell of the old black tar- Sixth Avenue and simultaneously he recalled that lie had heard tarian with my new.hatchet" George say that lie could make a great deal better job of "Oh, that's all right," said his father. "The tree was a cutting up kindling wood if he had a hatchet that would good bearer, but it stands right where the new railroad is cut ice before it was melted; a thing which his present hatchet coming through and I shall get five dollars for it, dead or was unable to do. This explains how the old man got onto the alive. Besides," continued his father, "I admire your gall. hatchet racket instead of investing in a jack-knife. If it had been some other tree I might have felt differently When he got home with his purchase lie restrained himself about it. As it is, don't let the matter worry you." i from mentioning what he had done until about eight o'clock. From that moment George began to expand and in due time At that time, when George was about.starting for bed, his lie got married and became the fattier of his country. He also father took him by the arm and led him a one side and wide- took art in the Revolutionary War and subsequently ran for what it was,U '.. pored something into one his ears. The family had no idea president on the Democratic ticket. He was elected by a countenance, that they could see, by the expression of George's at he was pleased with something. The next large majority and was always a strong advocate of tariff morning George found the hatchet sticking in a log in the reform. rvr Boor���rT nar ,Yr -J�i-,R-' , - r r , y �CTnoapliere was tromnlou$�qf h d4na� �� Gnsvf heS`la bli r.tllr ,pII ,p'gritol eats r { Th ' g r 14 1 I Lr Inn oJ��4i'd e v e • .�'glmea 0.P that catchy eon v r <ATn }rli ha Ci B s { + +Jbl ,16flor Rrrihta . JUe mnrG nPi I1Pc fR PnsL F•hgnrbUn oven:artAesn(, nod orening;,.Omen lip lust, C ��drvi. + r I i'DfG'xY'�fiA J n ei,i il(grrin�,l(t2yrngnf ll etonntpms• Tt bel UFa nmfR 61TAR 01:n duce it dlrg; 1' { .'t411z%%Ip WrnuF�N h(0. vole , Ot mercy forms Z e seen, G ! St 'i31e9fl as tiddIa pis¢alit Upon tbo vllld Re gt went { i�T it lBldiwg o Zthn Null RportinF�'lth my old 01cle, n a tpd, strange aa�Tt may spots w call P ole loF ')'ray a e t ml,bna. jl rpHd '.ae cgs the con Un011t through A GdeP r¢anok drlrn Ilan arrnr' ` v 610 try•loteeted aY ' e t(lo 1Rdlnns and( II anoetic. be In kind, br. •MUI1tting Recalls NOW hesdtLalth fat times) Ineurinulilltable. dit 7)i never, never urn b ii,eilfes, was inelude-d aulong.'ahe mobs- A Lett,,,. b'Imil tb¢I ala dog Tree,. bpitiea of the not distant Pnture: York+ City., in the The Brent F'neole Railroad "Toodles" at -Burtoll's Theater. To Galifmnln.; list]! BprtoriR 'fheuLer, nn the, slut wltero i Bring off the 9ncm,911 Fifties. .Toy down 'do, lice rep I,naN stlpds tlin Alnerionn News Conn kinase the rellbOt p,nbl ` pa»)''s Bnihl ing in Lhambere street was 1 '$y at am we're honed t3 Rot rwuplug nn full time with a change of .'�J'pr r¢lknnft dra his ,wmlr C.'.IrymmlUY i o1Pht bill Friday, when '11ROUgll New,aie;l r prograsnne ever r ;PORULAR SONGS OF THAT,DAY l 11ei t„o,o,r, Agnga ,yC,n neN r., P; [Ila inebriated fondhs” Invariably ex L1brIs LY'9 minstrolai 77Z Nroada'ay,had tile' rolled lbw doorplate married 'Thonrpsm7' + •^ —�— fl rat call upon the pptl•onage of a large will] a "P" a5 m mLicla "handy to have J�gwl People of Doth Urban slid.Sub-inlass-of a,nnsnrugnE-secknrs In-low York- l0. the noise Tit the millage e the, N - land elsewhere, slid it was from behind i.vhurcl:es iP til. overgrown Village ael•oae e„i�Xyljal>1 Conllnurlitles Sought Pleas. ['the JtootlightS Of that little theater that Iiia river were su.reasful4 cmnbsting the 1 r rrs+, :Foster's first and best songs went [Orth�,pernicious influence of the p1aY'• k ;: ;FiTe Wheli Work Was Over, into every corner of the oivlllzed world. The first tvnrld's,fah• 'ever held in this gg 3t 0.i x( I'fhese songs were then. are noand country was opened In the '•Crystnl, rte, over will be in .a class hY themselves palace." In what Is now Bryant Park, U.'kluntting, an elderly resident NumbeNess other songs. many of Ubloh is and tiro uncolored statement, straight }t�Sbulhoifl, L. L, Is got n reminlsceut are, apparently. Immortal,have been pro-i from the treasuro•'s report, that 9,'100 ,�Wrei of'.rand, a`pd, 'hi]o leerily aline t9.y'rhmed; from [INS to time, bill when Ste-:.people, including children, passed the n.11 chat is going ng'vn today, lit home nod i1,11en C. laoster (tubo Bled In ner•e1 ty In turnstile 'Irmo 10 o'clock in the mornln$' fabroa4. likes occasionally to it'dttlRa fn Go, lodgtng-h011ac) was Bind to rest' to 0 o'clock at night of rho "boon ori rho,band played piaam's ht do Cold, ;day" of the exhibition, was.tukeu with a sr ,il4l pshecfinn O'hcni 'In one of..those grata of allowanr-o. (aid 61 nand"'nod no mora ithe eulogy 1�IoQde the other day.loo wro[e the ton ronid. have bIton spoken by Um greatest Pnmconi's HIPDodrome, ryhar0 thrllilnq row l niscpnces',of his young man- �pratcr IR the laud. That day all that feats of Pols URlnnetng and.walking:Bpi, kobd, Nllleh The beagle presents ;to Its remained of the [Beater'.Of the art of!,and down an Inclined piano on a barrel. �'Irosdgrs; originating 'songs that.tench the heart" were performed amid "thumders of ap. . .to 1gf,0 are maldng`ot popular -songs that can Rover grow old while pholse,":was a Ude show attraction.. Bill Previous . hnmsnity retains Its love for the boRnrl this famous Pallsiall Innovation was not `"?,Aga-WR- an IllduSd'Y that offered but tiful--was consigned to the cold embrace a frnaimialsuccess, owing principally. lol :Eery,LntWcotueuts tar [ho Investment o(' of mother earth; :elle difficultiesIn the way as.. getting Leann t#0'a and `3apitRI, But about, this Huta It 'was not tIO. "o1iP^ (or vaudeville) to town after the Rer1m•man ce. 'fh0 J�nrr- n j ,! gau'to appear, with the p•egsanvy S,feature of the show that draw the crowds lieny. from Forty-second sheet to thekkii rgi see Siecltanics flell and the sovereigns 'hmuea:in the r ty, in stages of lliod.ed1 0, $(+IlariLyl oG a(Ig¢7s' visite. sOigi from,the packets of the aristocrar•y of lelpaaty, drawn by horses that tied to be ...... lreilulrpmolts,dt a,people P;ngland. It was the Singing of songs) gpWerad_uP cT cry few rods, h'um_Chc A fri4a t9?a,dagi Oe of tha om'e,timml ouch as are not:.prodnred In:these days, , _ __ >$ 'I1j aiAusi9 but bliss it Y Ignorant by:perfectly blended, uncultivated volees, ellppery Pav9ment, was am eJpertesce to t„errjbnloalllles and srtistlo'quglf, imoduleted to express the meaning anrl_ �be anticipated with gtodmy 'forobonings.I fle'tvords, that did the trick milinient of th x a r¢�dr eves such a Ila N and won " And.then therewasno detlrind orelr.es- Some Popular.S011& '111 Rural ;Coit,, G { {,,ilrRtldn ns.Eo"constitute nm.ovot ire,ambitious t.o. rano 11, Pur. the Ilan's mkuT(ttes'. �� p,Ist41'lof conversation In t village share Of. Popular,npProa nl Che inahu �{ � rit5t j(ot�l er Rbetas wham Progrus nients were all in the circle" And played In nvsl-9mnmunlI.. s)gighrido an4 .RC9a1'r`j )'q slid alert women wela wont tq by the singers thilnaclves, lienee thein Rttnwaitlo•pa,.ties of 4oung tpeoplo sang lid vl 0.114 sang, pnt1l It beoamo rout 90 thiil.l- > ; lid nocounla of tlai,ullar qaa fnv'splrit of nivairy maalfetile by axR•gn ragweed When "golag either' of the twotlepaltmen Ls u( the mu that IC could 4o in opo, ear md'out at 'q @t eke rata of•toren LY-fl ve ;ntli05 Nice]y:.onto t. ho other' 0.'l thput Ueing.no tine'It ll In early tarn1ir. ''efc ]totalled to with'Open ' I roAueUon:pP t eOtgo 1 .':Roots. )q-con,- ItSput 'and bulgintalled , 11 re, w'an •The Days When Jenny Veld Sang• poser, nnd'wdtf-r of those aril ing`war ll ct 'to "beat Ile ars iu Lh9so days Mien the Old'-songs were net,, barso- songs that pl4)`etl 91191 an enedfivo pant E 1 NI P,Rl hat ¢t 0ite end UY ahonte to Hood star title ill w title tileswore'Bowsry running, end '1'Idrd a�0 lie ng intervals, up to Inj It S'R: Ill%'y'Itr%'Ooo andf o''CIo E the'dtItCr passongers were Idly`'tmo- 91y W' first fitreet, Night :atter night In gvelrty'ouq!rwhd ItnnUrylrlmr felt 9thao genllc.Dower I'1 0.6 th`glr lianas In the.frost On tlld.win- successlnn, yellow hahod n.agels ernopad 9t Rosalie, the, prairie flowc+'. r dPi$ ones; oyes something, beyoti4 ['lip" and bore "I Mile lava" (little Cm•- When the Uuys and':gllla of sixty-.odtT fwflFid t dreams oP luxus) A s�avo,a9,thq Idella Tlow•ard), 'Io reahna at hi"'ginary years ngo Sather ad.abort Ihq I'molod nn," t;MnUanep h0.'U1G cOnld, Uy Inning In;'. nith I•hlisa among .the. gorgeous-hand elands tvhrn [he ev"Iflog6 [veru.long ,.Bur rill low prfi le baggage master and paYisg Iingt ally that'.hnng euapcndgd [coin lhr. Gies of. the camles -reasohahly cheap, nnlong' the { n cl§an yP lir,eolil, for tho.prlvl lege en National Theaten`tn Chatham street Jobs rottg$ of wltich llteY npt•et tired 0.'s igili•.rous sma e.at box 0.i' bat • N Cento the famous hatter was lir 1 t .hyo' ttlrirt•7)ef.gpul q" steel, now end+ copying a front..seat In Castle carries, ' sofY bo lit 0 Uin lerq, r (t'r gib/dt{v melanOhply 3 'on the l for which he ),lid $260 to hear Jenny Vad urian en,ea neper,. Vmlo a In woclo,rs �' 'idr4f(Sr))flhiT Sw rpt ewtt'pletfplm ,Dirt the wRThlq. mho nn9lque o{ the modern Jb}ler tr eahg.iregrl ( r n+ p,eGaot rip¢ Y�,r auytplug In the holed^out, with elevnte4 ayehrows upon; brey'm p0. rvb(b bright lones r�` r,s'of{T;,le o"king oRn}{ + v •h tpersohinglelly.-[tole fah&t mwo inspiring' nail Pond hoPre'rmwAln. Jegion "Rho-ra Aleeceer 'while the"met'-. Bloarlms lllwi ryrwllmq uow'c+s Vm Wed lClleat bay lie • �ti s#'r sty tr n,l�nrro ,:R inroad SpnB ,gbant.Arincea; .and oGhars 0.R ChR seer And one-lh`U9911)4 see IlLand go It one; '`h,, `yialSr If1Na is"`±`g0.r hJCgErrhf i _ morisly rich, who;ror(nLed lira',.[,.wealth b9'I 08tter Il tUo m0.Uuu oh lr.ndor sentlmont; thetens of thousands (in sloe Instancea; stet , , r + et �, °IY�I$f�lzatk@t''!'sp 1 mJplt {as eitp0.t ,otic r 6. all the way up.;tn tltjR »n�two hundred.''i l . �yy POei$ sat to�a:.9I[p R�IOe.Anit,souls: ,i - m(h�er-�Grr(igvpglt"dli�tq',u1)�q,tlq+rtuh��gyl�a � 1.�,C{�,%adaeepmedting Y Puns"t Brfilo yearo error el nwly by Tsniena thoneand) ex- I'l,o allow I¢ ow)Irgrata a n ten In the whJto G nrnrdbinanatolis ,¢ oraneTU¢ unsQw lso w + have file, float ¢leans wber9 0aW f 1 been i I 'y' {f'Jfa � .`• �-� l Jl 14-11111W—� IAB rRo1 illi lY�l4b''r&dflen]>:g�e-twitH3i I ik+rp74Y 6av@ ttieon fill7itt'Ptit aad Pr4U9>`� +s' ! 1 �� _ 1 + t rrn¢Ig1 Non?tav l)t1 �J`1Nhen jm h`lln"tz)ibsla t{ andaul 1;00tlY re;4te,,�oul,tilge were thgsetl�0 gR �s rp'0.! � �` r )r PI!fks U a''Yed 1{'oPenh;<g0q"ir In tile;P �" {rl who would`An )I banned In that dar3c o n4asttin4 , 'phis nRl;;'soman until ell hr iiJld>�Q 3,�. hgle " b 1 1s, 'b115 1 H '+ Lltig rypod jirc iatkt'lioaaVttingrgodl arl?d"a�I>rts Ride,by Stage to'Bedford Flnjoyable.t b}7 F,rsi`rG'f 11,titeW,l)J'1dM` rtt 'r r d atr a woolen sptl away, wtlttl e'InemorTgrl ` rf(,e(rnittl 1 ls� '9 ?(vg p ber awn fo011shuphs lose n t) of His It was nn enjayabla:ride out to Bede Hai i r� 7T p �9tilytdh 1 � r t q s y for11; doubly go 1( one out bavp n east's ,Ce• � ' pgn' p t,atb ,,rrs! i� IrJ Inlet of the long ngb.ond made Uo�' ailA, lrbfr 1 !r�1'@?� pr 4 t Y : �., But titer.npntlineat Italian nn old song (iYhJoh with the driver.,, A stpalght streak,•of iq 7le pe lh>g tel11,3 4Olerl4 i , hns'recd it Ban red In a now niid�i'inore country road :Uarderod by'tlelde of%ivnv- do�or t�'{asp + r „j 1 °� elaUor5t0 nnlslcar g.rll). we5 nu rmoro lug corn and cnUbages In: livin8 greed. a'plryloea rz4l} vrr grow Amar Blit it should.not be inferred that Bro41t- IY; rmwt dl �he,6t halite [a!r ` '� aoudil tiije: thea tffan now to aefsUng .,]Y,n w" not.some city Pluton stl'QW,in )11-'mgxF.e,,a rllI6nl al:h1; and all p. Oh 111C1.rp gorx this !imo the ferry Bpd:the tower part of Myrtle, QIm„liters, r when tie'heart Ix vomg avenue were quite bUOy tharaughfnrep.., I they had"?• hiK potpie. 'phera la naught :on Bard to olimb The City Hall'wne mucU.,ne IC ie today,; 0,nr °filers. Il wb the haerv: ix Tnm,g. and pale ale" BeN "drawn IFmn tile, I ne, had•:o ill¢ pat-P11. A mlot of 11e1191d wgod" on the corner'of Myrtle avenue.`. 9bn tryst Nov rondo of „'e. $CPtlL18 r see hr Ila flight. Too moat.ret it or nmot ye die. , are' .thes'mash h, il,e night, It Is too Had that the presont generis.-, l)vnl• tli,re. then lite h¢nrl a y'oeng,'' Had can never seelower Fulton street Trils,gae8'!fulled to :become pop Ionic et .es It was of a Saturday night In summer:;_ ujltaLdO'the tlie4ter, not I,HrougH auY Inok But ,I•anry go.the suer dy,Alorit'Sn the words, at wholly owing When the begirt Is old; j Troops of mddisbly dressed girls and if Tbna Cato lit Lnl a xwoet UsCClly nttlr ed yenAg men, gut for -a `Cp thd`. somber ch m•arter n the 911'• 319ten me hrxrt In old: promenade, obstructed the sidewalk on Irrcn all that'smnel and shone the right side'of the straet •(there was n•her. It was In ted tuf whtstllnp and There js a ental loat and,gene, I baud rosea Ubl poses. OrI Anil am trlxnnw aro tow or nano, 'always plenty of room on the wrong,' , I it V hrn ill. hrnrt la and weet aide), or filled the con[eatignol'Y. :When' Fernando Wood Was Ma`J_a rt emporlumd, where strictly homemado,lce In 1846, Frall,lin glerco had noti ceased oT ��P oo T_Y ry D IIYs �Tcreamstores was ere oil at n6 soma a plate, L 1J 111 ll�i THe apparwere open anal }1 a'olocic:and to he President,of the United States, nndl , atl apparently did n rushing bus,ine@s.� remand, Noodywas•ylnYm• of the Small I �a F� Many of the itis firma now;.oa whist was. or New m•x and, of the two, hp rvne Mr yPi,t • .then`Fulton avenue began and*ognductcit by Pi, ,the mora tnikpd about, and pps l i�lr ll '', p business Par years In the tltytle buetllpg slbly, the better abused ;His nnnonnop 1 1 street, Osboc rRoltc ' �ment that Ire had "a single eye tor the (,r=0 Needle"i ` t r R P heti kr Thngnd;l 'inulin gond,". was said'to have boon n0 Needle" store) whlah his'sbne dayelopgd, q,, ,I'Into a showy ¢at4bllshrtpnt'11 ; and 'T nm'o In Accdttlanre NI Ui-the truth than y ' r" r: It, was withtilerules of granunar, .trier n+ o , store and that pf Multordpxj hgls .i had n 'ane residence. wild 5baciott5 I�I� I'IUI1ft n IYes Of Times Nos a pionpor 1❑ the unhdwn too{spy' d->•;Ip•! •'out re ide country"wi ' St ectad 4 furnisher and:decorator 3o�omrp ltpjt yfEl. grounds, Wheq)Old Mel? of Today after the war, in 4he p9n40rij l t :Nay and SeveAly-aev0ntll street and';in of vnoant lotell0ra nosy,a. l 4haf other and divers rospeota aPDaar ed to�,Ue ) p�pp�� pretentigus depart e%W", iq (h In the enjoyment 01 the '950 things: of y! r� yV 8Y0,,Young• #' title world," most at whirl, noaoy„dlne a. �y( r And there was;eornethjng do�nk Iq rcy �, to general bPllr4 had` peon acquired ri tJ,j ,avenue. r ' Deported and lament6a%ofd lEiver lo!ul; � through tile: 31111010/15 dianugement ,fin + u Iton street. Some years a6n yap U,pKp'n„ Co-operation Njtlr U.,brothol hOl n'4a 'A UIS�T TO PLY OUTH CH URCIf to droop act prop. Th pprvnrd pran„d 4t tile proprietor 0f nn. .1nduan �lrpp} " , - 'pnPor) of, Same Nidely and nn voign§§ly , "�uelpeea gnvel}mu a psraleUen4 p41u known f, 'PoIle lie,[' 0r 'i-1T- 9 �.a10 the clown nt thr. circus if tha'4 d Also .Sometlilng'„ About fife Period rated VohmondloU Bud ga ltd gout Lhgrrd t�,P' IBrbadweY'Titeater, batera)1 Poal'1`;'P!ld I WHan Lowey Fulton Street Was 'de grace, • , lAuthou (tVat•tb) arrests bad a tepifljp, Days When: Brooklyn Earned the. Iem,g—tis the tone oe "Soo Howerc tljdn+ in Its Cf1oTY• - Nickname of "New York'0 Int the Beni tit of its popllarity ops vnrpo� oq NhieH, in 0onne0it 11 with the relatip0, of his pn'n oxperjolica in bnchln6 1, a plthoueh not naw•a Brooklynite, The Brooklyn In.LBkodearob 60s was not oa1Y'; aplh,"nLsdo„thio rgfor5app to thc'9Ta,Yr,k} IDegle's versatile and To "City, friend,, I r t tile-1001110-1' {grekm flnr nisl,t ill nu^grainy tU oulj 1 Dr; f O. Hall ins of Sontluild, h I" the 1 11 1 lent metropalh; of houles"And rBtil !t'nahe( logia xsy atao !j, + 1 Boeing:to,haven gee11 working knpwledgp ''houBoB as well and every light tUBl P,ernY'; i,find i am sou snm,t enough W ,r. ! '.baste came Iii crowded ip the ohalne+with{ b ytn.ane ccrnanda=Wand s ,1 ofµ.lint Hr0ok1)•n,ivns a geno7atlon or so ` s y gager and In the PRi•19wlug''apthdO Re jodgers returning from I'tnoir jaoulo n rTlfls'-OPldodo Is lat,. noo'd Ilel arl'br,p IYI Ln Cho„ tl11tt`m'itiutsm at tuen 3n+Y�lli+ µ,rite Intereatingly al' a 'period Ghat�,.the busy mart par oea tUbd:'river. Anil nl;, k r eB;is ' nC.nitogetHBl nn ant tgaopGfdaY dwellers latoe B 0 r Orou U f ''DOPY on the other side h ou fibs oak-j moaerA eivl4Bnapu, YI pb t g�moa, or n 1pa3onitY of them pad ,would stop to Uuy lliiff)� o(, ane moP t)tie,! raenufsne who theA sr'na� rpawled; $'The lGood Old Rye.,°'d ) tr tsrparaely realize ever a�e�e� iglaal t ter D U, tort' edition Trie a�a wys;DYMi irhpUr the old BOOKS Were pew tth.4�¢�'hA� x,(�srieuprYbodY 'no B' h 1"'g r 1� P0.`" .^,b, N v ppapgla,df<tonligd to �eto aiOirtunitie aht '( lu,alry Ao[ the Tang Isla rd t tlr8et �lDojIII tnPreatlia11Y l�hes'en4lxe�tq�gn{lfEj�tai' ,'S f+tthn lt♦allriea no Pp Qu a ppuS�Y' t r althnFet ry add Ino A mention -the' [enrols) PopV� y jdy�eht pvith q'htoil th°e pis aernt?f1 p�4a h { 'Hud Go drawl!�.city,read It studlodely;tnnd with 'g{,reat`. pp m161Je ishedS Lralue- tlda le,satiated, and Yet t,e4 1Q, p''�r4, � a �regho,only fry,rg,removed franc p,00.601tllgp afxe jfyyypt roagbr S�4E tnl,tmPH o[ enklneacing Akiliy„ mtaery, There were the sing).g8p?p ellpi°ys t'l Ada uauclal obter Prlee i<,tlie AtingEiq',I The only ove n &YOik gn•+MYrtle av@ailar it Ldown in,the mall, ISh'HY a HBI(@fil;.;And rvnnter� Budd l� �sununora fila4•ofo l]ghtG' n'hnWljunnolpivnn [i aughtjwlth aAala�y and'. ice creamery:wuo' near too hQ ll4[dpnvA" rhes and tba dirat(a. pad th[ljr„ q_jgl'pll�a,� rpta�nty Tbe.dafkna@�u oou�d ��fel't, Igateo9ulte raeP4lltletan ud heldtiMeld tanl elgc they. had>tp §pb• Pip h��5i)id4uUfn tEl I1 Ht nod the eUeaoe eves; PP waive. isle I�b11 h0 hpa L�sl911jacgdpll"r'uet lf� ra nil?(�Yet 3t tvae nothing , mit of the flue 0�ce•at the thus, but he raYga.'moge. le syrup Tml,rhpaie rhr�dr,. I ij ', %ar(lta sd0' a awo5nan ;proshuma;l?1Y,�overion,;Sh`erjft Lo it. 'It'lld htiµp tSop!I3 t .' gl) „ ) rs(pd pod'+evida�4ly@omen' at nil, 1µd ohnlhgd upon he r aide rql!w 44'9!L$j° nh�k lifaatJ hmu 4th gal bnket rl t tc, and 0i ,r,3 jind'rapUje fo !„ IS .` `'?h.+ale aJ;�pl`t}(j„'+f r,he tl�r�o�.,IrGha� stofrost of &; h lite pl O to !AnA(r, pl pl - r t _ ,a^u, , ti �vt p•; ry d�gxd I'�lr},� ; d�,�tl e� '� lcH Nas to t�„� d✓x � � r 7 l - a' gA< @rVoG�Y}+o 4U �t'L4 i1� 3Fgltoos, 1 or�6lul7fallkl�s�r{oY,Yi �1ilY�"1�� j[3 t 1�jrMy, „.,.0 9 t ts,ua! ,aiy NndtNflF^h`jt1}tukw( C;t �'Q o '6ienpe 'irttigl'tb'e ,bad dliS�mV , d' id'; f ij '(' {'rxti � , �,+ ` t$rttY';uipd(dffet'etiti tbs the mandptes'v'o[,+f,@ahlon gotigad.I t; Praac t pRfb,`l q h 1 1 is 1�s r ) s'2 I I ' rad 'p1en.,fY`gogdenough to Neac-. to' his hndkprchlof nde4uts fi 011r a>, ( �} 50 ,� ' , � �'`+finle aP made the oIW9 11M ti}+ z$+ r^t!4 1 g d { ,� 1 el}uroh;' would 'wear Ilke a board,' and•'8$. Ih'or Stilly 9n Ili!!HtraY, +r of ill@ g u 4(j s + B .' from the 'Bound barrel' to tUn.olotUsslihe darfnl o9losay of suggf0tl� -j� �t tx <�r A ° ' g�,; Jvith ell tU6.original oo,l'ofs 11utEcrmg in tc, ! sx + "+ .the breeze.. -. Wer@n 23orse Car .'8ed�s'I,Tingla`'i an + !. twrift for revenue only,' backed ” r;� r x IDY:HUYIttII'1g W axes'Rel'j111n scent by the 'paupor labor' of Europe, enabled tires/Trolley Gon Was Npt;• I :the people to get full value, In Imports(, Tharp onme n time wheq+a Hrooklyat$, I11 $tOYY of Old Tilries 111 'goods, for their money, the purchasing just returned from a,,In ng ahsonaa from Power of which was at high-water mark fnmlllaP. haunts, wo41d;. If Ike tl pp'ed to, Custom HOUs e. while its'volumes and circulation were at flPf} hime@I[,1n tho •evealn,Q,r 51f;arrival a low ebb. Or- Hence it was that ryhmr [the fn front. 01,41eat was fn lapontpte Pq Itho' I.eign products war, tieing unloaded at the Arlwnyn Qpan DnVg &tnrat and,oytich tV n 'Part of.New York in cilmutittes onleu- ria pgw+o@b[ the long chain 4P.'@toreg, .DOMESTICS NOT IN. DEMAND: anted to supply a lnrge'arrsa of tUe United plloraytadyn Y the largest drugs aIorpopgtlnnj States, .the occupation of Custom House pR/i+It oupatyy,+i[ not,In the world=tlavo broker was no more.lucrative than stren- 1 At�P�dt l� thp first ti}ne enlittle grdani a Emus. - ht pa lI` toward'UIm 1¢ Idyrtle ave;' Foreign Mills Prodlac Was WUat His outfit consisted of a dingy office, h rr d}a';tell one p6Lbg sfl}e snug in+ Peo le Wanted.-Eqs pin Meth- one, two or more anlimtent-clerks, aritl Fultn>streaE apd>aG:'yellow one movl¢g, n yg g la fluctuating colica Llan of bays, endowed s�4 't 'done 'CgPtt 9trbat all the wnY ods in Customhouse. by nature with flexible limbs, capable o- r(nshyConiGtery and swhon 'llghtn)ngrlike rapidity of motion, imiquina- U e1R erg qnd Civlf 0yd qt,the Citn' ness of perception, unm•r:ng illscrimina- rs r 'tire and dlplolnate ablltY,' monumental + 1"snj�unotioay all bound for the lorry. In these days, when tariff reform Is gall and the faculty of living oil three krsj} IlppgyyvloGlpn, would bade been [m-c'gd one of the lives Issues, the following ,dollars a wek' that the' horse care had Loin b.. reminiscences. of old time 9n the New h "The ,lac ry' of the .Custom House, b 4 etQ dr ',:no doubt„liavq been 'struck York Custom PIoves, recalled by Dr. J. .then at the corner of Well slid Nassau r:1of46P apd admiration, but R(the YhY a;llfe would tiara been cuiloue �a. ;FIimtting of 'Southold, L. I, pl`0 °f Iotclock'Pm,, ars scene of Cbustling,�push- v rat had bocoae,of the stngg9e• more than ordinary Interest. Ing activity, The alleging throng, made' �l`ghirY ho Would Pays-Imrftad that ! "'L,`he'Perlud I.Of which I :write,” says imp mostly of brokers and their employes„ Y e sane Elie 6a"to-couses hndtthe rdltcilroad Ila' 11 Dr„Huntting, ^was perhaps the name Of while not laltogether k'eomlunnity'.e[ In- v s�'or. gteambaat ralgndiPge ,r Y{`here 4the`orn.of hon@et,ImPorted goods—a glor-: tarsals, was relations were were ° nersistenitlly ¢ p @, jolase iia LkI s@leta 9s(,reQeao ' 'iOP 'era the 111:9 of which we.may ever_ a was upon nro'ce ,behold; (,[ur short1y- thereafter..a� °gi terms with lens neighbor and allweredl` ^+ dmhelllehelrwlfflr the ❑nines of I 1't ,`p @Ir-qs to Wh1oCbeY Sbaouged ,more or less ready, If not saga•, to ex-. nebulotle scheme for ,rhes bringing'up l.p'i@ri s111{tt...r,,,b,atd 8e@eb,ei•�`a Potent`L'gbtor Of,Ibudry lnlant IIpdustries' on the bottle' change courtesies And favors - a W `` tWfaoB fi,ha1 ...rhe line at the entry eloi rt a1l�oGpO e, °P,,:,1ks�rh the AppreaI ti n of thejnniliel exhlbi rartea e spirit the of lbltir o service. Pref, { ytfit l`'dry cry a!)Iflq.(d( them tVj"ona }i',a musty supplanted`;by a 'spirit, Weretly two r more that were worth'(,lo' g g 'Oop� lr� hp R[ raising Ftr'oltlyn, ,dtn[!oa¢oeror the sPurlo�u§,+ And Chep S qt g, huh R,fs(a7¢brIl do,BeenrytA ''IIaR s Uma�.Uo'Nd)rrporativo domhbdi for cheap hers tothelr employers;.:would enrage in. +, @rgha,"soft d Ile eeaP r9 fna artiblost on rfer 'prices approximating a friendly:altercation and roll well. out ,,qq� $@nry Nnrd Heephsr At g +of Imo upon the floor ,but tbose'fn the, t&ej h$ wa'0 as fop re'. orad +tUo$e tt which:the people fiad become m r rear never thought of., forward' ti prgphot eaVe m this +crypt nbnps em$d under the ol'd tgr1P[4' ' ' to fill the' gap, wh°nwa so doing n ! d`-„+g aYIY+plaD�tot rtUom,FFr+��?�t@Le { hFmUPe struggle'- [°r ysupremaoy•between.. couple or zo� Ofor 'might&honor&bl9 rd he go l Of Q p Sdud@y pl9bW q@ @clall�n i 4haeP❑ as nd qunllt was`short and do- Y @,IFjhpsur pti<eaoding eervloo"`I�`1I;�41'iY$ and cheapness, man, ad with vic-� gaiued; Ort the'contrary the elders;alter' ,Y}@sylnl}¢,ep setd that Rll c;,load r + terga street It lea ryonder ,'ropy find,togged, PPtawdry flnsry, waiting with'some Interest for the cid- Q+ rjumh tit traxel on the boatq ididt took an'easy chair m fro; while qua1= balligabeate back logtheir places n7 ell- apysllh did) bhom the' stock a[ +fI,Ity mauled nd bedraggled, crawled out join upon them the necessity of mending },p yiFe"ryr rCombapY r'�+ of;AAI uuder_the bno k seat, I their ways,, 9� rsaf+ [ aatningW0.a of epLLTea tUq + F Y } ntrthe}PU@Ic was, uuqu�sy DL iVlar HdW Soma Brokers.Hastgned Matters y pp,d[Lded attrnetlou,, It,woe lu oiv140t.estia Goods, Popular y was by no means'a rare occurrence y bmparghle to the up.ta dater,, Years Ago, 7t for a broker, whose standing in the bust Ice' artletle article+ but, 1t wa@ ,r� Meat many` 'years `ago domestic nese admitted of some show of arrogance, ho sag, f P°lute that made It long fol�� mauhfaoturest of.every daearlptbul worn to walk deliberately beh[nd rho nAiling It' @(nem are(,, n poked upon with+ontrnoted brows and !and,place hies entry Pnpere+ hmio seg a Ea ne/.qunday night, 1a tr and a[',, 1pP6vlm�rr hq], uses»°:the aierk's"(,ask: The'blerh -randlpg,'+and myself.".etrnSled train Sur 1 o'r'ne homrrthe eBrE@at"mllls'oesLoWal dap would leisurely unfoldlthe•papers, rail- Ing Ibent+ uppn yllndin8 1 aC l+°ase wet ` slaiy In comparison Idly and.dextaronsly stuff the bill Into ry.,fbr ourselves Iustswhnt +all-4 a taller tI'll I t o Idngl shr"hutPut. angraI'p cap- hie vast poclletand proceed to mace out 641' the, m4slc at 1}°ep ar'a,amotint9{] t +� the perm[t, while the Him of anxious r�x',rvy�.9 strived vgrY l by EferO for Pats 6f on Bug wear° wer° coarhue enougin erli ygdttl t pGpt t 't r to abbot stralP@ throu8h,' and every Pro-�1faces wore all expressh m of disgust cpm- It gr tg �dt s4 @ IR tkle gat deur ho LLsewif@,,world lege to It that the mensunntel with the exasperating Proceed- rygm H sued 4 pabern(gr +'shuttflrs Of,the best'j'goM were kept cpm; In6 _What cant becureded must Im On ! ) �, *3Cu hie,+o nsy> ytydl�snadc"I i ciao fly 4losed as the only lmeans of pro- - ' - tl t1 figgs Jelin ZuPdp�i1 g i tee in (t?e b'eauti hrl+ p urea from' the duan i was if posalay. mora etrlctly Lrue� hpfH'blgp.ipAahyn111n iPrs41(flg j� ' �, , then tbah: It is today. e n!Pdr wad', rylaX+ag+tJthef'vast ;Iola caring, IPgigfs��roar 8pppt Y�dSoh look�aF I`a, a Impgrt°r worild take his Involco. C f$ Yyrpper+to I p`t Y dd tU;'p (nnom ti n Ulll of lt;ding'and jlerhape other data. W ', t 4,av i n 4&Rd't�hn�qu„ tus� ph"<Ijh e itG,a fntry�melchuntowi � �sNU9legpme a Che` prokal' anti ho'.'would do the reat Ie r9h&+(Cjn g r iCvl xk $`"Y? said fm• Che IVlture ar is ibuafnes@r was Pr on L6"b ,flet of resew l goods on the C, P �trrimYr f' '3 rt,do , r 9 @ p� V, over Involgl9d'Into w$Itls'nClhB hhe colgra Inv Ica t:he pkngecleric would aback oil pa& Iah`dtfp }lf5 'lliaryt�`nq6 to 'ruP; " �I ria — �yralear The Iden_�nl_satimt it itis case 11��T s{hg q 1 ae, YPik��RQa,�mPP�d1�� ���Wg�2hymP 'oQ y _ _ .— 111vuld , (E�@ox�W, da 4ldarthe•wi,l@4pu danrt°jr,9. 7v—'F rio a eertCgtiµdoBeogle,ta tt I1nvb , b the ha11 room o[r:,p Sboutld`(a� t Pustndian OtJ 4Ub onmpanY s reInfr'Brobklyu. Hel reallzedimaaY 'god • eyAnaliiltbl$gsAe 1 made n rvhd'dash"for appl $ytI An of the -cowder then 8, 11.1 Ilan lady, HI spa llmSs tu'Inhiel I I , the crane.- Ile wqa stem Lbn olp41u1. pgokages -liE4 "Opel enae tngiked L'vI' in{d°wnytUe ganRDl6nk, which,`rvee being kePPor of the 6orsne u8oI fm, tuthing,l c a stlamgnd H '`oUtwide 2.' To�tUle hauled In, and Into the air Above the ! IYUe af11Xe$the st nature.of a deputy,061.1 betvoenrthe plank and tbp, the Leepm4not, when dr8wlug in the grea4'. aleobm ° Q : dock,sand like u wet,y4pdershlrt, hunk+ Aetna, 2n'felet de¢p nolo a mil° long. .lie lifter- rima bad chimed the witching l carelessly over a-;Mloth.4 ilnO ha alighted Trimly t g wore a echo c¢p,'arom wh:aU Lha next. hbnr of*11, trustworthy bay would da upon the atringGieaertA,�rr'the pier,," to the lasttuft of yellow fur had bean Ilver this potent domain, t the y9Tf�F carried away, presumably by some '.re toc who-ivas ueyallyno tIaec p 'to badfmmdannihetT N R 'PI Lay i,�1V 1cent northeasterly-gale. Ills red-flan l Dahl❑, P[ R,.16feat Clipper ship, 61PPIng 1rK .t; ,11 AAA»l j iSr4npy aid emdklnR ',,'scone I d �..•d.+ tnh shirt was open at.the uaclq and his feet'. ghlp Iogmpd.uP to the-'Apparent'holght of " ' n were bare save for Irregular, scattering Place a P,e k, and the. boy, wool clhnb 'i:, � �{ TT ^ etches of dark brown Boll left ever 1 the srvgyi g compaulon ]ndldsr to�bq ,e 1' d'�1.�^o J,IDE �� +u4r� from the oarlY spring Plowing, and•Im- called'<at"t}le rail by'a pihh eyed=square +@@@((( 1:- f ire tosplhle of removal by the friction of nPagod, ferooloua looking bulldogs n'ud yrs /j r- -.I eycoi,ted b}; It, with slow and meseUded the tanning;tido. Hla PIPs had gono,,opt, 2F ad, [o:Che Cabin CPU back xl b0 ' I'and UIS droamY haze .wee wandm•ing; G Recollections of L. I. s '"Thee°' almost Ually experlencee In S'4 S' I, over the smooth, polished surfede of the - t Alead of produclog',liew nstUmuAi'; cents�. F'&Yl'IOUS industry at the I ,Uay, rvhirfi IDched only We whoop Of the l tered within the system of the narroty �untutored'Savage In the.bordering forest chested boy the getmu of manliness and oouingo. glitch, ha After ere, developed East End. ' to make it'a good second to Coo jler'e Into Prmulnent charneterls ties., "Glimmerglass when, Witt' a Pro411117 The nekt move In the game was the de- t Mandy seemingly foreign to his nht4rq,.. Uvory, by the broke 's carman, of the -cl a 'be areae and rare]@4sl,y dr Pping,hl@+. case upon the CAPACIOUS floor of the rub- THE MOHEGAN FISH HOUSE. .pipe�-upon,:thn�Vann['§d' rhA1''�i said; m• r �` father ejaculated ' ' tie Stora.' where It was dowtlhed to re- main until time ehoulo be merged lnto� "By thunder' TUey'i'o gaint nhundi eternity, unless, peradventure, fps Itoh• uG�tld Fish" Go to Waste an Big Lord 7orusalom, sea Am brOakl 1,^Iaf3ni;Jlan. Ing Paim of the trucicman WAR scratched t Jos Ain't. live hauled thouann in th6E=>baul, with quarter or-hdlf-doilar,7acam•dln t Seines'B%rlug'Abandauce I'll eat the hull of nm fav bTeaktbisj€i to the nircumetnuoes,o[ the 'case'. and Gho - Kone, boy --this to an npen-moUtf"6a, mood of that quxlilnpy official. ,` to Shore. _ usable bnslddg in the sun 1n Ebe ynarm ' .for whlab o[ this@ - ,annd—"You-moos Tho question west to up C° 71m }jAkr5,Al13A, acme Ooutd ho be Induced to trundle the n1 J, ti If Uw7°rrNa 'P, tell him to gat on the old "hnNef� �� Maul Into:;file appralser's room? Rt lyes I glen everybody to cgrt flab to�'brt'u1, ,Dawn by Elm bay, on I, -bh,d uCi mornla. .The Mokies'has Bono rqund a matter 100 pen,cent. Ices or d§ip 'tO; 9I five baledtpnuean", an"tell evorybdrlY,ffR;. the broker, and'thee-delleats siEUah on 4 d t thAt rip a to tlSa bei gilt of 10 ori y2 feet abevai the level °t the long' Wallis 'em t4 Come down arteT ggpm called for tba exercise of taC6 aiLlddC`lioy i d. b ACU AtPed thO low-'�I fish' 6,C'cioOkl Come gtt ag8� 11J`i macy, w•Uieh were generally fori;j,,poh5{,Pg IttrBfcU OG epR,Yf l 1 .I And they "go1Pt'touod on.tin bt tWthrea-dollersr.A Week oblong Heb Pot!ee,,df'tbe`A''Mo}lagrula. ThB' F• "wblallhad been_lying tnoreahan, eoowe, baJ ' 0.ug l tong uarrgw room'wan arranged 11 ,Wile off and to end and aip 1•edtly tm4�e illig'., h4nt',move Urok e�rwl imself s �tPr ons a'ttapr the mgPne, of gnat ,night have la United by 'thp 111190 Rlle life seine, w9,re I �I hie !Irardenod a7id eensoneds OleTke Ueen the Bret Pullman'-that took form' beteg rowed be if tor.ileo•In oppPaid oe to- iwa)s xtol�Elntgrview". the ApprAlse!' :en� Iii 4he Ingenloypq pad Inventivq mind of m(Ilit °h tweeancthem the sand inQ thelbeing gvakes fatten ks ingdrPuptitilb.�funtltlailTcjy hal ttre lnS'e, 4aCr8S'M• Arrow.;4t "bunks", with feverish haste, Wltbin ,say, halt an b4enypovenaded to perto,m lits Dneroue 'ex ended�atA4g {ha Allies ttind narnsp one I hour the efazy multltudo of monhuden,'. duty lnAba promisesr.the rgooda :rtyee aE U ld.,.whit fat the other was pn enormOue i with Its small peccBPtago of ila'rttnGdgg-I the peaal of, the tingle tar }vh•l, the 0replhaP M, 'd6 Rut for@jatlmra, anal fish;. rpugnaclous eeA:nol}ins, flashing, IudogOdmlgptl cases went either t4 filas` ors a: e 'l} shlaeref rnristocrptlp, lupflsb nnd.veryl ro S ftha,U S. Bonded Wnre 6 sd TUB ^nic Uete thbdrdlnd ybdyt� wjhatl the even-I Ilkely & trouble-makin6 'a Bulk or,.>two, }' ear q♦;` -tlwe'e°lb k':'npd °old And mampbed: ly¢d Ueen 'gathered ford ther.huge, belly 1"o(�♦i4e erlo`d;othe cuetomtof ojll'in�gntko �g la huq g(az?led'mulled'cldeT rDach'.,of tba Baine, the '91nee' at Lha•andn'uf perref lnl'ordm• to Is leo GUa "AlaohSnery rl°r'h rvYnAl p,ovided wlth -ti. iflUilt" ot. whack were 6eing rapidly fogad ,to ytlSe'. ^"�}yla4 a'+1 npory $omelUtng}destlte�te oP at "ria i enters rjrpopa tbhp rdstad, throng simre. 4 .tIDe ' r r, �b� r{ara'14ng'hasket contAinin6 a sup- seli,e Brought, Agit ;SOne M@s3enger SusfrMissad all Invol k y�,'q( itaol�YlAfunls rnlculated to skay At Tact,the aCowa 'g,Punded;' tbq � r eatery Yoyaga to Euro 'e' i� aGnmgeh' of the thriftY;fanclO wbo,l.l een worn made fast'to the Capatane, Irl I�me a'bol ons de utiz�ed Ito ode Ir}m!i Atli his 'shlght or tr¢gtlon there-lthA horses were led down the Unna("rand r On v,6,. I Uvea �11Std• the hands:. o[ thea P4 sena .ef off$,lne}he ¢�e1Pen Idlaigned Ant? equlPlied two ho rs the capstan •hare, and'. rho' phg sldgwlaeel ocean liner Paollie,A licca i�fyr Eh$��'1°e',pEUY,ey oft menhaden ' °R two weary acircl9ald title,tdeeP�ean d�� �,ymg�b iof I,honaldernblb Imps¢ltnno�e"i 4'lh6 ��¢ ' iTUlgi! �ruh,a sent from bond. waw begun. When the "arms" of the Iho darted hither and LUtt en"jlnto atsAS G �4a Ia1P nights ae I wuhl'dbefono;fon nelnb struck shoal water it was llanled lop+ aC is f the ahlp U t 1�sU ab eqf 7kr k,� ` r I hl by.hand as+4eAr to the•sbl re as pns- ' r 4 --- qr �� l 1e�fburpUsP of stnyinh nae +stole. oU tills'searOh tn'ued`un Id a PlA9eE Yoh g,i91 Gynbus lh r' hr;lAtgrvale ibTaen' flab- slblerA ;amnll Seine wqs then curried. lilt ought not huge b'sehr Ann re(Q¢r tidy UO *aV'Uakad':Pblmkers' Cor @had) and u[oagd it and "stalled down" when nto- r a d art "big ane" was taken n and loaded mjto. lip htma'el[ oL file•PAPeI'r thhr ydl+� Cllr 'i� < sr- h`de:a' Patlzl tfgyaad Polar- 6 R yr4fi a41n�a EA,fad wltUrry`nakdning yan rl lei ,2 quY'alGs hµ'�aRa lOr lrtr tg reties°.uf the the ecoge,.glitch wero,thue made another'4 to �ow�o It" and lay' ott im ¢anther iiQ�r5 thehfait I1kes4nl g'�sn1uP§b m ' ry �. t W @` hau " - SIg1U�nte atuak 1rfJ'Uls t�HbonQ'Ir~o�,<bti b, � a. �' �rlAAO,td4vcl� d �' 9[�t o thloU h _ ._-------- "wool — " oashtd��idlhJ sb�g��, eglae 4C�slx dgdyretl on' { j�eiDo�e•� rt y. 'f�si9r ' tI, D � aP dt ry � j4 Y t j�y sly.�l��q yt' t� ,f r �. tr sr 1 Ixl rr phU, o receive a sunprlse-i¢ {2y RIM I 01 1 1"v' � 1paonaide]'ata,a,borigfnos g;. AM n 'a dx'y s o ( '•74 " °Y i rrb 4G�t Thias�wafl"n little stare m flay, butrt .,f�,� r fi -( ,l t t, 4 Y r pit6lYtorft�"vY' `y /'� 7 g ',S pomemU'en filo hl wood st4ue i Eho frost rentolz n� nth the foot,dyq agjJ$r� 'i, GENE k! Yy (t{4's "and oP filo church, and In imagination g olnaTetion 77 of,dgpla$ 9 of ting }7 s ❑ lA r 1, S Cl can feel the deadly Leat that struck m°in the,taco as I entered the snared octal. gl lstPn�n6 sande a one bjue� t qyl % - Tltq stove auccpoded,the little psr[m•ataU. 11 10, A, or some other doleeta67 atleampSe �''� [ s tilt .Moot-Stoves of'which I have n din �� �tvkaG wan' in til° buppli, Itavas file❑' ?Dr. Hllllttln '�(r� Be'.l�etl'1 Inns recollection, but I know thnC tl>,e rold 1 p to',ho h ,lad as used to take them over to 'Uncle I 4 APPY end 4a rel eon 'girls,nol- Aj1 king boys and, iterhapfl, a (ow'grdwn-, cent) of Town Meeth and 'Go°py's" to replenish chem 4romthegmw- slPltnr,to make their selections,. all being y 1 g idg,coals in, his great droplace.' ;Pully determined to have nothing but theSunday was a strenuous day, even slxty� ;best• .Other Evefltfs. Tears.ago. The morning service was from JS to 12 o'clock; the.Sunday school from "Good Fish" Unappreciated Among 12 to 1;1110 afternoon exercises from 1 to �• Housewives,Thaf:'with which we are eurfeltedis s and the "evening meeting," in winter,; HOW THE,BOYS ENJOYED THEM ign 6 t 7, And In summer from h to d: l a%tal discipline was an acLontpllslf lnever'.appreciated at its teal,valuo Andr f, rpanG at that time, and we boys overs oAi apo ,it'wee with "good fish", So;called to the lob for the continuous performance, rt(Ifp4rentinte that variety Prom;kknrmore, some Notes cit Old-Time Railroading, hui when we went into secret session xnU I' tit If 11 and plebeian ht eed,less ]pghly lanced the matter over, the consensus of ivj4ju$d as 'sea food." Every`aiouoewife and the Story of a Y iuven118 opinion awemed 'td be our ins tib' community 411q., Pull-well that P Tragedy, rafecUm for the sanctuary son 'Itt lik- byl handling Jeffilma, or'ITS] Jane, a Peed to that of a cat for soft a IdP. 1jµ cwt; and packing her off to the bay. The:Parson's Prayer and the Deacon's sh irould„as a 'i•nl n,, confidently make `. While the.reminiscent Dr. J. G. Idiot- 'Timely,J'Amen," cµrrjtGigementa for the cooling o4 all tb4 'tinedoes not,.in the following pen-pieturo ,At tiro � e I dltbiAS bhtefieh clipqult. Vorgles, and es oP 1 fe in Rti );astern LongIsland coo• �aeinptiwee Sp4nlas lnapherel, wanted for. i nC s," .Paris(j�onerA OOIn1PC :iron •. die_. r4t,�pQGr:pr bn e4kfast,and 0 lint'on'a gen✓ munIWgIxty,,.Years ago, shoctfloally name Lance, weul� go for a ehango and to u Sohthold, no rano at all familia• with that stretch their limbs, over to "Uncle Fos urplus Poe the cat, or eats. Por �.t lr�IgGggans woe not the only com- cKhtming old village can,:for a moment, tar's" to eat their]u And of doughnuts end. the beach: Theta worn others— buttered biscuits, APd this reminds me N douf�t'It was he FingIR mind. ,o[ a little story which' has, at leant, the 4 u111fletS "TltrkeII"Sarpen rile". etc, i An ofd codger, barn and:bred where'the merit or solemn truth. th if�izya4np t Wx@'surely an I r Y7n d7uy ashen nano bP ese gmado a haul bitds'sigg in•:the early dawn.and crichats The.packet boat Bread, Captain Dph i'-Psnce;the not Inoorpprehensible ¢newer' chlrU at the levontlde, can hark backs to calm Overton, atnrtad;o4G, with a f¢w toy the;oft r gator t not l o f - Possongwre and a'cargo of hoop-poles, eh fl'� y p yon watl4 �Sho timq;lavhe'n'Lhe drat'Ppesday In April, bound'(or filo whµling port b[ Sag Har- any IAah'( i woe Pregpenif I s[\° It loads Ohrietmas and Fourth o[ July aepm bm• q rljoretnlit erAJutb to;d(rsese inn"fir ,sadly lacking in those.'essentials that local Perone rho passengers rs er,r. the clergyman Poi t the Wind Poste¢; When: ft>EL}�71�,ers' fq1 ,�Fentilizthl r73,tH1tei Snake Or perteatlam oft Paradise Point the Wind freshened °nd+- h, DLaw pRedcat All thfnga,'Oome to him who waits,I the surface of the water became g41tp and so IfIwas With "Town:Meeting." Be- uneven, Some 6V It ran into the lea j,�}Au3,l->;era' w@re uewo a@� all arqund,l t re the suu.had thardl = egged at toe main ryld'tl 6tlr byt agora aepeotµlly"+tn>`YPyhg Ua rol.days, we ° s werehhuddled the meat, The boom t ges a ,� Yyyuf a y P §4 >v Y •to- eider croaked on•Ita'hln �., Sgylp Ir at one'lei&nd p t oBe g@ther ip then little square farmed by'ibo the cargo shifted uneasily and it,looked afy r � l dbWRar wprayphlrno 'p.�tq SamvO ❑ ler pP two sond1.e, and,dlreatly 1❑ front 'as If.all was lost, At this critical' Juno- , ua' rd slb'gl w m2e rmunYGu M oho s"' uhlm hpime," Tho gay 1Gure the-minleter, h'nving can urgontlY ' AEh�q+kgpdop dotvn til$1 Soayd o !dt 4 p requested to do eo, mado a she l yllc to stem t ser with P Ppenad"to Pm view;as ora watcGad rt-prayer, �er L� f 4 t, 9h lit pµngin oA the netreshryond Ili the burden o4 it eta whiph was "Lord, Save iPand Gt sLhnt often ,netted a �' r 4sI" ftnd Uuole Poster added welght to : 7 / u r .Q@Fide r'Igk on the epbt fief ll I could rhe �gl l .Pitgrp lawyer{row.,Pt pi q sl�bt'$e a IoG41PoEive l@'dkinuen or fireman,�ltbe pati tion by exclaiming, ,with Great w iforwidabla dnawba lin to Ghn + + sunetlon; 'Yee, ) ,o ods ph the Pan 1¢ ti t�'Gyld 6e the Prpprlefor oG ane of th¢so 1 yes, Lords By all means r r µ kwd4 YD't a at u)3s St loci ed Ggpd° td.me to tie;1❑ save usl" ons aStDl w C(a��+ogetin'wbre@zee pn21'' )Z,A;hI'pp r e fih8tity dean ¢P e� )card' gingerbread' hast Time on the'MRln�L(ne, L, I,I r r' ;,Irh@�`Qndaan4t:'dn0 s,'the w'olnases cand , bf the ger/tie nP tiler n151n"Tr,�lyyh III he 3 ardwbblled�eggs, the winter rase R. R. sixtysYear o, ase lank')Aft tieN(td aha w is 1 4@ g t h Y P q When I casual Y 'ramark�gthat the r 1 goes 11 ell ved��torr u Ir l x ° es and s he. late¢ all stere a r,ad l r n Rr yy b r Wp out(In a row ap„ho JlhhrallY peppwra{1 6y Bneton. Tran ' eo called iur uie ,� °a� to Cha 111f.tfes g }�ipgrrmaeegur cC o,ousts lok d-up b two'thousand q' a oln,fPP,dinupttqn h,¢venthelesetz;AM1Nos q°@ xl h k q y pains Tea ane thst it wall-put on the read - 7 ” r i Pl cowhide goofs. (which, by the wavp was coretrunted Qrr 4Nh@`at was Boated Ix the hat 1 ( ter the.,business meeting In the n•,nnn•tlY wits this ubjbct in view) to o'4ra� s!!eceasful.tai•mor ; r V"'r.5 1 r su- I, xpross the ,road; the lestivlttea GonnepC with the steamer Frances, at ¢j ,� one time It'`wee estlmfttlet( thA¢ 1 cane—the horse-racing 1❑ the mala Gre@npopt•whereby file.Stonington:route d9 ,bdP gas belonging to the itJft¢ Han s:reef the ,baseballs game in Aunt Les- �taginptjj��nies were sohp'gle ' rTtl, +76pe ater s vacant lot, ;whore`the base runner, to Boston }vee to 6e put cot of susinens, SJibreb�o[ the bay. �'p + D nnrd'lp r,g made that dally run from South. ..erry; 'igt{osG storm' it:'ca m 3d;rlia til when pluggod to the Oar or,elsewhere Brooklyn, to the eastern, `terminus of ml ht ^d Ep"4O ,y rr $<, glluftbbali,y Was oglargd out"'by the the road-9p,a little•°yprv,two hours and at­1 � 4,nd Ulow g{ant rg�1gait ha law JL Owi�ophoSing `team (there such lhipg a PR 4.11at,and lalnotl Uit6jlfd if G 71G3b @ la's 4n tm J ' and al""ways nn occasional half, It is to be ,expected that a few w rvt�de` an5l nl 6E' n `t gr r '� 1 PIC} doub5ing,, 'Ghomases' will 9ueeLlon wY urrsDbea third dxygtheS�I ileo q�` all a gl'g'iltf`l ll�jyjoes9awas so'4uw thaU it dlkbb gj cup`o[ hap vpt•aolty; NevsrCheleea''ns one of aur r 2 f plInd'over. j x,;411'- wave qt ,ju�n'gGodOnfjed+C'Higs�;< a.i r s, d - r oldisettlora used to sxY, 'Pacts Is t1' paq i4watad iitlye,Papp$$$X te�aoas'CswahP,xi,eu}ndei•s of the �Pime When Red pointe" . ', t yt4)(e,61(d Wand In14fk�lapd �L y ,:MI Wyere'Hostile, In some sections of the rand the rail t!.�,o;.Ztthp d¢wpar'0.h ' ung w pv�r)ingpby{j 15 'O,n iuy`ngigtibpr°'s promisea ie a well,dp consisted of n 'dot,strip of Iron,, about subOq�1rFosti,�}tsa"j toe,wall.ol which lase Ghau'tisltway'tp fluor-elgkths of an inch thick, milked to a 71e s S'OntPs tay4 x QY t- h f a b r and rt s l , timber laid on the tires, and whop it be- t p o or(hi, ., yJ n 1lr Ehe bottmn, ik an+iaKORvat1on or cavern, til f✓`PaoGe e' [ r '' r ' ! Same loosened at onesnd it would'some- sLI.,roti' tf {int g (p r '4 �� yma 0 1 era Stu`a❑ osto9 rl° gated their, ail- pr4111 atF �' ja is etapopnal ani Gh@e a0. he times roll up and -Appear through the tl.�t FR ryW 1r rir 4 h � Yq as�rlt {,peaJcY Ind la4s.:.pmq r) `°' iJy across Dhe goer of'Uhe oar. I don't'reoµll that'an@ 3 y� v�hs Fpwt {4�4ho v°atl �r @ hlstoilc old ever went clean thr@4gh the body Of e cnu� f6 ° �gh4e def q)1a��A,om'-tm4�� .! ins4 Qhurch: ' D jq^e., Pnaseggen bgG!h have b n toI"d sEh t the �y4aPj jJltlt r$�I, ,, r 4' lg`i l{ r�1 �r4113 wu19pW'yl'`, [a 40. gy un 11eau(11tY^'ol such n`.aealle°t wall , ever Rhetlnnbl)dd'al"g�� me 0 s ttkes'b(!t 1 B 4SrBg b r t F11st r cull ! Spb2e„ In tlm$'4hesO rNll,§ r4eewme so r°L�5 tq l ppaj od't,"rs to S$ole� l a'D`R'G 6 Kir a o n l ra�PPYIP thrpngh:•euta I Ghe bars by Sl4 bi ry a D a y"gL„�d L h w y "A " y n hgv w,aY inoJs or that they (: fisl4nfi, Fas r� rrls?>-n.+ +rsh,�"}:mg+ 't'``�✓,d 117darn st rwegKJ6;q u0. t „,t „„hagh ejkaea (-C yy2 D,hA ntR Yle of 'P s�:§Uuptl-' t � / STORY OTA, BATTLE t'Ik'�§�A Fc Etl@ d K41lr Et d w yed.v�lp� 1 "Washhigtoninn Army" was nand the nbent qv yF he/rel tl ¢Pit P� E>EerPglf„ zed and begap Its 'forward march;..and the at ¢ AGAINST jT�y{� 7�n71(( battle was on. 'P><e loeeatotlw,ea<7on thq t+rokd' ,Atker�� :.AGAINST RUM IIN.�YION ,While rumors of war had penetrated', Alm acro afKld`-5'Flnml>en' fPoAtbnvl Ll 1 x:11 RUM DEMON to this conservative.aid town, there was, tl}elp was sgmeth np ,to a"Sold Enf oaoh L!�} ns yet, no formulated scheme for depart- lag from the traditions s of Its founders, A;'ISlgh the7jl lbtl,tpowfks,iiid,,at!!e A01 ,and but for a fortuitous Circumstance and;.fhe Boston,' that: ),trot, by .rgapon of HOW ,'jt W83 Met slid VEIII nobody ),news what might not have lisp- its b"eing .invarlably 1.attached oto, the paned. Hgston Train" and never Stopping at - quished by the Army of. .:Wbon Mr. What's-his-na;no moved file ,ray j $,tatlons for` Closer Inspection, i' ' barn he provided the Indispensable wm'Ic- rathgr find the bilge an the others, Washingtonians. Ing material with a lavish hand. First n w.`++� Importance was a water pail filled to the Story of a Long Ago Train WTock, brim with°Medford rum.,with a lin CUP Tlje stations oq the road were marvels floating on'.Lop. This pall, mysteriously at'crudity The one for thea vaingo at:; pR. HUNTTING GIVES. DETAILS. passessed of ,the dominant climacteristla 13'p Eon's +lone, woe n superannuated car. ofAbe widow's cruse. was placed on the, tri' the `Harlem road, I think. It was), floor at. the opening made for the big pprp�ped up on a•shaky foundation of re- - barn door, and when the building moved iectQd '.rgiiroad.ties. Dern. n Was Strongly Entrenched in, forward. With crooking sound, the Pall " Tfiera was absglutgly.no means of Com -, was simaltamm�oly propelieil, nnd,when m�inioatlon between the Brooklyn tory, an Eastern Long Island Town, the barn Slopped to rest the pail reposed `mldill ;and other:'pgrta of the Island. and .but.Had to Go. In the same ofd.spot, and thereabout the when 'a" way train was sent- out to. multitude congregated.. The next and !RO,gEder through..the ecrubboafe, it Was i, - last on the list was a string of dity loU to sight to memory drag". until n , The 1➢hgle,'e i•em liuecent, contributor, yoke of oxen, made fust,to the skids'ar sneaked back home some time In the at- the forward'end of the born, and araC Eernoon of the -next day. Hence It wena Pr. J. G. Hunttin6 of Southold, L. I., the teams were saturated with the active ngt anrPTiSIgg that Candeetel' F eldd"of In the following article recounts some In pHriclple of molasnes In solution in the an Castbbund Fatulth of July excursion t allonts of a time, now long past, when Phil, they became drunk as so many bar- w- 4 ar- train, Conk to rhe 'voM1 rn' w °'1 "there here more strong waters consumed :rels of-pork. The Oxon plodded on pro- ' t' nq ,mere when.he dismally'failed to miscnausly over the rand, and the eon- ' pass, on the wime:'track, the mai trnJ❑ , m Suffolk'County, In proportion to the ,fusion of "Whoa-haw-gees" rivaled a per- rom'or"rnmel't onina the other ^v Population, than is now the care, fie tormance of German opera; The,enflPes root on the exact center of } writesinterestingly of the period, and his ' pleturo Is no doubt a true one: I "Gid Haydock" to the Rescue, ! n, t eir hridge. lacked horn, and Stood on, Chair' hind wheels. The tender and The II the at the last.century was an The houses Chong The the line re march,' bA gage car of thalmall train'fir, had In 11derC,desehted. The women were out In g s ,,epoch In the reign of ISing Alcohol. When f 'n'.tlie, rnnflwey under the bol Rely Eh our forefathers came over train Can- !their "and taking fielding a the pickshow,, toIfIr'str oposse nger can was tel@sopped nnU „ 'fences and taking In-rho passing ,oxen is ren.( hind REI In to at and cunativ Y'hnt a .,nectlFut, by .way oI. Lon6 island Sound, I' and when (Ito'mixup of men and .azar alp•nn'tic@ ba ac pt ^ ladamotive, m,r Ant 1fid0 to locate on thin narrow neck waddled Past,' tbey exclnlroed, with Coe ",aidpd,body-of flip engineer Was nodpr �'�.of land, they brought with them all mex- accord: 'That settles IU When our' ,F,rep!covers with a shoot• Haman the I.bsuptihle supply of piety, a limited(,husbands, brothers and even. fathers are) nm.M SKant; was dying, of his Io.ttiriee In 1:,quantity of household furniture` .and each (rying' to drive two yoke of oxen), 1 a,p@Igh jgring farmhouse, Thq Scapa Was Ilwhere there Is but one, and straddling $iPlf1Eg.,Hring almost the-ilrst' ngCidonl i,crockerY (since bowmr, very valuable),1.over Imaginary obstacles'l❑ the high l ikdt knurl Ip thm history of railroading several pounds of British gold and a rea- way, it Is up to us to get buoy," suit rinthe'aoutttry, It pure got on the nerves sooablq and,controllable thirst. straightway theysent for old Haydock,', ❑�5��pptPJt nS'u stay to the goo wing„wauw,�, After the. Passing of 200 years. this Ile came, he certainly saw, and lu a small i�uaj lu top FommUnity, 1mrst, enormously Increased-iw%lze out way h¢ conquered. Ila lectured to n motley'throng, and Ails detalled descrip I IygYZWheri Al•U6r@al lBeautres Were I Intensity, continued liart and parcel of tion of how he lost his leg by freezing; �Q{ k L1vg'1,EEly RpgaTded,. I the social system of the established P.t when be, Was drunk, and other things uhep Kl as a Y0un6 man, Bo.you pg, Iq I Public,- Festive oecaslms were decorated that he said ,cared the Young beginners f La�iLi@G f gouldn't ince 'voted for IEvlite the punch bowl, social calla were and Impressed the hardened offenders laQ d with the gravity of the slLuntion, Hls F7PkmJjnT a Pew ; yenta niteri: 1[ I had made popular by 'the evidence. o[ the mannerr of gettingafter..the demon rum 'w(aEe(1 tn: I remember,hearini a well- .,black bottle; and the rum ,lug n•stled IRS a elution to snakes, green lizards, 1) prvlrt, a1417pn reroalk lisp'.Any man ;amid the golden Sheaves C[ the hm•yeat radelephants,opd all creeping things. of f,t'rv`rzn(I(1 Rn opd n 1 nuh`f{•rec npnplr= igela; Taverns and other distributing reser. A:local brigade of the national Wash- pd glut6p' pt that [or talks that didn t v ingtonfan Army,was formed without de-' {SI pEf qm qpd nRf ohfrga•"am a @Slit•4.ours.werepopular resorts whet o repo- lay,(and a monster celebration and parade /must bq Plumb crazy,', whereuPou at, ",table farmers and artislans gathered to wna. Pinmmd Lb'aa[o efter.G Immediately, °o'ftlaiy inion, of egyal Prpminenaa re �'swap.yarpa:' and general Store, sold n !and that was certainly the UIg'gest time (farted ,v, "Tarsal P Ckl Is-•,111 right '.1Il prime article at HolimiVgtu'-at 7fi cents a that I aver wpm to. It was se entirely ,SPfpn dCee pay. Tho degron bggS,t 'R a0on,a•3 cents a glees: New hngtanu ,i1Hgl,enf from Lowy meeting that earn- at on- s and'patd P. Ca PEsiu III wauldnl�E wna turn lug out num,that bore iia I¢Uel parlsonS are odloae. All the old..drinkers `1 t;blm sof 'em opt I knoN ihat£1-Ie salt? (eater thmi`!It could ,Ue absorbed sand ht the town were In the front ranks ov' t E�tl'Qgs�tould's'hub,/oft oho,Sun opd El�pr sending thesui'plua to heathen huroa' tics; procession, and a certain prominent. gsdss,'wou(dn't grow Beeidse ha wruldn t nod tae apple!ack foundries oC New jet- nope flamed up, right behind the bond, �lt'P„vph bn"Yar.1 r Interfering; wltl) file-){{spy were runnin6 oven. tlme.' German Ilke.'the "red.lantern at the.switch,” and N)gpprty. Ws'll )vont soma 6reee refollr Ibeerwas ol'bowing Its way lntd the affec- the rising generatidn were thereby made hvI tell ye The ohorrteas flea Pr�1ll,.; Hous qR lovSTs of Lon dog porta• and aware - of the', pos Ihilities, Banners t7l'bjarlf buit' a 1 Ai bL lj,lLr t�'p ">� Tale, an ddomestle whisky (Konongabela) wnpad ¢t various angM, from the obtuse kl�bEp`n ball 'a'dying at, tf�et aS IG�Pap f /" was catctiln6 on Yh the Sotthenu States. I to 'the acute,. one . of which was up- at Shty Yenra 1ptgt p'h Y 9gp ,fQltd l yr'n.Jq tEpho of" Ilmom of-Xviine's Prohibi I holstered with a full-grown elephant, l{Cq�jDanka on Its,treasr S4>ra48e 7a w�th �i, .Carrying on Its back a yellow rooster, '4ip�1H�er gates thTo(v bauqu t- 71 It hQj•- tion t9gall• - the;j whole: surmounted by the device: eghaded ntreots Thq ozlt@y ve Cnon )d[�y.. INUIIe Yt was tacltly conceded that the 'We come..strong; we crow loud." Mill-j C�a{jjtAin Bill d 1, prpro @@ ,nai}f 1{1 r;lai presdnoe of eQreng` drink In such year )Ary;hand,(drum and fife) were- planed fIPPCLupI n omind�r o{ Mr,>1r18h ,j14, A� quantities "In am• midst( was:, menace at short intervals in the parade, .and, l qq ,:, 'r N rf r�`, 5 is"6 �,�xb this Industrial and'.moral progress of while Some Some were- vigorously playing `the peopl's:of the nation:,tow there were "Yankee Doodle," others were letting to coprpt ut.iIn the open"and demonstrate I themselves go on "Turkey in the 3lraw:;' f :the ,,,C,quyage. of their. Convictions., At It was great beyond description Teat, boWever, the boom of a big gun In. --- -- ----- Sf,'alne echoed to tile Capes. and was fol y the d�wed b desultory drinB all alongabl - - - f Th tiealoua It i _. ohr 51858 the R .. _ 'lVitU,lire elactloR�4`,¢h'e dalSttJda16'ofa Centore by the Rev. Dr, Cha in ,a 4puhbj0 11:.parby ❑mile up;l lino Solitti' South Jamas+;Bughana4, the i P lot x Pen• nld line Rtblgs xnd a great many l the a:was,nothing�Ifo<throav the y -, Notable Event. 1 D'emom•ats o sol oil, ; About lids time a ami ty'Temperancs I PPosed to ktt"e,eXtenslon"oP local Democracy off"Its' oase,'hnt there. giau¢ry', at-its .flreG nar{lonal oenren tlbnl lyes ono mail who was a little uncertain( Soclety was orggnlzed'.l and '.put on' the noa�iitatotl as'1ts standard boatel Sohn C,o'as to the outcome. III was n very wealthy road, with the versatile and dignified ..Fr,smont. • (It not hrfinentiaq man,.hr whose veins John Sherry as president, and when the ''So Tar this is ancient history, familiar��flowed the blood of a long line d¢ 3etYer- the merest ttlon h.ince, that this Peerless a to'.every schoolboy, but tho presen '.soman ancestors, .and nu1Lo tato 'one the morsel ekance,`that peeNassl orator,iIf matron may be'.Interested to learn good"otglrt ,Aust before election, when'he. oras: the Rev. Dr E. H, Chapin, was able to the fats old duffers remainlhg oho voted;on his way home from An accustomed respond to the invitation o the eoclet e tlle'tlrllet Pleased to recap, that Pro- I haunt full of zeal and gin, he was over- Lo address all lmprecedentedly large auY n,ont was n eonspleaousl r What might linea full 'Y untried mah.I.Beard to remat•k to himself, 'IB Buchanan dlenne'in the Presbyterian Church; Rep Pened lied lie'beeo I is elected.I'll Pre a gun, and,If he ain't t•eseutative citizens were content with eldeted la neither here nor there. but all ;elected, I'll-rI'll fire ASun, anyway.' An� 'seats on the Pulpit stairs, while the put- through the campaign his 'file rt Jet allic,I obscure illustration n[ true American op-.i Pit ilea]¢ was uncomfortably occupied by oertaln1Y Played.first violin in the over.�'tinrism.. If he couldn't get what ho want- Visiting clergymen, who, a holding re- when to mntrage�l thattltook Ibe stage•p ed,hAtiier{cn far take 4mwhat eriel le anuan get. War nownod doctor himself,f, were holding 0. g tip fu 1890,] church function In the Universalist Never, before"or since the tiny of Dells' cry of .the formidable Party of pati,lots, Church. To this distant day, old reel- Madison was A woman of:this vollat,V mostly young men. nuclei, the leadership) is is who were so kept In the. limelight as was this Ac of their candidate for President, Millard% privileged to hear.that I trey wonderful exhibition of the real compllshed daughter of Thalpas Ii Ben-:!!Fllmo•e, do this connection I recall act th Ag fn'bratory'wIU talk about It with ton'. . .''incident in my Own experience that im-i Byer-fresh enthusiasm. Some o¢' them, ,.whoa thekapubiicall aandidlita sttlted 'lTrossed the very much at the time. typo are et111 1Iving, went away' filled In to woo and tiled Miss Benton be prob- The Author's Dad Blunder fit'Clines-i Lh itillth a new-born appreciation of the ably Thal but the vaguost notion of ,hot in a.New Heck h1, erto'.hidden write of straight water, he urns up against. Ilio; anticipated w lch had thus for been regarded no father-ln-late Was at the ,into. perhaps "I bought a.hat with thereward of.,: ,u (Iftll only for bathing pgrppses, the most p0enllner,t Pgure br.the United.( week's labor (after deducting toy board 7�,I1-he momentous temperance uprising States Sell 6, add when Lho,young on- ell elmp•.becaumit.was luost.becom- ptllntinaterl in the memorable Fineor, and surveyor proarn to himself - a t Prohibition as all.gig IaanI fon the lvacaat position t Ing to my Poinlla type. of.-beauty, and Ip&#711 also,'of 3864: Haratio Seymour nail eL son-An law tp'.the Ijustrious man lm .were It home As paper, Parcel under I ran H. Clark were the party candi- Taos for Governor—one standing Wad, fold, in'a [eQ< well-Ghoson words,j'my arm. .When I •cached my roomilit g'tor they(that lie was simply a tntsfik. ItlY boarding hoose Ip R"illonghby stiI ppegulntioN' of the ' liquor traffic, the Brooklyn. I adjusted It with groat attita- gthcr for the wiping of the whole bull_I It Was a Singing Cgnrpaign. I %tion( to detail and cmnplimehted mysgll n@m iI, forthe-map. After the; 7th of„No- "Up''to the time+of his nominailon pub-� apou. the'general elect in.,the gloss. rt ambo•, fm•. elY weeks or metro; it was J+o„Intel@ t In the_don{es tic affairs of 5I1', _Wlt�.the hat still on gY;heaIl t,d"OPPad, not known 'Who was eleaUld. The sue- f - d C -- - '1'gto a chair'by the wlh”"doth `rand In, n' 'pause was unendurable ana the tousle Fremont had net been aroused,. but When short time I noticed a smell mob :col- At the breaking point. But, at last, when he loomed illusion ..as the aaPlrnnt far rho lected on the walk, and n large, Bub the' returns from the small up-State dla- highest o1Pcc, In t gift o4'the.Americau collar voice of command uttered these trtcls had all atl•ag Il, In, it was found ,People, with about as mucN skew for tiler.- '.words: 'Take the — hot off yea on Poe that by the narggw 'margin of 3dd:.pier tion 'as some of 'us have for becoming' '.gobs 0'11 knock It off wad the head in utL' JY71ty, Clack had unmistakably liecome stdcltli old era In the Standard 011 Com-`..It I was not scared, I; thought I was, rdov�tnor„with,a "friendly L " 'P eglalaturenny, the Bald people were sit Billy 1.ly de- and rushing)Into the room of a (ellow- .at big back. A prohibitory law;was,quly sh•ons.-of effecting a reconciliation he'-( boarder, I-told him Iwas from Misson't enacted which, after the first test of Its 'te'een' the stickler for constitutional He showed me that I was wearing. x )'.consUtutlonallty In the courts, was In, ,+rlgI U and `the freeh-made loader of the( 'Know Nothing' hat and .that the. sooner f oraed N q `Pa1,ty Pounded upon the Declnratton of''I Presented myself bareheaded at the t�(f tlhi tr” lndependonce and. 'Uncle Tams Cgbin. window tpa corer I would he of avoiding t a t ` g With th this' objeot in view,.tits foliowInp_, trouble I�dld'ns he suggested and worked l �A ,I S �'I�E DAYS p a s ng was muaU-atmg at mass 1 astiugs,, ,off on the belligerent beach one Of my stn, all through.. the NorLh;:'and• wl th blandest smiles, whereupon Bag crowd 'rJ' 1t�tM tousiderable effect at frequent ralllee , melted away. 7¢'��Rpy{��y9y�p Irl�pnr own hall an+rho first floor of he America for Americans' 10 still Y1aol Q N Cf,.�.R il9dltY1 � oltl jicademy: _ watchword of the repuhllB;and I imagine +'k{l , If our Johnny we. ),Is Sessle It will continue to be such for some time r y p Prom auto'Tommy's se, :to come, but tine question arises, Who at fxiAtCll fs,.N., R'In bis Jessie teed h1s Jessie. Americans? No doubt some of the de- Need onto.Tommy creep scendants-of the freedom hunters, who RhYFi la 'IUllttllig WYI•tA8 O{ the RIYSt� "It was ern ouch ocans/ons,that the pa- 'wanted to trample Al new hat in the C A+ sitter, of Mrs,.Fremont In the camPaig Y was well defined. Spellbinders cool duet of Willoughby street; aro now among r Qam Sign '.o{ the& Re.,' 1 our moat.loyal citizens, They have. al- spread themselves on the Ulle h the easily glven ample assurance that In case lilican Party. PatUhnder and his rem¢rkable achieve- of any opposition to the waving of the p� menta and receive A g,morous round of .old Pe _d ��fflIpp t �'applause, but whenever the. magte Aetna ranks o[�Its defendera��tln In the front. Ijlfl FREMONT'' ulna bhuago was fla' Was poneits earnandathe, rafters _ _ S:- PART IN IT the rafters -" ----' a tmeit, by the t n•allied to the aouomP P gloe'.club oL f ( Well giro nr Jeeele We11 site at Je ere 'AHei H�isband Played Seoond -F3ddle'I ' woP sive em 7eselc, ' rally al the Dolls zit+i al inG SC,he PoWhen Welchestra litidal Or ;� •'It-will be seen that the-campaign on +Il ,s".Jesslef� a 1Vfa.guc Name, I the--''Republican.Bide, waa largely one.of sentiment and vocal anddustrmnental music, Almost every district In the State Iauntiing o�( Southold,`L T., Und'.ata glue club, And thus' that could who has wl i Ctan many ArQclbs,of p stabil the ted d,b strain nail had the. Into an ❑rytule for 7he'EftglP`ot,!lato, talent boasted a;braes band Sympathy to• she downtrodden slave n.as the oil- it thetIt aflrets'(camp¢it slot PscdilletloPp;o! dsl'lying cause U the 60,OQ0,-Republfean 1n,4 ty to G is v ag r QbiB RepublicanA € ��,, majority rolled ev hn thl Stela In the 'H[ma It ; rye(e'ia o tCt{ rs Ngo,: 1(itelIII",:o¢ oveK,be6i�lny, Dat ooA elm,, that Period:' (78BQ)'lL� ufr'}fnam�nt iroe� . 1iPorgh,FO)fd IlbertyrS {Ya$1�hot,slogam, will( teat) tltp.interoatt it hls� esr to 4ipna;roe a:' mnst,.,;1Ttt,,test ug_namg_ gn -, :_-- 7 ,'➢ t f7'. �'r >,!3r NN, 5A arx�??y+4�3° '"rsv N'c` l n 6r7 +^ v.•"J x �lleert rending surlel{would atlnaunc'e he aornla Were,the` aar afar• ofsings. IY�' tkene'weeia no -railroad Crossings.' Had �tpe•e been, and had one of those carts i ibeenstnlled on the tussle and hada Pnen k ' C°C-dnY express traht, bearing dawn upon of at hub.six(Y-nalleco Dill conslet I equences It squarely have been hub.far-reaching, Then powerful would have bean ter-reaching. The powerful toco- 1 motive that made Child's inchinlay of picking Incidents of Oa r Forefathers Trips by Coach, Ox Cart and Inn all automobile and Clinching over. - . the Lance would have been as cin)' In the by Water Before the Long Island Railroad Began head. of the patter' or as meat for the scrap-heap. The tram would have gone Pioneering, 'up in the air, and the cart would have! j - regarded the affair as a lIDge jolts. And; By J G Hnntifng. T An Your of Rest at Coram, vet there was a peculiar exhilaration and There was a time, lees than hundred The Brat atop of the stage worthy. of aaencedtain sense of standing gupmIn to be and' years agog when a familiar sound in the .where the.noon.hour)Perlenced o' sof oxen up h a cert and Data waspa Coram, - thgvjng n yolee at oxen, with a long tisk-�I early morn was the mellow. nate of the x•se set apart as a'season of rest for man cry."gad" with a cowhide lash 2 feet long, I stalm-coach horn, wafted on the seaweed scented air. Presently the 'lumbering an beast, '.Ardent spirits may or troy. at the end. The oxcart was need, princi- vemale," with its precious freight a( not.have blazed the way for the dinner ihallY for moving freight, such as here- 'of lamb and peas, but when this wne:over yard fertilizer, decaying mossbunkera i three or four (usually male)-passengei'_s, 5seaweed and.pumpkins, A whole family< and ne mxnY.Carpet hags an the Insldw and fine ?-cont cigars lighted, and the,In- 'has however, been known to arrive at and a wooden chest and n thehaiInside, avitable loitering..passenger bad climbed;;church on a Sunday morning In a Cart,' upon the deaoutside, rumbled through upper aboard. a Sharp blast on the horn was that had been se'aped Wild SWOP! AP-11 Main he , rumbled led through a far- the signal to clear the road, Mr. Webb proximately clean. and the wheels,. cracked his whip, and the swaying.ICU- greneed,ao that the squawk could not away msfrCPolls et the New Wafld•' As be noticed. It rolled it gathered, not ew Word but Ing. outfit was off Cor Uncle all. Carll'e. 73ut the ide¢1 scheme for getting out of et Dix Hills, where the entire '.'shoot Lha wilderness was by the Fall-water n taw more passengers and carpet bags, Ing match"-.was to put up for tiro night, CO,.throggh Long lelaud Sound.. Pas` another trunk or.two, and nosy and then One nightat SupperUncle Gil, asked 'Sengera were embarked In a small boat n latter to astonish the.Interior of they .his greats If they would have some at tita foot of Town Harbor ,'Lane, sad primltivp mall bag, which. was on'tne ^prewed. etunes" whereupon everybody rowed out t° the PRO steel primitive off verge of collapse. Owing, to the high lauLlhed.;. His tongue:was sure twisted, 'in deep water, with white W1119 spread,i price n[ postage, very few'letters were .but his stock was straight goods. ,plvOrY iwelting for the lure of the tide:': We will,' j prune that be proposed. to deliver had. call it 4 o'clock P.m., when Ube Yeaae7,l conveyed by the authorized United 8tates the distinctive prune flavor. The Insipid iweighed anchor and sailed away, around,! Mail route, 'Note the.then current rates 'black plun. of the Far: West had not IConklin's Point,,. through iiardiner,'s Bayl of ipoofage and .cease to wonder that by ')arrived to the:place made recent 1 and Plum Gut Into the Sound. .If a pas•,: far aha greater part of the Island,Corr by the'enforced absence the (olviluscious to a'Sub I curiosityganger alAs to when been so mthle voyage e as'VO xwould '4 reepondenco was Intrusted Qo private tons' that the present generation never [be ended, there would have beea several ,messbngere, without compensation—rale- beheld. guesses coming to him As n rule, haw- i.. flues„ felon or, utter Strangers, who Then there was another system Of loco- (ever, allowing for head winds and ino,j ,Ghgncad to be journeying is the right -motion by land that Is deserving of an wind, it took the craft about as long to duh°etlbn: Inch or two, Of REMO,,, For obvious rea- 'check off the nautical miles that separate "8ingle lettere,.composed of one piece' sons (t uever became popular, but when the East End from Peak 611p as it does conditions were favorable there .was 11 a private car to get over the ground be r: ol,paper, any distance not.exceeding 30 nothing the letter with It. The appalls tween New York and Sad r ranclsco, 13" G 'miles, 6 Cents; over 30 and not exceed- tion that stuck to the system, while it the water trip was far less tiresome and Ing 80 miles, 10 cents; over 30 and not lasted, was "Ride and -Tie." Two met I monotonous than the land journey. Thel ' and one horse would meet at an appointed searcher after true bapidness needed only I ing 160 miles, 12;¢ cants; over,160time anti place, each man being equipped II to got into a Comfortable position on the I axCeetioL exceeding 400 miles; 26 Conte, with a compact package of IUnch and n home-like dock and let the gentle zophyrs I Double'letters„or those composed of two i bottle of cold ten, One man would mount [of a lovely June night watt the smoke; pieces of paper, are charged with double 1 the horse-and ride away:at a lively can- ;from his cigar all to the leeward, W11110,and triple ]etters'wjth triplo. those rates, ter, other while-the othfollowed on behind the. moon, rising above ;the wooded- rates” at a brisk walk, miles di man had bluffs of the Long Tslaud shore, �ridden about two miles he dismounted, 'off Norton's-.Paint, cast its silvery sheen I`see that T. have given the erroneous I tied the horse to a convenient tree and over the darkgreen waters. ',Even then, Impression thab;the stage !torp woe heard. struck out; on toot and alone, with nn perhaps, passengers,while thoroughly en every.day In the(week,Sundays excepted) I elasticity of Step that was entirely lack- joyhtg their•.surroundings, were discuss-, eveCthe following weak,Sunday one e the hug before:lie got half-way of the Island. ung in a half-hearted way, the wild ru-, but the following of the day:will sof the, In due time the second(man reached the mm's regarding a railroad from Jamaica place whare,the horse was complacently to Greenport, matter right:. eating grave, He untied the horse, One time, when the packet Prudence, �. n ebb "The mail 'between� Brooklyn and 'mounted and n.rode oto the next tying .with uastraclff ug`throughr Southold hescommneed,going twice a thee'Gut"dike a .. place„probably passing the man who was tide, then doing the walking, to whom lie cat with a Scotch terrier fn hat pursuit,, week, Arrives.et Soudlold every Wefinee doubtless -:.extended a'. greeting .which 'a .lady of high degree, whose native'.: day,and' Saturday at 10 0 oloek ,ta the world read] In modern.parlance; "Hello, environment was productive at reline- me efine 'l morning, This.will be,a Sroat eogvent old many How are you tmaking It?” And meet and propriety crowded.to the limit. fl, thus epee to the people of the leland<by en-- Eho'end o[the Journeyernately . and walldgg, to. addreased eated rthe'captainself Dear : "Gnptain,d" said . 1 iIi ng them t° Het ihalr,lettara ltwlCo as she, In a tone of.voice na soft as a skein t:. often as heretofore 1­11 f:( - The Oacftrt a PgndGYous Affair. of silk, "is. this Plum—ah-Plum—Fktm '`.Presumably the stage left;�hfs ,Clhage �,Tha oxcart'gf Ehat remote period was Stomach?" Captain Booth was a blunt„ on alternate days In the 'icAp 'Zeeasant; a marvel of-,strength, durability and outspoken man,but he was not to be all;- �,: a�large proporflon of the Jh,eOtergt�fArl 'if�l h '!dght `nt-by'Wasteness goneanetrUYEed Jonaersr'lines�ho• stiltiest of ain thvomagenndf agcordingly byally rteY,I e "Dalt End," Intrloatejyt �fl;jde'd jj��tgeted llQp' §4 • tiled, with exaggerated suavity l*Io, sealed with waX or 1w �q'� % IS?%ttt'II �iliUiltitt4elr souses of elle}} IaTBil and posey Main t that exactly. This lei PIUm ah ea Y r;nq�'�' ''t��nb$rs Ith�G a (;,qt §or tghiP� tar aar pn - x ewr qr Pr den, 5`w �t� t 411oA�f lap ' oUl dshaiEe Ito itR q hull Ing• Plum Plum'Ingldee - 1 _ .� — - f�lt"hand oo}'nes�i�°'R,§�et t�'r$�Qep4�`. �b �,da��j}"Levlatp�q htalefl pupped°ouatkfl. X ���� In Care fake Ft�ul?�a.tn,°t/ 6,�g�,�", 1 R�•^!�%Lest 4Rn.�,'E� 16ra1gC §,4ve&$ er '". , .... AI to t 7p,Saengereys ' ;.�,u1x rw . ' >' pit 0 c Ti tTtuifi% I; it,0.''(fir "' ON {a}hl tPllf ® y+ �Ji i4 rr 'r "1 >, 1 (r�m_ pu^ r• , r r" (1,U 1) if F,hiiihry dd r 4o1"trc ta'ry !</ �? tf� t+ h 'Y�. '�t �Ll � �' ,r �' r + qy9 th f u�P I�. Yr - mane ed to e ^b e �S` k devll 'didt' 'y 11 mr F ri h �'� " " E ti t > know boVf ha got`�t ejl �.3,e rhaPn t bead' �° there more than liQll'taw+,minuts.whepy { �� the Lord got la eye IonshltP Ho+kneW It was my rooster any! R{o ;IrngoBod hhh' i �1�pP1Ii'� HOUS0C102111I1igh r f&Y�, �0dy'C0'ros how the to amliY Ino uding Ivor, with a thpndar6oJO dufeker than 4 r Aoat Botey; Slept that night N WII1 you could any Jaok�Robinear" - ]t's yt7lCa� Of t}10 M'd`il I10P Q� In ntlgn, ho Wever„that°fonther bele,and A,Confirmed Funeral ' andaA i , sPraw, beds were aPrend over the notion- 1 I , ably damp odor, and furniture, 'look, Lrlvlra Sbnyne was a kind hearted ,l✓1fe OP th6gi oT1 T61,a111C1'er 'wom¢n; but She would gd. to. every Yea .g . fag glasses"'and 'the family Blblo 'were funeral In eight,. even at the risk of 1 EB PS 0110 BY plied UP tnmporarfly to the reoroa to noising herself appear over anxious.. Shia ' ntle/uiz (; i ,Sl . �13, which they, were assigned. It togli,kalf went to. ahury her.respect for thh de- + the next day to get things thoroughly 7 caused; aml her consideration for, the na ' aettlod living; and Incidentally to observe how $ l Dy J. Gr.IInnt{Ing., ` the mournots "took it" Shehadbeen €1 I pring” housecleaning In the ;Ion Bi~ago $omgthing to Divert the,H0,aeta At- known to say, on aepogfaliy harrowing f ocn¢slone; that they "took It real hard." )�'n& *,Ao doubt, punetuathd loth ant'us ' tentton. ',. I Pile of these ocepskma was the obsequies r(p Oeltgatimis; 'at the same time taken at n pair of nor small twine, Pour little ap to"�wn'o1o',It`was' nothing to laugh'at l'etatooa we`re Dlanfod la a single "T,Qw sp crit toot hodypaltered up the;golden ('fljdier9n( before Che day set aPPrt eti;uot around (.b0,00 rnA0ld so that the horse,! Ne and Lwc I ttlet eartkly forms IaY'' t$r-js'p,] nht p9 In the darm wagon, +yJear- i at e`haultivnitng co.I irlk coming around aids by tilde In p llttie oaeknt: IIDvt is 11 aet''ex resalon that s ka ldu der 0 and ''of 6 row, walk en.,.the mused a,moment to gaze at tI.IgIIs holo �h6{"Igj , P PP p dlaplay, and turning Co a neighbor in li51 -4 u1 f of a Axed determinatlun to Punic Vines and be less beat upon tramp- the Sets= parade around the bler,,Bald, 9"4;�t, e'N,;hing ,through Wlth'lh'5 A'e y,l(yg on the corn hills Besides, potatdes in ¢:.stag° whisper; 'They do look §WhoR�ldpyright Imtke •hast,rhhatl�ou90 rWhre"raised only for family,consumption, kinder ounnin';two on 'em so." h� "(q.•,p up • and y around.:T o Arat bvory mechanic, professional moa ' „Characters •and incidents resurrented, p, h� + +from an almost forgotten past, form t 1fla'adttled^Yves the 0t I, IS oyerr,Thle 'haYnianbacised enough for his"awn e a ,paeh a }Ink 1n the rusty, old chain that. j' Dyed from Its winter quarters'lu In' hla'�Yl¢gk garden• Bot'.there camp a runs ,back through the Years and 00111 , bi'FY1gQ room';fo 'Its hoE`y. ,•pethor rtiytle,whon all l`thSs woe ohau8ed P°fhlnk ace ts�with thn galdan era of childhood yvn¢p�rtn q tits kltgh pp AdY„ry r e!!wt,0r ldd. was 41 365H, that our farn?cra were ,and with, 6upgr'A'&ee that the tnQn of thepot)ee the++t 0141o1e{i „ into "planting. a consldernkle f line, r an; the next door qQf uar�jaa!l �1aaretga fo'p market, and'they hit fft;„dtf 4 + 'so wdll that„they never got 0"r.it. Tho James bt, ffi'owne, one of the oldest two' able bodied v{gmen r(wbbwkvooketli r lerop elsewhere was "a (allure owing to thedanbt�oat qt the 6tavd g o kid qN American locomotive drivers, diad it utbe,i�h`it} tuna �wlth th b?IYdta" they strut aaifr Long Island had' supply the fmdr r,roPd+ztho breeze on+tibio lnrYoup 4'Sa a buNdw rkelr¢dt the ee arsear k°ua Bedentl his ;Brooklyn home recently,.egad 86 { a ,Fig a ' 9 Y years, For forty ,years he drove all h{ rips pings le unacgga,l�ntyad 8ylthrrthp Uarnau staadlug LoU.,y',tkat were ,,built if rry4! a 1hd of hsatt'e that �rkpth with+rife rpnootleda of (kat single Drop: angine continuously without an coni. r Air d�}k h„rlh ' m ' ie l salddm 4'off a cornfield that I !tall! sv{}n��o5t 4♦y"ita�mQtlltoeEed ; ,a1 duet. In the late O's air...Browne, ,r tQrsyl}i'nIR of Aper ofa Amos agw;dead diove tlIs Nety York Hera (IS special yrr,sf a}r?mg'y 4°mea and sada ;toydya fly t t ddttgyna + Myvy en houril P kas+wh116, �'}i a;kFlgrfyign ton [ot or.. The envna,ye away Sittid'g on thAriepgn wnov lie might, foreign news dispatch locomotive from for, er[ryhq Id"ohery Qf7M7pyt tk+'yrpinpSu(nE6.ugea pan „been otkerwla,e�' preauport to Brooklyn. In those days he,iiot when blye kt e,74; pYerhkSgeggri eQp„Png xjs' feel werefn 'at there were no.dcables, no telegraph . o napy r andQBP kala aqd(slap , syy ° i, line ab hit o[ etlhaon put i�ut all�@rta@ri a.rb0.aellim flgln'every col dfleld g between easteruLon .Island and Nety p 'fifSl{ugd to.r6r°ad 6) rQpdn rfi I� a k eq-VO Where h° whey known,;".3t' Yorlc, no wireless, any telephone,.Ads e1( ot` hQ7f bad)( hq�,i pr+sage n SsaW t>�qt pe would destroy hY step. The Herald's principal ship: news o-�npYivgtoe""an B¢o a11Y„ Pt!Py+}wdad li t9nnornlraoAhva m.vneuptea ao anrt.rotul�Yqp, m, oreburoan-wasat Greenport. Its reportonae met incoming,ships with spsolei dis-' ' • ' w n�, N tin. qn rhopr patch boats, Eakin 'reports, ,lt Q�vg add +exyellent o°ffge +Ani°a + cher° Wae Q map la;our town,�Qnd%Lo �pc{rt and then boarding tlieo seen t, lyejhht ((twenty, oahpS),y Pdugilrl +r ae Wol diens' tall and'prptipo}rtlondtat ) g gine. '+ t'ingp�}be an:ao itglge+i a; q,'�fyel �,'�t l�y Hle lertpina name was gQ4euusur, IPilotod by Dlr.Browne-(which,wna the 6 sh qOt' N7Yerything^` ip rt a thtlnae,I Landr,by riyay o(',avoldingd oontu�fon, 8o YastesG .locomotive on the road) and "Z il'iherc rVolo two others In the ycmnnlunityl Wade rho run to'New.York with all ' P44t1"t dk GAEL�pegk to cellar D0 ♦,q, WQp, be,•arlag up ,under, the ammo name,"Lel I10Qa1 b�'e speed. Mr, noUse to say ` ¢(d'}�,b J,tSiae near nrdgkt skis yy,soy ipnao y,'aa genardlly spoken @of as, 'taut ytat Few a ine driof,today wor d y l�4 blot In��tber'�nont door YSfdy A boys,py6en°zm,'�- sometimoar ehortanod to o nSolit t0 make such ft Tun On esq h hWhi hW86.'w JrNe�MCo pgw0 ,&round.thank au Nar¢r His,father cuaed to say, with„ l0oofnotiYC8 and'oval'alteh fails as we ' n§�Yowing+'Fttp nail ;all thou Yept of� the ti;low,,,Qtaucigpa ehngkl�. ,"Look`at that, verity I have ralabd viy Biomaseii"I 1t1 u@0. then, Often the runs 'tt•are �1,. tr lggu"1 t i`tp t µ+ll th, p4 tin �(linh+y,pftn S$ enoz°T. rv°uld ogc0.elonatly work half made at night, Oil a single track, with, �iAt r tC oomip"',�dh.W$`�th a T,te.p s Say tor, n ltving, aqd„ be ahava8 fro-I out airy regard for, soil es of trains. P s frdQmgc dQ)'ata6 tiQ a ♦,]lore+� pggoCyf(once:i week):With a Iachl nl[o. There was no system of signal li ilts, ` �yt3$ Q'y�`+rj.p4".111'L4tGpre, >ie "}akpp' I�t'w@ '+'y{!lie w)y` pd�arpn ot,his Ince wasireat�lot-I And;the head wind's .often extingu slied my" ¢rttlXgd y@nil{i`."Ha toqu jlri €vie la!Yrto yo pnd';of kis nose „ Byr k4 withnih Ifs headlight`+on:his locomotive. Ani. r1477I Y 't th¢pp§�tt.,`;R`yga rrbro 4,)IRn tq kt q'dolo ga hlllie Pwoe an A4m'bP lob vt.❑ (her New York papaVat the same time , tSii}If p` �i+ �` r�s at �secl to have its shipn " 'date+V rag et torottuho'P ;A +P'nt � ahnytlthe ruling'wd aln8v ;'iditilel rou st in in..n Similar(way over rrrsws$ t Q3d P7�Sn" l0oti t S �@ 4 4 r n �. y' 'i �`, ,T ev` ��qT�i�roKu�oyf >+t l�a Qd (py°r 2Y'+'kll° �ne made ,po" fgS+ma� norm ounenticut rhe engine ou that .line, incl there has oau. A youthful driver . or�Q (�v„(t `Y f �F��tWall syb,�,Re a plaint t4 h9Qdgnartare rt hgltyrifi�o l ex-ilso piloted t 31 , c 1pdeased fh publla hie +kpisgatti�afpgtlon been many a race in be- r�a ,rdv{,r 41iq},in,ty+ ty tk,Bl ?rider' wltn thn waY 1q tYki d' a ft'tWdO yf�-' iweell 't I two on dark andtorn }cola,itwo�hans&� ip 4y t�I'ia lP �p d ; igUS,a bonus In$l0-being thea eward �dqa+nititgl` D t1 Pj {,h slq'rn ,P�i rypltry�gnnde ,' lki oat!ii- br the-dtiv rwho"arrived first with .t?t�• + I � y rl!'mgce( ftGid'il Che'anidde�PataY, ray dsdzsQgto�is• .�_ , a93 r„i° r e f ` �`1r` rrt 3r'r' 1"!. , at the 't vgningtsy t4rtnlile � wa, t'the , tb t r ✓:`r �' �' `� � r R'inter'eveningsncW nPTw,swe cuPlad the long Uenph at,nno soda of th4i JrJr ���' " �1 .�rrf J�' etova, wUfle the ';latecomers rend of J , ,f. +> , ..,: Ypmtgep gat wriggled uPmt the shot 3'1 �. edges of the halt empty Wait: kegs oto o Tlr;an;�ndle 'Prade`,UGas Sns £BUi�IneS�r a t Jt•Al� a�s JO no' the other side I have often tbougbytheg i.l �n yy e While. the "tallow dip Ued by; N8 _ hlllStl{ng%ir, the `rMa'rtI of menag lost Its prestige sap illumlaant, the npilling al nch Wos roosted Bythaa) ,� (el`x oT tight to the pound), was not to) and published. in book form; make dt-. the'tr¢tIIc 1n molded'emdtell, 6s and Be time-lclllutg bunch would, m Dollee Trade — Long I.Siallders''b0l Rdeezed..at. When•(Wel was hlgU'.and' veluahle work of tote. Th totthoseint p bollJ,btor's wages lea-, the regul¢r Trriday terested !n ghost loco. The night that t: Used to Have More Time pnq er78yut the el ou''a of the it rmore cold°oonet�Uut t pi PeIn it vlOthere,Tbo�, to Talk Things Over at the prominent members. on Ruch occasions stove-buggers were hats all there. lY 0. 1 g the front room bens. '<be 11gMad bysome ,are talking somewhat elmrdtaptain y m related th0 Store. half-dozen candles, 'placed in different Previous cold annps when Captain Jim Village Store. parts of'the stated all of alsioho l oto the oilowingrbitter aged bexD rmnoQ y Henry �oY his Brand.•, Brethren, hose reliability and devotion tn.., , : bay I .but ll is )- e; : member small an lather tomisB,. 4 1t'. was a'typical Country, store of the to the cans° were nn111fle '` a was a , remember to g loon throughout the se4son. But one Jfrom a trip to the barn for the purpose olden time, where everything Headed dna looted o work the t eu[Reaso . n steady of decdlug�the stock. 'rhe look of can; lhilM1ty, but Painfully 'economical corn- B' or fewilon on his once I cap never furgetl. night It so happened tont be,was ase ,unity could be found ¢C prices rogu- trained at"home (must have been a: ease Ilk.acid he.was. afraid ho had r¢IRod lated by the oast-Iron rule of an average. Iof sudden:deal° or a oroken log), and in 110 ser, for bo found too baptrozen stiff' pram of 331-9;per rept, In those days; his absence a somewhat, obscure fedi- In the mea,,,and whoa be wne gropinFf. when the. big µorpornLia OR am,Investing- vidual took it upon hlmeolt to IIlh the around for tha beetle with alifah to drake when, of their corpoont' millions' In tko; gap. tie` bad started^-on his rounds ''b the Dftcl}[o1 1 to ft, ';a a mistake i Cnndp trodo,. it seems tunny that the sutp:,oft ton weeks that had toppled over ad'got hold-of oho cow's tail and rmOst It off about two feet from tho'YurtpermasC'. time ever µ'ase.when I could stand and Rod were s, when ribose ane tbroug&hte Up_ ,and •Ho said be woul}In'i,Dave done It' cast a Wlstful'eye Upon the barber pees, rho candles, _ _ for two dvll¢ra. But what W'orrfed him Coe drops, Pnekages at lozenges nod with around turn by Pertinent Iq• 1, moat wne the Gond t10n o[` the horse• �p'osalbly oue•'4r two other.varieties (not iry, tractable to o rolce 1❑ the backl or nni0 , nostrits-wera,not Only" to mention, J1tJnbY Posta), in the dill pa oro mpsolld, but:to Voaph deponced ado' I'glass Jars on the shelf behind the'coun- gait o rho room: "R'bo Put y�bu In frozen, several foot Itn laugh?', which had- . ter. On the same shelf was Abe drug de- 7`P,u1(mnn7 What a, terrible Lh1og is become ernral attached,to the harp IIoor? 1parlment, where wore,dlspil(yed a Jar o[ jealousy t. that, confluipg the horse Yu a very un• opium, gum ,(4,old w!thout 'restrict I, sC I Rivalry m Dress Patterns took a so p ahllling nu ounce), and a group 9 anchm•ed';In rho 'and tenwe lathepl idles off on:s level Wit ti{: lot patent medloipes, on 'Coe shelf o4P Rlkon `the .'el of �rabove wero .glace tumbler re&baled hnbUor and discharged her cargo and the the horse's nolo In the butnewai naw. oleo• for Imported olsprs il}apvY goods, nor spring or dolt, warn 'him rohlel,re,eutedoitselt. IC Was found 1 Dent, •2 cents tthd 3 °outs, 'tet �nrted"up to ;the store two or three oC dlgfculty P g throat nod gra let Of the 'speckttely-, and' It Is Wortky o[ meatlpg the-'kindhearted, 1f not Curious, ;neigh- that the mouth,: hide of lee: 'that, �whlle the ono-cent;tumbler as, •bora would volunteer to aid'in getting horse was one;:pontinuopa g flcA"ptly' replenished, 'the & center'( rho hogshend of molasses (NOW Orleans, land my grandfather Nus Lu, err alarge° "wRa}t from,time to time, praatleally un-1 fn the season, which was readily dis- to,let him at oats lest W extra largo i`dJemrbed,,. 45 one gad ofk Obe$,0011, 6,r CYugulshahle, by the meta; enroll and Itueuthful sed as, slide the bottom ou IF ;Ives ,n-hos from µh rill ea, l I g th@IrJ�'bm re a[:Um; U,om the q teha idlst y o[ Bltnoe.� kaY{ o�Itulsls4 maali•` J, 6. 1111 T_I -f3. �h$Ip thorr(aglves Safi rqoar@is g 9 t. -- -- Z toopte,on the code'0,4'to-One Rut"tp 61 brandy into-,toe cellar. Every wallh - _ — phgv0.cr In•blue Da pen,'a>g;ln,yefl10 A Oka rhillutetdt gonernl,%store abld intoxicant { -�r5en Y011n$r Men Dared n&4s n : „ , , 1h )4ts,o sU1t a 0tbnlBI- When 'Coq boy^' IsdUlpo nlght'ae l snt'In thy_glp{tmingy Qy ,dry BI- ds box wast, -1 it it the bait, 4o'e"redaliet stove+.� k I' Ij ,atDrel ,tor coos eapecinhy, that were left an the Jast now at the Memorial Day period Iloproprietor, upg'pad,r n lip euQD9h f co�n((errJ[„or,luaPootim, W,ptp an indurin Iitsis of especial interest to recall what tq'} gnpo�Irt my }(oe ttr�, Manhood sbp'. eourobt of nnxfety to many a wgmha wh t ���y�g�'(igo goal;:of,my nm Kdl1w 1 v)ruok snared tont Mre $oignd-So Wou13 .hnv , the very young men of the a&t•ly sixties ai'ekoi't cut top,,,thd t4hdpo4ee(<eit �NqL a�dr4se' ort rho eaID$ pieoo,thaw ewe.ha idid-in common with those more mature Ra ar aas', pan butrt✓;iat LEgi[deJl Ulna meptn)i .selectadr nn� ifro m whish eh r"kty p9q,P @g aP & �. � for the defense of our Government Iib a'41-plug”, hat hapPe ed I T4 Flyn 1nh d ICD PUrobne ,drone PaE'kvrn a,'i•'Uund loose"ji Prom�bolq�71r)b y)ort a ap N yard9li kilo anon ae aha Could 'yarn or- when it was assailed by force of arms, tont hal gad mYl etlael yt? v e b4hy� t Rel[�2 ��Inadclglly Acre are some figures taken from tim r �agWell ;Ileo^lust too al3s}yod hfa $ n0 ',tlfe codflehV 1'oare,,was al'Ways ryry o1l{cial records showing eloquently that phg a'a and `expeo¢8rlpI�� „ad rl(i,pr"tlY•o{ po'�' �atnc{ }e'tidr�(od artiglo Il[e dfza i outh was no bar to ttta patriotism that; t eButPregett�;blleFIrngerda�rr�cOf ' ftel{lQk,@toners Tl(a dnhflbltante Led e;< y 4 h y v ldn �poPk klnlao>hEm sausage,'phigl(ev 'tilled men's marts and'woi•ked out for' .� �a}hr)h'e etc ill, or t caul tAm§§ [ d'p Ina d godte-�aIiAh puupd�l't wna�In B$nG da� the common weal in hyroio-deeds: 0� 9 h4iy 1114 e�' 77��( urn �qgl• those who fought the^•4>Lttles of the rq 4 y e;omacU itq grk}�k�p r�tpv nce>itt�,kt" {lF + ii a.+, Yn this" c11 L' ion I racalh' I Civil War•tbeie were 082;1Y7 who were Tsonstrllto ,i�l ,. f (}�wi iy ,aprueing anecdote Yn lhanvns over 21 years of age,1,169,789 were,21 Hua Itself s.lv �S,Ydriltg 1 ek ,4i,gl � tld�}p� wtian the mea-ware ae sGnbted',a}q�. ears Hud Under;844,881 were 17 yenre xYs,dgk�Ya*d a4 rd �hxn p�d J B 1tn, d'a�}e„p dpf�t Qcertnln 'farmon"e'it old and under;231,051'were l0 years old, 'i}hlaery,wlthout7yx(}Iingq pt�,ea'pr test rho Spdili en ware, rather rmeYi}eate0ly. and .under;IO4,U87. ween Y6 years old' i:elaee Lhat daaBerul irltgotiy. {1>'yhtll, nsl;I 'Qgrt'Viod uPon,to arty grace }Iv did so, n oW,ot..tobuoop p(nd t?tgy:.F � sFlpsllRke f; roost" merciful G4dapctiIgNq .and under;1,62U were 14 years oldand� et O inial cthl egad aqd`harken and onlona••to o11 under .200 were 13 years old audunder;l - eagrdonor_ a$ulGuefygl7j yT ,�r . lu4e,�,�15 Oh LVrd F• Hover,IDlpdi'abou, 278 there 12 yours.and under There _ tha,Qod(!eh and`gotafoea were 2,851.909 men and boys sworn in- s- e A "Plunger" on Tlianksgidingl Oheer, When Uncle James stated that he'es- AN ERA'OF FRUULITY� unnatmithat he saved annually the When Uncle JamOs bold up 0e an aw- 'neighborhood of(throe�dollprgby,person- to Of realness prodigality the ally mending the family Shona(he having FE aY of V RECALL all Neck (now BayVlneed ,a former who had fitted up o e), Uncle In the urt d for I all his family Oonnoctlone, from the acv- the .Purpose), Uncle Sohn'blurted outj eral Corners of thevillage and vicinity, that' nn ounce of prevention was worth! �q.�/ '3 ,9 to.n Thanksgiving dinner of resat g �--�./��./;[ Y. a pound of cure," for no did not wear [f eoea, out bis shoes trapesing all over town when "spareribs" (of which he bad no from morning to eight. What the Argo Uncle games and Uncle John lack, It being late In she ecaeou and Monte got overheated It was usually those he had loaned out when he "1r111ad" 1 h onto eight o clock, and the 'nein' Discuss the "EXtYaVagan ClBS" rFero'coming home In duplicate), would of adjournment was at hand, •' have filled the bill In ovary ➢articulare There was once a woman who resided'. of Their Neighbors. Uncle John dissented on theground that elsewhere than in this village, but not eo very far beyond Its limits; who had the providing. or .roast goose (of which ile he was y y - ) thevicinity of tale to breae n needle . con- porson¢ll ver fond on that � vicinity oP tile eye, whereupon ehe.con- THEY DISAGREED, FROM HABIT, "Auspicious oecamon" was merely going 1,sulted a skilled{mechanicdn refereuoe to tbo limit,in the exproselon Of gratitudo'i,the feasibility at having a new eye for favors received, such us apples, drilled in the remaining portion. When pumpldna and geose. I ,� Informed that the expense' and risk at- There Were Many Pet Economies in On our mantel wan a hoar-shaped.glasfi'', tending the Operation would ;be out of Lon the Olden Days'on lamp" wltll a holding capacity equal toproportion to any satisfactory results g that Of a small teacup:, The lower and',that could reasonably be anticipated, she Island; smaller. section Was parmnnantly fllled. 'turned away beq.face nnd'wept. This In- with water colored to a brilliant emerald" cident, trivial Initself, has a direct bear. . green, The vacant space above the Water tDilution the subject;at issue. Da es G, III ale Joh G. wag all of and-refilled with sperm whale AMUSEMENTS THEN' - Uncle James and Uncle SOhh were In oil ns often as replenishing was -madecoij ' ' l the habit of comity over to our house ' which the la the S high d. The neem g which the lamp wSm ll tub,s Tho burner almost every evening, in,the fall of the vIdod i Of two smell tubes, each pro. A CONTRAST NOW year. They would sit at opposite cor- vlded with a slit( designed to facilulto ners of the fireplace and poke, with their the raising or lowering of the 'wick hyo means of'a pin or other pointed Instru• cases,from glowing faggots g that frequently ment, It would appear that Uncle.John V Co-1, /�/ Y_ LeIT from the crackling.weed fire and had surprised my mother In the act of rolled out upon the hearth: I got the Im- manipulating the wick with a'pin or the; The Old-Time Singing School a pression that the highly respectable old tine of a'fork, and, availing himself,of _ Alen Were not In accord, at all times,! the opportunity for showing Ler "a more Forerunner Of.the' Hop, especially upon matters of current in- excellent way,' he had gone home and l - p fashionedfrom a piece,of wire a lamp terest. It seemed to me•blunt when oneplpk" that. hong for some yearn, when Skip and Jump Age. .positively'Asserted that'.so and so was. not fn use, on a nail under the mental _ the case, the other, with considerable shalt: When 'Unolo. James had big at-; " ahoy of asperity, proceeded to pick out teatlon called to the contrivance he un- "READ „ besitathugly pronounced it a labored eE the weak spots in the assertion and held ING MUSIC A LOST ART. fort on the part of Uncle John to show them up to ridlmile. But.I wa's informed what he could do, regardless of the cast that their bristling antagonism was et material and the value of time, The Dl), Htultting.Writes Interestingly of ,largely assumed, With the abject of more I.see of Jealousy the lees I like It. bringing Mit all the facts and thereby Why Pay Eoard,In "York"P. One Old-Tone Singing School In musbuiIhing a'working.hypothesis: Being When Uncle James made It appear as Which He Hada Part. ' eery,.young.rat. the: time, T let It go at it place of downright extravagance for I Ezekiel to pay board At the captain's tatels;.wben he Wept,down to "York" on ,.FW nr J. G HUNVIIING. i i 6pnr 'a'b,'fame¢ b,-8,. qd utaE too the along to kis viihnI funeral, Instead L! stiilrin contrast to the hop, skip seud`ing.eP"a letter, wftlr' a,;half or quay- a[ taking ole propigtouS from hams, as g, ter sectlou of a Sheet lett blank (outofalj '.prudoht .pamoengerp did,' especially and AimP ago In u•h1Ur we live were"the ,the Unite&Statoa Into-New.Jersey,'a£ an when:be'.wap owink "bred" considerable yt,ars of soberness and frugality before !Drilla o[ 12 cents for codfisk,'cnndfes•and'sodn crAckersi Uncle Ithe war. The laying up. of .treasure Ia Y % postage); was an Jghn said'he did':hot blame Zgqlre" a hsaveu.\vas n ruling.pnsalon seen ud onlY Idiotic waste of Stationary,.nt'2 cents•° mite'.for getting s e oars mane,whan he Square to that..for the Accumulation of riches Shoot, Uncle John held,mentioned the he amu skimped t It was town leek that and put :sauce was not to bomentloned the same skimped the table•outragoovely. and put oa earth., A' hopelegs minority of the , dhy with that arising from long court. evpry dept that'she could rake and.serape Papulation hlduh•;ed In dancing and card- .'on-her hack and foci head, coming out playing, but .these pastimes being re- sklps as•-those made uaavoldable the :as she did Sunday In a new bonnet that burning of candles, at a Shilling a pound, :oast 10 shillings it it cost a cent. When gard ed, by the vaso majority, as P6 the 'evpMy Wednesday and Slit V, nlght,'Year Uncle. .James contended that It was devil devilish,. did not become popular 1 apd Year Act. When2•Uuc16 John de- grossly Improvident for the lazy women DWI After Appomattox, `But cometh lug clared that the.oonduebo[,a a" Joh mon of thwooln{nunity to..pAtroub 'M o r:�11011, ce had to bn.doin the.way of recreation ertainum,,groenport;lhaker,.whose bread• was i 'andamusement—something that would In peYing Jonathan Landon. A abillings a 'little, mere than a cunglomeratfen of combine Uusjr�ess with pleasure, nqd:there yard for a carpet for ll.. trout room tholesq,e¢ch�Shrrondod by a�.thla cover cone combine bu the Sing wfip¢ ho wne-bahlnd ],.his doctor's bill, Ing of,dough,.Uncle Jobn,wanted..to know i,lug School came,. In. was borderingwastnthe],.his Uncle Jamas what anybody could expect for''sixpenca Yiimarily it won an institution designed .retorted.that Dr,.Ira could look out Lor when Genesee wheat'wae worth n dollar? as a. distributing point for information n logical: He went-pp to say that if rcla'tive to the art of "reading" musis— hlmsolf, and that If we bad a Lew more folks wanted sdmetbing-to stay by them' a¢.art, by the way, whichhas now be- .epidemics of -,ship fever," he would own thore.was noShing 1116'buckwheat cdkee.l come numbered will) the Iest Another the whole of Plne Neck, : ----- _- - '--� - " '•, einokeko for Gln . Partilmnl� °aonpag���� )ti`' .REAL. SNOWSTORM.::�0 ;cutest in vleiv h'q9 to'Rrpvl[Se a r`ecrult 1'ng"ISSf 1 p� Ing ground,tnl the church chop S, wbich ttlmtoohbumed'th'e tvrnakagel[oe'�Metaan were never gldte {arae: and PowCrfbl I in Avery mid Most of our elnlPle'madeR of Tt.'Tt Dry. 1856 enough to drove IlAbe discards in the con- {gurus .and rel tonal.;mnus[Avemente: >IL was THAT OF -"7 grogations dent Dion singing the grand I that p8R6edln(I ring Lha rdnYS laC PRecioP- alof tuneg of LOwell Mason, who would atrnhtloP hell uwm the ashes arose, — & &, -/ tiave cried like a chlld hall be been thele. among other stalking forms et; aXtruva- „ I' nFtm' years same of those as g inld gime'and htxutN;,the hrepreoslUlo and I'Den overlooked ,:hon nF.Lura was 61v1u6 delvotees of whack are 11 re Blizzard of 11888 Not a Marker rpt tUOse essentials;�voice and ear, so of grnhdpm cora who acro horor at \ Clio error'of their' way$ and resolutely thought of the baf° Poselbility.. td EaYh@Y St0Y111i DY. Itcpt their nfouths stint. ntting Says. At. the thim at which I write' the A Few Who Danced In the Olden Days_ Hu I 51n61ng School. Del( Dace a week-In the Ili intereningmOfquadrillle, the tileutpi grte aceful ahutrh Or chapel, was the genera{ rally .dreamy waltz and tile. sprightly Polka Mg place for all woo really laved to slug .were Indulged in by Only{the (In a meas- iI BIG SNOW AT THE "EAST END." —all who found sattsfartlon in singing oro oatrn2Ized) isgv who 1dan not Ihear the simple but wonderfutiy effective me latter and in view. Thew (¢nese, tlment 'sic of the period. And lhis'was'not all u°tong-three e fr,olitlesathat°re lured th 1 gldr'' An Upset in n Snowdrift That Almost The first,school 'the minute details °t ally Incl lna[1 and unsophisticated Youth p Ended n Courtship, vailch I remtll, one "a'nn,' sa to speak, of that Puritanical petted lata the brhad' BUY tUe Rev. Henry Clhrk. Ho was well highway that 'xas auPp°sed t° load' qualified Cm the responsible Position etralgbt all -¢ atnrtg to the kingdom of brtt Didn't. a t t1M both as Itt6L111Ctm• and.ruler of the nloh. twentiethcent ry'had In store for ahtheir' ll> J, G. ILUN'P'14N1:. But lie was orrlbly Put to It, at times,: do°endants, In the Ila° hilarity done Ser ye to know whado when the tehors and d t to leeipatloa, whatwould lmvc they ns niter the untutored and In- ' basses got 'off the k°y" in consequence, ,Ili net bee' Lhinlclns of, Suddenly.and nn hb. well k,o, of the Smiles. and .without. warning there.has burnt upon ,experienced savages had disposed of.their gionees of the rosy cheoked sopranos end col, astonished gaze the turkey trot," Banded property, far a Lely baubles and' lrltos,9n'thnh•,an{t"fasOlnators"end most, the "tangy" and. if I am not mistaken,the i a, many gallons of rum, to the Progenf- becoming. shmvls;'.thrown back:. perhaps, „grlyz{y bear." if not "grizzly, ll is tore of Lha land sharks of the present over ole Shoulder, hot rarely altogether same variety of hear, for the hug midry the discarded. When be was busily engaged i,ll, evicward,.silatnhling gait of that nnl- Ceutaront Ut ole races far othe. placemade In chalking the etelie and Half steps on rn al. aro eurclyr closely imitated Ill, the the "stuff" ell the blackboard, notes, D°a- ntadern dance. vacant by the passing of the Garden of nuts and wintergreen lozenges.ivere being QhDrdp singing is.neltht practical al nor Eden; but now, I am proud to be able �•nssed across the aisle, and thus Drag be- d9sirnblo. Salo'°Ingers of varying ab11YtY too ns laid the foundations of some of the 1 bob up here and there, to Please or bore, 'e°wnh°,protected ortlathelt North h'y Its large families now promine it inthe core- [,a the ease rally be. Card-playln&. once n:culty. regarded as closely associated with the 'granite hills of Now Englnud, and qP rho A Seatmate. Who`.Acquired Faure, ' gambling half and the.vlliage elms chap, 'My seat mate was n young.Winn wltlll having u ale goC doininoee,the,vall the h'as Attained barPo$11I�!yphntyete1Bthe lg wll,diswn4ea lSaying" um lanDdg� 'gain of great respentas ty.`In fact,'ths they break "on the beach at Rockaway," "inning .Ways and a good voice-ED could ono at waist Is no longer looked upon and at other Points along the 'South s{ng' bigher than d, got he wag not to It sea orlma micas,'Perchence, a Player recall - with:me nn LhP ini� notes in spite Of g this belle of coli tent on we Parted, at the fttsce to return his...partner's. -lead of Shore? thnloverose �dowingoaring hpopulaUpn°oL the end or ill wintm• term, with no show of tre a. mmfr refusal, aacording to high ,a llmosity. Our ways diverged,'Bud my all 171 bele .excusable only h a case great city. to come out and bulla "yeart of."np tlnthlrs or sudden''deatli on the Iasi recollection of title is as he stood on Chu stage of the Academy Of Music, the price of send Is It It a�d so lotneo candfn Dancinga Aftor,"re walln c nepom- sight,"to rcome Inland and oultlyate,the In NewlOtk hg.188$ o1P,ttte-dpbtuspnv. part o[ lots player. And here we are. round" bungalows by the 'sea- eof a 1 "neinstor call);' m•Oelded over.UY , r r General II'mpeld Scot6 in Did of the afterSSAI_ CuelY d1sPlnYod rn the UIII,'has become up sandte e Fertilize the virgin sol. an raise_ tnry.Commiselon.. It WAS late' -- _-- chickens—In, many. distluguished.'bell had been Reel' they lura to the show. varl one crops; including ,tad l7en.a end Ills large audience was ehoiK, to sow.the seeds, of I duntry andf UashI Ing to disperse, wbOu the $ov, J. reap a harvest-of econgmy; . The "Be,, T.ralayea "IS announced as the next and.,i "Came to thin skeltered lust speaker It was gqamusing to Sao thetheera waves" say ,IInce otalleak my gms,sthoel laeaoc ate, tr Seats. lx' and favored nook in a.,cosy corner of the gifted orate, and PI'eachel; had; it was grog( Atlantic, where cyclones never evident, gone nbrond, at that early Stage, come Dad where blizzards nee o[ rare of 1118.CRI'ser• t aecureneo." 'There WAS one.:n,an; aid enough to'have But tihma aro a ,Yew openings for file ,sea my fxIlls, who had an unquenchable desire 4o's1ng, to SCI dah wfle added a grim. �''Investment of capital, with a view to desir to'si en. Kis vocal grgu,ne wool( increase values, in the farms of Eastern An grafts In aeantm hoof out;" wool( ',Suffolk. The owners In tile potato Bull )uvopsl, warble mdlpe dressing._ in the caullflower region regard their acres as mof•ning and got "Old I3undred" Bn[l' "more Precious-than rubles." None but "1'snkse Doodlo,,inextrlcabty mixed when, those to the manor horn,'ar such as have Lending the PI $ stnlBli He Milted with; found refuse gore oppression to foreign the °lass conditiOPall Y Ho was to $tabu lands: Can held hull m¢leo Pru(taUle this beside Dr SranIt Tuthill (later a well- fertile section. Those WOO who, tree reasons wer the 1-nown is It and hletor`aar, Of - the I "call of the wild," shun the li State of Cn11" rn(u) who ag; best: ltnowh to themselves. hum In the rlhe whenever he made a dl$' i"murmuring sea" and ate environs, will cord." lie,,,arms OL Pha compact nl'er° I Ido rbaSollwell to keep. to the middle of the aulrie( ouG Yo 2 y'I'ttevtmato wheartlfo ; Island. __-- - -- prinP omenta wa i Sl,' .p -'-----'.— I � echest Wed map IB°°vergT;Pon (Dyes- °t LIPrbhaWdpi�rl`�anbltStT&"=iu �romp—L-9� I (hetes a µguy 771 V ' mrough' too next day. January 29 ttI A Paem Applicable to Aug t?,ection, snowed all day, nsd so on, intermittently, CI�I1AK THIS , On the oad WR.1 spur of the moment Q 11�p° clear duntile oto en w3 too and, when hasnudlrand the dnehed off" the following poem. pE YORK CITYplicable to any section of the country flret train slnce. Decot bar a2 1868camey A- iother than IAng Island; thus malting the thC1oug tber oo„G;nntluu under anal oilol mous latter appear' in sharp contrast:, snow-drift a few rods west of the "up- T _� �� / " IVhero ilia 'etrenmlitt Gently nemve town store," which remained the only the o sweae and lily. an' un°runners until elle arly springe g, while the Long Island Mali Wrcleaites Inter- 111 ar and anon,..L Veen, hu ljjnt oo tlm with arSilvery k bayou. heon b0ya and ,illi "Coasted"at down Its slor And the'Cuckod. ...till-, coo Plug roof wllleh was at least four or eStlllgly Ot il' POYIOd Ot NNIAlme the Came Ill, n.Oeoh,'light and with soot five feet thick. Ste Yiil ,Bld SJtres S. .{ , , I An Upset With Consegdences, Where-the oat tally'-grow se rank JOeePlIf,, i,,, a city-bred girl who'. '- on the brooklet'. lA...y bank; Where ills Whip-Poor-William's cam chanced t0 be Vlelting relatives In tela''. SOLDIERS WERE EVERYWHERE Oft 1..board in .ad refralrc . remote suburb when the snow blockade Where the bat., with renkl Pate, was on. .Her personal nttractl°Ils, p°e-: Chase themselves fr.ln.pltce to plate; -- 3RMkerc the peepors' peep in glee, Only mWglll0ed n few diameters through With. me, oh, toma..wlth me! the louses with which .¢Liars had Pro- Carlo - Nhero tho'.smells that Como to pane vided John S. for use in sizing up But Peoplo Had to Be Amused, gild Rival tit.be smfreali athat co cellaneous samplen of the female sex,he Theatarg and Muaenlllg Did a =Whose all. brnnahes intertwine - aPDcalead to him us acquaintanceutripeof ned Flnu)-ishing Business. With tine "ana..Ivy' vine; ordinary. A' Wi,oro.from out-tile bullfrog'. mug Into friendship and before the rands were come. n ndnncholy Chile— thaOughly broken after one of the, ra- Though his form WE cannot see— Snow The renriniecont lh'. J G. ILmtting Come with an. oh, coma with mol beenlnseen togetlrekd .Inn John's w omiFtterhbeo of Where Ilio nreay bobs around hind Ills spirited horse. Nothing OC— so.. lire. feet above tit ground; called tO strain their 'relatlois until,the of Now fork during the CivilIllior lia f llow-' "Whore the cool, refreabing braeZeh Struck It mrd f1r1'11Iflhn6 Tho ]nngln Shakey tic.rvurms from off the aces. sleislight elevation ofathe"old snow"' At.a jug Into rnnr.mnlug !vents of that ex- Worm. lh, which will Sometimes duo, .. On . person's clothes, keraop; paint oil the "lower road' . that shlrted citing Pe'Inrl: Also, whey. tntro'. many -dirt, '� the plot of ground now ocupled:by Wit one with mq ab, come with me! blow HI11 Cemetery.'Tile sleigh turned over Ona.ulKht In JnI Y, 18f 1'Step it Into The Blizz¢rd OY 1888. like a Pancake on the.griddle and tileoils uf'Pelm't ilsey's lith Ir states, Dvw- horse went up ht the air. John struck sly. near Bletio'er street and bought a But he all this as it array;Lho pheupm on ilia feet and at onto became fully ac quartet's worth of cigars Sh [or it (,nor. Real blizzard of lrisrch,1288,wits Cel'talnly culled with mnitm•a:relaling to the horse, ter, mule by himself, OP real Trincepe I some .snow, and that fact nceounte for bill at the Hist oppo'tuulty he it- �lobaccO. BOW teat a 'Its'haying been the subject of nulmated weatherver tile g Ian sgazellna_sa arrest- feed to pullimaterialze stock frofm UP he sweet I conversation during many ensuing yeas:; _ _ -_, _ ._ Accounts of individual experiences, ox". 6 -yam 04 ultra-fa striped I memories of departud pu P(s n handful of aggernted recollactions and mythical stockings elevated at a Perpendicular• ;that hind and pass,them Around among anecdotes-that everywhere fell upon the Above a flash and fluffy snow bank. Ted my friends who hog the delusion that Ilolening ear would have filled a volume stockings waved and fluttered. Bashed they are'getting "as good us ever" at the also of the 'Begin Ahna-ac," My I andscintillatedIn the crisp ntmosphel 10 cattle suuigbti ire joy of Walling them own meet thrllllug experience was when, and.the kaleidoscopic exhibition brought ln. the ntornhrg rosto•e daylight of the out all.the modesty and apprehensiveness out or illi idle drosur.would be n aatlsfuc breniorable 12th, when 'the tbm•momete1, that was. ever near tile surface of-John's tm.y offset to my reckless generosity. was eiz:abaye zero, I stopped with bow nature, and he found himself headed for Having puclwted Lie clgars,.l Lou der ed barefeet intd a pile of snow that had the'nenreat lunatic.asylum. But at tide )n payment a.: $1 -'greenback," [toil re- drifted into .the room through a windgw m•itical moment a stalwart passerby -a little tliat had carelessly been left Open' pre hurriedly responded to Johni o frantic ,sell allegedcalved In tochange 5ceaLsenvelopes, ln lPOSe- a arnat'. ..A man from Manitoba, tem- calla-tor assistance,.and with a seeming Perot illy stepping At the Holtman Bongo, contempt Por existing proprieties and con to fiquAttder Lilly:considerable Portiunno ,might have viewed.this scene In Broad- yenttonalitl°s; ho froze to the stockings Way with m sickly sotto and a feeling ne tllongh they had keen the 4nndlea of it In :coveting the coniums of et' .little irate reuvalopes would have Uocir little Do- ,of somewhat of contempt'for the muffled. his own plow that had become wedged shot Of criminal.extravagance. It.all en arid'Struggling pedesU•inn wha presented- .under a stump. He worked them sidewuYa ,,,ern to felt susplclorl,ly thin between the 'a moving picture of "God help us' as' and.backwards and ret hast Josie a ofr n°d fingers unit a Vault Inside revealed but a he pushed his way through tle donee. and stood erect In, all We glory .', pnesariltl 1 cent erg. T tilethingW d0 wall of falling snow. But i the reale Young r om list, a sad as area deg b aha .,`vas to puna It along. Tltu'njim,e, I ntd- dmits of New Yorlt; over which cit,the .snow from lien eyes, mouth,. noes, hall ed with storm was central, the outburst of Na- and as far down list, back as she conlJl qurestion, for the faun value,ilnuu9t0d with tin'e's wrath was more terrible than an reach, she opened up an John for leav- Ian m' pencil; on the Outside. army will'banners." Traffic wee praatic- Ing. her tate (or feet) in the hands of a1,1 lvallack'u Italy theater Brouilwny unl ally suspended and starvation, in Shadowy ,rank ontsider Willie le.devoted himself '1`hkrteenih street; wluere 'Le.tel first outline, hovered over tire, pm'alysed to the stmjugati011 of a fool 1101,00 tint took the name ""'allntk nntl. whore; 1❑ town. It was a great storm and far be lied Shied at something far more alarm-I 1804 -his 'Iiosedalu" made thu AIRIvel it from me to presume to dlm.the lustre Ing than Pair Of atoekhlgs. !.!ons run'.of 125 nights,.and WhOle Mrs.: of its erectness; brut down ],ere ret the The sleigh w0s turned right side up Floey; Madeline Iienrldilez, Mary Gannon. "East End," as a comparison to the "tit the horse brought basic to earth,.and Io1nY Brolghalu, Bohn (,lihert, .1. 0. SLed— cumulatly0 snow fall Of 1867, 1 would `_the live drove away 0n the return.trip est a'Con cent bottle of ink beside 'wltlt countenances from which every 1dar't and others of that grain; stook cagl- sugg 71zmy received Lhoso plinc°ly Salaries, 'a two-gallon jug of molasses, trace of unailoyed happiness bed vanish- rallging. from $15 to $75 (Paid to .fail' The first big snow storm of the season ed In June they were maimed and the BI' u hon) 1141' week, was way IIP commenced' In the night of December' linoly)`andchineventtulapp c(90 far As 1 at tier Cowl) On the opening night. S,plenb.r 22, 1860. ' January 1, 1861 it snowed all ' 25, 1861, the olden W rllnuh nor}ICI¢ 'uml( tiny, January 3 It snowed 'come more.. home about -mile from the scene Of the, slaeell" wherein hit salll In substance, January 10 it also snowed; likewise ori.,, chilly episode that over after made It that Ile had to lcll a.Pluoge--a ritllpOR ago January 14 and 16. Janufty 18,..we had,'dead..easy for them t° recall heaven from tlm point of vlew of Ills PiII,Yluds slid U furious Snow storm that cortluund of their lnarrlage by aesoclstill tha event advisors but 'that hit than in.ht( Uroc - with Lha ,neVeT-to-ba:[orgottgn snow l tlu'ew.himself, upon ills !?Rb,)'I)al tY a a, winter" of 1804 —I dksohminsting public Ln ills naap(lppt be - lle6ltluatt I(Iwldlld brute hi�ri ilit4llnd sou hhfi 4lriouglL 7.Prltf+ h�°tlIjb4IA'"olJr°ik3Cf \JUY �i,Utif�ilj`4eI! IL1`VI{, 1n1Fo '4h¢re„.,{�hg4llT'yFaS',}c+}itl0.grtr' .I wyldra gocge,0l�s SAloon:; uudet 'the'lu=,�: sCl eqt h uai er li+('?l�a leiltryl 'n�nit�At7+ l p11k,It P Tuafo LtD'avemRes of e 6 lS b�i tl;runtlnnal klytel IBl pntl,)vPv God iron 11 J rr shtob Inco "rho al}` , ,IhI slreet, 1}as rhlepY `Iigti otters bYi•Til) �0 / on npd snv:arnl otllrr='>ym ll,tY' hn4Hbs'� atP� of)tile 'Solig .mid]5e,ion"••,anti hh`o toV Ilnsl 'of the Iphlhg llnsdos and.visl 1allal ad rvrlileiNely Le Lhq uegda,Ir rthul-•Double Bone Act (3uggl�ng tile, )lime trite Onn) nu hl)p)g\Iliagee nm},i5nnieot-lovhig nnalo axgnilallun;randlpom hand to hand); Dave Namhold, the The Rnsh of the']YLoU. thli'y turtles of busliess :aid soo Ung men )'Inimitable ballad singer; Billy Rlau,, �gllded and silver-pLIIod-youth and"fur 1 Shorry)rCampbell. ANllliam Castle (later, -.About'L Ii'iduk In the afternoon or that lotigheel "boys-In bills` who packed IL )of tile.Campbell-C'asLle CperA Company)' ni nmrabl¢ July) , 1s63. 1 was Ptftndinq':! 'ta rho doing. presented a glowing p 011to 11 were members of the compftl'Y. pnP "revelnY by night." Afaggie ,liltchell, uI 1563, hod Iakeo tlo iuvereation vIth.a6 friend Just inside; The "pretty wdlter ,ON" System of LauralCeene''s theater, 622-624 Broadway,' tilt b!oaed deur of the hubettlashory conk ) ;serving drhths and sinuk es (laler.oboi I fol. the.. Suuuner season, and was giving) 'Inun Joutig (+nth tiler lobby of the d,a :lahed'bj• leg Cnnllment) was In her, great none maker Its Initial lun,I b'nlge, Hesse, now Brand+ay CentrnL.i full 'operation These waiters. selel'ttel Y whet n rxJ-Ileaded III](] redder•-facod tiny With an eye single t0 their PhYSIcnL at-' and the town ))'xs Weeping tears of syun r.m by shunting 'item they emon!" And: 'trarilpnsr In wllltr aprons and wail bar IpathY for pool' little "Gancllmn'" lie wns.I, Ilght Heln they slid caul^ nlshod SOLNels fiashing in the gasligla Baruunis Museum a Xa net for U)e� RoundOln Of lbel, ( 2ss strong. and }tile) alttered' I)Ithel mid yon, nr loli.erhlg 6 - amus of.Ihell tomhng wns Iilte until fhq beside susceptible oiviqur -r military pa-1I Country Folks; !Ill salting of on)r,e mingled with the die irons, were seemingly rognrded na.de' Country merchants, and others of the ) hint grn++'I of n.roghorn. A terrifying seendants of those +vloged, etbsrial beml, Dad -feAIsg Popniutlon of Now Jersey and I ;nriny of brxwnv swaggering,hug tura YH,,l i unlly now and num ter-c lvillzed, lusty hoya,i ties who'Cast In recol Int w•Ith aelan other-remote sections of Ame!•Ica, § pm�u lu Lhe slums And feared among•, 'when he wes nrrd 0•ort) the bol tleniknik -put pp' at the smaller' downtown Ito- thieves nod cut till uat55 "Flushed with; of heaven.- sy vintnrY mm lundrd vllh spoils;' It 'did; Butler's .American 'rhrnLet or '"4I1` tels hl order to tie vrithln ens wnikhng (Brondwnv) Its it wRS pia frequently distant¢ of Banuims %juseum, Broadway SSC seem ne if Lhings were coming thou•,,' rolled,.was anOtlnrl vAIIetY establish I and ,Ann street. Teeming witlr curiosities way, And no'B proved, for outof /aster, n)em ruhm'e one could depen I snow get- spit pervaded by an atmosphere of sanctity street, nn the double-quick, ling Ilia:Iumtay's wm•Lh. Al this holom the and Ivey ea)vdc$t, this was the mecca of (loahad at body of some 200 pollee and Olt' programme wns changed every weel( be,t' Um CI'uly:good when in search oC relusn- )Llzeo'deputies (tile, latter having volun- the�personnel of t.he'front lows Varied Clop nal. good and elevating Raj .. teo'ed their services In this unpreceQent not, materially hvery ni&ht he, the`?iveelc .menta Over the green balzo dour opening 'II who,oil willsis ' old it,night eltlidin quailing the imp`mvisod the "big.fiddle" In Dave Brnhamis orrh Psr., from the .,Freak" gallery worn theca re- trn nodded familiarly to different.sounds! Assuring words dune hI Yellow upon a clubs,.charged the thornnghly sm•prlied of the same coterles of prosper -junk- .background oP tilack Che "TO too Loctulo mv7 len lded ooh. Thr sfnkvmct lender 1e, Ing business and professional man, Bab- Room," Chu ndnlisisult to white wua 3-a,l p Jed,elite( Hind % lldly'si IdtM1I^IRing$role], qr[ Butler +viva proprietor and rosy cants—children 'bull Drize. It;ryas right 'a+• Pastor one of Cha top-Ilm•rs. there that eeobomy nod n clear coy-.I 'amt Ihp fronT rnnlcs nr the fpPVllpg 1 )4 ^I salenge apuld atz'lko hands mud amlle� tit but cJrlosit Ililnt atrain o bo tv fare%) l* Spklim•s Q✓�mro Everywhere( I thong there .was�eomoun eal'.'play actlpb,ol rrtren G, U'Btif up let's human leg-Jam gom>•�I Tnl{.rest In the,Nvar and all things re-'I pith:renl'good actors Lit "Barnum a; plrtely at Cie mercy oP the zealona,i,aml)I lAting.thereto dna, of coarse, paramount on the lvest std¢ qC ` possibly tap thorough, defendcis OFAAWi PbnH's restaurant, nod .tsar.' The next I Fill 'A ph°)or)ly^ Soldl ers'uvet Y+vhere--In bol el lnbhi¢a,bsnl Broadway, between Bleelcer .and AIUItY. psir(lens, thea Lets, bneenlent saloons of )vas a favorite feeding ground '•find Bttle,to say b0Yngd the brio( s4 to streets, g the "ReYaul e,' ' Dan• Drop U1" type In 'for the professionals, Dolly:Davenport, meat that 'Ira nimnbsi' Of killed retrad Oros,y'street dives where they Iyorr sys- wounded In the encalurtor rvnnlrl y}e5 ora 4 \Tack alll Bryn TS, a Jeffeer;,Slily Flor- pashas.dow)robbed, m• mrain,va io.tom• than. Dau Bryant;Joe detioneon who +vas. b¢known. pones Clown Brnmpvny, recto various.rr• tlieli laylug thin foundation at 41a groat, with were,ntenca then at bnnpr s)tyy:1 erditfpg-stations, on route In tile.langter- reputation At "Lou rx ISFGa'e," as Bar serapere were Imposelbl A. with T1ie 11raius l utg-in `comp'on Staten Island, lvhile and moneYe'avftllabIs, tuunela nrcilt�suh t.he�h fidinimil ed such stirring or Onf h• babas In the "Sea of Ice," and AsA-II nvs were)equall sot Nnbedy drennI ad Trenchard )n "011e American Cousin" be-.1`oh the telephone and he'llhonograph' bed ing=airs as ':Ton Battle Cry of ire tore-the conception of "Rip $an Winkle" not rmergi+il from that nObulqus lona) (hot h•ori Chicago) 'Soho Hrownis Andy' ._and ecor¢s of. others congregated tu.' Ify wbera'I'the wbangdoodle Svalleth for and oAnn,le,of the Valr- Small.Wonder, that:'imcess underground' Ino' of the her drstllora,".f3londpn:.hnd`caral itman. then, that Tony's pm•odies al popular tried otato. ' aangg were prime favorites kTere is a• P In a whaelborrgW Over Niagara d11a"rope, Perfect eonQ�denoe being reposed to hot ilea ILL Is ear Rill Che nytomohile ntnpzn of.one that waa demanded by the tpoantegrlty of the pe,trons,.no checks".. had not bnCgnlG Pnmlligj• obstacles.to the gallery, ggds -nightly until tlie•iucideut ,wei•.q used. The plain,' unvnrmished passage of,PAtlr f tyalns, nor histru that,fnsp reel the sentiment�)vas,elpsed:` ments bir-Abe derppits Oil of fool chick- It rot toe customer g, to Up- The rebel's 11,11 ons.no I v(sho}e,,l. , Ofi'now nrmh�ltp Wae Carry lil g. "tilway nuc. r,Its and..oil I,luous dogs. Ievertb Gle6s. fint+iall, I,n "al,vinndr der Jlla Visa yea ienllol llalVe and PAL19(8m-. Flu hod ills rye n nnitimma„ : �' per- there wfts something doing every once Jn Afnlr,rta6 my,ami yylnns - tett,to the alt? Du tepman,, In tha, t a whlle;.In "Lfftie'Old Now York" about' }k followed Sonoran ran Te, kaon a trnrk 1 opdnee one IleM,,.was omitted)lm thAt ecce Bnt win• lc net +vph iitlleella, iia would eookTodne btl)gD)g.eyei and with fifty years.ngo.._-.._.___._ ------- :flow qui klv he nkedilddlel ink a''*prn110un¢pd nl'@lug'In fleCti Op blandly re- - tGo)n ahvrgl ud:)toy DlnrYlu ndi,' markt �FrieVjmra atb?" He :coals I never Sonat m•" Bob Hart (who (tied,a Bap d understand hew.any rvoll balanced orae i.t'sG allntster) +vas Principal of the Cnl; e¢gld manage to 7vorry through a meal oied1Academy" and.Charlie 110he tine ,that was eGY'oR bhatfm'-fooled dish a best Impersonator of the nprthet nixed Spotb, ,g, Hff eP the St :Nicholas He. 'I' , Southern dA,kAN. that ever `Wore),4it t tot ;Broad)yay, between Prhihe and Spring 't writ, ofticlated as the dngce.`;lira Who. 1•atreots, Were risking In $10-a day from. e hold"Vag the most unruly boy hl{ all"al bridal eowplea who ware boll"" to have and JohsnY Wild tbo most mIsCI e1.vdYs t11o'.hest for once illlhell lives, 1f it tool[ He vY.as'thG chief manlpnlntor of%Che'hxnt 111m HeIn {tie [amity. - nin George Mirlety,t then' n,4nllei star D,ueutly opluialie wfta LheIMeWopplitan rvna n 'Upgnaclous -i'Againdln -But co)ue) gbuel fn,p6y1q,nt [m•�rvbloh A: T. Rely- Again ','beIalat-ona day blase rePra.atnry_pllnilai mt:'had'drawp ¢kat tGOm•d-br¢nking_oheek w•ho.mmdn pngesl rl :the-ltifrtorY of Ipi9'- ,(ee;dlalf'14 mllll'on Thiritt9: 'upper-tNM1 Ph slay and 7ncipielt,,o vaudAvllle l Conk (lmh croolted tiha olbOw At T�IIpe-SfOver" their orad)cipq like litUF mon ' °bei )yhllp Arte rho Opera ne Oval' Wood's�Ililstnel Tjail wad ort ¢' If}t All rob},ho Aoxdeplyr +vbor)o Adollpq Patti was war, aoa it wpa°it�diOl at'Gltapl �7RF glahhsblug' hot 4t{tlh, to shltile otic; started on ire R81},}q>tain e nheerc',C i4v�ri tyGttlAnl v.nP SdJlg �.tnutv: fnablon nn!_i, luLfY vf.0 tu0t„y'i1'ko til¢ �t agnla�Cn[o. ��{TiANCIENT �V7I/y; {nay.PIf R��y7 AN AId VIYI�d �A�Elll1 ;A Survivor of Wreck Reaches the Inn; blowtng;�ii tUa loocfiEa of retheY Ig Ii.1. vasa fm tomes of ryhich they Ilsd nb If the tour walls of that sclo-To room need, while their widen appeared In 7p� had the gift of speech and were disposed church In calico dresses and fivp-yeeu- ol NPRI ITIyE SAYS to be loquacious, it would be highly ea- old bonnets. IIo started us l osnor- tertaining to heart what they had to say. Ing the black bottle that was almost In- variably Placed within his reach when Many.tales oth 'tmthzand woe could they he made his Pastoral calls. Propelled by relate. Whcn�the steadier "Lekington"I'Ilia enthusiasm and deop sense of duty was burned, off Eaton's NCelf, on a cold he went on and on, until be reached a 1� Barroom Lacked the BrassRall ule'btla aaaualy, many,years ago,.U0. point where lie refused to allow a Pint of alcohol on his Premises however { n people Perished by fire and water. A,� much it may have been needed In the u and Other Fixin s of solitary survivm}'however, managed to. treatment of a Sick cow. Ilia abhor- ModeYn Cafe. heop Ills grip on a bale of cotton upon rence of rum eventually extended to to- which be was carried; by the strongebb bacco, of which he had previously been tide, to a Point Just west of Horton's 1,very fond, and he closed.his iron.tobac- co box upon the little that remained of GIN AND SUGAR, STAPLE DRINK Point, where he was cast ashore. I-I0 "Mrs Miller's fine cut," and if I am not was frozen in places and very hungry 'greatly mistaken. the box and its con- and thirsty, on- andthirsty, .and in this condition he 'tents are still in existence, after alapse succeeded in arriving at the Inn. In a of a hundred.years. It Was Started Back in Sixteen it short time ho was able to give a detailed .A Poem to Describe the Feta of Sam account of the horrors of that night, and died and Something, Dr, the regular ':stove huggers"and a few Brown. Says. others listened to the story very much In an outlying'section there was once fIuuttin g' y as we of the present day Would.have a Ulan who got so low down, in the so- been interested in the Personal exPcri- 1cial scale that lie'was kicked to death been a aury vor of the Titanic din- by a mule. When I heard the Bartle- ences BY J, G. HUNT'VING aster. 17-{ ,� 11 'l,lat•S I waa deoP1Y Impressed, aril. lA short slid narrow counter and be Tho house was `erected,��.hi sixteen rushing down cellar, I constructed 'a hind it a long-waisted "corner cubbard hundred slid something, on a Slight turn .Poem designed to tell the whole story with sasll doors through which gleamed In the main road, by a man whose Iden- I in a few words. Tile name, Salo a frau of decanters, each containing' Its tits has eluded the search of the histo,-. Brown is fictitious. I selected it slm- arow f de a brand of "dead ruin" t Ian. He was,, presumably (Possibly ply because it would rh$me With, own Pn; m large box stove bucked In not), a pirate. That be was a man of - town," drown;' flown;". etc., With a, 6' substance was evidenced by Ilio build- facility foreign to any%name. Here is' by a long bench and two or three Ing itself, just as It stood until recently, the poem: ellairs; a sanded floor and a Persistent when it was moved to another locality ,there was an old enowler called slim, odor of alcoholic beverages and tobacco and Somewhat remodeled. Labor and Far ,.tyle ha did not care n—rap; juice In the concrete,,and there you have expense bad not.boon spared in its con- .n„ Inn may suppose, it—p. typical barroom of a '',struction, The over roof was t�ndi tiedS. il.owoula Tale a it. lam• primitive celled with mortar made from home- '.Long Island "Tavern." It was a vert- 'made lime,sand the Jail, was split by Ills cont In nro back bad e.crack, taU1. Ilaven oP refuge Prom the disturU- hand from native oak and fastened with rho meat of his trees waa slnekl Ing influences of hone. Once' withfil 'wrought nails, also made by hand, and, Him buts we...vd Ied In, qln smelling' distance of that "cuUbard" Sidi this.Plaster catling has defied the frosts -and of onion.perfume had ne leek, and fogs of more than two hundred IWlit1 sight of the anger Uowl On rho: year's: Every to'this (lay there is a difo- To labor be was not tile)] ad bob-taile(l.So,'nter, and all recollection '.ference of opinion as to where he found His.tills o.l you scarcely could nna In thin ono respect, of the last word In reference to tli'll ,it trees'large,enough to "square up" And, .s ono might "Poet. empty wood-box, and to other neglectedif to the size of the Corner Posts' His nnmces were always behind. domestic matters, was me,cilessly{ Ssnurry M ol•e Ftn'nishea Historical His nal nam. was Samuel Brown, And when Im would come lot. town, drowned in the flowing bowl. It was, " 1 ° Data. He'd ml up Ills tank withal,a retreat about which there were i Tho fi st lfi'oPrietor with whom we wuh stuff that he drank, ) Or, rather which he did pony down. no "8•ills.'' A.beer Pump would have, .have agIfilo .lil common, was Hazzard been as useless as a stump tail to a cow Moore,//debt:Sammy, his youngest son, which evening, him nal strongerllto fear, f l fly time, and a brass foot rail and,a edge indebted.for my Intimate know)- Like a dad gestalt full. edge of the workings of the establish- tie went up to his mule. burnished cuspidons as much out of I Ment. On the Ascend floor, east side, \{'filch iia tried r0 unldlch In ills Petr. Place as would have been the late Sant- was the °ballroom;' and time and again,i ThIn Tile . ure IS, went at lila for telt, lid Robinson at a Flue o'clock tea. There have the massives floor beams i And kicked him 'way up In the air, was no beer to pump, but Loudon por- 'like an aspen leaf under the feet of the.And when fie came ankh ter, in bottles, was always. In stock l' merry dancers while the stirring strafns'�That was htruck eard ear whack Hstance from there. of Torkey in the'Straw floated out+ "wilder the liar." "Highballs" and "cock Into I& ball, where, upon rare occas- And that was the last of Sam Brown, tails".had not yet become as wild flow-i.-ions 'Sammy slid I were congregated, Salao usedfill t come into the lawn. ers by the wayside on the rocky road 1 Subsequently I have managed to forget with good Holland gin 'the violin playing of many of the mus- life sad recollections to drown. to destruction. Straight gin and sugar" ters of the instrument,. including Ola ca three cents a glass, was with ter This eo hope t tarn I narrate I` Bull,.but the inimitable my m tones of that In the bona that gem's torrlTle fate i relied upon by the yeomanry' with re- "fiddle " ]ager in my memory like the Will Allow up the ern , markable unanimity. At any hour of scent P the roses about the shattered of Indulgence In glm Beer and whiskey before Ifs too late. the day, during a Political campaign,- vase. -------_- - the oxcart and team of noble oxen, with Up to this time tIlevm,erableIlostelry — -- dreamy eyes and bowed heads, patiently had flourished Ulm "cadlock" in a grain fleld,.and industry sand thrift seemed to waited outside, while the sturdy owner languish for the want Of water, Accord- of the outfit pounded the barroom floor ingly, a. "cold water army" was organ- 'with.tke butt-end of his long."gad" and Ized, which,.like the W. C. T U. of tills 'vehemently predicted the election. of '(lay and generation, went "marching oil James I X. Polk,.whereupon two or three tri " efo grandfather Was A pioneer to the reform movement. as was pioneer Sus- :"Whigs" would look despondent, and ,tore man, bill wider that long, crackling, thus looking, gradually move:up to the buckram cloak he carried a hind heart': bar and join in a.','Dutck treat'." LHe hated to see his male parishioners f - 'lbut none the less leisurely, eawmg me. in two lengthwise. And there was the .I plug". bat—the only one that bad ever failed to fit like a lid glove to the borny hand of toll, evidently do- livered tothe wrong address. It was Aa '�i�.� w��"• manifestly designedfor some,lantern- Pawed, razor-nosed Individual, And T+ 1 i when Jammed on to.the apex of my. C)R � hl 711 raven locks it rocked from aide to side re-5, ��K with every little movement of.my tor- '. d. Ca,NUNTTIAC#• d tures body, and as I am no.Juggler,. ° nelther by birth nor occupation, the a ` strain of d }Ancingthq m1sQQ', non- desert ran{rivance on the top of my a +;` head sure got on my nerves. I may rr. say -that my cumulative misfortunes.: furnished. an object lesson in support of the theory that < '.`'•" `, no cinch. An I enteredl one f rOliver ' •• ',i Charlick's hot, stifling and musty cars, with a'linen duster Buttoned up to the 4 wax! 8 chin to Protect my unfortunate in-,- ���^° vestment in clothes from dust and cn- y> dors, the perspiration spurted in fitfu.. Jets from every poir, and I was obliged to tickle myself In,the:ribs, with a view to Provoking a smile cal- culated to prop upthe drooping spirits of my'bride of an hour. Arrived at Hunter's Point pater Long (tag j Island City), we entered an alr-tight carriage drawn by two grub-struck 1' 4 horses, and soon the receiving vault on k wheels was moving _down Broadway, „ „ <att e t� t ag through the maze of Fulton Ferry. .Wall Street and South Ferry stages, with the..speed of a hog being:ddvena .from home, to the plumb center of life and animation of the.metropolis. ' E:': Spots & Hawk, the proprietors of the St. Nlebolas—the Mecca of the newly l`' t`?: - wed—had the nerve to charge me $10 a day for four square meals and - nice corner ce si without bath. An un-' _ �- broken procession of sweltering hu'- A Cx:O1D�N BEDDING Fifty years ago my frail bark, bal., inanity, with straw hats and flower-. burdened bonnets, and the"boys in blue"of -(lasted with inhocanae and'Inoxperlenae, numermis. furloughed "boys in blue" was launched upon the sea of'matri. passed In review before the windows" ry�l'T({'p'Iry MEMORIES Tylry moray. I had selected, from a sample of ourroom, set ahand organaroundseen- IV; I1J119J➢i19.S 1167771511p1]1109i1 iFt\11N1S I stblblb of r the dnughters� of eve, as In , "TenPrince street played, without sees- CAUSES cook and navigator, one as ood In T, "Tenting but Old Camplaces of g g There were but three places of U yy 1a A /��� as gold and as true as steel. OVOC the. amusement Open In the city Xeen' o �7 ocean of 11{e,.through calm and storm, directly across the way; Laura Keene's Dr. 'Humming Writes of !Che Joys she has Piloted the cranky craft, and and the San Pranolsep Minstrels,where at last together we Nave, drifted Into the favorite ballad singer, Dave Were- at I bold, warbled nightly, "When This June 2.3r still water, In eight of the harbor Cruel War Is Over." llgbta( an Trials of 1864. edatppsthrinnevr kViduoeAmecanUn (the perpetulty;ef which was, at tho" ' WHAT A TAILOR CAN DW 1II time, someWliat problematical), apo, to woree, gold touched its t duke matters' , t�highest palati Thea ares times when th'Ings come high but we have to have This One fitted Up a BrldegmoSp 1nI them, and when I 'instructed Charlie- 1,lllller, Who will'be remembered by, a Snit That .Makes Mini Long i here Broadway tni/orlere and there,A l t As ware nolonY 'Helnember :Ms Wedding Day. tense In getting me up a ault-'of., �• 'clothes, T wet not of the deep-eyed Dy J, G. 'I'I'VNTTINGI . 'killa'haye.µgd"tet7ttetl cruelty that lnrkt t under tht'plausible exterior of a mor- ' My'golden wad-lag day has '$coni tai tFan. The Outfit was forwarded by and went" like a puff of wind oval a eapresa, ninety mllea Away, and was clover field. Not a drum was Heard, teoedveil on'the eve of the momentbua, not a gun wA¢ftred and no orator crone ;'hent,• too late far Alterations„or're=. to remark upon the. remarka6lenesa Dili ootfatruction The epat 'wee on tight' biulik the arm$ WWI hqd to stand' u khe_occ_aalor..__, atops Qhs minister with eltfowa a-kim; bcanb mg_tl ouaers Wore gradu4lly, —_o +: .'✓^,mak^ d emor�ies o oy oo ' was coat i pated of anmg event that I anticipated t with , t atoned eat-' I �'] / yy{r y� l C��yg,9yyJ of the l Even the hamholo the remthat bad I rl by f/Hr l � •Le/- of the last year's snaking, that had - - been kept, through thick and thin; (down cellar and in the chimney corner;,' ---me - Town. tc prove conclusively that ham, prep `RBCOIle0t10nS of A le �i0011 Golden Apples in the Orchard, Orly cured,' could be kept the year pp And how well I remember the or- round, was, when mingled with hot Hog Killing t chard In the lane (Goopy's orchard) :corn bread, fried potatoes and dried Ing, i log stilling and -Kin- !that "me and the Other boy" had to apple pie, not so bad as It smelt. 991., Dass when we went after the cows, the,Open space near the hogpen were dyed "Sports" On Long The golden apples hung from the top•, the shear poles, with black and fall; .most branches of thereas, andlnsor- `Where the lifeless remainsof the un` der to appropriate the luscious fruit Suspecting hogs were to be hoisted ups Island in the Long Ago, to our own use we were obliged' to and scalded and scraped with largd bombard the trod with clubs: This we .clam shells, thereby being thoroughly . did, habitually,." ww passed by; and divested of bristles. And the long car. In due time'a falling off of the apple Penter'sbench where the cadaver wag' 'Dy J. O. IIUNTTING. crop was perceptlbie.,,,;The:owner of to Ile during the coming autopsy, Noah ' the orchard was :as "easy as an old the shear poles two strong andretlabid• The'other day,-as'I was industrlouplY 'shoe," but the hired man'was a dif- .crotchod' posts had been firmly set in::. sawing wood In my back yard, I toll ferentpp,,��oposition. Ile" It 'wits wbo .the ground; and from one to the other' to thinking, In, a desultory, disjointed Noeured a dog which tie;put on the of these'.extended a stout pole.... Under! way, of my alas, both of commission :Job of guarding the orchard while he, this was a'crackling fire of brush and and omission, and I wondered if any OY himself, was 'away from home with Irefuse wood,.and there:was the ]tittle. headquarters at Cliff-Lot. vagueII Tha'eynnlcnt° k my few' and far-between'eontempora. 'rumors as to tile kettle, e acquisition of this f The hot-water ette, rhos could recall, as clearly Be I did, dog had comp to our cars, but the cows Tho meat'iron' kettle, the district school, where we wore had to be 'fetched" at all hazards, - That:burg on the p°ie. 'taught, among a very few other things, even"Uncle Hazzard's," where Azarlab After.the more exciting exercises of Intercepted. us.and more than verified that the "way of the transgressor m the day the sausage-making began,. as talegY thaturbingt rumor., Ho went so far. The large, dug-out an of sy tray,'. hard" and that wo,must not spit on as nosey that,,"Pat ought to be Som= which, llllo the kettle, was of syndicate our slates. And those smells—ab,these Plaited of, for keeping la standing ownership, was taken to the cellar And. funny smells that smelt, as they, as- menace toy a an Ilio." Undeterred, we filled with chunks and stripe of pork; semblod on the boys' side of the room, ftlled: out,pockets with stones, of va- and four or five men and one boy like a decoction of boiled cabbage, halt flints sha'pas and slzos,:and with lingerr seated themselves around.It and.began oil, fried sausage and brass buttonal l'l1 footstoPa proceeded on Our way, to chop, the men with axes and the B 'And Ilis� was the dog-a-red•syed,' boy with a hatchet. The men talked.; And the big boys). Ilow they.were as blood-thirsty and meat-hungry animal, and chapped, and when they were not fathers to us and how they brought In tho fpptpath.of,the road outside the :chopping- they tallied. In the mean us up bottom side up, oh, 'so many orchard, With a. deep,.omimms 'growl time, "Aunt Hannah"bustled about,oc,. he moved slowly in our direction, I'' Ll mast caslonally throwing Into the masa a .girls-the large, vlv olous, I e once sto c li a nearby Arco which And the g $ t began 'to climb. Not 90� with the handful of salt or a pinch of Hepper. magnetic, high-spirited A:who When she took note of the time and g p girls, stored other thenboy. y. stopped. out into the realized that the afternoon was waning'., turned us down whenever we mustered road, thereby. pprlfigmg ,thedn broadside. she, spoke her little piece: "If you; up courage to speak-to them.' And 'of the brute Sllto:vie\y '.andsalactlne .,pen would chop more and talk less,"" the faithful teacher! 'Heil dead now, rom'hls collecilon of stones One ,Of' said 'she, "you might get that meat but howwe used to fear that he never good size and ,lagged outline, be let chopped before the middle of next week, would be. How diligently'he labored It go like,a bullet from a rifle, It took I,end that's all I've got to Bay." to map out our careers by drawing out- tho.'dog In the region of the fore But the. meat did, ultimately, get', Imes upon our rears! shoulder,'and'the next moment the air !chopped and. the .muslin bags filled;. And the Sunday acliool that we never In the neighborhood was full of dismal, (sonteqs being slightly ripped under.' stayed away from unless wo were very agonized howls, varied with shrill "Ill' Istroft pressure) and piled up ready to,, sick or the church was closed for re- ylB;' end a black and white streax hang up in the ,garret, where they,. pairs. It was there that we first and seemed to have been painted on the would hang. until the last bag.dinap_; ,also last, learned the shorter catechism sunset horizon, The next night the dog peared from the line. And this reminds:. theshortness of which wqs- mostly was In evidence,--as heretofore, but me that I heard a member of the fam-: comparative and bolv;,the whale:swat- when..the 'other boy" stooped as If to ily remark that she would be glad lowed Josiah, whoae prolonged presanee pick,up a stone, the dog hastily tie-1 when the sausages ware gone so that In the whale's stomach gave the great parted for the "tall timber" that they could begin upon'.the bans. fish- a pain, whereupon he ran himself ounded one aide of the orchard, and I sometimes imagine that I have no! ashore and threw up,Sewall upon the Was Neon no more. wlsh'tO be once more a 7.-Year-old boy:- dry land, where, tired;hungry bad wet Recollections of Hog 8illing. I thinit on the wholes that I would,, to lbs skin he sat, doia ted.and forlorn, - 'Prefer tlo be-u-cooing infant, with nbth- ! all humped up ,upon„'the'beach - And And I cannot,-.if I would forget the I tug to do but kick and squirm the tAoom up ba the Sa[urdaysl events o0 the gray November day eet;l happy hours away. To express my How'they - fore' us in all their "wealtb.o Indlan 'apart for the annual hogale,ing. It ;sentiments oboes let be parody an old Bang: was daybreak, sad the pale, Yellow: expeditions, swimming.g. matches, stolen Yd edarling ttl a baby, wnhlessl Ona ninny of' whtbh. .ware grog In the east slowly and by and n lake little .. as l ruthlessly "plugged" @pieta they. vera withered sItself over the dry and And About four redone rhour; rl —etc.,^all intersper d.with,toter- withered fields, un the Hog.Neer with n be tour unto an little t p dp tingent, In an unwashed buggy with, And tothe sweetest acus-mins ' vols of wood splitting lCrid the running That ever there wne herr of errands. What though the weekly here. to match, drove In at the open And have nm 'hiakups" every night 'holiday lay to the.shadow of. the.fit, Bate,. Don Wells, the large,. -loud-.'.j And oquo everr morn. 'pendink Sunda like' a holnuwnrd= spoken and ruddy faced butcher, 'bound ptcnla party under the darkened allghtad, closely followed by his helper.,Ij I'd r And have athe ladle.ycome sk - of n An soon thereafter, when the horse y pursuing thi,nder shower, It And take me tr°P� my, nurse's arms was the maddest, happiest da of,all bad been made comfortable In the-' And d°li mo—Ob_yard, yum! the aevon, stable, we all sat down to breakfnst. Ana hug me as they,useq to do, Y Nobody knows how I enjoyed tbat onto 1,meds a ton, -t'--� HeagP4e I:was n tnolleti toYt t meat. Over the.bunch of:hearty eata�� t should snot do ee now. Sri/z fryool (1 Its=of.),ject In life q{{6 E9 yhnae thoCltnt over ao0 t Che part. He 16 m1a SINGING WAS p�011 caese of vpaal inrslovandrqufte to-t ttlahly,oldeL' than Ua used to be, and cldant¢Ily t'o prgvlda,recreatio;l ' .nd gory laudable'ambltlon that iia maY (or ¢;n iscule t'fat°'!tat on9 of two Uttndre<i may not) have had to shine In 5th%. IN DAYS GONE By members., Thq moat prominent in I- !,, mameut of musical sG ra, hoe dotrbt- slogans of the ,lay wore Its-conductors. (less been sat upon by advan,tot,i 3'dars, hurt- Gael P; Root, widely ]crown as a 'I doubt, However, that lila rto ace.. NoYcomposer in church tunes, pr evivus to fond voice has bone entli olY to pieces, r r y % tlia.¢epoming :[luaus as th,q out or '+f and were I a betting man, I wonirI those stirring Yylv11 War ,songs that wager a small farm against the new braso�bands have made familiar , all that he could, at IND Movies or Baseball Then Ea,ntame e, sing" people Duan to the ands of the earth,.,short uotiee, sing "The Old Sextan;' or' to Lure Pleasure was one. ' Hie first great auccesa in many 'another song within his range, hie departure to the field of secular. with an expression and quality of torso musfe was • ItoAn is the Prahle Flow- thot would cause an, audience to. sit Seekers. m•,". yJhlch teas' onv of the,six songs tip and listen. There were others .In Issn 7 under flit title of "Six Songs that original cast well worthy of men- • Pron Willow Balm his New Ung- .tion, hot my space under that head.is GOOD YOICE WON HEARTS THEN, ]andI home It.lite a phenomenal sale, 'f111ed to the limit. - w'ltfit the atYtai°-flue aaFetrs'ut tbro*b '' One reasons (there are others) for --- the ms editions. the lacking quality of the old songs An ther star, conductor was William The Best "Big" Didn't Catch t1m B. B ttdbury, than whom no man, be- to [lint, practically, everyone that lig- withstood the rnvages'oY thio, oris-. Girls, and Autos Were Not Pore or since, has. contributed no vel- tinted ht the heart and was worked up. ominously to the world's stool:of choir In the head of the author, Instead of Thought Of. tunes,anthems and music books. And being built upon a theme selected RPnm this reminds mel thousands of "pieces of music" stacked . By J. u, IIUNTTINO Singers Had Gay ThRes. upon the sholvos, and oven stroaie Incredible as It may appear, there over the floor of the workshop of rho y In the Sall or been invite (I think) ,songsinith." ruse a,time,,many years ago, when i the society had been 'invited to con- vocal music, occupied that place in the vena at.Southampton, where the mem- Give Us the Songs of Long Ago, afYectlona of alto multitudes now dllod bare were.tq be royally antm•talned; to ovarftowdn wSth baseball. The so- much as.are the W, C. T; U, and Y. Gl`gease that areae ouaonasnPw-- g Pi C. To and other powerful levers lie modern onee n pear io and clog system of the rural sections wase for th. nplifting of humanity at the mhotr yeacu e(oto.Iut Pnrv. Sera pSrl@tfIn the ve1nR grounded upon the rock oP.song. The 'present time,.many [the sympathising el' Almost�,lt ins hoar .old, tangos dance had not been evolvull'I, done habitants. many ef. whom had never For niter belng eons t1 death from un aimless, wrl sling and twist-f done anything.to merit the infliction: Tnet+ra numherea Nuth rho lona, B The East Ends:members went by train ,;The old Oray Bonnet" was s arms Ing dlverslon of ohlldhnod, a.tld,moving i to Riverhead, and thence by stage: That perlehed r toa-soon. d plator., leer' as Impossible as the plot over a narrow road,.through u.desert 'Ti.end to have ri told away i wants, t0 quogua. Beneath "The Cotten Moon. Of an ilp•te-date melodrama, Thele - "I{ae Ancone keen x0by' P This road is now macadam, and u%ivarhled a er and o'er, pro fta poli;toly ;nothing served uP.at w nodal gatherings lint ahorus`.shlging, notniug,to brag of at that, but [lien But lute "The arra m NaWe's Hat"` with doughnuts and apples us nhlgide.; It'was a foot deep in sand, and the it's Hown forever more, the Particular of that tide are as indelibly �' And there Nes Pretty "Proddqli el' Avcoxdto, til the r circle of ar ad- stamped h memory's tablet r. the Grlef-striaken lnal nn: ala, mission to the.Inner cicala of society brand on the flank of n wild steer, We v,.gir !'Stir•.. Btu 9V N at sang, shorted.and picnicked, and`acv- qqI o ew Gnttam o' Zto areae was Investigated.escluelvely us:to his Whl,e others Yee too YPuns to die "Had to. Get OttV and Are an n sharp den Ins, Aral times w'e.' H or, her ability to add powerto the Walk." But at last we reached the And thea. will soon:beslumperfnK rumbl0;of iiia baso, or melody to the church, where Mr,.Bradbury. rostered ° Beside 'The LoneaCur ,pho,", soaring tones of .the tenor, or volume our loaf Interest in life. by laying out Then.sing to us the olid Bong, .to the "treble" or. alta And thus it the, order of oxercises for the three Tpe ones that naves die— to session.. We were puffed with. "bown.'on th Swan¢.:River," was that a singer, either nat11ra1 or; pTldo whin he told us that we were to Or t rl6hay,�INSllla Blv"I manufactured; whose credentials in )wave the honor and privilege of giving. And last=yell cad[ a rale the waren. i 'd F qql, eS thn eall to this regard were 0,:IsUd, was regarded' Elie initial performance of-his mastelr, Or "Nellie was a Lady,'•or, aq pwvgluable asset, while the owner. Piece, the "Cantata of Esther," which Stat.bettor', 'Pillar>Bnyne." qP the.best "rig" (horse and hpBeY)•1n we wore to rehearse from the advance yet, take away the "rag• %ease,, town and, withal, u. landed proprietor chaeta. _ni .e keg "us hearrl�rff gain.Gray,11 , In the curring.of the third day the And let us hear again tae,stratus en, a.large Seale, who was known t0 Ol 'Little bias a May,0 affair area off, before a large and And strum 1t on l�a byno geE off file luy find emit discordant rgpfesentative audiance. There were And Sung it laude anH hlgtb - Sounds, was summarily "froze out' by,nb deadheads, and the 6oxoffleo rn'<, That Sun, old roli P, Celpta fLLllyy.paid the conductor.Itis $75: a'day. H "Susanna, Ron, You Cry ' the ley stores and Priglda innuendoes oP. a also had the.comforting, I "Tho sweetest Story Ever Tolfl'. ' those triune fortunate In the matter of assurance that his pet creation was' We'd II%. to hear tool ht; voice and ears. Thera was nothing left ergo," after its.successful suburban"tr- "rhe Old Log Cabin to tht Lane iqr him but to sit In the shade oT into ou .," Mr. radbury, was; naturally'. wbuitt lin us about rl6nt t Y, And-'Mated n m the Cela, Cold Ground," PnPlgr stove and mentally offer % bun-the "King ,Ahasuerus" and-,I recall: Olve ve batbrp.we go, „' dmd dollars for the voice of tfiq young how'he startled the audfinicei when itq' And %terra u BSnr.y lla kb man:with the Adhm'f apple, :ytending�sting "Thm•e'oit Let RaiCvm Die!" (re-' And and wroth "Ola Black Joe." - ,Herring to•tae 6q-foot – - In the limelight, at tlie`leYt of'then gallows.) — --- — — cabinet organist C ,7amoa Henry Young of -"The Sword Siugbig school�t Kele held vyeeklytitn�of.Bunker Rfll" fame, prgduged a pro- the vtrrlotta v141ga,{nand by"e'eSUPfoli fquud gptprosDion tby hie ierrdoring'gR County Har@tvpi 'FkY dtfitY who vrpatY�tho PaiE oP 1"Ghat wicked Haman," Izoil witfl S W > �9 $fYlfp� oYtGr aen�Goorge B. Reece°of•Mattitµvk, was rpt pc i•t as secret r nUr asul dn„'and sett only the first, buE the !test Mordecai mal mauagert N''Sd{y du ltgs 1nsE{lpt`Ign fa - - entitled-to mo-p'n�.,than ggaua `tneuttg'p. G > The alglt was one too many. fol' hor pnw lit the great cengregatlan BOA ° ME.4RE�IG ON Urtcle Addy, and he unwittingly ox- The mention of the h'riday night 1) pressed the pent-up sentiment of mil- prayer.meeting takes me back to rbose'' Tp�T a❑ I�liens of men, women and even chil- interesting occasions. I Imagine 'that) HAD 'HARD ROW',T voice that he hardly carried In a Lona of I Prince, the kneeling form Of LlhcrU :volts that hardly curried to the .oc- Prince, and'I seem to hear Ihil far- e .+'jcUPants of the rarrriago Rldei`dttinn ;reaching tones of that clear, tenor voice I Ip ye, ride:" :''! ' that filled the church and passed out The wife of Uncle Andy's concave of the windows and doors, far beyond Sr bosom was a Woman of ultra-generous the. sandy open space whereon the atan's Apostles Spoiled Caillp proportions. Each portion of herhoodlums of the village were conical- In.anatdmy was strict conformity with. bled. No nun 1n,Lhis broad land could Meeting Days, but Nights the other parts, even to her feet; but match his regular prlvor, bi Poll,t of� If a truthful man was ever actuated forvidhess, ele:ivance sum sincerity,anal Were Worse. :: - by a love of approbation, and applause, l: have no doubt that his.petitions shot to'-exaggerate a statement, it was the put through the quivering:ether in a I local shoemaker, when hemade na straight line, for the seat of govern- bones of saying that in the making of hent of the'univeise And ,judging S'PR'AYER AfEETINE} REVERSESa'her shoes, he always used a base for from results most of these were ��:a last, and that there was never.any promtply acted. per, although hero ' .tilde coming over the fit, other .than and there one may have been pigeon-. ;Aunt."}Iit" Struck by "Cyclone;' brit that.the shoes were a little "too snug heed. over: the dnetep„' before they were And "Uptown” similar meetings were Hoc "Rom` Shoes" Exploded It. ".n•oksle hn. Slot n was uneinttool';'by-her' held In the "Lecture Room," or "Eat Uncle Andy Said "Daum." friends and n�lghbors, both In. public, Pot;' as it was .irreverently called, '+and out, as Aunt Rlt—this curtailed 'Eider R. Idall, angular, and sadfv Joel(- cognomen being ono ofthe middle syl. Ung In that co-ordination of the muscles By J•'G. 116NTTING, chins of her name, which was Mehit. so essential to grace'Of motion slideasy f'Jealonsy, envy slid impecunlosfty, able. of deportment, would enter.and stride ethose three—but the worst of these,ia One dark, .foggy and drizzly ove-. up the aisle. Mounting tine platform, .1'ealoesy, with envy a close second,and ening, as Aunt 1.31t was returning from he would offer up, in sepulchral tones, :the regulan^Friday night praym• meet- his well-known prayer, beginning with Impacunioslty suspended like a black, hip in the M. E. Church, corner of "Oh, Lord,,we thank thea that we have Pall Overthe two biggest guns In tho Maln street. and Greembort lane, a been permitted to meet once more on- oqulpm alt of Satan. The polnt •be-; heouless youth, who was also the this side of the 'holler' gaitPin' tomb.' twaeh,jealousy and'envy 1s ratherno, :'champion sprinter of that section of And the piping voice• of saintly Q Ilea.'county, bore. down from!the east Aunt ^L„” coming from the kitcihen jealous e[iy distinguishable.doorm,while Othello was. at.,a gait that exceeded the speed limit extention of he• long' poke bonmet,•an- 7ealoUe oP Desdomona,wh11s whoever fa by manymiles an hour. As lie ban he nouneed that she "took up the cross" favored with material, or any other noticed an ob)ect, a shade darker than to tell what the Lord had done. for variety of .prosperity, Is a Preninentl-.the night, looming up before him,, but her during the past week, And then object'of envy. it was then too into to avoid a cal- Jerry would monkey with. the her'- The childof affluence Is said to have- X1'111' He struck,head on, with ter-I montes of the scale until be struak the. Ueeu "born }with.a sliver s eon In his rific force, and Aunt. Litt. toppled over. right key, when all would'siI p , „ u uqy smma :in a sudden. squall Lot on a narrow-neck of land,. mouth;' and' by ,the same token; A. And there sho lay, upon her back,.df-; Between two.boundleee Bene I>ii and.. Jennings came:Into the world with a: reetly across the footpath. with asfn hoe in hia�b'and, He was a mansllght gle Illy of light from Captain ben. I'have recorded a trivialrincldeutconi,� ly,fbelgwfthe medium height, with slop- well's oom,sitting a room. window piercing : netted with the Jamesport CamP McBt- tha gloom, and dimly outlining her away back In the early•ilRties; g QHouldera: and receding chest, and ;placid features. She lay fleas for ai mg, jl$�sa",preaaram in the corn field 'was like +few seconds, or until others homeward Good people from miles around.'oc- ` yet`„ot the•,weather-beaten scarecrow :bound from the meeting"stopped in I cupfed the tented grove, and the wicked i end were y no what was `Sorogone',concluslen. Behind his was lass stednto�a�tsttting postero,and' epicuoualy iabsent bEatables means .verooi aolc Im was usually, and often casual- at once volunteered a brief account of I abundance, but the sleeping.arrango- 91 sPolcen of as Uncle Andy, but to;hor thrilling experience, -She said that mems could not have been worse, had Lsaao, when In pursultbf his Lary- Immediately after the cyclone struck thore been :a uo'uspiracy to offset the eke,,”,it was found to be more dipld- she knew not where she was,-nor how good results of the.meeting. Malin to address him an 'Mr, Jepnings, she got:there, but later she concluded Every bed imthovtclnity was en- that she had Passed away, and hers,gaged.by two or three persona,. and pita mornipg,In early summer,.who last recolloctfon;' pravioua to coming b the loft over Joe Skidmore's otore, at thse''obXoit of my remarks was bending too, was of having o:heated argument l',the station, was pressed Into per over tho'nandle of his bright.and well- with St. Peter, as to .the location oq..,as emergency Quarters for:men only. ,warn hoc, thaRlng viciousgabs at the _ ______ L'nffalo robes and horse blankets l wars ,Juxorlent crlbii oV bitter 'weeds inter, spread upon r,.and the lodgers •sper"sed with tha blades of fresh,young. ® were, compelled,;to sleep '-loads and ro; ,be heard the sound of carriage. polnts;' to utllixo the limited space. I�cc,ppeels. Straig4bhtening-the kinks out One night, when all was stili, barring of 1jis back, as aroset to bis full height' the.snorts .nod snm•es of the'slaope•o, ',(5'feet 'l), anLt shading his eyes with'; is cultured gentleman from one of the 'his thand, behei3 In the road skirting.' ;Iiamptons, addressed his nearest ped- 2hdtoornfleld,. one of his'nelglihore alt=' 4ellow do this wise; ,ting;eroat on the front seat of his car-.: -'.Bog Pardon, sir, but would you ay-all, .his fa fly,occupying the.,back. ldndly remove your toe from my oar. seat—holding the reins•over,a, oil- act ha order that I may take'.in the voices .horse, slid amfitng the while, ns ;one of the eight, Including tbo'cbfrP of the accustomed to a ilia oP'1'luxury,'and crickets?" '@i as ox of the Pren- h� fold up � nr IIIr�Qnmm s,t now P F,. ,' t '�h'flll gpll' 1VOW �r� i$ek9gt4 hltttle cloyat d'[rd,, Yia ,r r5 G}iyterinn`dkuj'gh at Barxer:VC "A toyohz lJ�C4 'a `tskt eoreo in one -Uppd and . �@ ,Ingetmy" $Ilor the;rewainder of page Does anybody thick" wo Usvo it '� , ; one. intro uo•� bbe"othsr,we toturn to ilia tawi ifhall On the editorial page the Sfax 8pgng.-: ,,loved" ountom by who Sing out agaful Joh❑ 8¢t G , Ing the'"present method, of OonduoGing led Bgnnexfloate over"People's Begul. buefsesa 7 It-seems ae lE town nr'onnd;'' 'old np aur Uandfal o. popes our town and go home, No ,gnko,,uo beoH„ as ,lioau Nomination for President, Ulyseee 'meoting,bad heen IonaawaywiEU, and oanuts or OMI193s no fan, no any O S, Grant,". A oompany.having parchas- anfEeplaeewebave a-lot of formdhty� P od�theeright of "Pcatt's patent Pi@ket and red tope. Who does not IS wit pI,thin g• ok BAckWaxd penco withoutrails" 1'ox the towns':oP, pleasure the toren meetings of Y ut ago,, En ontTnevnL n The winter wind Southold and Shelter Island, offers to, wben,thepeople°area from OrlenGPmut 'nud Frankliaville, and all the: villages bee waftod a waif.,t0 my wioket; s tailor' dispose of ilio right to use the same;' f'tbe Suffolk Weekl Apply to B. ff. Booth, Pres., Southold,: Weekly between, and really held n mooting 01 ed ati3 torn copy a April 29;' Wm. Vail, Sea, Peoonio, L B, Case, F. ilio Eown'S: people? :The goutler: sex,i Times, printed'in. Gxeenpbrt Ap B, B.Conklin, 1868 and tben in, rte eleventh year of. H. Overton, J. B. Terry, too,had their Share of the good,-tlmo, theand: others: "New Fall and Winter. pnbliontion, Buell G, Davis we Saxe because they came with thea husbands editor, The date being, Several y Goode"are offored at the Southold'Sap',• and fathers, nud-vieitod friends .living ,. .ply Store.by J:Albert Wells, agent. before the birth of-Tbe Wonder, or Tau ve�In Greenport John G, Champlin ad, along the route. Andthe bayed Well! TnevrotEn, Sad a full generation having A frlepd romarked to me on the evening the "Ticonderoga," of Tuesd4y, 'hile we were speaking of Passed away since it nvae issued, your in his unique his estye, the present method: "I really feel soy readers may be interested in what a'lO-: in his eve ad style,and at l peach t C, r for tUelboy y oaper'.ag4taiued more than a quartos B, peeve had ten.thovennd pooch trees. y sof to•da when I in more for sale. Dfessre. Clark, I{ranoher; and. of how much they are deprived. W Uy, °�;a 6ntar9 ago• tows meeting was the groat'holiday of „Wo take so,nnta o[tlmobat tram 1te foes." Williamson were then the Greenport f eat It was looked forwaed to wick :`. On the first oerdwainete,and "O":bne and HOxtOn9 the 9 meat the,hvolieat'antim ations of enjoy n e of the Times and in.the first col- Undertake and fitted"by Some`youths,wit no an eye to basineee i,nm the oxeoutors of Onpt. Theron B. IInd°xEdk°r. T. J.Vaaeant was in the w.ould,litivete(anas whore coal be Par• I.Worth offer his farm in Peconlo for Hale, Drual uggist cGy nteCe, +nOw oeoap(ed by. I oli'ueed^<@nab appfoe.an oranges ae were CapE. W Worth had died tUa previous year, Druggist George H. Oieavas, . ."Thee. tohe,foundnowhereelse; and then the g'O,F.Brown; aimed ones they were, none and hie death mode the flint break in Union 1)rugetore" was'then, se now, jdougbn ,ta, (S, the'�Board oP xnetees of the Sovtlrold 'owned by Dr• Brown.." a oftherl�akrng•powder makeshifts of the �iSdyloge Bank The Time advertise- sold Stoves and tinware at Ehe pfd stand, the were lighter and harp en Iia fan & Jacobs had the olSeapeet pp toy g w mentlo thoBank says it will be sd P ;erartaabetter than.any made at home, ,to>';�bgeineee 'every Tuesday, Thnreday, store in the place The firm o4 'Sisson tthOigraates6 trent of all wpe Old Euxde from 10 s,M to 8r,ar." Smith Uad beau diasohesonby 0O pied 1.fienry Hnnt-,V, 3Esq and Thomne J. ooasen6 and B H t} ugi iSti?Pttb s molasses cake,,, wade to °qa Sa ' y ,'living P ., s,sod moulded ox: stamped by ° ppnkltn are the oply re r0nenta- .Moore's briok Store OE tjte lfooflrpf Mnin; p Qiofrboprd with grooves aSt ill Srmr tree persona`wUp �were alive when itis Stxoet nae ship olisndler'm Ohinewmere. wnah.board Then IInole 'BUnk"was tng8rporated April.7, 1868, In those da�ye eewtug @ Ip' bo 'a , ,; Waloox .& i ether spine 'lTh°]txuefees bate Bred In' ,the following fall the rage and the"Floxenoe, ' "Gro• '�sifi"^GOrwln wojrld g oq1 bud'birch, "'ity� ;.variotta other otdoNI,eiI Y r r, vex & )raker, W,ee eeler &WilHen; s Glbbe,. Howe W ld a4,ad"yarbe .an Yloak-a beer1-1,11,1­1 that I� Therop�' j orth 1887-60 'Pivkle&Lyon' were sold 13y Ohsrlee iwae7hlCe no otherdnt� ''hat any one t'? '1IIegry,Prk�ez'1y00+ 1808-76 - 1 Coxwm, H. Tut$ill„David Wiggins aiand,aton o�er't"sated, The men gatheredii4 knpte �j ,rNathnata Antoae, 8raaeher, ;L, Hammond, and. the, espom - ,,, , - B %Franklin: gsdRompsxed note�a se to l t c gpremtah'Gbldemtth .1871—A6 tnikod over iy a <Q(rBI 1ti�(1=BG others: The Schooner enoaerof-the pusG,year, and a yQ fn, was la4nohed in 1808 froth dhe'yard Of thein plans for the,horefng;,eepeouf Thee J t$1PGo smttU,1877'';,7E IIetoham&Smirk in Grdouport The, btiainese meeting;lodlled otk,�'6heY`oPr4'� " illinm;l'utl 1877-68 ; I S• ��s e nW , + Long Inland-hlgvigaElon Oe„ .by' wQq of the nssesibied;fgthe s 60 tl�� lbeitPAlberEsou 1878—60 Tuthill agent, 6 James Shp N,Y„ gave fisrad va�loun plana PropoaeCl b���p��8• � WfllramiWzok`Uam,,1881—61 notice to the p!rblfo m`lag or or,, New advanced ideas aucdeome,`yolL° t`i7�' Qan "`�moses,0”Clgvehmd,1888—$8 Suffolk ,6reenporEand Oxi@gtlttiat they th-lbte of enEhaetaQmy�;wio�,j}'�x�a Ips Jo(rn'0: 1•eland 1895 82ev "pooetttan whiohh'tl'�d�°,7.�A,ilbr' li�^ �>Frpu )iij ti3Overtgtj 1887-70 aou]d tako paoeage;for�7ew Yolk u°enr�' P, Pr 1887 •89 iLueeday;by jhe Steamer 'River,42 bj% adopted. Batapme(oldfrgee�ya E^� ^,yRon�,y ' ,per5,y Ca t?George 0:wf abbe Southold wpe ' tired Stfe world withyq rp "q,0£' S.,lr,nobt� i7 ;HatohlPso4 H Cnso 188T—09 P '- luu ti7nb ylpaplf} @ then wltUoat n"look, sad We oovld take qo� daown 6he �. , rr,, O ld'�Hv r 7 u iJeeepq Latham, 189 900=78 'passage to, artfocd'on the eteamer,Sun•; nrdoF of,the planper, PndO?Y d �arO L Qoldsmrth, �, t Bates, by going ',to Green Side'illi the Ehotigbt thathe,lwJ4jd ,pa ^, ;r�Hvpldsmtth, 1891—,71 nhinei Cap e ab r s e rry port:". The Oonn. Volley Railroad UadM1 pjsenior'epine ds�y,-q�° ),h�,-1, ,) t 1,t xr , , `,rJ�ghuaSis j�.owe11,x1891 78 not been thought:,of, and Long Island'' thiage,toeult4�m8e1 gposSl �Y � i '„�J�ra� �usJerome A802 ,7l RatlFoad frame were ruaaiug on the "�1�3zeagpte�dot. ,Q°P t';(�Sl ,� ,T;t r"w;g,� uIl HRStoa,�1'S96 70 ' 'Soutflse�t5ls,ae',fnr ae Ielrp:only Thai '�Qih little k of@fit tiY `r°, r s° �e i E ?i �A°adelnY',at�4outh0ld woe �r a�Q�altales ao netroo oP a,ingF! �elodi u>” q b Oe}nher,t:�1887r , uiB"atevCo4 tot ime¢s`1 pun b h>�ad 1 ° ,� �� sdG q °P°4 k q ,�; y a ^tjnleave�¢he sglorde Df 59F`t „ h m4 G4ey�°Ohl on1, : * bk ^ y;llmod,Comtj` e ae?Prinoi al logy'+droWninfl rn the bxpokasrHq °eteeo@�yeetye u�h � moolc, 'Tlre,farm"of Willtsm 61lieCt; P(deoeRgedl ooneieEtng'gf YQ�lgropef9 then e❑o ed s wonderful gift,to bq able by tho magna- lanxve�y, ie I'lloffers, fontnal ; ` �oirree; ..The compapy �� 1y tiem of our preeenoe'end tlia cheeriness d "o" j 11-i s 1'raoltation by C. L. Sanford, The $ell - 'hlnson H�'Oase' Josiah Albertson a Bnoy,"in whioly the buoy bell:proved . ofpnr greating,'to bring au❑shine and v Albert Albertson. .At Rlverbead, o where ershance.was gloom, and we ,ijeeIf of move importance than the joy p , ore Taft,, Sucoessora to Davie �& ,a rob bell. 'Tway very intelligently expect. that henceforth brighter faces.. F on, advertise a book end stationery i and fmpresaivefy rendered; the audience I .will greet us, for it is o aura.fast. that +the east end ot"the "old court ,__ f everyone contributes more ox less to the p f clapped far more, and got it. brightness of.our daily life, and few can ` eyasi il$ometUi❑g New," But the humorof the evening resohed f 'following,Oriental ad. appears; its climax, when after mach porewaeion , resist the magic of a cheerful greeting, u;,i3tile a fow, pounds of the Early —he'ie mooh 1, you know—Iho Doctor' especially if neaompanied by some tell, �.lotpEo�, �1 60 per pound cash. No ' 'I ing joke, Yet we must not forget in:our i ,bt6tin two;poynds or less than one played apd Bang "Alabama 0000." own pleasure, that there will go forth ,o� dleeut t6 ono address poetpgid by ,Sam Johnson's Dawg," Rod "Tho Ta❑thill, Orient L.L'; Thore net peanut Stand," with much of the old- from your now home some Good and bitter v'`°be n a lank of advertising matter roans, that tears will f5l, and bones Aaemoet of the�lEeme are duplicated Gime rollicking goat,, and our sides will crack; yet the charm of your pres• r$'$reut (sages of Ehe paper from nohed in. oonsequenae. Then with; a ! once will not fail you thea, for the many,' b/they qre taken .TUG copy which rich Irish brogue, Mrs. LizzioTarry, in 1. ofinethae„Ehelname yof Henry D. „g,ctie'e Request,”told how Ted, with who come in tears will go forth in glad-j "insq$bed on It 'hence I. am in• use,. and those whose sunken cheeks'!! R' e osEhat;;genEleman for it. whom Katie was riding. scuta not"hug betoken age will go out with rounded • 'r xtI her and kiss bar swats lips for hie hands ones and showing their teeth equal. to'' y, uthq d Jan, 29, 1896: were Be fah of the reins"; so She bluely- Ian ha Uncle Jo, But aG I nm prone t ingly asked,"may l dhrive for a minit7" y happy �t <Unexpected�h� H&PPeneSli Then Dame the grand ohorila of Auld to reminieoense—in tact so much eo that �LaAhursday evening, Laog Syuo,Home Again (from Hunting•, alndy once said to me, ,You must be Eon or some other foreign shore) and I awful old,"And,thaG was many years ago,, hder the cover of moonlight, a are so so I try not to remember as muoU as I v' H - - much more, after whtoh games became did-let me recall for the moment the P Il?oreone, urged on by Mise Sarahl the order of the.evening, during the estcpswooped down upon tho residetice IR m which the players we betrayed first time I became intimately connected �l! r'r%J. G. Hunttingof this vrllage,b dF P y� g ' with Dr. Huyttfng, Many will remain. in oR modest and excusable bilerity. a ;6 e•o oonoerted'effort to pull the kuop l,r.. ; bar the concert given under the direction ns , After amee Demo.plates and napkins, hie;door•b'ell(apparently) IIie'Urave; 6 of Dr, HunEtir g, for the benefit sf the if,6 ventured to the door, when ttis but the goodies can't be discussed for ', old Southold Lyceum Association., _ AU 'tti�ron'g''pouredinto the �Uat,. and tberel fear'oE Mr, Ed_itor'e blue pencil; only. mel twenty-three or four years ago,—so r"n '•, Caterer Wells'coffee. I wondered what, ;br gau a medley of declared eurprise,oyn• 'th'at lvae made, dotfee beaus I eu long, yet there lingers in my memory to, t atulations, laughter, baskets, boxes, p night one of the pleasantest recollections • - 'ttoee,:but the aroma of it was so bewitch- g ppaksges, oto, °I❑ that even we semi.invalide rashly! of my life. I recall the cheerful home ? he Doctor sitting in his easy chair, 6 of Mr. Peak, the warm greetings we re• �,•,'tth',paper and pipe, was taken with a entered upon the drinking of it, with .salved from all, the company of singers i of unexpected dnmbfoundednoae, lneomuia staring.❑s in the face, And sol whe had assembled, and myself unused be soba Tallied andgot np and shook with-best wishes of boat, hostess. `and, to public singing and a little inclined to u ",,"Ol'nronnd, Atter some prelims ga�ets, the good-nigUte'were said. a ve ONE of THEM felt afraid; yet so kindly r treated o, and, 3ollatting, Henry G. Howell made i :Emittimd,Feb.7,1898: r felE'gabstained by theft iufluonoe, and I,Uis happiest efforts in an address _ all of the rehearsals.became a season, eio,me. In reply the Doctor assured Mr, IiowelI's address of we loomo was of rare happi❑eeS to me, and a reoollep „ w u�ienoe;thst he ooald .not make R ae follpwe: le�' "In the arrangements made for this; 'tion after these yeareI love to think bF"and then immgdiptely proceeded of and live over in memory, when life is Lo�dmalre one in wUiph be feelin 1 ex 000neion�'I was requested to give the g y not so full of pleasure as then.. Would `pres"eed'hie�appreciaiiou of the thought- address of welcome. I wondered what. it bring too much sorrow into our pleas- ' stglueee .that had brought together eo' that'realiy meant,for I knew it as a feat. orae if I par a alight tribute 'lo those �rmauy frfendeof big earlier days. He ;thats'veryone•wne;glRd to see you return. y i who were then with ua 7 tribute t I those o e g�1R�vodUy6Ixe.Hunttiugin,yneaE]fttle� case morn to the old familiar scones. he it requires not sPokeu words to keep 'pddress; necessarily impromptu, (10111*; •But atter Some though I concluded I_, Breen their memory. Of Ihose Go hl!P• pxebmslve,'-.aonof8e,a bitltremulous wrthl was to concentrate all the gladness of„ fulI cannot omit Mr, and Mrs. Peok, ;einotton but quite a gem in Its way , everyone, and while they could not sit.,. .whose welcome woo like one of Mendel- qeu came do oxigi❑nl poem, writtet for shoat hip, ]lip,;hurrah I it devolved' esohu's eonga without words—Ueautiful ge0000eionby Mrs: Haunch Oonkho .there ore on me to try andnmake you.:: and felt mostlyin the heart; Mrs. Annie brief;but appropriate, and,like all-:her believe everyone,was shouting 6urroh Snelling, who never' forgot anything �(Sqe e;full of bhaI I This f7.use follow Mind �waviog' figs, eo please imagine. 'for our comfort and happiness; Mrs,-El- Deft! y�' Phe$Ruute&SGr;eRur" tha flied ,there,is a very big noise just to wet- -mer, oneof the siugers• to whom you song that"hire Oarrrell+o'werre evon-eang, come you. We are also pleased tot a paid the rare compliment ofaaying al at u Putilio„ twenty years'ago with-Dk itis not a bad penny retgrning, but one Should you ever want a help sr for con- ]Iunttmgf,aea000mpaulsl thio tome wlthy brig t,fresh, ane fall value in making cert work you Should select her first of store U. Trt;,Overton ,;' J.'was? ooi� llifebrighter and fresher fqt everyone g_ or x11. In memory even now'I say.hear the --- whp;oomee in contact with you _ I'ie,qI -- ------ — - -� strains of 'The Land of the Swallows„ `VSs' 'ryptah"+,�mpreseed maathen so mush 1611 r- >v� t r, , s= + , ipxopr},etor toffurniUh matohes,'while we; Mrs. Oonklin'a.poem follows: s oseghave�oroeeedthaliorder laud„and am0'of h pipellofl peaoe3'errstng Eliot ,nherrle❑da orooryoat➢1 Throoghavfetu or- theottietn=gt that 30 It gona'to vnrlona beaaE ful and"touching hallgd,0 titled= doers " planes, bat I venture the assertion'-.that .Little Gallie ”W"mere,' and"will eyes nope will ever fm•gat those plensant fall The worse aomelnden to-night pledge the fieryleen of oar Old'. 00mra a With memories,gleaned from the pathway of days, and too crowning glory ofthe.son- life Mr.`,Sturgee to assist us, whose vigor is - cert, �;1'he Three.Blank l7rowe' Andou*root novo maraca in their alehc. soil up to concert,often Sorely one so I began my .pleasant friendship, must be very hard to please who is not The days of our youth, full of promise and which has always remained unbroken, overcome with so 'much honor. Yet I hope, and I ammost happy in being permitted feel you will stand it or I should not When life was all fresh and new, to welcomeyon to-night, and pleased toAnd sweet posemsnme lay jset Wand, dul'B heap tl0 mach upon you at one And friends wore faithful and true. know you ore always to remain among time. Have I-in- these few imperfect us, even'if,-like Uncle Jop, 'you and I 11 Those anGool•Osy friendships, go absorbing sentences made you feel t You y wet- and sweet, ain't lie young lie we to s to an`and so I:dome 7 that we are all glad to.see yon, so The tender love lingers stilt cannot look forward to many ye❑Ttl�. glad.we were afraid you would not know And the retrospect brings to our hearts te+'• How The tome feeling.olEngs to every it unless we told you 7 Are you not sure night native of the east and of Long Island, — The old-time rapturous thrill. how glad all seem to be.to finallytoil nowhere find he this groat footstool got could you bad eo.hearty s -welcome, so And we Almost toot to nun6dmte rime, - - book to its old streets and waters, that .warm friends as are here tonight to do. And youth Is again our own; never lose their hold, however business you bonor 7 If not,then las my mission Ana the sweet young faces are near us once. or duty maybeen a ,keep us away for a season; more, and in truth..Sonthnl9 4.s M...ur--+-_, failure, mid my efforts in vain; with answering look and tons `,aagelone wkiok:Natare has done 'mnoh' but be that as it may, I will Hover retract ,o make lieaatifod and now with its one word I've said, never cases to Le "nForut lrmn❑y we love eoe vision 1, zwell-- a we Beek m vain aha,le'd streets, which are doe largely to glad that my old seems friends are here again, The fortunes of lite have scattered them fa•, Yn"yxd6" friend Mr, Psok, is lie obarming and to stay. It enema to mo tont Thom. Their destiny none and tell, 1a r oE:as one can]d wish, with Its creeks, as Moore,the poet, has written some ver•on, • gat to-night,a wataomlagurawa we Come, I ''tnud the magni6eout Sound on the ' lies peculiarly witfith yo for this on, I will In ageotlonste spirit end truth; �xtli Oertainly tbose.�who larded at withwhich, with your permission, I will k7apny,to and in our"m+dat again rwn Harbor in 1040 and Heed their close my,greeting. These vamed'friends of our youth' 0 lots;and founded 9oathold,nammg �Aha done not a mooting like tole make emonde „Their bright,genial presence ngalp le cava, recognition of toair old home in For all the long doers you poen wandering With the..cordial hand and volae J +n rlsnd, Southwold, mode no mistake, away so the sear reminiscence grows real sgyIn r, , r�R "'T❑esu.thus around youyour youth's antV And our thankful hearts r;jelpq s� , ,oxye]"we Oro all 'nat❑xally prond of purl friends, ' _`•+ 11Om& Born Its You were a£ ancestors As smiling and kind as on that happy day 7 we trust their wandering feet no longer I,Jvfin avealways done honor to, 8011th- Though Reply o'er soma of your brows,as o'er shall rest on a foreign shore, ,•ol Ifhavlug a -0ama which none leve mina. ( May their beautiful ➢oma dna their old truoi i The snow-(allot time they he otcalicg—what friends ,ver dishonored, it iepartlanls$y 1jEEing then 7 I Content tham forever moro.a �liQtyou return at last and Eta Yourselves ��" Like Alps m too sunset,Ehus lighted by wino, - in,Ehis beautiful home; and,it is certajn- 1 We III weer the gay tinge of youth's roses The Eagle gives a list of the 88 poet #,,,1 a matter of congratulation and on agafa offices in Suffolk Clounty, in 184$, and �Byidence of great good-,:fortune, that you "'what softened remembrances Boma o'er the the salary of each at tont date and its 1pe've been able to,eet4ls,as you hovel ❑Sart, Salary at this time. From these we emote your relatives,,both by blood and In gazing on those we've been loot to go hng I quote: .Southold $122.75 and $1000, The sorrows,the"j ole of whlah once they were the Else of marriage , -Those of;,,us wool s part ! Greenport $188 08 and $1700, Orient p'te comparatively alou6,wrtk11VI otogtIll round them, ae vlslons of yesteraay $8139 and$547, Outchogue $98.84 and K' u in I When weary lot oil Rp�pYrd whO - , rung 1 $426, Mattituck $57 44 and $747, James= 00j6find no eympeihlz dg[ado who can or e,Aa lettere Rome band hus Javfeibly traced port$32 49 and$467,Sag Harbor$758.27 o ids"to extend to ue comfort in our( when hold to the rtamq wilt stent out on 1116 and $1900, Sonthampton 171.01 and tt� sight— . +bryRules, almost envy;Sou in Eke cissa } so maps a teeung•t,at long seemed effaced j $1700, .Fast Hampton' $179.03 and 'lit eltuation yon npwiproseeasr lauxround mnewarmth of o moment lino tole Rimae to $1000, BridgehampEon$125.27 and$747, �r '�aegonarebyyourro�Ar,fami�yyre9rexd, tpgRt „ " . Huntington $27619.and$2100, Babylon eAdy and glad to esE9ndf 4of t'4¢ every 3 jgot rtet oar ealetelme a gu+gnea at the moat, $155.15 and $1600, Patchogue $187.67 coin-,toii,.and who nevus 1rm�lA nearty�t1Fs l p,Qloan Arayelat,abq few.wepol}t sear; and. $2100, Suffolk (now Riverhead). k �� ' $150 b7 and 1900 sial get°giros, however many times>m o days 7A❑a' ft even is anneeaoa ana7oet $ y,pord offices. �o¢�•ehnll call. In oldt t�nres se ,4r,�near f tomo,.hear hit could echo u,. trove eines been created, inolading, Neiy. Yi'kofhonorthe -ireedpmrot too oftyl Ahvfauimaywec)Do' ho❑ tms'ghort life. Is Suffolk, OtienE Point, Peoop ltov to, Prom- se odalthough-I was,neve(' real r :epee are Ised Land, Shelter Island, S. I. Heights, O�rlear"lig to what tt me@tet yet to 'behalf X,Ta meet,In some-world ormoxe permanent South Jameaport and Manorville. Sag hall, I od0;49A,the freedom of QouE{ii7i( ,r'd➢4eg Harbor beaded the list 1843,and now �ae IIel(�gt1�dplea4t erg}V RdY1b 7a1�f¢Mlonjlg7 oT o aR other m ttilB a11agtrning Northport stands BCet W1Ek $260D. ts¢ j �j y ting oame foto oxrsteuce and uoe, the old indeed what wao,a stere in those days dr;�,Enrron TRAvsnen- What/ I hesrd` , �� without a shed 7 Now the alrura7c ehede ' ;te�call of "J.H.O."-Por the bo e''-to #ol; Doe was purohpaed-b"y tneP.reebyterian 4 yr r in different parte of tka pillage arenlnrge- low,.hfm, I started out but `Someho}v`3 church, audby the removal of,the�briak ly used and more or lees appreciated by ' muet'have been a little behmd'or'elge Y story and the¢ddingof modern improve- those who drive into "town"to visit or 1; 'Stopped the way, I found. things counts made into their .present^neat r�pp, y R to trade. BARtle changed as:I tried to follow bis chapel. These memories nod many others gross eta 9•thCOe h the village I I remember I found "Uncle Jerry". etill.buihling'. 7 ro p t g g in my mind as I read and re-read "J.H. now;that I.•went into the Methodist the scows and dobbins, but "Uncle C's"sbetolhes in your paper, I trust °''ma ti,hg house of which hes oke, and Foster"was making the,_cof es;as they r p were needed. In carrying the coIllc at he will favor the "boys" with more in 'ataybdto Sunday school; the prep¢ra- that line. n m P. i tion for thatwae—nut the stud of the funerals the box wagon .bad given way y Book,hula Feb.el, 1898 y"Iuternatfonal"as nowadays,but rather to the long "eahoonet"wagons, at loess - _._._..—_-. an application by my mother of an ea two of which had been brought from. %'`F/ r�A Belated Hobble J `�%�� tra emognt of soap-suds for the cleans- Orange Clonuty by Albert Prince and �yQh the Old Traveler Boys ofJmy para! I was expected to lack Halsey'Iuthill. g, y,y p (good moxnin old friends our ;deoent,andtporhapethis was tdhelp my At the gun-honso "Judge" Hazen laces look as natural se sunshine, and I 'kea`ragp.;aleo, My. teacher, t`Uncle" was roudy to greet his friends with his don't Be, as you are a bit older than Lhther Wells, sad the preaohors of those quaint salutation, "How are your.Pbysi• when we bode one another good bye at ' daysOrobard,` Lent and Frost—have cal functions tn.day7" Hamoved after. the "Run," after .those reminiscent +ggge to tbefx rest, Wban they:came to ward to the house now owned by A; walks on those pleasant autumn days. myffallior'e house they "returned 14Zu¢rtyand died thane, I think, The Yoa wit no doubt recall that in our iGl ankh ;after Sale, bosfdoo "asking n "lecture room" I was sorry to bave eaunterings ve eased by the churches jb�,ee)!i}tig"betoro. J.H.O."pass without n more extended of Ehe village with only oneuel rater: ,Whoa I at It on from the .maeErng notice. I have no doubt that he could enaee to them, though they do not look fill a column or two with the glee its for ae000iatione and interests fuse ar• hofjg9, -Mr. an was living) in the p Landon house, an d`. .S arra' walls so long confined, but still sate q • able from the lite and youth of the town; li ranks and to house were gone. It treasured in his mind. end many familiar faces .and voices i"✓+rr Daniel Terry had moved his shop to. iseemeahard to believe that she,house- y Dome trooping into memory at mention - ggw;Mfee Jorusha Hortou's,and that of: the land now owned by Samuel Dicker- of thih a wbo precohed and worshiped Danfol Terry—built j ust'60 years: son,to a spot near the milestone mrd al:, in them in years now for away behind i eo near to n "mud-puddle." When L as, And now as we are near to the I she only ones between the - own the Bret hmee which my father, .Homcn house and the Ooohrnnhouee, Methodist church, we will, with Me. owned r t.hnt shop to f,; d her shod I`etopped at Squire Terry's, and was: , Booth's permission, sit on hie stoop•and I , ever So:much interested in his "Sheep "forward"—tke71inrl hoofs didn't need recall some of those things thst BOOM Outten,"as it was called. That was a, ehoeingl—thisgnestion from "Uncle" most ready toregpondto our efforts at John Ledyard greeted me: "Do yr u i round platform perhaps seven feet in recollection, tbongh fora part of them Par- diameter, with its axle set at aslant give the old main any grain, eouuy 7 we shall have to go back of our own per• nn ' s S answered,"'No,:Sir; we give her some olrr%'the. .perpendicular. The sheep conal memories, ' I' 's" cern" That day learned that om•nwae. lied up one aide of this inclined So far as Southold is oonoeened,Meth• f y ailled grain, and ¢nothox day, years: e and:its weight turned the wheel, od{em proper bad its birth in 1706, In r, later, Ilearned that England wheat Ob ran over a 12-inch wooden pulley that year Wilson Lee, thea Stationed 'was called oars. Before that, N-had Tr a feathered face; this pulley had -a somewhere in Connecticut, made a mie- v'tr failed to nnderatand why. Christ's dieci- sionary visit to this then sparsely set- 1111 §�'which by menus of a lever moved , ttl dasher of the ohurn. In later years plea fa parsing through the fields ate tied hamlet, and found a welcome into " ' home and aonfldenoe of Abigail r,Llgof Deacon Cleveland—I thick—¢ corn; even thoughthey. were hungry I the .Thememor otthnE visit to the bl¢ok• Serd lle which had been used .for that y Ledyard.Moore, and there to a haadfnl a; y Smith's was ever associated with the r urpose; and I built the refit of the ma. of the new eeoE, preached Southold'e ali�ee,' Although it wne rather heavy, shop, even after it became a part of H. Ilrgt Methodist sermon ,py;dog "Watch"could turn it; but he !fienninge' .barn and until it was torn La the years.immediately. following, dawn. was visor than the sheep, and ob7aoted _ meetings were chiefly held in the homes ' to 30 lions were overruled, bul'b's'' , The mention of the "Swallow" re• . of Mre. Moore, Mrg, Peters (now owned - 1 an lls a story of the fishing days,. to this sad 000npied by Mre,Rebecca Downs) ltda t o maey exaeptione that I itnally,l 'ieifect: One day while the seine scows and Peter Vail,deter the home of Ras- ,ad a stay. "When 7: ranched. the school grouudei were °aft at anchor, and the. "Swa4. eel Vhil and xeplaoad by that now oc• rIt liTiok read a )nonce—iu which my" ,.low"was:also at anchor with no one on onpfed by his eon Wm, B. and grandson ' fat or hnd;taught-lind given's, board, see Squall acme up,. the wa, Allred R.evdtamilieg, Ihave often board ter became:pretty rough; some of. the a Igoe 'to a wooden ethuotare. LnEer,,, my grandmother d tascribe Peter Vail, Ap bands were rather excited, and one 'of. th+s waBe¢ieed and a story of bxrok was, tdas in sooiat meetivge 6e'joined in sing tions;finder it, than.making room for i them called out lustily, "O Swallow, ting "Salvation, oh. the joyful eoand," r:= - - ' ' come and help us," whsle tears rolled down his cheeks. another department. The if which' ! The Ooodlift store an( , abed that wne than'a%tonsively patronized rr r Daring the earlier years of what the 'mafned.fn the 'sentry" where rt hndi� etootd by it lacked nofrfdr company; and adherents of the old.first ah arch regard. - ---`awee,holunateputedaenterofathev_ilege ----- -------- �_ and, which been .'x Afton the;prase t:so 01 build.a ed as the new doatrrn,_^ - ;I lie and in fs6d Southold became 06 PrORO Ing j)r ii6bbard died in 1806, After him rought with it more demouRtrat I Belf with Rev. Thoma oam� W. 0- HOYLI Orlando 8tafford, or ' 'Id settlers, 1 stati6n by it , Gan S, Jayne, John 41-mutroug, u, B. I vid forma of worship, the 0 on in charge. In 1784, eleven Sin most a f them staid, 0 0 It- Stephens David Osborn, 30111, Nixon, servative Presbyterians. mUO1I given to years previous to the preaching Of ill Joaa�ll Reason. n was (in linifier- having I,all things done decently and in first sermon, there were but 211 member The Rev. Mr. House ' order,"looked with scant favor On thal of the donominAtiOn 0 tile Islan Th laid order) tile Wvanthu�l. preach" to 0 1, clean, officiate in Southold, and by those whose of their� fir8tappointmallis to memory goes book about sixty years, fill n ill new forms and strange larval Clar Bud JROO will be remembered as the appellant�Of shouting brethren;and Voliversely the were those bf John lien Occupying I and 1898 th the Rev, J. K, Ingalls t new lights"Almost shivered at Contact Rlokhow.. Between 179 11 apit of tile Universalist church. ohers have boon appoint- the Pu with the severe orderliness of their following preB The question at issue was as to tile Presbyterian friends, who flousidered ad: oripturidness Of tile peculiar doctrines themselves foreordained to what they Robert and SYlventer Rutold"Houl L' of Universalism. If I realamber light- M Combe, John Clark, Jacob Riokilow, ly tile debate, hold in tile Ul"verhalist deemed scriptural methods. I remain. D�vid Back, IN.Phoebus, Andrew Niola- week of Ad Brown, John church, was continued flit"int a bey when a Ind, in a 0311113-11100ting fit 16. Joseph Totten, Do James cam ovannig'. many people Carlo from long jamespeyk on old lady with much ain. Wilson, Cyrus Stebbins, distances and remained 11111,11 A late hour Samuel Marvin, potot Jayne, BiTy" thuBinsm and evident sincerity bell, vith unabated AmmeHl, mot to say ex- Sobtfaud, John Fileguit, Francis Ward, outomBut; Rod the 00at"OVOIBY At son's thanked the Lora that she was not a T F%m-1, Henry Redstone, James 0016- uages developed something'near 111,111 Presbyterian," which was eqnsied by Ln, M. B. Bull, L, Andrews, John humly. 'And too result WAS, that L. IN Tompkins, 60 ROE' t A little wear and tear of brAln� an Admirer of John Calvin, who on an- Kline I Nathan Emery, 11 (3, occasion solemnly expressed hil COLOR Carpenter, Ezekiel "old, Sam- I after"a I I of other uel Bushnell, Arnold Schofield, John and late boom for BARRY pool) 8' "An I thankfulness for not having been pro* BoyEadda,Olive" SYIOB, B- Northrop, 0 contestants ilgil proved ilia truth of deatinated a Uothodist, Though for V Stewart, IN. jowett,Fitch Bush,John big owl'doct"'En—at loost to tile Bet". aran Ebenezer factioll of himself Ind hisco religionists, manyyears the two denominations did ii Smith, Samuel Gorjs, barmel D. Alto 'being "OURVIUCE]d RgRiIISL I'llur perfectly B�Owfi, Reuben Dar I fild,And pet-hops now do not ton Jacob Hall, will,, were -,of tile Santa Opinion Still-" Ferguson, Eli Donnie ade on eitbor Hoe ,eye to eye," yet beneath the our- Humphrey Humphreys, W., All Wil. I Wink no convorts were in Opinions idol tor any a n 8 few of seeming Bootarioniem there wall felt Henry Hatfield, S Horton, idoulged. n reserve of latent brotherly 'love which 1,1, jui rOVE0, Noble W.The as' YrU' After Mr- Hanson' came E. S. Steel; only waited for time and opportunity Foso, 0. 'V, Ammormau I . 6amfku, and on incident in connection with his John Luckey. (fill left at least one fatally rally help to Answer the ques- to be revealed;and twouty-five years ago k bollill him fit this oint tion "Are our boys wormo than boys a namess 0 and no hand-olaoll van ever more hearty an in tile list the RE, 88 begin to sound fa- used to be 7" Ilmlor big alleation a Shiners than that of ,Udole" Albert collar to age approaching three Sears series of evening Meetings were befog years and ton.) do, Ratio. R. in"d in the meeting ho"ings"Rathtile hill' .Prince I that man Of rare for oy of Than. followed Alexan Go one 61 those Oven M Ill spirit, Bad grave, orthodox er Ed. IN yenned, W, R, Stafford; F. W. SizorI iltout IVRS knObling In the Alta' A"gAged ward Hnutting. when they I cot. J 11rippett, JAMES Ranauall T, Daven. in player', Some IOw.IiVml boys who "a" tage prayer moethign.l Lik Oth- port Theron Oideorri, and Blean S. often diStillbod.tile cu,uing�, iRifled tile ers, their haDlItswere in adv of their ifeb6ird. No, Mr. flabburd was Maine- h "ildow opposite to him anti digollfilgeLl thing of a doctor Is wall Re A PrORO or, ill, contents of A spult-�uq wiliall, they heads.-- and Rude pills that acquired quite A reP- foulp,oviosly filled flom Capt. Bmij. A Secomd Belated Hobble Illation, locally at JeRsi,; sort there wee 5 wells,oow-y�rd, fall in his face. With- r, tile outraged 1�12 tile Old I,Traveler" Boys mulm lad of' five Or six YeRrd whogo, out baltilig-ill his PE3Ye is handkerchief eigniente0y 'eftiberrialmly draw il I Arintootisidered themasoval 1) You may well congratulate yourselves for Ali lJ.R0Ativ0JY- iron, his 130okeL, allied the filthy thatyon haven't to dopohd upon two 'They were Of A 90RM0118 SIZE, And ill dratiolling1romllis face slid colithatie-a i half of Oita was millindcrea a 'rhme were other many aftsm hig prayer to tile Olid. . ,ones for locomotion in Such traveling doBe foi-all adult, One clay tile glint for� )a]formanites in tile Sawa line too in- ls this: two good]age Are bettor. When acres Blight Ailment divided one; and ailing to rohno, And I have 911101 this swan is only 80 or 90 he can trip tucking one half.into 1118'p"ll"Of A Pre- Ono only AS leading to answer tile ques through,that snow at quite A lively pace, served allarry, Bile Swallowed it aud� Lil,'tillit I Spoke of A mini.Ito Rgo. bill when he gets to be real old—even placed tile other half in its little box, Wall. After Mr. Wool C'me J. A. all(,ill& box beside the cup of sweet- Fda, lie, Fzrft Jogger, Aigivia R. Lent to the days of two sticke, why It makes moats oil the top shelf of tile clipboard, (tile little pale mail of marvelous vitAl". Bamnan, him puff and blow like a tired PIOW-Ox Then 8110 left tile room- it), Joseph Ii. Fersb, 81EVAk. �BRUIAU, in grans ground, Now this Youngster, likonlany othom, N'01"119 0901131-d' Edwin 01,11-iii, Thos. I think I Boarciely need an was find of Sweetmeats, And reasoling stclbetisou. Mr. BLO"hmlsoll WAS A k if the I]. It WAR good for auntic, Most be Imitations of the other day contained shelf, young min, vivqCim18 aml social, and that flha tome of tile Older find rame modatR mem, gm,L�f,r him, clambered to the anything which might be deemed offort. brought(Iowa tile cup and box suit pro. h,us of his ch1l,ch whispated that be immitate )its Atiattle; tolling I, pretty jolly for a minister; bill sive; because I Am Sure Son all under. caPded tOolf pill in a obarry skin, Ile �'Auut Betsey 1311811Y," alwaya Obilit- olood the intent, tip tile h awallowellft. Itwas very nice; 80 Ile Able, Sought to BRIM their fPIrs And sa"11 I As was noted at that Lima, the M. II out another in five and disposed of BROLI I I,LAW well, We Inflat ll�flkqf R!'10RAllcol church of Southold had its beginning in half in ilia Some way, His fegBtiug was far I�im, for he is�eokiu A""'0, 1705. In'1781 the first circuit Beall than intUrrupted by a ORII to dinner, N6xbcmEIO W- Hit"rd! RSau Ray- which oolisiflted of baked beaus and oth- Milan' Stephen Ru9hfie. B, , er things, which he fit' zi all of Long Island, bat whether estah. a heartily, in flu Bauriond, L. D. Nickerson, 0. S. I - lidiied in that year the records do not hour or two there VAR a very sick boy; Liam, McBee Lyon, W. H. RUF$011 Shia. From 1810 to 1881 it included, but it is not necessary to 90 Into do- (fallylv of the Ginhimit law teacher of, SuffollE County only. Afifir that,it coy. taile, and we'll 90 OR with the "of all �Colrnbj&UMvUfliLY), R WArrim", J' Brad ilia territory from Riverhead"east. pr�enohels_. _ �W bimpson, IV. 0. Beach, John rilk- ward to the end of itio,laland and,when ir�tou E, Watt, John Brieu, A. S. 6 aves' Georgo'yRylor, W.L.DmuglRa, the population had largel� increased, josepil'a. Gill, B. T, Abbott. Arvine,41. Bowdisle, Win. M. Carr, D, W. Howell,, Horace W,Byrnes., ------------ ------ 7 And by,`ttie,wway, I;wonder if '.tliexo ie• Pai't31 Of We so''d port, the sum.of'i8 Previous to 1818, meetings were bell re!ifane farmer left, so bland to•`pis own: omils for eaoh dozen eggs, provided'he in private louses, In that year'ivas "intexesta:ae to ignore the oft repeated brought his entire production to the bought a lot Q rods square Met o ist coinere", suggestions of our faithful oruithologfet Party of".the'first part. But he lost a Main arrack nod i5 feet by Lane," L. and a meetiug.houee 35 feet by 25 was "L,".with rcepeot to, the retention of i money by the transection. That year built, with tmoushioned SeWs but not .the birds that protect his.crops. If so, father bought from Mr. Wells a barrel Peres• of sugary In 18$0 the site of tits resent obernh.;it would really Ream like a case of jiidt• R y N. 0. molasses at P 22 cents per gallon, but it did not keep, edition, 5Q feet by TOC, wag bought, from dal blindness, Lawyer,j. H. Ooldemith for $130, $30 " The e o a g o f birds i a decidedly and some of if turned into sticks. of whichhe donated. On Sept. 11th of pleasanter than the contentions of a IAw- But while so many articles of food and that year the carper-stoue was laid, andsuit; and the one held week before last raiment are cheaper than formerly, yet in the following April the church was the farmer -seems eomP gilled to hustle dedfoated. Excepting tiafl00 the Cost was was happily one of rare 000urrence, 2ixed at the time; and in 1866, under. 'Pho descendants of the Puritans are us- for his bread and butter with more hur+ e ministry of Rev, 0. S. Williams,. a ually a penoe•lovmg people, as our ry than seemed needful then. See that special offering, was Applied to its en- townsmen ore. It may be that "eom- load of fertilizer, perhaps two tone, and Re at Present, nud 6 foot ameut, making it the team on a trot I In olden times that ne At present, 35 foot by 75' parisone ore odious,"bot they ars some- In 1853 the parsOoRge lot wag bought tfines'inetruotive. would have been thought hard usage, for$175. During the ministry of J, W. Some years.ago in a sparsely settled but with improved draught, wide tires. Simpson the pareonnge was i0proved town, I spent two week in the family of smooth roads and well kept horses, they Rod the church remodeled. "The salary of Mgrvin R. Lent wne $too, quite in a Justice of the Peace iwho held court, seem to jog along without great effort. 6ntrmt with the present one of $boo. on the Average, parte of two days in the How the farmers are hustling I It But in those days it was not ueesgear;y week judging oases many of which were, seeme to me they drive twice as fast as For the preacher to spend$100 a yanr or absolutely childish and should have, they did when I was a boy. And they more,for books and seep abry and In .many other ways, to keep Abreast and been settled without recourse to the law, are stacking up piles of fertilizers un- - nhoadbf the growiug intelligence of hie For instance, a man sued hie neighbor, der sheds and in outhouses, putting hearers:- For the value of 26 barrel slaves, which tools in order and getting off odds and. But,.my emends, it n past n .o'clock,u it was finally proven had been taken by ends of potatoes And turnips not needed is n the ne of he that note confronts ns is not one of theory, but one of condi, mistake. We do things better, i thinkfor home consumption. Years ago what tions—sow we're going to enno it home fewer luw•saits are held now than half a' little snrylue a farmer .might have was through this slush so as not to miss that centuryago, nud certainly Be in proper carted to Town Harbor, the wagon driv warm dinner. Please hand me the eanea :on in till the water leached the bottom -thanks, Good morning. yR,o, tion to the number of 1❑habitante, boards and Ehe "saes" ]ceded into the t - --- All manner of changes have taken Ger-attention bas bean called to say, place In that¢fine, Than the price of sloop's yawl, which was rowed out some oral errors in the uameg of ministers who wheat was pretty steady,at a dollar a half a mile to Capt. Wells' "Swallow" hgve served the M. E church here, as busbol, which paid for a day's work or Oapt. Booth's "Prudence," 'Phan given by "J, H. 0. " in his "Hobble." ,,hayiu'and harvestin',". and five shil- the sloop was sailed to "York " and "a took them from a list which was liugs were the "goin'wages"for hoeing. berthed, while the captain went up and ;printed several years'ago at the time of drummed up customers among big gra. ) corn and the like. And boys were lucky the church Oenteuuinl but which did if they got a shilling a day for dropping, cerymen aogaaintsuces; and when he notentirely agree with the written ren• corn or riding horse; and when one of had sold out, he returned with bArrels ord. On that list the name of Rev, D. I my mates charged Halter S. 'Homo❑ of molasses, caddies of tea, or the money Wi Howell was the last: for that reason eighteen pence a day Por riding horse, that would buy them At Albert Oase's or the -name of Rev, l;. Ii;. Creed; who the reatof us unanimously declared it a "Bill" Wells', �foligwed him, wAR emitted by.l, 11, C., One trip is the your was called the n t blast wnA not known to no t piece titextortion. a,51 p dl five About thathat time I rode horse and flaxseed tri;t, and mush interest was idAya after going to press. The name dropped corn four days for "Uncle ' centred r❑the prioe, which' was usually 'Orinudo:Shtffurd should have-been Or from twelve shillinge to two dollsm a );lam Horton ou the Poor House farm lnodo Starr; Joseph R. Frost shouldbuebel. As the time for the annual have. been Joseph H. frost; J. A.,Ed- (now owned and occupied by Wm. Low- ery, on the road to the steamboat wharf) shipment appronohed, there was mach wa`rde should have been Edmonds, cry, came home with my first silver half- inquiry about the price; and it was said Tb Third Belated Hobblle/p�. dollar in my pooket, the happiest boy in that one time when Cupt, "Ben" had 4 144th the Old Traveler Boys/0.// Jug returned, from '"York," he met town, My I but wasn't that d big half• j i•`Good morning friends; I want to say dollar? Never before nor since did I -Uncle" Asa Smith as he stopped alight here that if you found anything of ashore from hie yawl. Be had seen the gee a half.dollar.quite so big or.quite so 9uEet•est it, those eoxape of M. E,.ohurob bright, I put it m a little china cup on "Swallow" enter the harbor and sad Ihistory the other.day, you may'mostly the top shelf of the impboard, and often hastened down to learn the price of flax- thank Rev..Mr. Byxnea,.who oovYEeoas- peeped into the cup to make sure my: need. (Now "U❑ole" Asa's thoughts )yhung out the latch string of his stady prize was there; but alas I in a moment sometimes ran ahead of life utterance.) I dgor,an. gave me free access to the ren- of unsophisticated generosity l lent it, When Oapt..$6 Ben 31informed him that 4frls in Uis.safe keeping.. and a good churchman it has kept the price had risen from twelve to forte i Well, don'tyou feel like shaking teen shillings o-baehel, "Uccle" Ann hands All around, now that Old Sol Ude tent ever since, Now Lent and eggs are oloaely aeeo•I started poor snare up Town Barber 'smiled"away,Ehe snow-banks, and aE tae stated, and that reminds me of an foot' Lane to tell rho good news to his neigh• game time re jade our worm-eating i her RusselVail; and entering hfe'hitch• friends that it's time for them to open dent of 60 years ago;when W. H, Wella,. p party of the first part did promise cov-1 on door half out of breath, he panted i up their spring::ooncerb? it the veto e out, "Ransil,Russil, flaxseed's gone rip of the turtle..is heard,at. the `Run,' enant_and ugroo-to'pay to *the farmer, I . __ _ _. . —_to fourteen.bushrl, .__.__ m; Mina ou thq,flagaeed money formed , 4 g.8nki as the: geome4r<6 an $laniflolood'began tosrise, especially at '6, ,YV F„1. ,: .N. /.. �,_ YY� L qo meoneidaxnble it m an 'the- farmers �pv nd could n'E seem, Eo%get that`"unlndglika and.esaeperatipg; self financial budget in those daye:.when his the "ith any degree of graoeful Pflug. True, there was a little r!gurry" u e dstaiet'6h�m wandmr rade on the sides and bottom of my:wagon, wife's calroolmok cost from a shilling , '�"'"�'')u;r ,,,� �,t t: f Y,a"W o, tt 2 lib poeetbly and there was some smell; but none to to one and eispeuae a yard, sugar 14 , ,¢. ,ds,, �,� .„cx. pence a pound, snuff one and "thrip. 'We uiay.meet again.^ 'coni)moiniug:'-", speak of, and they needn't make such a punas" o quarter, and stogkin' cern __ _ a:Ro. foss about it, for wasn't my fish wagon eight and.sixpence a tinned. You sea! Bunker Fishing, as good as anybody•else's fish-wagon, f those were days that tried men's shot•' But they still sniffed until my.'indigna- bngP, for blink➢UE08 were ftlW and (For the TRAVsaaR sopa) tion know no bounds and I said,"Whos, i Mn EDITOR:—While lying awake last nkc Owa in ord., Jack:' Now, if you women n' w like checks almost u night and. thinking over old times, it my wagon you. can nit out au' walk," inary business transactions. occurred to me that since fifty years ago no among country people, and the specie „ bungee protested d so they meant en a.generation had arisen which. knew disrespect to me, and so having the keen. by which barter was supplemented wag not” bunker fishing; Rad if the Tuevan- p carried in the little strong bags Rn boys:will land me their ears, I. will caste d my indigestion taken off, I pro- usuallyy in which the merohaot bought his gon'I tell themes little about it, as pursued lit- castled their destinationu rete and got gh allot. My grandmothers aunuitq of X00 labtiling;tribulation, and though received big skilling . ty years ago: In those days Town Har• much trtbolntfo➢, i6 was a big chilling per quarter always came in a shos•bag of,!bor was one of the favorite swarming Eo my eyes. silver dollars and half•dollnre, and feediag grounds for the proliflc In those Jaye it was customary for the -e ie difference digression may point to illustrate bunker, now called menhaden fish; and �the difference ae to "point of view," farmer to run up a bill at the store dur• the farmers of Southold and adjacent _ log the year, and about the first of towns caught them m. schools Of from j ABOUT THE MODD OF OATOHINo THEM January following he would pay it in 26,000 to 600,000, and in one caseat wheat,Sore, rye, oats, beans, pork, etc. I least, of 1,000,000, 1 At the mater end of Town Harbor' Even as late as about thirty years ago These wereat that time counted out of Lane,,and perched upon the bank, were Southold merchants probably took in aa: the nets two after two, and thrown gp•. the Bell houses,each containing ten (r barter more grain than they sold around! on the beach in piles of 600 and 1,000 I twelve"bunks," and each the,home:of home, and it was all patiently pounded'. each, to await Doming of the farmers' as many farmer fishermen .during four out with two sticks the hand-staff about) mama Edkaul them to their far me, over to eiz:weeks, spring and fall.: To each four feet long and the swingel three feet,I whose sores they were heir termered� 10,900 oer hone was a stable for two horses, The; etc each with a hole bored through the end), ,to the acre, as a fertilizer, producing houses, elables, nets, boats, ., Were, and the two tied together. with a well 'flue Drops of wheat and owned in "rights"Agree), But 66110, oared eel•ekin. These constituted the In crops opsof wheat the odor of decaying ornod half-rights, and fished only three, flail, with which the farmer threshed oat' 'fish.wa6-prominent, :powerfnl, and all. days in the week, while those owning:. one.or two ,floorin's" on cold morn•,pervading; giving rise to less general whole rights fished air. The property' lugs before breakfast,.foddered the stock goointi�aiatthan do the preseut day rot. was divided into, or rather owned""fn,° - with the "rukin'%" and went in 'to `tion cauliflower, but were never aoaueedeight to twelve rights,usually ten, Eaohj big' at,And so the winter days were 'of producing sickness. company and hoose had its own dietino•'. poop e�ri`awoy and the store bill settled. '. One warm afternoon in the latter part. Live name, B' 'it think of the change, From .of May,. 1840; the writer then a mere There. were the 11 Mokiee" (Hoke.•, fig" r.�5Dished by Messrs. W. A Wil• !'slip of a,boy, had returned to the gene),:"Nulliflere"(Oanndiaue);"creeks, lis ; : Wells, H. W. Pxi¢oe,.W. .beach for another load of three dace'old "Buzzards," "Turks, "Dum.dugeonsi"' }� and others with nerves equally euphon• O;tq. ison and L•-W.Korn, who have ;fish, when he was accosted by two city loos; On Sunday nights or.early Mon- sap; their books and kindly given ;,ladies; stylishly dressed and just landed, Ide'I `Silts, they have have sold dur .f_llrom Capt.. Ben Wells' packet "Bwal-•. day momingP, the flshexmon, with their kl �• baskets of three or cis days' provisions,. *OsSt year between sistemn and 4;l4W,„ They wished to be carried to the walked or were drives to their respeo•. )mv, �r hOggaad bushels of grain in house of a friend a mile away, and,of clad'' i none feed, at the retail value `fared:me a ehllhnp to..take them, Oa-', five houses. At daylight, if not windy, of ok 'fl$N140; and this door not include {thea wse looking for me'home with 'mys they were ready=at the,word of their' r 6 ,load of fish,•but that shilling was more' ahosnu leader to" o off;" and with all't, hp�been sold, Amon the causes ff t be chaffing and.:joking and guying they for 6 rernarkabIs showing may ^than a matob for my omusolonce,and we 6 meq ad!,the patent fact that farm � '�` filed down the bank steps and into the: oloaed the bar am Pled the way;'to. _ g s two "dobbins" that were tied to the: anis re,driven more spdtastep cud theIlyl'llll wagon Upoa 'reaching which 'the shore, and one man in each boat "set" word ¢harder;. the comparative un °lsdjes stopped emif a ]Coked at eoch pro, eulnee of the grain crop, and thepEher sod said something 'in an under- iEhem off t6 the big soowa that were an- ood o'ht,inoresaed aEtentfon give¢ toEgn`e`' aIIot�sfter, some hesitation they ohored twenty rode from shore. The ro0j vegetables; suddperhapa there r ' 'net, twelve to fifteen feet wide; and Dna-: iocnoladed to get in, SOI lifted out)the arc' Ardsossa,•" {orebrrgprd ped told atiem they couldthfrd'to one k61t mile long, had already $" ;y'friends, I see that the houp ,ie�nsloi? Jaok'e rump Ite<wouldn t kink. Ibsen loaded on'Eo the sterns of the two'. ha-'� "the. Lester clock is crawling: S'oY'tif�be¢ing np theta dmmaaglate skirts iacowp; and they 1'ashed-togettier, The.. .rr." ( dgbbms were tied astern, anchors alqu and dinner time. Of a Erath I �r� og�+iamapwbile), Eh p Ilttlo boost pulled op and eight strong men with. ,cold sit here on the 6hapel p`'"r iie�vµ°ot�rn On�'the way, Up they ,�,. ,,,,cold and let our ; ittyp�a"r'unn ndt'd�e;of'remarke dere big eweepa pulled the'oambarsomei tl f,volve for a little While aroondi arm'. , a�, r'3 d.r . , + boat all`three-160ths of a mile) 'where' " „ b$otnl>jiocmy'Wag+en dnlil my Lon - they k'hketOhargh,"but.they flew! (they5were�enohored And'now comes) tll/�rr s .r reaR g dlane oo' tfieest of lo4g erghtedne9e, evexy,,ppnt l°r0y�ba `Tn a couple'of?sours en ourn I these ao eeTmade fruitfd lig the industry `e eainrng his eyes for`"". breaket"i� Bhe arestttie land, and the olrouiEop;J elGpping of their tails b he- bunkers ey of.. Dobbin' is at an end '$cw thBI of their present occupants. True they Y "little seine" ie. Urougbt, staked up , were not perfect; they brought their io�proosee of feed' the are alert, around school,:dad'the "big'.eeioo" human netgrea soros the ocean with ,I�,tght: strong, anger men sit graepipg ed oust behind it, hem, andfound it necessary to build a ib lietr oars, ready to spring them sE the gathered up andslropp `'soowB, o prison house"and establish courts of to be,loaded on to..the wafting. ! oral on of for mind you there oratory to nuchae "h°n1.^ A°a.:' jastioe for the larvlese; and their.prompt now the men with handbarrows,,-two to. punfehment of even petty offences was 1-1-s 'alf•doadn other oo4lpanioaest in the prop ung neighborhood, equallung Colony. y interested and sure them up on the beaohbeyoud proof of he jealousy wtheeU which the. i'anatoua for ftee flee, and the oompail eaoh, yof i'ion ie sharp.; high tide, and word is sent to-,t60 fl et But on the he wholemoraltheys of twer omen in in- ,to unwritten anal Recopiedlawis 6E hem ,to Carl fish. Among nrOt1v08, high aim and unswerving in- teat 6h0,00mpany that first etarte itsoars toappoar fs Uncle Elbert Prince, with tips the Deet right to t fish if they,can his:big black more. He takes do nm`ett us�if they had been low, grovel een all B outoh them. Now the osptsin turns:his 'thousand off the beach, ' ungodly men? Have tend, his eyes glanoe'.from company to that. Then Uncle "Thins" Davtde, bo fag, worldly and ere 'be d, hi to see tF any oars are any to has sent word, and Henry or Otis comae net tea laws of heredity sound with inn. If none, then soars the guise, rattling down the lane, and Horton Case faithful family training and sound reag- „ and his foul-tined tone teaching held in grnoiousau;°daese nrervous. command, "Start your carat" Iwih Old Jack e -good ed them down each generation to the ono' coupltnga are gniokly untied',:the fork jingling in the bottom of the wag• the ezcellencies of the fathers, dhiq Snows part oompaa9, one going east, on, And D. P,.Hoxton fatedbeing i; Be wast. After. little the each Ifiggers," be, was "appinted" to keep that followed? Is here no signi8annoe test he would "command bis , egi4!tBe St northward toWeth shore, tally of the loads,.and eo Azariah carted. fn the confldenoe that Abeam's ad bar ;`one;mdn in eaoh scow helping the net Those were lively times. proud Town in him, Quad up the With some exceptions, which A ver the Stern roller. Now the men !Harbor, but the peaky dip•nets came, children and his ptions,..l ousehold after him 7 e !buoiCle`'to t'air aweeps lest the fish es- soared tee BSh, awa9,. w men•, eon"is the rule, an o. we may see the improUability of the auxroundedl And tartness,and coneequeutly tele frog hackneyed Blander that ministers' Bone ,not is wide, and is r and the staff to Itaxy sketch o{it, / �...� oa e,lfeforo the are now tits net hiall ov goutboid, dao 28d -- reao'ed, This is a pole Be long AS the _ _ --.-- are the worst boys in the world. This intended to Stand The 1?iftlr Belated Hobble unworthy Ring, by the way, has been perpendicularly, spreading the nat and Will, tits old Traveler Buys effectually disposed of by the venerable keeping the upper line to which the net Good.morning, m9 locg.fime friends. I.N,Sprague, D.D., who after invest'- lis,attached (and wbioh is strung with sere, gays in itis "Annals of the corks) near he Burface of he�water;and So balmy has the six become tbatswe may gations over a wide field and throng ,ibto e lower one (which is strung' with eately sit hese On.the chapel steps with man9 9 that Igdg)near he bottom. On the way to oom4ortona without u of of ipe ixaton feiom heir namb rebus'theriolaes of amention in hoping p country Produced ao many he a re one man in a "dobbin"`is left the very eight of the historic Presbyteri- this one who have beoomo emfueut ,can 17 Btu staff, to whish is attached a rope an "Meetinghouse" across the attest. worthy il0nd9ug th0 To Ain Of the d1Bt4¢OB to 'To you wen have rend VVbitaker'e $is- and useful men as have the ministers. he',epore.: . Hieduty is, by apinehing tax of Southold" it will seem like o Ana Dr,Spxagueiegoadenough°ahor- at�e�wntee with era oar, to frighten back , work of supexarogntion to nndoxEaketo ity for all candid people. But no eaging' t)e`echoat of Bah,ahcold they attempt a ", recall any old-time things or,people in can be too absurd to be swallowed py le provided it be repented n - tgprpada Braund tea staff, under the times, "Hullo titers ! I Bore, It,, and so sees 0, Occasionally. connection with the oldest tow. and the good poop p m big so 001 would press so heavily . oldest cental,on Long Island. ,What . good manyIt ag'uiuetthe bag of the seine as to"trip" can the moo do that somal, after the gwi wind's ter th'ay yor t eastlardt beaus ye dew 9e it and'all go out. king?,, And from additimmlauthoCiEi08 won't hev no crop.,- So shouted"Uncle" Also we may learn something about he lowing in the lot adjoin• 7;As1e­11oon.as the boats have started to men who planted the first town on Long Tim,who'11was p t�„gxyqund.'a Bob ool of flee, he captain.'' Island and organized its first search' b@anathe ;and then he add d,tell �aI'velahcard syagde up and Shouts to he shore: 'Ihe connection Uetween he oharaoter 1 Exactly so,and t Mokie: horses, Mokie horses,' and and lives of the fleet eettlere of he town, it said so time V a6i°:"past since some �prnsently a msm is seen riding.one horse 1 the time is not long p ur0 Illi 06 another. He ties one op. and the condition and oiroumetanoes of their descendantsto•day, forms a subject. ',people actually believed that the eo•oI y jposite one of the 4naoming .bouts, hen broad and deep, and rich in suggestive- 'ed ,BlueLaws" of Gonneotiaut rosily sin a to the other,.A String of should- nese to those who love to tcaoe the work. ,had an existence and forbade mothBa ers es On Banday. B0 iered;poats are get °long the beaob eE in ',kissing their itexvnle o4:some flay feet, and eaoh boat. Inge of the laws of bexedity, and the 4aof wfle the exception of one Pur an hater, reaching and moulding inflnanaesgf' thoonlyanthoritq fox thoix belio4 wne.\ upon lapdog planes a capstan on one of sound and faithful religious teaohiu had beard these,-he rope from the staff is Placed that they like "Uncle"Tim, 'l,gne tarn n around it, the tdn•400t lever To some it may seem a f sobriety, nc• i tion, that the order and sobriety, he it "said so" time anal again. But I i@ thueEiiu!beEwee°the range of the asp• prosperity Bud of the pro the planted m9 beans rule teal wind "ter; generatio9, have any neoeesar9 con th' sit "Id," and harvested as good a st�grnr'the;(oldrmafe hR"S to tea other crop se usual, Pardon the digreesion,r igpil leleok'/@,� x the Mokx and to` t tdown on the tion with the oeaxaoter and. life o t e' "'gypH J yr r men who two oentnxlee and a.half ago I but you know it is hard to bare paEianco --- oonshrno" dxardg,sor3tp" , t1�,ugeond�;t as'tha°ase- ----------..--- with enc m Now as rt is""edl' eRE that,he Ifathall "'In sun+,h'9 ado':'move, and; rfy we, htEl°cues would yfeld;�inet °e many i¢ "commanded their otiildren after them," fathers •do not move we may find"Dnp- number 7 J;xtruvagmtt I Then they p� mightwenot expect tu❑t their descend• selves confronted with a bold `dinner, bovored them with home, and in the fall / s—I do not ante would do as their fathers did and from which fate may the good folks at snow how many to king them with th half acresame ,for I did not command their blifidron after Diem? And home deliver us _ ��1;,:°• - _ - — lime the°Dunt. I think the quality Of 60, many if not all the excellencies of the The Sixth Belated Hobble the potatoes was quite uniform through• first settlers have come step by step in' With the old Traveler Boys out the town until "white peach blows'' graoicus sequence down near to the close friends. Does thio were .introduced, and they have hardly of the century, securing to us the advan• Good 'morning, Cages of that Puritanism which was, as salntation, used eo generall9aunennoe a and prob. the vines twere overy]mgefand exha�sttve the historian Bancroft_ says, the out. 'ably with little thought, growth of Protetantiem, fact or express a wish 7 If the former; to the soil and them were too many wee No one can read Dr,'Whitaker's most '$would baldly be true when the day 4aleotiug thenee rlargestt and bestmforsr of seed, exhaustive history of Sonthold's first opens with achilly northeasterly drizzle; J. 13 azzard Horton was the pioneer, at century without forming a high opinion so moat likely it la'underetood to,exprese •least in this pmt of the town, Bud he o[the character of fie fleet settlers, for a wish that the morning may be to you a gained quite a reputation for the excel-. lie seems to have put all history under good one,finding you in health and bore• fence erhape90 swill be puzzless of big ed to discover fort. IVs a pleasant custom, often on- m ver aloes relation between potatoe tribute for the materials which with 9 y painstaking accuracy he has woven into consciously carrying with it a ray of a¢d the "Old Filet me thin and I must p g y annahfne and a pulsation of neighborly confess to the same thing, but the .that valuable work. And yet, nod Roai- oal as ft may seem;the causes and voce- feeling; and when spoken in ° cheery great that that I could cato lture have been so rcely avoid a pass- sions for church discipline and civil tone and accompanied by a smile, it may tug reference to them, serve to wither a growing snspiahm or The first nettled pastor of this church prosecution were probably more frequent revive a dying friendship. was the Rev. John Youngs, who in OOto- in proportion to population than has The good-mornings lately vouchsafed ber, 1640, gathered "a considerable been the base in more recent years, number" of thoe° to whom be bad There seem to have been iu tUoseearly to the farmers hereabouts have made formerly ministered at Hingham, )Jug. them emits as they hurried the potatoes 'labd, and organized "the First Church Eimer some remnants of caste which into the rapidly-opened drills; and I am of Bouthold." Probably few 00119t ga- probably had been brought from the old reminded of some potato planting that I Lions were ever more strongly attBchod country and which adhered to,the social saw done when3 was a boy. Twobroth- to a pastor than were.the first set Amo to and religious lice of Eho people. Among theirs, and they. manifested it among the wage in which it manifested itself are were preparing to plant about half other ways fn th air generous gifts. Of was that of. seating the reacting-house, pn pore in the same Hold in which, many mousy they hull none to est of tile burn,"but lected for him tile b 'where the pews were allotted to the tam- vans afterward, ,Dole Tim" dared they aggregating at least 120 acres in 801,10, flies of the oongrogatlon aobardiug to notplantbmon8 with "the wind t' th' 10 different looations always the most eaeVBrd." They rooted through (or eligible and desirable. After,82 years of, their wealth, prominence, and social.Po• scratched oval)the ground with a yoke faithful ministering to big flock, he died sition, In later years people became of two-year-old steers that looked as if at the age of 74. Thn inventory of hie more democratic in their views and one. they wished they didn't have to "bow" which heylived andindicate ne ofthe industry, tome. Yet even as into as the days of or "gee," and the plow was one that he petalled in addition to his pastoral my boyhood there remained a little. of could not find barn-roomfn those days, labors, It WAS as follows: the old feeling of superiority. , "Young But by night they bad that half acre In wocdon ware&2 old bedsteads an r. a D America"in patent leather shoes, with fill Cheat a e mall ,2 tables a;n rooted. The neat morning they Appear' forme&bottle s tray($10.00) s2-oo-00 i'. a peak of cigarettes in his pocket, had ed with the steers and a rather light g kettles,2 Potts,hake,%pot•hake 09.00-00 not been born, and the youth.of the 02.00-00 wooden•toothed harrow, and when it got Pewter t( town were taught to "rise up before the. tinder waygI was quite amused(boy]ike) i 2 iva eon o rtamesand velluinges,ono 04.00.00 4 hoary head," The father and mother at its option. It wiggled its way over lynl❑g and shoots slid pinobars 02.10-00 I4k' were not referred to as"the governor" the previous year's ecru-stumps, reared �5 oxen and one lame stotre and one and"the old woman"; and in the fami• cow and$of 2 yeare ofd and oaf 2T•10-o0 ' and itched,.and rattled the ox ahafu in sane steers one yearuug 0x•00-00 ly circle the children must be "seen Bud lively fashion, for the want of a fence- ,one house not heard." When children going to or 17-00.00 post or two on but eoiontiflo agrir" Ian small 02-00.00 from school saw Lawyer L'hommedfen a amen swplo or the minister or.doctor coming,.they tore hall¢bt lip EO that time are as far d 8 ohames,plow ytOns and vert yl•fn0 04.00.00 j fence•poets for weighting harrows, and house and lana 0x00-00 usually ranged themselves. in a row at 6L os-oo-oo iron.teeth were Scarcely discovered. But ofd book%by Mr,9ubbard Prised the side of the street, the boys with Papp anyway some of the teeth left marks be- 1 07.00.00 off ready for obeisance, and the girls hind them. In the afternoon they -I Tools .made of "yrou" must have with a fold of their frook'between the a000ped with hoes holes about -as large II been costly when 8 abalone and the plow thumb and finger of each hand prepared and deep as a half-bushel msenora., On and exG'"yrons" that a small farmer to "kirbhy" as gracefully as they know the morning following they appeared 'would.ordinarily need. were valeedat how; and a bow of recognition from with the ,two.whoeled.cart loaded with I�20, and his $1G horse n good ones. to "Priest H¢nEting"or "Dr,Ira Currin;" which the curry"him,on his pastoral visite over a soiled ocru-stalks and straw, y .Pariah eatendin{f feom "Wading Oreek." was honor enough to be immediately re. evidently imogiced to be manure, and Ito "Qvet,r Pon&" Pastor YOnuge was lated on reaching Uome• However, placed big fork-full in each hill (or lsnooeeded, in 1674 by The Rev.Joshua judging from observation,there in among [IuUart, wbo finished his labors in 1717, rather hollow), and in the afternoon they and was followed by the Rev Beu•arern r boys and youth in general more defer- dropped a small nnont potato in each. Woolsey from 1720 to 1736 Rev, James' i encs felt and manifested to age thou ,Do-yoq thins they would waste their Uig DavenuorE was big auboeBear from 1738', was tree oP^them tweut9.11ve Years Ago, �atoeabv nutting them to plant when _-._ __- V Chat fir:„ to 1746; sad 2_YPers:later rev,, �W m,. With ;fie Trkv01WBoya � So muco for the '.breaking." The i'hrnop .became pastor` andcontiuCome boys,aed' - own are od nest step.in the direotion of that: article; "for 8 years. From 1763 to 178Ttheir ' sit dnthe of ancient wearing;apparel,..,leas the 'pastor wag the Rev.-Jobn Sierre,'and and let's baveabit of ohatabout. old• "swfngliug." The device'for'tbfe was, trom 1707 to 1806 the Rev. ,Joseph Haz. time things . It's oo long since we've !r 'card who was something of a:poet as had one of our gniot talks I've gaits bu a;piece of hard woodboard.two feet long`: well.as.a,preashor. and eight or ten Ionics wide,the upper, During 23 years following the latter gotten what the last one was about. This end thinned to an edge, nailed to the: into; the church enjoyed and profited by time I'm going to try and.explain to you head of.the.breaker,that was all. The the faithful miniati-Btions Of Rev;,JOnn the reintion 'between flaxseed and cloth• orator world grasp the bunch of than Bantling. The older people of the fere' aarte, I don't wonder you laugh, operator parish remember him Bea man of core- broken stalks is his left:hand, and lay mandingproseuoe; tall;square shouldered but wait,a little. ing it across the edge of the swingling �will, the slight stoop of the student I take it for granted you are all fa. board; would strike it a eliding blow His countenance wassomewhat stern miliar with the appearance of that Read, .with a wooden sword called the "swiog- land his demeanor grave; tnsomuoh that as a decoction. of it is so often need it we children regarded 4im with feeling, ling knife,"after each blow slipping his oomewbat aklu to awe. But he also gages of oongbs and colde, and also that knife under if and flirting it up to shake possessed a earn of quiet humor which you ara•quite as familiar with the All. toutlhe-"shivoo," as the bite of "bark -he sometimee treed with much skill notpearauce'of the wagons of Smith &Oray merely to provoke a laugh but to dig. ' end Perkins Bros, Well, 60 years ago were called. cover the fooliehuesg of a folly, or the. The neat step trousersward was Shallownesa of a sham, the which he my Bummer clothing (part of it) sprang "hatoheling." The hatchel consisted of could do without giving od'once. .from.flesseed; now LE Aprin go from Per- apiece of plank say 20 inches by 10, In. A'promineot obarapterretio of his was gine'clothing sort; Red Twill try and an!habitual spirit of helpfulnessy which - tell on how the one has displaced the to which were fastened close together" maril"ind itself whenever suit wherever y some 00 iron teeth about six inches long. Ali-:opportunity was offered,. and Z re• other, gad as.thick as a 20 peony nail. The member one me6pupe in. which big good When I.MAE a.boy helped my father at ,bunch of awing'led fl,z wee drawn aaxose intentions repeived on ill niannoved and oqa spring to prepare the ground for a cud'. through these tooth until the re. Shabby rebuff, A cerlu tbrashermar wosteplilrang the cyllu or of hie rnaohine piece of flix, It gCRW some lour tent maining shaves and tangled fibre were at the parpector shop of Irl"-quire' MOBOB high Rod bare a pretty little.blue bloc. ,removed, Oleveland when Mr. Broatting happened Isom,;and when the Held was in full And now it's a head of flea ready for elougl and.becoming interested in the bloom.it was beautiful to. look at, In thresher's work he made a kindly Aug. the little trotting epiunaug wheel. At gootion as to how beat to 'do at.. .The the fall when ripe-It was. pulled and this little wheel mother or graudmather .man (who,.like 'Nabol, "-was churlish '�ispread in-the "pightle'"behind the.barn alta through the winter days trotting and evil in hie ways") laid down his '!to "rot;'' You lee the. bark of the tools; tipped.book his hat, placed his stalk had to be rotted in order to break out the threads that are to be woven in. hands on his hips, Bud addreasing,him, to tow cloth, If it is to be plaid, then self to Mr. Bantling, said: Mr. '.it up'ard`remove sit from the fibre which the warp Is to be oolored with "Built," '.Huntin', did .You ever hear the story ci it enolosed.'- When rotted and dried it a dye stuff resembling eed�pntty, whose tile.iejun and his canoe?" Mr, H. said, was stowed in the'barn to Rwmt-0he lees proper name is annalto. And, as Mo. 'No," And the crusty.threahor thus pro. Pro p ooeded; "Ones there was aufn un that 'busy days of winter. Lincoln was wont to say, "This re:. Blurted to dig out A canoe, and 4 neigh. The first'stop in the evolution oP my miuds me," Ocae my mother Rout me �bor came along and Brad, 'Why don't ;towtrouserswas the "-breaking"of the 'tothe store.for some of that .dye stuff, 'yon dig more have?' He followed iia flax, Now I am not sure that I can advine and spoileil lt,mid tppew it over Having someway learned its correct desoribe to you into themaohine `Ehe+fenoe After spoiling two grist i„ name asked for anrBito, .The clerk ';oanoee by follorping tl�a advice of other (with which the "breaking" was done, scowled and said,. "A shilling's worth �felke he'got a faprtli log and when but I'll try. , It was a Bough home made of what?" I repeated the name, when another nelghbor offered odvioe about ' affair, consisting of two parte, the up.;'10 to dig, he An,%, to him, .This is , he said, !'What do they do .with it?" pry onnoo; there, parry opdy'R canoe over per and the dower, The,latter consisted I told him, but not euffioieutly Relight. %the +fenos•"' Mr.,Hunt6ing ;turned of two 4.14ch pieces about 5 foot long erred he referred the matter to the pro• ineakly aw'A and left the crusty thresher ,fastened 6'inches apart on.two end pieces printer who, .oiler studying over it Ito fife -tin§eriug,. Now wasn't that D , shabby2 of plank and standing.. on four legs awhile,blurted_out in desperation, "0 ..,Mr. Hurtling. was followed. in the ;about 2} feet long. Now to this space I donne, I gases the boy wants anter; miniat•rp by Bev ldalph Smith.from 1880 of five feet by six .inches, three strips give him some any way," Well, the to 183$ and he by Rev. Goo.' F. Wis. .with upper'edges sharpened were fast- ;,well from 184Eo 78¢0; by Rev, Bober - erred at each end into these same plank warp was colored and all sent to "Aunt" Whitaker from 1807 to 1802;'by Rev, PhebeOverton,(ihe grandmother of S. "i (3eo D. Miller from 1892 to 1804; Bud -heada, .Then.there were 4 other Simi. Grover Gardiner) to be woven, and out 2 bv.Rev.' J. B. Freeman from :1896 to !Lar strips.and aidepieces with lower of the sloth were .made my plaid tow 1890Ali ofthese were settledpastorg, ledge sharpened, Also fastened at.one - tie year between the close'of one and trousers; and as I remember it, the first 'the,begiouing of another were filled in lend into a'plank heRd, and at the other. time I put them on I strutted around in by Rtated supplies of, longer or shorter ;end a stout bolt or, rod of iron .ran a fashion.thatl would throw' the modern terms PORBi ly I might recall Rome through all tfie Btripe Rua side pieces,.M. dude'quite into the Rhode., I, in connection with them, but lowing the upper blades, moving on the A Sure I have kept you quite long Now boys,.I trust you see the relation onoagh'already. Hoping:you mBy neve iron rod as a hinge,to shirt down pre between flaxseed and the clothier, m• A for these longg end lengthening' oiaely as the two blades u knife abut rather the clothes he sells, And if you days of toil,I will bid you on morn into the handle. A handle was attached dud inaccuracies in my account of thed ing' _ _ 'x' II a _ !to the flood and of tire..upper part, so I raisingandpreparation of Haafor aloth,�, that the operator could lift it, place a temember it is 6 0 years line's 1 have giv buuoh of flys ruder it orosswrae, Bud by Rn theimatter Attica ht. Aad:now yo elammfhg�itdowa her d•braak itis stalks, ars'all ready to go h"ome d am euro, ` no, drip7.And ,�Jrittle, m-�oAdhort please Pond b e, a a 0,-', i od"` ti's y Ve the HfiT'e, r _ - - nhlienediu 1897, 'In 1841Ihel'dathreB, by Emery Oonklfn with,hie fit) is 7 h`e Ei7ghth Belated-HobbIle I p , p voice. During the year 1877 and early (with thB oto TraYemr nays) '' days'discussion with Ray.Jose h Hen• part of 1878 the Church was repaired and e tlomeu. come son..of the Southold M. E. ohuroh, nod' Gadd. morning, g 9 which reflected little credit on either of eaovnted, the large pulpit with its two And let no sit down. under the shadow of ❑s as it consisted. mainly of opposing [lights of steps was, removed, also the this beautiful reminder of otic heroin taste of Scripture with more or. lase old pews and the gallery and its stairs, dead; We may "give to the winds our Ingenious interpretations, of obscure Bud the vestibule pulpit and affair Plat• fears," for does not. 1,Abbie's.Man'' and conflicting passage,, but Bs I think forms and seats they now have were patiently stand gunxil over us,aymbol of 'light by o the of ft now the Bible was vindicated from put Afol being refurnished and ro- many along and weary g the charge of teaoUing unending dedicated, the following ministers bays Potomac ,r swamps of miaeiesippf 7 punishment in a future state of exist- been installed ns pastnrs. Rev. Abram Putt across the street is the Universa• P Mr. In alis the sow of nom• enae.' Succeeding H (Inn Pdfn from r. 0 1879, to. Cary the list church with its long Rev, Daniel M.T';uappan was pastor for UaivoreheEr Scmioyv alffected nitsryfirst, modious hOY,e-sheds m the rear, and two years, 1844 G, boarding with HBTCY regular church organization,with officers wbioh with thele coat of fresh paint have Jennings, who kept the hotel, now the sed saorameuts. J. 11 O) Sn°osecUng gyite dispelled the fears of those who ! much improved Mitchel Homestead. 1fr..Conklin was the Rov J R. Lavelle thought they might present an ties f %'During 1846 the Rov. J, b. Ingalls from April, 1888, to April, 1884; Rev. to J, was recalled to the Southold ohuroh, A Rafiou; from November, 1884, m ly cppeaeaoasiF locatedin,o canepioaone April, 1691; Rev, E A Florian from n place; and now that.the decaying fence remaining for three years, during which August, 1891, to•January, 1894; Rev. E between(be eburah'a lot and the promises time he was principal of the Southold H. I{eens from July, 18;14, to,June;1896; ;of Mrs,Elliott Pock has baso removed, Academy(which enlarged and improved oovJ nuary, x1898;1 and Rofrom yrYsEB. D. the carrier has taken on a new Aspect, in is now the R. c.church) Bud he kept to from June, 1898, to Januarv, - keeping with ninny other village im• house in the second story of the Academy 1890, During Jnly and August of 1884 provemonte, IIow we eunlltll,a the building Rev. J. P. Thompson supplied the pal• akelteriug ,Be of Mr. Rootb's high, "Tho gay. Daniel ➢1. Eaappeu was pit, and many whose names axe asi n or which has been weer to shield us less'familiar have pranabed occasionally bodge, called a second tim0 to the pastorate in „B supply or candidates. from the biting wint°r'e nortU•wester. 1860 and doting tUaE year and'.the „The ordination of Rev. Abram But the pretty Park-like view which Mr. next preached nod taught the Aced sniy �,COnidin took place an the afternoon of ly:bae-opened rap is a loll recompensenext Rev,.Chos: W .Riddle was pester Ipot. 10. and an the 14th, 16th avdlOtU for the lose of the winter lea i8G4.G, and perhaps longer,.se sarvfoee tvaro hold, nG whfoh the follow- Hie; mg miuiaters preached: Dr;. J. M. Now.about the Unly0CB0.11At Meeting tff0 TAOOI'd, Ca,pect�ing leis pastorate are I pgllman, of Now York; Dr. Forrester, Hoagie, and the society that has war. incomplete. 1n 1862 8 tile.Rev, Robert of Tee ownrk, J•; Rev.11H. ,fi S. nryAberot� shipped in it, TUuxB are no very full Lau,ing was pnston from this time Rronklvu; Rev. Obas. A. , Hooper, of and complete records known,but what u,tsil 1878 there woe no settled minister 'Croy,N. Y.,and Rev. W. W, IIoopex, of may be known, boo been gloaned b9 i nor.regular service. During preceding Huntington, L• I." of T toasts' kindness oCMCs.Silas P.Overton,mainly vacancies the pulpit was frequently Bllad were tL1e,tori Southold, not very rsma Y ,,am memory of the Misses. HettY. by Rev, Thos. Miller, than a reeks nt „goad grey head," wera.found in its and Sophronia Goldsmith. and that, by Rev Neck in the To of Southold, aougregration. Hnt some Of us remem' of picabrother.Salem, than whom probably n° Where he reared n numarou, family her !'D a" ''utile, of Now Snllollr, thee.living pornona could farnieh ao I who fn ilex girlhood ' elpooted.to be ands ae I shuts not undertake to several of whom Are mow filling im .Joshua Hortoq, Aunt Acheah Horton, ooh, ortaut positions in different parte of the �I diesel tken tad"when a certain young man mprov I on Mr's. Ovorton's oouoise yet world, For several years he Anstained , proposed "to go out awalkin eons otbO1' 0 pro On,Ive' sketch of the UnfyeYAa• much the Ionic relation to the Unlv(ma• eyPning 'Phan there was the Vgenbt aCabla rot off uroh;a history, I will give it you list society that the Rev.• Jonathan Ian,t0long°auo eachill 11 ing a foot in bill xA R Ins ' bout,aA,ghe gave it to Me, without ,. ,Hilatting did to the Presbyterian; with. bund, anti silvering lock,. He it was of14fella change. crit regular employment, but ever ready wbo eDi)yed the dretinatiou ,Pf first '1The Ugiveraaliet church of Southold to BR a gap ori call, Preaching on,the utilizing Break eea•waed ae n fertilizer. was built in 1830.7. The painting was Sabbath, often in fnnnralA, oelebrntfng. Through rite lid ba led andmmer puys lse ,rest- finisbed.Aug 27 of the latter year, In -marriages and other mI intorial duties, old hailed,and bailed and palled, rest mg hetwaon times in his cozy little hut. i rise same :year it wag dedicated and the „Tile mnel0al 1aatCOmBnt n9ed in talose on the crack shore. Seaweed floats Rev. Was, Fishbongh installed its Bret earlier dnya wA, a 'Bern phim,' which word Dot kuowu hereabouts at that tion foreovoral..yeaxa was playod b,y Daniel and "Unole.Rill" pulled into his scow praetor. He boarded with Dr, IrA : Albert's son. Albert Oorwiu. The neat praetor wall the Rev much water.with,the long peak gxaee, (#oldsmith, and so he bailed and bailed, And it was Joshua King Ingalls (recently deceased, Quldemithwasforseveral years ohoxfstor, roughly estimated that.ho had hail°d . Atmore than oighty•Year8 of age) who and the choir consisted of Miss Hannah jockey Creek over eevoraftlmee, omit i es of sea served the yhuroh from some time In Coobran(Albertson). Mise Ruth Augusta the h�a evead ry H Ammer'f°r'years beforWeed e 1840 until.1848, when he wont to Dan- ,Terry (Horton k the ,Misses Eccy Car- other, farmers took the hint and followed Ville, Conn., for two Years- Mr,Ingalls• win(Case) Hattie cud Sopurolaa Gold his example of producing Bne°rope of lived m thebongoof Elam P. Hoxton, smite, Mesere, w, II. Wells,.Cliffs. O• °oro with seaweed, -- -- talid.at that time kept the' Tow Paor -- Horton, Ezra L. Goklamitli', George House, apart of whtoh is now the regi Hobnrh Elam P, Rol-ton, Sarah Terry, dance of W m Lowery, An in liters o£ the daughters of Judge;Ebenezer GRHO his pastorate (to whiohIUave refenrod, and'•othorA, Doing. the pastorate of before, J. H CJ..I will quote from 'hie 1101, ohac.1 Lanvin the chair_was led' ,ll,Reminiecauses of Be clogs anis { �TfIE TORPEDO, .A1rr1D BBICIS'EI rr nd�eacellegt Pdgrrm,' }2eter�<Hul}g " shoulder, i'n Ebe proces8ion, a-pi4co g RAID ONDI';A. 1:fLFORD',S' ' �fromthe-.OWA lfordIyouseahow•{ug� aacss6or "Of one Rev Joseprls,,' £od Halloo It,D D„, Mr Ii'HommedieT100 , PLACE, WAIL OP 1812,, tile splintered bole made by the Biit•; married a;danghter of':iNsthamei?Silvee.� ishbull. Years aftert saw that pinned{ ter, of Shelter Ielaad, whi0h was then a My father,•Joseph''HazirU 1Horton, In the Long Island Historical Museum toldme that on the evening of Thanles it with the inscription: "PreacuteU.hy. Part of Southold Town, Of their' chil j giving Day, 1811, he with his "Brice, Moses C,Cleaveland." The"Multord dron, Benjsmin married first. Mary. ! 6'111lum and Joshud Horton, walked House" has been of interest to me be, donklio, and second, Martha,..daughter. from Smithtown,arriving In Southold const, my good mother told me it was of Ezra Boune, of Sandwich, Mnss,,., ;at eight p. m. It was their return"the birthplace of her grandmother,,, June 14,1731. He was a mariner with Prom Brooklyn,where they had just ,'Annie Coroy, wife of Lazarus Horton, ' a home. oSouthold;near his father's and, been honorably discharged from sere and daughter of Sheriff David Corey, their eon. vice' In "war of '12." Father:used to It was also the youthful home of my : Ezra L'Hpmmedieu wits born iaSouth- tel about:the v ar,.:ind very fmterest excellent uncle, Alvah Stratton Mul- old August 80, 1734, He.graduated' at. Ing was that of the Torpedo wrecked ford, son of Abram, son of deacon Yalu 0011698'in 1764, - December 24, on. Arshamomoque beach and raid on. Abraham Mulford d who come from 1766, he married charity, daughter of Deacon Mulford's house, it short dis- I East Bampton to Ashamomoque. A. Nicoll Floyd, of Brookhaven, L. L. and tance,east. It appears that one Capt. S, Mulford was long an official in the sister of General William Floyd,.one of Penney from up the Island,had es-.. I Atlantic Bank; Brooklyn, later cash- the signers of £lm Declaration of Inds- coped from British impressment,and ier of City Bank,nod in 1860-2(7)was pemde0ee,whes e""dean was the late eopght to destroy a �Britlsh mtm-of- with Hon. Conklin.Brush .and others � Hon,�David 4, Floyd, of (#reimport, '.. war then prowling about Long Island., In organizing the Mechanic's Bank of. where he long dwelt in kis hospitable' u6$,iGardiner's Bey. On Ills. way,; which he was Castifer till Spring of mansion.built of stone wrought from his fPannoy'a steering gear broke and the,. 1807, wh(n he returned to Southold; own -benntftul farm, Mrs. Charity., torpedo stranded at Arshamomoque;' and died grealy lamented, March, Floyd-L'Hommediep died July;A 1784. beach Jonathan Horton Bolsseau 1..1863. The Mulford Farm wits later Mr, L'Hommedieu studied law and"soon says That his grandfather, Benjnmiu owned by the Albertsons,.who sold to became eminent He dwelt in a fine Bolsseau, often told of having seen kir. Brown of New Jersey. It has mansion on the ancestral binff of Ilal- -tbo wreck, That 1t was turtle aha pod,1 long been owned by Daniel Nr Thom• lock's Neck, a'ss'ort distance east from and ,propelled by.paddles fastened.to I as, Esq.,and with.its fertile acres and the present steamboat landing. . Very cr'anits which were moved by Cour'',, arty Jerseys is known.as"Bound View early life abilities were appreciated, and e ma below decks.,After Ianding,Pen•', Dairy The house was rebuilt some lie.was active in all good works, He was nay tried to blow tip the queer thing! years since. amomber of the.Continental 'Oongrese by bBraing, meadow hay, but,;failing 1 Arshamomoge Bench Is the Isthmus from 1779 to 1786 and' for 10 years be -t❑ this, he with .his crew sought an•,I between Heed of Mill-Creekapd Long '�, was prominent in the. New York State other and anter locality, 8 o❑ theIsland Sound, about one calla and'n i Senate. . .From 1787 until his death, !British came and destroyed-thetor-I .half east fromHorton's Point Light September 28 1811,;"he was' the most ,pedo..:"They also fired a cannon ball' .House. Not:.far"southeast from Mr. native Regent of thw University Inlay i Tito the.Dlulford Douse, and did a lot Thomas's house was the home of ing the foundation_,.,for education in of tblogs out of pure cussedness, The Capt, Nathan Sinderland.and tits wife I the State, and , the one who Ince ,Bu.ujnml❑ Reeve Prince,one o[ Katherine, ncoordfng. to the 'Town always reported at the regular meetings B,rgoIdyn's. drat Aldermen, :related, Records, as early as Summer'of 11639. of his visite to the;aoademies of the. that when u Ind,he:lived with deacon it was across this IIeuoh- that Col, l3tata." Rev, EpherWhitskor, D:D:, in `M lford-.and on it Sabbath alfwent to Meig3 and alis bravo men took their ;hie invaluable'"History of Southold," - the First Church,except the colored", svfialeboate tato klill .Creek, thence says: ,He was the foremost of all men bcy,4Sambo,who was left In charge of across Peconto Bay to Sag Harbor who bad lived all,their life from birth to thc'4pince. While. nt church British, :where they worked the attack on the death in Southold and probably;iu.'.But. g`uns,were'beard,and the Deacon with British,June, 1777, folk county. He was Olerk of Sal7:'..olk .6tb irs hurried to his home, >'There It S-g-12—'02. D. P, HORTON, County'for twenty-seven consecutive "was fonnd,that a cannon boll lied bee❑ ---- - -° - years from 1784, except the year 1810., �ehot EkrougU tha house,and a general I Honorable Ezra L'Hoinrne. et',- Besides his many public duties, he. rgId made. When Sambo saw the gave much attention,to agriculture, and IuBedCoats Ire got behind a bay ,The Statesman - Farmer of No he ,possessed large' tracts of valuable' and covered hie hoed. The Red C0ats + York too Years Ago Icons. His beautiful homestead was on inade him help .them steel -a 99001k,, "Hallock's Neok," and bounded by �number of floe sheep, filled :up "'th .Among the.lluguonoti who flad to Peconic Bay south, east by Harbor rom,'molasses, and other things in Amedon, was, Benjamin LtHommedieu Lane—now Bay Avenue—to near Main '"" ' 'and trio stepbrother. Igan Boisseau. street,and west by the long-time eluding Mrs,Mulford a knitting,work Tna=Deacon, with flag of truae, went jT11,Ywerit,to, Southold, :Long Leland, age lands of the First Ckuxoh of':South- -on board the ship and t<ftora parley p?New York, in,16W ' old, where in succession dwelt Rev, returned with Sambo, the knitting �':;Mr L'Hommedren secared a whome Joshua Hobart, Benjamin Woolsey, Jae. work,etc., and some satisfactionMy gotta 'where now rs the;oormer of Main Davenport,William Throop Joha`Siorrs brother, the kite Jonathan ,Azruinh attest and Bag Avenue De became,a �(great•graddfuther of Rev Dr Richard.S. Horton, told,thnt'on the Fourth,.pf suo0esafulmeTahantaodpfi4mruentmyrmr i�8torrel,:amdJosephHazsrd, num'1787, IoJ July, 'Gl, he saw "Uncle Siney" ,9momg,hra:{Iaud Possaemoms„ 'se a pet Afew bores had been sold to ':L'awyer: Co4k11n "it Belo of Lha eloquentSeaa- •of the belglrf };r.pr,H°lir, kl °k o° 'LHOmm rouegreatmole, JolipBofs., itoi,-Roscoe,-,dice 1 ❑ oacry_en .gis Qd44Ri r.'1It p ,rn'$med'afrit� the etud'ay rewy��w{i ¢gdttkeauvener5ble' usf o .:etnq ,p7"fEhe .00>;perx aQ[,tl yrr,, kFee i�Dnr 1, pfy l e19r Ialand,t'nc SgrJat, (yr�t4 � Ifuvin :; eoogrIll V `ands ar�'ox;Bane, wf�igpt wpabg' 'rArd ongly MF o,yi�;ouhha i n,�+ri�aeene „ �b a ,, inikhfnllyraserved,iprUhe�(;oupexl9 maraud for the 260Eh,9rintvefearyr{r eibe, B%0e gutkpife'Mo((Lnwyer lBon'uti 4 gg T tripof betruggle of�Ehe�Revolut onions', bratio'n of 1890 $enjamin L teomme 1 4 t r , ,,r�; ,rA9P ' , k °1 Clardiner `brokh�en of Da`vidiC}grdmer anti the-oalm of Iudr;peudenoe Go -Lawyer L Honimedreu nleoown ,�, rc;s, t'a Died Se t. 27'.1811 Ehe Sily star Manor fon Shelter Iel, rYUoee` been�tiul : dee hie wag , of P , B T pad, and at one brme,;th$ `Mennntio second wrfe'of•'P-reeideot Jghq tTy,ern 77 ,' , ', (Farm 'on the same. At,the trme�gthie" Lawyer 6ordiner and Mary L,Hom'mc _ __v a ..... death aha assessed "Itobbin'd I an dieu• `hie wife had three danghtera ,p d, plum. Island has quite an inter. which was said by hie eseoatdre'Eo{(7bL Mary,:who wrote,.'Indion Legends and. eating history. It was first.bought. of Benjamin HarEon and Jemee EeVe, °ther'Poemq,"r°glndisg the i,mmlable; the Indiana by Samuel.Wyllyn.of Hart' prominent men of Souttiold for $4j000: ",My Nutfve Isle;" married the woil rldE p , tordr one of the Prominent settlers of His eastern boli of the Historic "(7elvee' renowned Prof. t hen"NOrton.Harsfocdf that town, who in 1069 purchased it of. Neck"was bought b his a it aacd a o- Ptiebe, second wife of Harvard a digitin,! % g quite satin- g y p P q the Oorohofl n. Not being. oessor in law, the Hon.Thomae S lieater, gyished Profenaor; and Fanny, wife of.. Ifled of the suffioieyoy of the title, he who left it to his bachelor son, tUe'Igte Prof. Lane. I ',procured an act of confirmation from the Thomas S. Lester,:and it is now o�vu6d .Mrs. Horsford and her four talented, iobief of the Montnnks, who also claimed b Geo; Harper, of Brookl n, N. Y. etep•daughters have long enjoyed their 'I. _ y p y it,,ds follows; "room at the: "Manor, House" on B:now all men b these presents,. Mr. L'.Hommedieu presided at emast- y Bbeitor Island, and are well kuowv in ing of'distingu{ebedbitjaene in the-city I that I, Wyendaok, the MontaukeEt of New York, "for the or oee of iastt. all good works, "" " ,. P P thatsachI, for mo and my heirs loxever. Biting p Society for the Promotion 'ot The L Hommedjeu mansion. on Bal.' for and in me al 'ofof s cont, s look's Neck was'demohshed rn38�1 sed' AgrloylEur,e and Manufactures;"whn[eai t r barrel. of biskitt, a 100 mazes or flslt r the barn wee moved near the',00rueG 9f. me xe• it Woe 'Rasoived, That Messrs . Chan t hocks, at this subscribing by 1 Main_Streat and Horton 'Lane by,+Foe ag11Qr a,Livingstou, Simon DeWitt:and „. �, carved of Snmvel Wyllye of Hart[ord, yS�muel S rMitahellI be;n oI ommib " t� ter Sayer where i6 was,owno$�S,DQnoon. y , Tutbll,�then by hie eoq`Ehe'lp'te�Lswyer. d°eesl6.allennte andmnke all m right fere reand raper Rules and Regulstrone �' title and interest unto Plombe Island to rP the 6overnment,oE the Sooiety,t'j the Rep 'E h!ex�pnd'+noW rt belongs g the'pefd Samnel Wyllye, his heirs for• t Whitaker D D, t e Napa were adopted by:the Society ata p , ', I, ever, and I, the said ago am, hereby do-. hrnetxng in.the Senate Chamber, on% 30t sahcl I and gIe 1, a_11 Iabeloyved paetoF alertingmyoolf the rightf°1 owner of:said". nxja`�`il 26 1791 °ape year befq' i emgI"t 'fEhe"�PirethOhgrohr�t ,Soatli y '" ', oldbs base}"nnoborag�' reoppoeite the island, I covenant with the said Eire Maeeachgsette Society was forme -, t a ' Samuel Wyllye, his.heirs and aeeiggs. a " :> ,"Fdundere Mongmen4 aq�mkhng was started The Nary Ypjrk� h�Mr li Hommadieui owned a'`number never to molest him or bin aaeigosin the" Sft� p` iAgrionitural Souiet$, "TUer flC0 hIgpee al�;ofaWgom were manumrtied poseeeeiov of the anme,.nnd I wilkj p'no• uti of Eh air, TO wagpnbl p a fors hr d'eeth apd,Ue made ]fl�efsll : hibit,my men from doing so by g ?adaepPdFeeident,nnd HoowP]zrabL H mm Ip VI9IOb'tori O'surviving, e p 6f �hte any o4 iSie cattle that oksll be pat nP°n •householdI'll r` ',,' it, and for the true perrormnnae Hereof dlep�Qtoe "P, id 'In this bpok grre{a ge was Ehe moat cativo member Ups! I have set my hand at Qordinee Island, 7goodly number of papers trom,�r, Ehe'aFiret oburoh 'aendre'wioto "among Apri127, 1659.11 TTr'r'Sommed1. teu;n non, and oaxeful[eadin 'mav other`Stnte,li sit n,E ro this, Some aizteen yenta later, in 1076, many e�bpE they have not baso rezoelle y hi S,h .ra Il foldeat ohvroh on-;Lon Isla has h rn- Wyllye seonxed•n palest from Qovernor. +in la or,-Rys a C. r r p - `B"' 4Rd o Andros and a taw years Inter, nocording' 71 igoceroed kv emae178 , s r,atL'Hommediou 'preotically„ >L§Gd }fie wasitha+lay' t owner Rf ,thd hi Eo Thompson, Bold the. entire inland to �deil�ryft s'uiud,sea weed, 'ynd red ov r ,tgtro°'{(O+l"d rBrrd" abaci' eU siit"lutlt`riq; Joseph. Beebe of Plymouth, 'Mase, 'rq,lj l�ida9,Suffolk(7ogbyf r�ajsed mo11t0 ",`lwhioh�j:a Ares' w t� vq`kh''sr be Local tradition eayathat Wyllys�oon:. i$ a ease l then all tl�yreet oJ?the r m net her 9 to qrd 6�1 io aka, u" s veyed i64oJoeeph Dudley and he to the 'iaetnte Some [armarea gots oY �rodrgenk'ohildreu oP'the pnpi�hl` ; Baeties, D°dley, nQoordi¢g to thelnttes leQ pI'dflt frdm that,khan from agll oth r Tlie Reoorde`sof the Satiopl lli rigt authority, owned the island in the rev rtioropa.'The seed h' e,vpsretgaEhere, i , r b 'the olutiou and was much troubled b the_ Ehe Oburoh, the Town, then bun y; by 'the -hgrse machmQ,t mvenl�d�}'k��yla,a aQtatp and Eheutiov, all eh¢�; area fog British, on the one Band, and by the M "IdJapeu man 8mal r yon, < Wor , Bmtjtade`EhaE the`Hon E7}r Tl',�+omm'a�' ',Indiane,: .on' the other, The English tr e y women pad ol}fldren,r��li l�€ djeq wee 4F ships liveda,andy'd�d line tpie'. shi a sent boats'crows Reborn that took ivesta lar a nnntiti , 'ij'he a ttv t C ': , r �� r i ds 8 q a L +y 4od1 +her raga ' A beaniiful hoto his onBEleanflsheep and IR d'hieoorv ' E�o,'yeree of age'the cam v a mr, f gr' ` y`nhr i i otiopga o� E sent d' fleldsi}nd orchards.. The Indinve, who ' 'Sciitbold'Town granted Eor t ��1 � 4`s �n ,� gt a� ;ab � fibs, o° holdr orbn�'<p Cioultarel IreeorEed thither for hunting end lie Ing, rmediov oee half' �Ebe ,ot �d ri�'E> + ogi'ety lby��>hs +g[npddaugMhEer� Mre�j -did the same wb>,oh by art and ihdoatryi�pe�l� ,, sbeQardipei,liorfoS'd;�aadl'r jji Dndley, rtie said, later neoa[ed pay- ogees ta`f{row ov th'Q'taUgrgelgE � app��oistodhyfiEhemembereent from the British. Joseph.Beebe ilgo�'e Neak Pine Ne k 0, , es N +✓ r Y , k e o ee erteiy of; athoa Ftrof had fear sone,• Silas,divided the Amos fgnd;flgtei6he"fe¢b'6d�lpi¢i°grr4tTl>,t b oii�s m 'ty),ronupmenE A�iaare th 'Iand Theophilns, who.divided Ehe 'island f1�r 3 It s 't cop efo to�er� a °'a0`Rtid ':r,' V , ' !into four farms, or equal porta ms, end ,I a, each took one. It was during their clay Iwhthttherry oti ld was'agost employed t Jiq� agrs ,ft1 8j,Q+,,�ia 1oa` a' .a +}lj,.P'azp®D n,,;ns€iy r1rr e0811 to oomPrieing n po—alatron of?; EV, Pn �'k{ i ul. — i a� soventy.flve opals, The Beebes I ,of Loog Iylaodhared ia',Ellie wise-.!I;ereotd Founders monument of so she provietou for intoliigeut and good Ohria ,cemetery on the south side of the'came ware'ybougnt'out, farm by farm,by. Mr iHEreat. tlane�:and oitizeoe,. Jerome of New York,who when lie had �� The determination of the people to 'I: The present building of the Union eeonredthe whole island, oreotediit into limefntain public wnools.,eproad }rpm. School a ds hundred seat than three oi. iterimmedl86te a nor: I fendat estate and built Elie fine r New i':oglandto other stoEes. ylatter old aolonfet mansion which still remains I. The work of improving,them Use been predecessor did: The school aooupid the pxincipsl,and almost the only dwell' Igradaal,nnntinuous, and pearly Always 'the Bite of "the brink eohool house." inswas erected ontheiiand, " FadvanoI troth in the wider reach and IThe building 'now ow in neeafter several ThedOro mnoSol d out to Charles Le. the .beiter .quality of the instruction about thin ears, ngo, Matte and he, in 1890, to ex-Mayor meetings Rad eaxneeE digensiens and u given. Hewitt'of New York for �BG,000, who Uar B�atnoId schools have been of, ballot to deEsrmioo the sits for it ce ghll;oWna it, devoting it to the rale ng. rioeleas advantage to the plana, Be they,, andhfarsmor'c res I¢tot was of nghan er sdfy thing. of cattle and sheep, For a number of are now. year'8 the island was leased to Orlando It is impossible to give Vero evens whioli has occurred m selecting the Hite Mand of Bridga ampton—fEaple,/900 , of thenowand attractive Union d tchool o-day. summary of the legislation o[the Town, --- -- -- _ the county, and the Biala, in relation to i Ronne whose o well i atone to how today. ,,The Public School" ', public education. IE has proceeded one cannot well,imagine how widely Following is a copy of the eke of rather on the basis of the Ox' of scattered aro the men and women who the$nblio School deposited in the car•: schools than on that of their creation by ,legislative enactments. i a walla of theught in ere is buildingheir dnow in roe's. nor"stone ofthe now school building: Not many can The orer8O of the of a new, convenient, New lawn and provisions have been save el teahersswlho have givow the ien inetruc commodious,and costly building for the, Made,iemente and inclivaEtons ofthepeck, tion at some limeln the history of the Union 6ahool of 600tnold suggests Sor, pie demanded, During many yeRre old nnilding, a pa , made rt,of the contents of its corner stood p. During the last 00"t¢ry some of the. a nriet aketon of the Pnbli'c 6gnool, provision was made for q partial enpportD. of Pnblia ya cola of essentially"the�ppro{0=, of the of ion of public depa tment ofapnbliaer oio tr°o• themselves notr. maiderra littleill In 6nff a t ilk indwet� rat advocated byI tion as asunder Lather fn his addrees to the common.. Uoiversitylof the State a regents of Elre. .habits, and p0mceth ds off teiachinglrtand t I councils of all the cities of Germany intV physical discipline. an 1524,zand in his letter two years later top. I Libraries.were%ISO provided, p During the last half 00performed rmedre the the oleotor of ,Saxony. Some Steps in! .Thirty years ago a oonspicuoue foryteacher this,direction. were<takeh in (}ermenyl ward movement woe made—additional. duties of the reepe'ctive ogloee in this i before the end of the sixteenth. oent¢ry.I ( ve taxes were imposed upon the people; the. But the thirty years' war from 1618 to 1 distribution of money. by. State officers eohool. Two have each taught here eight 1646 area all progreae therein, f Wes fnaresaed; and tuition was mads'! Hare or more. The average time baa Prneia renewed the movement about' ttrarents ere a rich oree for altollildran alike, whether poor,taxed or their not f been perhaps three years. . They have . one hundred years ago,and such an ed•' :p - left teaobiug for many other employ vanye lila been mscle that all the hall- ('Phe benefits of these school snared is: mente—for houne.keeping,farm benefits of those measures. uhandigiog;for the ministry of the 908- ran of proper t age in the realm may naw Before the public shoots were made - be ta¢g4t in Elie pnblio eohoole: pal;for the enactment and the praine; for i Scotland ie the`only country. in Eo. free for all children, wine. Rod-generods of law;far the praomioe of medioiuo; for rope where public eohoole were este• 'men made soma provision for Enos in-. the work of newspaper men; and for lished for all the children as early as the goRrdion Of ne could children not pay for their schoolhose parents, - other:departments of honorable sed use. eeventeen6h century. ful.human action:.: John Rnox urged ills neooesity of pub- ', Ing, A bright example among these It fe bnlioved that their labora and es. Its eohoole for children of-the poor•.!,;hien was rhe Hoo. Ezra L'Hemmedie° periences in the Southold pnblio-school eat people, so that 8611 children could be I :of Sontbold, were very generally }or.�their,.own nd• taught., He did this in 1660 'Pox this �, The school houses of our village neve vantage and for the good of.athors. .. purpose much was subsequently, done. occupied several different sites, and their EranH WHITASHn, Brit not till 1696 were schools free for ;materials have been variong-sometimesI Pastor Emeritug of First Church.-. all'the;children of Scotland, Now every l,,one story brick and another story wood,! Southold, September 27 1901_ 'congregalfon has school, and every and at another time Oil the outside wall Y _ us ''child of suitable,aga in the whole IanD e�oatur sUe Want}s'rhe ofsbrinke school. BEV � DBr EP;HE� HI '� � In E¢gland;. Jhn MOWS'" olognent, ! house.,, It was a enbsIlt of 1, ricks in Rdvocasy of education did not eetShiloh ! 'n¢ilt ediflae: It was built o} bricks m N�: kynyr QQ ppn�5 �p¢blio;eohoola in.that country, and no !to increase Ithie style, rather than of wood, in ordeit r consistent system bf publto eohoole is I from plaae'to place difficulty to the will ' I' Endre today, or The.foundera of Now Eagland estate. (town"oto ohonge its abode. It stoo11 d on - lihed'Aheir publio;aohools 1a both Idp a VerlOable Southold �Preac '8Y saohnsette and 4cnueoticut before 1660... 1 the north Aide bei•the mail' street ,qnd u ' 'alto AUtI1,0Y Was s0fil ; � tI The Now England Tawoe on the east. "few rode farther seat than in the recently ✓ —_. -- —--_ 8 , damod and Installed pastor ofth /'ke.Pros `which conducted the various oases arid- � BEGAN LIFE AS A PRINTER, byt olue church of Southold, His poor, ing under the war measures of the gov- ,1 toral service in that church cautioned time ernment. HB Oltletl the Twenty-second Ill the beghuiing.of. 1892, and slnce'tha ] y date,lie has been pastor emeritus. regiment in Now York in June, 1881,'so Has Written for the Press Since 184d: In 1866 he published a volume of adv as to.familiarize himself with military dresses end entrance on educational� Was for 41 Years.SoUtlloltl's ! patriotic and Other themes of public n- oil far as it could be acquired in a I Beloved Pastor, terest, As the Southold church wag, militia regiment, formed October 21. 1640, n is one of-olid. In the summer of 1862 he spout his va- ,, oldest in the -United States,- and Dr, (Special to the Engle.) Whitaker named his first volume, Crc4 cation at Southold, from which town his Southold, L. I, Ifereh 26 fo-nlmrrow rruits from in Old meld ' ',III 18SL Drmother came and where he bad been in Is Ill❑ ninetieth anniversaryof the birtli Whitaker published .the "History' III from his j the habit Ofe e of the Rev. Dr, I;plar Whitaker, pastoi, Southold—Its Fist Century, from 1610; p nding summer er 1740." - boyhood. The second call for troops by emeri tus of the Southold Preshyt❑ring L1 1894 H: O. Houghton printed foil Dr,, President Lincoln, being after Me Church,:and one of the roost c ulue'nt man. Whltal:m•. a beautiful Illustrated volume Our Eastern'.'Long Island; where 'hu bas: with this title: "Leaves.ofAIL Scasous; Olallau's peninsular campaign, was then been prominent since 1861. The story mI Hynrrs and other Verses", .It cantaing being answered, and Mr. Woodford took Ills career is or great Interest. because a selection of lyrics that be wrote at dit. an active part in the meetings that ware fere❑t times from 1801-1893, slid also in- of the fact that Ills life has always bermeludes translations in Pugllsh verse mode held in the eastern half of Suffolk conn- efosely Interwoven with the newspapeei, by him'from'eminent French and German ty to stimulate recruiting, magazine and publishing bnsmoss;as wait, poets—Racine, Hasa, Gootbe, ,Schiller_ A number Of men whom he had as interests of great historical and res and others, Many of tile Olin e- songs anti young liglous importance, hie halt lrublishod hymns, written by Dr: Whitaker and In- known when they were all boys together several 'volumes and also written parts' eluded hl tills limit,,had been set to music ,pets Willing t0 g0 if be would g0 with of O, dozen others. He began to write and sung on-varlous fog Livo occaslmis or freely for periodical`s of New York City at religious services, them,and he resigned his position as As- ad elsewhere In 1840, and continued to When the Long Island I 1st u'1611:Sb, sistaut United States Attorney and on- do so every year for seventy years;having clay`.held'. its first.aununl meeting, Dr: - contributed to more than fifty daily; Whitaker.was, elected one of its coal- listed as a private in company H of the weekly, menthy, tluasterly and. mines) offers, In company with William Cutlet One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Beg!. Pa issued In Boston, -Neil Bryant, Governor John A. Map, Judge Ment New York Volunteers, As soon as Haven, Brooklyn, Dfanhattau, Phlladel- Seal B. Strong and others; and he has pbla, Wilmington. Norfolk;Neto Or.lemd held this honorable position by 're-elec- the quota of the company was filled Mr. and elefinboi•o-. - tion each year ever since,.being the only Woodford was elected captain. Gover- lie was born in Fall-field, Cumberland one now to o/ace of filo original conn• nor Morgan, who was then governor of Count) N, J., March 27. J820 When flf. Wore. ` Igen. t c?rs oltl h >'+woUw'+— :n_ nn. ! So great has been-his prominence.and New York, on hearing of Mr,Woodford's coins in 13vidgetua, the eoual:v'suaL of usefulness on Long.Island; and LIle re.' resignation civil office and hie on- in County: In thnl ohlce Ihd,' epeet in which he is:held that lie Is often nlnsteredthe details of the printing amt'. called. Suffolk's Gland Old -flan," a, listmout,.offered him the lieutenant colo- newspaper business, as then cuuducted;' "The Bishop of Eastern Long Island." noloy of the regiment. slid became the managing editor'of the Despite bis great age, the Rev, Dr., The 0tlT011ment was completed Sept.B, Papel'' , I r, Whitaker Is fairly '.vigorous.physically; hie graduated from Lhe Uulon Theo-'; and his mental strength is unabated:. Ho 1862, and following is the original roster logical Seminary of New Ye9t'Ia 1851,1r Is beloved by all who know him. and his of the command that left that day for and In September of that year was .ort ,birthdayto-morrow.,will.be made.,the oc- New York,to be mustered foto the Unit- fuslon for many hearty r,ongratfilatmou.- ed States Service: r Colonel, Wlllfam Gurney; lieutenant FRIDAY MAY 31 1895 ooldnel, f3tawart L, Woodford; major, a f Edward H. Little; adjutant, Edward W. Schaufilor; quartermaster, Albert M. Bradshaw; chaplain, Eben Francis; cap. t�a Co. HI 127th Regiment tain, Oliver I. Vail; first lieutenant, J. In the Brooklyn Eagle of May 10th Henry Young; second lieutenant,Geo.J. appeared a well written article by O. J. Calling. - Burns, of Greenport, on Co, H,' 127th Non-commissioned offoors—First sor• Regt.,from which we take the following: geant, John J. Riddell; Second sergeant, Long Islanders filled the Union armies Benjamin R. Penny; third sergeant, during the rebellion, and Suffolk county George G. Reeve; fourth sorgeant,David furnished bar full quota of men. Note- T, Conklin; fifth sergeant, Horatio N. his among the organizations that went to Booth; corporals, Jesse G. Case, Henry ?� ° - the front from this town wae'Company O. Horton, Benjamin H. Terry, Henry H of the-One Hundred and Twenty-sov- W. Prince, Edward P. Hurtling, Chat- h"r enth Regiment, New York Volunteers. ham Corwin, George E. Latham, Arthur It was mainly redrafted through the ef- W. Tarbush; musicians, George Clark r'. forte of General Stewart L. Woodford of (fifer), Robert Ourry(drummer); wagon- 'j Brooklyn, who, by a series of patriotio or, Prank B:Goldsmith." addressee in the hamlets of this town got : Priv0.toe—James R. Aldrich, Andrew together a band of one hundred hardy !J. Bennett, Leonard T. Butler, George young Long Islanders. L. F.Booth, Barnabas T.Billard, Selden --------" S. Bennett, Gilbert A. Brown, William Attorney Mr,'Woodford appointed Assort- J Beckley, John H, Benjamin, Addison "I ant United States ttorneyat New York The Rev, );Sher Whitaker, D.D.,` II,early in April, 1861, and wits aeon placed J. Corwin, George, Calver, John D. Who Te-idorrew cri'la- ton ale wnetath"F . - 1 Cleveland, Albert W. ease, A.Wickham ,uveramy er'His IMrt, ;,,, ____.i rn charge of the bureau of that aides, ;Case, Walter Carpenter, JohnCollins, Ua week in summer and once a fortnight John Donn,Smith Ewart,Robort Ebbits,I But there aro otbor veterans hors- in winter—where it bad been stationary Frederick Ewaul, Henry Gaffga, Jacob abouts and plenty of them beside those for twentyflve years—to thrice a week A. Gerrodette, L. Wellington Gillette, of Uompany H. Patohogne .boasts of in summer and once a week in wiukr: Henry M. GBVi$torl, Samuel Herxie, dending the youngest soldier in all New A year later he gave notice tbat the mail Charles H.Havone, Frank Hommel,Hen- York State to the war in the person of to New England should start Oman a ry M. Hallook, Benjamin A. Horton, Edward Gtng, who because of his on• aveok all the year, "whereby answers John Hopfausack, Elbert Hutchinson, usual size encoeeded In enlisting in OOm- might be Obtained between Boston and Anthony Heanne, Leonard Jackman, psny 0 Twelfth New York Volunteers, Philadelphia in three weeks.' In 1775; though onlq 14 gears and 9 months old. Robert Jefferson, John W. Rhpp, John Franklin was made Postmaster General, H. Reason, George Ledyard, Jonathan He was born in Icings county, Ireland, with 5 salary of 41,000, with an Allow. 0. Merrill, Oliver A, Mayo, Isaac T. in 1847, He served all through the war, once of 4340 for a secretary and a oomp• Moore, Benjamin F. Moore, Charles B. came on' without a scratch and is hale troller, The next year, postmaster$ slid Moore, Joseph McNamee, Edward Mur- and hearty still, thong h he went through post riders were excused from military Play, William P. MoMnuie, Joseph Now the seven days'fight in the Wilderness, duty. in April, 1779, the salary of the ton, Charles E. Overton, Warren Over the bathes of Fxederiokebnrg, Antietam, postmaster General was doubled;and in ton, Theodore Overton, Edward Oldrin, Ball ftun, 0hanoellorsville, Petersburg, December it was raised to 46,000. An William Osboru, Grove Pease, William and Yorktown Samuel Hawkins of Inspector of Dead Lettere was appointed E. Price, Baldwin'1', Payne, Sidney B. Greenport,a comrade of Ging'0, went that ec at a salary o1 4100. In 1786, Petty, Thomas E. Reeve, Joseph Rnffer• through the game enowas, and is now a the first line of mail ooaatee was eoEab= ty, Jacob Reis, A.Judson Smith,William prosperous anrpemter. Big Daniel How.I lashed by Congress from Portsmouth, N. W. Sterling, Jeremiah Sullivan, Lyman mond, oleo of this place, belonged to the'1 H., to Savannah,On,, with a spur from W. Sutton, William E. Shipman, Barton Cam Hundred and Sixty-fifth New York i New York to Albany; sod this line core- D. Skinner, Daniel Smith, Erastua W. Infantry, George Prince, of Southold, prised sixty poet o19oes, Only Specie Tuthill, Charles E. Terry, Charles 8, still clings fondly to no old army" sword was accepted for postage. The following e Tillinghast, George 0. Wells, George B. which he carried home from the wax• rates, counted in pennyweights and Wells, U. Henry Wells, Henry K.Wood, He was a member of Company H, Sixth grains of silver, estimating a Penny- Thomas ennyThomas A. Wiggins, John S. Young, Now York Cavalry Charles Grilling of weight at five•ninetiethe of a doller,werd. John H. Young, Shelter Island served with Company E,I established by law; Single lettere, 60 Company H, after spending two weeks Second Massachusetts cavalry. A.O.Sal.I.milea, .077(7°sots, 7 mills); 100 Milan, drilling on Staten Island, proceeded to ly belonged to Oompaey A, Rhode Isl•1',11; 200,.154; 800, .196; 400, .245; 600, Washington, where they passed three and infantry, and now commands the. ,286; 600 mfies. .33. weeks at Camp Morgan. Thon theLong Peconic bongo, 0roeuport, Inane Mon. In 1789,when the Federal Government Islanders were sent to Upton Hill,where sell, Company E, Fourth Naw York Ili•I was authorized, the General Pott Office they pitched Camp Blies and spent the I fautry, fee prosperous carpenter here. WAS revfeed. It we located the next remainder of the winter of 162. The fol. I William J. Boutcher, of Company A, year at ldow York, and SaMuel Osgood,l lowing spring they wore ordered-to York- 'Fourteenth United States Infantry, is a of Maesaohueeta': was the first Postgame• town, and participated in the peninsula resident of Outchogue. Christopher B. ter General ander the Federal Govern•' campaign. They were hurried north to Moore, Company O, One Hnudred and I meat. Hie salary WAS $1,500; that of', take part in the battle of Gaaynburg,but Sixty-fifth New York Infantry, is a dry the Aseietant, 41,000; and the olerk's,!, arriving after the field had been fought, "goods merohant here. Henry H. Pres. 4500; and the printing, stationery, fuel, they were ordered to Yorktown. Not i ton of Shelter Ielaud was a private in and rent, amounted to 4011 per annum. long after, they participated in the bat• 0ompanq G, Fifth New York Infantry, There were 75 post'olfloee and 1,876 miles tle of Honey Hill, in the skirmishes at I of poet routes. The Postmaster General, Cole's Island, Folly Island, Morristown, You mem TaavaL%x in his report to the Secretary of the Deveraux Neck and Pokotaligo Bridge, - postal Improvements Treasury, said : "There are about tearing up railroad and building on- - twentyoontraots for carrying the 'mail, teenahmente to resist the onslaughts of In euly, 1686. William Penn establish. which has a greater tendency to put the the rebel forces.re The little regiment °d poets from Philadelphia to the prim. business into confusion than 1 appre- from Southold town then, after fighting cipal 001110ments of Pennsylvania and handed., He suggested, too, that his lrae over,went into the city of Charles- Maryland; and the poet office at PUB- oaloe should be the same as the one in delphia was anthorized by an Act of ton,where it WAS Stationed doing provost Might the mail was handled,so that he duty until June 80, 1865. Assembly in 1700. In 1717, there was a might by h1e,presence prevent he net eettled post along the main line of nom• During the for Company o had lout termination through the Northern Colo. levee and rectify In at I The net about one-calf of its originaloomplement ales and Maryland and Virginia,Bud the revenue of .the Union wasf$01,706, 01 by death and sickness, and the men who y g which adorned s clear surplua'of 45,• time between Boston and Willismaburgh, 498,611 sailed homeward from Charleston to Hel- Va.,-Mae 4 weeks in summer and 8 is One Samuel Gordon.who was carrying ton Head knew they would have many a Inter. The poet was not.dispatched the mail between Albany and Schenecta- sad tale to tell to widows and orphans at ,until enough lettere had been deposited dy was overtaken in March, 1804, by a home. The steamer Northern Light to pay the chargee; and, except between violent snowstorm, which proveuted the brought the remnant of Company H to Philadelphia Bud the North, there was Passage of the Rings; and he took the New York, starting on July 4, There no regular departure of the mail, mail upon his back mud carried it to the they were paid off and mu$tered out In 1758, Dr. Franklin was-appointed poetofllon. From this exposure he loot the old Seventh regiment Arm orq,and" pawl Dap'y Paettautor of the Colonies. fid eyesight sad became dependent up• each started for Southold on his own Remade great efforts to improve the ore "charity; buECongreee declined to hook. -..._-- ----"- -""" condition of the ofce, and snoceeded in - grant him any pensian. inhreming the amommodatlon from once Through the efforts of Postmaster hisbouse.-now the home of Gilbert H.• not want to continue through the tun. General John McLean,who was appoint. Terry. Ism told that before the open —would• nal to South Perry get Ufa tcuuk `Q j ed by President Monroe Bud commfe. .IBg of the Railroad the stage driver Bud put.it.onto-the front and of a horse sloned in 1823, the Postmaster General wouldtake.the mail bag into the, house, ]oar and thu"ureue the uneven tenor of was made the head of a separate Depart• and the person in charge of the office"Ibis way. 90 meat instead of the head of a Bureau of would n¢look the bag and dump it; then 1844. LOB . the State Department. In 1810, the the lettere for Southold were put into.a 816Bd Ti'. R. 1B"894894 rates were redcoed to the following: 30 box, and the rest were returned to the' The first survey ng Island woe made. miles, .06; 80, .10; 160. .12j; 400, 181; bag; the bag wan re-looked, and the and through Southold village the line 901, ,26, In 1883, it was reported to the "mail agent"reel th his route. Wheni ran a few rode north of the present road_ Senate that it was inexpedient to reduce it was known that the stege bad arrived,I bed. The panic of"97 put a stop to the these rates, people who happened to be expecting lot,i enterprise, but during the summer of When Amos Kendall was made Poet- tete went to the office and looked over;, -43 a new departure was made with Geo, those fn the box to see if theirs had come I B. risk as president. James Shipman, th master Generale spa m th found that The Railroad was completed 7n 1844,aud civil engineer, was in charge and he was the books of the Department had not ,been balanced in twenty peace; the eon. Elation Lane was the "stopping place," ably assisted by Messrs. Chase and' IEraoWrs were not paid; many offices had and "IInole Hazzard'," was the hoose David canning Brown. Some delay not paid over their balances, and some which the -railroad travelers need very was caused by the difficulty in deoidiag ,bad defaulted entirely; and there were freely not only for a "waiting room"but upon the eaetorn termiuns. The main nearly$900,000 due the bank,on amount also for a hotel I Then Mies Jerusha object in building the road wile to afford'. of overdrafts. He instituted a business carried the mail from her father's to the quick transit to Boston. James Tuthill method by which the first quarter'sbu t. tram,and I doubt not ohs had jolly core- and others worked hard to have the Hees left a balance on hand, and this was Wines then as well as now, But I fearferry start from Jamesport, and quite a applied to the settlement of the old I have made the article too long. distance was graded for that purpose. B T.P. Lawyer Joseph H. Goldsmith urged claims. Hie system of regular reports Southold, Feb. S. 1607, Goldsmith's Inlet, north of Peconic, as tied ever-active supervision was so suo• tUe Uest place, and as there were ob ceeeful that the Department debt ol. As Things Were - staoles in the way of running to the, $1,004,881 in July, 1834,had changed by. Last Sunday's Pagle gave numerous water in Greenport, there was talk of Deo., 1856, to a surplus of$642,891; andiestrnate from the Railroad and Steam- stopping at Pipe's Neck, but at last; this improvement of the revenue oontin• boat Companion compiled by W. possession was obtained%or the present. Bed. He introduced "express mafle," Wdliame in 1848. Here follow some excellent site. In November 1843 a charging trable postage, which had to (tams of interest taken therefrom: be paid in advance ; but the "magic shanty was erected west Ezra L.B Gold- speed"was so satisfactory that the in. New York will fa s year al two ha an' smith's land just west of the 'Bowery come exceeded the expenses by more' k4k b with Albany and also with Dan' Lauer by Peter Malone, who with maty than$9,000; and the system was thought kirk B railroad, Phe New York end helpers did the Gest grading in.this vi- to be almost the some of mail fmprove.' New Bevan railroad is nearly completed, oinity. Later, Contractor Pox,. with a ment I By it the time from New York New York has also a mows, running large oupor t,eet in near Hortonll Lane, xoaEU as far no W Elimiugton, N. 0, It to Greenport section. In Juno following, Eo Washington was shortened from 1 requires 23 hours to go from Albany to the first locomotive, "Postboy," brought day, 8 hours, to 1 day (now 61 hours); Buffalo by rail, and the cost is $9.76; a construction train a short distance out W Now Orleans, from 14 days, to 6 days, by the Erie Canal, it taken 8¢ days and from Tooker',Lane. on Saturday even- 10 hours(new 48 hours); to St. Louis, coats$7 60 with board, or $6 60 without. Ing, July 16, a larger engine with one from 13 days,10 hours, to. 4 day,, 281 From New York to Philadelphiathe gat and anew passenger oar, name te' hours(now 80 hours). In 1889,the Mie• time is 6 hours, and there are two trains siseippi river had become a "permanent idem Can.on's Lane." WEEK this were James poet route"I each way daily. From Philadelphia a- idea�4eo..B. Fisk, Vioe Pres. Jnmee The green proceeds of the New York railroad rune to 0hambersbm g, whence Brooks and others, who were taken to Post office were, in 1790, $6,657; fu 1898, stages leave twice a day for Pittsburg, .Greenport:in private conveyances, Their $947,000; in 1890, $7,780,801, Postage To this record we may add that the. stay continued till Monday evening, anat;. stamps were first used in 1847, and I tracks of the L. I. R. R„ completed to I on the Sabbath,crowds came to see they often watched postmaster Wm,$,.Wella Greenport m 1844,were wooden nleopers strange eights on Horton's Lane. Geo, maefog up the mails and eoieR, the wrth fat bars of iron spiked onto them, F. Wfewell, jn8G tram Union Seminary,' .sheets as the stamps were called for; (I these bare being about the width and preached in the First Church as a oandi- believe the inventor of the perforating thickness of the plates now need for hold- date,and the railroad novelties did not process received'from the Government ing together the ends of the steel Calfs, increase his congregation. on Saturday, $40,000 for his rights.) The free deliv. For quite a number of years there was July 26, the road wan opened to Green. ery was begun in 1863, and the moneyno station agent here, and freight notpart, and celebrated by a large number order system two years later. called for when the trafm came in was from Brooklyn and other cities. Those It seems not long ago when the sheets, kept In the oar, . And as lateae 1866,the were taken in.three trains of three. oars written on one side, were folded and riding on the road wag very rough, not- enoh, ata rate eurprieingly rapid in withstanding the fact that the speed was . those days,for the road was nearer level Euoked, sealed with a wafer, end seat slow--so ,low that with the fregaont and straight than, any other in opera. without envelope. I just remember - whenMr.Salter Horton was the post- cluster for wood and water EE to- tion. Crowds from neighboring viL muster of Southold, having the office atquired 4j hours to reach Brooklyn. The loges went to Bee the oelebrnt(on, whish -- -- - ------... traveler on reaching Bedford ,if he_did. waea very lively one, ander a ]ar e road with interest as taken frons all awning. Wm, Thornhill wan caterer the produce was taken to Now York ins article entitled, "A Street's Better slog)a 0.,d fife "Pxadonoe," Capt, Wm j Dayar" Published Silty 11 1838, as fol- of there tvae an abnndnnoe of good L things' Mayor Sprague of Brooklyn""' nail "Swallow," Cupt, Benjamin tows: presided, and he labored good naturedlp ;Wells, were regular packets from Towns The ate t in 1836 island builtiby Bostm, p ill- to keep ez-Mayor Talmage and others in Harbor. Cora, wheat, oats and pork talista whose tntenI n ,vas to start a good, running order. Among the or- were the staples, and it was rare that 06 to 11 ng line to New York, nassen- p gars to cross the Sound by boat Yr out deny inYitad gn0ets were Messrs,Warren farmer lauted morn than a quarter of ld- New London to Graenport, a sail of Richmond and Barnabae H, Booth,-thea', was the first )reducere of potatoes. miah from one hour amt a half, thence going by leading business msmith on in Brooklyn. In. to Abe Tribune or the next Monday it wes Southold and for many years he followed depot stillstands,ars ' onow devoted tolbl si- statod that, "Long Island is noted for it to his own' advantage and the great less purposes. The route was not a fish, lo-oo•fo-eos and niggers," and Be g000mmodation of the public. For a: success, though the aspm'h„ant was often was that foolishness repeated, than time, Allen A. GoodlifT, civil engineer, renewed some years later. During many people have yet r t senlightenedeer00 was is ohe•ga of the Coad hereabouts. the building of the tunnel the cars oil thosubjeot. The first passenger ao He marded Caroline, younger daughter passed In Pacific a street, turning oil to OOremodntion train, John Smith condue• of Capt. Beni. Wells, and for several escavatim, an+Atlnnticuavenaellw.sl a tor, left Greenport on Mouday, July 27, it years kept n store near whore is now the get undormldug and occupied many 1844, and returned ties same evening. residence of ll, T. Conklin. Mr, Good. months. Gangs of laborers bussu atg- 'Fare, $2,25, and from Southold, $212 , lift moved to Wellsville, N. Y., and is of ging at either end, a rn`ah•y east9ng 1„I A few days later the Boston train started pleasant memory to those who knew their progress, and when the work was .St. him, On the open day of the road complete in lads old residents say stopping only at Farmingdale and the George's Manor, arriving at Greenport three or four valuable cows,bolonging to y v1'ouah tha nrch yvele once”' about. nl's' train near the giauor. Mr.Rt nor keca"11e'sho c wolll cul shout: Before noon. Passengers Oonld dine on Mr, Seth 'fi Raynor, were killed by the e At Nu• I AHtunI, aveme the Union the "New Haven"during the two he Motet was -silt Uy Thomas cosugan. sail to Allen's Point, whence they took a that station in good shape for more than A . on the block above, north- three hours' rile to Boston, reeking-the forty years. It was expected that the 11 trip from New York in leas than nine Southold station would be on Tucker's west ea re and eer 1fwetl cn,htuctadeLlying- hours. The trains were a wonder to Lane, and a right-of-way was given. So sten arouse, Barry C. ti oan,a"' pco- .many, mud there was no swi[tnesa of it was understood, but the final decision prietor, and cmm,ua`rzl➢V�which vis1Ostni travel like that of the "Boston Train.''. Was for present site, The vioissiEttdes owned y street, owne[I UY F• B• Litehdeld, and now at.. Ayres and Mr. Bowers well fav through whlo11 this fond has been would tared and rented by doors, Here buld H engineers. The former became a fill a large volume, and but for the high ness men missing a train would find night, t going to Gfhnore's or Mrs. wealthy resident of Jamaica, and the chargee,probably it was saver under pleasant aced"'n,odatle8 fur tto ,quer continued his chosen occupation better management. A greet detriment Murrny's every stab would to in Brooklyn. Smith Ryder was a popu• to this branch of the Island hall beau drllev`n to their homes near too city rat lar .oondnator. Of engines. the "Fisk,". that the managers seemed not to pppra• Among those who resided Elizabeth the "Brooke;" 'Boaton,""Elibu Townsend,". elute our goodly heritage; but moderato, Livingston nglish O1GborgeIV Wood' deal''Uoli I wines, fruits quit cigars, oil Atlantic and I oil Little" were marvels to lie sub progress is better tops avenue„and who afterward he house pOlmg9tOra, EY00pt at Greenport no m¢ahxoon activity. D. P, HORTON, oil Willow place: Peter TaYNew Y01,1[�n and Static, rooms were provided for the _ _ ware, 4 Gold street, SELLS OF OLD TUNNEL' New Orleans, who afterward mast to );act E,d,And fora long time i neeengere at soutltold 8epended upon the heap-• San Francisco Captain Strout.AHan- tic Ocean sea captain of Maines tnhtp of our "Old House at Home" On Stephen M. 1Mra¢Drown.iseveralneoff Heton'a Ln,e:" At what to new. Pa: IN A'�LANTIC A�ENOE''. 1„ this city; whose daughters now reside in the attic, Daniel Overton, an eo001ATle city. FL 1h Dickinson, druggist' .Iehul G. Latimer, carpets, and Dr.Drake, all bachelor,lived ulcus in a small house, �;ell-known a1 the street; also ,Joseph i and the stoppiug plane was called "Her-. Brlutwell, whose widow afterward mitage."' Thera were no daily papers Ba1llUel Bal-I)aY Recalls Bull dill�', H it as boarding oar i e.houre on opposite side.otilnnb1e'' here then except an occasional one Squires building (1Sae), Nicholas Pike, thrown from the Boston train. Soon of Long Island Railroad a paperhanger in New York, ,resided, who became American Consul to the .the.mail was carried on the a000mmoda- Years Ago. Islandoffs-oMa tritius,ile Oil the coastrof tion train; and for really years GOO. - Africa, limn to that oY I-Inyes.'Tow•ard Hue ferry Smith,was the -:.glut. Early in the --• on thesame (south) side is the Bostonl- spring of'44 Henry Clay was the Whig (NOTES HISTORIC LANDi:IA1tR Rotel, once the favorite with the raioad connpany, and still owned by the nominee for President, and there was rMulfordMartin estate, and which was much e,thuefnam. Later when the Nion and wmnen Prominent In Busl• opened as the Clinton FIotel by Thomas Democrats named Jare68 K. Polk maopICetcle ol, who .came train Patchogue mess and Social 11'orlds and who dm (lied In hotel. Among the of the party were greatly surprised, and merchants who,at various times, stop- even Col. Lester exclaimed, "James K. at That Thne, ped at this hotel were: Mr. Cary, a Polk' who the%wasdavit t °. The day produce dealer, residing in Yaphank; 0.ftOC 01eutionwas stormy but aeVe[nl ' The recent demolition of the old Patchogue,whoiOften cattle touce e the[s In cit� wooden:flepot of the Lung Island Rall- This oral of. the street "vas a notable ardeutyoung Whigs went to (#roenport [,oad.at the foot of Atlantic avenue locality lIally will recall the little, for returns, 0.udv0Cp slept Was too die. brought Ydrth an illustration and frill fat flagman. William Ennis, win° from pppomtmentbe00.uee of Clay's defeat.. desmiption.hn The Eagle. Additional his horse at the entr sec at the the tun- Before the railroad WKS built, much Of reminiscences of too locality will Ue �nr0achinlg[trni has and who Yafterward ' was the horse car starter at the Sotith 1 my own experience, thinking it might brokenartfrom the 'mast ana mitten Parry. ',`hen there were the geniat be interesting to some of the readers, near;so that we got it on deck; that Coll du tie's, Smith Ryle, and Edward was-all the Spar we had. We made a L(r Le Forte. of THE TRAVELER. . jury mast of it, and the gaft topsail, The that president cf mo Larg' Having spant the winter flehin on, wfich was lett, we used for a sail. IIIIs Railroad at was G ell st D. Pin , the coast of South Carolina and I tori- Fortunately the wind changed and be- wh,, resided lit ss Ranson a to of upon da in the smack Bride, John Eldridge, came fair for us. The next day we whose death the road passed to d }'hit- . , •,.d al plila s.naicate r.no elected tivH- captain, D. C. Tuthill, Ambrose Hol- made the Highlands, and that night a Haw Z. Morris in )854. who resited { drtdge and myself composing the crew, pilot boat towed us to New York. The on the corner of Henry and Socs.lemon we left Charleston the last of April, vessel did not roll way over; she must streets, and who subseauentiy re- 11856, for -home. We had pleasant have been bottom up, as the prints of turned to Germantown. Pa., where he e- weather until we came up to Cape the stove covers and ashes were Been has since died. when scene was ra-, Hatteras, wherewe met a northeast moved erol Atlantic avenue, In 1860, „ , no doe ceilingiv the cabin. There is 'ins control of the coact passed to � wind, which compelled us to lay to' no doubt our lives were saved by the olive" Charlick and mayor Have- for the night. The next morning it breaking of the mast; that gave her a meyer, both of whom served respective I-moderated and we had good weather chance to right up. If she had not, terms as its president. Upon the day till the sixth day. That morning the she would have filled with water im- of the cleat], of the latter in the may. captain said if the wind was favorable or's office in New York (November 30, mediately, One such experience wasoffice1874), the ownership passed to the `nye would sight the Highlands before lenough for me, and I have not been to Messrs. Poppenhusen, whose disas- night and would soon be home; but we sea since. The captain had the boat 4•ous history is familiar and following Were doomed to disappointment. The repaired and went South after that, which It passed to the hands of Re-I wind came northeast and_by noon was 'and in 1861 went fishing on the coast of salver Sharp and thence to the Corbin blowing a gale, and we were compelled .Florida, His vessel was taken by a syndicate, SAMUEL BARDER. to take in sail and "heave to" under Hebei privateer. He lest her and all Charles Wiggins no old resident of the storm-trysail. The wind increased he had, and he and his crew were taken Greenport died at his home on First at., that night and the next morning it was t ;2a - 1 -•�• 4. Inst Monday. Fm• m soe forty years h° blowing a howling gale. I think that 1JLSCZ[L"b7728 Her •'.Dfbbbs6jbfeP engaged in the mercantile business m 1 never saw it blow harder or a bigger: A The strange ansa of the wealthy Mra. Greenport, and in the spring of 1888 he sea. Before noon the captain thought , p [ g Eugene V. Strong of Babylon dlaolaim•'1 gave up-doing business on occount of it would be rodent to reef the trysail, ill health. Ile has been a great soffit- as he was aTraid it would be torn from I_ lug her pretty and tnlanted 29-year old or from disease of the kidneys. Dar- the ropes, That made a very small daughter, was revived in a long and In-i ins his lifetime he kept store in the sail—large enough while the wind blew teresting story In the World Thursday, blulding now 00e11pfed by Edward hard, but it soon began to lull down, Recently the girl has made attempts Ging, in the post-office building, to the then blow harder again. When the{ to ha untied t°her mother,and although north store occupied by S. B. Horton, lulls came the vessel would swinh g• g in the store occupied by Alfred Dew-' broad off and lay almost in the trough her father interceded In her behalf, Mrs, of.the Bea; at such a time as this, a -. Strong Is still obdurate and refuses to o sen, and other pintas, last place , g Using In the building now occupied by ' lot";'e sea;caii0':ht her under her weather ' recognize the girl. Philip Newort. He was a good citizen qutarter and thht•ew her.over. We were Mrs,Strong w and n born merchant. The funeral algin the cabin at the time, as -there g ae a f eoonlo woman,the services, conducted by Rev. he E. His- was i othing we could do on deck. We daughter of a man named Goodale, who cox, were held t his tato residents B. on had one man stand looking out of the. was very wealthy and regarded as n' Wednesday, Stiribi sem- cabin all the time. At this time the miner, At his death she Inherited'all his 3 and burial m g � ain was watching; he suddenly oteryy. Mr. Wiggins wne born is Now� stecapptped down, pulling the slide over to :wealth, about. $800,000, Twenty-throe Y2Itis father, Brunson B. Wig-I close the cabin, and at the same time years ago Alto marded IIIStrong of fr,ine,was a merchant in NOW York said, "That is a bad fellow" (mean- Babylon at Pascale, Three years later' City, and in 1827 he bought the house 'ing the big sea that was .coming in). the girl was born,but in three days Mre, and two acres of land now occupied by He had no more than spoken, when Strong had the babe removed from her Ilowa•d M.Jerome,on the North road, quicker than lightning (if anything can home nad has never permitted it to live and moved to Greenportand established be quicker) the vessel was thrown th to eines, although the girl, now a general counWy stole. The house Over and aysl'ything in the cabin was a young lady, and the husband, have wos built by a.Capt. Webb and at the in a heap, with the vessel bottom up. three separate times tried to awaken in time was said to be the finest residents By the time we could get on our feet the mother a love for the child. She on the cost end of Long island. The the water was coming in the,cabin by gives no reason for her Strange actions, interior decoratlons and finish were the barrelful. Fortunately she rolled and in.an interview Mr. Strong said he an' fluent. The house cost some back on her]reel and we saw the water 0ouldThe givegirn for reason, either. $10,000. Mr•. Wiggins purchased the had stopped coming in, and I can a with the family R. J, set has lived Tru- plate of the],sirs, of Capt. Webb for sure you all hands never came on deck nnnehnr •y of R.',1, Hunt in 'Pru- $850. Mr. Wi gins afterwards traded. faster than we did. I shall never for- g.N. Y, Mrs. Hunt learned of gg get how it looked when we got on her while visiting In Riverhead, The the place wain Jeremiah Icing for n .eeclk. The mast had broken off at the girl was tbon living with a Airs. farm of seventy acres on Shelte-1810l t, deck'; mast, rigging, sails, spars, all e!ora°,s distant relative, In Br.mklyn, it now being a part of Shelter Island laying over the side; bulwarks all Louis Rathbun, formarly of Riverhead, Heights slid valued at about $12,000.an gone£tom the leeward aide; the boat was aequalnted with the families and °ere. Soon after Mr. Wiggins- moved _I that was lashed down, stove into ten with the situation regarding the girl It to Greenport, henry Beebe, who owned thousand pieces—not a piece large en- was largely throuvh him that Mrs, at that time nearly nil rho land now j ough to float s cat; anchor and cable Him wits Induced to take the little covered by the village, offered the one—the deck cleaned of everything Me, Wiggins or $ � homeless girl in t0 her family, whore .Same to f1400."' y but the windlass. We saw aonce a t site fine since resided no lira, Hunt's -- -_ -" ---"- - that U the rollingof the vessel and !cater daughter, being educated in Ali F., perience ofFiftyYearn -n-- the surging of thmast that there was s°Toole and°alleges. Havtn,xdcently read a story out of ,danger of a hole being punched in her The girl l conversant einthe with all o[ the; one of the Library books, "The Deep !side so we were forced to cut the Ian- [note. Sha lives In the hope that even- tuef the viRito 'h heart alit soften, Sea Tale," of a flaking,schooner that i ter being cut loose,whole InAl ff from The[ether vista the girl qalto often. was dismasted and rolled over on the her bowsprit and hungby the jibstay, He bee built n now house In Babylon fishing banks, it brought so vividly to but it soon worked adrift, one part af- and dealeree that he will Install the g girl tiers, my mind an experience in my life, that ter another, till there was nothing left Both Mr, and.Mrs.Strong live a life I felt almost constrained to write of but the jibstay The' topmast had of luxury and case, traveling about in -- ---- •- their yachts and autmnohi lds sad spend tag a part Of melt year In Florids,Av_jn6llf 'sy ril 3 8 .Ty gs--�aq'9 E� A 'e _ .__ �. f _ .A" ^ b '� 1's. '� �f�0a .w Yoe.(+.° "+- j �zz _ilth y �: iD Called 'u '� �S-'a S�v f bks _ 4k:✓ >.,j I, I. Cf 1 1 q t � ✓f� 114 - � t Vy g N yam i ^q5 The Post Papers pastor of the Presbyterian church. My Do Not Swear 1835-1902 father-in-law, Wm. Faller Horton, was Decay i0 written on all things earthly, named after him, as was Ezra Luckey It chills my blood to hear and locust poste will not lost forever, Boioeeau atter Mr, Luckey of the Moth. The Bleat Supreme, The big eased posts that once supported edict church] Second annual meeting, Rudely appealedto my front gate have collapsed and Dec. 11, 1881. L. H. Jennings elected On each trifling theme, brought to light some manuscript- snit a President, James MoNail, Vice Proof.' Maintain your rank— lot of newspapers therein deposited by dent, Third annual, Dec 10, 1832. 06 Vulgarity despise; my father Bixtyseven years ago, When liners elected; L. H. Jennings, Presi• To swear is neither brave, tha'third pulpit was removed from the dent;Deacon Wm. Horton, Vice Presi. Polito, nor wine old Presbyterian church during the pas. dent; Halsey Haines, Treasurer; J. W. You would not swear totals of Rev. Geo. D. Miller a record Scatting, Secretary. Fourth annual, Upon a bad of death; was also found in the handwriting of my Dec.20, 1833. Same officers elected as r Your maker ake father, which I had seen him place there last year, except Treasurer omitted. Now Reflect, Yo=iy aropi akeyour LreaiA, when I was a school boy. Those done. Fifth annual reacting. Dec. 10, 1881. menta were rescued and returned to me Alfred H. Sandford elected President, The above lines were posted is the by my friend, fleury Huatting, Esq., G. L Davis, Vice Piesident,J. W,Hudt. stores.and distributed among the public formerly pariah clerk. "The First ting,8ecretary,and a board of managers. about 1886, by Mr. William Terry, who Church"is now one hundred years old Present number of members, 281, and I was a,well known, excellentcitizoo, that and has papers deposited in a corner Increasing. Market prince : Wheat, $1; "read his Bible every day," Oldest stone, ns I was repeatedly informed by rye, 75a ;core,760 ; oats, 87} an, re c.; be , ad Orn will recall his venerable form all the late Jonathan G. H)rtou, who was $8;eggs, one chilling; onions, 600. [Po. he walked thestreets, wearing a soft hat, present at the time, tatoes not quoted and probably not long nleter and leaningon a very long! My poet papers fire in a badly dam. raised for market] anne, His home was where now dwells aged condition and some of them cannot Among the newspapers found in the Mrs.Captain Beujamin Once, his grand•, be deciphered. The principal sheet poet arc: daughter, He was a large land holder' bears date, Southold, 30th April, 1886, Several copies cf the Temperance Be. for those days, and possessed a good when General Jackson was President of corder, a monthly published at Albany, share of this world's goods. At ohuroh the Uofted Staten. It says: "Thig fence fifty cents a year, he was a most attentive listener, Dur•; was built for me, Moses 0. Cleveland, The Evening Star,Nov. 20, 1834, pub• ing the summer weeks he almost daily,. by Wm. D. Cochran and his apprentice, lished by Noah and Gill, 47 William St Sabbsthe excepted, raked sea weed and Richard Lathers, of Georgetown, South New York, daily $10, semi weekly $4. creek mud into a large Brow, loading to Carolina, who is now 17 years and 4 it contains a Long Island Rail Road ad• the water's edge, and then stopping to menthe old. I was 30 years old last In• vertisementsigned by Joseph H. Gold. boil. He kept two scows, and while he dependence Day. My wife, Buoy Bob. smith, Samuel Hicks, J. H. Weeks and was loading, a helper would unload, add bard Cleveland, IN 32 yearn old. The others calling on stook subscribers to so a large heap of valuable fertilizer was! weather is cold and vegetation is vrry pay$6 on each share. raised on the ,bore of Jockey creek,' backward. The mail stage from Brook. The MOrnfog Courier and New York nearly opposite the foot of Oak Lawn lyn passes through this place twice A Ergairer, published by James Wateon Avenue, A wag said: "Uncle Billi week. Salter S. Horton is the P. M., Webb, 68 Wall St. Terry had bailed out,all of Jookeyl Joseph W, Case, Town Clerk, Rev, Ne•. New York Commercial Advertiser, Creek." He was very accommodating, homiah B. Cook Is the preacher of the Sept,9. 1834, published by Francis Hall and when not using his scows, kindly Presbyterian church, ROV. F, W. Bizet g 00„ 46 Pine St., daily $10, The fol. loaned them t0 others, He was inter. of the Methodist church, Rev. Thomas lowing,marriage notice is taken from its rated in anion fishing. He died in the Miller of the Universalist church. Dr. oolumns: At Southold, L. I., on Thurs• spring of 1810, leaving a widow and two David B. Van Scoy is the only Phyllis- day last,by the Rev, F. W. Sizer, Mr, daughters, the elder of which married fon. The merchants are John 0 Wells, Oliver B. Goldsmith, merchant, of New Caleb Dyer Phillipe; they moved West, Albert G. Case, James E. Horton, Wm,. York, to Mies Julia, daughter of Gilbert The younger Is the wife of Mr, Thomas H. Wells, Rensselaer Horton, T. R,' pose of the former plans, H, Wood, to whose kindness the writer ii Glover and J. W. Huntting. [ Will D. MoDowall's Journal, Vol, 2, No. 12, is indebted for the above lines, to which P, Horton kindly tell the TRAVELEri December 1834; a monthly periodloal it is earneetly hoped our people will,give where these seven merchants were 10•1 published at 130 Nassau Bt, N. Y., Rev, hood. D. P, HORTON Win. _..._ ___.... oatsd and what became of their stores 7 J J. R.McDowall editor. Motto, "Purity� The Post Papers No. 2 W . D. Cochran keeps the Inn near mya , and Troth." This is the last number of r8 2 a 02 place, and he built the Southold &code•, the Journal and contains the "Editor's 9 my in 1834 The Independent Temper.. Farewell Address and report of the core Another eased gate poet line given up anon Society was formed in 1836. The mitten on his accounts during four . its record, deposited there by my father first Temperance Society was formed years." He appears to have had some thirty yearn ago; his mnnneoript is in Deo., 1820, At the fleet annual meeting,'' trouble with the New York Observer and perfect condition, and I wish I could Dec.0, 1830, Lazarus H. Jennings was the'Third Presbytery of New York, In ' show his autograph, which is no clear all, March>1834 the Grand Jury of New if signed today, chosen President, Gilbert L. Davis, 'as York presented the Journal to the court President, Ebenezer W. Case, SeOretary. as a nuisance. It was succeeded by the The following is a verbatim copy of Addressee were made by Rev, J. Hunt. Advocate of Moral Reform, published his paper: "July 24th, 1872. This ting, Rev, John Luckey and Rev. Wil.. monthly at 148 Nassau St. by the Fe.) fence was refixed by Beth Wells; it was male Moral Reform Society of New York j built May, 1834, all was the house. The Ilam Fuller. Report was published in City, at one dollar per annum. ` summer hoe barn unusual hot, Flay the Republican WatOhman,Bamuel Phil- N.BUBBARD CLEVELAND. IT .. .. _. lips editor. [Prom 1830 33 Mr,Fuller was _._Southold March 20, 1002. / GL> only addling, wheat good ; corn is vorY formerly ocounfed ny a. r. uorwin. Republican - Watrilman.� promising. A great excitement here Gge W. Young and C. G. OOrwhr a concerning the Presidential election; bad,eorwith "commendable public spirit," EsTAiantsucn V It in• on Mawas Ilenr r A. $wavesn street lamp at ELpleading candidates U. S. Grunt, the prese of Main street. O. Bates was "leading s oumbent, opposed Horace Greely. gr000r,"and AugngtuS Halsey was run- PUBL13TIER AND PROPRIETOR, Preachers — Presbyterian, Epber ling the carrier grocery at "knock _. Whitaker,has been pastor already twenty-, down prices," James G. Wells was prrbllshodEvery b'atnrdnY lliortan;-;to landlord o f t h e Groenpm•t House, ono years;Methodist,Edward Waxriner; and D.Taylor of the Wyandank Hotel. Geonport, Suffolk Go..N. Y'. Oatbolfo, John MoKena, Postmaster, Che Peaonlo Hoose wag for onto by DECEMBER 24, 19112. J. W. Hantting, also Town Clerk. David G. Floyd, also the residence of t Henry Huuttiug, justice of Pence. 'Are' John Neill (music teacher), on 1 By WHaat AND\NREM WAS Trim Frnsr Railroad avenue, J. E. Horton and THREE MASTED SCHOONER Bmur?—'this James R. Robinson, principal of the Clark &oorwin were undertakers and question 1s rnisod In an art(isle elso- Southold Academy. Merahants—F. L. dealer photographs furniture. LHammond was whelo taken from n back number of Judd, Prince Brothers, Sherburne Beak- taking ,way down"at the with and G. S. Tillinghast. H. A. Old stand two doors below the post of. the Brooklyn Eagle out of which It Reeve, Supervisor, Market priors; floe, and Ebenezer Clark was the Poet wns clipped and sent us. We have Wheat$1.60, corn$100, ants 760, pita• master, The L. I. R R. time table then heretofore treated of tilts matter and advertised that the express train would have devoted some time to all effort toes plenty and cheap, say (I shilling, run to Grloupoort. on Baturdays only, to uccorlaln the facts. In the BI Ceti eggs 240, butter lou, cotton shooting ,Capfrom O nCOB. Edwards was rano ngtountal Volume of Addresses delivered 15o. The Sons of Temperance in good, the steamet• Escort between Sag Hari at the celebration of the Couutyb working order, John H. Boisseau, W. her,New Suffolk and New York twice R '00thann(versnry, on Nov. 15, 1883, P. The local temporauoe society MOOte week. Dr. Nat Cookling had a dented the article prepared b ourself upon monthly. Iflce at 88 Main street, and G. H. P p Y "I fli Bill 77 yrs. and 20 days old, Gleason a law uoe in Boot Davis' tile" m e Comerce,Navigatlou and Flsh. building, Front street. 1 Giles"of the County, hits an account "MOSES C. CLa`VVLANrt" Tfol Su,Q•olk Times of April 6, 1872, of the building slid launching, to Oa Five newspapers were :nand deposi. William R. Duvall, proprietor, has ria. (ober of 1885)fit Lilo village of South' ted in this post: The N. P. Times'of the first pa a Mrs. Elizaboth H. J, Jnne 7, 1875, contains a fall report of Clevelaud'a beautiful poem entitled, amptoo, by William French, then a ..No Seat in Heaven." The Southold resident on HIII street and a tnnn of the Republican Convention at Phila, 'ravings Bank is advertised to be open many original Ideas, of a schooner of delphia the previous day, at which Gen Isvery Tuesday,Thnreday and Saturday, about 80 tone burthen, named the U. S. Grant was unanimously reeomt. from 30 A M, to 8 a M ; twenty-one Sarah Helen, and having two Center- nated for President and Hon. Henry trustees are named, who have all passed masts. She was Wilson for Vice President of the U. S. away, At the annnal 'Down Meeting, boards and three The I IPBrkZ,July 4Lb, 1872, hoe a field April 2, 1872, H. A. Reeve was bulltmtile streotiuProntofhlshouae complete list of delegates and alter. elected Supervisor by a msjinty of 21; and was drawn on wheels by mahp uatee to the National Demooratfe Can J.W. floating, Town ls, C 2e major' yoke of oxen into the waters of ]teary vention at Baltimore on July 0th ,ty; J. Madison Wells, Collector, 45 Horace Greeley was candidate for Pres. mej rrity. The total expenses of the I Creek, nn effluent of Shipnecouk BILL, ddent and had made a speech at the BOB town, except for roads and bridges, earl which at that time had an inlet from ton Coliseum, in which the moat notice tbo war debt °now paid,"was$3,44927 the ocean deep enough to Ilout tills chic feature wag the absence of Buy Voted that$1000 be raised by tax fm thesapportof the poor, and $250 for curious craft, She was successfully political alluefon. [The some your Mr, rondo and bridges. AGO mmittee of five taken through the Inlet and mnde her Greeley spoke on the Suffolk County was a oiuted to flutl Ehe beet IOoatlOn way to N.T. City,currying n cargo of Fair all Una at airing end; his soh- and approximate cost of a tow❑ hall, cordwood;there she was sold Land em, Stowas d been indict Edward B ,cud report at the neat annual meeting Stokes diad been indicted and was on Edwnrdg, Wm Played is Southern trade, d seaseawsg u trial for shooting James Fick, Jr., on Z Icing(lemmitteo : Lewis A B H Booth,J. G, Tuthill and f fast sailer and a staunch and or- the 8th of January, 1872 There had E. H Overton. '.Phe steam mill of E thy vessel, neem a prolonged "heated term" and H. Teri 8c Co, fit Milt Oreek, find.beep As"Bluebiller"does not lay claim there were more than forty deaths by entirely ooueumed by lira. for the Magnolia that she was bald( snustroke on July 31 in N. Y. City. Tam LGN(} ISLAND 1nAVmLmn, March The Republican 1Vatclwn¢n, Greenport, 27, 1872, was then published at Out earlier than 1840,there is a Grtu gtu of Fa», 8, 1872, containing a neorological aha ue b L F. Teri at 75 cents Per fit least five yenrs in favor of the Sri- list of deaths in Suffolk Co. in 1871, gasp It contains resolutions of xeepaet, rah Helen, which was certainly numbering 774. Mention is made of the ado to at the Rivexbead County Corr' launched in october of 1835. lu the burning of Golderoith & Tuthill's store an Ehe death of Spicer D Dsytou, which abaeuce of an roof to the Contrary at New Suffolk, with the books and-res oconrred Feb. 22, 1872 Wm. M Betts Y F ords of the Presbyterian pariah at Oat• was acting as auctioneer and G. F. we are justified in claiming for Wil• ebogue. Frederick H. Brown adver• Hommel had added a new allow room ha • Item French of Southampton the hon• treed the !Mulford Farm"for sale, 105 his boot and shoo'store in Cutchogueor of luvoutiug, It that be the right acres, bonnded north by L I. Sound, H Jennings had opened his new meat ward a third const for n schooner etc ; George W. Lyon and Nathan Rap mnrkGt in Southold, Ten thaasnud Inn had "just received s big stook of bushels or CUBOOO potnloos WGra wanted rigged vessel, and also of lining tills dry goods; John G. Champlin silver.. b J. B. Terry, dealer in Long I3lnad l 3 masted echooner the Sarah Helen tised "The Ticonderoga;" Anton( produce. Orrin A. Prince and 'Mia,.. with two centerboards. Rrancher was °Heeling the Nation," Hattie H)bart were married MBroli 20, and Wm C. Vail advertised a list of L872 - _ Suffolk Co, agents that were selling his Here ondoth the Post Papers. �'Oelebrnted Health Restorer." H. K. Weldon announced his intention to open Bontbold, April 8, 1902, - I meat market at the Front street Shop, N. HODIIARD CLEVELAND ki ionshfp to one anothor and even fn Ill looking up all answer to the In �011IIll19CCIIC08. the locntfon of the "Home Lots," Mr. I'gairy as to when and by whorl the it seems to Case had not hfe equal. Any one .who IirSt 3.masted subooner was built, on I Past 10 years,how long rioetty led us to search further mad ook forward to and how short a time. tvauted to know hother 0w he was connected til seek to know someth(ug or the vessels now that it fe sono. I look)nl[ttin Me in Ono or tilie info matiou°from I'ill "Itdo tress recall rn built o ports to this county. No au• and sea those now taking 1 thel ligrecofd exists; but In the IB- businesaslidcratesofoutdailylife who stnglo etaboefnwliehhofailed. What xicell Coutenulul(praptited lu 1683) we aro- warn then oUiki-all fmen.all of mischief std- the presentlogy isra,d to will cls N trace nowgiIt_ cured In mot's or less cotnC°annd date yteat��ago last January that I now It t&etall t come v ug can ttnko�lyia pinoe� No one S. tile', Ue name,rig,ton nnee,1 of Inanchisg, of Sil vessels theft were to Sonthohl and eutarad in t1a ch•ugi Another visitor, was. dol. `Phomas Icuou•n to have been bails in the corn:- business with Dr.SwcOt, then one' "be" a led, aG times tune than o ditiniaril iu� ty,excluefca of several hundred small lovedphysichu"" The mon who werethere y sloops and schooners built on the that prominent in out every day life are fading to a great degree.ts He would would trent Souib Illy, mostly for nahing, gone, rigged its follows:Sloop,12',33; schoun- Mr.Peck was thoue imply visitor. Pull take a paper through never end won pay er,tt2:brig,3i;barkeotine,t;baftlue, of projects for village improvement that by the seta Uut ceipt, failed to me 10;sbip,2; Biennial', 10 t sloop Samek, then seem himeri°al, hub many are now for and get n receipt, nud ne the IIRVO eamo nt 10; Behr. smnek,11nbonllo lP Yncht, pilot he wtastnluaya ready use. Ali ardtoe maintain rhis had quite a pilooP4themcenee]$Gill hattvns as achy, ynebt, 8; g. boat, 1; barge, I. Its addition, at Se- opinion by argument. A warm Un[ver- aarofnl and particular about that as be tanker Will. Bacon bulls a0 vessels, ealiet, no ono felt n deeper interest ill was in other things, as hie largo and well but tho rig and tonnage could notes the'AlinaeA9 of thn "corner olruroli' nud circuses fetes placed _finally showed. Had ascertained. All Of these nenryy 000 caw a brighter future for it in coming circumstances placed him in Wall Street vessels, except l their rig any lath• year°. No one who hes departed from he would have accumulated a large for- vessels, except were bulli for commef• ,lis world wns mire mieeed or deeper tune,as he was very gifted nen flvanoisr. cial uses cud ranged In tonnage from rogrotted by m0. Qui°]c and or deeper I rO evmUernsted hem at one time why 20 to over 3,000 tons burtheu, Of thorn it ie tt•ae, bat uo man ever 'bad morn he Hover invested any money koro at all we can now [Ind n•treo or but very generous impnlsaa; an one would do a' bond and mortgag07 His reply was "It few In present service--Perhaps 60 to kindly actor 10111 ono ill distress More ,his true Imay logo by city investments at 7v would cover rho entire list uP ser- willingly than 114,', PcOk, and two doubt'. times,but if I do no one ]snows it; and vivors. Of really their bones repose I'll, last hours found him with on° ifmI righ�m�Q°tlwould be said,ere and s Lester in the ocean depths m•whiten ou In. fcalfug of Imtred to any man. is a hard-ltormtod, mean, old miser and hospitable benches; others fell a prey ''Another frequent visitor tuns Capt, I tla town would ring, Rol I prefer an to wreck end storm or fire In Dolt, Benj. Wells, "the mariner." dale and occasional loss to yeah uncalled for re- •.vblle the great majority slowly de' hearty at oval'80 years he would come fn I marks." I world urge 1fm to give Ilia scenderl the path of .age, to their final and with the request for "it little of thathos° place, "0alve'a Neck," to the dissolution. Of the total tonnage than good tobacco,"Sit and road without the Town with 'fund of about $80,000, the shown to hate boon constructed, for aid of spectacles, the finest print It inteiest to be used be keep in order and commeref it uses, i° Suffolk county., Was a tare teoat'to me when he gave beautifying ft, but his reply was, "Its all pribt•to rho year 1033,the exact mnaunt some of the reminiscences of big early good but where is the $30,000 coming cannot be given ; but a safe c dointe days. I recall ane overt of his going to fromP" His large estate showed that would put It considerably above 100,- range County, I think on horse back, I gain was n amnll consideration. nun rjnj. and the long time it required and the A d is OF HISTORY. long, a Lang Island diflfoulty of finding Itis way. Later he - ant calDeanna M. C. OlOvArid eland seta n fro' Sound is 110 Miles long, and From 2 to commanded the packet running betweav snout caller nud prided himself on Lig 20 miles side. It is open at its eastern oxtremity into the Atlantic ocean by 0 here and New York. Capt, Wm, Booth I faming, sal in truth lie was a good passage called the "Race." Long Is• wag his main nud for a nuMbor of years bell oil Tlto ringing of the nine oolong Solar- laud forma three counties of the State the jotiruey mast be made Uy either, bell on Sunday by moaning teas for n long of New York—ICiuge, Queens and Suf- stage 0.Sailing m'nft. Capt.Wells emtld l daytimOho tvonkllgo t r Groonand pmt every com- folk—is 116 miles long and 12.miles fn tel!of some remarkable escapee when II ( ras Iiia watch with the regulator at average width, with an area of 1,682 .going up and down the Sound and the 1 Square miles. The island was once in stole would be quiet while Eaton Uov/ a na presented tolda store. tvillage Theclock aCol. hnbitod by 13 Indian tribes. August 22 he would by the lend feat his way into presented 17T0, Ser Henry3I Clinton landed on Long New Haven snails aom, blinding anew Lester and placed ill the Preen. church Island, with 0,000 British troops, defeat- storm. His groat age Made kiM n link has done away with that cuakom. 0d General Sullivan and compelled between the past and tli0 present that it Ezra Horton would occasionally old, Wasllington to evacuate the Island. The sag hard to loan, Rod I thivk can claim to be the or'igiuu- Island tuns included in the grant made mr. T, Wickhaul_ Case, million he for of begging for ou0'8 own tom)Stolle to the Plymouth Colony by James I., in rarely°nnee in to stay or sit awhile, was I He Wag a very peculiar chatnotor andpoi• 1620. In 1626 the first settlement wag a frequent caller and n man of more always enjoyed seeia him come, made by some French Protestants under than ordivary intelligeuco and re me. there trps sere to be some thing d0oid• Dutch protection. Adrianne Bennett meet. Ill the knowledge of the differ- 0dly original Said or done. B0 wag a erected the fact house ever built on the en_t families of Southold Town, tUefr re very tall Man,raid it ie Said that at onn - Islandaudit was afterward burned by the Indians, tints he went on a whulin oruisA Un I have umv written only s[ inose woo g -O. ll. Elmer tuna n[regnomt.caller Red lieunme Brod of the confinement ancl�ho anti Mr. Paoli used to have some hot pt'ominc+ut and native thou hnvo now pd� aimed "the great majority-',,really sick. The captain of the chi al•grmomta on politics. Naturally an-. j South- when lie loft hint Ruggested'to him tba to onistio,with n good odmoation,a ready shall Bee another sixteen years fu Soulh• g old will also sea the same falling eat tial thorn would be no Ilia in his walls-command of langnage, he furnished no 1'auka,the same dropping one by one" ing wnte nmol to his disgust' mean competitor Bud one mast be ready nntfl we shall live in niemm'y only. .. Lawyer Goldsmith was anutlmr 'fie- in nrguuheut to hold any coolest with It seems sad to me to sae those who queut visitor mrd always n welcome one, him: have prepared themselves for notivo hfe Ila mild Nod, Ilia dog, wino famfliai A. F. Tuthill often carne in and lie to have to leave it and pass on, yet het ns lights Along oar streets. Ned was given aeemod to mo to take more comfort than to bricking at ove;Y passing tvagau, hnvo any ane I knew, very excursion scall life it f3 Only the of all thin of a Vetter life, not'ho ending of all things. I trust to the Latvyor's diBlflcA, so alt ens otos enffialate on him and I thin h. hr gat all ear•renders who shall Rud guy ploaauro sial he req ueted me to £lutea it ion the pleasure ant of then there was. y Richal•d L. Peters was also n daily in rending those brief remimfauouceR will. string to his cellae that would held him not be tai critical. It is the story of mr so he eeild :dhow,him to get started s9- visitor, for m lima naming in regttlnrly idle Itonr and which rho edit<n• thought then suatch him up and administer to forouoou and afternoon. He nand to ]light ht"one an et ich of hie -unmerone him a thorough 'castigation." All be- have a calls that was made with a wlnla'a io f late. If so I nm [""'Ply oI retvurded• fug prepared they: started for home, tooth for the head and when Mr. Cala Lawyer having Ilia long aloalc on hold- termon would jokingly try to get it from - fng that and Nod. Soon a wagon passed him Ila would hold it so threatingly that ` AN OLD TIMI; DISASTER. slid away went Ned and away went the Mr. C, would have to give it lip. He Omeof the worst disasters which plonk and the string slipping through was an old time whaler and would relate ever 000u 1." on the Long Island Iiia finger.,,lie was unable to hold bin, many stories Of ilio natives and ahvnys coast was the wreak of the sloop of agave lain the proutisod onstigatiou. Ho insisted that a❑egrA,A skull was so all, war Sylph at Soatbampten ninety 1 shook Ilia nano at, him find called, but forent from a white.loan's there was no mears onth go on at thehte olcee oY Y the wars be-reBut I wise Ned kept away.until his auger bad place for any brains. He was a maw of tween the United States and Great cooled. All ardent spfritmaliat,he would strong individuality, an ardent Demo. ! Britain. The Sylph curried twOutY- argue will,groat vigor and Arco getting Oral, that could always be depended on two guns, and was commanded by alittlo mif;iy at my unbelief he shoo] to vita B straight Democratic ticket bee had an activet. "gin Longe Island uBound Ilia cane at me and promised that should every time. AILhongh mover profossfng during the war, but in passing along 11 survive hint he would give me nn evi• nay religious belief, Ilia will gave more the aoatn coast of the Island she lost dance of the power of spirits to return to the churches than any one I ever her reckoning In a fog. She struck that annld leave no doubt of truth, I knew in Southold. Ile used to relate a Pointe and nwasy opposite edly bar hearoin nm sorry to Bay uo snob evidence hag yet story Of big grand-father that memo here the morning by Nathan White, who been given me. He nal Iiia unusually novo"have beard of I think. On one been,,,,,the news to the village. A agreeable wife were most hospitable and ocuneiou, whoa it was about the hour for ' number of men asseto mbled rescue the I have spent many till evening there of the church to be diamissed, he carried a beach ant thevessel,pre which ewas fast hne•e thou ordinary pleasure. When ho sheaf of straw foto the garret and ft theim- breaking up. The Burt was running .moved to Southold he purchased all the, ing it to a long pole held it nut the very high, a furious snowstorm was land lying between Railroad Ave. and window and set fire to the straw, The raging, and the weather was bitterly. 111", Cochrnu's, including the house note dna attracted the attenLiom of the people sold. After eeverbl efforts the brave occupied by Me.Ballou, for$1,400, and i coming home and thorn was Boom quite ing villaboat, and afteers r desperate exertionin landing 0, s I have heard my father any that but one a crowd. As his grandfather kept n store the purser and five seamen were con- mnn,Flor'noe Ovortou of Peemhie,thought' of whish ram was the principal tomo- veyed to the shore. All the others of it a reasonable price, all others thinking dity hewasmaid to have made a good her crew of twelve otdeers and 121 eamen were lost. it too nmol. Ave have made sonic lid- mpeoulation. He also claimed to me dint aOn the wall at St. Andrew's Church, vauoo Rarely. one of tine rooms in Ilia house was strfot- on the dunes at Southampton, is a Albert B. Torry called on me fit times. ly the Home of rho Methodist donominn- tablet recording the wreck mild bear- and was the owner soon after I ofimo to tion iu this nominally, it being .,the ing the names of Ghe officers of thn and Southold of tile drug store and lot ad-. regular Place 'or holding Choir religious thepwbsele above" it are of made tablet from joining. A close, calculating business'. meeting,for some time. pieces of the red codar frame of the nun, ho nnonmttlntedti mice fortune, but Ren-. R. Prinao:wns also a frequent sylph,—Star. ��am, .L/• % g7& 5 my experience with lila showed him 'RW caller and a000mpanied by his dog he though chose yet honest Bud one who, would spend some time with me. Yeal'b would appreciate any favor extended ago he'VOL,a prominent lumber dealer in him. A sufferer from that most nog- Brooklyn and I think held some impor- temptiblo of all dfsenses, dyspepsia, bre taut office ander the city government, latter days w01'0 not to be envied. A He also went to Europe for pleasure strong temperance mum and member of which in those clays wan considered n the Sons of Temperance, he wail, always great event in a maxis life. Be was at ready to speak a good rued for tamper- ardent Methodist and no long as his anon, health would permit a regular attendant Schools and Teachers I with Prof. Elmer as Principal and Pro- Teachers J. II• C." in one of his "Hobbles"prietor, and Miss Bale as Preceptress; Schools and Trac �•• says of the present Catholic church, and although the name of the school The public school fifty ears age It was built in 1834 by Wm. D. Cosh-was amended by omitting the word .flow things have changed! .We may ran for an Academy and was used for Collegiate," the course of instrue- note some improvements : some chang- tion was still to include a thorough es may not be improvements. that purpose with indifferent success•.preparation for an college. And this until about 1860." He elsewhere saynp p e g When the bey Degan to lunch h school that Rev. Daniel M. Kna nen taught pledge was fully kept, , he carried n little round lunch basket there in 1850 and 1851, pI went gto My list u the pupils for the firs; with a handle large enough er put over Thomas Price at the public school a term—August,next to Dears 36 manes; his arm,sat oil d the "intermission" few days; and when after a short ill- that for the next term, 56; that fol' 'came at sat on a desk with his feet on ness I returned to school, Asaph .' the next following term, 75; and thatg for the the seat anABut ate his dinner with his Young was in charge. That was ih maimed term,there l the 'h I re- mates. But he soon learned that the the spring of 1851. I do not remember maimed a pupil there till the spring of basket was a source of too much care, 1861, I have no other lists; but I have especially when playing tag; and if he that there was any school in the Aced- a diagram showing the place of each in had no sister to carry it for him, lie emy that year, nor afterwards until the room on Dec. 22, 1859. amended the plan by'putting the cook- 1853. Having a.list of those who were at- ies into his pocket and leaving the He also refers to the building of a tending the public school with me. in basket at home near the front gate. district schoolhouse to replace the "old the winter and spring of 1858, 1 lately. And then what? Why, the cookies brick schoolhouse" which the boys transcribed the names—118—and to were nibbled and finally eaten before seemed to think antiquated and there-'.them added the other names that were school was called. Then at noon the fore a fit subject for their destructive on my Institute lists, crediting each boy would probably go to "Bill", energies! I am told.that Rev. Alonzo with attendance at the Institute ac- Wells's store and buy two or Ahree' Welton was active in the movement(cording to each of my four lists. Of cents' worth of crackers and cheese. (not this movement 1) for a new the 118 on the public school list, 59 In those days—the days of Daboll's building. At the school meeting which was to consider the question, Alf red'iwere on the InstiCute lists, and 47 are Arithmetic and Town's Speller—a pair was to consider the question, Alfred' now dead. Of the total-183-64 are of shoes were not "rights and lefts;" IT. Sandford presided, and in his force now dead; of the 20 who became sol- but had soles of tine same shape, and ful and impressive manner called the diers, 6 are dead; and there are a few it was considered necessary to attention of his fellow citizens to the names which, after the lapse of forty- "change" them every day. Lest this fact that vandal hands were destroy- six years, I am unable to place. be forgotten, the boy was required to ing that venerable building, During But let us look a moment at the put them in the proper position when the razing of the old and the building pleasant side. One warm, quiet day he tools then;qff—that,is, put the one of the new, the public school was in the first term, the reading class had from the left foot at the right side of taught on the lower floor of the Aced- the Parable of the Prodigal Son ; when the other. But when the warm weath- eny by J. C. Chapin, of Vermont; and Bennie B•'s turn came, he read in his er came, he left those shoes not far James H. Aikman had a select school; on the upper floor. (Will some out nj deliberate fashion, "But when he was from happier the and then who could be v !I yet a great way off, his father saw happier than he 7 No corns, no bull- tell an i tell us what year .) I him and had compassion on him and.ions; no shoe-strings to bother him. In August, 1858, the "Southold Col-. ran and fell on his neck and killed And how much faster he could ran ! legiate Institute" opened there with! him." Janie R. and I laughed at the'And when he stood in the aisle to read 'the following prospectus : Daniel W. "new version," and Prof. D. having for spell, he could "toe the crack" Dickerson, Proprietor and Professor failed to notice the variation demand- just.as nicely as a girl, who had to of Natural Science ; George W.Dickin- ed a reason for our unseemly levity !,wear shoes. Then, too, when he son, Principal and Professor of Mental. Did ever school children fail to laugh if "beat" at spelling he moved toward and Moral Philosophy and General Sci- there was any possible cause or ex- the "head" without any noisy shuf- ence; Rev. Epher Whitaker, Professor cuse? fling. Flow is it—do boys go to school of Ancient Languages and Literature ; When, in later terms, on a Friday,—the Iinion school—barefoot news- Ceorge B. Reeve, Professor of Vocal, afternoon a large boy dramatically and clays 2 Music and Organ; Miss Lucy A. Hale, "with honor to himself and pleasure Will you look into the school-roon? Preceptress, Drawing, Crayoning and to his hearers" recited "King David's'You see that all the seats are occupied English Literature; and Miss Iia;; lament," there were some of us wh and you will find that all grades are rep- Mulford, Piano Music. Eleven gentle won no renown with "See the chicken resented, A very little boy is looking men were to lecture before the Insti- round the gate," "On Linden whe languidly at a book which the teacher tote. Board forstudeuts from abroad the sun was low," and "The boy s toot)(boldsupon his lines; and the latter, could be obtained at from two to three on the burning deck" I ! (`while glancing around over the school, dollar per week. Possibly the Principal's soul was calls the letter in their order to be Soon after the term opened, Prof, sometimes tried with the pranks andlrepeated by the "innocent child," George W. Dickinson retired from the inattention of some of us: positively meanwhile slipping the penknife 'down institution. Prof. Daniel W. Dicker- his sole was tried in the games of foot- one uoteh at each correct .repetition. son then tools entire charge and, with ball when E. P. H. and E. R. A. and To the child, one letter seems about the as of Miss Hale, carried on others of similar build and agility werej like any other, and none has any value the school until .Prof. C. D. Elmer engaged. But we all had good times or meaning. And though he may learn carom in as an assistant. This arrange- there. n, z, r.. their names in three or four weeks, he meat termmaied wntli that ;ran Nov. Feb. 18, 1904. _.___-- Igete no idea from one or all of them_; 26. On Dec, 6 the second team open; , ---- _ and in learning the varying values of As I think of those named on my Schools and Teachers==III many of the letters he may meet sur-A 8list (mentioned in my former pa- I I have delayed this paper in the hope prises as long as he is in his "first per), anfl of many who were my mates that I might complete a satisfactory hundred" years. Before his school there in, previous years, some are list of those worthy men and women days, he had seen many things of prominent for one reason or another. who have taught in our village schools which lie could readily speak the The "big".boy who so often made —especially in the public schools and names : he had learned the latter trouble for the "master" and was so the old Aeadquiy—and the years in while lie looker)at the former. That is often severely punished, but still shed which they`taught; but I have not yet the natural way, and I am glad that no tears either of repentance or pain; succeeded, nor do I know that I ever this plan came to be used in the, the twins who looked so much alike shall. So I have decided to lay that - schools ; for the child takes to it and that a wart on the arm of one of them part of the matter on the table, and learns faster and easier, and I believe was the only distinguishing mark for offer what I had prepared in regard to that it accomplishes twice as much in their mates 'the bright, quick girl some of the select schools, and some of a given time. who went through her reading with no the buildings in-which they were kept But it is time for the large reading pauses and no regard for punctuation —and perhaps some other things. class, and they gather. at the front marks except when a-impelled to count In 1828 and '20 a Mr. Farnsworth with the"National Preceptor." [That one for a comma, two for a semi-colon, had a select school in Mrs. Jane was a book to which might fairly be three for a colon and four for a .full Franks's house, which stood on tiie applied the remark of a Southold one. stop; the good-natured boy who was south aide of Main street just west of tioneer in regard to a Concordance of. "Colonel" before be became a pri- Maple avenue. (The well remained the Bible, "Here's a book that has a vate; the jolly, Meshy girl who had till some ten years ago, when Will. lot of good rending in it,"] Please ex- 'the preeminence of being the only pu- Hull Wells built on that land. Mrs. cuse me.: the teacher is busy and pil in the school who wore spectacles, Franks died in 1846 and the property directs mee to hear the class, and (which so often lost their position when passed into the hands of Capt. Benj. I am delighted to do it. The the wearer stumbled; the slim girl Wells; and the house was demolished lesson is I'The three warnings." No- I who in playing base-ball asked no odds and some of the timbers went into the tice when we reach this part of of any boy at betting or running—or, store which A. A. Goodliff—who niar- the story: really, at anything else; the heavy ried Capt.W's daughter Margaret C.— What next the 1101.0 or our tate befell, boy.who gave me a thorough "rub- built on the present site of D.T. Conk- Hue•tong he lived,bon•wisely,—and how bing" because I hit him with a snow- lie's brick building.) Among the pu- ivoll - ils were Miss Helen Case (m. Edward ball for calling me "names',these P JI nuonend bio,to bia n pat Ills li 0onree:' IIuntCing), of Peeonio, and her cousin Ta wills his uses,and pat bts horse,— all were "on the list.". The ivnilnR muse shulu te.u.° I 0, yes, and there was the cheery lad Caroline L. Case (m. Selden B. Case), who delighted in running the "thrash- of Cutchogue, who boarded with "Un- Whatdid you think of that pause af- _ --- - cle Jimmie" and "Aunt Joicie" Her- ter the word "well" ? Several of the ng- machine," which consisted Of a ton just across the way, where "Un- class would have made the same pause short board (taken from the fence be-I cle" was keeping store. Miss Julia and some woalrl have added an empha- tween the public school grounds- :md Landon, her sister Hannah (in. Henry sis. Some of our church hymns pre• the Academy lob), with one cud rest-! H. Wells), Wm. Mulford and his sister sent the same temptation I Save the ing on the lower rail and the olbe,r only Frances were among those also in at- mark I Advanced reading seems not on the ground; and its the "horse' tendance. to be in the curriculum in these days r stepped and slid in a lively inanner, In 1830 Mr. Farnsworth took the there is no tints for that which gains grass was thrown onto the board and public school. The Rev, Wm.. Faller, no "counts." Reading may not be a „thrashed" under the sliding shoes, a young man with a round face, light "lost art," but good readers seem Sometimes the horse failed to mind the hair and pink cheeks,was pastor of the scarce—even in the pulpit. brake; and in such a case loud cries Presbyterian church, and was conduct- When the reading is finished; some most surely "rent the circumanbieot ing revival services there. The td I l t il � teach- pups wan "help," anam sent And some may recall the lively er forbade the pupils to play on the from seat to seat for .that purpose; boy whose boots hadproved too tight' south side of the street lest they should and that too I like. At one time I had on the instep tad had been enlarged by disturb the meetings. Sidney M. Jell- s class in arithmetic at the back part setting in a piece, which operation 'nings a lad of 14, and Charles Wright of the room. One boy had not thor• gave them a formidable appearance a boarding pupil, disobeyed; and the oughly mastered his multiplication when approaching a foot-ball. teacher, in attempting to punish them table, and I ventured to suggest to the The public street was generally the was so cruel that his services soon teacher that this be required of the play ground; and there the girls i ceased. One evening Miss Susan Case Ind. My suggestion was not well re- played tag and the boys played the: (m. J. Hull Osborn) and her sistel4 ceived and I was forthwith deposed. old-fashioned base-ball—with no autos) Pamelia (in. Chas. C. Moore), daug? The time for this "helping" I could- or cycles to ranks afraid. Then one ters of Moses Case of Peconic, dro� quite well afford from my Latin, navi: , gation and algebra; and the practice rule was, 'Over the fence is o ft" to Southold to attend the kindly of, was.undoubtedly a benefit to me In my and surely the ball was ver often and Sidney' above named) kindly 'I own schools later. knocked into the "graveyard," and� fered to tie the horse. But he put a - - - ----- --- the scrambles over the fence after its. ;lip noose around its neck, and when were more or less destructive of school the meeting was outthe horse's breath clothes. But there goes the bell 1 I was also out. March, 1004. u;T. P. i Miss Miriam Vail {m. dames B. 1 liave many times plowed-over the for all the English hay." [TI ia alma; remains of the cellar; ;which was al- nae is deserving of an extended notice. Downs) was living with her mother most opposite the:house built.by Orrin: The subject of this article married in and teaching aprivate school in 1830 ' E. Prince in 1856,and lately 'owned by 1790 Miss Hannah Woodruff of Bridge- in a house whtc stood near where is Isaac Remsen deceased, now the tenant house of A. Case, E When John F. Corey was teaching The building wassoon afterwards his home school (Ba View), the twin moved by W . Icing (m. Adeline Til- sons of N. Tuthill Hallock—James linghast and had daughters Jerusha Madison and James Monroe—were on and Phebe) to the North road ; and the list. The master was constantly that was his home till he sold to Henry puzzled to tell one J. M, from the oth- D. Glover perhaps about 1841 and er J. M.; but fortunately he one day — bongltt of Rensselaer Horton what is noticed that Madison had a patch on z 7 tow the home of Mrs. Win. L. Bow- one of the knees of histrousers, and so e i.ea.a. tan. The former place, M. McCabe the trouble was over ; patches are use- ought in the "seventies," and a few ful. The next day, Monroe wore the `� p 0 ears ago he enlarged the house and patched trousers, and the trouble broke ymodermzed it. The latter was sold to out afresh. (I understand that Mr. . "Uncle Martin" Goldsmith, Mrs.. Hallock owned the place late of-Ed- Bowman's father, in February of 1853, ward Fogarty deceased, and about 1846 Mr. I{ing having died in the fall of the traded it with Lewis Conklin for a - previous year. The house—lately ex- farm in Mattituck, Mr. Conklin made tensively enlarged and remodeled—was twenty trades of this kind !) b•iilt by V. Horton about 7816—two One of the long list of teachers in years after he married Miss Ruth Hal- our own district is said to have been _- sey of Southampton. (She came to decidedly careless of his attire. One — this village on a sloop, and.on the pass- forenoon a miss who came rather late hampton, and probably went to the age a swing of the boom knocked her was asked for the cause of her tardi- home of his father, John Paine, which list overboard, which mishap led her to ness, and her answer was, "I had to stood where is now the residence of J. remark, "I have come into the town a stay home to iron ,my brother's shirt B stood W On the t 16th e Jul 1801 a•ownless bride.") bosom." At this, another miss, who y y ' When in 1847 Samuel H. Landon died was standing near the teacher, said to he raised his own house—a few rods �at what was then called the Landon him very frankly, "You look as though eastward—and in just three months Ihouse and is now called the Singley some one ought to stay home and iron moved in, finishing it later. That was house—and for some years afterwards for fou." g —his daughter Matilda (in. Hampton But enough for this time. My next the western half of what a few years Mulford) had a private school there. ..paper will go many many years far- ago Chas. M. Post modernized for his She afterwards taught in Cutchogue ther back and will be accompanied bey.f summer home. That land (now Mr. and for many years in New York. Her a cut of Ae "old brick schoolhouse. 'JII Post's was possibly liven to rand- brother Elijah was an esteemed school-' March 8o-ton^ o T. P. ) p y 9 g mate of mute. Henry T. Bing (m; Schools and Teachers--IV father, but all the rest of the "whome Phebe M. Tillinghast), who was broth-�, lott" great-grandfather John willed er to William mentioned above, had I (Deferred) m 1814, the year before he died) to lived in the same house perhaps about' In this paper I bring to notice as one ( '32-5. :. of the teachers of "ye olden tyme" my uncle Silas W. Paine, of whom my Miss May G. Griffing '(m. Ezekiel father bought it. Then it extended Aldrich), besides teaching at some Phineas Paine, not because he was my north of the railroad and from "Uncle time in the public school, perhaps grandfather but because his records about '35 had a private school in the. show so many facts which have proved Russel" Vail's on the west to "Dea- "Aunt Polly" Webb house which' interesting'to me and have also helped' con" David Carpenter's-now Geo. A. stood 7•list east of the present home of me in ascertaining other facts; and I Maier's—on the east. When father Mrs. Evelina Cochran, and was (gger- haps about 1840) moved by Abner venture to assume that other people sold it to Horace Fields Prince, the Wells to the North road and set on his ,may also be interested. payment was made in gold. land opposite the eastern part of the The only story of his boyhood that I Grandfather was a mason and worked Osborn -Tuthill -Voorhees -Thompson have heard is that in the Revolutionary throughout a large part of the town, land, now belonging to Serg't Farley. '. In that small house lived, at different'War,when he was seven or eight years as afterwards did my father, Charles times and with their families,Joel Wood I'old, he was at his earnest request II., who at`the age of 14 went to learn and Michael Malone who worked the farm, and I know not how many oth_ taken aboard a British man-of-war the trade with him: (Masons wages era. (Mr. Wells had moved the house (the first ship that ever entered Town $1.12, and laborer's 60 to 76 cents.) in which he himself lived—now the Harbor), and there he remained the (Many a time when father and I were wagon house of Geo. G. Richmond who greater part of the day, his father riding eastward or westward, he would' owns the farm—from the lot opposite 'meanwhile searching for him about the say tome, "Your grandfather and I; the summer home of C. M. Post on village. Being so Dung he had the did all the mason work in that house," Main street.) Miss Griffing's father, g g y Jared Grilling built a house on his lot liberty of the ship, and enjoyed his or, "I did all the lathing and plaster- (now owned by Michael Lacey) on the visit "immensely". In an almanac— ing in that house.") He had a rope North road probably about 1836. "Un 2�inches by 4—which I now have—his walk and made well ropes, bed cotds, cle Hezzie' Jennings carted some of the brick for him. My father bought. father made the following records on fish lines, etc. He made coffins—price the house, moved it to Boissean avenue some of the blank pages "Septem- $2.76. IIe sold meat (beef 4 to 4J and built onto it; and there was his her the 21 day 1777 the flete went a' cents, mutton 6j:, pork and veal' b), home till his death in 1869, It was al-I way from Shelter iseland: August the grain,(wheat$2), vegetables, grocer- so my birthplace. The.entire building; day1778 sacral trion with his arms 'lea (sugar 14 cents, tea 86 cents to; was burned about three years ago, g Mrs. Hannah D. Ward being the own- came to Southold and August the 26 $1.63), building,materials (nails—all or. Later—that is, in 1847—my father day his army wente a way, April the hand-made-13 to 16 cents), tobacco,I bought of Miss Mary G the land also—I10:'day 1779.the trups came to Southold oysters, rum, cider, etc. He sold to always.called the."Grifftng lot" and --- - - - - -- - one man 6 gallons of rum by the pint 0 and half-pint between May 3 and Aug- tood about where the Catholic church) Y g- Nathaniel Boisseau—Elects (m.Thos. qst 29 and "booked" it. He had a Anson Terry and was the mother of I stands.] The cost was estimated from cider mill and charged only 911 cents a Franklin,N., Ezra B. and Thos. A.), eighty to a hundred pounds, and it was I barrel for the use of it. One man Hannah (m. Moses G. Terry; 2d, Josh- proposed to make forty shares—ma- made 113}barrels of cider in 15 years, up Horton—the latter being the father terial or labor to be accepted in lieu of Cider vinegar was worth 31 cents a of Chas. 0. Horton, and the former cash. These were the Stockholders: gallon. being the father of Mrs. Chas. 0. Ezra L'Hommedieu 4 shares; Wm. Al- He hired out his horse and "waggon" Horton). - bertson 3; Hazard L. Moore 3; Benj. at the following rates: To the harbor I Jonathan Tuthill—Rhoda (m. Asa! IIorton,Sr., 2; Joseph Bullock 2; Benj, 9 cents, Cutchogue 18, Greenport 26, Smith), Anna (m. 3. Reeves Gold I Horton, Jr., 2; John Gardiner 2; Wm. East Marion 38, Orient 60, Riverhead smith), Henry (m. Sally Case), Hari-'Horton 1; Jana. IIorton 2; Lazarus 75. (Dr. John Gardiner seems tonab (my mother). I Cleveland 1 -1Gilbert Horton 1; Giles have been a good customer in this John Paine, (brother)—John Benja-,Wells 1; Jas. Overton 1; Sona. Tuthill line.) Just 100 years ago he charged min, Esther.(m. Horace Hayden). 1; Dan'l Goldsmith 1; Richard Drake Christopher Vail (m. Betsey Boisseau), James Horton—James E., Ezra. 1; Jona, Wells 1; Phineas .Paine 1; who owned the Singley place, "To Asa Smith—Ezra, Thaddeus, Dyer, James Downs 1; Zaccheus Goldsmith 1; finding my spirits 16 days at J pint a Lucy (m. Joseph Wood), Hannah (m. Jas. Horton 2; Widow Elizabeth Tut- day, $1.31." Everybody used "spirits" Geo. W. Phillips). hill 1; Jos. Cleveland 1; Jos. Horton 1; in those times—even at weddings and Preserved Field—Gustavus, Leonard, Moses Cleveland 1; John Franks 1; funerals. My father told me that in Cecelia (m. Martin Prince). Thos, Hempstead 1; total, 40. later years grandfather once tried the Matthew Osborn—Matthew, Parnel The "proprietors" voted at a meet- experiment ee - experiment of harvesting without us- .Booth (half-sister to William Booth, ing held April 11, 1795, that the build- ing any liquor, and was surprised that m. George Conklin,; 2d, Geo. W. Phil- ing should be 22 feet by 24, and 7J feet he did the work just as easily without lips), between joists, with eight windows of it. -William Albertson—Josiah. Some of his memoranda ran as fol- Peter Vail—Esther. lows : In 1813, began taking .the pa- Jonas Wicks—David. pers of Mr. Moore (Hazard L. Moore, Marvin Merrill—Sylvester. who lived at what is now "Hurtling- Hezekiah Jennings—Eben. burst" and carried the mail on horse- Nathaniel Vail—James. back through the Island), In '24, John C. Wells—Benjamin, Henry S. violist built a "loam" ; bought a plow of J. 4. Sally Tuthill—Miriam Vail (m.Jas,B. C. Albertson—$8,13 with share. (In Downs). '37, he bought one for$6.25.) In '41, Daniel Booth—Obadiah, Henry, Bet- bought a stove of Orrin Prince, $10. sey. In '20, made a seine 126 yards long, 58 Hazard L. Moore—Hazard,' Dyer meshes in the bag and 35 on the arm t Smith, made a scow 18 feet long, In '27, sold Lazarus Jennings—Polly Dunster a quarter-right of seine in the Sea (m. N. Tuthill Hallock mentioned in 4 - Serpent to Augustus Conklin, $21.60, my 3d paper). He taught in the old brick school- Grandfather died in 1849, aged 80. twenty 6 by 8 lights, and with gambrel house in the four winters ,beginning .The teacher has gone; the patrons roof; also that Capt, Benj. Horton, 1809,'10, 'll and '12, .and at various shave gone, the pupils have gone; and Dr. John Gardiner, Hazard L. Moore times furnished supplies for it;:he also ;comparatively few of the children of and James Horton, Jr., be the building collected rent for its use—once of. Mr. i the pupils remain. Some of the above committee; also that the building , Townsend 69 cents, and of Dr. John ,namen.will appear in papers to follow should be finished by Dec. 1, 1795, and r Gardiner 76 cents. His bills for school- i',M r According to. .promise, and be of brick if it would not cost over , ing—one year the rate was 2 1-5 cents `th.ej*.;h,they courtosy'. of N. H. Cleve- ;,four pounds more than a framed build- a day, and another year 2¢—were put land, Ilpresent the cut of the old brick, ing. into his accounts with the other schoolhouse, A very interesting his- May 25, 1795, it was voted that each "negessities" which he furnished. A tory of the building will appear in a share should pay thirty shillings ($3.76) partial list of the patrons and pupils short time. B. T. P. to the building committee by the 6th follows : April 19, 1904, day of June; also that there should be John Prince—Benjamin R. and Geo, - - --- -- - -- ---- --"I a chimney ands fireplace in the school- Schools and Teachers--V Whitfield. i house. th Thomas Ledyard—Hannah. (Deferred) Sept. 7, it was voted that e east Matthias Case—Hutchinaon H,, Al- THE OLD BRICK SCHOOLHOUSE end be one and a.half bricks thick. bert G., Jerusha (m. David Landon), On the 24th of June, 1794, a core- Dec. 1, John Franks, Hazard L. Maria (m: J, H: Goldsmith). pany of Southold's citizens proposed to Moore and Jas. Horton, Jr., were ap- Jonathan Conklin-Benjamin Y., pointed a committee to plmr and lay Augustus, Beulah(m:Hull Goldsmith). erect a brick schoolhouse, "for the but the desks and seats and have the Henry Peters—Austin, Harry (fath- advancement of literature," on such work done according to their judg- er of Richard L.), Henry Cleveland piece of land.near the Meeting House 'incur. [A duplicate of the builIling, Its the parish should designate for that (brother to Moses C.) with the same style of desks and seats, -- - - --- --- purpose, •[The Meeting House then - was standing_at Wading River ..soon af- e ter 1832; and it bid also the - Mise Helen Hutchinson, livedof B the Oct. 27,1806, engaged Mr. Haines /� & same kind of strips on._tbe wall be- for 13 shillings per scholar. [Rev. basement house next west of B. F,. tween the. windows for the nails or Moore's and died!n 1844:] Ezra Haines was afterwards pastor of In 1834 Austin Van Scoy, brother to hooks on which to hang the hats, cups .the Congregational church at Orient 'Dr. David B, Van Scoy the resident and garments.] i. for several years and also taught the physician, came as master. He wore Dec. 7, John Pranks was appointed village school. His wife Martha, sis- '.to draft a constitution for the regula- ter to Gordon and Moses Case of Pe- "store clothes" and a tall silk hat, of tion and .government of the brick conic, was a most excellent woman, and was quick in everything and ed schoolhouse. and one of their daughters became the 'the professional nl session witce.h He opened March 24, 1796, it was voted to sell wife of Alanson Overton.] 'the morning session with prayer and the old schoolhouse at vendee and use Dec. 10, 1816,.agents were appointed As also very active in church a of the proceeds to make a board fence to sell the schoolhouse to the school fa an incentive to Bible reading should uld :m front of the parish burying and ; fared a tract to the pupil who should p Y• g Y district. [Pursuant to the new law commit to memory the largest part of and Capt. Benj. Horton and Hazard L. creating the school district system.] .Moore were appointed to carry out the Counters with under shelves extend- rho let chapter of John. I tried very hard, and great was my disappoint-. i,order; also voted to build a necessary, ed along both the north and the south 'the. cost to be apportioned to the (front) aides, and the seats were slabs ment when the prize was awarded to' shares. sawn from oak logs. ea slab is the Hezekiah Jennings, Somehow I doubt- April 10, it was volved to purchase an first strip sawed—like the first slice ed the propriety of the award, for had iron stove of Hazard L. Moore for six from a loaf of bread—and the slabs not "Hezzie" and ' Siah Albenson" pounds 16 Dr. John Gardiner, —Doth older than Idhid my cap, le 90 p ($ )• used for seats had of course the flat that my father had to see Uncle thmard L. Moore and Capt. Bonj. Her- side up and the bark aide clown 1 Seats Ston were made trustees for one year. Johnnie Jinnins" about it 7 (Uncle Y of that kind were used at first in the Jonathan was my good mother's own , The schoolhouse itself cost 168 original M. E. church here,.which was pounds, 9 shillings ($396.12)—$9.36 per built in 1819 and is now the Cochran cousin, and . used to call") How well Ire his "little farmerr• mem- �share. store.] The master's desk was about her when "Hezzie" and "Slab" Feb. 9, 1797, the trustees were di- four feet high and of the same width, rected to hire Mr. Wines Osborn to and stood between the windows at the came up a latter lane to return my teach the school the ensuingear "for cap'! The latter said to the former, Y west end of the room, The fireplace „I allus have spendin' money. Yes- not to exceed twenty-four pounds butI was at the east end, and the stove 'Slab, as much less as can be," stoodterday my father said to me,_near the middle of the room.I you wma some mons 7' And h'gave The following rules and regulations '[In extra cold weather there was a-- Y Y in pursuance of the act of the Legis- fire in the fireplace besides the one in me tiuenty five cents." That was a lature for thegovernment of schools" the stove ! When Mr. Farnsworth liberal amount for a boy in those days. were adopted April 9, 1798: The mss- was teaching, this box stove became I Mr, Van Scoy had a very full school ter shall procure wood, and shall re red hot one cold day, and he poured a of both large and small pupils. Among ceive of each scholar on his entrance in pail of water onto it I It cracked in those in Smith's Grammar were Jane each quarter one shilling when the fire two but nevertheless maintained its Prince, Julia Landon and Caroline is used; he shall procure good ink at usefulness for many, many years.] IIorton, The English Reader—a mine his own expense for those who write On each side of the stove were long, of good things of lasting interest—was and cipher; he shall see that each low benches for the small pupils, and used by the larger pupils, and Mr. Van scholar has his own book, and not per- between them and the counters were Scoy introduced Lyman Cobb's series mit one toread in the book of another; box desks with lids, and fortunate of readers and also Olney's Geography he shall from time to time inform' the were those large pupils who occupied and Atlas, [Olney.'s follows Morse's, trustees of the mode of instruction and them. Some pupils were allowed to I which was in use there in 1830.1 An- !make such alterations as they shall di-. furnish desks of their own when the other 'book introduced by him was rect; no scholar under 4 shall be ad- old'ones became unfit for use. One of Peter Parley's "Child's Sook of His- 'mitted if there be thirty above that the beat of these private desks be- tory." With its pictured pages and age; if not, then such may be admit- longed to Caleb Dyer Bolsseau, an ex- fascinating stories it was a treasure. ted at 8 shillings per quarter. cellent young man of great neatness in My ambition was to read in the highest March 23, 1796, it was voted to give all respects. He copied his "soma" clue, and course I was delighted Mr. Osborn 20 pounds per quarter; into a large book. Also he always had ;when told thh at I might take the Eng- .April 4, 1798, it was voted to allow the the best black ink, s penful of which ,lish Reader.. trustees 40 shillings a year; and July; was a real treasure, and he was very ! Mr.Van Scoy was s thorough teach- 10, Mise Jerushu Miller received per•' free with it. Hence when the master er but very rough in his dieciplino. He! missionsto teach in the absence of Mr. had mended my pen there was great kept his thumb nails long and sharp, Osborn, satisfaction in accepting a dip from and with them he made many ears Aug. 4, 1800, Thos. S.,. Lester [.19. Caleb "Bushie's" inkstand. When black .and blue, mine among them. years old] .was engaged for the,ensu asked how he got such black ink, he Some pupils wore mufflers for protec- ing quarter; Nov. 10, Mr. Osborn.'was answered, "S put fink powder into it." tion. One boy's ear he cut .with his engaged and was given permission to I have learned that if we would have , pen-knife besides punishing him other- teach a singing school. The n2xt•April the best of anything, we must use the wise. One afternoon I laughed at he,was hired for 19 pounds with the 'requisite means. [Caleb D. Boisseau something while the young ladies were privilege of taking.in one of.hie boya. :was uncle to J. H. Boisseau married reciting in the east part of the room, and in their presence lie struck the of much property in Hasliamomack, Zy Jubilee Service y,''�j� side of my head with his ruler with a was a man of push, with a mind of his A grand jubilee service was held in force that was not pleasantly remem- own. [He came to Southold from St. Patrick's Church Thanksgiving bered• west of Riverhead in search of pasture morning, to commemorate the Fiftieth Writing was done sometimes with for his cattle, and "the excellent Anniversaryof the Parish. The Rt, pieces of blank lead sharpened to a Sarah"'apparently made a lasting im- Rev. Mons. P. J, McNamara, Vicar point—long lead pencils being some. pression on him, so that he was con- General of the Diocese of Brooklyn, ,thing extra fine—and sometimes with tent to dwell in the land.] He built was the celebrant at the Solemn High ,goose quills of home production. Man- the first brick house in the town, and Mass. Rev. Richard Foley, and Rev* ufactured quills—boiled in oil — in the remains are still visible not far James Crowley, of Brooklyn, formerly: bunches secured with red cord were east of Capt. Sanford's brickyard, lie of Southold, acted as Deacon and Sub- in great favor.; and the master with also had much to do with the building Deacon. The Very Rev. Edward Mc- ]its special pen-knife mended [pointed), of the First Church. [That is, the Carthy, of St. Augustine's Church, old pens and made new ones for all present building. And it may be said Brooklyn,:preached the sermon. The who could not do it for themselves. that nearly all of the "proprietors" Reverend Rector of the parish, Peter [On the master's desk were kept two were contributors to this object.] P. Mathews, acted as Master of Cer- boxes—one for the quills,and the other (Albertson Case, Esq., is his great- emonies. The services were very for the copy Blips.] In 1836-6 a Mr, grandson.) I largely attended. Southgate gave writing lessons in the Ezra L'Hommedieu was undoubtedly On last Sunday at the Masses,Father Academy, and Mr. Van Scoy was a the most prominent citizen of the town Mathews reviewed the history of the Pupil. These lessons were interesting I and of the county, and at this time parish; telling in part of the hard and profitable. iiwas a State Senator. He died in 1811. struggles of the Catholics on the East'. On the first Monday in May, 1886, His mansion was standing as tato per- End of,Long Island back in the days of I the Southold Academy was opened by haps as 1840 on the west side of Bay '64. Their number was small,yet filled Selah Hammond, and this took a num- Avenue 20 or 30 reds from the present with that love for holy faith, they her of pupils from the Brick School- home of Mrs. Lucy J. Gordon. The traveledfar under trying circumstances house. In due time the attendants at remains of the cellar went down the to hear the mysteries of their religion the latter were named "Brickbats," bank years and years ago. The water explained to them by their first spirit and the Academy pupils were in of his well remained always good, ual guide,.Father John McCarthy. Al- turn called "Catamounts." Not all lwhile that of the Tuthill-Gordon well, though,tharecords left to the present who were sufficiently advanced could though much farther from the bay, Rectorwere scanty, yet.he was able to %(j'ord to go to the Academy : there was made brackish by extra high tides. bring his hearers back in thought to was no Martha Adams fund nor any [Zaccheus Goldsmith was the father of the-year 1868, when Maes,-.was said in 'Jthor in prospect I But those who Lawyer Jos, H, Goldsmith. Joseph the home of Mrs. Thompson, who, then could go made the most of their oppor- Cleveland was the father of Moses, lived on.Boisseau.. Av., and-who died ;tunities, Henry C., Benjamin, Mary Z. and. 'about,two years ago.- The Holy Sacri- In November of 1836 the brig Seraph John D. Moses Cleveland was brotherTice was offered tip- iq those days ,by', struck the bar and ran ashore near to Joseph and father to Deacon Moses Rev. M. O'Neil, who •labored with his Great Pond. This caused much excite- C. Giles Wells was great-uncle to small flock, until he was called by hia �ment throughout the village, and it George C. Wells. Dr. John Gardiner Creator to give an,account of''them. 'was of course felt in the school, I practiced throughout the town from 'While the people weie,lamenting the 'tried to picture a vessel on my slate. 1781 to his death in 1823. He lived lossof their two spiritual fathers, and. Mr. Van Scoy had previously called me whereMichael Furey now lives, and priests were few, the peopleofSouth- a "perpetual motion," but this time the place was next owned by Nathan- ole parish were not forgotten by the he stood me on my seat, gave me a iel Boisseau till his death in 1849.1 late good- and saintly., Bishop John, piece of stick and some red cord and Loughlin. He.sent to,them Rev.Joseph ordered me to go into the rigging busi. I take great pleasure in presenting Brunemann,.a Belgian.,by birth, who ness I If he had only encouraged my to the readers of Tnu TRAvcLE2 the labored, long..and zealously;with: his efforts at drawing,. perhaps I might above matter. Through the courtesy people,and to.whom may be credited ',have made a picture of the Old Brick of Mrs. Mattie D. Boisseau I have tho buying of the .present.house of 'Schoolhouse! been permitted to use memoranda col- worship.for the Catholics, which was Of the "proprietors," Col. Benj. 'lected by hor brother, the late Prof. known previous to that as the Southold Horton was a large farmer, a very D. P, Horton, who intended to prepare Academy. His rectory was then sit- prominent man, greatly respected and an article for publication. My own uated on Main St., near Railroad Av. a pillar in the church. (Mrs, Geo. W. 'notes I have put into brackets. I Here he lived, until one evening the )Dayton is his granddaughter.) Major think the accompanying cut will now angel of fire visited his place,destroyed .Gilbert Horton was. his brother, a halve a double value, illustrating the Itis home, its contents; and.most of the farmer of high standing and Also a ,history of the building as it does. church records. He was a man_well blacksmith. His dwelling place is now n T p advanced In years, and this,misfortune occupied by. his great-grandson'.Dan- June 12, 1904. _ seemed to crush all the ambition that iel II. Horton. ' (Mrs. Hiram Terry he had; so much so that his physical was his granddaughter,) William Al- condition was unable to bear the strain, bertson, who married the excellent. and his faithful, spiritual children, .Sarah Conklin and became the owner mourned his loss from them. St. Patrick's Church is ,situated'on Church, Platbush.,'-At the death' gfii ?I`lee Old Stores Main St.,.near Horton's Lane. When. 'the pastor,she )ms'appointed' to 106V, jclo� BY B. T. BAYNE the building was boughthy,a Mr.-.Ap-' after the affairs• mil the parishl with pleby, who afterwards sold it to the Cutehoguelas an out-mission, flt� wdel When N. Hubbard Cleveland gave in Catholics, it faced east and west, and.', duriug'•hisadministration that his .out-I Tac TRAVELER of March 20, 1902, his it was after the .Rev, John McKenna mission was made aseparate one from first "Post Paper," which contained came as the pastor, that the church the parent Southold,:and he was, senh, the names of the .seven- merchants of was turned around, new wings added, from Southold to Cutchogue to Con-!' village in 1835—John C. Wells, A!- and stood in the position that it.does tinue his rand" work in the: Lord's; bert G. s,Case, James E. I-Iorton, Wm. to-day. Father McKenna worked hard Vineyard, g : ff. Wells, Rensselaer Horton, Thos. R. and unceasingly; it was during .his, tI"Wilr and J. HW.o Huntting—he asked: Looking over the lime; from the time Will D. P. Horton kindly tell Taa reign that a plot of ground was Nought that Mase was first said on the East for a cemetery in a place now. called TanvEnca where these merchants were Bay View, He endeared himself to End of the Island to the present time, 'located, and what became of their all., He was ever read when duty one can mark the change. Where stores?" y y there was only one priest in the days Prof. Horton was then ill, andeven called him, like his predecessors, to at-. gone by to attend to the spiritual tend to wants of his parish, which ex- p when later Cleveland called on him a tended from Orient Point on .the east wants of the people, there are now little later on was unable to give to Franklinville on the west. After three; where there was only one place much attention to the matter, This is: 'years of hard worse,. filled with that of worship, there are now three; two greatly to be regfetted, for with his'I of them standing to-day as monuments retentive memory and ready pen his zeal which is characteristic of revery to Father Foley. Priest, he was called by,his Bishop.'to answer could have been promptly another field of labor, St. Michael's.in .The present pastor of Southold is a forthcoming; while the beat answer Flushing, where after, years in doing young man, ordained nearly twelve that I can offer will be the. result of good he ended his earthly, .labors .and years ago: Born in Brooklyn, educated many questions and much work on my entered into eternal happiness: in his early life in !the public schools, part. I trust that it will not prove un- The next one to. come as the shep until he entered St.John's College in interesting,nevertheless. herd of the flock was the Rev.. Richard 1883, From there he was sent by the I gathered many pertinent facts in Foley, who remained for over thirteen late Bishop to Niagara University, and i this line last winter while writing my years, whose name today is as fresh when the Seminary was opened m papers on "Schools and Teachers"— in the memory of the people of South- Brooklyn,;he was recalled from Niaga- published.Feb. 1, March 4, April 1, P p ra, and was one of the first to be or- May 6, July 8—but although some el- old as the time he was with them. He dained from the new institution,,by derly friends of mine very kindly lent was beloved and esteemed by all. It the Rt. Rev. Charles E. McDonnell. me their care and their eyes, I found it was toward theend of his stay in'. Father Mathews' first appointment difficult to reconcile the recollections of Southold that Greenport became a sep- was to St. James Pro-Cathedral on Jay different people who saw the same arate mission, when he was placed in St. He assisted Father McNamee, of thing's. Besides; the scenes were con charge of St. Raphael's Church, in. St. Teresa's Church, for a short time Blissville, and afterwards became one t and in shiftingaase0 years ago ask now, of the permanent rectors of the din- and then went to St. Patrick's in Fort and in many cases it is almost ititems cese, which he still holds to-day. Hamilton to assist the Rev. John-bG.ut close y settle the dates. Some items Father James Crowley, now ,pastor Fitzgerald, who was then pastor, but closely connected with the main goes- of the Church of the Immaculate Con- .now is in charge of St. Stephen's in, tion appear in this paper, and others Brooklyn. He was a faithful •wgker.'� will probably follow. ception, succeeded Father Foley, as : - pastor .of Southold. Father Crowley iA me Father. Mat ews, when.the, appoinvisi6n of To go back 100 years, John Calvin Father Mathews, when.the division" s- Wells owned the lace in the eastern a fluent talker and linguist, numbered � � P among the best preachers of Brooklyn;.;Southplihparish took place, as its part of the village now owned by S. tor, Since he came to the place he Lester Albertson and occupied by He spared not himself in doing good';ter, made many valuable improvements p for those committed to his charge. - Thomas Taylor-; there at lived and both in church and rectory. He has kept store. He was the father of John After Father Crowley was assigned'endeared himself to all, irrespbetive_of, p to city charge, Father Myles Oefor;creed,and,the..universal wish of South-' Calving, Abner; Benjamin; Fanny 'ly, a man full of zeal and love for' (m. Hazard Rackett), Polly-(m. Alvah " old is that thelpresent pastor may live Case),. Henry Scudder and William souls, but broken in health, was sent by his Bishop, thinking the pure air many,many years in his holy. calling. Homan. He died in 1810 and his son _ in the country might benefit him; and -- John Calvin' continued the business. was placed in charge of the parish. It The store was a long ,building and was to no avail, the malady. from stood, close to the .east end of the which he was suffering, made such yin. house. It.had a horse shed on the east roads that he was forced to ask for an' end of it which extended nearly to the assistant,afterwards to return'to his ;Vail line. In the back of the shed, native land, and there' bebreathed his were doors to allow driving through, soul into the hands of the living God. ? and under the west and was a door The man who assisted F4ther O'R'ilhvi opening into the store. The building el in 'Southold, was the ReV. James) was sold to Harvey Smith and moved Lynch, Ao came from: Holy Oro`sii, to Indian Neck road. _. -. . .._ atl --- rear part of that spliced banding was moved the store at the flrst,the tnew The next store of John Calvin's was moved westward to the place where it least when he was putting up where now stands the Hook and Lad- was built' Then about six feet of,�house (the western part of the So 'was house; and after he bought the Al- width was added on the east side for old Hotel, now owned by bert G. Case property (about 1840; see a hall an extension also on the same Homkis), that red store was on the below], he moved this store to the site side¢ad a kitchen at the rear. This corner of R. R. avenue and he was where is now that occupied by L. W. work was done (by .Francis D. Over- running it. Later he moved it farther I{orn.. When it was moved there was ton, R. B. Conklin and his brother (north and set it end to the street, and some,trouble aUouC making two turns Hull) to it it for the home of Charles built a new store in place of it. (When I, the small space west of the Singley Merrill, who had married in 1846 and Mrs. Roxanna Merrill was tailoring for house, and Boss R. B. Conklin used had been living in the Singley house, him she lived in it, but in later years .tackle to cut the rear axles-so says This house Albert W. Albertson last tier son Charles provided a house for one who was "looking on". Wm. H. year remodeled and enlarged and Jas. her on the western part of his own Wells his brother, the late Charles H. H. Conklin now occupies. home lot.) Not many years ago the Wells his nephew, and Charles Merrill When Mr. Wells died (in 1850), he McNeil store was turned side to the his wife's nephew, had clerked for had a schooner mostly completed in his street, corniced and otherwise.put into .John Calvin; and about 1848 "Uncle shipyard on -the east side of Town better condition and painted white. It 'John" tore down the old store and Creek-the land now belonging to Fred now belongs to Mr: Evens and is occu- built a new one on the same place and W. Carpenter. She was launched and pied by Geo. J. Tillinghast. started Mr. Merrill in business there taken to Greenport to be fitted tip, and p John Calvin', son of Benjamin Wells, for himself. The latter was obliging was named after her builder. S. A. clerked for his uncle John Calvin`, and and fair in his dealing, and Ihave.Beckwith was her canto+.• afterwards went to Gree'nnpoyt Althea� heard my father say, "Mr. Mew•ilI The 'Iwhocne loft" of William Wells' served with John Lewis who was the doesn't strike his half-bushel twtice." Esq in 1661, included what is called�'II sister of Austin Overton), Join busi- He ran the store about ten years,. and „Hotel corner" and extended from R. leading storekeeper there, g Was followed by Jona: C. Merrill, Ezra R avenue to J. B. Farming's 'west ness where Edward Ging now is, and B. and Benj. H. Terry, W. H. Terry James Downsl living upstairs. (Alvah S. Mulford I and from Main street to W and M. T. Horton, F. L. Judd; W. C. �Conway's north line• was keeping a "tavern" on the oPP°- Albertson and perhaps others before bought it in 1812; Dr. Seth H. Tuthill site corner south.) J. Calvin' formed. 1 L. W. Korn. held it ti111828; and James McNeil till 1 partnership with Enoch F. Carpenter 'Somewhere about 1845 Mr. Wella 1835, when Wm. Ii. W ells' bought it• who had married his sister Mary Cath- built a house, about square, a little stood on aline), under the name of Wells & The house which now stands next east C`r enter, and the firm began Uusiness west of the above mentioned store, of TnE TxnvELea building using timbers from his shipyard. Af- in a small building on the west side of that land where H. W. Prince'it was s resi- Main street, a little south of the site ter he had laid the upper floor, he dence now is; and while there, 1, Mc- spliced the uprights,to complete a sec- the domicile of Downs, other of the Uricic storo (L. E. Lyon &Co.) end story. Before it was finished he Neil Wells and of ever so many which they built later. moved it to within two feet of the - heads of families, H. W Prince being Hudson Corwin and his brother Na- Singley house, setting it alongside* the last, man and I tli,niel started the whaling business in Then he built onto the back end of.it, Dr. Tuthill was a large Greenport and erected that large build- making the whole about as long as the wore a camlet cloak with cearanee pHs re ing on the west side of Main street Singley house. He intended it for a seated quite a striking appearance next to the water, now belonging to hotel, but before any use was made of moved to Orient. M, Claudio. It used to bear in the it, the splice was opened I The front native of Nova harbor side "Ship Chandlery" in very Mr. McNeil was a part was bought by Win. H• Wells and Scotia, and was s mentioned President of large letters. Their first ship was the moved by him (in 1847) to his land on „Post Papers' Potosi, Capt, Chas. C. Griiflng, which R. R. Ave. near the railroad and..fitted the Temperance Society here m 1U. Un- up for a station" and also a resi- Ile married Cleora, daughter of ' cleared June 28, 1830, and returned He had a store June 18, 1831, with 2500 barrels of oil. dence. (It was occupied first by a cle 'Gast" Griffin. This ship was wre4ked on her second jeweler named'Randall, who had two voyage, and her vane was brought just east of his house, et a'puPpYl of the captain and placed by apprentices, John Potter and Lucius his son John wanted to g. home by Holt. Mr. Holt has since visited Nathaniel Corwin on his barn (now John Davis (father of Mre. George B. where it remained friends here, and some of.:them haveSimons), who offered to take his pay in Mrs• H. Talker's), been guests of his in Hartford. Jo- Dods for many years. Another ship was the eorn, This was the decision of the Triad, Capt. Nathaniel Case, which aiah Dee kept oysters„ and -Salem G. •,Pater, "Money for g°can't stand Tuthill (now living. in Chicago) sold £or corn;-corn for puppy cleared August 2, 1832, and returned candies there. A few years afterwards ,,l 1t„ Feb. 17, I8S4, with 3200 barrels of oil, it was burned, together with Geo: P. 1N„r g• Wells, after buying the 500 Using sperm. My father went on Horton's carpenter shop which was a ` .above property, occupied the house, both of these voyages, and also on the little south of it. Perhaps it was at Barbara, of Sag Harbor, Capt. E. >;• and his son Joseph Albert was born 31, 1842, that point in the history of the there. He had had years of experi• _House, which cleared May Corwin Long Island Railroad that freight for encs in the store of his brother John. •..and returned July 5, this station was carried- on to Green- Calvin' (25 years older thin he),'and Brothers sent out four other ships- P began on his own account in the Mc-. Delta, Bayard, and Nile4 port if the consignee was not resent .._- -._. whether. he to take it direct from the tram I-)_,_The Nell store. I know,not - _- -- - 1 4- least least(Chone Merrill made two voyages, at saw the remains of them—near where village homes for the pleasure or their least one is •.e ha was on, the Delta; the Wharf road -crosses the stream friends as well as their own enjoy- and on this he had the misfortune to break his leg. The captain, Seth Grif- which runs (into the creek) south of ment. He dwell succeed so well in Wm. Lowery's land, the mercantile as in the musical line, fing, set it for him.) Wells and Car- - - - - ---- and accordingly found himself com- penter succeeded the Corwins in the Leander Brown; with his mother Pilled to make an assignment—per- Aber business and fitted out three Susnnna, brother Mortimer and sisters haps 1840 to ; and John Calvin Wells' Aber ships—Sarah and Esther; Philip Susan and Melvina; was in 1830 living bouownght the whole property, from his 11. and I(enawha. In the brick store I —and keeping store—in the large house bou west line to the east line of the think Wells and Carpenter vete fol- . still standing on the west side of Bow- land now Mrs. Evelina Cochran's. The lowed by J. Albert and HenryI. cry lane at its junction with the "low- Y store was cut in two and moved to the Wells. John Calvin3 died at sea in er road n (This was the "post Bay View road, and it is believed that 1862. road", and there was then no road running on the south side of Wil!ow one part went to the place lately In lith Stratton Hurtling was board- owned by Mrs. Thos. C. Bennett and ing with Dr, Seth II. Tuthill (men- Bill.) ght to Seth" Overton, who the other to the Overton place on the boned above), and icecping store a had taught the "Sodoml district other side of the road farther east. a small building. which stood on the school had at time a select school Just before the assignment Mr. Case's corner now Miss ter he (probably) Norton's, in that house, a Oppnd o one side of a nephew, Oscar L. Case, carried on the Several years later he (probably) sold the house the l opposite side is the businesses while, the Unik oP his first out Co Rensselaer Horton and went to lane. In the latter house at this time order being ^liquor": There were at ��:reenport and built on the west side of —1830—lived Henry D. Glover (in• least two tiara of barrels across the Jain street the house just north of Lucretia Prince) and his mother and o Center street, now belonging to Wmstare, and one of each sort was always on t . .several sisters; and not far from 1840 tap. It ran as fast cold weather Macomber. The house and shop which Samuel Gardiner became the owner as hot—perhaps faster. In the fall stood on my present lot (to be de. and moved thither from what is now of 1841 Oscar built for himself scribed in another paper) were moved the home of Gilder S. Conklin. a store Os a sot a little west to the Horton corner, and there Mr. Thomas R. Glover (father of Daniel P lim•ton continued the store keeping T.) was in 1836 living in the house first of the house lately belonging to )usHenry Waterman deceased: Oscar Wgusts till that out about 1838. In mentioned in the above paragraph and died in 1850, and the store was bought lugust of that year he began, and in keeping store there. by Frederick I{. Terry and moved' to )ecember of the next he finished, the i J. W Huntting in 1834 married the his land for a store. It is the rear', nain house, cellar and kitchen now sister Melvina, and in the following tsed by Miss J, W, Horton; and the year built the house now the home of Part of that now occupied by Chas. E. aason took art a Wm. H. Glover. Then he moved his Case. J. H. C. stated in THE TRnv- P pay in goods from the EbER six years ago that that store was tore. He sold the place Nathaniel store,.which stood about where Mel- built for Oscar by his father in 1836,. 30isseau; Mr. Boisseau soldld it to Benj. � rose h Booth's house now is, and set L Prince in 1844; Mr, Prince sold it it just south of his house. This year but I have several reasons for believ- ing my date correct. I am inclined rack of August, day and Mr. Bois- Leander Brown married Ann Magee to think that his date refers to the ,can sold it eight days later to Mary and soon after built the house' now store near the "Run" (south of it - !onveoldsmith, who two years afterwards Ernest h the and "Aunt Susie" which Oscar kept and which F. K,. bawyeed. H. Maria (Case), wife of , lived with the,young couple. 'He- hip Terry afterwards kept there and later Lawyer J. I-I. Goldsmith. (Mary was Mr.- .IIhntting formed a. partnership . moved to his own land. .he mother of Lawyer Goldsmith and and carried on business under the firm Jas.E.Horton lived in a house which the widow of Zaccheue Goldsmith, and name Brown and Huntting. :Later ;stood on 'Squire John Franks' ]and. their home was what is now the Sal- he bought the store building and moved north of Main street, nearly opposite mon property at the corner of Pecouic it to Bowery lane.and lived there. It to r the present Maple avenue. The lane and the North road. Lawyer G. is now the "headquarters" of Coln- land came into the possession of BeThe married in 1821 and three years later rade henry Gatfga. min Wells and now belongs to his son. nja- went to the city, where he lived till Albert G. Case (m. Ruth, daughter .Oscar ellL. The house was 1 is son 1833. His parents after leaving that of Dr. Seth IL Tuthill) was living in high, and the store was on the west place lived in—and possibly built—the the Singley house in about 1832 to, end of it. It was burned more than h 1835, and keeping store in a long, low ]louse on the corner of Peeonic lane fifty years ago, but the well was plain- building,. standing with its east end the South road, for so many years the ly marked till within a short time., very near to the west side of the home the ]ate John Morrell.) James Horton, father to Jas. E., Ezra Uncle Rensselaer" after selling outI ' house, Inn were two doors on the and others, owned and occupied the front and one,on the east end. In the .the cornet•to "Uncle Nat" moved to place now W. Y.'-Fithian's, and had Greenport, and in October, 1844, began west end of it was a reception room .his blacksmith shop on the opposite. to build on Front street, a little east of for the village sitters, and music and side of the road, about where H. F,. the present home of Geo. P. Tuthill, smoke filled the.air. Mr. Case was Van Wyck now owns. J. H. Boisseau The house was moved to the north end very tells of seeing the refuse coal heap ,of the lot some years ago. He used to evenifond. of music, and on summer ngs.he used to sit out in front of Plowed through when the toad was be- tell that when he was a boy he played his store and play his clarinet; all the ing worked. in the pits that the "first settlers'/ neighbors having the benefit. Often An "old store" .not above men, made for storing their vegetables, and he and Orrin E. Prince, Wm. VohreY 'boned was that of .Matthias Case Horton,and Elam P. Horton united J. H. .Boisaeau. says that he himself (father of Albert G.), which stood - - - their musical efforts in some of the •---- - ------ -- tl just west of his house, the. Here about 1636, on the spot or ver ".Old Cason Old 2`ifnet3 and Families oFl P y House", a part of which now near to where the house now owned by stands told �ouythold - Mr. James Wickham, of Cutcho lie, Oil Boisaeau avenue half-way between g Main street and the rathoad. Er Anywupi, ewnnwx and formerly the homestead site of the 'Thus" had a ver "IJnr1N Early in the sixteenth century', the Salmons, Conklins, and Albertsons, Y pious dard[ey Earl of Sterling, Secretary for the stands,he erected the first white man's named Hiram who slept over the store; Kingdom of Scotland, and a favorite at and when some money was house we have any record of on Eastern' from the till where it was left ak ahub ora Long Islandroandhall[ t a pother Long Island, and here, later on, he ting up time, and "Hite's" name was islands in the North Sea (Sound), I brought from Rhode Island, Mary connected with that fact, he so took to south of the ship channel, together Katherine, a young bride who, so far iheart the insinuation that he .went ' with all islands o',., the Great River as history, town and family records, ,away and hanged himself. His Uody (P" Bay), harbors and bays and traditions show,was the first white was found the next day, in the woods tributary and connected with the said Woman that ever had a home in Old now owned by B. B, Tuthill at the North Sea. Southold. Her maiden name is not head of Long Creek, by Alvah Case The Earl never visited North America, known by the writer. (grandfather of Benj. W. Case) while but arranged with James Farrett, a To this peaceful harbor, he ,camel gunning there. "Uncle 'Thus" with his sloop for rest and from it he j died Scotch gentleman living in Boston, sailed out among the islands and upon in 1831, but years before that the store Massachusetts Colony, to superintend was moved to the east corner of the beautiful ecom of the North Sea and Main andopen up this property for occupancy beautiful Ponic Bay. From here he street and Norton's lane, where it' and improvement, made frequent trips to Boston where i served as the carpenter shop of ` Un Matthew Sinderland, a bold Scotch cle Foster " Sayre. Perhaps about'. seaman and navigator, was engaged by co took emigrants, direct from the old 1861 it was removed to Bowery lane,' Parrett about 1632, to explore this country or from the New England where it was the home of William'' region, visit the various islands, make Colonies, to the most attractive points Turner till his death a year or two ago, a survey of the North Sea and the on the Islands, laid out the lands where Ohs of the men mentioned in the Great River, together with all the they decided to locate, and so prepared Post Papers as working on the Cleve- harbors, inlets, and tributaries, erect the way for the conveying and deeding land house under the direction of Bpse landmarks on the headlands, place of such lands by Sterling, through s. Wm. D. Cochran was Richard Lathera�, buoys on the reefs, and prepare rough FTilett, to actuaciates o of Georgetown, S. C. He was then': diagrams, maps and charts for the Tile.early associates t Sinderland, learning the trade of carpenter, and guidance and information of those who located (pioneers) a the east end. was very handy at drawing. He mar- near their leader, Jackson, east of might become interested. Sinderland. His claim ran from Pipe's nett a Southern woman and made a In 1633, Sinderland called to his fortune speculating in cotton. He assistance a few men of his own char- Neck Creek straight north to the Sound became a Militia Colonel, and is now actor, hardy, enthusiastic, full of cour and east tag Creek,, Winter Harbor, now Greenport village. SCinder- living.at New Rochelle—so I am told. age, and fond of adventure, most of Creek D. P. H. wrote in 1888, "Henry Cor- them playmates and friend3 of his in. land's claim was from Tom's Creel[ win, Thos. Anson Terry, Alfred Smith, the Old World before they left merry (now Mill Creek) east to the end of John Corwin and Frank Wells were England and bonny Scotland, to seek. the island. Mr. Cochran's assistants, and Richard adventure and fortune in this wild and Salmon, Glover, and other located B. Conklin and Dick Lathers his ap unexplored land. Fitting out with further west and claimed lands from prentices." 'Tom's Creek to Mattituck. These THE ENE - great care his good sloop, Speedwell, armed and provided with everything claims were similar to. the Squatter ----- _. --- necessary for their protection againstSoveriegnty claims to Government lands ' in the western territories made b Prices t! pr by list on the c. wild beasts and savages, and with such y Here is the price ltst on the •'carte, supplies' and implements as. were few years ago and cattle breeders only a. of the Ehe.dao hotel of Placerville, few years ago when immense bodies of Cal., In the.days•s when It entertained required for the work in hand, bei 3 sailed from Boston Harbor in the� the forty-niners. "Payable In advance;" choice lands (millions of acres) werelying idle and unimproved. These It proclaims; "gold scales at We end spring of 1633, and with him sailed frontiersmen and cattle breeders staked of hasome the pioneers Southold out their claims and were not disturbed A "square meal, with dessert," Is Town—William Salmon, Richard Jack- priced at $3, and other items that son, Charles Glover, and others, so long as they occupied them and were probably Interested the patrons of the Making the acquaintance and friend_ able to defendthem against jumpers, Eldorado lire set forth as .follows; . ship of Poukamp; Great Chief of the which they did very effectually with, Beef, \lexlenn-prlme.cut. $1,50; beef. Manhansucks, who had his wigwam shot gun and rifle arguments. uplong, $1.50; beef, plain, $1; beef with and council house at the Five Wigwams, But when the time came for thei a potato, fair size, $1.25; beef, tome, near Pipe's Neck t h couple of miles. -government to open up these lands and front the states, $1.50; also two po, west Pi e's-Neck' Greenport village), Indian Reservations to bona fide settlers Buttes, medium size, ,t0 cents; two po• and give deeds for them, the Squatter twoes, peeled. 7ri cams; hash, low he got permission .te.make his head- q had to purchase or leave—so with the grade. 75 crura;•hash -18 carat, $1; quarters on the shore of the Manhansueb t East End pioneers. I rice pudding, plain, `f9'ceuts; i•Ice pad• River,.now known.as Conklin's Ferry, ding and brandy- peaches, $1.—Loa a narrow branch of the Peconic. Bay Very few deeds seem to have been Angeles Times. running between Shelter Island and the made by Parrett to these early settlers, --- - mainland. - (probably the pioneers feeling that it 'Jackson Line. No Parrett deed: was - The first John Cory, a friend and was hardly necessary to bother so long(ever recorded by Sinderland o£ Salmon neighbor of Salmon, while he lived at � G as the Ear] did not object, and the for Hashamomack, but if any of our Southold, was another who was given a Indiana were satisfied to have them[friends now owning and occupying the farm and home by Salmon for his occupy and improve the country. .£arms. and other improvements lying company, and remained at Hashamom- Later on, Farrett deeds were made to between Mill Creek and Greenport have ack until Salmon died when he moved Stephen Goodyear for Shelter Island, any anxiety about their. titles owing to away. Lyon Gardiner for Gardiner's Island the fact that there never was any quit Katherine Sinderland Salmon died and for Southampton Town. In June, 1for' Sinderland took a: Sarah Horton, daughter claim deed made by the Earl of Sterl- and Salmon marriedfor a second wife, • Farrett deed for an island and two'ing for this property, we imagine the of the first `deed made by Poukamp, the big Injun Barnabas Horton and died in 1666, necks of land in the mouth of Oyster Bay harbor. This is the first deed Chief, and Ambuscow, the little Injun John Conklin, Junior, eldest son of made for land on the East End which JI Chief,great chiefs of the Manhansucks Captain John Conklin let, married the is found upon the Southold Town and Corchugees, to William Salmon will widow, Sarah, and through her and by answer, and no doubt, any Title purchase from the heirs at law eventu- son in Another was made to Jack- Guarantee Company would be glad to ally became the owner of Hashamom- son r August of the es (a year for one insure them for five cents each. - ack, where some of his descendants hundred and fifty acres (a part of his Captain John Conklin 1st came, to still live. The west part of the north claim). This purchase includes a part and Jeremiah Moore Southold in 1660 and was given a farm side was in the possession of a William the Bay front, an of the late Wm, Brown estate re and home at.Hashamomack by William Albertson through his marriage to a daughter p estate on the Sound. Salmon, for his company. The under- g hter of Captain Joseph Conklin Jackson sold this 160 acres in October standing is: they were friends in the about 1784. Later on, the east and of the same year he purchased to a Mr. Old Country and that upon his arrival south parts were purchased by the in this New World, Salmon was glad to Albertsons and held by that family Weatherly, and no more is heard m give him a home for the pleasure of until a few years ago when the last of this region. . him, he probabllyy moved away from I having him again for a neighbor at his the name moved from this historic .home in the wilderness.- This Capt, ground. The island in the mouth of Oyster John was the ancestor of the Conklin When William Salmon married the Bay harbor, purchased by Sid andn I. family in this State, including Roscoe, Widow, Sinderland and moved to is now known as Centre t Island and is the Eloquent. Hashamomack in 1642.-3, h e 1 e f t the headquarters of the passSewed from Ikal Several other settlers of these earl quite a little settlement gathered Yacht Club. The title passed from I y Sinderland to William Salmon. If days were given homes at Hashamom- 'around his home on the main Southold, 'a Sinderland and his early associates ack by Salmon for their.company and street, opposite the Captain Benjamin 'tools Farrett deeds for other East End it would seem that the old gentleman,. Wells homestead, The first Charles lands they neglected to record them...__,being of a social and hospitable dis- ,Glover who came with him was living — position and perhaps with an eye to the un the creekside and his house was In 1639, Sinderla�td landed a comp position of his estate more attractive very near where the house owned by of emigrants atOyster Bay. Harbdr,. by reason of these unusually social �.Mr, J. A. Bliss now stands. He had and as they were delighted with ,the conditions, gradually drew around him 'already established his shipyard across country,he left them In tents and went quite a little colony, congenial and (for the'creek on land now owned by Mr. with his vessel to Connecticut for Fred W. Carpenter, where he and his those early days) cultured spirits who Imaterial to construct their rude houses, son and grandson built vessels for for more than twenty years lived as an While lie was gone, the Dutch whohadindependent community, a delightful several generations. His ton, Samuel, control of the West End of the island had his home a little west where the specimen of pure democracy,' amenable and claimed the territory as info m creekeide cottage of Mr. Wm. H. Oyster Bay,sent a delegation to inform to no legal home jurisdiction, paid no town taxes, made and executed their Joust now stands. He was one of the I them that they were encroaching;and own laws and regulations, and in short, original patentees of the town who would not permitted to remain. minded and managed their own busi- received the grant from Governor When Sinderland returned, they told him they did not wish to have anyInessintheir own way, independent of Andrus. William Wella had his home ' trouble with the Dutch and preferred ;thoutside world. This condition of across the street, Minister Young's ' things at Hashamomack continued with house stood on the south-west corner to locate elsewhere, so re-embarking �fthe Main street and the driveway some modifications for seventy-five Y j them and sailing down the North Sea years, when steps were taken to make which ran down to the landing at the and up the Great River, landed them it a part of the town and it was head to Town Creek, and nearly all of at Noyae and they became the founders the twelve or more settlers who came admitted to full communion. ;of Southampton Town. with Pastor Young in 1640, or about I � Among others who located there was In 1641, Sinderland died intestate Thomas Osman, who was given a home that time, (Barnabas Horton, Richard Wand without issue, and in 1642 or 1643, and two acres of land for a brick yard, Terry, Mathias Corwin, John Cory, William Salmon let married the widow, onthe margin of the bay and adjoining Peter Payne, the first Henry Case, and the Town's Creek Mary Katherine,, and moved from . The brick yard others) to organize the town and the now owned and managed so well and Southold to Hashamomack which prop- First Church had their homes in the erty he bought of Poukamp,Manhanauck (neighborhood. This was-the custom of successfully by Mr. C. L. Sanford is Indian Chief, and his son Ambuscow, the early days and the same plane Sachem of the Corchugees, in 1646: the same established and worked by were followed in Southampton and omas . This purchase included all the territory ThOsman (the founderof the .Easthampton. The settlers had their Osborne family two hundred and fifty from Town's Creek on the west to the homes clustered around their churches _..._ '---.-- .ye¢ra ago).,, ..—..__- _. and as near together as was convenient, is marvelous when estimated on Euro-2 Youngs, in the First Regiment, wmle not only for sociability, but for, co-I pean standards and beyond the com-a very incomplete list of the Third S. operative protection from the sEwaged. prehension of our cousins on the other C, Regiment includes the names of There seems to have been but little side of the Atlantic. The next fifty,Colonel Thomas Terry, John Tpthill, friction among the natives and English years' changes and improvements will Capt. Joshua Youngs, Lieutenant and Scotch settlers on the East End, as doubtless make the past half eentur M Thomas Conklin, Nathaniel Dickerson, the Indians were found to be amiable'. look insignificant in the estimation o'2 Glovers,4 Horton,I Pain,2 Salmons, and friendly and a conciliatory course I those of our fellow citizens .who ma 3 Terrys, 3 Tuthills, 1 Wells, 3 Youngs. was pursued by the pioneers r well course live to see them—all going to show th Probably a great many more old Suf- by pursue Young and his disciples at boundless resources of nature, and the folic County or Southold Town names a later time, unlimited energy,industry and ingenuity)were on the Third Regiment, but in There was some trouble between the of man. some way most of the list has been Long Island Indians and the war-like John Salmon 2nd,only son of William)lost or destroyed; while of the Second, Pequots across the Sound, but the Salmon and Katherine Sinderland, from,Suffolk County Regiment of Minute whites stood behind their red friends whom has descended the family of that Men, Col. David Mulford, Captains for the common defence, and we have';name, was born in 1650; married Sarah Howell, Dayton, Fithian, Hodges. Ino knowledge of any serious collisions 1',Barnes, and had two sons. William 3rd, L'Hommediou, Rogers, Sandford and this side ed the bay. I i who commenced the Salmon Record of i White, organized and recruited very The eofths nearly annihilated the:�Births, Marriages and Death in Old)largely in East Hampton town. No Mo ie a in a night attack early d the Southold, so rich in genealogical mfor- list of the enlisted men can be found. oration and so interesting to the 'Joshua Salmon 4th married Mary 17th century. antiquarian, was the eldest. John, his Conklin. Their eldest son married The early claims of these pioneers brother,was the Major John,who after Prudence Case and their eldestcon, for reasonable amounts (like the pre- providing for his family, gave the rest William Salmon 6th, a soldier of 1812, emption claims of western settlers of., and residue of his estate to the First married Alice Case, descendants of later date) were allowed by the free Church for the support of the Gospel, the first Henry Case. Their eldest son, holders, as well as Indian purchases; so long as it was expounded in the old William C. Salmon, married Lucretia, when reduced to writing and witnessed Parish Church in the letter and spirit a daughter of James Jennings, soldier by responsible and reliable parties, but of the true Calvinistic faith. The of 1812 in Artillery service at Castle after the formal organization of the, property so devised was principally in Garden, New York City, and grand- town, all lands not deeded by Farr•ett, land and included a part of the Old slaughter of Jonathan Perry Jennings, purchased from the Indians or actually. First Church Cemetery, God's Acre, Revolutionary soldier N. Y. State occupied and made susceptible of culti- the lands now owned and occupied by troops, 3rd Regiment of the Line. vation, were claimed in common and N. Hubbard Cleveland, William H. Alvah M. Salmon 8th, eldest son of apportioned in the shape of home lots , Richard Sturges,ea, Miss Hann all and outlands by the inhabitants at Town y William C. 7th,married Martha Glover, Meetings. Carpenter, the Union School Rouse, a direct descendant of the Int Charles with lands on Hog Neck (Bay View) Glover and Samuel Glover 2nd, one of New settlers were provided wirlr lands and the outlands in every direction and other's. This.property, by reason the town Patentees who with his six la laand the custom was for all the of the conditions of the will, cannot be. associates, Isaac Arnold, John Youngs, ,as well,, a and fellow townsmen Co turn conveyed by warranty deed but is 'Joshua Horton, Benjamin Youngs, leased. As the lease has, at the Jacob Cory, and. Barnabaa. .Horton, out and on a day appointed meet at the present writing, about eight hundred govern- spot selected by the settler, ,cut down. receives)from Edmond ess, the years yet to run before it can revert or for his Royal Highness, the Duke of the trees, pe tsquare the giant trunks, back to the heirs at law, it is hardly York and Alban in behalf of them- doors, and shape the planks for flooring, y' worth while for the occupants to think doors, etc.,and in a couple of days have much about renewals. selves the of all the freeholder in atent the rude log home ready for occupancy. ants all the Town e Southold, , p William Salmon 3rd married Hannah for all the lands, necks;islands, rivers, 1A home of this sort in those early days Bailey and their first son, Joshua 4th, lakes woods, and all othercommodities, - represented but little money outlay as was a soldier of the Revolution, with the house material was provided by the lots of his Southold neighbors, de- emoluments and hereditaments in any forest, the labor by sturdy armies of scend, of the first settlers, in ad- ways belonging or appertaining thereto, generous men who knew how to wield dition to many who enlisted in the to have and to hold (.or dispose of in mr axe, and the land (if purchased) Regular Army, Regiments of the Line, common) for all time, but not Co even as late as 1665, was worth less including Hezekiah and Jonathan Perry interfere with or vit the byaformer than fifty cents an acre. Jennings, first of that family in South- such as may hold property Large estates containing hundreds of. old patents, purchase from the Indians, or acres would frequently inventory for A great many of the male citizens of by purchase or exchange with others. less value than the stock,furniture,and the old town were officers or enlisted And the patentees, for themselves and other personal farm property found on men in the First and Third Regiments their associates;the freeholders reedopay for the place. of Suffolk County Minute Men, includ- town of Southold, agreed The growth and development of this ing David Horton Ichabod Case, 13 this patent to his Highness as r region, and the increased value off Conklins, Isaac Cory, 9 Corwins, G,Ilal- rent to such officer as may be appointed landed property, seems rattier slow illi locks,11 Howells,4.Jennings, 7 L'Hom- to receive it,.ono fat latn6 each yeas•. Middle end New some sections of the 5 The above patent or quit claim deed P WesternStates,_ but Pa nres eG Terrys o4nTuthills,10$Wells, confirmed the title taken from the - -- —- - — - )Indian owners of all the lands from the Wading River west to and including for schools, seeds, animals, and indeed which now stands (as it did in thhe own tre oldz Plum Island east. This Indian Pow every other improvement,&d as rule days) arese'd of thetwhole world,load Wow was held at Southold on the 7th has accomplished nothing, and opp day of December, 1665, when Capt. is gaud only to hunt andfight. -a rich field for the courageous, enerr John Youngs, Thos. Mapes, and Bar- Many of the oldest families have getic, and industrious man who was,it or nalme fIorton, in behalf of the free- increased rapidly notabl are numerouthe Conkli a is, 0umbitious to rise above in,"loc fathers were not of the Cavaliers, holders, received from forty-three .the East End, y' Cases, younger sons of the nobility, of the Old chiefs, Sachems, and Great Warriors .Halloeks, Tathwh Terrother s, y of the east end tribes, in exchange for Hortons, Wells, while others have died World, but honest yeomanry, sturdy easforty-yards of trucking cloth (what- opt or moved away. Very few of the mechanics, bad enturous and rhuntet sa and- ever that may be) the whole of South- Glovers or Corys remain, and the Sal and soldiers, old town, which then included River- mons (males) soli Ue counted on tho trappers, they carried within their head and Shelter Island—most em- fingers of two hands. This seems.quite hardened palms the seals of honesty phatically bartering amagnificent birth remarkable when it is known that the and wore upon their wrue nbeaten right for a mess of pottage. __ representatives of the entire eight brows the diadems of a true nobility. A great deal of morbid sympathy has generations of that family married Our mothers of the early clays were not been felt and expressed by people who wives bred and born in the old town, grand dames and fine Is who could have kind hearts, but do not atop to lived, died and are buried here. But do nothinor more usefug more l thanus k to play the lute or harp for the entertainment read between the linea or look below while the males of the name have trot to and superintend the the surface, for these poor, ignorant enjoyed comparative longevity, nearly of their company, P. making up of their magnificent ward- Indians,and of indignation and condem- all married and but few died without robes,but they were strop coura eous, nation of the civilized and christianized issue, a large majority to the children . from grounded in their convictions upon the men who would so take advantage of were girls, and the later generations had high ideals, were route an their heathen fellowmen, and rob them have beeninclinedto drift away Bob)act of Moral, Social, Political and Religious Ethics. They were ,honest, of their heritage, but let us remember the fatherland. virtuous, and truthful and although that these people had occupiedthis About the first of the last century Ueautiful island, this magnificent Gem there was quite an exodus from South- thestrataofvhave societycome from a humble a may well be eat of the Sea, for ages unknown and bad, old to Orange County, and several of isfied and proud of them slid of what y (after much tribulation) they accom- never constructed a single mile of road i the farm] were included among the or foot of substantia]bridge, had not ¢ emigrants and have been lost eight of, fished. true ina sense, but while single believe single domestic animal outside of the It may be well to say here that it was p The old saying that blood will tell is more'Qi¢n mtdertsking to leave South- that good blood or breeding is desirable, good wolf dog, and did not produce as much . good precepts, good example, South- grain in the whole territory as one good old and make a home on the frontiers good p rdmgs tell strop er Some of farmer of to-day would harvest from a in Orange County one hundred years B to iris raised in the slums of London forty-acre field. Furthermore, they ago than it would be to-day to locate thebestfamilies of Virginia trace bac and Glasgow, sent over for wives for hall no taste for agriculture, but were oil the plains of Colorado, or the the colonists,slid the.very cream of the natural born hunters and fishermen, mountains of Oregon or British Colum- F P• V.'a are proud of their descent, and were satisfied to live in their skin- his. No railroads, no steamboats, no ' the squaw who prevailed upon old covered wigwams and subsist upon telegraph, no good roads in those days Po attane(her fathers) not to knock game and fish found in such abundance and a mail not oftener than once a h. the head of Captain John Smith of£ amid the forests and waters around mIntthe British Isles, on the Continent, with his club. them. the London nails—for we have every L'urthermore, when they bartered in Asia and Africa, where all was old a We intend no disrespect e Pokey—or y but in reason to believe they made good, true away their lands they frequently re- thousand Years ago, our little history and helpful wives, and that they made served as tracts, as was the case would seem to be as yesterday,y, _ se the IIashamomack sale to Salmon, this New World we must look upon ood mothers and grandmothers we or gmentally, have ever been produced when two large swamps where deer, those in whose veins ruts the same kor now, falln kheateeStates thancmy old bear, and wild turkeys had their breed- blood that warmed the hearts of a" - among Virginia, the mother of Presidents. [ng places, and where game of every tore, who lived amid the scenes a „L+vos taerr a man with sow so gena description was always to be found in hundred and fifty years Ufa the Rev- who never to nnnselt hath eat& the greatest abundance, were reserved. olutdun, who helped to clear the wilder- Large reservations were made for ness and make the lands blossom with TheffirstrHenry,Case came itoirSouth- Indians in the apportionment of lands .rosea, who gave thrix labor and thous a home lot of four acres to the east in the various towns. The Montauks nted blood to plant and refresh the glorious old home to town four habout opppe was aos'tte at East Hampton; Shinnecocks at 'treo of liberty amid whose branches tend of he store now occupied by L. W. Kmn; Southampton; Pouspattucks in Brook- rest to-day ¢ hundred million singing and a right in the Commons, providing .birds; at least as thorough bred Ameri- he would improve and live upon the haven, and indeed all over the island, lot for the period of three years, but,if aonte of the very finest bodies.of land cans—dyed in the wool. he moved away before the.expiration to be found were-reserved to the And fellow citizensywho havoe ha e he that time, the lot would revert to Indians, and I am sorry to say, have down from those earl days, Y the town; the town to reimburse him in been sadly neglected by them as even a right to be proud of your blood and with the example of their white neigh- of your names. The blood and the the wa°oflamhprovements�rHeanevcr bots and assistanceof the government .names havo gone out in every direction built on this lot, but shortly , after to assist in the building up of this purchased a home lot and dwelling in in the way _f amities and appropriations grand fabric of Republican Government, the west part of the town street near: - north aide of the town street, butianda ,years a o. Quite a number of.;;the Suffolk. Some of the original Gold in ever direction including. three or name still remain in the old town and' smith'Cutchogue property remained in Ywhere they are numerous in Orange County- the family and name up to a verys drel About 1676CclIieo eft three -where they emigrated with the rest"Vfl recent date; Nathan Goldsmith owning he ttle gue the Southolders during the exodus. and occupying a piece opposite the sons, Gershom, who went to Cutchogue Goldsmith& Tuthdl store,only,a few the store sate now owned and occupcan _ early and succeeded to the homestead; Joshua by Charles E. Case, where he died in The('first William Wells came e Y 16G4. He married Martha Corwin, o removed from Southold t° orient. All to tile only daughter of Mathias Corwin, and to Southold,and his hone lot was Oppthe o. two sons, Theophilius and Henry. site Pastor Young's, the house stand- first Richard.Th°mare Terry,ace lca grand- A Thomas Hutchinson married the ing on the spot where Henry Prince, widow Martha. This Henry Case was. now lives. He was the business mini of Suffolk County Minute 3rdson, was Colonel of the Regiment the the first of the name and founder of early some Revolution. th lg Island tAllracebackato him,ses OfEastern. �edgeeof law but ldid not claim to kbewa The first Barnabas Horton also came Mathias Corwin came to Southold lawyer. He wrote up deeds, wills, with Pastor Young and had his hone papers in legal to Southold with Pastor Young, and and a valued lot near to where the Catholic Church mortgages, and other pap now stands, He was a large landholder; th Towne and a(associated with PlAatnT der in th A9sISt nt his closest adVlaora liestool] had the his home f¢rm extending north to the Sound, and outlands on Toms Crack, Young) expounded the civil, while tho home lots and his house stood on the Goose Creek, IIog Neck, Cutch°guey, - Lane, opposite the old burying -ground Oyster Ponds, (orient), and m °cod, theironeiI allneighbors. t e dor various o corner Pp he town street and Horton's and on the spot where George C. Terry direction. Ile was a man of g flees of responsibility, was one of Gov. has his Attractive cottage. The first sound judgment held various sACOS Nichol's Council, and at one time High among the Early Settlers, was as, ranite amosoclng with Barnabas Ho•ton and Sheriff of New Yorkshire County. Ile. h mein)H°wherea4a massive Ug4 r nc , 1 others, by authority of the freeholders, accumulated an immense estate scat-I monument now stands to mark the spot. to aupervcse the affairs of the town.. tered all over the Town, including the wash and His outlands were very extensive; the IIe deed about 1660. His aldest'son, whole of Little Hog Neck,Peq home lot extending to the Sound and Sohn, married Mary, daughter of the first Charles Glover, and moved from g smaller lots all over the town. I-Ie was the Southold homestead to Peconic in Pool's Neck. Ile died in 1G70 )covin ubleman in the town. IIe left 1700, having purchased the farm now two sons, William and Joshua. His doubtless the most energetic and public four sons, all of whom remained in owned by Geo. H. Wells, also the land grandson John, son of Joshua, wasspirited given Pool's Neck; hie (Joshua's Southold and from whom has descended from Peconic Lane west to the west the numerous family of that name. line of Courtland Cases farr i from g the South to the North Country Roads, daughter Sarah, married a John Fleet• the family for seven generations, and Soine of these lands remained in the The Neck has remained in the gleet Some of the home taro remainded in family until very recently, the last family to the present time and is known the old homestead site was sold by the remnant being sold by.Captain Henry as Fleet's Neck. heirs of D. Philander Horton to George Corwin to Charles Davids in 1860, after C. Terry during the present year. being in the Corwin family for 160 Minister Young organized the Firs all the first families would require Church in 1640 and continued his work To undertake to trace the history re years. as Pastor continuously for over thirty volumes; we have only touched, very Thomas Osman, first of the Osborne ears,when he retired and died in 1672. p in his brief) , upon those most closely con- family (the name was changed in 1778), married Martha, daughter of William- Ysome Perrier in SG63, and went to Hashamom- His eldest son, Captain John, necte with the pioneer and early town ack where he started the brick yard home on the east side of. the driveway )believe nitife, and tie raufficcently baccurate to (as mentioned in the former a liter), leading to the head of the Town Creek errors in names and dates, but we and about opposite to his father's house make it worth while for those who nce and where he died n leGl, leavt i four interested m aucp matter mrovea the sons. Few of the name are left in tlte, p old town but quite a number are Pound on the west corner. The old ewes, least bit interesting to all of those who in the Hamptons, in New York and house, now occupied a Mrs. Downs, over it, and perha a it may' Western cities, where they rank high is the same house—a part of it at least have come down from rho former as business men and in the various _which was the home of Capt• John generations. 11 professions. Fam-I capable and influential man in tl places early feet ketehesoi Old Namesaand nd imp m- William Purrier wns an early settler; during his whole life. Ile was a very had a Noma lot and extensive outlands, days, and held a great many p seems to have Ueen a man of consider- .down through able means and influence. but th Bein trust and responsibility. Ile was a'iliea of.Old Southold, we have not a'- seendied out as he left no sons, Reeve, and Osborne to foreign ports; was one of thethe eight generations in which they daughters who are the mnternal once,- captain of vessels sailing the coast and tempted to follow t em tors of the Mapes, patentees of the Town;. a delegate tAave had the ir homes on this aide the families. Yorkshire Atlantic, or back to their Yremains to Captain Ralph Goldsmith was received New Haven ; Sheriff of they cannot as an inhabitant in 1644 and purchased Y which than included all of the Fatherland. It only blnest some land,but his home was in London, Co g England,and his family never emigrated• Long Island), am Tndianinterpreter; say that while, perhaps, all :have John Goldsmith, the founder of the member of the. Colonial Council, and claim to come from the very family of that name in Southold, ,was. Y Write their names the son of a Goldsmith who was living Colonel of Militia. From this man has blood of the old world,near y sufficiently high and cut them suffic- in .Southampton as early as 1G60,_ Long Island- most of the name on Eastern had the ability to., Island. probably one of the first settlers.t a ed Richard Terry came to Southold withliently deep togatcher. Bye the hese 1678, he (John Goldsmith)house stand-stand for land at Cutchogue, te and the name is closely�torian and biographer. If we look dose in near to the Catholic Church l h Pastor Young with Welling• wa to the Sound, He also had meadow. Town, His home lot history of the we may find thein and the Crusaders, an yhis lands extending Yrom the hi h- identified with the Bart was Haar the with Wallaceand BTlree, ,.timet Huntting homestead ,west .end and en e hat and erred m n'a.soulawhen tand the )Anda_nn.tha.Rnv.,_frnat._urAAY nf_Tlnnr .. 4., y Oliver Goldsmith was born in Ireland. I David Jennings, D. D., in Scotmno hour arrived when"the inner pleagn 1 He was author•of HI nameelfind hie" pas minister of Old Gravel Lane xsw He /^ aP- their lives, their fortunes and rand Deserted Village. sacred honor in' defenceo4 the g that we1.re ping meeting house over 40 year,. not born to die. wrote Introduction to the Use of principle, that all men are It not works are among the fgW born l and equal and. have the(right. to life, Sir D.Anvera EngOsbland, and.was aP- Antiquities oanddSermoge of na.ed He died lin liberty and the pursuit of happineas,the, Bedfordshire,, Engy a native of m place of C11 HIS Wife was a 1762. State of New York alone;which in 1776 sister of the inted GO Ear of Sterling LI Governor of No He or- Joseph Marie Terra , was sparsely settled outside of.•Long but Prance, was made Comptroller Gever.. Island, Manhattan Island, the Hudson rived in New Yorked and in ,heartbroke pointed, discourag al, Minister of State He Director etired from River Valley arid its tributaries, fur- b the agitation, confusion and strong Dished to the'.Revolutionary Armies,• I artisan y , alar ad public life in 1774, respected by the rank and,;fJle, of the :Benjamms ;'Pmpoaebleoto exercises adp it, almost Aral of Buildings, Bennetts 46, Booths good and virtuous and hated by those B41tes 16, ministration over the colony, he died who grow rich on the patronage of thel g, ordsb a week•after his arriv li h Francis Browns 303, Cases 27, Clarks 17 4CIeV - yy e government. lands 8, Corys 12, ns Conklios 164, Cop• �Ossornrn rtnBedford hi re 1583. Il wins 33, Davids 7; Albertsbns 6, .Dick- became master of the horse to William Henry Bennett, Earl favorite'Of ersId t ons 39, Eleets 1, Gardiry , 79„ Jen'_ and Lord Pembroke. He held some born 1818, was e g after a long, Dings 19, Goldsmiths]3, Ilsins 21 Hpr-, offices under C8 w TO- 1689, and again Charles II. He died 1885, al' tons, 91, IHallocks 97, Hutchmsons, 6,, 'were published, Zangdone 16', borne werec oetOe ofrtlie a17thJcentuOrY; bet he only pereonintful everwho had the. lie was owwella 87; Kings 97 Osbornea -69; to manage will'success the bad tem- H-1 I Moores 147, Mulforde 13, and some of their productions, said to per of the King. 1 Osmane 3, Overtoha 4;'Paynes'43,Pecks heve been ver beautiful and oub�Bea p Penn s 8, These are only a Few of the old 30, Pikes 6, y Peters 17 Phil- ly reputable character, were pacter we lips 8�J, Princes 12, Reeves 38 Rich- m Boston. If lips 8 17, Salmons 13, Wella 72; Sim- Nathaniel Salmon, an antigwrote a, mightomentionswas ithnecessary. or of Survey of Roman Statistics in Britain;. any particular interest or utility.- If it onds'onsis , S Salmons 13, Well!errys 38, �Tuth= born in Bedfordshire, England, possible particular in trace hack to those i ills 62, Veils 72, Wickhama 14, Woods 202, Youngs 204. : lieh. who bore them in the old, old days; we a Survey of Roman Antiquities in the wore P Antiq would doubtless find that soou of us Tits,pon its pt will pardon 'me s p I Middle Counties, The Lives o He gdied, are degenerate sons°erha ss rioausdecided nd- draw upon its patience and:its space Bishops from the Ref ormation, sires, and some, P p ' for another moment while I cEbosetof in1742ies . Surrey and Essex. improvement on the originals. How- sea to find what was by author of The Pres- imp y we are now only our name on the.other alde, Just a Thomas Salmon, ehronolog- ever that may be, little while, please, until we'an glance ent state of All Nations, a h names at the records of just a few• teal history of England and other works Theregm y not be a drop of hthemblood Barton Booth was the greatest actor of merit, died in 17an• eminent agricul- of the eminent men we have ment19 t ions Arthur Young, in our loins, but while a ioseanother of the 16th century. smell as sweet if known by published his Farmers'I thereis Something in the names Sixteen of the naive of Brown were. tural writer, born in Suffolk on__ , of such eminence,in England that they, England, 1741 p found p Agriculture. Among other °f And as we clamber up andadown ithe places in'biographical diction- Almanac in 1774 and established the. name, aries published as long ago as 1838. Annals o4 Ag land, Ire- works are his Tours in England, slopes of life, end atop now and,thci:etc' John Philpot Curran was one of the Agriculture,: pay a little tribute' at the shrine of most noted and eloquent baristers ar land and France. He was SPP Retros action, whet a world of dreamy Ireland and although of humble p Secretary of the Board of Ag fancies, what a host of pleasant remin- edied in.1817. Matthew Young, a noted mathema- escencea come thronging back and be- ents became in,1784 a member of the which o03ce he held till his death in 1810 HouSe of the name ms. H. Dublin, wrote fore us as we recall with friend Sloven Five of the name:of ction Moore were em- ploy n and divine, Professor Dublin, Philos the name of some g but, inent in politics and literature in Eng- phy in Trinity College, sig of the and loot. There is much in a name, land. James Moore was Colonial Gov- an essay on Boa tar l aiIO1 not all. "A man's a man for a' that hilosopher and phY- ernor of South Carolina la 1700. Henry principles of Natural Philosop & a , and for that." was Governor of New York i popular 166Thomas Young, p valuable p - _-_ THE END, -.- - ere to the supplement to the Encyclo- Sir John was one of the'most fall sictim contribute many soldier generals of Scotland. He P under the walla of Verona, where they. pedia Britaniea, and to him belongs dice said to hi a hearers,co'the woxldred hdo credit, in part,at least, of having; thc' move." When I was a boy the store Dulled him darkly at send of nlaht, covered the,means of deciphering now owned by C. E. Case was moved. The soda 11th their bayonets turntng' '.` EBYP hles.- II 'thestrugglingrueonbORIs8, 1ng•'llght tianbieroglYP And theh•lanterns dimly, .. - oat was James Howell, an English writer,,A through our streets by 60 yoke of oxen. Richaard Glover,,an English p. barn in 1696. His publications are very No trees then obstructed its passage author of Leonidas, anammortal work' ,numerous, amounting to half a hun- from L. W. I{orn's lot, where it was to ether with.Other,poema of merit, o built b Oscar Case. During the and of Boadieea MSal and other Lazg+g month past we have seen the Budd and resented:;at:the Drury dred. The best known and most POP' Jennings houses moved very skilfully ,dies p , _ by the Hopping-Jesaup Co., with the -' which have gone through eleven editions Theatre in the middle of the 17th can• alar are his lett on Public Affa ra, aid of only two animals that neither turv.'. - ... - chews the cud nor parted the hoof. Uy- new house, instead of moving it from house now is, wast ome of George Southold Reminiscences-1 the Magee land, or that vicinity. It Ledyard, son of The ,and father of I �AJ-By B. T. PATNF ( �'� [appears that the firm were too easy John W. and Fanny. IIis wife was I was misled into admitting in my 3dwith their debtors, and the result was a er on "Old Stores (Feb. 24, '06) he Boileau. John W. and his P ' "P that their creditors became so much in- mother and sister were living in the that Oscar L. Case, before building his terested in the store that it was Stelzer house in 1830. Ile went to store in 1841 on what is now the Water- thought advisable to move it! So it Brooklyn to learn the carpenter's trade, .man land, had one on the south side of was taken to the land of Mrs. Ann and there met Miss Emeline Horton the Run; and that Frederick K. Terry .Magee, and set very near to the north t it there afterwards till he movewhom in m kept d married. He built p side of her house (now the home of A. shop for himseliff about where Cottage it to his own land. Now here is the I. Booth). Mr. Huntting kept store Place opens into the Main street (east true story of the store at the Run, in it there, and thence it was moved to of the Waterman place). Ile bought Mr. Terry built it himself on the north Bowery, as I stated before. I won- of "Uncle Nat" Boisseau thirteen side of the Run. (The meadow on the dered at first why the building should acres of land on what is now Boisseau, south side belonged to the Payne fami- go to the Magee place, but it occurred avenue and moved his building onto it ly for several generations back, and to me that it was "all in the family.". for a home, setting it about where now my father sold it to Capt. S. P. Smith, As I have on my list so many. stands Wm. H. Beebe's. Afterwards a previous owner of Gilbert H. Terry's ,moved" buildings I may say just he bought the large building which was homestead.) The Terry store was sold here that for the moving of barns and Capt. Wells' mill (on Bay avenue), to J. W. Huntting, who moved it to small houses, common cast axles were I and moved the first house back from the triangle now occupied by the Sol- used; but for large buildings there the road and replaced it with the large diets' Monument, where it served for a were very heavy axles, with wheels one. That was (in 1850) the home of. store, a village hall and ever so many which had (inner) boxes 8 inches in other purposes. It was next moved to himself and wife with their three P P diameter and rime�8 inches in width. daughters and three sons. When I be- Peconic lane and set about where is And if necessary, trucks with solid gan going to school and heard the eld- now the residence of Geo. E. Prince, wheels were put under the middle of est son called "Colonel" I did not and Gilbert Case (son of "Uncle the skids. There were many oxen in know that he was named "George Mode") kept store in it. Later it was those days,and the moving of a house Bunks" after a British colonel of that set on the north side of the railroad, —even from one village to another— name who was a great friend of John and still later moved some rods east- was quickly accomplished. This fact Ledyard the Traveler. I had referward. It was the home of August may give some color to the statement once to him when I said,in a previous Wolfe, John Carroll and possibly oth made by the late Josiah Smith,. that 'in paper that one of my school-mates was ers. Years ago it succumbed to the the old times house. were moved, not a colonel before he was a private—in combined attacks of ^humble" bees built! - 1 the Civil War. and old axes. In winter of 1839.40 a heavy drift of In 1830 Nathaniel Corwin bought I had the impression that Oscar L., timber came upon the Sound shore, and Fithian1832 Case's store was a small building, and what is now the otr home; in who the Tillinghasts (Albert J. and Henry he sold it to his brother Hudson, who formed but a small part of the Terry S.) secured a share of it. They divid- in 1835 sold it to David Landon. Capt. Beckwith-Tillinghast-Clark-Fanning- ed what they got, and the former with � Landon had in 1812 married Case store; but I am informed that the Jerusha, his part built a barn on his ]and—now sister to Albert G. Case, and had lived. original was 2-story and comprises the R. J. Sandland's. It was raised in the in the house of his father Jonathan most of the present building. (Mr. I, fall of 1840, and when my uncle Hub- (then called the Landon house, now the Terry finished olf the second story forbard C. Payne set the bush at the Singley house) until about 1830 when living rooms.) J. Frank Wells (broth- peak, he said, "This is the Log Cabin Ire movedinto,the Ledyard house,above er to Geo. C.) was the boss carpenter, barn: may it be well filled under the mentioned. From '35 to '46 he lived at and S. Moses Terry was an assistant. administration of Wm, Henry Harri- the Fithian place, and then bought•. (My father did the mason work,) son." Several years ago that barn what is noro called the Landon house at When the rafters were in place, Henry was made over under the direction of I Creekside. He was many years on the S. Wells (father of Mrs, Julia L. Conk- the present owner. I sball refer to the [sea, and in 1840 was running the brig lin) nailed the hush at the peak ; and� house in a later paper. !Rudolph Gruning between New York l when lie wns called on to •zzatne the Southold, May 8, 1905. [ ' building, he said, "This is the veto of --Note: In my previous paper "Cast'his widowTh on Francis C�d'ed in 1891ninealis monopoly." [His uncle Wm, H. Wells axles" should have read cart axles." was then the leading store keeper I]. That leads me to say that the last ap-. 73d year and the daughter Miss Jerusha (For the moving 60 yoke of oxen were pearance of an ox cart in our village, last April,in her 89th. Mrs, Hannah provided; and when everything was streets was in the procession at the;.S. wells, the other daughter, is in her ready, the word was given—no button celebration of the 250th anniversary of 86th. �tliemto be pressed—the "gado were the settlement of our town—August As has been told in these columns swung and the oxen did the rest. 27, 1890. It was the property of the lot on which now stand the South-i Now another story, referring this ;Richard L. Peters, but now the two time to the Brown and Huntting store old Savings Bank and Mrs. Carrie J. hubs seem to constitute all the "rest, Lewis' residence was at one time the mentioned in the same paper., It seems residue and remainder thereof." property of Joseph Peck and was now to be the "truly true" history of The "Ledyard house," which. stood called Peck Hill. His hoose was called that building, that he built it near-his where Albert W. Albertson's tenantGriffin's __. ---- .. _ Peck's Inn,and it is related in - J,Taurnal that in 1781 twenty men land- i ed at Town Harborro fm a British war- l weaving carpets and having her loom� Another of the pioneers. who helped vessel and went up to Joseph Peck's in the kitchen ; and Rev. John Luckey,, to build the railroad through this sec- Inn, made free with his liquors, abused pastor of the M. E. church, was living tion was John Thompson, who with his family and seriously wounded himin the eget others boarded at.Salter Horton's. with their weapons; and on their way part. (Miss Hannah died S: in 1877, aged 86.) Mr. Prince was Miss Jane McQuillan was Mrs. Hor- back to their boats insulted and robbedthton's assistant. In June, 1844-the the inhabitants. Mrs.Mary B. Sleight, en ( house (now keeping the town poor owned by Wm. Lowery), month before the first train came in her East End story "An and his children were attending through-"this man and this woman" Heroine,"brings in this noted hostelry, ng school. When in 1855 his wife Eunice died, he were made husband and wife by Rev, Joseph Peck died in 1789, and his son was living on his farm on R.R. avenue I Father Curran, who dived where Mrs.� John carried on the business; political now the home of Silas J. Baker, Per. Almira Glover now lives-the house meetings and caucuses were held there, haps two years later he sold out to Al-'.now belonging to Wm. Evens, I think. and once when two men were seeking vah S. Mulford (d. May 20, 1858), The house in which Mr. Horton had the nomination of their party for thelived while building same office the people waited for the Mr. P. died in Geo. S. Prince's 7iouse g (•n 1887) a larger p p Oct. 20, 1877, aged near] 92 eas, one (now Gilbert H. Terry's), Mr. coming of Lawyer L'Hommedieu; to _ _g__ __y _y " '•4'-' '°Thompson bought and moved to Bois- see which he would favor; and when r - -- - After Albert G. Case left store i. Sean avenue and that was his home he said of one, "Ob, he's deef," the keeping he returned to his old home, till 1861 when he sold it to Geo, A. question was promptly settled in favor the Case house. His father "Uncle Maier, whose widow still lives there of the other! The building was burned 'Thins" had died in 1831, but his moth- together with her son Frank and his :some time previous to"1830; and not er was living there. Later he bought family; Mr. Thompson Bought the later than the early part of 1835, Haz- what had been built in the eastern part Martin Prince place on the North road and L. Moore (married Esther Peck,in of Cutchogue by Albern Case for a (now the home of his son James), and 1757), who had come into possession of carpenter shop for his son Albern, and after many years of hard work died Peck Hill, bought the said Ledyard amity this he moved home and set about there in 1876 at the age of 72. His afthouse and moved it thither. Family where his father's store had stood. In widow survived him 27 years and fine family lived i it there, till "ono it he taught a private school several reached the age of 96. Their eldest fine day d spring" Daniel .Terry years, having 20 to 25 pupils; and his eon, John, became a doctor. When he bought.it and moved . e his land west wife "Aunt Ruth" boarded men who was at one time visiting his parents it the home lot of busy Jennings, where were working on the railroad, among some one in the village was very sick it is still sheltering busy people. whom was A. A. Goodliff'' a)so three of a fever, and Dr. Thompson recom-� ` S. Y. Jr." stated in Tac TRAVEL- ' mended the-free use of milk in the (married p IDR in 1898 that Joseph Prince miedMarbrothers by the name of Stone who ( came from Connecticut. John and caed. That was considered a new de- Benjamin Nov., 1746) gave Bj his son James Porter were also. working on parture in therapeutics. Benamin the northern halff of the home lot of Pastor John Youngs, and the railroad, and the former was dis- Rev. Thomas Miller, who for years trict foreman here as late as 1858. The "ministered" in Sodom school house that William the only son of Benjamin latter married in 1843 Catharine E., before the Universalist church was sold this in 1832. This will serve as an built in 1835 , introduction to what I have to sa daughter of Gideod8aerry. and named ( ) and also h that church The house in which William was born his first-born Daniel Terry. at times a later years, had his home (in 1785) was one and a half stories To lodge the boarders two rooms in a hound belonging to Dr. Ira Corwin high, stood facing the south where m were finished off afterwards upstairs s this moved !and standing on the south side of Pine y building, and afterwards the school 'Neck road just west of the Munch own now stands, and had a front room was closed and the first floor also given 'house now occupied by Moses Taylor, and a kitchen in each end. The street up to the same use. When Lawyer He had twenty-one children born there, now on the south side was then a part Goldsmith and others thought that the The Munch house was the home d of thatland, which extended north- railroad "stopping place" might be Henry Corwin the father of ton sons: ward to the Main street. Benjamin changed from Horton lane to what is Daniel, Dennison, William, James, Al. Prince died March 25, 1789, and Thom- now Boisseau avenue, Mr. Case moved bert, George, Charles, Theodore, Orrin as Ledyard (grandfather of John W, the building to the north-west corner and Warren. It gave me pleasure to slid Fanny Ledyard)married his widow of his lot and set it near the railroad.. learn "what became" of the "Priest Hannah (Moore) April 19, and Not being used for a station, it was Miller" house. It was moved by here lived till his death Sept. 1516,, 1820. bought by Andrew Jennings and set .Chas. 0. Horton to "Egypt" and William was apprenticed in Sag Har on his land just north of the railroad, onto the land now belonging to his son bor to learn tanning and shoemaking; about opposite the tenant house of Moses T. It was put well back from and afterwards worked at his trade in Daniel Terry mentioned in last paper. .the road, and was first occupied there New York. I-Ie married Eunice Jen- nings (aunt to Hozekiah Jennings),and The land sail the house afterward came close Thos. D. Terry, who built the barn into the possession of J. Hazard Hor- close back of it, and worked the land Al her had four ast), en,Th Mary rd ton; and a few years ago his son-in-law perhaps a year or two. (His widow Albert J. Tillinghast), Thos. Edward, J, H, Boisseau moved the building to Sarah Ann built in 1853 what is now William B. and Sidney (logit at sea). - within three rods of his residence, And the M. E,� parsonage.) Afterwards While he hued here he hada shFpe ahop there we will let it rest, (I intended the house was occupied and the land just north of the house, In 1!190;`his to say that Mr. Case taught also the tilled by John Prince, J. Reeves Gold- mother and her step-daughter Misa Public school about 1848.7.) Smith and Daniel Manney.' I recall Hannah Ledyard were living in the -- -_.— -- -- ----- -"---- very pleasantly a visit that mother and west part_of the house, the widow I made to Uncle Reeves and Aunt / h L/ I Anna while they lived there. Father lowed the great drought of 1838. He A button-ball hedge ran around the took us in the ox cart across the back then bought a barn of a Mr. I-Iammond corner and extended nearly to the east lot, then across the Boisseau land (now on Peconic lane and moved it to the line of the present home of A. Case, B. B. Tuthill's and down on the east site of the Terr house. This barn was Esq. John Cunningham and afterwards Y Carl Bishop worked in the shop. Both Me of the San€ord swamp I In 1854 afterwards bought by Moses L. Case lived in the Landon house by the creek Mr. Horton built the house which I and moved to his place on the North and the lattermovedto Shelter Island now own, living in the Stelzer house road which he had bought of Moses C., and carried on business there for many Burin the re4ious winter. In 1866 'Cleveland. The latter had du a cellar years. g p R Daniel Terr , who had learned his he sold out to J. Albert Wells, and the there intending to build over it,but had trade at We River, came to the next,year built the house which now instead built on Main street the house she p in the spring of 1847. In the fall stands on the "Egypt" lot above which he occupied till his death in1883. of that year Mr. Wella moved the shop mentioned, and there made his home. He had built for his brother Joseto his own land and set it on R. e 'ay, ph, calls about where now stands the flat- When Phineas Fanning built in 1848 a house where now stands the roofed building owned by Wm. Evens. the present home of Daniel Terry he blacksmith shop of W.H. Glover(which Mr, Terry rented it about a year, and had a good-sized shoe shop on the pres- he built for Henry C. Cleveland), and then left it. After several others had ant site of the store occupied b F. T. after his father's death (in 1848) he occupied it, Thomas Paine bought it P � Y and moved it to Jamesport, and I un- Wells. Several years later it was sold the house to Moses L. Case, who derstand that there it still stands—and' moved to the present home of Thomas moved it and set it over the said cellqr,'l stands still! Soon after it was moved Conway on Horton lane, and was a The moved house and the moved barnsby Mr. Wells, Geo. eGeo. P. Horton built a part of his residence which was burned are now the property of Lewis S. Tut- carpenter h thn bought ust north o theGustavus not long ago. hill. Fields shop above mentioned Ezra Prince (son of John, son of moved it to what is how the honand,of Joseph, son Capt. John; brother to NOTE. In last week's article, in the John and Martin; father of Albert, Or- R'm. R. Newbold, setting it on the I thirdpm•agraph, "Miss Jerusha" rin, Martha, Betsey, Lucretia and road (as usual) at a point about in should have been "Miss Julia"• and at Phebe) had his house on the lot which front of the eastern end of the main; the close of the article, 11 Geo, S. is at the corner of Boisseau avenue and Part of the present,house, which was' - Prince's house" was not correct: the North road now belonging to H. C. built (185-) by Jeremiah Goldsmith house in which Wm. Prince died was Prince. It was near the south-west while the shop was there, Just east of his own, which he built after selling corner of the lot, and may have been the shop was a convenient pond, and his farm and which is now the home moved to that place, as he had a large east of the pond a two-stall shed was of J. Edward Davis. Both mistakes chimney built in it—and no other ma built by Silas and Austin Boftwho a—proU- were inexcusable on my part, for I son work, I judge—in 1816. The cellar ably for the use of those who attended; "knew better." I shall be glad to re- is not now noticeable, but it may be meetings in the Lecture Room. The i ceive corrections at any time. located. That lot, together with ad- shop was moved about�o he Da- jacent land was in the .Paine family, vid Jennings land (now the home of Samuel Dickerson) and set on the road About fourteen years ago I. gave to. Alsop Paine (grandfather to my grand- Samu the "17 M to Suffolk C H" stone THE TRAVELER the following item : father Phineas) gave it in 1765 by deed near Benjamin. The latter died and also near another convenient pond foil j ! "Boss J. E. Corey and his foassist- to his son Ben While it was there, I took to be shod in 1781, and his eldest son, Benjamin, u ants are progressing finely with the x•e- sold it in 1704 to John, son of Alsop; by her. Terry the first horde which modeling of 1I. C. Prince's house. Li and John willed it to his grandson Silas father owned (as I think I told in THE ;iTRAVELER some years ago), which had tearing off the fascia, they found pen- Ezra Prince died in 1826, and in 1820 been grandfather's. John W. Ledyard ciled on a part of it, 'Wm. Wells, Al- his son Albert father of Susan T. (mar- asked me, 'Do you give the old mare bert Prince,J. Payne and E. W. Payne, vied S. 0, Salmon), Albert E. (died any grain, sonny?" My answer was, 1846.' The house was built by Benja- 1855) and Henry C, bought the Terry `l No, air; we give her some coolan min and Nathaniel Boissean on the lot 'louse and trlbved it, as stated above. Israel Peck bought the Jennings land now occupied by the residence of Geo. ,Early in the following year he brought! and began building on it in year When to this new home his buxom bride Mary' the Darn was builty that year s the J. Tillinghast, and was moved to its {Tuthill). His mother lived with them next—rho much-moved shop was sold present site in 1.829, forty ,yoke of oxen till bar death 1844. The old house was to H. Jennings, who attached it to the being used. In 1846 a half-story was sold and moved to Horton lane, where' east end of his barn, where it did good it became the home of William Horton service, the attachment remaining un- added to it." -married Misa Clarissa Manney) and broken for many years. Mr. Terry The Tillinghast residence now now shelters his daughter-in-law Mrs. then built the shop in which he did belongs to H. W Simons. Th phebe N. Horton. business for so many years longer and Prince house had been the here o In 1828 Gustavus Fields, a black- which now belongs to J. Edward Davis. Moses G. Terry, whose wife was Han smith, was living in his basement When Lawyer J. ii Goldsmith opensd house, which stands next west of B. F. the street which runs south of my nab W., daughter of Nathaniel Bois Moore's hick stands to Daniel Terry, house it continued westward to the seen, and whose daughter Ruth Augus- Just west of it was his shop. Years Hollow, and then toned northward the Main street; but at Mr. Terry's to became the wife of Chas. .0. PIor afterwards he moved the shop d about h a ere suggestion and on his payment of a'' ton: "Uncle Nat" lived on the car- ss now on thethe Bay Viie ew to tlae Pines north certain sum of money, Lawyer G. j nor previously owned by Dr. John Gar• of Mill Hill, and he lived in the house changed the street to its present place diner and now the Home of Michael on Bowery lane which John Shafer —thus gaining in the number of buil{l-. ung lots besides the bonus 11 4_/�z•�y Furey. His baro, which stood on Par- bought a year or two ago of William _ _ _ sonage lane (also called Hobart's lane) Tillinghast.aas also a blacksmith shop perhaps twelve rode back from the near the corner of Main street and R. house, was struck by lightning and!R. avenue—now the Albertson plsee— burned in a thunder storm which fol- the shop belonging (in 1840) to W. H. - ---- -- —— -'Wells,and the land to R. L. Peters. /00 Note 771, TNe JOURNAL OF JONA- age his wife died, and he married a about 40 rods north of the Meeting TITAN HORTON.—No. 1. girl that lived with them and had 8 House, where some of his offspring I was born on Sunday,June 21, A,D., sons more, and that the three older now live [about 1800]. 1789, in the afternoon y, I have been sons after they came to Southold, re- James, the youngest brother of my told, My father, William Horton moved to Westchester Co„ and the great grandfather, was born in the youngest settled in Southold. In a year 1694, and died May 16, 1762, aged was the son of Ambrose, and was born part of the probate of his will, which- 68 years,and his wife Anna died March Aug. 23, 1768. My mother's name was is yet extant, there are 6 sone men- 8, 1783, aged 82 years, 2 months and 6 Deliverance and she was the daughter tioned and 3 daughters, via., Joseph, days. He lived and died at Hog Neck,. of John and Elizabeth Corwin, and was I Benjamin; Caleb, Joshua, Jonathan,' 'in Southold, where a number of his born May 2, 1.767, Ambrose, my Hannah Teril, Sarah Conklin, Mary descendants now live. He was a dea. grandfather, was the son of Jonathan Budd. IIe died in Southold, July 13, con in the Presbyterian Church for a and Mary Horton, and was born at 1680, aged 80 years, and wan interred. number of years, and some of his de- Southold, April, 7.739 [he mads a mus- in Southold burying ground, where the mordants are still much attached to take of 10 years; Ambrose is buried at stone that covers hisrave is Baiting Hollow; hie gravestone g yet ex- Presbyterianism. gsays Cant, and which it is said he brought The 6 daughters of Capt. Jonathan "died 3 Aug., 1792, aged 63 ], was from England. Jonathan, youngest Horton in the probate of the will men- married to Anna, daughter of John and son of the above, was probably born tioned above, were Bethiah, wife of Phebe Jessup, of West Hampton, by about the year 1660, and married Be-- Henry Tuthill; Mehitabel,wife of Dan- whom he had three eons: Jonathan, i thiah, daughter of William Wells, one iel Tuthill; Mary Goldsmith, widow;. who enlisted in the American army in of the first settlers of Southold, by Abigail and Patience. He probably the Revolutionary army and died at I whom he had.5 sone .and..6 daughters, died in the year 1707, as the will is Peekskill; Azariah, who died an infant, as mentioned in the probate of his will, dated 1707. His wife Bethiah died and my father, he being the youngest. 'still extant. Caleb, his oldest son, April 14, 1733, aged 80 years. My grandmother Anna was born (died Dec. 26, 1706, aged 30 years, and Jonathan was the name of the son of Feb. 23, 1733, at Norick [Noyack 7], left 3 children, Jonathan, Mehetabel Lazarus, and was born March, 1704, from whence her parents removed to. and Bethiah, the last of whom married and married Mary Goldsmith, dough West Hampton when she was young.; a Cleaves. Jonathan, my great grand- ter of David, by whom he had 2 sons,I They had 8 children, viz,: Sarah, who father, was born in the year 1683, at Jonathan.G. and Rensselaer, and 61 married Hugh Raynor and had A large Southold, and married Mary Tuthill, daughters, Mary, Mehitable, Betsey, family, of I know not how many chill, by whom he had 6 sone.and 2 daugh- Hannah and Anna, still living, besides) dren ; Abigail, who married Thomas ters: Jonathan, who died soon after several who died young. Eunice, hiss Scot, of Southampton, and removed to he was married without leaving any oldest sister, married Hezekiah Jen Richmond, in the west part of Massa- issue; Eliphas, who went away in the nings, and Ruth, his other sister, mar-; Musette State, and died, but how large beginning of the French War for fear ried Cyrus Goldsmith. a family they had I know not, as I of being pressed, and what "became of Commiasioners met at Annapolis never saw any of them;. Anna, 'my him was never known; Aaariah, who Sept, 14, 1786, but adjourned to May grandmother, was the 3d child; John, was brought up to college and was a 26, 1787, when delegates with more who married Mary Halsey and had, Presbyterian priest, and who married a ample powers assembled at Philadel- quite a large family, viz„ Patty, who. Foster from Southampton and lived at phis,and agreed upon the present con- married a Coleman in Orange Co., Settle Hill, in the State of New Jer-:'stitution. Sept, 17, 1787. Matthew, Issue,.Polly, Phebe, Charity, sey; where he died; Lazarus, who mar-; 1789. Congress met at New York' Susan, Dency, Sylvanite, besides one or Had a Corey and lived with his father'i for the first time under the new con- two who died infants; Stephen mar- at Southold,.had several children that;'stitution, March 4. George Washing-', ried an Albertson and settled in West' died young, and one eon and two;ton inaugurated first President Aprif Hampton; there were also two infant daughters still living; be died in the 130. sons that died, as mp grandmother has year 1764, aged 40. Ambrose, my' 1790. Dr. Franklin died in his 86th told me; Hannah, the youngest sister of my grandmother, married Benjgrandfather, was .the youngest son.;year, April 12 amin. The daughters were Mary, who mar 1791. The State of Vermont admit- Benjamin and removed to Herkimer ried Joseph Cleveland and lived and'ted into the Union Feb. 18. Co., where she died about the time my died at Southold, and Mehetabel, who Dec, 1, 1791,' mother was delivered grandmother did, and left one dough married a Sawyer from Shelter Island of a son, whom they called Azariah. ter, Sarah, who married an Overton'.. and had one son called Nable, and then 1792, The State of Kentucky admit- amen and Jonathan. and had three son, via., Joshua, Ben died in the 19th year of bar age in ---- - .- - - - J �' 1760. My great grandfather died April I,ted into the Union June 1. The genealogy of my ancestors on. 3,. 1768, aged 86, and his wife lived Aug. 2, 1792. Died of the cholic; the side of my father, according to the, some years after him, being about 97 my grandfather, Ambrose Horton, in best information I have been able to, years old when she died,' i the 63d year of his age. collect, is as follows, viz.: William, his brother was an execu 1793. Louie 16th, King of France, Barnabas Horton was born at Mous for with him in the will, but of his age' beheaded Jan. 21, Queen of Prance ley, in Leatembire, England, about., and death I know not anything except beheaded Oct. 16. 1600, and removed to Southold about' that it appears probable that he was The yellow fever rages in Philadel- 1640. It is said that he had 8 sons; the next younger m phis at this season and carries off' y ge y great grand- i burn in England, and that on the pass father and that he lived at Southold 6,000 people. - j cJ 1794. My mother was delivered of Died some time in themonth of Sep- I JohnCorwin, named Sarah, quite: a daughter Jan. 1, whom they called tember, Mr. Thomas Wells [Thomas. Young [about 4 years; gravestone. Anna. Dickinson Wells]. I recollect that 1,1 Baiting Hollow cemetery]. My brother Azariah died March 1. went to the funeral with my.father; Towards the close this year the goy A remarkable frost May 17. and that Mr. Manly Wells spoke from ernment of France underwent quite a Inaurrectinn in tilewesterncounties Psalm 90:3, "Thou tnrneat man to de-, revolution; the Directory was over. Of Pennsylvania commenced in August struction and sayest, return ye chit- thrown and Bonaparte & Co. were is quelled without bloodshed in Oct., dren of men"; and that he was buried chosen consuls, at the expense of a million dollars, on the fresh pond farm in view of the Dec. 14. Gen. George Washington 1795. St. Lucie taken by the French Sound, died at Mount Vernon, and the United April 19. The Cape of Good Hope The most of Wilmington, N. C., was States, like a great family, mourned captured by the British, also Batavia burnt October 31. for him many days. and Ceylon in.the East Indies. Died, Nov 12, Polly, youngest 1796. - Tennessee admitted into the daughter of Mr. Richard Hallock, aged 1800. Jan. 7. A great snow in Car- Union June 1, 16 years. olina and Georgia. Great fire in Charleston, S. C., June A great fire in Richmond, Va., Nov.: Feb.22d, the birthday of Gen. Wash- 20. 22. - ington, by appointment of Congress was A square in New York burnt Dee. 9. George Washington was appointed observed as a day of mourning through The most of Savannah burnt Dee.26. some time in the year commander in the United States, In Dec. we moved to the road in the chief over the armies of the United Jan. 28. My mother was delivered new house. States, which were raised in experts- of a daughter, whom they called Hul- tion of a war with France, da. 1797. John Adams succeeds to the' It was this year that there was an March 20-25. A remarkable flood in presidency of the United States and Insurrection in Ireland, in which many, the Connecticut River. Thomas Jefferson is vice president lost their lives, for those who revolted! June —. The seat of the federal Match 4. acted very cruelly and murdered many' government transferred from Phila. A great earthquake at Quito, South of the other party in cold blood, and delphia to the city of Washington. America, destroyed towns and 40,000 then when the British had subdued June 20, died, Adonijah Osborn, son inhabitants' them they executed many of those. of Adonijah mentioned on page 13,aged Died, Adonijah Osborn, March 25,: whom they caught. about 60 years. He lived at the Wad- ,aged 86 years, 9 months and 4 days; - -. ingriver and left two sons, Gersbom he was probably the oldest settler that 1799. Capt, Truxton, in the Consti-: and David. is living in.this place. He moved in tution, took the French frigate lnaur- At this period I recollect not much,. this place in April, 1749, at which time, gent, Feb. 10. '. but remember there was much dispute there was only one family beside his to, My sister Clarinda died March 12,1 in politics and considerably said and the eastward of the ponds and one or aged 2 years, 8 months and 9'days. done about liberty poles. two families at the ponds, so that pre-. April 2, died, Jemima. Osborn, aged - George Clinton was chosen Governor vious to his moving here there were note about 70 years. She was the oldest, of the State of New York in 1777, and more than three families, if there were daughter of Adonljah Osborn, men-1, continued to be re-elected until 1795, more than two, in the place. tioned on page 13, and had had the when John Jay was elected Governor I had a very narrow escape from be. eonsumption a number of years, and [error not in original] and held the of- ing killed this spring in harrowing oats;. died very suddenly when she died. fire two terms. the horses ran away with me and I fell April 13, died, my grandmother Cor- 1801: March 4. Thomas Jefferson off between them, and the harrow win, in the 64th year of her ake; She succeeded to be President of the Uni- went over me while fast to the horses was the daughter of Daniel Wells, of ted States, and Aaron Burr Vice Presi- and they under full speed, yet undor Aquebogue, who had four wives and a dent of the same. the care of Divine Providence I did not large number of children, viz.: Anna, March 23. Paul I, Emperor of the receive much hurt, I who married Christopher Young and Rosales, assassinated, and his son Al- About this time there was a John died about one week after grandmoth- exander I declared his successor. Mci;lure kept school here, to whom 11 er [Anna died 3 March; 1797; grave March 31, died, Sally, wife of Ger- went, and a strange mortal he was;'� stone Aquebogue cemetery]; Sarah, shorn Osborn, aged perhaps 35 years. e knowledge was quite limited, andi who married John Albertson; Daniel, abilities for government, etc., quite who lived at Aquebogue and married a April 5. Lord Nelson gained a victory over the Danishh small Young; Micah,.who married a Young; fleet before Copen- hagen, My mother was delivered of a daugh• Jeremiah, who married a Cleaves; ter July 3d, whom they called Clarinda: Mary, who married a Corwin; Abel June June, died, Matthias Corwin [died 11 10 aged 69; gravestone], aged who was wounded at Fort Montgom- about 70 years, one of the oldest in- 1798, Congress passed an act de- ery and taken prisoner in the-Revolu-'. Glaring the treaty with France null and l tionary War and died in prison in New habitants of this place. He left only void July 7. _ 1 York; Nathaniel, who removed to Or- one daughter, his wife [died 10 June, Died in Philadelphia some time in; Yore County and died there, d to - 1783; gravestone] having died about 18 the month of August, my mother's,, large family; Isaac, who married Je• years before, after being bed-ridden -youngest brother, George Corwin, agedi mima Overton and died at Aquebogue; for 26 years, it is said. about 24 years. Oct. —. Definitive treaty of peace _.._ � and Mehetabel, who married a Downs.; .signed between Prance, Holland,Spain, June 3, died, a claughter_of Uncle' - - - (it is supposed) he caught the yellow daughters, but one of them is dead, (England and Germany- i July and August. We i fever, came home and died with it, began to take 1802. March S. The bill-for the re- aged about 20 years, a newspaper with Benjamin Hutehin- peal of the Judiciary law passed. Died also, Sept, 30, Mr.James Warn .eon; the first we had I think was dated March 6. Princeton College in New er, aged 42 years. He killed himself Aug. 5. Jersey burnt, supposed by an incendi- by drinking. He was a man of consid- September. Died, Gershom Ed- ary, erable parts, but habit got so strongly wards, aged 60 years, one of the oldest May 6, died, Manly Wells, aged fixed that reason could not have a settlers of this place; he had had a fit about 55 years. He was ordained as a bearing. of apoplexy some years before, which preacher in August, 1793, and aeon October. The frigate Philadelphia, had very much disabled him. after moved into this place from Aquc- belonging to the United States, com- In September of this year the dysen- bogus and lived here until his death, as manded by Cant. Bafnbrige, in chasing tery began to rage in this place, and a Congregational preacher. a Tdpolitan cruiser, ran on a shoal and' continued until November, sweeping July 6, died, John Jessup, aged grounded and was taken together with away about twenty inhabitants, viz., about 65 years. He was my grand- the crew by the Tripolitans. my brother Barnabas, Oct. 12; my mother's oldest brother. Dec. 20. Louisiana ceded first by giandmother, Oct. 25; a Mrs. Noris, Sept. 2. Last night there was quite Spain to France; and by France to the two children of Mr. Micah Howell, one an awful storm of thunder, and the United States, is in a formal manner of David Conklin,besides several others barn of Philip Hallock,of Rocky Point, annexed by the latter. In consequence I do not recollect. is burnt, and what other damage is ,the territory of the United States is They have built a school house in the done I know not. much enlarged. place this autumn. A Scotchman by Nov. 15. My mother was delivered April. Gerahom Edwards has the name of Archibald Cameron began 1804. A of a son, whom they named Barnabas, p to teach school here last summer in and my father has to-day sown a piece kept school this winter and I have the meeting house and kept two quar- of new ground'with rye, and we have been studying arithmetic. After he ters, and then Mr. Samuel Waters be- been borrowing it. left off Charles Corwin kept school a gan the last of December. Nov. 16. To-day my father sent me short term, 1806. Oct. 4. I eat out this day for to the store of Mr. James Fanning to month, Morgan election At the Lewis the ]was ast oeleet,d New York in the Concord, Walter get some things, etc. Smith. - They are around with a subscription i Governor of the State of New York, Oct 6, Sunday. We got in New trying get enough to build a most. he to himwwas Aa onho was ldBurr,up inVice York this morning and I wanted to go ing house. Mr. Freeman Allen keeps school in President of the United States. George to meeting, but they would not go with this place and I have begun Dilworth's Clinton had been Governor the last m the owever,bck we ten an churchthe . arithmetic_this December, term. - "" Juno 24. Died, David Smith, aged g Oct. 10, Fair. We left New York 1908, March. The sloop Fame was 20 yesterday afternoon in the sloop In- upset and came ashore the last of this July —. Aaron Burr and Alexander dustry, Peter Fournier, but the wind month. ,Hamilton fought a duel; Hamilton was came N, E. to-day and we went in Mr. Youngs Wells began to keep amortally wounded and died in about ,Black Rock Harbor. singing school soon after (New?) two days, aged 48 years, Oct. 12. Sunday. The wind S. W. Years and kept a quarter. I have. Unexampled tempest in the West and we came out of the harbor early been trying to learn to sing. I got as,Indies Sept. 1, and raged three days; ,this morning and got home to-day. far in arithmetic as fellowship, before, Oat, 19. My mother was delivered on the 7th, 8th and 9th it . .. .__.__ I was taken from school to our spring Carolina and Georgia with immense of a daughter whom they call Elizabeth. work. State of Ohio was admitted into destruction. December. I went to Southold to M father has built a shed and shop, school. Mr. Ezra Harris taught the the Union some time last year as a etc., 30 feet one way and 18 the other. school. separate State. Sept. 16. My sister Hulday died ' 1807, March. I returned home from May 8. There was quite a snow lest night, aged 4 years, 7 months and school, having studied Engish Gram- storm to-day. 19 days. June, - Great Britain declared war Dec, 3. Bonaparte crowned Emperor mar and Bookkeeping while I was against France, and the latter immedi-, y there. of France b his holiness the Pope, by The last of this month the schooner ately commences extensive propara-(the title of Napoleon,with great splen tions to invade the former, which are dor. The Emperor presented the Pope Elizabeth, of Portland, came ashore Icarried on with great vigor. England a triple crown,valued at 20,000(what?) against this place, loaded with flour, prepares with great unanimity and ac-�, and from Now York. tivity to resist her invader. 1805. Severest winter since 1780. July.. We have cut the most Eng- The meeting house was raised in this Froze Dec. 20 last to the last week in lish hay this season, 19 loads, that we .place about the first of July and fin February, 1805. ever have; it having been a wet sea- ished so that they began to have meet We had a cistern built last antumn, son. inga in it some time in September, which we had settled this spring. At the election last April, Daniel D. The yellow (fever•?). prevails consid There was no school in this place the Tompkins was elected Governor of the erably in New York this autumn, winter past. State of New York. James, eon of Me, Daniel Edwards, .May 2. Died, Nathan Benjamin, Dec. 26. Died, this day, very sud- followed coasting to New York, where aged 72, for many years an inhabitant; denly, Mr. Zebulon Woodhull, aged -- ---- ---- --— -- he has left three sons and had as many - - - - -- - 6 Perhaps Qo years. Intemperance was or F istic Features of the Village the cause of his death; he. had been Historic ' drinking very freely, in which habit had considerably gotten, and fell out of Southold of his chair and breathed no more, as they say. 1808. March. I went to Southold to By ELLA B. HALLOCK school in November last, and have been studying the Latin and the Math- The following article was published held in the Meeting House, Only church' ematica until I came home now to in the Brooklyn Daily Tinees, May 16, members voted, and no details Ili Poll work. Elijah Terry began to keep 1906. Because of the interest in the school in this place last spring, and Old Village Cemetery, the TanvEOEtc lie o•church affairs were too trivial for kept here nearlyone has been requested to reprint this them..to act upon. All duties were to year, article. We are indebted to the Tunes them religious duties, and were Con- About the 20th of last December for the use of the cuts.] acientiously discharged. Selecting at Congress ]aid embargo on all ships, The old churchyard of Southold,which random, we read that the town collect- and which continues yet, comprised originally about an acre of ed and paid the minister's salary; that The last of this month there was ground in the northwest corner of the the Town Meeting disciplined church -quite a snow storm. i modern cemetery, was to the early set- offenders, fixed the fine for Sabbath April. We have made about 40 rods tlers God's Acre, or God's Ill for it breaking and swearing, provided for of board fence to the southward of the was dedicated to the most sacred pur- the punishment of any person that road. THE ENI) pose—the site of their Meeting FTouae "shall be found to bee a common tale oopted by J. F Y. _ and the place for the burial nf: I.heir bearer, tatter, or busie bodie," voted M r I a, $r r� ROUNDERS' MONUMENT FIRST CIIURCH (PRESBYTERIAN) OR SOUTHOI D As the First Church was the centre "Possibly it was built of logs, hewn that two of the most prominent men in for interest in the early history of and squared, but;most probably it was the settlement might "set up a Pro at; Southold—in fact, the town has been n frame structure, with windows of the west end of the Pulpit for them- called the daughter of the church, so leaden 84ah and diamond glass,Ol'mCCC• I wooden shutters without any. glass selves and families," xppnthis men o-rlay, tit is the centre of interest of Y all the historic reminders of which in-the windows. .`'The First Meeting "to seate ye Inhabitance of this Town Southold may boast, The First Meet- House Was the place for all public meet- in yo meeting house." ing 1-louse was built in 1.640, "in the inga ofevery kind which Puritan Chris- The Records state that in "Desim- otnd titins desired to hold in order to promote bar, 1684, carpender were appointed to central square and on thehighestgr of the settlement," which is to-day the Clio general .welfare, .safety, comfort' viewe and apprize ye old meeting house site of the Founders' Monument, There and prosperity of the Town." It is in- in order to make a county prison of is no dascript.ion of this building in ex- teresting'to read in.the Town Records said:house," and for the next fifty istencn, but;in Dr, Whitnlcef'x History of the matters that were seriously con years; nearly, the first Meeting House, we readthis interesting rnfemnce_to Ll: sldered at the Town Meetings were_ was used as.a prison house. A_ second' Meeting House was erected in 1084, e {l probably on the north side of�the street, rials shall nin atone declare that Southold i� P�� 'i. not Forget either local history or nearly opposite the first one. The third the great epochs in the history of the;± one also occupied this RiLe, hilt the fourth building, the present church od" nation. ifice, wife built mn the south Rifle of the We enter the central gate and are sheet, a little east Of the original site. ' face to face with Colonial times, The This was begun in 1803 and finished n.i Founders Monument is before us. Its 1805. The, chmrh is in per feel: repair fbroad foundations—as deep, we are •,.,: and re Lains some of the old-time fest-Il told, as it is broad—its .simple design, 1 tures, as the galleries, windows and concis=ig of a die and massive column pews. These, with the historic and re- of roughly ],]wn granite, make it a ' ligious associations of the .past, give a most appropriate memorial of the lives c" peculiar aLmosphere and charm to the .and work of the plain, hardy men who'. :•`• `J Place, that only the oldest English found"I the town. On its one polished - church in New York State may possesssurface is engraver] the following in. The present pastor is the Rev. Wil- scription liam I-I. Lloyd. The Rev. Dr. Ephor. Whitaker, a scholar and writer, who This monument marks the site of. preached in the First Church forty the First Meeting House of South. .-•--� years, is pastor emeritus, old,and commemorates the founders of the Town and of the Church Southold has its history written in! which the Rev. John Youngso•gan- books and in stones. In its libraries ized here, October twenty-one,16,10. it It is a part of the260th Anniversary n 'f are such works as the Southold Town Celebration and was erected by the Records, a most valuable collection Committee of Arrangements for of the earlier records of the town, the the Celebration. result largely of the labors of J. Wick- ham Case and Dr. Epher Whitaker; No names of the founders appear on Moore's "Indexesof Southold," awork the monument., and wisely—for only - "---- --- of recognized authority; Dr. Whits- manes of certain persons are in the The Fanny Ledyard Chapter, D. earl records, and tradition tells of tablet upon o Mystic, the Conn., place this lee's "History of Southold," that is .y p grave of Fanny perhaps the most valuable of all to the others who were among the first act- Ledyard, niece of Col. William general reader, because of its orderly tlers--and who cares to settle sue], a Ledyard, in memory of her noble and accurate presentation of important'delicate question and blazon the matter work among the wounded and dy- �� y g on sl:nne '? ' ng, after the massacre at Fort facts; Prime's History of Lon Iet-,, Griswold, September 6, 1751. and;" Thompson'a "History of Long' A few steps to the west and the eye Island," and Griffin's "Journal." - rests on a modgst granite block that Moving westward. a few feet, one In its cemetery, are stones—and such tells how one of the daughters.of South- glance at acostly_modern monument, stones 1 What pages Of history flash old was related to the struggle fir the Salmon-Jennings monument,carries through the mind as one walks through American_Independence. We-read: I the mind back through all the pages of this old city of the dead I" MenII - - - our coutttrv's_hista[v.__.Here on its cur f INSCRIPTION ON THE WELLS TOMB JJ face are inscribed the names of a He must have sacrificed much for the The tablet on one of the horizontal pioneer Of 1635, who settled in Hash- life in the wilderness with its privations stones has been entirely removed, and, omomack, a veteran of the Revolution- and dangers. That he was honored in we think, "In spite of his tombstone, ary War, and his son, of the War of -the colony, we know,for we learn from here sleeps the unknown dead." Not 1512. Then, without changing our the records that he was the first South- so, however. The intelligent passerby position, we have only to look west- old lawyer, the Clark and Recorder of informs us that this is the tombstone ward] through the trees in order to see the town, Selectman and Sheriff of of the second pastor of the First the memorial of that event that touches Yorkshire on Long Island, and delegate Church. "Don't you ]snow the tra- tim lives of people living to-day. The from Southold to the Duke of Yorks dition7" lie asks, and kindly adds, Soldiers' Monument bears the names of Convention, held at Hempstead. But "The tablet was of lead, and it is eighty-Four Southold men, who volun- as we finish reading the inscription on supposed] that the British cut it out at teeed for the front when the Civil his stone, we feel that there was after the time of the Revolutionary War for War broke out. In this list we find all something in his character that out- military purposes. There are several the name of Edward P. Huntting, the ranked pride in birth or any worldly other tablets that have been taken out young lieutenant in whose honor the honor, "Hee livd in love and sweetly in the same manner." Then he adds a Post wall named, and who fell in the dyd in peace." charming bit of news of how the battle of Olustee, Pia., while bravely depression in the flat stone mattes an fighting at the heal of his company. Mr. Barnabas Horton was another of excellent bird-well, and that Dr. Whit- Thus do the stones in Southoldre- the most prominent men of the early aker, who loves birds and lives in the settlers. Ile was a member of the Anchorage across the way, sees that mind each and all who will pauso to General Court for the Jurisdiction of the little well is kept filled during the rear], of the larger national events, in all of which the town has.hnd the Colony, and a part of his house was dry summer days. In his history of Probably no man was more prominent used for many years' as the place of Southold, we learn that after twenty in the history of the town than its first I meeting of the Suffolk County Court. years' search, Dr. Whitaker was able pastor, John Youngs. The first stone Barnabas Horton was born in Mouseley, to ohtuf l a copy of tine inscription that that we read, is Ills, and we are told in England,and the slab of blue slate that had been taken from this tombstone. that the first Pests upon lila grave was imported from Dr.�Whftaker's history, A law feet south of the graves of pastor's grave was made near the his birth-place. The inscription reads:. these "elect men" who were born church edifice, and on the gunny side of nearly three centuries ago, stands an it. On the slab is this inscription: Here lieth buried the body of Mr. I unprotendous marble column that brings Barnabas Horton, who was born at us down to somewhat later times and Mr. John Yongs, minister of the Mouseley, Leicestershire, old Eng- I reminds us of the character "fore- word and first settler of the chveh land, and died at Southold, on the most of all men who lived all their of Christ in South hovld, on Long 13th day of July, 1680, aged 80 lives from birth to death in Southold;" Island, deceased the 24, of Febrv- years., nos illy busy toobedn(last, - a•,y, in the,years of our Lord 1672, core Oludst menu come to rase It %%ILII tar The line carving on his stone tells in a and of Ilia age 74. lust; - modest manner the story of his life: my soul nseouaua to Lim terouo of Ood, "In memory of the Honorable Ezra niers Iles the mnu whom rloctrnm ora wall. Where With swuot Jeea9 now I nudes abode; L'Hommedieu, Esq., who, having kno%yea, Then Ila9te11 Atter lue,illy dolu est%%'Ire, .Dill snow he sought IL'Ist's houpvr mac his; To be partaker of tills blessed Ilio; through a long life faithfully saved in OM 011, 11 And yon,dos•oeudren or. mnuW tIIa Imrd, the councils of his country during the 3n wenlaios sown In polio• terse shall be, Hear slid obey Ifls politic and snore %%ora; arduous struggles of the Revolution, 'DY 011rlst Prom death to I1W Ptornnlly' And In your houses call upon His name, and the calm of Independence, dire ! For oft have i advised you to the smuu; -Sept. 27, 1811, A;. 77." A few feet north of tile pe nstor's' Tion cos ww blase 3-on %rail 5,0111. chu- grave is that of his oldest son, Col. droll al, We rend in history that this foremost John Youngs, and south of it is that of! Ana to this blessed Place Ito will you call, man served his country in the follov- hig grandson, Benjamin Yonu 9, Es I'lob.xl,l l: Ilse being ddt g' q•�' ea , yespcalmte. ing manner: IIs was Representative both of whom were men of promfiv Plainly written on another of the of Long Island in the Congress of the in the colonY• horizontal slabs we read the simple United States from 1779 to 1783; Min- Then we panne,at the grave of Wil- inscription: - her of the State Senate sixteen yeas; of all the ProviCon- ]!am Wells and mark tile greases e perfect state "Here lyetb the Body of Captain amemberofNew York; a member]of the of preservation of the stone, (1110, we John Conkelyne, borne in Nottingham- are told, to the reverent care that it shire, fu of the State England, who departed this Council Appointment, and a Regent has received from the hands of one of life the sixt day of April, att Sovth te University. the descendants, the Rev. Charles hold in the sixty-fovall year of his age, These are only a few of the names Wells Hayes, author of the Wells Anne Dom, 1694." that we read on the old tombstones. Genealogy. We read without di(3icult.yI - There are many others, that , are the inscription that is shown m the , In this old cemetery, in 1551, a neat. borne with ride to-da h citizens of marble monument was erected by the Southold, because of the sterling char- illustration: Hon. Mahlon Dickerson, of New Jersey, acter of the ancestors who brought the (Loaned by the out of the Welh Secretary of the Navy in President names to this Town and country. It is - Genealogy.) Jackson's Cabinet, in memory of Phile- to be regretted that members of fam. William Wells was the son of a recto mon Dickerson, from whom Mahlon and ilies were scattered in their burial, not l of a magnificent cathedral of England his brother,Philemon,Governor of New only in different parts of the cemetery, .Jersey, descended. but in different parts of the Town. The . _ _... _.. . ._.. ... __.____ ..__..._ __.-_ fl-ocland-Hubbard monument i@.a..fine_ �r example ofan effort to collect and per to be used in caring for this place of .(John Tuthill Junr 8 2 0 0 petuate the family record from colonial I burial. in other persons have Samuel[Kings 4 3 0 0 limes, beginning with Moses Cleveland also bequeathed sums of money to be Abraham Whitter 4 4 0 0 of Ipswich, England, 1622,ending with used in the same manner for their own Thomas Terry '0 5 0 0 the descendants living to-day. family lots, or otherwise. Two years Wlllnt Hopkins 1 1 0 0 Interesting hours and days might be ago, the work of improving the old Gidleon Youngs b 3 0 0 spent in the old graveyard, where'"the cemetery was again undertaken, and Timothy Martain 1 4 U 0 rude forefathers of the hamlet Bleep. more than two hundred stones were Edward Peatty 2 3 0 0 The stones speak eloquently of the straightened under the direction of the , John Cartier 2 2 0 0 times in which ,they lived. Spelling Village Improvement Society, Every John Loring 4 1 0 0 year shows a marked improvement in John Paine Sear 5 5 0 0 was a matter.of indifference to them, 1 0 0 but not the fact of life and death. the care of the lots by lot-owners.past. A John Brown people that remembers the past and John Wiggins 3 100' Pae 11 name,th 1111 ycn.ra, snell'U by the recognizing the debt Caleb Curtis 4 •1 0 0 nine tiered inose. TCVCTeB the dead, g g The phtee of tame and elegy supply. that the present owes that honored Cornelious Paine 4 3 0 0 Aml many a holy text around sae strows, past, is quite likely to be a safe guar- Christopher Young Jur 4 2 0 0 That teach tlm rLstte ntoraust to die.,, dian of the future. Thomas Moor Senr 4 3 0 U Carved on the stones, the historian -. ---- I- , I Thomas Youngs 0 1 0 0 finds history—plenty of it; the Chris- :� It is the smaller events, however,. in David Gardner ° 2 U 1 tian, faith, that privation and hardship' the history of the town, that interest Mary Youngs widow 3 2 0 01 only brightened; and loyalty to that us more. We wander Umough the Jonathan Moor 42 U 01 faith, as in the epitaph, "the Virtuous tangled grass, in and out among the Thomas Moor Junr .i 2 0 0' Wife who following the example of her old brown stones, ever asking, "Who Me, John Conkling 3 9 2 husband,gave her estate to the support was who?" and "What did he. do?" Jacob Conkling 5 2 0 0 of the Gospel in this Parish." Domes- „Who were the good and the great in Thomas Ridder 5 4 0 0 tic virtues were accounted worthy of the making of this town 7" A little John Hopson v2 9 1 0 recording, and we read of the '•blessed patience and the atones answer our John frxukling 'w '?. 0 0 memory of the affectionate daughter, questions, Here is arow of old "table- Peter Simons 1 1 0 0 (sister, wife, mother,friend,Christian;" stones," such as we find in Trinity and John Aliebe '3 1 0 U of the "kind Husband, affectionate other cemeteries whose ages are in the John lsudd 3 4 2 1 Father, dutiful Son,and beloved Broth- centuries. They are heavy horizontal John Veali 3 2 0 0 or;" of the wife "who was the mother slabs of slate or brown sandstone, about Joh- Pain Jour 3 8 U ] of 14 children and departed this life in five feet by two and a half feet, sup- Henry Case 3 13 0 0 Sovthold the 2d day of April, 1699." ported on a foundation of brick or Jasper Grifling G 5 0 O 1 Ile who erected "A Cenotaph, Sacred atone covered with cement. On them James Peatt y 1 0 0 to Lho Memory of" his wife, J.ott Johnson 1 0 0 0 and we read the names of men whose his- Thomas Longworth 1 2 0 0 carved on it the fact, "They were tory has come down to us full of honor, John Peatt J 1 0 0 married Feb. 8 and she died Dec. 8," y men of influence and standing—a stand- told a story of a broken heart, that ing that was determined not alone by Simon Groner 2 4 0 0 awakens to-day a thrill of sympathy, birth and the possession of worldly Mr. Thos: Moore i1 1 0 U as did also the father who recorded his .means,,but by_ability and,charaoter. .. - Joseph Youngs 4 '3 0 0 "blasted hopes" in the death of his Satin[ Youngs 4 '3 0 u IN HISTORIC DOCUMENT. Patter Paine2 J U 0 seventeen-year old son.' The "passer- _._ o P - -MAN , Chrietp: Youngs. 4 0 0 by" who finds humor in these memorl- f 'r'om the\v,rrot�tns L'eb. 4, 1FOJ,1 2 2 0 0 als, finds what only his own light na- %twu i`;` neprinred by I,ery„eat.,' ti'✓• Stephen Bayley _ Y John Youngs ry 0 0 tiro places there. The stones brought To our friend GRORGY R. HOWELL, San”' Glover with die,the and expense to from a long of the State Library at Albany, we Benj : Youngs. 4 3 0 0 distance, the carving of the rude dog- are indebted for theprivilege e of tri-- John Salmon a 1 0 0 gerel and of the heads and wings of 1 g 1 3 'A U U Ling this curious antique, never be. John Booth cherubim (symbol, not ce death,.but of fore Published: Sar Youngs witfo• u 5 0 0 the "immediate presence of God")— p y these were the choicest gifts that the ° From page 94 of vel 33 of N. Y. Co John Curwln 4 1 U 0 Ionia[ MSS. in N. Y. State Library. Cornett' Horton 0 4 1 0 of their dead, could place h, the graves y' Richard Benj : 5 4 0 0 of their dead, and as such, they appeal A List of ye hilrabita-oo and hones-.. Benj: Moor 5 3 0 1 to our interest and regard, holder wt ye number of there persona h i❑each famile Jeruniah Veall 4 2 0 U Some twenty years ago, under the , y to Sohold 1680, John Bullock U 4 0 0 direction of the church, the people of ' mals f Lill 1 Abraham Corey 4 3 0 0 the pariah cleared away whatever Co•anoll John Young 3 8 0 0 Margrltt Haliock 1 '2 0 0 brambles were found in the cemetery Capt, Isaac Arnold. 1 4 3 3 1 2 0 0 Mr. Joshua.Hobartt 4 , John Cleave and set erect all the atones that had • I 0 1I ,rpt Tucker 1 2 1 0 lost their proper standing, Later,Mrs. Liut, Richard Brown 4 4 0 0 – Mary A. Rose bequeathed to the true- �, Jonathan Brown 3 3 0 0 Josuua t-tm toll - 3 4 U u tees of the church one thousand dollars Richard Brown Junr 3 2 U U I Isaac Ouertoll 4 `d U U in perpetuity, the interest of which is I. John Tuthill 1 5 0 0 13urnebus Winds 2 4 0 0. A Centennial Church Do you wish-to know who bore the Jacob Corey '2 s 0 OI heavy burdens in building this enduring Martha Hutcheson 3 2 0 0. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF SOUTHOLDI house;. who laid the.solid foundations; I Thomas Maps9 1 0 0 Ann R,eev,; 1 2 0 0 IT'S BUILDERS, PURPOSE,STRUCTURE be ms�e Youfwill have to earth the i John Reeve 3 3 0 0 AND USES old books and papers of the Church's jDanici I Terry 1 !1 0 0 There is no other.nation on earth Trustees, and even there you will find The Dickerson '-'� 4 0 o''that has relatively made so much thede- no monumental amount of information Pater Dickerson 3 1 0 0 sirable and gratifying progress in the of this kind. Joseph Reeve 4 1 0 0 last twenty years as Japan bus done. In 1803, they erected this house, and Abigal Torry 1 2 0 0 The most famous and eminent.man began to worship in it. Two years later, Nath : Terry 4 1 0 0 in Japan, under the Emperor, is Ad- they surmounted it with the steeple; Willie Wells 8 2 0 0 miral Togo. When he made his official and thus finished it according to their Samll Winds 2 8 0 0 report of the destruction of the mag- plan. The did not crown it with this Simieon Benj: 3 4 0 0 nificent Russian fleet in the great bat- hurchly and heaven-pointing structure Joshua. Wells 1 0 0 0 tle of the Sea of Japan, he said that until they were ready and able to do it Gersham Terry .2 '3 0 0 the glorious victory had been gained well, They did not wish God's house John Goldomilh 8 1 0 0 by the.virtues of the Emperor's antes- to have on it both steeple and mortgage. Thomas Booth S 2 0 0 tore. In due time, they raised on high a i Benj: Horton 2 3 0 0 The Emperor and Admiral Togo re- structure fit to resist all the violence of Caleb Horton 4 0 0 0 Gently went to Ise in order to rever- hurricanes; to support the bell that Wllhu Colman 3 3 0 0 ence most impressively those ancestors. sounds the hours for those who walk Thous, Clarice 1 2 0 0 The truth is, that men who do not our Streets,..and for those who sail the `Villin Mapes 1 1 0 0 honor their forefathers, deserve not watery waysof Bay and Sound. Pheophilous Case 1 1 0 0 the respect of their own children; and Thus other men labored and we have Theop: Curwin 4 3 0 0 generally they do not receive it. entered into their labors. James Reeve 6 4 0 0 Men who honor their predecessors, Their successors improved what they Jabisli Maps 1 2 0 0 are most likely to plan and work for did well; for the virtues of the sires Tholnns Twill. 6 2 0 0 their posterity. They keep their eyes survived in their sons. Willm Reeve 2 4 0 0 looking forward, because they know, The building was erected during the Thomas Mapes Junr 1 1 0 0 that their ancestors did the same. pastorate of the Rev. Joseph Hazard, Thomas Tuateen 2 3 0 0 They are mindful that the generations The interior was somewhat changed . Pette, Aidrledg 4 2 0 0 of men are not a heap of sand, each, and.resealed in 1860,under the pastoral Thomas Uzamn L 3 0 0 grain unjoined to others; but that they care of the Rev. Dr. George P. Wis- hJohn Uzman 1 4 0 o are an unbroken chain; that eaclink well. After his pastorate the bell was Petter Bullock t 1 0 0 Is fast bound to other links; that "no hung in the steeple; the Lester clock Thos Bullock 3 2 0 o man liveth to himself and no man dieth set in its place; the floor carpeted; the Richard Howell 6 J 0 o to himself." seats cushioned; the cellar excavated; James Pershail ,0 2 8 2 These truththis h us to honor the the heater put in it, and its chimney !�John Edwards 8 4 0 0 men who built this house of worship. built;and other improvements made. Simon Ruursy 1 3 0 0 They might have framed ra building More recently the extension for the John Swazey 3 •1 0 0 to last for their own day y organ was built,.and the organ, a gift Jobu Swazey Junr 2 1 0 0 constructed one that will stand, with of Elder Stuart T. Terry, set in place Joseph Swazey 1 4 0 0 proper care, for a thousand years. under the pastorate of the Rev. Dr. Iwhich is ye full somber of all They built it on foundations of gran- George D. Miller. persons helonging to this town : its, and foursquare,, to defy all the This house has been, for an hundred of Behold whereof there Is ons winds that blow. They built it fit fol• years, the chief place of the literary, their mato purpose, the worship of intellectual, moral and spiritual culture hundred and twenty nine train God. Hence they built it high, to lift of the parish. The men who ministered Sonldiera ye officers includedGod. the thoughts andprayers and as- here throughout the century were men and Sixteen Troopers, pirations of the worshippers to heaven. . g Prompt of the best education, graduates of marriages within Seven years 0'14 . They built it on straight lines,to p p Yale or other Colleges; and most of bearthes...................... 161 all who meet in it to act on.the square them graduates of the foremost The- 072.................:.••• 07'J towards their fellow men; and to live. ological Seminaries also: They made ` - righteously in the sight of God, and to ye Id pug or culow is males white' g y no claim to perfection ; but they knew fulfill their duty to Him. .They built. ye 2d,pag or eulom famels white the gospel of the grace of God, and it free from extravagant adornment, to reached it; and thus they promoted ye Ikl is male Slaves p ye d is Fawell slava make it accord with "the aim licity sound education, good morals, literary Prorderof yoPrudentiallwen i that is in Christ." taste, and spiritual culture, noel Town Commissioners. They are praise-worthy also for their which , the Christian religion thorough-going freedom from vanity effectively produces.' They gave digni- Stephen Bayley Town Clark. and ostentation. They did not live on self-conceit. They could do good and ty and high standing to Southold among literary,scientific and intelligent men. generous work; but they would not be Among the.pastors who have thus made i pretentious. _ ____ - this house a centre and source of be- 1 m�i�n oemg made by the curator, ,Dr, Chal- eren s Jonathan maybe named the Rev- No for graves. os'tt�by uvea their early mere, to classify and arrange the large erends Jonathan Huntting, Dr. George s,thea For us,their country,and mnm:nnd they collection of manuscripts, pamphlets. F. Wiswell, and Dr. George D. Miller. (lied: and books that have been donated the When this house was erected, it Was And whilo the nation lives. Its banner the only edifice built for public worshipwaves, society. In closing he appealed to the Their unmes shall brightly Shine, their people of old Southold to join the His- between Cutchogue and Orient. doods an glorified' est and donations Society and aid by their inter- and With Long Island Sound on the north Of similar interest to the pious heart, the effort that is be- district Peconic Bay on the south was a have been scenes of religious fervor Ing made by it to preserve the historic district ten miles long, whose people and consecration, in which men of remains of a people and times to which nearly all attended public worship prominence and high standing have remains for the beat here, if any where, here devoted themselves to the service elements in society e are so largely indebteto- d We read that this is the age of great of Christ and His Church. The chair from the Presbyterian combinations, of wide labor unions, of These walls have heard masters of church, NoirMatuck, consisting of some denominational federation, of a broad sacred eloquence unsurpassed by any twenty-five persons, with its famine and comprehensive church. Well I this orators of their. age : Duryea, Storrs, choirmaster, Mr.. George isB. Reeve, house was, one hundred years ago, the Cuyler, Talmage of Brooklyn; and was present and furnished s musical common religious home of nearly every worthy of association with these mas- program worthy of a high-class con- body from Cutchogue to Orient. Per. ters are the Rev. Doctors Grimke of haps there were on this fieldtwo hun- Washington; Wiawell and Reeve of cert. These singers are deserving, of dred families. The Rev. Jonathan Philadelphia; Keigwin of New York; their reputation, and their beautiful Huntting while the pastor here from Kneeland of Boston; Whitaker of Al- music added in no small measure to 1806 to 1828 celebrated more marriages bany; Miller of Rochester; Marshall the enjoyment of the occasion. Their each year, on the average, than his of Chicago; Coan of Persia; Wood and singing and their kindness in coming successor did fifty years later. He! Goodell of Constantinople; Merwin of to the meeting, were highly appreciat- doubtless ministered at more funerals Chili; Pinney of West Africa; Vroo- ed by the people of Southold. also. But when he became the pastor, man of China, and Doane of Micro- The feature of the evening was the there were but fifty-six persons who; nesia. interesting and highly instructive ad- communed at the Lord's table in this To these may well be added brilliant dress given by the Rev. Charles E. house, and a large part of these were' ladies, who knew how to speak to the Craven, author, of the ' History of of whom these only are men- Mattituck. His subject was The staves who had no family names. I,people; y Influence of the Productions and Trade This building, for more than half a tinned, Miss La Grange of Syria, and Meeting; and home c of the political]I Mrs. Woodside of India. of Gardiner's and Peconic Bays-upon century, was the place of the Town the Life and Character of their Neigh- meetings within these walls were ex-, Southold, December, 81, 1906, boring People." The address was val- -- -i uable from every standpoint and.won tremely impressive. There were some- ­- - the attention of the full house. In our times as many as five hundred men FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1907 limited space we can only give a brief present here—most of them seated, raport of the same. The speaker gave others standing against the walls; and - — - --- an indication of his own quality by hie all with intent,faces, At one of these Summer Meeting of the Historical Society first words thus: meetings, a young lawyer from New — York City addressed the people. His The Influence of the Productions and Trade The subject assigned me for dls- mother was Susan Terry, born in our of eerdlner's and Pecoule Bays upon cussion this evening has this peculiar old 'Town. She became the wife of tae Life and Character of their advantage, that it cannot possibly be Josiah Curtis Woodford, and so the!, Neighboring People- _ emsidered dry." mother of Stewart Lyndon Woodford, I The summer meeting of the Suffolk It has interested nine generations of who has established a noble fame as! County Historical Society was held in white people and their predecessors for successively brigadier general of vol-1 Belmont Hall, Southold, on the even- countless generations. unteers in the Army of the United log of June 21. The largest and most Countries of relatively great coast States.; Lieutenant Governor of New; enthusiastic audience that has yet at- line are the regions of high civilization,' York ; Governor elect of New York, , tended was present. Delegates came See Europe's above Africa's, and our but fraudulently counted out in 1870; from all the surroundingSuffolk County's richness herein. This Presidential Elector• member of Con- villages. Dr, advantage is greater in a new than an ress, and Minister to Spain. When be, Whitaker, vice president, had Bole old country. The water affords both g P charge of local arrangements, end his called here for volunteers to serve in, careful attention to details assured the food and passage. the army and save the nation, uprose' success of the meeting. Mr. Augustus These Bays have good harbors also, the tall and manly form of young Ed- Floyd, of Mastic, president, presid- and early brought people to Southold ward Foster Huntting, who walked to ed. . In a very finished opening ad- and Southampton. the front of the pulpit and on the roll, Englishmen were not the earliest lying on the communion table, wrote dress, Mr, Floyd stated in a concise people dwelling along the shores of Y g manner the aims and achievements of his name. He was quickly followed by these theirBayswortAlgh; for th and Iroquois oit man 'others the best young men of I the society, He reported that during y yielded not Y , Y g the past year the mortgage on the knew their worth• for the the parish. All these gave theirtoil, building at Riverhead had been paid only food, but native money also. For and some of them their Ifves, in pat ri- and that the society was clear of all wampum was current money through- otic devotion: ._._ Indebtedness, also that an effort was outs large part of the continent, and .___ _._. __ the beet was made of the products of these Buys. -1n 1668 Mattituck wash.been of vast advantage in all gen duced to buy small Iota at $2.60;, an 'bought and paid for in wampum..orations. It has provided rich variety eacre ometand ell at the of several o ars, White men were not the first to turn for the tables of the wall-to-do and re-<.Ned percent. The outcome of these On products of these Bays into money. lleved the pinch of poverty for the transactions was not a great number These Bays have been for centuries poor, In view of the increasing cost of little oyster farms owned and worked the doors of transit to wide regions. of living none can bemorecalm than many happy oysterman of Suffolk Amon the earliest white men here ounty, but:.a few big- farms owned Among the dwellers around these food produe- on by men of other States. .were shipwrights and mariners. Ves-Ing Bays. The business expanded immensely, sels were built here and voyages made. Formerly the menhaden fishery was so that in 1906 Gardiner's and Pecome to and fro along the coast and far important. For more than a century Bays produced about one-third of all away upon the sea. At a later day, these. fishes entered Gardiner's and the oysters marketed from the waters. large vessels Bailed from these Buys to of New York State, The Sound and g Y Peconie Bays in countless multitudes .its tributaries yielded 336,000 bushels, every sea in pursuit of whales. What and were caught by the farmers. Jamaica Bay 339,000; Prince's ane men these voyages made of the cap- Without reduction in the fertilizer fee- Raritan Bays 360,000; Great South tains of these ships ! What ambition tortes as now, they, were spread upon' Bay 220,000; and Gardiner's and Pa- fired the young men who determined come Bays 600,000. the fields,_Rich in nitrogen and. phos-I Weare used to seeing men amassing to rise in them I An old deep-sea phoric acid, they supplied what the wealth from oil wells, coal fields and captain is always a strong man, ener- gold mines on land; a gold mine on the captain sturdy, self-reliant,strong man,courageous, farmers needed to yield fine crops of bottom of these Bays seems different. getic, corn and vegetables. The farmers Men here have deemed the Bays com- and generally of a decidedly religious man pro ert , and the don't like to or irreligious character. He has borne..were organized in fishing companies, be shut off y from the golden oyster each with its fish house on the shore, mine: In view of the change here, responsibility, braved peril, maintained . an imperious will, and matched his its seine from half a mile to a mile in Henry George would have said that God- own judgment and skill m successful length, and its capstans on the beach land, even land under water, is a God- g for drawing the seine by horse power. given basis of wealth, and therefore encounter with wind and wave; and rightly belongs to the whole communi- There were some twenty-flue of t All can be sure that it should be yet n has felt man's littleness os and-these companies in Southold Town e .weakness amid mighty storms, on the P developed and taxed for the benefit limitless expanse of waters, beneath alone, each with its captain and Rome of the people about the Buys. ten men, There was often hard work Under the law of 1884, some 80,000 the circling Stare of heaven. He has to be done; yet this fishing during the acres were sold at$2.60 an acre, many smn the works of the Lord and His month of May afforded man of the of them proving m n more valuable wonders in the deep. He is good or y y per acre than farm land near the Bays. bad. He often presenia a splendid ex- pleasurable experiences of a prolonged it has also been said that much Stam picnic. The companies of Southold and shell land has been sold contrary ample of a God-fearing man, to law as well as scallop bottom, Last Whaling has given place to other Be- Town often averaged a million fish year t�a law of 1884 was amended both tivitiee. Latent official reports chow 46 each for the season, and occasionally as to method of sale and means of tax- P over a million were caught at one haul ation. The Supervisors of the county sailing vessels and 17 steamers carry- of the seine. The fish, of course, were were required to mark town linesAn m Ing Greenport licenses in the coasting not counted individually, but were the Bays and also natural clam, shell trade, and a smaller number from Sag measured to the wagons in which they and ecalfop bade, and to make maps Harbor. were carted from the beach, twenty topen to the public),. of all surveys, cubic inches being allowed to the fish. and a record in separate books in the The rapid growth of the oyster busi The menhaden are now caught by county clerk's offices of all convey- ness is continually making Greenport fishing steamers in the open sea, and ances. a more important port. It should be converted. into commercial fertilizers Shortly before the amended law be- made a ort of entry, not merely a in many factories. The capital in this came effective, fourteen or fifteen P Y. Y business is at least half a million do'.- thousand acres were sold at the old. port of delivery, so that foreign ves-'. tars. rate. There are about 176,000 acres Sols could both enter and clear at this In recent years the shellfish Indus• under water in these L '.ya. Thirty or place. tries of these Bays have assumed forty thousand acres have been Bold. Lon Island is in rapid development, large proportions, In 1884 the lands After reservingg the natural clam, shell Long P P under their waters were ceded to Suf- and scallop beda and five hundred feet and Greenport looks out on Gardiner's folk County for the cultivation of shell margin along shore from high water Bay where a great navy could anchor, fish, and the Supervisors were directed mark, probably many acres yet re- There British war ships have more to appoint three shell fish commission main to be Sold. than oncecongregated, and the inftu- ere to oversee these lands and make The oyster productions of these Bays sales at$2.60 an acre, in parcels of one last year were in value more than one ence of the Bay was extremely hurt- acre to twenty-five acres, and to per- million dollars. ful. We may believe that the national sone who had resided in the State for The clams, shells and scallops con- fortifications now built and building at least six months. Natural clam and tinue free to all whogather them, will ermit us to see no hostile navies shell beds were not to be sold. The o1Sternum market a few thousand P Hitherto the business was small; but bushels of clams. Many are taken 'there, but peaceful navies of commerce as soon as this law took effect,increase along the shores for local supply,. continually traversing its waters. began, and fifty sales were made in the Many shells are collected from'the At Greenport 160 to 260 men are em- fall of 1884, mostly four acre lots for bottom wherewith to make good eye- played ye- lo ed in ship and boat building and. ten dollars a lot. ter beds. This is a business of some P Y P g The culture on these small lots yield- importance; for many thousand of repairing, The self-bailing life boats ed generally little profit, and most of bu3hels of shells are gathered every . of the Beebe shop are supplied to all the lots were soon sold, at about $26 year. the life saving stations of the country, for four acres, to individuate or com- The scallop fishing continues from The taking of food fish from these to prose ute the business and dac la ge the first of September until ice inter- The p fares with sailing. As many as two waters was a necessity until some time scale. Now the business became prof- hundred sloops with two or three men after men of civilization were here. It itable, and many�eraone were_in- each, are in this bueinesa;. A succese- ful season yields the men_$200 000._and. aam manes a uvennooa to hundreds of that ha sea springs from luxury It certainly seems a pity that an asse- women and girls who arescallop open- and frivolit rather than.from sobrie- ers. There have been legal attempts ty industry and simplicity of life, ciation should not have been formed j�.•C made to limit the amount of catch. The tier against the evd ie resisting it for its preservation as a historic relic, The attempt should cease; for it prc- by the sturdy sense the self-control: Had any such spirit manifested itself motes dishonesty, and all that is need and the religious faith that are in the in time and shown that it meant busi- sc Is a strict regulation of the size of o - ness, there is no doubt it would have scallops taken. blood and bone of the people of these been met more than half way by Mr. These industries are physically old towns. healthy employments. No other men Life should have its proper share of Lewis Case, and much general regret are hardier and healthier than those pleasure. The dwellers about these;'. would have been spared. who "follow the water." As to the Bays should make sure of the health- The old mill has been photographed moral influence, the sailor, like every ful recreation to which their environ- ' other man, has. his temptations and ment invites them, and keep open ac• and sketched many times by those ap- his easily besetting sins. But en occu- cess to the beaches. preciating its romantic beauty and its pation that is physically healthful car- The village of Southold is setting an historic associations. ries with this a strong aid to moral admirable example to her sister vil- It has kept,watch over the waters of healthfulness; and the speaker well lages in establishing a Park District. .said that "the men engaged in the in- The possession will be well worth the the Sound for many years, through dustries of the Bays are certainly expense. The loss on the oyster lands calm and storm—watched the bathers equal in moral standards to their should be a fruitful lessen as to the enjoying the water, and the picnickers brethren who toil on shore." beaches. Let other villages follow enjoying the view and the pure air The eastern Long Islander as to in- Southold's wise example and promote telligence and general eapachy, is .not this good influence of these glorious. during the calm weather; and aeon inferior to the man of any other part Bays, these same waters storm-tossed and of our country. "'His ancestry.and _ wreck-laden yielding tip the living and many factors combine to make him It is anticipated that Mr. Craven's the Bend. the man he is, and undoubtedly one of address will be published in full in the conditioning factors, affecting him pamphlet form, as it is important that Built solely as a tide mill in 1839, directly and also through his ancestry, the information contained in it, relat• with money raised in five dollar shares is his proximity to salt water; with �i A, as it does, purely to our local of- among the neighbors who felt the no- is labor and sports that invigorate the fmrs, should be preserved in the ar cessity for a grist mill in the vicinity, body, train the attention, call for chives of our Historical Society. Alertness and quick wit, and develop At the close of the program the it took its power from an under-shot patience and courage." choir and the officers were invited to wheel moved by the waters of the In- Theft is known on shore, and it is the parlors of the Presbyterian par- lot, which was dammed at this spot, easier to steal in oyster fields than`in sonage, where refreshments were These same neighbors carted the hay fields. The bagmen have not been ,served. F!• the only men who have been obtaining Tife OLD MILL c v - rock for the water wall which confined public property. for almost nothing. S,/,r l '.1? the channel,in their own farm wagons. fhe public were not informed as to Gilbert Terry last week drove ram The first miller was John Appleby, Ithe prices received in the re-sale. of Orient, where he is now residing, to grandfather of the present John Ells- these lands. The written deeds'say visit his niece, Mrs. Wilson L, Petty, leU and he only ground for "one dollar and other valuable at what was formerly the miller's res- worth App y, ,. 1 consideration." --- These hurtful tendencies favored by idence,. near Peconic Inlet, He ar- when sufficient grist had accumulated the riches of the Boys fall short of the rived Friday morning and left Satur- day to make it worth while, for in those helpful results. The good God who forenoon. made the earth for man has peculiarly Mr. Terry, who was the last miller days there was not enough to keep the blessed the favored penple who dwell at the old mill, was almost moved to miller,busy all the while. about these Bays. The natural ad- After Mr:Appleby, came Cox, Ben- vantages are rich; the rewards of tears at the present aspect of the old nett and Smith, the last an Englishman labor, abundant; comfort and pros- mill, which is being town down, the erit assured to the industrious • and who bought in all the shares and 1 t y ' timbers and machinery to be used else- owned it himself. He afterwards sold., the opportunity for excellence in cul- where and the rest destroyed and lure and religioneffective open to all. These out to Gilbert Terry's father, who, Bays are effective In promoting an split into kindling wood. with his several sons, were all practi- equable climate, natural beauty Mr. Terry was compelled to give up wholesome recreation and healthfu5 millings number of years ago by fail- cat millers and who resided in Matti sport. in health, since which time he has tuck, The great advantageswhichthe no- g After running it a number of years, fives here have always enjoyed and re- lived in Orient, and since that time the being an,old man, he turned it over to I arded as matters of course, the city mill bas been silent, dwellers have begun to apppreciate, and It has always,. however, been a his son Gilbert, who conducted it for are glad to exchange gold for these prominent Peconic landmark, a favorite thirty-four years. wonderful deligPts. This is one of the P During his ownership he enlarged �. most influential products of these at- place to take one's friends for a drive tractive bodies of ocean water. These and headquarters for picnic parties. and improved it by erecting a tower ' city people include men and women of All loved to visit it; to climb around and wind wheel, which much increased all classee and characters. Some help b Its efficiency,as the tide wheel would to build up all that is beet in the cus- among its worn timbers and view the only perform its function during part i tome and institutions of the old towns. Sound from its more elevated posi- of he fall and part of the rise of the Others help to weaken and tear down. tions, and a feeling of local pride The influence of fashion and luxury amounting to almost a feeling of own- tide or ten hours a day at the most, cannot be avoided. Every summer ersbi possessed all Peconicers, The wind wheel was erected in 1870, many persons will be here whose main P. P and after that time Mr. Terry, on purpose Is pleasure; and work is not Local pride,however, as usual, did numerous occasions, ground over two made easier by seeing others play, not amount to local action, so, as relic 'hundred bushels per day, his greatest Some of the players are workers else- hunters and others were assisting time where, here on vacation; some.are not: : in Its demolition, the owner concluded grist being three hundred bushels, But.thegenOrel tendency is to make when he worked a greater part of the idleness appear attractive to. many to allow it to be torn down on salvage persons, and cause the to suppose 'twenty-four hours,. _„-.____,PPo-1 shares, and this work is now going on. On the night of Dec. 28, 1866,during another were spread along from.South- In those good old times the Mother a wind and snow storm of tremendousold to Cutchogue, the McCurdy being Goose Rhymes were made familiar. to violence, the like of which, Mr. Terry aground directly at the mouth of the '=the children at their homes, and were says, he has never seen since, the Inlet, She was afterward worked air, 'not prescribed by any syllabus for use steamer Commodore, of the New York costing more than she was worth to in elementary teaching in school, as and Stonington line, came ashore off accomplish it. F. W. R. they now are! The three R's were the Inlet. Looking Backward thoroughly taught, I believe, in all the OR Faulkner's Island her rudder I was very glad to be present at the schools. When I inquire why little or having come out of the water she dedicatioe cf the Arshamomoque school; no attention is now paid to reading in broached to, and getting into the house, reported in Tim TRAVELER last the advanced classes, I am told that trough of the sea, soon rolled her week; and as-I then escaped a call to reading receives no "counts"! What smokestack out. Being helpless and „speak a piece I will now "write a is the result? I believe there ate very in a northwest wind,she drifted Coward - few good readers among the young composition." the Long Island shore and threw over I feel a special interest in that school people. Indeed,,I have been told that :her anchor where she hung immediate- district because there so many years some of them make stumbling work of ly'over a rock. On this rock she ago I had my first experience as grin-� it when called upon to read in public. pounded until toward daylight, being cilml (That was, of course, in the One of the good things that Commis- so badly sloven that the water enteredold schoolhouse, which had been moved sioner Howell said at the dedication faster than it could be pumped out. to its present site ayear or two before j was to this effect: If a boy is told Some of the crew getting possession !from Its original pI coon the north side) that there are 1728 cubic inches in a of the liquors at the bar became drunk it of Pipe's Neck road and .just east of. cubit foot, he will quite likely forget and mutinied and, when after the an- the run,) Mr. George Conklin the the number; but if he grasps the facts cher had Leen castoff and she drifted I trustee gave me a call; and the terms that a surface one foot square is a ashore,.they seized the only boat left !finally agreed upon were$100 for three square foot, or 144 square inches; that on board and attaching a line thereto months! .The school opened Dec. 31, a solid one foot square and one inch drifted ashore. d March 26. I enjoyed thick is..a board foot, or 144 cubic in- ELarly in them1866, and close orning, Henry Squires i',the work, and, I believe that the cher; and that twelve board feet make ,observed on the beach several barrels !i "scholars" entertained only the kind- one on foot, or 1728 cubic inches; ohe f light freight, part of the deck load liest.feelings towards the "master.^ then if he does forget the number, o of The Commodore, and, not seeing the When school was "in," faithful work will quickly recall it. Informing is not ot steamer, went back home and got his was done; and.when school was"out," educating. temp wagon; on returning lie observed teacher and pupils engaged in "buck When I first went through Daboll's the rowboat and looking off caw the steamer. chuck," ,loggerheads"pupils and wrest- Arithmetic, I went to the teacher an Hitching the host rope to the rear ling bouts. And once there was some tasked how to "do" some of the mis• axle of his wagon, he pulled the boat fun in the school, when the covers of cellaneous problems, and was told to along to abreast of the steamer, when ithe desks were raised at the opening multiply the first number e third. If the sec- of the morning session, and from one.. end and then divide by the the boat was hauled out again and the of the front desks there jumped a the,next problem could not be done by passengers were landed, followed by the officers. One hundred and sixty in muskrat I How could the animal have' the same method. then I asked again; gotten into that desk . Well, never I and not till.I struck those examples on all were saved. , Mr. Terry's house being the nearest, mind about that. ' Boys, it won't do my second trip did I know what t e e il.was soon filled to overflowing with to have that in the school room; you I were! History repeated itself to some half frozen men, women and children, had better catch. it and put it out." extent when one of the large boys on I in j many of whom were immigrants. By' .The suggestion, adopted, but there a cut the same, who was working k, nine o'clock in the morning a two horse was.not half so much fun in crawling about the same part of the same book, wagon load of life preservers were. under the desks as there was in put-I came to me with book and aisle; and piled up on his premises, serer serving ting%lie little creature into the desk;' as he looked over the room and wathel ited .their purpose. and no other ' varmint" was impris-1 for me to Islasked, he Have you w to otr ed! The shore for several miles was oned in.that way during the term! question,"No, sir." Have you studied We read in an old book, In those it strewn with freight and other flotsam. ? "No; sir." Have you read! A great part of this was saved by the days there was no king in Israel, and it�„ ,�No, sir." "Well, now read prompt action,of the wreck master who every man did that which was right in it . to arrived on the scene from his home in his own eyes." So in the days of Y and study do iit AIdwi4 helpdo you " He Mattituck at an early hour. !which I write there was no one to so- studied it out and thus gained so much. however was broken up and perinien" for tha (office of) Commis- for himself. He and I sometimes men- Much stolen. shiner of Schools had not been created; tion the circumstance when we meet. of Fe The boilers and walking beam of the and the faithful teacher.had to di that school in the hevenina�brtaki taking supper steamer could be seen standing out of which was raght in his own eyes And with Mi.• J. Conklin Corwin, whose the water for many years, a pathetic when a Commissioner came without!, eldest son (Albert Conklin Corwin) is ,eight telling of ruin. having had any experience in,teaching, tho,(mtheo of the present teacher. On how "under the sun could he advise, the 16th of then I tookch I ) upperiIt the The ()Id Mill has seen numerous other in, school; wrecks, notably afew years ago,when or in any way assist a tenches? Verily,I house of Mr.Daniel.Conklin. Mis.Conk- the coal barges McCauly, Essex and, ,thio is vanity- - - - pleb daughterhe mother of tale Eesent ii lee teachrr. Aitnougrrrnemvenct ', + 'rte aOIT� 4 s`pHiEar $Ty �TiTrDr AFS r, a0m is +`a+a{�� .>•,-., _ should not be ere dit's d„with ing t6'this result we all en o e rcJa LONA �I6IlAND, ' - 'Ny p , r of a mond n'd ` ' J Y ,�y Y r v ,+ a r It PQV and the second session 'lasted > I- r to vier Juatice,Wiokham atfhtai three hours !, 7 , reY + f + ' i teen a �,i ,ar x saytk aw'. eud®94van,fooh a be 'is in a vel obi eta 14i"WFifteen. years later I taught ,, v p O, o enin school Nov 14 xempetead,in':}Ifa-oh 1749 ` . ” ;' opening -1, , , b e he s Co e m tion I came', fops leen pripils) and closing Mar+ch { J to; n aad lod ed tilt s�[lerllPP�eads.`' On ili�, following Monday I to ]tS� 1S k'"1h4110 the New.L.OndgrL Flatortaa� `h1tC�(14 tt' 9,d PI uG ' Southoli]school to finish the y a ,{q Somety-printe Jpphua„ empptead a� n n saes L, place of Mr, B. H. Van Scot', , ,o tart', covering, the Ineitl'ents of hie 'ya p Elgin mV, {tempatoade and'ha (' .dropped school keeping in order tq take i lQith WP to Ste�png, I epllpd aGd`hemas''I f up store-keeping. I taught here'We'h °!ly ilio from 1711. to 1768 He was, ,Moo;a and Haut. Rand at tlrethOr Uon, following year also. So pass �qt7 e+ related to the HempateaiJ fomllips on `i(nga and then on board Cap Ja Rogers ' ;years, R T r: 'Eaet'ern:L'on Ialand, In Mareb of 1749 ' Southold, March 9„'06.. ou`er 161 years ago-he'niaderthem a in the old sloop;that belon6a�o Ca 0 ax - - OZ lWlggana and we hada yery good, Fifty-eight Years Ago ` visit; and the description of it,;copied � time 0' r 4Y,o a osped'ye'Sound Eton{? F tom the Dta y, a been sent ue for pp �g ye Rock by�U1blelerid"into the Harbour In 1860 James and Thomaer Bohee ication -Wei 'It ill a fn nd a a + 'U � �t EY' p N by Powderkdeland in 8 glasses hour, started a brickyard on the BoutahtOra. {vie ire,E�'ell N� lat�reattU[h naarativo eeoh Got�sefiore 4 o clock. part of what is now the farm o Benz + k H Monday Marph 18t�i fdlr and windy _ B. Tuthill on Boiasesu avenue cT , , had ,been in'',the em` to of �y I t�yent gn boars JgT.. opnga of Oyetex , A LINCOLN REMINISCENCE. P 9 fid 4n Fonda and{ye hUg fie,Wipd at W.N W Robinson, lesa'ee of what is now Capt Sanford's yard. With them came v rt';1111iteyvy W.e{,urried it to ye west Da,Jp$EPI; Ocie• r. Richard Bolles (son.of Thomas), J'a p$ of'Nt7,antiQ) Iaianq.anQ th`jb stood ;%Cgthatlltee for Celebrating the 100th fF -� apropq('pt'>fjlp!pp I�Igh{I, 2 ;eefe m ye 'nhilvereary of the Birth' of Archaic '� F Sheridan and,Peter Black. The Bolls t !btncoliL: i ' P' mainsail anW about J'mver th, wind met brothers built a two story+house twelve ue ah'out W 8 W, and We itOhf"d the, DEAR SIR;;As imparting a little local feet'by twenty, with a len to, ;ad ` this they soon moved to ?tli'e hi '' "aterly" part of �lu{nb Island and flavor to the otcaeion'"'your committee gh'waY .irhed thio the'GUtt on the flood and is she to observe m�Greenport,:L beg and set about'.whore noM1 'sta de r n G '. Tuthill's residence which"'wee hunt` y"��P to Oysterponda, lto3m, hong point, to submit the following pleasant person- Benj S Raids eau m 7.868 The rail nd got"asharle Ill Ili I'll Sun'un hour high"and to11 ale rdmmiseonce sent me i, .recent ter, j part of the Bolles house he moved bask reacon Tut6i Is and, gotta horse npd pespond9goe gy,ith Mr{lddiegU.C. Cleaves eady b Sunae� '� �t11 my"aseapte of Brooklyn,_a_former Greenporter and Por,an ouL-building, and .it eervect 'j;'t o - <, x 2e d an a dot'�e arae yipab 8 I`a brother of bUr'fellow=citizen, Mr. W. purlSoag,till about 1894; ^wheh>"'it ¢ u ,a y, r torn down by Mr Tuthill and replac t{l ro clock a fq�Hlt�' F ,Qin {f,pl luqcuod A, (,leaves. Fpr many years Mr A. C. by a new one of the sam'a`size U Bron er; plN. �ol qt e {o }�t9{1,,XR1 p 'i lehbea was'd sales nen, and one of the The well b"g the houeg fa m g od iDcai{ t�i���hl, P oo P'dsary§ t+UlYYid, � .pnt�valuedrand trusted;employees, of condition but ie used onlyras a ,cogle0, i Chrihtiria t lAf� ell at sPli�HPltllla egaj the late`Alezander�T SGewarG, and it j -the pipe •and the,+xeindM'11 havingg,`,'and thgrg nett�a�1 pPdlVtPdped �!" was a-hie thep,Imequalled` '•ort'goose:' superseded the we]1 and She wxndla'ad`J resent to,,p}aathtvl�ptPpt,eet �v+er�6 Pp'1sme a .Bop�wa`y a�d Chambers-ata a This well vcae sthe work of Sherid�' `Nealy sari Yooted„'HC gall the wayta µ N;!Y' Ctty,where t}iaamus(ngyetehnr- f: and it has'^ar worthy reeezd for it,,te founrgther wa}l!and elp�tep 1plpo a* acterietie incident below cook place said to be the first"one ','in the townl.Poorly,rthel}'only%eon T¢optge fln�d When Mr. Lincoln went fo Washing- i ri sunk withoict palnmy and`also the ret' not long since, Iwas; ti{eret,l6 i'� Il$t ton just before his inauguration he pas- ?' made wxt�e' sty"axgla.t°brwks r Moreover;iday, only went to Otiz Stra�ttoai(s',y,�;i 1 cod EhTqugN New York-and'held a recep- 3' the: curb W e"ma.de o1' the full]en day 17th ,t went {�{{'�POG1{PP+ 41: a tion to the, ova r Rom at the Cit gip �� al X11 G T49 P o y , of the boarabout,tllmteen feet ! igaense °fl.�'(t aGayedaal�itll ]1G` inedi ,Hall iL caw and ahgokhanda with him., p- The first, chit made at the new and Thad q O'kl6�6ca'cold a Sat i�th1 He and tlie,,�ife game to Stewart's, yard were used mth(4l building. of the Viery polis aridlyymdi( I Nel!tr`'ttio vialtJ . then at Bwy& Chambers-ate. Among F_ M.I7 char'Kin 1850 -,gMany' of lthern, Cuz, Coyjkhrl a�{1'�+{lap dlVtglYo>V'd and+ them wahta wiere kid gloves for Mc.Lin- i were a second time used; lw the 'neicCua hj�t�{ap�llle;lQfe C�t��Jon�than {Vola I w-d'selected to serve him.',He church, which'somas comploted io1900a Hal(e{� iigre,t aty�yed e`attw'ithuie+� did not knew his size,"but insisted that About a year`after tris starting' qft and in ase�g4mQoTylRotaba �,to'$ratrienna'iltlRt liavecthe largest that came- , theBollee yard, aeh{pped on Talm'°' qe+anr?+I�dpeli �e;�jifAj� tt�."i ,would,.pgt.takemy measure; so I gave 1. . the fie bare C,eor a,Moon e'"L i + q9p a t eft him lE<p ire Nos ill. ' In about a month 'pack9µ s 4 pt' SkYlJ�n k�iS, xiE@, a tnP Jg $ Orrin r Prtn+ceOn one trip tie safe anijar({ > qe;I , Fray 1 Igtoiy, Mre. Lfncolp tame to New York; and year SBl ' a ,easel h, f bo r s�T. brou htthem'baeki and had them than + !, 1++, ,1Y��+, k n#tr a l p , th''ii�li ,avq rt' �l`��4 ``�pFd gP�'o`h ' ed fox g silos sn)aller-to 9}. Sbe.of- fl ttiouashd d llxe. 'wortN+>mgfu ha t UGy tt >ra r ' ' 4 u wradi9tlau {.. ,The captain shove to off°,Southold a{{� fi"�1'�' pr� ,�'�{(itad�e5df,e�''Capt 'Dai ' tag a er ghed ab)6 those kid i took aboard hisaOfilrHerry,,WY to m'elEg Biel +11,pownea r a '' t` fight Tueadgi BloWee )' al'waye nerved her after that, Y a, .his first visit to New`York, and tµ°« N a rt'sip r,' +`� "h�il so a xa nt ty1,Vtdr, Lincoln never took much f latter tells how Mr. Moon the own, rnhd ol�l�� � `a lyfi' �ilyes s atdck n!�1tw�e&1,41, I�� x" 1 ofthe vessel ,jumpeddup and dent¢ 'end+bTek#r+¢ted+ i ed and gut ori ,. - ,i, on_the wtar'fir file REEVES. WttbtSa'riff C`o vi a Long pato Roeptfully, H. A REEVES. 1111411 +, "9. '+%`*e + Grebhport, H T PAYNE; 04 e�ti , a Ott pTo}v and' on,�'gl }; 0c,"r,/ t re f j + f hk /i I 1 Yf{6J i