The Middleburgh Post. liiliMlied every Thursday. Geo V- Wagenseller, bditor and Proprietor BuWriptioi) 1.50 per year. wuieb .- i..i im okM in adtUBOB wtien sent out side the county.) MATESOF ADVERTISING. All CraliatMM SdlMlllsatOBti not otherwise i iiir. U I tur U1 M Charged at the rate of II rem line (imnpartel measure) for tint Inser- Un Utd HI cents per line for every subsequent Insert Ion. 0-l'ith imMom puMuhrd rt ; obituary poerty, tntiH'f i trttrct. itc, threr cruU a line. Gunning for Wormi. Soniethiiijr new in Kpurtsmanship U the shooting of worms, which is now sniil to be the order of the day in west ern New York. Such nre the rnvnpcs of the tent caterpillar fn the orchards of tlx- fruit licit of that section that, according to the voracious special cor respondent, farmers have taken to rcg alurly organized worm-shouts us the only practicable means of holding the pests i'l check. Despite th.? spraying method in the enrl.v spring, the worms Inert used) tearing down the "tent" by hand was disagreeable work, and ne- i BOmpliyhed little permanent benefit; rags soaked with kerosene and set fire to, I i burn oil I the worms, were fair ly effective, but i slow method, finally some genius thought of shooting out the neata, and row the average orchard J in Waj ne county resembles a miniature arsenal, and everybody Ispopptngaway, even including young, unmarried and especially bashful farmers. When strange sounds of firing are heard up that way. they do no longer fear Span innlF. for they know that it is worms. 1 Despite all efforts, and great as is the laughter, the worm birth-rate seems I to e ceed the worm death-rate) so that at inst accounts In the race between man and worm, for the l'JD apple crop, file worm was o,uted at odds and no Bakers. Novel Salt la Sight. Some novel litigation is promised In Maine unless the Western Union Tele graph company planks down $2J,0UO for the failure to deliver a telegram. Last February, report the Boston Transcript, the newspapers of the coun try were bristling with headlines tell ing of the cold-blooded murder of one 'Mamie Small, who lived in the ususlly quiet village of Gardiner, Me. The murderer was Bradford Knight, who had been paying attention to Miss Small, contrary to her wish and that of her parents. According to the Ken nebec Journal of Augusta, Mamie Small's sister, Lizzie, was on a train bound for Gardiner on the afternoon of the murder, when she noticed that Knight was n passenger on the same train. Knowing him to be a desperate character, she sent a telegram from a station on the line of the rond telling her sister tliat Knight was to be In Gardiner and directing her to leave town at once. She sent this message by the Western Union Telegraph company, but the dispatch, owing to alleged neg ligence, was never delivered. It is claimed that it was received at the Gardiner office shortly after four p. m. Knight met Mamie Small at seven o'clock that evening nnd shot her. A claim for $2(1,0(10 In tho name of the dead girl's mother and' one of $5,000 in that of her sister have been filed with the telegraph company and damages to that amount have been asked for. If no settlement is made suit will be brought. Bradford Knight is now confined in the insane asylum at Augusta, All odd case of hysteria is reported Prom Abilene. Ivan. A lady of the town hn: been entertaining her niece, a young woman from another town, and ever nines the arrival of the girl the Bouse has been made the target of peep era and burglars, li the evening before (Li family bad gone to bed there would be a crash of glass, and then the young woman would come flying in terror to her aunt with the story that she had seen the face of n man nt the window and when he found he was observed he broke the window and ran. After win dows had been broken all over the house officers were set to watch for several nights. At last one officer, brighter than the rest, discovered that all the glass broken from n window fell outward, showing that it must have been struck from the inside. A Watch was then placed over the girl anil slu was soon caught in the act of breaking a window, after which she ran scream ing to her aunt with the same old story .irvut a man. Her strange performance in accounted for on the theory of a hys terical condition in which she "sees things" and then does things uncon sciously, Nothing taxable which Spain's cupid ity could reach not even the grave seems to have escaped the clutches of her representatives in Cuba. A vivid idea of the thoroughness of their meth ods in this particular is given In the fact that a yearly tax was assessed upon each letter on the signs used by mer chants anil others. This impost was farmed out to contractors, who, in col lecting, were often arbitrary and an noying. It was to remain in force till June, 199, nnd Americans who have begun business and have hung out signs at any time within the year are compelled to pa- a full year's tax. Somebody plainly observed one day that Uncle Sam was running his prem ises on bachelor principles. Inasmuch as his national helpmeet is the God di as of Lihi rty, who does nothing but pose on her pedestal, it was suggested, writes Bertha Damaria Knobe in Wom an's Home Companion, that there should be a practical Aunt Sam to give the womanly touches to our towns. Since there Is no Aunt Sam. the club women have assumed these housewife ly responsibilities in hundreds of ham lets. They are industriously sweeping the streets, securing receptacles for scrap:., calling down the weeds, plant ing shade trcts, opening ii parka in short, by such attractivelmprovements, keeping dirt-collecting communities from literally getting "in the dumps." The wide i Stent of this movement may be instanced in Minnesota. This one .-state has Sj f derated clubs of women, and of this number 4fi are enthusiastic ally devoted to the Improvement of their respective towns. In most cases the transformation from unattractive villages into beautiful and Deflowered garden spots has been simply wonderful. The latest suggestion for maple sirup without the maple comes from a Vir ginia woman nnd may send a wave of consternation over the sugar camps of Vera. out and northern New York. "Take clean corncobs," says this eco nomical woman, "and cover with wa ter: let them boil until all tlc sub atance is boiled out, and you will have a liquid about the color of tea; strain this carefully through a fine cloth; add brown sugar nnd boil down to n nice simp. Let it stnnd one day, and it is ready for use. You cannot tell this from pure maple sirup, nnd it is much cheaper." The city of Chicago is built on a sink ing plain, according to Prof, 0, K. Gil bert, who presents the facts In the lat est volume of the geological survey re ports to show Unit the northern and eastern shores of all the great lakes are rising and the southern and western shores falling. The lake at Chicago is rising at the rate of nine or ten Inches in a century. Already that city has elevated its -ite considerably, and the prospect is thai it mast keep it up In definitl ly, i r remove Its plant gradual ly to the more central and desirable lo cation of St. Louis, jocularly observes the Globe-Democrat of the latter city. Keeping a town permanently on jack screws is inconvenient and expensive. If Chicago is looking around for a new stand it will find nothing to compare with St. Louis. An unexpected but frequent cause of fire, according to Fire Marshal Beery of New York, Is due to cleaning carpets on the floor without taking them up. Near ly ,J1 the preparations guaranteed to make carpets good a "new without mak ing it necessary to lift them from the floor contain naphtha, which has in flammable qualities in a disagreeable degree. When used for cleaning car pets on the. floor, it soaks into the floor boards to a greater or less extent, nnd contact with an overheated steam, hot air or hot water pipe will do the rest. Members of the State Law and Or der U-.iguc of Connecticut attempted one day lately at Canaan to put some 3,000 gallons of hard cider where it would do no mure harm'' by smashing the barrels containing it In front of the town hall I nd letting the stuff run away. MUCH ol it touml its wuy across the square and into the basement of Christ church, where it threatened to ruin the carpet of the Sunday-school room. A vestry man stopped the smash ing of the barrels after a wordy war with the smashers, in which nearly the whole town took sides. A coroner's jury delivered the follow ing verdict on the sudden 'death of a incrchuut who had recently failed in business: "We, the jury, find, from the cw doctor's statement, that the de ceased came to his death from heart failure, superinduced by business fail . are. which was can3ed by speculation failure, which was the result of failure to see for enough ahead." Evidr-itly the Chicago llecord does not approve of the practice on the part of leading educators of soliciting en dowments for their respective Institu tions of learning, it says: "The king of New York beg gars is said to be worth $l(!0,ooo. but we nre not told of which college he is president." The French have laid a claim to Dewey on the ground that he descends from n Huguenot family named De lluoy, and the Jlwlgians have put In a pita for him as De Wey. The Spuniards, as the Buffalo Commercial observes, have not yet filed their claim. An old maiden lady of Chicago makes her living by washing cats, and no doubt thinks that is better than if In her girlhood she had annexed a hus band and was now compelled to spend u great deal of her lime washing brats. Among the provisions of the will of Mr. Martha 1!. Stevens, of Iloboken, was one that, after certain property had been distributed, the six heirs should draw lots for the remainder. This pro vision was carried cut. A Columbus (O.) woman refuses to pay for a piano, and sets up the claim that she was hypnotized by the agent who sold it to her. That agent should have no trouble in finding a Job if he ever needs one. Aruerloa for Hoys. "I have come home solely on account of my boy," said a New York widow of moderate means, who to the astonisbi ment of her friends, reports the Press, suddenly reappeared in America after a prolonged residence In Europe. "As far a I am concerned 1 sm much more comfortable abroad, where my little income goes twice as far and life Is much easier. The girls, too, I can edu cate cheaper and better on the other side, but there is do doubt about it, American boys should be educated at home in order to be successful men In their own country. I have watched the results quite closely, and in nine cases out of ten it is like fitting u square putch to a round bole when they come home and go to work. For young men of property who intend living a life of leisure It is all well enough, but for those who hove their own wuy to make it Is, in my opinion, a fatal mistake to educate them there. They lose the power of assimilating themselves, so to speak, and, what is more, they form no early friendships with their own coun trymen. So, ufter thinking it over, 1 made up my mind that my boy's future was worth a sacrifice, and here 1 am, although it means to me skimping and striving In New Yolk when I might be living in case end plenty on the conti nent. I shall semi my boy to a good boarding school and afterward to a home college, and 1 shall then feel I have done my best for him." Then Ito Wfklkrd. "They tell me your gait was es teemed one of the finest in the regi ment." "You flatter me." "No. I. lent. Wagstaff said yon marched magnificently." "The lieutenant may not be a good Judge." "i fane , he Is. To my mlrd (here!? nothing that makes a man more pre sentable and really attractive than a graceful walk. My curiosity is greatly aroused. May I ask a favor of you?" "Certainly." "Then 1 would like to see you walk." And she handed him his hat, Wheelmen and travelers who wish to go in light marching order, but ob ject to using the glass ut the wayside spring or drinking fountain for fear of Infectious microbes, may now Invest in a lip guard ami protector. This ap pliance, which is the invention or a Boston man. Is merely a metal or rub- , her shield which slips over the drink ing glass and is held In plnee by the ; natural spring of the material. There ; will be no sale for this device In Keu- tucky. Arthur W. Dewey, a cousin of the ad- ; mirul. who baa just returned to Boston from a two years' trip abroad, says that ; he as In Rome the day the Spanish ; fleet waa annihilated at Manila, and the next day u Dumber of Italian bunkers. Who hud heard of his arrival, rushed to j his hotel to assure him of t heir surprise St seeing such a great captain so soon after the battle. Mr. Dewey put them ! straight. The branding of a child fn New York the other day with a redhot irtm hus brought to light the fact that some of : the missionaries working to convert the Jews of the East side have frequently marked Jewish children by tattooing a cross on the arm. A Dr. Joseph Cruder lectures that such children have been ( brought to him by tlair ; a rents for the purpose of having the marks removed. When a lecturer starts off with a gal- ion pitcher of water before him It looks . tv tutichaslf he was taking every pre caution to avoid giving a dry lecture. RAW AS BEEF FROM ECZEMA! do Torture Equal to the This Fearful Disease. At Wlnfleld, Kan., every Arrangement had been made for a funeral when the graved Igger came rushing in and an nounced that he had stria 1: solid rock In the grave and would require consid erable time to blast through it. The funeral waa postponed for a day. Dowlblg Oreen, ".. has a mayor who thinks he has struck a new reform In the right spot, lie sentenced a "tou?h" to attend Sunday school and church every Sunday for eight weeks or go to prison for '20 days. Not mueh attention la often paid to the first symptoms of Ecsema, but It Is not lout before the little redness begins to itch and Itching and Burning ot .5 aursoie. n is a common miuc to return a roughness and redness of the skin si merely a local irritation ; It is but an indica tion of a humor in the blood of terrible Eesema which is more than skin-deep, and can not be reached by local appli cations of ointments, salves, etc., applied to the surface. The disease itself, the real eause of the trouble, is in the blood, although all suffering is produced through the skin ; the only way to reach the disease, therefore, is through the blood. Mr. Phil T. Jones, of Mixersville, Ind., writes? "I had Eczema thirty years, and after a great deal of treatment my leg was so raw and sore that it gave me constant pain. It finally broke into a running sore, and began to spread and grow worse. For the past five or aix years 1 have suffered untold agony and had given up all hope of ever being free from the disease, as I have been treated by ,mme of the beBt physicians and have taken many biond medicines, all in vuin. With little faith left I legan to take 8. 8. 8., and it apparently made the Eczema worse, but I knew that this was the way the remedy got rid of thu poison. Continuing 8. 8. 8., the sore healed up entirely, the skin booame clear and smooth, and I was cured perfectly." Eczema is an obstinate disease and car. not be cured by u remedy which ii only a tonic. Swift's Specific S. 3. S. FOR THE BLOOD is superior to other blood remedies because it cures diseases which they can not reach. It goes' to the bottom to the cause of the disease and will curs the worst case of Eezoma, no matter what other treatment has failed. It is the only blood remedy guaranteed to be free from potash, mercury or niiy other mineral, and never fails to cure Ecsema, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, Cancer, Tetter, Rheumatism. Open Sores, Ulcers, Boils, etc. Insist uuon S. 8. 8. : notions: can take its place. Books on these diseases will be mailed free to any address by Swift Bpw eirlc Company, Atlanta, Georgia. ADVERTISE IN THE POSl Safest Investment, Largest Dividends. A portion of the full paid anil non-assessable capital stock of the Boston & Texas Copper Company is offered for sale at Five Dollars per share (par $10 for Treasury purposes'), and is rccommttjided as a safe and highly promising investment. The company controls twelve thousand seres of rich copper land in North Texas which is also valuable for farming and town site purposes. The tract is some 10 miles long and about three miles wide. It is equivalent in sire to five hundred ordi nary raining claims, The property has been developed sufficiently to begin producing at once, large amounts of the richest copper ore 40 to 70 per cent.) taken out nnd marketed, and inexhaustible quantities of copper marl and clay running from 3 to 15 per cent, copper found. (Calumet and Hecla an 1 other great dividend payers are working on 1 to 3 per cent, ore.) The property is within 12 miles of a railroad and fuel and water arc available. The on-H and marl are oa the surface and a few feet down, and can he mined and converted into copper cheaper than any other deposits in America. Copper will be produced on the ground and a plant of moderate cost will treat 300 to 500 tons of ore and material per day, and according to engineers estimates earn 83,000 to 85,000 per day net. with copper at 15 cts per pound. It ia now 18 ct. per pound. The property has a historical reputation and a rscord in tho State Geological Reports. It has been examined and reported upon by the highest engineering, geo logical and expert authorities, and its merit and value are established beyond all question. It is not an experiment, nor its value speculative, they are proven and demonstrated. From Report of Prof. Wm. DeRyee, former State Chemist of Texas. II Such numerous outcrops of copper ore have been traced over the summit and sides of those hills that out of 12,000 acres of land which the company own, hardly a lf0 acre tract should be found without ore upon the surface. A crOSt-CUt to the depth of 15 feet was made upon the I shell lead, and ten hiiar' work resulted in the raising of 6,000 lbs. of rich copper ore, averaging about fiO per cent of copper. (Worth $3C0, net.) It is easily smelted and the strata in which it is found can also be more econom ically excavated than other in which copper ores occur.'' Prom Report of Prof. W. F. Cummins, former Oeologlst of Texas. " In order that I might see the condition of this lodo after this amount of work had been done, I employed a few hands and cleaned out the tunnels when I found a lode of copper. This is the disulphatc of copper and will yield as high as 70 per cent, of copper. I drove the tunnel twenty feet further Into the hill, following the lode. When 1 had gone about twelve feet I struck another lode of copper eighteen inches east and six inches below the second lode. In three feet more we struck another lode below the second lode. Immediately below the lower sandstone is a stratum of cupriferous marl schists extending the entire width of the tunnel, say four feet, and is probably much wider. This marl will yield about 15 per cent, of copper." From Report of Prof. (iustave Weatman, Mining Engineer. " I beg to express my entire satisfaction with and confidence in the report made by Prof. W. F. Cummins. - I only had to remove one foot of earth from the surface on the three spots already mentioned in order to find large deposits bedded into the clay. After washing, this clay was found to contain 15 per cent, of copper ore of same value si aboe. These ores could of course lie taken out and made avsilable at a relatively small expense. 1 The cupriferous marl situated below the sandstone, contninine IS per cent of copper, caa be estimated worth at the place nt least 810. 00 per ton, net." From Report of Oeorge F. Kendall, Mining Engineer. " It is a self-evident fact deduciblc from every report that on this property large bodies of copper ore exists and that hundreds of tons have been shipped ol high grade ore. That a deposit of this nnturo can at a very small expense be made to yield handsome profits, from all existing reports, appears not only likely but certain." From Report of Francis Arthur Read, Superintendent. " This property is all right and there is all the copper you want here I think il is the best in Texas and it seems to have been selected as such for copper. It il near the top of a water shed and the hills crop out here. I thiuk there is oil ben because there is coal. Oil has been found at Corsienna. The property is adapted to genera! fsrming purposes which seems to be very profitable here and a tnw:i could be laid out on it and a railroad built to Dundee, 12 miles, to great advantage " The Qreat Boom in Copper Shares. Copper mining has proved the safest and most profitable industry In America, and the largest and most conservative capitalists in the world have receutly become large investors in copper stocks. This company can produce copper as cheaply as any in the world. It is capi talized the lowest of any in proportion to its acreage, and at the price of copper bearing land in Michigan (800 per acre) containing a much less per cent, of copper, has a large value in excess of its low capitalization ($2,500,000.) Receipts for ore and assays by the leading chemists and assuyers in the country are on file in tho company's offices. The officers and directors of the company are men of the highest standing and business capacity, and include : Hon. Emery M. Low, manufacturer, mayor of Brockton, MasV, President. George W. Russell, Esq., paper manufacturer, Boston, Vice-l'resideut. Maj. F. M. Spaulding, 2d Vice-President. Col. Edward B. Robins, Boston, Treasurer. Col. James. M. Wheston, Boston, Secretary. Hon. Jas. W. Bennett, Fx-President Eric Telephone Co. Only a limited amount of tho stock will be sold at the price of 5 no per share ami those wishine to secure shares should act at once. As stated the stock is full I paid and non-assessable. As soon as this allottment is sold the price will I advanced. Amount of land, quantity and quality of ore, cheapness of mining and Ires ment, nearness to transportation, favorable climate for continuous work the yesl around, the increasing demand aad profit io producing copper considered, tl; Boston and Texas Copper Company possesses unequalled advantages and affords t! best kind of an investment. It can easily earn 50 per cent, per year an the price . which the stock is here offered. Stock may be ordered through your banker or broker, or direct as below. FROM REPORT OF T. BURTON EVERETT, MINING ENGINEER AND EXPERT. Archer Citt, Texas, Mat 3, 189!). IIo. Emery H. Low. President, and others, Boston, Mass. : Gentlemen : There is sbundsnt evidence of rich copper deposits, not only at the mines already I opened, but at various other parts of the property, aad it is my opinion that this will prove to be one of tho exceptionally rich copper-bearing fields or the United States. The ores found io these deposits are immensely rich in copper values snd the cuperiierous clays mat are also iounu nere in immense ueus, wmie DOi as ncu, will undoubtedly prove of great value on account of the cheapness with which they can be mined aad reduced. The mines are accessible at every point ; the cost of mining will be very small, as the ore is not in hard formation ; and there is no deep work. I have eiammed tho various reports made by others, and confirm them. A fur u I hava been able to investigate, ami T have done so earefullv. lusnf tha onlnion it is one of the richest copper fields in the country. Very respectfully yours, T. BURTON EVERETT, M. I Mr. O II. Savage. Mine Examiner of Butte. Montana, after gaining sample of ore from the property, says l "The ore is the richest in the country. If you have the I field you can pay 91,000,000 dividends per year." Major F. M. Spaulding, of Boston, and C. F. Crosby, Esq., of Lowell, Mass., who returned June 16th from an examination of the property on behalf of the Coin-I nanv s stockholders and intending in rcstors, report tliat tnev fnan.l tne property as represented and connrm me expert reports, lacy mic-u uj ejaunueu Lm- mu.i mines and explored the entire property. The Company la thoroughly organized with substantial business men in the management. It haa such extensive acreage of land, rich ie conner. and so easllv and cheaply mined and converted, that dividends can be earned and said during; the current year. Now ia the time to make tl safe and profitable Investment, and those who take advantage of this opportunity to bay stock at the low price offered will reap the beneft. Remit by P. O. Order, Registered Letter, Check or Express to Edward B. Robins, Treasurer, Tromontj Building, Boston, Mass. price 90.00 per snare, suDject to advance. BOSTON & TEXAS COPPER CO.