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Colgate Library

1can.

ilton

·••.

VOL. 90

.. - -

-

,w

HAMILTON,
rj. Y., THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1918
,,
LLOYD EVANS GIVES HIS L\f,E IN
FRANCE
I

A Light Summer Suit.

THE AMERICAN FLAG

--

I

II

FRANCE AND HER PEOPLE OF
TODAY

__.

No. 4
OBITUARY

MISS DONNER TO HELP WOUNDED
IN FRANCE

Celia L. Billings
Prize Essay by Miss Elizabeth Carroll
Celia
L.
Billings
aged 77 years died at
Dies From Wounds Received in Action
of the High School
Letteri from Professor McIntyre Describe Was Physical Instructor in High School
the home of her daughter, Mrs. Frank
On June l7-EnliSled a Year Ago
The following essay was awarded the~
Country and Customs
1916 and 1917
A feeling
grief and sympathy first prize in the annual D. A. R. Historical
On our way to Pari·s from the· place we
R econstruction
· aide in the medical de- D. Seymour, June 29th, 1918, having ·sufsh d ofb mingled
h
fered a stroke of paralysis. She seemed
vas are
Y t e people of this village Essay Contest. Inasmuch as the theme entered Europe, I had the most interest,
when news came that Lloyd Evans was is pecul'arl
. t and ha e
partment of the army, is the imposing to fall asleep peacefully to wake up on the
1 Y ,appropna
e,
s xcep- ing ride I ever had. The country is sim- title which has been accorded to one of
other side.
058
0 dead
· th from
fi t wounds
bo f received
H ·1in a cti\)n,
· He tional merit we are printing it here for the plv. subli'me. Amen·ca can offer nothi·ng our res1·dents, M'1ss Donner, who is goMrs. Billings was a daughter of J.
1s e rs
Y ro!? ami ton to give his benefit of our readers who will undoubtedly like it. The old castles, the beautiful ing to France soon to help in the work
Bradley
and Harriett Billings of Lebanon,
life in the bitter struggle which
is being I be interested in the forceful interpreta- ch ateau, tne
c quaint villages and above of giving back to the wounded soldiers
l.
She was the oldest daughter of a family of
waged acr_os£ the seas, The news, which tion which Miss Carroll gave hef subJ. ect. a 11, th e peop1e are a never ending source the use of their limbs.
reached his parents, Mr. a nd Mrs. Charles
As if in augury ol that lasting peace for of interest. The women wear the most
Miss Donner is the daughter of Mrs. eight children, six of whom are still living.
Early in life she united with the Baptist
·
which all mankind hopes as the outcome of curious head dresses and the men dress Sarah E. Donner and has resided at 717
Church at Lebanon.
this world war, followingtheentranceofthe like characters from Shakespeare. I have Randolph Street with her mother and
On October 2nd, 186o she married
United States of America into the great seen many oxen and some cows drawing sisters for a number of years. She was
Samuel C. Gates of Lebanon. Later they
struggle to secure democracy for all wagons and ploughs. I have seen pigs born in Winterton, Lincolnshire, Engmoved to Hamilton, where Mr. Gates
peoples, the Stars and Stripes were re- driven in droves through the streets, all land, and came to the United States with
died in 1888. To them were born four
ceived gratefully and reverently into that shaven. All teams are driven tandem her family when she was fourteen. Alchildren, two of whom died in infancy.
great shrine of the English people, St. even to three in a string. The wagons though she received most of her schooling
She is survived by two daughters, . Mrs.
Paul's Cathedral, London. These Stars are eithers carts with 2 great big wheels or in the city schools, she had her last year
Frank D. Seymour, of this village, and
and Stripes are to be preserved for all else they are long, low, broad affairs with of high school in Oak Park, graduating
Mrs. Harriett A. Banning of Akron, 0.,
time, together· with those
our Allies, very small wheels. The people work in in 19ro. She then attended the Chicago
I
and five grandchildren. Mrs. Billings was
1
whose emblems are also waving over the the fields until too dark to see longer and Normal Scllool of Physical Education
married to Solomon T. Billings of Earlforces fighting for the liberty of the world'. the most pathetic feature of it all is in the city, and since then has been an
ville in 1898. Mr. Billings d_ied March :n,
This event marked the alliance in a this, the workers are all children, old men instructor in physical training for· five 1917.

sacred cause of the two great Anglo~ and women. I have seen women plowing, years. Last year she had charge of the
Mrs. Billings's funeral services were held
Saxon nations, just one hundred forty years hoeing and sawing wood. It is a sad sight. phycical education in the public and gramTuesday, July 2nd, Dr. W. 0. Steams
after the birth of the flag, following the The country is the most beautiful I ever mar schools of Riverside.
officiating. Burial was made in Woodlawn
conflict which severed America from Great saw and I can easily see why the French
This last winter, in preparation for
Cemetery, Hamilton.
Britain.
make poor colonizers. Their attachment this overseas work which she wished to
In the early days when the thirteen to their own land ought to be real. Words take up, Miss Donner took some special
OBITUARY
original States were still small, there were will not express the wonderful charm of work under Dr. Louis Collin in massagmany kinds of banners carried by the this land.
ing and muscle manipulation. She apMildrid Frances
Masson
Revolutionary forces, nearly a year after
Aeroplanes are an old story now. I've plied for the work, but heard nothing
Mrs.
Guy
Maxson
died
at
her home in
the Unit~ . ~fftes h~d assembled in also seen many Boche prisoners and until last Saturday, June 15, when she reGeneral C$gress, and had pledged them- thousands of evidences of war on all ceived a communication from the govern- the town ot Madison Monday morning,
selv~ 1to support the Declaration of In- sides. Public works are sand bagged and menl telling her that she had been ac- June 24th, 1918.
Until early last spring, when she was
==de~aence, the crosses of St. George and protected.
cepted as a reconstruction aide.and that
taken
down by an attack of measles, she
St. Andrew, emblems of the mother
You have only to see what I've already she must be ready to report at an instant's
was in her usual good health with every
countey, were discarded and replaced by seen to appreciate the people of France and notice.
a uni~n made up of white stars on a blue their heroism. They are not bled white.
Since Saturday Miss Donner and her prospect of a long and happy life before her,
field.
· There is a look of quiet determination on loyal friends have been working over- but the measles left her in such a weakened
The birth of the Stars 'a nd Stripes was their faces that mean success. The time to make ready the · long list of ar- condition that in spite of the most tender
DR. H. P. WELLS
June
fourteenth, seventeen hundred average /American citizen knows nothing tides which it is required that she take care and all that medical skill could do,
DENTIST

seventy seven. The birth of the flag was of war. Every where here there is mourn- with her. Her uniform consists of the complications set in which lead to her
Office boun:
Evans
last
Thursday
spread
gloom
declared
in a resolution of the Continental ing,' men with wooden legs, empty sleeves, regulation street costume of navy blue death. She was the eldest livi.1g daughter
o:oo ro 12:00 A. M., 1:30 to 5:00 P. M.
of Mr. and Mr;;. A. B. Coe, and was born in
through0t•t the town. it brought home Congress which read, "Resolved that the blinded men and of course a constant serge, but her working uniform is white;
the town of Eaton, July 13, 18<)6. She was
to
us
a
rense
of
the
nearness
of
the
great
fla~
of
th~
thirteen
United
States
.
be
stream
of
men
on
stretchers,
men
in
and
she
wears
the
regulation
insignia
of
the
DR.HOMBRE. SMITH, F. C. S.
thus only 21 years, u months and n
army and medical corps on her collar.
Dewt~~ euluaive professional a tention war, and to all of us a determination that thirteen sti:ipes alternate red and wh~te, ambulances and the Red Cross nurse.
dayr old at the time of her death, but
to the
I and aurgical treatment of the Lloyd shall not have' given his all in vain.
that
the
umon
~
a
?,lue
field
representing
At
present
two
Y.
M.
C.
A.
men
and
She
rec~ives
her
orders
directly
from
dlle- of the eye, ear, noee and throat and the
length of years do not count for so much
ecientiflc fttting of ,11-. X-ra_y laboratory
The Utica Press says:-"Lloyd Evan!! a new constellation.
.
. . myself are located in a beautiful hotel here Surgeon General Gorgas of the army.
for pict- and tff!atlnenta. Office hours 9
in life as goodness of personality, in this,
was
not
yet
years
of
age.
He
enlisted
There
are
many
th~nes_
as
to
the
ongm
in
Paris.
Before
the
war
it
was
a
well
Miss
Donner
is
still
a
British
subject,
to ia_and I to ,4, .week day, only.
20
while her years were short, her life was
Turner Buildl111, Norwich, N. Y.
in the Marine ·co,ps, April 13 , 1917 , at of our flag. Some m~mtam that the ~ew knovm hostelery, but of course has prac- and has several English cousins in the
rich beyond measure.
Mildred's unDetroit, Mich., where he was employed at flag borrowed the stnpes from Ole enSign tically been forced to close its doors since service, but Uncle Sam is glad to get
selfish devotion to her parents, her husband
the motor works. He became a member raised by John Paul Jones, and the stars the war and rates are very )ow.
such a valuable aid and at this time her
and child, and her friends, made ber life
of the d Company, 6 th Regiment, and from the c~lon~l ~ r of Rhode Island.
I ,i..ave already seen Eiffel Tower, the cit-izenship as an Englishwoman eounts
73
a blessing to all, and endean'd her blll ,
went to France the following August. He Othera mamtam ~hat m June, seventeen Arc~ of Triumph and have walked along for her. She had some valuable experience
their hearts.
was an expert gunner in the machine hundr~ seventy six, Betsy Ross made the the famous Champ de Elysees.
this spring in play directing for the war
In the circle of her friendships she was
gun forces and posse£sed together with .flag which wa~ a?opted a year _l~ter by
I have just received my appointment Recreation Board, both in the city and at
known as one that was ever ready to lend
this ability, a great amount of energy, Congress. This ts a ~ood tradition _al- and had a most wonderful ride through a several entertainments gi\ren in Oak Park
a helping hand in thetimeof trouble, one
which accompanies only the highest thou~h not accurate _history. Accord1:1g country as charming as what wt! passed fo( the men in the servi~e.
+
whose goodness of heart prompted her to
th1
st0
patriotism. From F1ance came a letter to
s
ry a committee of Congress m- through on our way to Paris. It is very
,
speaks words of cheer and comfort to those
. recently, written on Mother's Day and eluding George Washington called at the pleasant to ttavel here for the cars are ANOTHER JOLT FOR THE KAISER in distress, one whose kindly smile added
it conveyed the tender inter~t ot a son to upholSt ery shop of Betsy Ross a nd asked more comfortable than those at home.
light and joy, even to happy hours. and
his mother, as well as the strong deter- her to make a flag .. She was _willing to_ try They are tiny besides ours at home but Hamilton Ei:c~ds Its Quota In War endeared her to' host of friends.
nd
mination
for
victory.
a
prc~:luce
a
design
of
thirteen
stnpes
they
are
far
ahead
in
comfJrt
I
nsJure
yo:.i.
+
Savings Stam:, Dhve
The memory of the goodness that found
+
Surviving the soldier are his parents and th1 rteen stars. She changed the
This place is a quaint town and if you
+
The people of this village have once such beautiful expression in her short life
sta
and three brothers, Harold Evans now
rs from six points to five points saying, have ever read some old French novel again respo-1ded generously to the call ol remains as a blessing to comfort her family
+
at Camp Wadsworth, S. C.; Raymo;d and "These. can ~~ made_ wi th a single clip of dealing with the middle ages, you can the moment. Congress asked for $2,000,- and friends. even while they sorrow o-,er
+
Charles Evans, in this village and a sister, t~e ~cissors.
It is also added that pictw:e this place in your mind. The side 000,000 of which Hamilton was to raise her death.
+
Bessie, aif,:> of this village. The young Washington th0ught that th e stars should walks are about two feet wide and the about $36,000. A paragraph ol praise
Besides her husband and little child, !!he
man was 3 member of the Methodist be placed in a circle signifying the equality streets are more crooked than those of is unnecessary. Let the figures speak for is survived by her father and mother, and
FOSTER
Church here and very popular with the of the sta tes. This was later changed. Boston. They actually drive dogs here. themselves.
GENERAL AGENT
one sister, all of whom hav"e~ the sincere
young ,people, and the news brings a shad- T~e Be~sy Ross house, ~wo h':1°dred The shops or magazines, as they call them
A N D ADJUSTER
sympathy of friends and neighbors in the
st
ow, the darkest that war can present." thirty-nme Arch ree_t, Philadelphia, has are in nearly all instances devoted to the
TOWN
~LEDGE->
A,'10UNT
Hamilton
56o
$ 21 630 bereavement of her death.
:
HAMILTON, N. Y.
h
d
d
ed
f
b
be
The local division of the Home Service
en pure ac an is car
or Y the sale of only one line of goods. Tobacco o6
206
Her funeral was held at St. Mary's
5 '205
Section of the Red Cross is attempting at ~etsy ~otssh flMemorikal Association
in stores are allowed to deal in that only ex- ~u~~~~~sville
159
5 •625 Church, Thursday the 27th of June, and
O
present to learn more complete details onor
e ag ma er.
cept tl)at all such sell postage stamps.

Wh te e
h
b
th
· · Of
Earlville
300
41,390 burial made in St. Joseph's Cemetery,
of the engagement in which Lloyd was
a vthr may ave h e_en
.t he ongm
There are cheese stores, paper stores,
fl
h
al
All
pledge
cards
have
not
been
handed
Rev. Father Francis Lyons officiating at
1 as ways fruit stores, lock ~tores and bird stores.
th
• wounded. Sympathetic ,1eighbors have cOen eag,
ed e message ~ tICI
ssed b
i.1, and the total will undoubtedly be the Church and Cemetery.
devoted their time to allaying the sorrow W vsh '( gt wa_s appropna
xpret k hY
On our way r.ere, we saw beautiful higher when complete returns are known.
th
de Y,e,w
tha~ has come to the family of Lloyd. t a f m on
e a ·e th e castles, perched on top of high hills. The The following telegram came to Mr. Fred
h m ese
th word fs,
Card of Thanks
0.ur mo_t er cows in this section all seem to be pure
He was out first boy to lay his life on the s ar trom eaven'.
t e _re
t b romht
Piotrow, local campaign leader, from Mr.
We wish to express our sincere thanks
altar of his country. He· may not be the coun ry, ~para mg 1 Y w 1 e st0 Pes, white, and they herd sheep as in Biblical H . G. Phelps of Cazenovia, Vice-Chairman
to our friends and neighbors, who so
last. All fair minded Americans know th us sh owmg th a t we h ave separateel from days with a crook and a dog.
h
d th
h"t
t ·
h 11 d
of the County organization.
1
that this war must be vigorously proseer,~
e w e_s n~s s a .. go own to
Yesterday I had ~ little spare time so
"You have the banner town in my dis- kindly helped during our dear moth~r's
illness and for the beautiful flowers.
cut~d so that future generations must eternity representing hberty.
volun~eered_ m}'. services to he!p t_he Red trict. Accept my congratul~tions and
d
th
not make sacrifices of young men like
Th_e flag of )rteen Stars and _Stripes ~ross m cann~ tor refugees coming mto the l thanks and convey the same (o your Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Seymour
family.
th
Lloyd Evans. All honor to him, and to his remained e national emblem until May, city. Such sights and such tales as we committees "
·
mother and father who gave him. The seventeen hundred ninety-five. Vermont heard. It was terrible. One l_ittle chap
Ours is i~deed an enviable record. We Mrs. Harriett A. Banning.
loss is ours!
and Kentucky had recently entered the f th
h d
lked
1 t th
union and so a change must be made in the o . ree_ years a wa
25 m1 es o e have raised more than our subscription
Card of Thanks
tram with a lame father, mother and 5 upon every occasion when the Governflag. As a result of this, Congress passed
Jd
b
th
Th
f
·1
h
d
We
wish
to
express our heartfelt thanks
the following act in seventeen hundred y_ear O
ro er.
e ami Y a not a !Jlent has called. Almost seventy of our to all who helped us any way through the
Jones Family Reunion
ninety four, "Be it enacted, etc., That from smgle cent. Old ~en, _helpless old women, boys and rr.en are in service, and one has

IS
The 21st annual reunion ot the· Jone~
all homeless commg in. It makes ones already given his life. The pulse of the sickness and burial of our wife and daughter. Also for the beautiful flowers.
family was held at the home of Mr. and andafterthefirstdayofMay,onethousand heart bleed to see them.
seve_n hundred ninety-five, t_he flag of the
Fruit is very abundant he1e. We have Nation beats with the same strength, and
Guy L. Maxson,
Mrs. Matthew C. Jones, Madiwn, N. Y., U ted St t be fift
just as surely as we are paying up-so the
1
st
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Coe,
on Saturday, June 29. At an early hour
m
a ~
een npes, a ~emate home no comprehension of dates. They
.
h'l M
d red and white, and that the umon be are wonderful and such fine oranges "mall Kaiser is cashing in. More power to us!
Marion Coe.
guests began t o arnve w 1 e
r. an
fif
h" .
bl fi Id ..
•"
M J
II h rt
I
teen st ars, w item a ue e ·
but 'fine flavor. Bananas are about ten
rs. ones gave a a ~ Y we come.
In this fla the stars
w re I
.
Tables were spread on the pleasant lawn
.
g
e l cents apiece, and only about as large
Ice Cream Festival
· Redpath qtautauqua
th
and at I o'clock 38 guests were served a arranged m
r~ para_llel rows, of. five as one's finger. There are many kind s of
The 0. E. S. ladies will hold an ice cream
Chautauqua will be here in Hamilton
. dinner.
.
.
. was stars each. This remained the nation's
bountiful
A business
meeting
.
I· frui·ts and PJent Y O f nu t s th at are new t O festival on the Park House porch Tuesday in two weeks. The dates are from July
.
flag for twenty-three years. This flag · me
held and the following officers were elec.
d . . th
f . ht
h
evening July 9th Also cakes for sale
18th to the 24th inclusive. This is the
.
.
was m use unng e war o e1g een un· , Today
'
·
t ed for the ensumg
year: President,
. I saw some of "our Iads". come
- -· - - - fifth year we have had the Redpath ChauMary Nichols; Vice-President, Floyd dSTe? twelve, a~d h~re also the St:irs ~nd marching down the streets and it made one
D . th I t t
k th
11
ta q
. H ·it
Th"
th .
. b h Bl'
tnpes were v1ctonous. It was m e1gh- want to mix the Stars Spa'ngled Banner
unng e as wo wee s e co ege
u ua m arm on. · ts year e prorms
rong·,
cretary,
1za
et
1ss,
·
.
,
d
·
h"
ddress
gram
is
one
of
the
best
and
as
a
prolill'se
A. t t.
El
MSe I
D
M
d teen hundred fourteen that Francis Scott , with America in your enthu'siasm. Such gra uate m 1s commencement a

rs. van
ua1.
r. an
K
th f
S
S
d
h bee b Q • ,

th
Id h
of its success it is sufficienct to say that it
H 1s onan,
Mrs. Hugh Pugh of Deansboro invited I ey wrote
e . amous tar pangle ' sights convince one that the spirit of as . n u~y m,ormmg e wor
ow,
th
.
. h h
.
, Banner, our national anthem. As new • Andy Jackson still survives
campaigns should be conducted and how has e support of more than one hundred
.
.
j
·
t h uld be finan ed
guarantors.
th e famt1y to meet wit t em m 1919.
Guests were present from Gortland, states _wer~ constantly bemg admitted to . "Doc" Huntington and I accidentally j governmen s s o
c .
Pool 'II H 'it
D
bo
Cr t
theun1on,1twassoonseenthatthepresent met today so had lunch together He
-----AtameetingoftheguarantorsinVillage
0 'Vdl e,o 'akml onF, !leans d roM
, dim on, flag would not truly represent the Union. ' asked abo~t all the Hamiltoh peopie
Service Stallion
Hall Monday evening plans were made for
ne1 a, ns any a s an
a son.
.
.
·.
·
the sale of tickets. Mr. Floyd Currier is
.
d k , A committee
My horse • Teddy R · wi'll stand Thurs• t h e c ha1rman
·
. . was appomted to .revise the , Best wishes to every one·
of the Ticket Committee.
In th e Ia t e a ft ernoon ice cream an ca e .
was served after which the guest• de- I flag and In eighteen hundred eighteen an I
F A McIntyre
days at my barn No I Hamilton Street He has appo1"nted a large team of solici'tors
I
.
·
act was passed by Con ress and a roved ;
· ·
·
1 0th

'
Diamonds, Pearls , and all
par•ed thanking the host and hostess for 1

g
. PP
er days at my Lebanon farm.
who will canvass not only the village but




I by the president of the Umted States,
.
1
other Precious Stones.
, the enioyabl~ time and _hoping they might . which determined finally the form of our :
Orsmo Beebe,
the outlying districts as far as Oriskany
1
Th b t
d
ttl
all meet agam the commg year.
, t' al fl
Th'
"Se
Change of Time
I No.1.tf.
Lebanon, N. Y.
Falls to the north, including neighboring
e es mo ern se ngs
na ~on
ag.
is act was:
c. 1' 1 The New York, Ontario and Western
______
villages east and west, and Earlville on the
-,
Be 1t enacted, etc., That from and after
.
I
(urni Sh e d t O ord er.
i the fourth day of July next, the flag of the ~allway Summer Schedule becomes effec- 1 There is nothing selfish about the United south. This canvass will take place
Special designs drawn if
For Sale
; un ·ted St t
be th· t
h . t 1 t1veSunday, June 30th. Very Important States evenifshedidhave aneclip•eallto Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next
New and up-to-date
house containing
I
t npes,
.1
Itema
a este red anidr eehn"t
or
izonthae Changes.
No.3w1.
,! herselt'a few days ago
~

.
.
.
s
a
w
1
e,
tlal
______

week · We know th e peop1e are already
1
1
desired
center hall, ~rge hvm&: room, with fi:e union have twenty stars, white in a blue ,
planning to buy tickets, and it is requested
JOHN A. LANE
place. Intenor decorations and electnc field...
I
H. Langworthy, Pleasant Street. has that they have their money ready when the
46 Malden Lane
tixt~ to be selected by purchaser.
Sec. II. Be it further enarted, That on .
Saturday Night Dances
ready for planting some Breadstone turnip solicitors call.
Lot eighty-one by one hund red seventy" admission of every new state into the · John900 's Orchestra will' furnish 111Ueic plants which he will t1ell for the benefit of
------ ,
N'ew York
seven feet.
for the Odd _Fellows Danc:es each week at Red Cross. 50 cent• for 100, 30 cents for
The battle of the ~fame a p ~ to be
. , _ - - - - - - - - _ _ ,. 38tf.
Floyd Cunicr.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
. Smyrna. Ticlteta 75c.
46tf. · So- 1
, the battle of the Marine.

A pair of dark brown
t
Oxfords with h
match.

I

B. V. D. Underwear.

Soft Collars and a new

Sum11er Tie.

f

And don't forget we

of

also carry Suitcases. Bags
and Trunks.

Themas Stradling & Son

eek

BOSIIBSS! PROPa&IOIIL DIBEtlOBt

I

I

•i INSURANCE
•i

:•
:••
:•

THE
MOST

PROMPT
AND

RELIABLE

ii D. H.
i

I

••••••••••••••••••••••••••

-F. 0. CHURCH
The Bookman

BUY the Ba11 IdeaI
Fruit Jars in pints,
of us, the best made.
none
The best
too good, if your
fruit is t~ keep well.
If you don't expect
.it to keep why buy
the very cheapest
you can find, $1.05
Per doz. l·s our pr1·ce.

.I,__ -------~r
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Il
l

Ill

Il

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------

II
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f
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HAYRACKS
This is the season for hayracks. We make any
style, heavy or light, and the orders are coming in
fast. ORDER NOW. It does not pay to patch up
the old rack when you can get a good new one for
only a slight advance over the old price.
Car of Hard Chimney Brick and a Car of Shingles·
just arrived.

TIMBERS ON HAND
Large quantity of timbers, all sizes and lengths.

LADDERS
Lengths from 10 to 28 ft. selling at a low price.
Our business is largely devoted to the accomodation
of the farmer.

LYONS' MILLS

ONLY TREATMENT NEW WHEAT --PRICES,
THAT GAVE RELIEF Food Administration Corpora•
Suffered Three Years Before
Finding ••frult-a-tlYBs"
CBNTBAL We.uur, BoirroN, MAl!I,
"For' three years, I was troubled
with Constipation, accompanied by
Dizziness and Violent Headaches.
I took medicines and Ja:ii:atives, but
without permanent relief.
Last October, I heard of "F~it-ativea" or Fruit Liver Tablets, I
used one bo:ii: and the results were so
pronounced that I bought two dozen
boxes.
I continued using "Fruit-a-tives"
until the twenty four boxes were
finished, when my physlci,.l condition
was perfect".
J AS. J. ROYALL.
50c. a bo:ii:, 6 for $2.l!O, trial siae 25c.
At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES

_Emited. OGDENSBURG~ N. Y.

NEW YORK

SOL&VILLE

BOOSTS WH[AT PRICE
Raises Cereal Above
HUBBARDSVILLE New York ·Mothers, President
$2.20 Per Bushel
Prepare for Trouble!

-Lois Bailey returned to her kwor
Sunday, after enjoying a few days vaca-

tion.
Blanket Right Given U. 8. Grain Cor1When a girl becomes a woman, when
-Mrs. Partridge returned to her work
poration Ir, New York-Said to Be
at East Hamilton after enjoying a vaca- a woman becomes a mother, and when
Step to N1eet Higher Freight Ratea
a woman passes through the changes of Which Become Effective Tomorrow.
tion with her children.
-Miss Mary Kling spent the week end
with Lucille Sweet.
-Mrs. John Ellison is entertaining her
cousin, Mrs. Dickson and faughter, of
Utica.
-Mr. Mills and Miss Sawyer of Edmeston, Miss Chadwick of Morristown, were
pleasant callers ar C. E. Stapleton's
Sunday.
-The Singing Class which met with
Mrs. Ellison Wednesday was well attended.
-Florence Abbott recently visited at
C. E. Stapleton's.
-Mr. and Mrs. Howard Green and
children of Chadwick spent the week end
with her parents, . Mr. and Mrs. E. S.
Sweet.
-Roland Sweet, Henry Bailey, Lucile
Sweet and Mary Kling motored to Utica
Saturday.
-Norva Stapleton spent a few days last
week at Edmeston.
-Anson Brooks of Poolville and Mrs.
Dimmick of Earlville visited their sister,
~ith, Friday, at A. J. Patte~n's. .
-Died, June 28, 1918, Mrs. Ehza A.
Weeks, wife of A. J. Patterson. She leaves
to mourn her Joss bristle her husband __
to mourn her loss beside her husband one
daughter, Mrs. Frank Scott, one sister,
Mrs. Emma Wentworth of Clinton, also
one granddayghter, Pauline Scott. Much
sympathy is extended to the bereaved
family.

_,)'Jn·

The 524 Ulll'Dal encampment of the
' G. A. R. of the 1tate of New York
1ril1 be held tn Ithaca th11 week. OoTenaor Whitman wtll apeu. A • ~ 1
rate of two c:enta a mlle la granted to
"Nterane and tho1e wbo wtlth to ·al·
tad.
CrotJ:i Falla, which led the oommaattles without banu tn the New
York dl11trtct during tbe aecond Lib
erty loan drive, haa been awarded ,
sllnr cup by the Manhattan club. ltl
quota wa11
,130 and It eu1>scrlbed

,1

·~48,900.

· ·· ~ ,,~... , I,

s: ·- ·~t-..

,, The couunty commt.esloner of eteetions announced that 19,793 Rocheater
women registered on May 26. Tbey
are diT1de4 among the partlea as lol•
Iowa: Republlcana, 13,636; Demoorat1,
2,812; Prohibitionists, 2,lH: Social•
lat,· 7611; blank, 362.
The caterpillars of the wbite~marl·ecl tueaock moth are numerous tn tbe
orchard• of Geneaee county and orcllU'dietB fear that the bumper apple
crop Indicated by the extnordlnary
~taae blot1BOD1J1 and bud• will be
aertouaty_ UID&g. b ~- p~ta.

B1milt11 ml Clinton
Ant, Bus
C-ectfa*g with TroDey at ClintOR for
Utka.
Week-Day Schedule

Lave North
Hamiltoo
Bouckville

Madison

Oriakal'ly Falls

Deanaboro
Ar. Clintcn
Lave South

Clintoo

A.M.
7 :oo
7 :tG
7 :25
7:.J5
8 :05
8:25
A..M.
8 :30
8:50
9:10

P.M.
I :30
I :50
I :55
2:15
2 :35
2:55
P.M.
3 :oo
3:20
3:40
4:00
4:05
.PS

Deansboro
Oriskany Falls
Madison
9 :30
Bouckville
9:35
Ar. Hamiltcn
9:55
Sunday Schedule
Lave North
A.M.
P•.M.
Hamilton
8:0G
I :30
BouckvilJe
8 :20
I :50
Madisoo
8:25
I :55
Oriskany Falls
8=45
2:15
Deanlboro
9:05
2:35
Clinton
9:25
2:55
Lave South
A.M.
P.M.
Clintoo
9:30
3:00
Deanllxa'o
9 :50
3 ::zo
Oriakany Palla
10:10
3:40
Madiaoa
10:JO
4:00

, Boucbile
Ar. fferailke

10:u
10-

4:05

4:25

middle life, are the three periods of
life w'hen health and strength are most'
needed to withstand the pain and distress often caused by severe organic
disturbances. Many thousands in New
Yoric would testily just as do the fol-

lowing:
BUFFALO, N. Y :-"During expectancy

I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
and found nothing
to help me as it did.
It kept me well all
of the time. I would
advise all prospec.
tive mothers to use
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptjon."-

Mas. M. Mm:a, 295
Grey Street.

N.

v.l"Some years ago I
suffering from nervous headaches,
blood disorders and with severe pains
in my back. I was constipated most of
die time and bilious. Some one handed
me a li~le book calling attention to Dr.
Pierce's Family Remedies. I bought a
bottle of the Prescription. After I had
used half t!he bottle 1 noticed marked
improvement in my appetite and my
food digested better. I grew better and
monger in every way and am glad to
tell other sufferers of it."-Mas.
SAMUEL J. BuRT, 37 River Street.

OmnNa,

•as

Blanket' authority to Increase the
price of wheat at primary and other
ma1 kets, with the appro.val of Fed•~al Pood Administrator Hoo·ver,
a,bove the $2.20 a bushe l minimum price guaranteed by presidential proclamation las t Feb. 21, is given
the food administration grain corpor11.Uon In New York by an executive
order of the president. The ord-zr,
IP.sued under authority o.f the food
central law, was made public 1n
Wa shington by Mr. Hoover.
To carry out the purposes of the
order the corporation Is authorized to
lnci:,ease Its capital stook from $50,00-0,000 to $160,000,000 In shares of a
par value of $100 each. All the stock
will be owned by the government and
wm be purchased by the food administration from time to time aa tbe
necessity arises to maintain the present $2.20 price and any lncreaa88 authorized.
While no explanation of the order
was given either at the food administration or tbe White House, two considerations were believed to have Influenced the president's decision to
permit the grain
to pay
higher prices for wheat. The flrst
was the increased freight rates, which
became effective on Tuesday.
Growers must bear this increase and
without an advance In the price of
wh-eat their profits would be materially reduced.
The second was believed to be the
altuatlon resulting from the deadlock
In congi:eas over the senate's amend'm-ent to the annual agricultural appropriation bill Increasing the minimun guaranteed prl.ce for wheat to
$2.50 a bushel. The house has refused to accept the amendment and
the senate Is to vote 00 It again thla
'• k
wee ·

corporation

Cau•• of Earthquakea. ,
One cause of earthquakes le the
shrinkage of the earth's crust from
cooUng. This process exerts a powerful Sidewise pressure OD certain rock
strata, and at Irregular lnte"ala one
atratum slips a Uttle over the other.
Another cause ts the sudden conver•
slon of water tnto ateam tn or near volcanlc districts. An explosion of great·
er .~1'. less vlolenc~ i~ th~.!. 12,ro~uced,
~ The totat voUns at~iigth ot Bnf~
and the consequent tremor ts trans,
·m1tted for many miles through the falo at the next election will be close
:o 150,000, flsurea jWlt given out by
rocks.
the bureau ot eJ.ectlona showing that
-48,359 women of the city Indicated
.;.t;:_'.!l,.,... True Mahogany. .,..
their party chot~ at tbe speCllal enTrue mahogany is produced by only
rollment de.y held on :May 25. The
two species of trees which are closely
relat ~d-Swlentenh1 mahognl Jacq and ct>mblned voting strength at the 1)1'lmSwlententa machophylla King, natives a rl es next fall wlll be 129,793, coaof tropical America. There are vari- !:ideral>ly leH a11 tbe re1dstratlon for
ous cabinet woods passed off tor real e!l election Is always much greater
mahogany. A bulletin recently pub- t haw enrollment for a ~rlmary.
lished by the department of agriculture
named "67 species of 41 genera, and
scattered through 18 famtuea of the
vegetable kingdom."
Latin Countries.
Latin ts the language of ancient
Rome, the len~nge originally spoken
In Latium, and afterward extended
over all the Integral parts of tbe Roman empire In Europe. The countries
of South America are Inhabited by
races ethnically and linguistically related to the ancient Romans or Ital•
lane; hence they are called Latin coun•
tries.

P ..M.
7:00
7:20
7:25
7:.J5
8:05
8:25

Differing Vlewa on Marriage.
When a marriage Is announced, the
bride's woman friend says: "I wonder
why they waited so long. She was get·
ting old and crabbed."
And the
groom's man friends says: "What did
the blamed fool marry so early for1
He'll Jose the best years of his llfe."Kansas City Star.

6:oo
6:20
6:25
6=45
7:o5
7:25

of Toledo, County and State aforl!llald,
and that llald ftrm wtll pay the aum of
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
and every cue of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by the UN of HALL'S CATARRH
MEDICINE.
FRANK J . CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and aubtlcrlbed tn
my preaence, thl• 8th day of December,

P.M.
8:30
8:50
9:ro
9:30
of Ohio, City of Toledo,
9:35 State
Lucu County, u.
9 :55
P'ra.nk J. Cheney make• oath that be
11 aeruor partner of the ftnn of F . J.
P.M. Cheney & Co., dolnc bualn•• tn tbs Ctty

P.M. A. 0 . 1888.

A.

w.

OLJDAl!IONI

(Seal)
Notary Publ c.
7:30
Hall'• Catarrh Medicine la taken In7:50 ternally
1&114 acta through the Blood on
8:10 the llucoua SUrtacea of the 8:,atem. Bend
8:30 for t..Umontalll, fNe.
CHBNET A CO., Toledo, ·O.
8:35 9oldr..,.J.all
dnal.ta, 'lie.
8:g
Bair• J'amll~ POia for ~

WANTS MEN BETW,EEN 30.45 f

HOW THIS
NERVOUS' WOMAN
GOT WELL

tion Announces Schedule.

It la Stated That a Minimum Price of
$2 Per Bu. for No. 1 Wheat Aboard
Cara In lntermountal" Territory
Will Be Made Effective - Other
ltema.

New wheat prices, neces&ita.ted by
advanced tre!.ght rates, were announ.c ed 1n New York by Ute food administration grain corporation. 1t
was stated that a minunum price o%
S2 per bushel for No. 1 wheat, a.board
cars tn the 111.termountaln territory
wlll be made effective. Details or thie
plan wldl be ma.de p11blfiC 800n.
The corporation'a ~nnouncem.en,
aatd that No. 1 wheat ar the northern
Jprlng hard winter, red wmter, durl'ID and red white era.de& will 'be sold
1n the various markets at the followln1 basic prklea.
New York, $2.391,;; PhUadelphia,
$2.38. The price basds for No. 2
wheat will be three cents below No. 1
and for No. 3, four cents below No. ll.
Gradee below No. 3 will be dealt lo.
DD sample.
Special classes of whee.t, the commission said, will be ,s old on the fOllowi.ng &ehedule: Dark hard winter,
two cents, above hard winter; dant
northern spring, two cents above
northern sprln.g; amber durum, tWI)
cents •bove dll!fum; yellow hard winter, two ce.nts under hard winter;
red s,prl:Dg, five cents under northern
e.p ring; red Walla Walla, seven. cents
under red winter; red durum, seven
cents under durum; soft whbte, two
cents under hard whLte; white clu11>,
four . cents under bard white.

Should

Wuhillgton, D. C., and Corponl R.a7
L. Dannlng of Cresco, la., atatfonecl
at B1'cks' aviation fteld here, wen
ldned when the air plane In whtcb
they were ylngfl tell In flam•.

I

Worth While
Investment

$64,000,000 MELTED DOWN

7 LECTURERS

'rreasury to issue Reserve Notes for
Silver Coins.

Sixty-four milll eJ:n sHve r dollars
have been melted into bullion at the
U. S. mint and most of it exported
to India since the destruction of the
dollars began two months ago, the
treasury department reported. During
this period 68,000,000 silver certificates have been withdrawn from circulation and destroyed as the dollars
on which they were secured were
melted down.
The treasury now holds 426,000,000
silver dolla·rs and $390,000,000 In silver
certificates
are
outstanding
against them. Federal reserve bank
notes of · $1 · and $2 denomLnations are
being printed and will be issued within a few weeks to replace the silver
certificates withdrawn.

INCLUDING
U. S. Senator
WM. S. KENYON
2. Sergt. Norman Knight

1.

THRILLING WAR SPEAKER

GEO. L. Mcnu*tT,
D. P. M.

3.
I

DINNER ptAIL MAN
FOOD SPECIALIST

4.

DR. NG POON CHEW
CHINESE STATESMAN
FORME~ CONSUL
Editor Only ChlnHe Paper In
America
CHINESE MARK TWAIN

Maple Sugar'a Record.
Sugar shortage stimulated

maple
sugar production this year In tbe
United States to a record, , with a
total of 52,612,500 pounds of sugar ., nd
syrup equivalent, the department or
agriculture shows. This represented
sn Increase of more than seven mulion pounds over last year's production. Thie yea,:-·e crop at · May 111
prices was valued at about $12,000,·
000. Trees tapped numbered 19,298,200. Of the 13 states producing r,9
per cent of the mapJe sugar crop, New
York led with 17,772,000 pounds. V'3rmont waa ~cood with 11,649,SOl•
pounds. !,.'i:ir';p .. .- ....

~---

,b

,

,

. ,

,,

Telegrapher• to Strike Ju.ly 8.

S. J . Konenkamp, president ot ,t he
Commercial Telegraphers' union ot
America, announeed• in Chicago that
he bad lss·ued a call tor a strike of
members of the union employed by
the Western Union Telegraph company, effective at 7 a. m ., eastern
time, on Monday, July 8 . The an-n ouncement declared. that the grievances to be adjusted are the reinstatement ot union men who are a,Jeged to have been locked out by the
company, and to en.force the right of
-the men to organize. ·
War Keep• England Sober.

War time regulation of the Uqu<>r
traffic in England has brought a.bout
a decrease of about eighty-two pP.r
cent in dirunkenn•s, say offlcl11l
reports. "I believe we have now
reached low water mark," Sir Edward
by Herself. Her Sin- Henry, commissioner of the Metropolltan police, states In a letter to
cerity
ConLord d'Abernon, chairman of the
vince Others.
liquor control board, "and that no
meas,ure, not even of total prohibition,
Christopher, lll.-"For four yeara I would be likely to bring .about any
suffered from irregularities, weakneut further appreciable reduction In the
lffl""'effl'!'l"l"l"l''l"l"l"l'""""~~ nervouaneu,
a n a number of charges of drunkenness."
was in a rµn down
condition. Two of
our beat doctors
Snowfall In Germany.
failed to do me any
Snow has fallen to a depth or from
good. I heard so one to three Inches In several parts
much about what
LydiaE.Pinkham's 9f the German empire, according to a
Vegetable Com- ,:lispatch from Amsterdam to the Lonpound had done for 11.on Exchange Telegraph company.
others, I tried it Havoc has been caused to the fruit
and waa cured. I trees by frost. The cold wave, the
am no longer ner- message a.dds, Is consld'lre.l tc be an
vous, in
am excellent
regular,
__________. and
economic catastrophe, Berlin and
health. I believe the Compound will Hamburg have experienced four days
cure any female trouble. "-,.Mrs. ALICE of uninterrupted rain.
HELLER, Christopher, Ill. '
Nervousneu is often a symptom of
Waivea Control of Stockyard•.
weaknesa or aome functional derangeNo action has been taken by the
ment, which may be overco_me by this
famoua root and herb remedy, Lydia railroad administration at WashingE. Pinkham'• Vegetable Compound, as ton, D. C., looking to the takl'llg ol.
thounnda 'of women have found by control over the stockyards of the
experience.
If com~Hcationl mat, write Lydia E. oountry, and even if ther6 were a de•
Pinkham Medlci_!l~~-1 Lynn, Mau., for \Ire at thla time to bring them under
~in nguQ to your ailment. l,deral management the KdmlnlatraThe
of ltl laDa uperieDce la 'Jon believes It bu not the authorai,-.1111inoa.
.tJ 'UMler tile ez!;t1a1 atatu

Told

General Wood 8aya Am1r1can1 of That
Age Should Be Carryln·g Gun.
"Every man In the U. S. ,betw8811
ages of a'o and 46 1hould be carrying
a gun today. The country should
draft them."
/
This was the opening declaraUon
made by Major General Leonard Wood
In an interview here.
"Look around you In your cities, In
your villages and country towns and
on the farms, and see bow many
strong, able men there are of the ages
I mentioned, flt and ready, yes, eager
to enter tbe ba-ttle,'' he sald. "Men of
45 today-that ls, most of tbem-ilre
juet as capable of fighting, and In
some cases more so, than many young
men of 21.
"The army needs otllcers, and men
from 30 to 45 who are more mature-more efficient, I should say, than
many of the younger men.
"You heard M. Stephanie uauzanne, editor of Le Matin, member or
the French commission to the United
States and a lieutenant In the French
army for two years, say that France
has lost one mlllton men tu killed
and wounded during the four years
of the war, and that If an the men
In France are killed off the women
are ready to go lltefore they wtll submit to the German yoke. Well, that II!.
the spirit that must prevail tn this
country.
"America wtll have to send the
greatest army ever dreamed ot before
vlctol'Y wlll be ours lor, of courae, we
wm finally win, but the task before
us Is a mlg_P.tl.. bJg_ one."

E. H. BAYNES

5.

NATIONAL BIRD AND
ANIMAL .AUTHORITY

Lecture llluetrated With 8lldH
and Movl11

6. DR. WM. A. COLLEDGE
ptERSONALITV LECTURER

. 7.

Roscoe Gilmore Stott
AUTHOR

2 Famous Entertainers
1. KATHARINE RIDGEWAY
"THERE 18 ONL~ ONE"

FRANK DUCROT

2.

(DO CROW)
Magician and Entertainer

3Noted Musical companies
1. Boston Opera Singers
COMPANY

2.

DE

LUXE

Williams-·MacNeil Co.
SCOTCH SINGE.RS

3. Canadian Bugle Corps

1 Great American Orama
"THE MELTING POT"
WITH
GRACE

Two Flyer1 DI• In Fall.
Fort Warth, Tex;, Ju~ 2.-Llea•
tmut wm De c. Ravenan, Jr., or

MILL8 AND COMptANV

1 Famous Comic Opera
"THE MIKADO"
8P'LENDID 8OLOl8T8, CHORUS
AND ORCHa:ITRA

NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Pursuant to an order of Joaeph D. Senn, Sur
rogate of the County of Madison,
Notice ii hereby riven, acC<>·ding to law to all
persona having claims against the estate of'Jamee
McLaughlin, late of the town of Madiaon in uld
county, deceased, to pre1ent the aame. Witb the
vouchers thereof, to the undeni~ the ad·
miniatraton of the estate of the aa1d deceued at
the office of Weller ano Smith, their attornef8'. at
Waterville, N . Y., on or befor1: the 28th day ol
September, 1918.
Dated thi• 18th day of'March, A. 0., 19111.
Ellen K. McLau1hlin.
Martin Cleary,
Admini1traton
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Punuant to an order of Joeeph D. Senn, Surre,.
gate or the Couaty of Madison,
Notice ia Hereby Given, accordin11 to law to all
penona having claim• al(ainat the eetate ;., Andrew S. Clark, late of the town of Hamtlton, in
aaid county, deceaaed, tq preeent the aame with
the vouchers thereof, to the undersigned Adiiuniatrator of the eetate of the aaid deceaaed, at hit
office at Hamilton, in aaid county, on or before
the 231'8 day of August, 1918.
. Dated this r6th day of February, A. 0., 191&.
John J. Taylor,
Sole AdministratOC'.
Carlos J. Coleman.
Attorney for Administrator,
Hamilton, New York.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Pursuant to an order of Joseph D. Senn Sur·
rogate of the County of Madison,
'
Notice is Hereby Given, according to law to all
persons having claims a11ainst the esta~ ol
Charles Edward Smith, late of the town of Hamil·
ton, in said county, deceased, to pre8t'nt tbeaame,
with the vouchers thereof, to the undersigned the
Executor of the estate of the said deceaaed, at the
National Hami!ton Bdnk at Hamilton, in aaid
county, on ~r before the 9th day of August. 1918
Dated this 29th day of January, A. D., 1918.
Ador. ~. Smith,
Sole Ellecutor.
Carlos J. Coleman, ·
Attorney for Executor.
Hamilton. New York,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
P1m1uant to an order of Joaeph D. Senn, Surrogate of the County or Madison,
Notice is Hereby Given, according to law, to all
persons having claims against the eatate of
Richard F . Bostick, late or the town of Hamilton
i,n. said county, deceased, to present the aame,
with the vouchers thereof, to the undersigned. th_e
Administrator of the estate or the aaid dec:eaeed
at his office in the village of Hamilton, in said
on or before the 23rd day of September
I county,
1918.
Dated this r4th day of March, A. D., 1918.
John J. Taylor,
Sole Adminiatrator.

1

NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Pursuant lo an order of Joseph D. Senn, Su rrogare or the County of Madieon,
.
Notice is ~ereby_Given, _a«ordlng to law, .to all
persons having claims agamst the estare of Kirk
W_. Livermore, late of the town of Madieon, in
said county, deceased, to present the same, with
the vouchers thereof, to the undersigned, the
Administratrix of the estate of the said deceased,
at the office of Albert Smith Sheldon, her attorney
at Hamilton. in said county, o'n or before the nod
day of December 1918.
Dated this 11th day or June, A. 0., 1918.
Elizabeth A. Livermore,
Sole Administratrix.
Albert Smith Sheldon,
,
At:f~::,~ho~"."JV,inietratrix.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Punuant to an order of Joaeph 0. Senn, Surrogate of the County of Madison,
Notice is Hereby Given, according to law, to,
all peroona having claim• againat the eetate of
Helen S. Tompkins, lab ol the town of Hamilton,
in laid county, decear.ed, to present the aame,
with the vouchers thereof, to the undenillled, theExecutor or the eatate of the uid ~ . at the
National Hamilton Bank at Hamilton in aaid
county, on or before the 8th day of December,
1918.
Datr.d this 27th day of May, A. o.,. 1911.
Adon N. :,mith,
Sole E11ecutor.
Carlos J. Coleman,
Attorney for E11ecutor,
Hamilton. New York.
STATE OF NEW YORK-SUPREME COURT..
COUNTY OF MADISON,
Edward T. Moran, Plaintiff,
Againa~
DeWitt J. Medbury, Defendant,
To the above named Defendant:
You are hereby Summoned to anawer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your·
answer on the plaintiff's attorney within twenty
days after the service or this Summons, ezclusive
of the day of service; and, in case of your failure
to appear or ans'wer, judgment will be taken.
against you by default for the relief demanded in,
the complaint.
Trial to be held in the County of Madieon.
Dated this 3rd day or May, 19r8.
Carloe J. Coleman,
Plaintiff's Atlonley .
Office and P. 0 . Addreta,
Hamilton, N. Y .
To
DEWITT J. MEDBURY, DEFENDANT :
The foregoing Summons is served upon you by
blication pursuant to an Order of the Hon.
oeeph D. Senn, Madison County Judl(e, dated
ay _13, 1918, and filed with the Complaint in
the Office or the Clerk or Madieon County, at
Wampsville, N. Y.
Carlos J. Coleman,
Plaintift"s Attomey,
Office and Poet Office Addr-.
52w6
Hamilton, N.IY.

'ii

I

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW
YORK :
To Patrick McTigue, '.!)iomas McTigue, Kate
McTigue, and Delia McT111ue, all of Ballyhenry,
Town ofShrule, County Mayo, Ireland; James.
McTigue, Newbrook,
Hollymount, County
Mayo, Ireland; Annie McTiirue. Hamilton, N. Y.;
heirs
at
law
and
next
or
kin of Patrick Tigue
1 (McTigue), latearesidentofthetown
ofHamiltoo
in the County of Madiaon and State or New York,
deceased.
SEND GREETING:
Whereas, Nellie McDonald, residin11 at Hamilton, N. Y ., the Executrix named in a certain
instrument in writing, p~rting to be the Last
Will and Testament or said Patrick Ti11Ue (McTigue), deceased, dated Afril 29, 1918, which
relates to real and persona property has lately
made a petition to the Surrogate's Court of the
County or Madison, to have said inatrument
proved and rN:Orded as a will of real and personal
estate; and letters testamentary thereon issued to
the petitioner. You, and each of you, are hereby
cited to show cause, if an)I' you have, before the
Surrogate's ~urt or the County or Madieon, at
the Chambers of the Surrogate in the Village of
Hamilton, in said County. on the 30th day of
July, 19r8, at ten o'cloclc in the forenoon of that
day, why a decree of this Court should not be
made admitting Raid Will to probate and record
and granting letters thereon according to the
prayer of the J)l'lition.
In Testimony Whereof, we have
caused the seal of said Surrogate's Court to be hereunto
affixed,
Witneaa, Joseph 0. Senn, Esq .•
Surrogate of said County of
(L. S.]
Madieon, at his office in Wampsville, in said County the 17th day
of Junt', in the year of our Lord
one thouund nine hundred and

By a Specialist

I

All for $2.00

I

AND .. IVE 8E.RIE8 Lll:CTURIH

(PLUS WAJl TAX)

Redpath
Chautauqua
Hamilton, N. Ye
JULY 18-24

I

ei1hteen.

B. F. Tompltine

Oerk of the Surropte11 Court

William L. Btulle,

Ati«uy r« PetitioDlr,
Blailta, N. T.

No. ari.

young people
everyone.

A country worth Fighting for is
a country worth saving for-which
will you do?
Cut · down the waste and save
part of your income-you may need
money wtien you cannot work for

)

~
)
)

s

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it

}

! THE NATIONAL HAMILTON BANK
!

3 1-2 Per Cent

i)

.ifl the
INTEREST DEPARTMENT

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.,.,__.,.._"'""...,."""""'-"'""-"""'-."'"""'"""'"'~"""'.,...-"' I,

HUBBARDSVILLE

L. D. Thayer Wednesday P. M., and in
the evening ice cream will be served on the
lawn at the home of Mrs. Wayne Thayer.
.
.
.
-M~. Rosa~ie Brownell is spending
some t1?1e wi~h her daughter, Mrs.
Morgan m Madison.
-~rs. F. I. Rhoades has recently entertamed her aunt, Mrs. Waldrof and Mrs.
C. F. Rhoades.
------

.
f M A h
-The many fnends o
r.
rt ur
Throop, will be pleased to learn of ' his
marriage to Miss Ruth Whiter of Boonville.
which took place Saturday, June 29th at
1:.30 o'clock at the home of the bride.
The home was very prettily decorated with
roses, peonies and evergreen. Mr. Lewis
Rhoades of this place ·a nd Miss Florence
Wheeler of Boston were the attending
couple. After a bountiful repast amid
showers of hearty good wishes the couple
-Red Cross workers will meet Thursleft for a brief stay in Albany. They will
day ,afternooon with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
return to Racket Lake where Mr. Throop
has been employed for some time. The Fletcher. A social will be held in the
evening. _T he proceeds to go toward the
best wishes of his many friends go to
Red Cross fund.
Mr. and Mrs. Throop. Thdse present
from this place were Mr. Throop's parents,
,Miss Ada Marvin visited out of town
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Throop, his brother, last week.
Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. F. I. Rhoades,
-Clyde Reynolds, U. S. N., who is
and Lewis Rhoades, Mr. and Mrs. station~ at Cambridge, Mass., was home
Charles Alderman.
Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs.
Rae Reynolds, Mrs. N. U. Reynolds and
-On Fri"d ay 1ast occi.rred the death of I' M
A
N'I
· h h'

Mrs. A. J. Patterson at her home about i rs. nna I es went wit im to ttca
two miles from this place. Mrs. Patter- Sunday afternoon.
eon has been ill for the past year, however
-Mrs. Harold Perry of Syracuse is
recently her health seemed some what visiting friends and relatives in town.
improved, until Thursday noon at the
-Miss Ruth Davenport, of Syracuse,
dinner hourshewen~into a state of un~on- 1 has come to spend the summer with her
sc:ousness from which she never ralhed. father, Irving Davenport.
Mrs. Patterson was 'bom in' 1860 and has
spent her life in this community where she
-Mr. a nd M~. D. B. Utter, ~r. and
has endeared herself to those who had the ~rs. Zar Benedict, Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
pleasure of her acquaintance. She leaves Rice, a nd Mr. and Mrs. Jud5?n Perry atbeside her husband, one daughter, Mrs. j tended the funeral of Memtt Lyon of
Frank Scott, and one granddaughter, Bonney Sunday.
beside many relatives and friend~ The
-A very pretty wedding occurred at
funeral was held at 2 o'clock Monday, Rev. the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Brown
Mr. Lewis of East Hamilton M. E. Church last Wednesday when their daughter
officiating and interment in our cemetery Ruth, was united in marriage to Ward
here.
·
Evans by Rev. Mr. Beadle of Morrisville.
.
.
· . Miss Marie Stoddard played the wedding
-The Thayer reunion will be held at
h d
bea "ful
th h
f L . D Thayer Sunday next. mare an many
uti
presents were
e ome O • •
received. After a bountiful repast the
-The W. F. M. S. will meet with Mrs., couple left for Utica. They are popular

I

GEORGETOWN

......................................,..,...., ............ .

f

Watch Us Gr~~

and have the beat wishes of

-Mr. and Mn. A. A. Brown and family
were in Earlville having dental work done
Friday.
-Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Utter and family
with friends from Whitney's Point spent
Sunday at Hatch's Lake.
-Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Stoddard and
family motored to Pitcher Sunday.
-Rev. Mr. Jones of Cincinatus will
supply the Baptist pulpit Sunday.
-Mrs. Adelia Andrus returned to Syracuse Friday.
-Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Niles and daughter Leone of Erieville called on relatives
in town Friday night.
-The hall was well filled Friday night
when ErieviUe talent gave a play for the
benefit of the Red Cross. ·
,,

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PRANK DUCROT, WIZARD.

Here come• a N~ York magician
tnd wonder worker ; also one of the
llnest entertainers tor children that
the Chautauqua baa yet brought to
your town. He does all kinds of clever
trlcka, doee fancy art work tlaat 11 ,

PERFECTION MILKER
The Labor Problem Solved
One nn with a Perledlon Milker can

do the work of three men at ~
time. In case of emergency your wife
or your little boy or girl can do IL

The Perfection milks as the calf
doe&-suction, downward squeeze,
release. The Perfection is simtlle.
It does not easily get ~ t of order.
No harness to bother with. The Perfection teat cup fits all sizes of teats.
The pail is made of "Wear-Ever"
aluminum, easy to clean and nonrusting.

G. G. ' Burlingame of Cazenovia,
N. Y., writes:
"Your Milkirig Machines on my farm
are giving the utmost satisfaction.
They are very simple and easy to run
and two men to do the milking in the
same time that it used to take five.
Our milk sheets show that we get fully
as much milk by using the machines, as
we did when we milked by hand.
Let the Perfection Milker relieve
you of the labor problem and you will
find that the world will eeem much
brighter.

1

~~~~~~~~ ~t~cusethi,

-

John Burton is visiting his grandmother in Erieville for a few days.
-Mr. and Mrs. Harold Shapley and two
children, Anna Hooper and Professor
Rex spent Sunday in Bainbridge.
marvelous and makes beautl:tttl
-Rev. Steven Conliff and family of t'ures out of old rags, gloves or even
Gilbertsville, Mrs. Lovina Price of Leba- old shoes. He has been a great sucnon, Mrs. E. R. Whaley and daughter, cesa In this country and also In EuMildred, of Auburn, and Henry Palmer ro~. He makes the Impossible thlor1
and family of Otselic were callers at the
home of John Hyland the past week.
-Dan Baldwin, who is working in East
Syracuse, was home over Sunday .
-Mrs. Frank Hubbard is entertaining
her sister, Mrs. W. H. Ford from Cleveland,
Ohio.
-The wedding of Harrison Shapley and
Miss Hazel B. Lyon of Sherburne occurred
at noon Thursday at the home of the
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Lyon near Sherburne by Rev. Paul
Monk of Earlville.
-Rev. R. Donald Williamson was ordained into the ministry of the Baptist
Church in Otsego and Wellsbridge, two
charges he has been supplying for sometime.
Several of his friends and relatives attend~ the services.
-Clifford Billings has enlisted in the
aviation section, machine gun branch of
the U. S. Army and will report for duties
soon.
-L. B. Lewis, D. L. and W. agent, is
spending his vacation with friends in
Greene.
1'.-The King's Daughters met with Mrs.
L. W. Collier last Monday evening.
-Mr. and Mrs. F . C. Avery spent a
few days in Syracuse and Canastota
visiting relatives.

RANDALLSVILLE
~ ; s ~ i i i ~' of'tt;;itton ,visu:;.Ji;;
sister Mrs. Attie Fleming one day last look like the easiest kind of play. Evweek
l
·
ery one ls going to hnve a mighty ln, -Rev. I. M. Stanton preached at the teresting afternoon trying to figure out
Church Sunday, and at the close of the II of the things this mnn does. He
sermon Mr. Stanton and Miss Iva Miller :omes the last af ternoou v l'. lhc n.ectrendered a very pleasing duet.
path Chautauqua.
-Mrs. Mary Bills who has been quite
ill is gaining slowly.
VICE PRESIDENT MARSHALL
-On Friday evening Mr. Sears of
SAYS:
Hamilton will show some 'stereopticon
views at the church, after which the ladies
of the church will serve ice cream.
"I have great confidence that a large
-Mr. M. Lamb has begun picking peas, majority ot people want to do right,
and has a number of Italian pickers from and In their rela tions to th,e government they wlll do right whenever put
Utica.
-John Bierce, Jr., Ii.as been confined ,n possession of the tacts.
to tne house with the measles the past
"There Is no place wbere more good
week.
can be done to th e 1overnment and to
-Mrs. S. W. Peet visited friends in the cause than r;>on the Chautauqua
Sidney over the week end.
platform. The people who need In-Mrs. D. W. Fuller of Eaton and Mrs. formation will be tht-re, and, more and
Simmons of Syracuse called on Miss more as th e years ,:o hy, persons who
Lillian Holmes the last of the week.
cao get it arc a v.1:il1• g themHelves of
-Mr. C. D. Bierce is still on his job that avenue."
-If you want to know how to use
New Officer Plan Propoeed.
matches ask U. G. Carpenter.
To meet future needs tor omcere
-Charl~s Koch with a force of men is
doing the haying on the Carpenter farm. the war department at Wuhlngton,
D. C., 111 considering a proposal that
-Mr. T. Burt is spending a few days meo from civil lite who are above
at his home here.
draft age and have special qualltlcatlons be . admitted to the next and
succeeding training camps.

Write for your free copy ofiour
new illustrated catalog. You will find
in it much valuable information.J.111

ir

W. D. BETTS
New York

Hamilton
The farmersot· Yates county are
begin~ to harveet their bay,
which, Jt is claimed, ls earlier
than aoy previous barve1t, due to
the exceptlooally favorable weather
of the past month. The farmers •aT
the hay crop will be larger In that
county tbao In yeara, with the exception of lut year, when they harveste4
the greatest yield they could recall.
Other crops are corre&pondlq}J'
promising.
Organizatloo of the New York State
Federation ot Arrtculture waa completed at Albany. i'rank Ill. Bradley
of Barker, Niagara count:,, was elected president. Samuel Fraser of Geneaeo Is flrat vtce preeldant and Seth
J . T. Bush of Morton ls the .acretary. It was resolved that If the old
political partlee failed to nominate
"suitable candidates" an lndepeodeot
Ucket would be placed In tbs lleld b7
the fede1atlon next fall.
The Byron Telephone company hu
tiled a new schedule of rates, whtch
go into effect on J·uly 1 In Byron,
North Bergen, North Byron, South
Byron and West Bergen ID Geoee,ee
county. Subscribers' ratea wUl be Increased $3 per annum and the char1e
for addltlonal dlrectol'J U1tm.sa wm
be I.DcreueC from '1 to P per unua.
The total number or young mea
who reglstered tn Gennee eount7
wu HO, coulderahle 1hort of the
government's expectation of 800.
lltfel'J town In the county wu repre11nte4 and 233 of thoae who Nlf•tlred appeared uersonally before the
.loard.

I
Governor Whftman Jiaa· nof c ~
his attitude In opposing a r.,ferendum
on prohibition In New York state. Denlal waa made by the governor'•
friends
that he had tnfonn. .
Monroe county leaders that he wouN
consent to favor a retereD.dllm.
! Some wheat shipped by William AT•
rault from Corfu In rood condl:tion ,,...
f~d on amval In Rochester to be
saturated 1rlth carboll.c acid. An IDveeUgatlon I.a being made, as It 11 be•
ltevecl the wheat was doped Oil tu
WIT by someone who wanted to destroy It.
Eaten A. Fletcher of Rochester hU
been appointed director of the Ne,r
York Industrial zone, I.Deluding Buf/ talo, Batavia, Syracuse, Elmira, BIDS•
. hamton, Albany and other cities. P.
j Harper Sibley orlglnaUy wu appol.Dtdirector by the war Industrial bo&r«.
but la In France.
1
i
The board of trustees of Ule Pree•
byterian church or Dundee have Ce.
, clded to take the ,1,000 left to tM
I church by the late Lucy Reader ua .
. Invest It in war aaVing atampe. The
; tru1tees hold that the church 1hoUlC
practice iD helping the country u
j' well u
practice patrlj)ti81D.
,
The town1hlp of :E'm~r, bl w
I are located the vil!agea or Raneomville and YoUllgatown, went "drT" la
the local option election IMt wNII:.
AD unexpecW leature of the eleottoa
wu the fact that Younrsto11'1l, wbtcll.
waa looked upoo u the 1trongbold ol
th.~ ."w:._~a·• 1:9ted ~r no Ucenee,

I

,/

Before the Counter-Attack.

"I wonder what tomorrow has b
store tor me," sald Mrs. Bargtns, 1can
D1Dg the Sunday advertlsem*nte.

RESOURCES
June 1913-$225,385.95

June 1914 - $706,102.17

June 1915-$943,815.59
June 1916 - $1,346,263.37

June 1917 --- $2,060,311.03

June 1918 -~- $2,710,504.76
This shows the phenomenal growth of the Madison
County Trust and Deposit Company of Oneida, N. Y., which
Pays 4% Interest on Deposits.

Madison County Trust
& Deposit Company
Oneida, New York

t+
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Wesley Brunil~n -ol- Holdrldge Corners, Chautauqua county, missed 1
heifer, which he bas found alive, after 23 days without food and water,
In the cellar of a.i old house, where
NOT THE ONLY ONE
the animals bad fallen through the
floor.
There Are Other Hamilton People
Erie railroad 0111.clals have offered
Similarly Situated
tbQ buallle&s men of Hammondsport
Can there be any strongei'. proof the tree use of the steamer Penn Yan,
offered than the evidence of Hamilton which ls docked at that vtlla&e, to
residents? After you have read the be used tor passenger service on Keuka lake. The offer, It '8 said, wlll be
following, quietly answer the question.
accepted.
R. F.. Hazzard, carpenter, Green Street,
Niagara district fruit growen say
Hamilton, says: "Two or three years ago tllere wlll be a very ltght peach crop
I began to suffer with lame back and as my th :s year, only a t out a quar:er ot the
wQrk requires a lot of stooping and bend- normal crop. The outlook Is good for
ing over, I believe that is what brought it a big apple crop There wm be a
on. The kidney secretions were highly light crop of strawberrtee lo the Nicolored and my kidneys didn't act right. agara d!strict.
A ga,!n of '16,199,5112.17 in state revI began to take Doan's Kidney Pills and
in a few days was greatly relieved. Doan 's enue for 11 months of the current fisroon cured me entirely of the trouble and cal year, as contrasted with last year,
I have recommended them to many of my Is shown by the monthly report lasued
by State Comptroller Travis. The
friends since." (Statement given No- largest single Item of lncreaae wa1r
vember 6, 1906,•.
$11,261,497.26 J11-dlr!£!_ t a ~
On March 11, 19 t 8, Mr. Hazzard added:
- - ·- - - Maps of Madison County
"I am glad to confirm the statement I
made in favor of Doan's Kidney Pills,
Latest and beat. colored map of Madiaon
for the cure they have given me has lasted. Ceunty by towns. Shows all roads and
Doan's are a fine medicine."
gives distances, population and divisiona.
6oc, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Wall map mounted oo muslin. Price
Co,., _tvHgrs., ~uffalo, N. Y.
$1.50 at Republican Office.
31t

j

FISK CORD

TIRES

arc made in the ribbed tread
familiarly associated with
Cord Tires and in the famous Fisk Non-Skid Tread.
No matter which of these
tires you choose you cannot
go wrong!

They arc big, sturdy,
beautiful-combining resiliency, speed, mileage,
safety and comfort.

SALISBURY & LELAND
Hamilton, N. Y.

TIie lllllilt• Re,alan
Publllbed Every 1bunday

.. at Hamilton, N. Y., br
H. H. HAWlLONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE NO.

=

1

J

REPUBLICAN baa been IJUblilbed at
N. Y. CDlltl-.ly far (o , _ . . It
laae aud iDC:ftlllUIS clrculatioa and often
die lat madlum for adtwtiM.v to brine. their
~ lo the atteation of Hamilton oeople and

Bntlttd at the Poet Office at Hamilton, N. Y.,
• ~ clau mail matter.

Tenna In Advance

Tluiee month!'

. 38

Sis Months
One Year

.75

Slnlle Copies five cents.
Ad-nrtlains ratel liven oo applicatioo.
will be ioaerted OD paymt:nt

Cal* of Tbanka
el My centa.

Raelationa will be cbarpd for at tbe rate of
till S1.oo accordins to lenath.

soc.

THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1918

The War Boys

like many other good things, may be carried
to excess. We are merely deprecating the
seeming great national unrest that nothing
but excitement will allay. We are forced
to admit that if it were not the movies it
would be something else.
Life-real, true lif~oesn·t consist in
work and amusem*nt. It isn't sufficient
that we work till we are tired, then seek
amusem*nt till we are rested again. The
frenzied seeker after wealth or amusem*nt
misses the real life. Nature has not
fashioned us for continuous frenzied
activity. Neither does the normal mind
demand continual excitemtnt. The great
realities of life are the reverse of these .
The fact is, the world needs less action
and more thought, less excitement and
more rest and repose. It needs to take
time to study other things than wealth and
pleasure-needs to meditate on matters
that make for character and the larger
things of life. Then will we really grow
and develop as Mother Nature intends we
shall.

Mies M. Abbert,rMrs. E. Leland, Miss E.

.6th

"'f

Peet, Mrs. Tanner, Cornelia Piotrow,
·sunday aftei- Trinity.
1
Charloµe Wilson, Miss Waldron.
, Holy Communion, 7 :30 A. M. i
~lo! 1
Tuesday-Mm. Rhodes, Mrs. Peet,
-.Ioly Eucharist, and Sermon, 10:30:A.M.
: Mrs. Stone, Mrs. Wickwire, Mrs. A. W.
~, '
Smith, Miss Griswold, Mrs. French, Mrs.
Wednesday, Patriotic service, 7:3o~P.M.
Tanner, Iv..iss Tanner, Mrs. E. R. F.
, Saunders, Mrs. MacDuffy, Mrs. Shephardson, Mrs. Childs, Mrs. Claxton, Mrs.
Congregational Church
Ab_by, }.'..rs. Ryan, ~rs. John Betts, Miss
The ordinance of the Lord's Supper will
, Griffiths, Mrs. C. Risley, Miss Shephard, be observed at the close of the service.
I Mrs. L. L. Saunders, Mrs. Jacobs, Mrs. -Miss Saunders will sing for a solo,
I Davis, Mrs. 0. S. Langworthy, Miss "O Love that will not Jet me go." written
I Hosie.
by the blind preacher, Dr. George
-Mrs. French and Mrs. Hawkins will Matheson of Edinburgh, Scotland.
be hostesses at the Red Cross Tea Friday
I afternoon.
Cut-Out Wall Paper Decorations

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--Work received from auxiliaries for
June.
Leonardsville-so triangular bandages,
75 abdominal bandages, So gauze compresres, 4X4·
~rookfield-80 triangular bandages, 4
I paJ amas.
j Hubbardsville-155 triangular bandages, , sweater, 1 bed jacket, 2 tray
cloths, 10 pair socks.
· 1 -~oolville-7 bed jackets, 2 pajamas,
2 patr socks, I helmet, 17 pair hootees,
, 8 petticoats.

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Capt. Robert Deming Heard From
The following ~lipping was sent us by
the mother of Captah Robert Deming a
surgeon in the U. S. Army in France.
Many Hamilton people will remember that
he came to Colgate Academy when about
12 years old and after graduation attended
a Medical College in Vermont.
"Mrs. Mabel Deming of Ballston has
received a letter from her son Captain
Robert Deming, who is at present in a
German prison camp. The letter was
written on April 9th, from Rastatt, Baden.
this was two weeks after Captain Deming
had been captured. He stated t!iat he
was in a temporary camp that he had a
bed and food enough to live on, his kit was
lost and he oniy had the clothing on his
back and a shaving brush. He expected
to be removed to a permanent camp in
about a week and in a few months sent to
England. At the time of his capture he
was in a dugout with about 50 others, ineluding another doctor, forty stretcher
bearers and a chaplain. They were taken
through twoBarragefirestheirown and the
German. The atmosphere was filled with
shot and shells but only one of their party
was injured."

We have a fine assortment in stock and
prices are very low. We are prepared to
cut out any special border or t!ecoration on
short notice. Mouldings, window shades,
and paints for all purposes.
45tf.
Geo. J. Tew~

-INSURANCE-

Place your insurance with
Georgetown-35 triangular bandages,
19 handkerchiefs, 15 tray cloths, 11 pair
bootees, , baby dress, 1 baby jacket, 4
waists, , cape, 1 pair socks, 2 sweaters.
· Lebanon-120 triangular bandages, 25
We have some ·of the be&t
shot bags, 1 comfort pillow, 27 abdominal
bandages.
Companies writing Insurance.
North
Brookfield-145
triangulae
C. B. SANFORD
Every one 11:1 Interested In se~lng e songe that the boys have sung and are · bandages, 12 comfort bags, 14 pair socks,
person who has been through the fight singing 1\8 they work and play Rnd 1 sweater, 1 infant layette.
"over there." Here ls a group of six fight today. You wlll be anxious to
Opera House
Hamilton Center-38 triangular banmen who have ell been In active see and hear this musical organization dages, 1 pair socks, 4 suits pajamas, 7
Hamilton,
trench and battle service and . have es It brings to us e real breath of the
bed jackets, 20 pair bootees.
been wounded so thet they are past life of the m~n who ore fighting to
South Hamilton-IO triangular banfurth~r service. But they can pley make the world safl' for humanity.
"GERMAN EFFICIENCY"
the bugles and the drums and slug the Fifth day of the Retlpnth Chautauqua. I dages,' 30 abdominal bandages, 10 pair - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....
Occasionally we still hear reference to
socks, 8 knitted blocks, 10 knitted wash
the much vaunted "German efficiency".
cloths, 6 pair bootees, 4 -b ed jackets, 1 ,
These references come mostly from either ·
layette, 2 baby jackets.
RED CROSS NOTES
positive pro-German sympathizers or
maids, Miss Ruth Menter, Miss Harriet
- So many young people have expressed
from timorous eouls who throw a fit whenPierpont, Miss Frances Allen, and Miss
Your OLD CARPET,S
a
wish
to sew on hospital garments during
ever "this dreadful war" is mentioned.
Catherine Beebee, sister of the bridegroom,
People of intelligence have long ago
to
all of Rochester ; Miss Gladys Smith, of
-Following are the names of those who the summer that it 'has been decided to ijnd send them to U
learned to estimate this efficiency at
Brockpo1t, and Miss Helen Benton, sister worked in the Red Cross rooms since last make special arrangements for them.
Beginning July 11th they are asked to make into RUGS now.
its true value, and have ceased to stand in
of the bride. Lieutenant George A. week Wednesday:
awe of it.
Benton, Jr., brother of the bride was best
Thursday-Mrs. Hawkins, Mrs. Stone, meet at the roomr every Tnursday afterThe efficiency of Germany is purely an
man.
Mrs. Allison, Mrs. Peet, Mrs. French, noon at 2 o'clock. Miss Tucker and Mrs.
efficiency of constant application. Her
The Wedding March from "Lohengrin" I M iss French, Mrs. Wilcox, Mrs. R yan, Hulse will be in charge. All are invited .
The cotton stocking is really more
Seneca Falls,
present militant condition is the result of a patriotic than the silk stocking, although was played by Dossenbach 's Orchestra as M iss Griffith, Mrs. Raymond, Mrs .. Shep- The regular workers will meet as usual.
lifetime of unren1itting attention to every some people consider it a little slacker. · the bridal party entered the parlors and hardson, Mrs. Schwart, Mrs. E . W. Smith,
conceivable angle of the game of war.
its members took their places before an Mrs. C. S. Langworthy, Miss Lucas, Dr.
While the other nations of the earth were
The other day the Woman's Suffrage altar banked with roses, fems and paln·s. A. W. Smith.
quietly pursuing the paths of peace, Ger- question bobbed up serenely again in the The bride was given in marriage by her
Thursday evening-Mrs. C. Wedge HAMIL!ON REAL ESTATE AGENCY
many was sraining every nerve and devot- Senate. It submerges for long periods and father.
Miss Wilcox, Mrs. T. Danehy, Miss K.
Life Insurance
ing all her accumulations of me'l and means- then surprises evet y one by coming to the
The bride was gowned in white satin Dapehy, Miss Myers, Miss Graham,
Accident Insurance
DENT IS T 1
to the task of creating an army and arma- surface. But the American craft has never with court train and veil, and she car-1 Miss F. Taylor, Miss A. Taylor, Mrs. W .
Fire
Insurance
.
Hamilton
N.
ment before which the world would find it carried explosives on board.
ried a shower bouquet of white sweet Gavin, Mrs. Allison, Dr. Alliso1 , Dr.
Automobile Insurance
)
'
impossible to stand: During most of this
peas and roses. The maid of honor wore French, ,Mrs. French, Miss Sperry, Miss
Live Stock (death from any cause)
Office Hours: 8 :00 to 12
time she was hypocr;itically participating
America is thrilled by the exploit~ of pink organdy and carried sweetheart rose- Thayer, Miss Starratt, Miss Gates, Miss
Insurance.
to
in the Hague conferences and proposing her troops on the Mame. She will keep budsandblueforget-me-nots. The brides- . French, Mrs. E. Leland, Mrs. J. Leland,
All Written In Strong Companies.
Office Nlch_o ls & Beal Block
the total disarmament of all nations, but her enthusiastic feelings, and after the maids were also gowned in organdy, two : Mr. H. Walltropp.
Get Our Rates. ;
Phone 193 ·
in the light of recent developments we war is over will teli them to the marines. in light green, two in light lavender, and / F,riday-Mrs. Bryan, Mrs. Shephardson,
JOHN J. TAYLOR.
_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
know that during all this discussion her
two in light blue, and all carried old, j l'y1rs. Ross, Miss Shephard, Mrs. Davis,
Exit the school, enter the bathing beach
warp-el>8r8tions \yere never slackened.
fashioned bouquets. The bride's mother ; Mrs. George Grant, Mrs. E. R. F. Saunand the swimming hole.
~ e n ~ · s efficiency in the arts
wo~ a gown of_ black o~er changeable!] ders, Mrs. Kinney, Mrs. McClellan, Mrs.
and sciences has been made to serve the
satlfl, and the bndegroom s mother' wore Childs, Mrs. Love! Hulse, Mrs. Camp,
Beebee--Benton
dread Mocloch of War. In extending her
a gown of black satin and silk net. The' Mrs. Peckham, Mrs. Bartlett, Mrs. Tucker
The marriage of Miss Ethel Marion Ben- house was decorated with roses and smilax; Mrs. A. G. Sanford, Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
influence among the nations of the earth
in these branches, she has been for years ton, eldest daughter of Supreme Court the color scheme being in pink.
Staples, Mrs. O. R. Langworthy, Mrs.
building ''spheres of influence"-in other JUBtice and Mrs. Geprge A. Benton, to
After the ceremony a buffet luncheon Reade, Mrs. Vischer, Mrs. A. W. Smith,
words, nests of spies and potential traitors Alexander Mitchell Beebee, son of Dr. and was served. The bride's table seating Mrs. Stone, Mrs. Wickwire, Mrs. W. F.
against the day when their services should Mrs. James Hoyt Beebee, of Rochester, sixteen, was decora,ted with pink roses and Langworthy, Miss Tanner, Miss Hosie,
N. Y., took place at 7:10 o'clock last week smilax. Mr. and Mrs. Beebee left on an Miss Kinney, Miss Gates, Miss Abbert .
. be needed by the fatherland.
at the home of the bride's parents in Eastern trip, and after August 1st, they , · Monday-Mrs. Reade, Mrs. Parker,
Yes. Germany has efficiencyEfficiency in . cold-blooded assassina- Spencerport. Rev. Clarence A. Barbour, will be at home at No. 615 Hazelw~ , Mrs. Allison, Mrs. A. G. Sanford, Miss
tion, evidenced by the brutal destruction D. D. performed the ceremony. The terrace, Rochester, N. Y. The bride Tanner, Mrs. Tanner, Mis. Hawkins,
-..of vealels by her sea vipers, when even briqe was attended by her sister, Miss Alice is a graduate of Livingston Park Seminary Mrs. French, Mrs. Stone, Miss Duell,
/
,nd children attempting to escape Benton, as maid of honor, and, as brides- and she also took a kindergarten course at. ·Miss Shephard, Mrs. E. W. Smith, Mrs.
jft ope,11 boa'.s have been shelled, mangled
Miss Fannie Smith's school in Bridgeport, William Langworthy.
and ~ ; evidenced by her wanton
Conn. The bridegroom, who is a graduMonday evening-Mrs. Starratt, Mrs.
destrqctlQn of civilian life by her airplanes
ate of East High School and of the engi- Sanford, Mrs. Piotrow, Miss K. Danehy,
a'1Ct ~lina; evidenced by the deliberneering department of Cornell University, Mrs. Tew, Miss Starratt, Miss Erma Mar@ti; 111\lfder of prisoners o( war who, by
is in charge of the new gas plant of the shall, Miss G. Armstrong, -Miss H. Arm~ the laws of nations, should have reRochester Railway and Light Company.
strong, Mrs..Wilson, Mrs. Stone, Miss
"'ANTED. POR SALE OR TO RENT
ceived honorabie and humane treatment.
Sperry, Miss Thayer, Miss Croff, Mrs. L.
Some SPARKLERS, FIRE CRACKERS, etc.
SALE-No. 442 National Cash Register
Efficiency in perfidy, as witnessed in her in FOR
Leland, Mrs. A. W. Smith, Mrs. Gavin,
perfect condition. Apply F. W . Piotrow .
rape of Belgium, for no other reason than 4w8.
Miss F . Taylor: Miss Graham, Miss
Cabbage plants for sale.
For the Children-Baloon Flags
~oberts, Mrs. W. Hatch, Mrs. Wilson,
that she stood between a brutal tyrant and
TO RENT-My camp at Lake Moraine.
Adv.
. S. B. Leary.
J. Karl Gaylord .
hie intended victipl; evidenced by her 3w2.
attempt to array other nations against our
FOR SALE-Saw dual and about u,ooo (eet of
lumber. Second Clau.
Gust. Ruetsler,
own country, at the same time her repre- hemlock
R. F . D . No. 2.
3w2 .
sentative to our capital was shedding
FOR SALE-Ladies Bicycle, frame good and
crocodile tears over his forced departure tires fairly good. Inquire at this office.
3w2
. Department Store
Hamilton, N. Y.
and separation from his "dear friends in WANTED TO RENT-farm with sixteen or
Mnerica"-doubtless he took with him for twenty cows. tb take poesession in fall. Inquire
at th11 office,
3w2.

the ' perusal of his butcher master full
FOR SAL~-Danish Bald Head Cabbage
proofs of his treachery while enjoying our Plllnls,
Inquire of L. S. Smith,
J'•d
Hamilton, N. Y.
hospitality and esteem. •
The Germany of other days was noted
FOR SALE--One rubber tire road wagon, one
rubber tire top wagon, one market wagon, one
for efficiency, but that effidency has been light
double harneae, one aingle harness.
Inquire John C . Maxon.
prostituted to most ignoble ends.

If you have not filled out' your card 'for your
+
God save us from such efficiency.
0
TO LET-On shares eighty acres of good grass .

I

C. B. Sanford
Block
N. Y.

SA. VE

~

S

WAGNER RUG WORKS,
N. Y.

r-.
- R-~,- - -x-N--·
f 0 . . 8 . 81 0
I
y.

t:· ·

1 :30

5

CELEBRATE

4th--J

women

u· L Y--4th ,: !

FOR LIBERTY

SPECIALS

Pursuit of Happiness--Safety First

R. W. HULBURD,

.-

•··············~····-······

!• ---------------------"THE BURNING · QUESTION'' 1
. *. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,. . . . . . . .......*

Will uchan1e bone for pair of farm mares.

WE SHOULD CALL A HALT
We often hear it asserted with emphasis
that this js strenuous age-an age of action. This we are bound to admit, but
not with the same degree of satisfaction
that SOme seem to take in the fact.
Yes, this is decidedly an age of actionaction of the body. But we very much
fear it Jacks somewhat of being an age of
action of the mind. In short, isn't life
__ ·
t
t
eel de
fast ....•,.,.;Omtnjt
so s renuous as O pr U
much thought-quiet, enjoyable thought?
Never before in the history of our
country was the demand for amusem*nt
carried to such an extreme· as at present.
Take for instance the moving picture
show. Scarcely a town or hamlet in the
land but has one or more of these popular
p) aces of amusem*nt. Night, after night
they are thronged with young and old.
No sooner is the day's work over than
. " ff
h
· " N th.
the cry 1s: o to t e moVles.
O mg
but the el{citing scenes there portrayed
seems to satisfy us. We are no longer
content to spend a quiet evening at home
in instructive conversation and discussions, reading and studym· g.
We must

be entertained.
No, we are not knocking the movies.

Orsino Beebe.
Lebanon, N . Y.

No.Jtf.

FOR SALE-·'Steck" Square Piano in good
running order, Fine Mobogany Caee. $40.00
takes it from our Flat over the Store.
std.
Geo. E . Sperry & Son.

I


I

FOR SALE-rires and tubes, J2llJ 1-2. Prestolite tank, and other acce,isories.
47tf.
A. w. Smith.

. .

FOR RENT- Upper flat of four rooms, city
water. Brown house, Charles Street.
47tf.
L . D. Johnson .

I)

TO RENT-Offices in the Sperry block. lnquire of H. H. Hawkins. Repubhcan Office. AJtf.
TO RENT-Stone House with twelve room&
modern conveniences near High School on
Hamilton Street.
R. W. Hulburd .
41tf.
WANTED-Rural, grade, and high school
teachers immediately. Free regllitrat1on, good
salaries. Write.
Oswego Teachers' Agency,
O.wego, N . Y.
35w19.

--------------FOR RENT-<>ne aide of dou1>le house on
Main Street.
31tf.

Inquire of L. D . Johnson.

--------------FOR SALE OR TO RENT-The Brownell
Houae on Broad Street. Inquire of John Harmon
1otf.
_T_O_RE_N_T___
Fu-,.-,.sh_ed_r_oo_m_s_to_r_en-t-at_N_o_.
12

Hamilton Street.

45tf

wANTED-I pay hi&hest market price fOf'
fat calvea or young calves. See me before y.:,u
..U.
E. T . Dunn,
aJtf.
Hamilton.

I1

w~ A l l _kinda of beer ca~ cow llidea

They are a 1ood thini in their way, but - ' ~";'--

1fL"T' r=:_et pncc at"=:

a

I
I

FJSHERMf NATTENTION! 20°1 Discount
OD Our Lar1e Stock of Tackle

Cl

supply of Coal for next winter, you should do so
at once. We have cards ready for our customers
at our Office on Broad St., or at the Yard Office
on Main St.

I
I

, The price of coal is the current price at the
date of delivery.

(I

Our terms are net cash or6% interestcharged
from the date of delivery.

11
IJ
9)

We are not allowed to deliver any coal until
we receive a card filled out according to the rules
of the Fuel Administration.

I •. LELAND COAL COMPANY·.

BIG BARGAINS RIGHT AT THE START OF THE

BAss

(I

I
•(I

I
I

(I

!

wt

ai

ii

=

(I

I
+

I

=
I
• i
=I :f
(I

sE Aso N

·

Casting Rods
Bait Rods
Fly Rods
Fish Baskets
Quadruple Reels
Automatic Reels
Spoon Hooks
AND THE FOLLOWING WELL KNOWN BAITS
TANGO
, CRAB WIGGLER
TANGO, JR.
BASS ORENO
COAXER
TAD POLLY
PEARL WOBBLER
YELLOW BIRD
BUY NOW AND BE READY FOR THAT
4TH OF JULY TRIP

20 PER CENT DISCOUNT ON

. BASE BALL GOODS

TENNIS GOOD

' GOLF GOODS

THOS. B. BELL,

The Hamilton Hardware

--rill··--..-·····-· *. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Our Phone number is 3 or 30.
I

ll

Mi

+

Next to the Post-Office

I

.

..~~~~~~·~~.~~~

--r

GEO. E.~PERRY &SON f4e ~4e~4e~4

.:4 e4 e ~4e 4e

-Mrs. A. G. Harkness of Providence,
Rhode Island was a caller in town this

I~ .. LOCAL ITEMS ... ff

WheretheBestlsNoneTooGOOO
Our Store will be open the evening of July 3rd to accommodate ',I
our patrons who wish to prepare ~
for celebrating the Glorious Fourth "'
We will also be open the morning ~
of the 4th until 10 o'clock.

'

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·

16

-Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Shean and children are spending the week at Lake

Moraine.

~

r

-Mr. Herbert Squires has changed
~ headquarters and may now be found in the
~
Stokes ~ouse near the 0. & W. station.
~
-Mrs. C. F. Rhoades was in Boonville
4e~~~
~
last Saturday to attend the wedding of Mr.
K NIT T lNG
-Miss Ruby Gardiner visited friends in Arthut ThrQOp of East Hamilton and Miss
Ruth Whiter of Boonville.
The Madams and Mieses are industriously I Eaton Saturday afternoon.
A1~dn~~nng~ttce they have no desirp to shirk; '
M
. . ...
h
telegram was received this morning
Their fingers fly quickly, and bright arc thdr faces ' - rs. F. C. Perkins IS VtStttng er by-A
Mrs. A. N. Karpp announcing the
Fo;~~{ir mind and their heart are both in the . daughter, Mrs. J. E . Hough in St. Johnsbirth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
AndOnhere's
a suggestion,
goo:I one. 1 reckon,
ville, New York.
each knittecl
article astate
who it's fromFrancis Karpp at Canton, Ohio, July 2nd.
Miss Smith or Mi118 Baker, or perh~ps Mrs. -Mrs. Anna Gibbs has moved from her
AndWilliams,
say that your prayers with the articles old home on Hamilton street to the house -The Rev. Dr. Hegemen, Archdeacon
of Central New York, was the guest of
The bo;:·over yonder in trenches are fighting.
of Mrs. C. R. Payne on Broad Street.
Rev. and Mrs. Van Syckel at the rectory
That
the
world
may
be
freed
from
oppres~ion,
weknow;
-Mrs. Henry WalltroppofYonkerr and last Thursday night after his visitation
And it falls upon us to clothe and feed them,
For here's
the sacrifice
here must mothers
we hOlll'Sand
lly sisters,
show. Miss Anna Michaelis of New York City to Earlville. ·
Then
to the ladies-the
are staying at the Beta House on Broad
Of all our brave soldiers over there;
-The work meeting of the James MadiYou
work and the boys love you Street.
son Chapter, D. A. R., will be held at the
And, returning, Lhcir joys will y.iu sharP.
-Hamiltoo Lodge, No. 120, F. & A. M., Red Cross Rooms, Friday of this week.
St. Louis.
A1bcrt E. Vassar.
will confer the Entered Apprentice Degree The ladies are requested to bring all
on a class of candidates al the Lodge rooms knitting that has been finished.
next Monday evening.
-Mrs. Edward Gulbran, who was
-Dr. E. B. Bryan left yesterday morn- operated upon last Wednesday in Faxton
-Mrs. F. A. Starratt has returned from
New York where she went to see Miss ing for Chautauqua, N. Y., where he Hospital, Utica, is gradually improving
is Director of the Summer Schools. He and her quick recovery is both expected
Dortn~r before she sailed for Frante.
and hoped for by her triends.
- Dart Hudson, who had been at Lake was accompanied by Professor F. M. Jones
who
will
act
as
his
·assistant
during
the
-An informal dinner was given at the
Placid, is now working on the farm of
session.
home of Mrs. E. B. Bryan last night, in
George Garrod, just outside of town.
honor of Miss Florence Bryan. It was
-Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Alling attended the occasion of Mis Bryan's birthday and
-Professor and Mrs. W. G. Spencer
and son, Hugh, are back from Granville, the funeral of Mr. Harold Leader at Madi- a few friends met to extend their best .
Ohio, after spending a month with Prof. son on Monday. The latter died tollowing wishes.
an operation for appendicitis. Mr. Leader
Spencer's parents.
-Mrs. Hattie Kenyon, Mr. and Mrs.
who formerly lived in Hamilton, was only
-Mr. F. G. Mott has returned home twenty years old.
Harry Kenyon, Mr. Albert Kenyon,' Miss
after spending several months in IndePorter, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bailey, Miss
-Mr. and Mrs. William Cummings, Minnie Kenyon, Miss Olive Leardon, all oi
pendence, Kansas, where he has interests
M r. and Mrs. Frank Hayes and son, Syracuse, and Mrs. M. J. Shelton and son
in the oil fields of that region.
-Mr. F. H. · Crosby and family ilave Mrs. Grace and son, all of Whitesboro, of Poolville were entertained Sunday by
left town, and will make their home in and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cornell and Mr. and Mrs. R. E . Albee at their cottage 1
Sauquoit, where Mr. Crosby has obtained family of Oneida spent Sunday with Mr. at Lake Moraine.
and Mrs. Harvey Richardson .
employment as a night watchman.
-In the photographic- section of last
-A conversation with Mrs. Clara Sunday's Post Standard there appeared a
- The few verses which appear at the
head of these columns were contributed Hatch, of Morrisville, Chairman of the picture of Lewis Boyd, showing the young
to Park 's Floral Magazine by Albert Red Cross Branch developed the fact that man beside a very modem motion picture
Va£sar, a nephew of the Rev. W. B. her mother had undergone a serious oper- machine in the Savoy Theatre of Syracuse.
ation on the eyes, and is now in Faxton The reproduction is excellent, and brings
Vassar.
Hospital Utica, in a critical condition.
rack pleasant memories of the young man
-Miss Erna . Goppert is home from
-Saturday brought a visitor in the who formerly lived here.
Cortland Normal School. She will spend

ABOUT OUR OWN PEOPLE

~4e~~.

And yet there are some n 'resses
left. Curious that a single Dress
is left hanging by the neck when 6
yards of Material at 50 Cents a
Yard, figures $3.00 and as the
marks read there are s Handsome
Size
Dresses at $3.00 Each, one
It

S'
d Q ne at
'-a t ;p .50 In tze 38, an
$3;50 in Size 36. and not a Dress
among them Which is not WOrth
more th an dOUble t he money.
Come in and look and exercise
your thinkers enough to put one Or
two of these Dresses in modem
shape.
In the process of manufacrure
we have a big bunch of Ladies
summery Shirt Waists which we
expect will anive just in time for
the weather which is about due.
And remember, that these waists
are not the thrown-together-kind
made specially for a cheap price,
-but all cut in sizable shape, of good
materials and yet prices as heretofore will convince y:ou that it
does not pay to bother with catchpenny stamps.
_
In the SHOE DEPARTMENT
we expect another shipment of the
Tan, Elk Leather Sole Oxfords for
the little folk to arrive within a
very few days when we will be in
shape to fit' the little f~ and fit
them as they should be.
Our White Dress Skirts in the
basem*nt of the-celebrated ''Emerson" brand are certainly handsome creations and prices are not
what they would be if bought at
thf' preSE"nt time. You are at
liberty to go down and get an idea
of styles even though you intend
to buy materials and manufacture your Skirt at home. We of
course have the materials as well
and can give some real Bargain
Prices on materials as the goods
were bought months ago.
Hosiery i!e getting very scarce
and were it not for our holding the
Agency for the justly celebrated
"Cadet" Stockingx, we should be
in bad shape ·to meet the stocking
demands as they appear from day
to day. As it is, you are likely
to find here, what you cannot
find in places less fa_v.ored.

week.

~4e

4e

I

~~a~r;~g good

her vacation in Hamilton, and then leave person of Mr. Ernest Coonrod, Colgate
for Herkimer where she has accepted a 1915. He called on old friends, and told
teaching position.
some interesting stories of his experiences
-Mrs. Florence E. Stanton announces in Porto Rico. Mr. Coonrod returned to
the marriage of her daughter Leola his home in Utica, where he has taken a
Maye t9 Lieut. Frank W. Barnes, June place on the staff1 of the Utica Daily
28, 191 8. Freeport, L. I., Lieut. Barnes Press.

-Rev. J. W. Farrar of St. Mary's
Church is expected home this week. He
is convalescing from an operation which
he recently underwent in a Utica Hospital.
News has come that Rev. J. V. MacDonnell formerly of St. Mary's is recovering slowly from bis severe siege of sickness.
The best wishes of friends are extended to
is now on his way over seas.
- Jmt over ne wire! The telegraph both.
-Several Vernon people were repre- office departed on Monday for less con-A news item brought to us describes
sented in town on Sunday. Mrs. Charles spicuous regions. Western Union will be
Becker visited Mr. and Mrs. Clayton located at the 0. & W. station and be in the wedding of Miss Helen Gertrude Peck1
Risley, while Mr. and Mrs. John Dixon charge of Mr. Brooks. Although this ham, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. G.
Pf.RRY'S _
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles change will cause no little inconvenience Fe;kham, an(\ Mr. Do1ald C. Hanna. The
-we still have the telephone in case of an young couple were married in Grand IsEvans.
PECIALTY
s.o.s.
land, Nebraska. They will make their
'
.
. -Mk ClaraFrosthas returned to her
home in Greeley, Nebraska, where the
TORE
.
-Amid dozens of boqu~ts of red, white
home in K,1oxboro after ten days with
groom has a position in the state bank .
- --·--- - --::::C friends in Hawilton. She divided her .and blue flowers, twenty-four friends of Thei parents of the bride formerly lived
time between town and Lake Moraine, Miss Leola M. Stanton met at the home of
hen:, and conducted a millinery business
being entertained by Mrs. Minnie Kim- Mrs.MarthaA. Randall, 18 North Grove
on Eaton Street.
Street on Wednesday afteraoon, June 26,
ball and Mrs. C. D. Child.
~The fourteenth annual Johnson re -Mr. Walter Spencer, Colgate 1918, 1918. The guests surprised Miss Stanformer Football Captain and now with.the ton with a lingerie shower which was union was held at the home of Marcus
arranged in a large American flag which Joh*son on the Lake Moraine Road.
Royal Flying Corps of the Canadian
Army is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edward hung over the door way and dropped as Dinner was served on the lawn, and eightyStone. Mr. Spencer is absent on sick she entered. The gifts were numerous two sat down to partake of the good things
and beautiful. It was a true military that had been prepared. A business
leave and will be in town for a few days
affair, the house being decorated with meeting followed, and the officers f01 the
The Textile Board of the only.
American flags and cut flowers. Miss coming year we1e elected: Marcus JohnWar · Department has com- -This is a big week for one local family. Stanaton, a popular trained nurse of son, · P1esident; Devillo Johnson, Vicemandeered all made up stocks, The Langworthys are entertaining Mr. Freeport and Hempstead and a member President; Clayton Brown, Treasurer;
Lloyd Langworthy of Detroit. On MonAmerican Red Cr<>£s, has just announced Alice Robinso~, Secretary. The occasion
finished goods and raw ma- day last, Rev. and Mrs. F. L. Anderson of
her engagement to Firsf Lieut. Frank W. was concluded with music and spealterials, and.has .complete con- and daughter, Rose Mary, of Athens, Pa., Barnes, Areo. Squad 2I 8, Field 2, Garde:1 It was decided to hold the next reunion
came to town. They will be the guests of City, L. I. Lieut. Barnes is a graduate of at the home of Walter Alling in Smyrna.
trol of the textile industry of Mr.
and Mrs. H. Langworthy. The latter Yale and a popular attorney. Miss
- A few years ago many people were
this country.
will also entertain Mr. and Mrs. William Stanton was formerlyof Poolville, N . Y.
entertaining
the false impressions that
Grassman of Syracuse.
-Freeport, L. I., Nassau Post.
tennis was a game for gentle old ladies and
To win the ' war, fifty to -Mr. Ford Saunders leaves tomorrow - Somebody, long before oul time, de- folks in feeble health. Others extended
for Ithaca, N. Y., where he will study the livered himself of a homely thought to this the same idea ot golf. Times have
eighty thousand men must be pipe organ at the summer session of Cor- effect, "It's the little things that count," brought abou~ a decided change of opinsent to Europe every week. nell University. He will take his ,course thereby denying us the privilege of origi- ion, based generally on experience that has
with the University organist. As for us nality. However, we believe with him. proven the co1trary. Today both sports
They must be CIOthe d ' Our who know nothing of the fine technical Let the excitement of a day bear witness. are accepted as a means of pleasure and
Government, Our Cause, Our ,distinctions of music-well-we can't The time is last Thursday- the place beneficial exercise. Those who live in
Boys in the trenches will be understand just why Ford has to take anywhere about town.-the action begins cities often have the desire to play either
. l b
lessons.
at once. First of all the daily routine was tennis or golf, and must leave those deserved fi rst, commerc1a ussuddenly disturbed by the appearance of sires unsatisfied because they have no
iness second.
- Bo th Glenn and Joseph Satterlee were a bear-accompanied by the customary place to wield a 1acquet or swing a club.
heard from last week. The former wrote
a very interesting letter, and enclosed a Italian. Tb,e attraction was sufficient Hamilton is .more fortunate. We can
.
He al- for ordinary industries to undergo tern- boast of splendid courts and an excellent
f
one
·
I n t he course · o f h'1s . li nn:s.
,.
we are endowed w1'th rea I pnvt
· ·1eges
· · ranc
. note
ed has ' af souvenir.
h
h h d porary suspension.
so medenht,_on
t. e hactfr t all~
e ha
performances, said bear climbed a tele- 1 that are constantly )Vinning added supWe have in stock good as- serv
1s turn tn t e ont ne trenc es
phone pole for the small sum of a quarter, I port·.
sortments of Underwear, and had come back . sa ~e1y. Glenn sat'd or
one thrift stamp. When bruin had i ·
·
.
·
he saw potatoes tn blossom, and some ea hed th t
h' k
e ted th t 1 -News has been received by fnends
hosiery, work shirts, overalls, that
very luscious cherries, although he said ;,d cbea e opd, ts f eetper stuggfi s
a,, 1' here of the safe arrival "over seas" of
.
a
rcoma own or wen y- vemore.
,
.
.
and work pants, priced in that ~t. ts. d1~cult
to g~t. the latter beca~se Cries of "Let him sta there", produced I MaJor JI,. B. Sunm_ons, m charge ?f. ~our
some instances below present of high pnces prevathng on all fruits. the same result as the :uggested monetary , amb11lance .~onpan1es, _the 92d _d1v1s10n,
-inspiration-and the bear came down. \ He wrote I am_ ap~mted Sanitary_ I~wholesale cost and these The boys are well.
-A recent news item conveys the in- This picturesque duo brought back mem- 1 s~ctor ?f t~e ship gomg ~ve_r, ~~ tt ~s
prices will be maintained formation that the police officials have de- ories of Banjo Ben. But we must hasten I qmte ~ J~b. He was entlm;a5t1c m h~s
while present stock lasts, cidedtoputanendto rowdyism in Vander- on. One of our citizens came to Main ~p?reciaHtion of .the_w~;k t~\ ed Cross:~
derbilt Park, Oneida, during band con- Street for tonsorial treatment. It ./;as ! omg.
e wntes.
WlS
you cou
first come, first served.
certs. The article points out further that afternoon and the barber shops closed. ' hRave seen one of the outfit~ th atthhad
the parents are as much toblame as the 1 "Well" was his comment "we are be- 1 ed Cross comfort bags given
em.
children,
and that proper steps will be coming' quite cosmopolitan•." The same , Don't know when I have see; su~h tickled
Think it over.
taken to eliminate the objectionaLle ele- I evening brought two young men {;om a f~ll~ws. A~ ~ver the
ey wer~
ment. Similar conditions have been no- neigh"Joring town. In their haste to ~tt_mg on t e oor openmg t e I ags, an
ticeable during local concerts, and we do · keep a very important engagement they fi ehght~ wi th th e contents. t ~a~ a
not consider it outside of our jurrisdiction forgot to leave lights on their car. With- ne ~vi~e land fe ~ed_ ~ross are ;.mg
1 tryh some _,me
when ,~e urge our authorities to nip any J out ceremonies they were invited to ex- a w~n er u wor ·
W1
further excess of juvenile enthusias.n in the plain their neglect to the Justice of tl)_e t~wnte
a let t \ abou\t . e va7o~s
bud. VY hile we are at it we may as well Peace, and fined five dollars each, as a P ases ? t e wor t ey are ~m~'i t ts
I
get one thing more off our mind. Last reminder that local laws are not dom1ant. wondenul a nd means so muc h
abong
t
week 's paper contained an it m calling As he was leaving the omce where he had our tnp EaS , and :ereh we a~e e;;n
to the attention of the public the fact that · been induced to part with the V, one of the ; 0nd erfullyd!elpedth Y t em, ~ - rea Y
I
it was a mitdemeanor to allow the flag I young men. was softly whistlin1 something . a;e d_epe~ ;n e~ aMote A I~ pa:;:r
to hang out all night. The suggestion about the e,1d of a perfect day. We is urmshe us Y tne · · · · a so the
failed to correct the carelessness. It's could continue this for a r.olumn, but we ~~ofcement~ c~rd \ e~. CBe~ween e
Tailors and Furnishers :10 !onger up to U':. Is it possibie to en- refrain. Our point has been proven. . ross an t ~ ·
· · · we are i
I force lawE, or do we specialue only in Atte1 all the the little things offer inter~s- we,! t3k:!n "1///f ~ of.
1 . ..
certain phases of the law?
ting features.
'
·l · CONTJNUED ON PAGE 8
118

§

ALWAYS ASK iroR
THIE ORVIS TRADING
STAMPS WITH CASH
PURCHASES.

TAKE YOUR CHOJCE, THE
ORVISSTAMPSORPROirlT
SHARING COUPONSWITH
CASH PURCHASIES.

The Orvis Store
The Ladies', Misses' and Children's
Ready-to-wear Shop of Hamilton,
where patrons find the best of everything in Ready-to-Wear Garments.
High class Merchandise you will find
here always at reasonable prices.
I

SAVE MONEY by patronizing your Old Reliable
Business Establishment. If you pay Spot Cash for the
goods you buy Come Here. If you want credit, Come
Here, the Old Reliable Orvis Store is glad to accommodate any honest person.
TAKE NOTICE-The price of Nemo, Gossard and
Thompson's Corsets advance soon. Buy what you
need this week at the old.price and save money.
Ladies' Ideal HOUSE DRESSES - Perfect fitting
Dresses of Gingham and Percale at $1.25, $1.50, $1.98,
~2.50, $2.98 and $3.50.
Waldorf Summer DRESSES-New line just in at
$3.98, $4.98, $5.98 and 7.50.
Misses' and Children's DRESSES-Big stock toselect
from at 98c, $1.25, $1.50, $1.98 and $2.50. ·
Ladies" WAISTS- We sell only the best fitting waists
made. Over 100 new Waists just in this week at $1.25,
$1.50, $1.98, $2.25, $2.50 and $2.98.
Ladies' White WASH SKIRTS-at $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50,
$2.98 and $3.50.
Pictorial Review Patterns-After careful consideration
we have decided to sell Pictorial Review Patterns. New
stock will be in the latter part of this week. Call in and
get the new Fashion Sheet.

C. S. ORVIS
New York

Hamilton,

Your Victrola ;Is Here
It is a Joy and Inspiration you
cannot afford to be without.

'W AR

It simply remains for you
to select the instrument. Best
adapted to your home and
pocketbook.
Our method of deferred
payments makes it particularly easy for you to secure the
instrument of your choice
without further delay.

Beal-Williamson

Go.

The House of Reliable HomelFurnishings
Main St.

Phone 47.J

Hamilton. N. Y.

I

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?ec -~ \

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r°~

Carl Baum & Son
Pl¥¥le

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-STC)·LLWERCK-·
GOLD BRAND COCOA-is of the highest grade
and of great nutritive value. It is manufactured
by a special process by which the tannin ingredients of the cocoa bean are neutralized.
This Stollwerck method makes the cocoa
easily digestible and more palatable and agreeable
to the taste. Try a package of the Milk Cocoa, it
will surprise you.
STOLLWERCK- Gold Brand Premium Chocolates moulded in one ounce cubes, each cube
separately wrapped in wax paper, making the
most sanitary and convenient cooking or baking
Chocolate. Try It.

The John Gates Co.
.. On The Corner..

Hamtlton. N. Y.

One.Carload

Comparatively Small Number of Mon
Dying from Wound• 11 Pointed to aa
Indicating Efficiency of Ambulance
and Hoapital Systema - Only 291
Men Loat In Transporting 800,000.

>

Ml• Grace Halsey Mills and an Excellent Company lo the Great America n Drama, "'l'he Melting Pot."
lweninC of the · Redpath Chautauqua.

The Sign of Service

SOCONY
Gasoline

Motor

is to buy from the
dealers listed below. 1 h e y sell
only SOCONY
-uniform, pure,
powerful. Look
for the Red,
White and Blue
So-CO-oy Sign.

A wide variety of

mixtures is being
sold under tlae
name "gasoline."
The beat way to
be nr• that the
gasoline you buy
measurea up to
quality standards

TheS..ola
Reliable De.ler

STANDARD OILCeN.Y.

and the W orkl's
Best Gasoline

DBAl BU WHO_ SIU.L SOCONl' ~:i:_o~ . GASOLINE

HAMILTON .......... . SALISBURY & LELAND
LEROY LAMB
E. C. STILL
BOUCKVILLE ...... . . COE'S
DEPARTMENT
STORE
MADISON ... . ...... . . L. FUESS
BICKNELL BROS.
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SOLS VILLE . . . .. ..... G. R. SMITH
RAND ALLS VILLE ... E. W. ARNST
EAROVILLE . . .... .... Earlville Garage
EATON ... .... .. ..... SPAULDING'S HARDWARE
STORE
MORRISVILLE .. ....... SQUARE DEAL GARAGE
(Blowers & Cramer, Props.)
POOLVILLE ......... ~. W. PRICE
ORISKANY FALLS . MINER'S GARAGE
JAMES MCLAUGHLIN
BENJAMIN & ALLEN
EAST HAMILTON .. . M. D. NOBLE

ii
_t:'•

HUBBARDSVILLE ... THAYER BROS.
FLOYD RIPLEY

,.,

STANDARD OIL COMPANY o/NEW YORK

Second

Every Two Minutes

Seven hundred and seventy casualties reported among the American
expeditionary forces during the week
/brought the total since American
troops first landed in France, nearly
a year ago, to 8,086.
The second weekly summary of casualties, issued by the war department,
shows that the total number ot deaths
from all caus es is 3,193, whlle 4,647
men have been wounded In action
and 346 are missing in action, Including all men held prisoners in Germany.
The summary follows:
Killed in action (including 291 at
sea}, 1,172.
Died of w~unds, 364.
Died of disease, 1,234.
Died ot accident and other causes,
422.
Wounded in action, 4,647.
Missing in actions (Including prl•·
ers), 346.
Tota.I casua.ltles reported to da.te,
8,086.
With more than 800,000 soldiers
sent overseas, officials pointed to the
small number, 291, !oat through, operations of German submarines a.a
showing the etfectlven11sa of the convoy system. The men lost were on
the torpedoed British steamers Tuscanla and Moldavia. The former wa.a
taking troops trom America to Eng.land and the latter from England to
France.
The comparaUvely small number of
men dying from wounds ls pointed to
as Indicating the efficiency ot the ambulance and hospital eyetems, while
the tact that only 1,234 men have
died ot disease le accepted as proof
of the excellent physical condition of
America's fighting men.
Another consideration is that of the
wounded men a very high percentage
return to duty within a period of leaa
than six weeks.

It tted

amo
.crse
In
17 \Dd
ar d•
rl)

In, to

t p lc;k•
: t , ade

.....

., the
YI · ,le-

L b

Sh

rta

la

111111

Ml

ot

....

......
ta

Ml<

la

& ..

...

Shlpmenta of meat b&ff bND SolnS
tbe to the aru.. tor 110me time at tlle rate

• ...t

a.



" of 11,Nt pomia a mlnate. .Aa tile
I
I In. llblpmenta are kept up ctwtac a tell . .
• • of hour dQ' tbeJ lllllHDt to t,...,ON • •

• Illa pcMIDcla clal17. Tbe meat .... .. ..
.. U. ,..,_ of U.. UD!te4 lllatea . . . the al· wt
hll • u.. uact 16 the ~ popeletkla a, 111.

.._, au cu

'

OOIUltrlaa e& war

•::.!;_ ___.,. -

-

w1u. a.-

u.

....

-aw....~~1.uu

These statements
were made by a · prominent representative of
the United States Food
Administration.
No industry in the
country has played a
more important part in
helping to win the war
than the American livestock and meat:.:packing
industry.

The Untted States government's
financial P'rogram tor the next
four months was disclosed by Sec .
retary McAdoo's announcement that
In preparation tor the fourth Liberty
loan, to be floated probably in October, about $6,000,000,00(1 certificates
ot Indebtedness will be issued. They '
wlll be offered in blocks ot $760,000,000 each every tw·o weeks, beginning
June 26.
Every national bank and trust company Is asked to assist · the government by subscribing five per cent ot
Its gross resources monthly. The certificates will bear 41h per cent Interest, like these preceding the third
Liberty loan and wlll have varying
maturity periods, none e.x ceeding tour
months.
,
In addition a.n undetermined quantity-perhaps $2,000,000 ,000-of tax
certltlcates will be issued during the
summer for use in paying taxes a yea.r ,
from now.
f

One Ho6 Out ol Every
Four lJeing Sent
Abroad.

-.rol

McAdoo'• LetteP to Bankers Seta
Tentatlvo Date In October.

d

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nll

IDII

of the

, NEXT LOAN $6,000,000,000

R

15,000 POUNDS
MEAT A MINUTE
GOING TO ALLIES

Swift & Company
alone has been forwarding over 500 car loads of
meat and meat products
per weex, for overseas
shipment.
1

Swift & Company, U.S. A

Rheumatism Arrested

The Perpetual Vision.

Whnt ilghtens lnbor, sanctifies toll
If you suffer with lame muscles or
and makes a man good and strong,
wise and patient, just and benevolent, stiffened joints look out for impuriboth lowly nnd great, as well as ties in the blood, because each at•
: worthy of lntemgenee and freedom, I tack gets more acute and atubbom.
is the perpetual ~lslon before hlm of
To arrest rheumatism you mun
8 better world benmlng through life's
improve
your general health and
shadows.-Vlctor Hugo.
.
purify your blood; the cod liver oil
1
'

O
eme Y or • or
ge.
As a means of relieving the labor
shortage in the U. S. a suggestion that
a. portion ot wa.r contracts handled by
the textile industries be awarded to
Porto Ricans was made in a confidentlal report to war labor board by F .
C. Roberts, special In vest1gator tor -_ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::...--the labor bureau in Porto Rico. Mr .
!Roberts states that as the Porto Rican industries use labor only about
five months in the year, there would
be plenty or time which could be
utillzed on American war contracts.
The Coal Man

I

M.• J. CLARKI:

June Reg_iatranta Total 744,865.
Nearly complete records to the provost marshal general's office at
Washington, 'D. c., show that 744,·
866 young Americans who have became of age during the last year registered for military -service on June
6. This Is 266,724 below the estlma.te
of the census bureau, but since more
than 200,000 unregistered 21.year-olda
already are enlisted in the army, navy
or marine corps, the mllltary authorlties find the result entirely satls·
factory.

·in Scott's .Emulsion is Nature'•

great blood-maker while ii also
etren,thens the organs to expel the

........... ._...._..,.

lmDIU'itie1. Scott', fa .helplns tbouaaaa. who could not find other relief.

~DI!~
Kenny'S' Se"ice II

j QUR

announces that in accordance
with the Fuel Administration's
orders, parties wishing to secure
their next winters supply of Coa,l ; I
MUST SIGN and fill out the or- : 1
der blanks which can be secured i
·1
at My Office on Eaton St., or at
Demo's Drug Store, then they ,
can secure two-thirds of their
I
I
If th
d i f
year y supp y.
e or er s or
j not more than 6 Tons, it may be
Make Plea for Nuran.
· filled in full. No special order to
For every 26,0-00 soldiers landed In sign for 1 ton or less at a time.
France, the army of the United
states must have not less than 400 When all have been supplied the i
nurses, General Merritt w. Ireland, '. remaining one-third can be put 1
chief surgeon with the American ex- · in. The Fuel Administration say 3:
pedltlonary forces, asserted In a com•
munlcntton received by the American that it is of great importance for f
Red Cross and just made publlc. customers to place their orders
These figures, General Ireland said, EARLY for their normal consumpallo,w for no extra emergencies and tion. This order is imperative to
for no illnese or fatigue on the pa.rt
Qf the nursea.
, everyone using Coal.
j
Let us have your orders at once
Aunts earred from War lnaurance.
so we can be in a pcsiton to supUnited States government allow- I l
II
ances
can
be
paid
dependent · P Y you a • .
aunts or other distant relatives of a Terms Cash or 6% Interest from
s oldier or s ailor only If the insurance date of filling your order.
1aw is amended, treasury officials sa.y, : Thanking you for past orders.

examinations and
the making of our
glasses is work of pre·
cision-no experiment.
HEN you come to
us for eye service,
you come to a house of
no mistakes.
EARS of experi ~nce
extending back for
more than a quarter cen·
tury, in same location
must tell you we know
something about eyes.

W

Y

BARBER SHOP

I

in answer t o man y Inquiries. At pres,.nt allowances may be pa.Id only to'
I dependent wife, child, divorced wife,
,a.rent. grandparent, brothers, ststers I
r grl'ndchildren.
..

M• J• Clllk, Jh e (01IT'~Man
Tel. No. 1 or 227-W.

BOWLING, POOL
1ncl

.BILLIARDS

FRANK TIMIA~

.,
1·"'"""'-.~~_.~.--........ _ _ , . , . . . ~ ~ ~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . . . , _ ~

Entertainment?
Oh, Yes!

l

B00,STER!
BE
A
BUY
HAMILTON
AND BANK IN

CANADIAN BUGLE CORPS

Every Dollar You Spend In HamUton is A BOOST FOR HAMILTON.-BE LOY!'L-

Real Trench Muaic

Glve ' Hamilton First Chance.

WILLIAMS-MAC NEIL CO.

Hamilton First."

Scotch Sinsera

Ita17 la queen of the air.
IDngland's defense of the sea with
her Mammoth Navy; France's heroic
Infantry checking the first onrush of
the Bun at the Marne and at Verdun;
America's vast contribution of materlala and money In the past and of
ftcbtlng reserves In the future, •e
matched by Italy's contribution to the
allled air navy, which will determine
u much as any one factor our final
victory over the Teutonic Powers.
The general public, amazed at th•
ma"elous performances of Italy's air
fleet during Cadorna's drive over the
Alps, at the record breaking Jeats of
Resnatl, Laurea ti and D' Annunzlo
and at the wonderful , mechanical
achievements of the great Capron! and
Pomilla planes, still have 'llttle realiza.
tlon of the vast scope of Italy's
achievement In aviation since she entered the war three years ago.
In February, 1915, there were In all
Italy only 100 aeronautical workmen.
When that country entered the war a
few weeks later she p_ossessed alto·
gether only 80 (lying "machines and
those mostly of th e French type. But
the Italy of poets nnd singers Is also
the Italy of mechanical genius, of Marconi and Tesla, of Capron! and Pomlllo. Seeing with a clear vision that
the fate of civlllzation lay largely in
the supremacy of the air, and particularly the need of air defense for her
own long coast line, her statesmen set
out to build a new industry from the
ground up. They gathered together a
vast number of men of energy and creative ablllty in order that they might
bring their contributions of research,
Invention and technical knowledge to
a development of those machines of
0Jfeo1e and defense with which battles

Of Before.

Hamilton Can Serve You Best
NO FAR-AWAY CATALOGUE HOUSE GIVES AS GOOD VALUES

"THE MELTING POT''
THE QREAT AMERICAN DRAMA

WITH
GRACE HALSEY MILLS AND
A SUPERB COMPANY

FRANK DUCROT (Do Crow)
Masician and Entertainer

BeaJ.WQa....., Co.

,ERNEST HAROLD BAYNES
BIRD MAN
Illustrated Talk

Flowers an~ Plants for ,all occaaiona at
reaaonable Pf1ces. Rialey s Plant Hou-.
Clayton E. Risley, Propnetor, Phone 224e

I

lncludins J. K. MURRAY,

DR. NG POON CHEW
The Chinese ·Mark Twain

ROSCOE GILMORE STOTT
AND
THE APOSTLE OF JOYOUSNESS

KATHARINE RIDGEWAY

Whece the styles come from. Clothes
of quality, rightly priced. Clothing,
Shoes, Men's Furnishings.
Thomas
Stradling & Soa.

Amerlc;a'a Foremoat Reader

I~~es.~~

ALSO

My Motto:-"Hamilton".
Watche&, Diamonds, Jewelry, SilverFloYd Currier, Funeral Director, Phone
ware, Gift Articles, Etc., in be.mtiful
variety at very reaaonable prices. En- 109.
graving and Repairing. C. B. Sanford,
Jeweler and Optician.
A complete line of reliable Hardware,
Stons, FumaC88, Tinware, Cutlery,
Farming Tools, aad G..-al Hardware
Why not settle your gate troubles now will be found here and rlehtly priced.
by putting up "Can't Sags?" We carry Roofing, PlumbillJl and Heating by exthem in stock. Also ash and spruce boat perts. C. E. Guibran, The store that
saves you money.
oars. Wedge & Waters, Phone 31.

LECTURES
SERIOUS

HUMOROUS

PATRIOTIC-17 in All•.

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Tickets (ANlfr::li~ $2.00

J~tCl~k!'.111~0~! ~ I a ~

227-W.

I

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Well tailored, good material, good trimmings and rno1t reasonable pricea for the
people who desire suits and gannents
made that will wrely please and satiafy
the wearer. Carl Baum & Son, Merchant
Tailors-Men's Wear.

The Poet With a Smile

ItoJ1:Coal
e well-known Lacka"'.ana ll!ld Scran. . Auto and ~ g e Livery. At

.
When 1t comes to M!Jnuments and
Heating, Plumbing, Paint'S, Oils, Vamishea Tombstones, J. I. Baker, . 1s the one Y.(!11
Garden Tools, Seeda, Oil Cook Stoves, I shoo!~ see before making. a. ~ble
Lawn Mowers, Etc. Thos. B. Bell, The sel~on. What he says 1t 1s-1t ia.
Hamilton Hardware Next to Postoffice. Designs and Plans constantly on hand.
'
The Hamilton Marble and Granite Works,
--------J. I. Baker.
Choice staple and fancy Groceries and
Provisions, Fruita and Vegetables at
correct prices. We appreciate your trade.
Agency of the famous "Saxon" Autc>J. E. Carpenter, Phone 65.
mobile. Auto and Bicycle Tires, Suppliea,
and Accessories at correct prices. Finlt
Where you are always sure of getting class repairing at reasonable prices.
your mooey's worth in Books, Wall Paper, Lamb Garage, Green St .. Phone 26.
Stationery, Post Cards, Leather Goods,
School Supplies, Etc. Newspapers and
"O. & W.", · Scranton and D. & ff.
Magazines. F. O._Church, The Bookman.
Lackawana Coal. High Grade Bitumi• ·
nous and Smithing Coal. At your &er•
The store where you will find just the vice at correct prices. Leland Coal Co.,
very thin~ you are looking for and at Phone 3 or _30. Office near 0 . & W. Depot
correct pnces. R. W. HuJbtud, Depart- and at C. S. Orvis' Store.
ment Store.

People in Hannlton and fCK miles around
know that for reliable, stylieh Dry Goods,
Carpeta. Shoe&, Ladies Coat& and Suits,
Skirts, Waiirte and Furnilhing& it pays to
trade at the store oi C. S. Orvis.

,

First Class Groceries, Confectionery
and Baked Goods at correct prices. Your
money's worth always at the store of
H. W. Hinkley, Phone rno.

A dollar's worth for every dollar spent ·,
has riven thia .tore its reputation for
9Plendid valuea in Hardware, Tinning,

You like aoocI thinie to eat. You''ll
, find them at the right price. at the up-to: '} date Grocery Storea of A. J. Newton.
1 '-·

Redpath
.
Chautauqua

Superb stoclr of Watches, Diamonda,
Jewelry, and Silverware. Pretty Gift
Articles and Fine Stationery. Where you
are sure of the quality and the right pricea.
F. N. Tompkins, Jeweler.
Our clothes and furnishings are oonect
in style, quality an_d Price. F. W. Plotrow
Tailor and Haberdasher.

Remember We h:1ve a large stock of
Roof:ngs and Building Paper. Bulklln,
Paper ::i.t $1.00 and $1.25 per roll.
3 Ply Rubber roofing $2.00.
.
You'll look a long ways before you will
~d u~ your 4undry. Y{e 1:l1'e exHeavy Slate Roofing, $2.50.
._,_
find better values in Hardware, Heating, penenced m tl_ie busmesa and ~ill give you
We bought before prices advanced.
Tinning, Plumbing, Paints, Roofing, Etc. first clasll service at correct pnces. HamilWedge & Waters.
John Larsen's Hardware, Phone 256.
ton Laundry. Phone 2-M.

! ~ ~ ~ " "-'''""',.,,,,."""'~""'---"""'~"'"'~"''"'"""'""""'""'"'"""""""'
l\ill¥uuuuAuu'"'1¥\lUUUUUUUUUSUO

PLUS WAR TAX

Hre being fought today. As a result
In hydro-aviation the beet Italian
Italian aviation hos established a new machine ls the Macchi. that for reconrecord tn the history of 111 ,·. -nalssance work, having a speed of
over 100 miles an hour, and the fightA New Born Industry.
;Ing machine having a speed of 125
To the lmmenwe and famous Italian·
Industrial centers, already sl rongly miles an hour. A PomlUo P1ant recently put out a 290 B. P. machine
organized and active In general auto- with a apeed of 157 miles an hour
th
mobile construction, was added
e capabte of climbing 10,000 feet In six
new industry of tteroplane construe- minutes.
tlon. As a result Italy today has over
Giovanni Capronl, creator of the fa40,000 experienced workmen In thl!I mous Capron! machine, ls planning to
field, and her government possesses bulld ofter the war a flier carrying 00
over 3,000 military and naval planes
and 18 supplylDg others to her allies passengers, with which he expects to
cross the Atlantic In 48 hours. In
hy the hundreds. Many of the planes fact, he had hopes at one time of esA!jperlca has sen t to the French front
were made In Italy, and Italian planes talJllshlng during the latter part of
are being shipped here for the training this year a Paris to Washington mail
of our aviators,
route, flying by way of Poi,tugal, the
Such firms as Flat have accomplish- Azores, Newfoundland and New York
er:l marvelous re!lults
8 short time. City. The longest leg of this trip oveF
water Is 1,195 miles, which, he says, Is
This concern turne,I out a 700 H. P. well wltbln the range of the present
aerial engine, and other firms developed successful engtnes of 160, 200 H. Capron! machine. It would be a strlkP., etc. The big Pomlllo plant was Ing repetition of history If the nation
erected In three moatbs' time. Today which gave us Columbus, the tlrst man
there are more thon 25 aeroplane fac- to sail to the new world by water,
torles In Italy, and that ceuntry has should also furnish the first to follow
the dlst1n1!tlon of producing the fastest th8 t rout by air.
aeroplane In tbe world, the fastest
Not only In building, but lo handling
;;eaplane, the largest flying machine aeroplanes have Italians excelled. One
and the best climber.
of- the world's records taken by an
A great secret ()f lialy's success was Italian was the fent pf Captain Glullorbe large and power.tu! engines she Laure11,t1, who eM.obllshed a new
had already perf!'cted In her automo- long fflstance flight record by flying
bile Industry. These engines, develop- more tlla.n 900 miles without stopping
·ing from 500 to 700 H. P. and later 900 from Turin to Naple& and return In
H. P. and over, made possible the August, 1917. Lieutenant Re11natl asbuilding of much larger planes than tonlshed Americans during bis flights
tiad ever before been supposed poss!- here by golog up li,000 feet with 13
ble.
men on board nt Newport News and
Italy's aeroplane plants havei been by flying from Mineola to Langley
kept In operation, notwithstanding ad- Field, near Newport News. a distance
verse conditions, such as lack of coal, of 322 miles, with ten passengers
when wood wns substituted for power aboard.
generation, and the buHdlngs In which
Excel In Dirigibles Aleo.
U1e people worked were so cold that
Not only In heavier than a ir mavarnish would not dry. Another greet chin es, but In the d(rlglble lighter than
obstacle was the lack ot chemicals. air type hus Icaly excelled. The For
Right h·e re Italy pnys a tribute to Jann! dirigible has a record of llttlng
America. It was American raw ma- four tons ot bombs 18,373 feet as
terlal that made this great develop- against the bl!11t Zeppelin record of
ment possible.
13,12:l feet with a similar load. As a
Record Breaking Planea.
submarine chaser her non-rigid type
New designs or aeroplanes are being of dirl i::i hl e has bern very efl'ectlve.
turned out constantly by the Italian
We enunot say whnt will happen m
factori es. One of her machines produc- the verv neur future, but we cnn afed Inst year ts capable of carrying 11 firm th;ll !1 nlian technical· men, fulJy
tons. She ho s pla11t't' capable ot carrying realizing the always increasing exlgenli crew of 2:1 nwn nnd ts now develop- cles of war and t'he vnlue of av iation
tng one with o curmeity pt~ men and In the war. are c.:mtlnulng to work tor
,a hortSIie also has ever newer und more puwi>rful type!<
plan<·~ ,·nr:nhh · nf rruvellng more than which will 111 the f11 tu1·t• t•nulolt' ltnl y
900 mlle11 wltl •o"I II stop. One of the nm! ltf'r ::111,•u t<> k<'"i' rlii,,: ~:111 ,:·•!IIlll<' ,\
Jtalluu 1n11· uf 111,
I

''.Safetf First''. is the principle upon Reliable drugs, medicmes, toilet articles,
whica this bank 18 oondudad. c.ourt.esy, rubber gor..ds, etc.
Preacriptions a
"Where Qw!ljty Counts".
feel at home and that is always looking to Delicioue Ice Cream and Soda. Frank J.
the financial welfare of its patrons 1188 Demo, The "Rexall" Drug Store.
resulted in a growth most gratifying to
r
ounelves and depositc:n. Bank J'OUl'
.
money here. The NatklnaJ Hamllloa
Phone 185. _We move a n ~ .
D--'- ll-:tton N y
Baggage and Fre1ght Transfer. "Service
.u'
'

WIien You Need It". ,Hamilton Carting
The It.ore that lllltifies you when it Co., Robbins & Marshall, Props., Phone
comes to reliable up-to-dat.e Dry Goode 185.
and Shoes at correct prices. Geo. E.
Sperry 4t Son.
,
A gooFruits, Baked Goods, Tobacco, Etc.,
Heedquarten for reliable up-to-date First Clal!ls Goods at the right prices.
Furniture, Carpet.a, Ruga. Hooee Fumiahing1, Victrolas and Record&, rightly priced , J. J. Danehy.
Service aid Safety at a baDk wliere you Specialty.

/

One of the best Italian machines tor
reconnaissance work Is th e Pommo
two seater of 300 H. P., wlth a speecl
of 125 miles per hour, carrying two
machine guns and a large load of
bombs. Similar to thls is the 300 H. P.
Sia. Besides this, they posses for
rapid work a Sva biplane, a single
seater of 250 H. It. and a speed of 130
miles. Italy's best fighting ~Janee are
the Pomlllo single seater and 280 H . P.,
with protective armor and carrying
two machine guns, wlth a speed of 150
miles an hour, and the Ansaldo single
seaters of 250 H. P., with a speed of
150 miles.

Hadn't Thought

The Beat of Muaic

COMPLETI! CAST, PRODUCTION
AND ORCHESTRA-SO PEOPLI!

ClaSBea of Fighting Maehlnea.

You

They May

BOSTON OPERA SINGERS

Comic Opera
rapid-tiring guns. Italian designers by
synchronizing propeller revolutions
with machine gun fire have placed machine guns on planes that fire 600
shota a minute through the propellers,
whlbh make 1,200 revolutions a minute, the calculation being such that no
shota strike the propeller--<>ne shot
paSBlng between the blades with every
two 'turns of' the propeller. In addition to the machll\e guns a m~ltltude
of bomb throwing, position finding and 1
other devices of great utility in battle
and in bombardments have been perfected by Italian genlua.
Italy has developed the beet type of
machine for each clau of war work.
Those for night bombardment are the
Capron! biplane of 4l50 and 600 R P.
and the CI\J>ronl triplane of 600 B. P.
These planes have an average speed of
abou't 100 miles an hour and carry 'a
large load of bombs. For day born~
bardment one of their most efficient
machines Is the Sia type, with one engine of 700' H. P., which develops an
average speed of 125 miles an hom·
and has a capacity for 700 pounds ot
bombs.

Read These With Care.

Present Something

"'THE MIKADO"
lly GARRET SMITH.

Some Reasons Why It Pays to "Try

Safety First!
Get Yours Now!

Ha11ilton, July 18-24

The Unicorn.
The unicorn which assists the llon
· In upl.oldlng the Br1tlsh Royal coat of
arms bears the reputation of being en, tfrely mythical. But In truth it has
! an actual prototype ln the · chlru, an
antelope of western Thlbet and Hindustan. By right the chlru has two
horns, but lt Is or so pugnacious a dlspoattlon that It often loses one of them.

l

PRINTING

Of All
Kinds

not the cheap kind
but the
g~ kind done here.
,

......... ,,,,,,,,...,,,,,, ...

Rattleanake Skin.
The rattle of the rattlesnake ls developed from the single conical scale
or epidermal spine, which In moet
snakes forms the Internal tegument of
the tell. The bone on which the root
of the rattle rests consists of the last
caudal vertebra and Is covered with •
skin which ls the beginning of the nt'tle In young r~ttlesnakea.
·.. , , ~

--· i

T\l\'o· Great Sho\l\'s!
:,:..

THE MELTING POT

In

-\

•·~·····

•.

..

ISRAEL ZANGWILL
"THE CREAT AMERICAN DRAMA"

I

FEATURING GRACE HALSEY MILLS AND AN EXCELLENT COMPANY'.

r

-, .. -·

A ,•·• •

I

.,, ,.
1..i

'I"~--{
~

.. . ,. ,

·-:;)
...

't

I"" ' '

AND

THE MIKADO .

r,·-. 'l\

:, i

;..

FAMOUS GILBERT & SULLIVAN COMIC OPERA
FEATURING J. K. MURRAY, NOTED SOLolSTS, AN UNUSUAL CHORUS, AND COMPLETE ORCHUTli

OVER 30 PEOPLE
,,

1

!

REDPATH CHAUTAUQUA
SEASON TICKETS FOR THESE-AND FIFTEEN OTHER ENTERTAINMENTS
(IF SECURED FROM THE LOCAL COMMITTEE)

ADULTS $2.00

t..--~----------_,______

D

(Plus War Tax)
_ , , , , l"!r'r.l.m'N"'.'Sl1"'':'· · ...:-,·.., .... , •. , ...

CHILDREN $1.00

. .~-~ ~.,.----------------·

Hamilton, N. Y., July 18-24

-~~
I HAMILTON

Eunice and Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Naurman,
of Oneida; at Rev. D. J. Ebert's, Henry
Hakes and family, of Perryville; at A. J.
Goodsell's, Mr. and Mrs. c. R. Bri,ggs,
andsons,andMr. andMrs.H. o. Ousiby of
Apulia Station and Mrs. J. c. Smith of
Cazenovia; at J. c. Ottoway's, Morris
Walker and family and Guy Walker and
family of Eaton and Mrs. Emily Roberts
and daughters, of · Beaver Meadow. x
M-Mr. and Mrs. c. N. Penoyer and sons
of Morrisville spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. c. L. Smith, Mrs. Penoyer and the
boys will rem~in here for a few days.
-Pledges to the amount of $5,030 were
secured in this election district in the recent War Savings Stamp drive, thanks to
the energy and efficiency of the local captain, Dr. Thomas and the majority of his
helpers.
· -The pea picking season has opened
here. Harry Faulkner is harvesting early
peas and several West Eaton people are
picking for parties near Morrisville.
-Mr.' and Mrs. J. J. Darrow and family
spent Thursday with Miss Elizabeth
Eames of Morrisville.
-Mrs. H'. T . Collings and Miss E. V.
D<\,ll'OW were guests of their aunts, the
Misses Blair of Cazenovia, on 'fuesday
and Wednesday of last week. Mrs.
Collings left for her home in State College,
Penn., on Friday.

THE AM~ICAN FLAG ·

~

CONTINUED FROM PAGE I

Madl80ll Street Store
Ruuell Block

Main Street Store

union, one star be added to the union of
I. O. O. F. Block
the flag, and that such addition shall
At the
take- effect on the Fourth of July next
succeeding such admission." Following
, th~s enactment the first national flag
~Ii~ hover ~he ct"~u~ ~ Repr~ntatives,
~lg t:1 u~ r eig teen.
he conuSJon a ut t e arrangement of the stars
has largely disappeared. The flag now has
This Ad applies to both stores
six rows each containing eight stars.
America may recall with great pride that
Shredded Wheat pkg.
13c
the first official salute to the American
Campbells Soup the can
lie
Stars and Stripes was given by France,
Best N. 0. Molasses the gallon
85c
always our friend and now one of our allies.
This salute came when Burgoyne's surJnst while stock on hand lasts
render to America was announced to
Atlas Pork and Beans
2 cans 25c
France. New York State has the· honor
Flake White Shortening, the lb.
27c
of being the first state in which the flag
Macaroni the pkg
10c, 3 for 28c
was raised. The flag was first raised at
Fort
Stanwix, before the enemy. Later
Pink Salmon, flat tins at
14c
Burgoyne surrendered to the flag at SaraSteel Cut Coffee, 1 lb. pkg.
21c
toga, which was the decisive conflict
Sauer Kraut, the can
19c
of the Revolution.
In all states there are laws regarding the
Just try us on Bread-Blue Ribbon, Butter Krust
display of the National Flag. Some of
the laws are: 1st, That ev,e ry public school
and H. 0. Bread.
shall own a flag and display it during school
hours. 2nd. Anyone injuring the flag .in
any way is guilty of a misdemeanor and
Butter Krust, Blue Ribbon and H. O. Bread, as
shall be punished by , fine or imprisonment. 3rd. When the national flag .is
good as the law allow~·
displayed with other flags, it should be
given the place of honor. 4th. When the
colors are desired for decorative p'urpo~.
red, white and blue bunting should be used,
-Children's day exercises were held in
not'flags.
·
, the First Baptist Church Sunday morning
1
The flag is displayed only from sunrise at 11 o'clock. An excellent program was
until sunset, however there are three well rendered by the children arranged by
exceptions to this rule. Over the east artd the primary teachers,
Mrs. Allison
-Mr~. Genevieve Moulthrop and son west fronts of the National Capitol, and Gates, Mrs. Fred Snell and ~rs. Leon
ITEMS CONCERNING THIS VICINITY Stanley, of Lawrence, Mass., are guests over the adjacent Ho~ of Representa- Sawyer. Singing by the children, several
tives and Senate office buildings. In selections by the choir, socal solo by Miss
. of Mrs. Henry Berry.
AND ELSEWHERE
· spend"mg some these places the flag flies night and day. M. L. Calkins, chorus by choir. Prayer by
- M"1ss Florence v:1
n.a ey 1s
When the Stars and Stripes float over the Rev. Mr. Houston. pastor of the Congretime at Leslie Howard's in Sherburne.
White House it is to inform the people gatinal Church.
Notes of Interest Penned for the OccaMrs
Mel"
He
"
·
t
rta·
·
.
1ssa
nry 1s en e 1mng
of the President\ presence in Washington.
llloa or Clipped Fnm Our
Miss Eugenia Boss of Sherburne.
In some countries there is a tendency to
-Rev. R. S, Chalmers was called to
Eschan1es
-Ethel and Hazel Dresser ~e visiting abandon the flag in hostile operations be- Norwich Saturday evening by the ~rious
-A $5 bill in your pocket does not in- their grand parents near South Hamilton. cause the colors center the fire of the en- condition of Mrs. Chalmers, having had
crease in value; a Savings Stamp does. ·
-Mrs. Dimmick of Earlville, Clarence emy about the flag bearer and those around her· tonsils removed.
-Sunday morning, July 7th, Children's
-Madison county this year draws Brooks and daughter, Marian, of Chad- him. But in the American Anny and
$32,741 from the state as its quota of wicks, have been recent guests at Anson Navy, it is different. When the army or day exercises will be held in the First
navy go into battle they go along side of Congregational church.
state highway funds.
Brooks'.
the
National banner, not as a mark for the
-Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Fiske, Mr. John
-Since December 16th, 481 Madison
-Samuel Campbell an~ family of
County young men have been accepted for Otselic, Daniel Swancott of Utica, Frank enemy, but an inspiration to the men Fiske, Mr. J. Billings were in Hamilton
Tuesday to attend the funeral of Mrs.
service in the U.S. Anny.
Campbell of Ilion were Sunday guests at who are fighting for it.
Thus the history of the Stars and Solomon Billings, from her late residence
Bert Hughes'.
-Hornell has a white rat farm owned
-Mrs. Henry Berry entertained ten Stripes is the story of the nation itself.I with her daughter, Mrs. F. D. Seymour.
by Marshall Baird and the anim~s
young
children and mothers, Thursday Its glorious history is the history of the The deceased was a former resident of 1his
are 90ld to the government principally 'for
in
honor
of her son Henry's first birthday. people whose power it signifies. · From the town. Very much r@spected and beloved
use in laboratories.
tower of high ideals, where the American'. and will ever be remembered for her
-Mrs. Helen Thompson and Mrs.
-A 17-year-old Canastota young man
flag has always floated it may ever be great kindness and thoughtfulness to
Ellen Peck, twin sisters, celebrated their
paid a fine of $25 and received a suspended
seen, an inspiration to its people, an em- others.
birthday at the home of Mrs. Thompson
sentence gf six months for willfully damagblem
of hope for the conquered.
-Many relatives and friends from this
Sunday.
ing a war garden there.
town · attended the funeral of Merritt
-King Thornton has received news that
1 Lyon from the residerice of his son, Mr.
-Our otily complaint of the dear girls
her sister, Mrs. Zada Edmonds is in NorLinn Lyon of Bonney Sunday, June 30th.
~ wear their furs in summer, is that
wich hospital being treated {or a fractured
at 2 o'cl<><;k P. M., intermeni in Earlville.
~ don "t make the thing consistent
, -Mr. George Pratt went t<>~Cortland
and complete by wearing their bathing hip as the result of an automobile accident. Monday,
for medical treatment.
The deceased was at one time in company
-Mr. and Mrs. Luther Loomis were in
with his son, Mr. F. D. Lyon, in the mersuits in winter.
Syracuse
Tuesday.
-Mrs.
Ireaphine
Eldridge
spent
the
cantile
business in this town. A so.1ccess-Large abandoned ·sections of the old
-Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Brower and two first of the week visiting relatives at ful business man, much respected and
Erie and Champlain canals will be transwidely known and at the death of his wife
formed into large ponds by the conser- sons of Lanesboro, Penn., have been en- Plymouth.
-Mr. Leo Brannigan is working in I Mary Ette Benedict Lyon went to live
vation commission for the rearing of food tertained at King Thornton's.
with his son who s..uvives him.• Sympathy
and · game fish in large numbers
-Mrs. Sidney Cloyes of Earlville called Auburn.
~Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
McDonald,
and
is
extended to the family.
upon
Mrs.
DeAlton
Taylor
Wednesday.
-The number of women enrolled with
the political parties is a big surprise.
-Mr. and Mrs. Ira Hills of Deansboro son, Denis, attended Barnum and · · -Rev. and Mrs. Houston have re~urned
Bailey's circus in Utica last week Wednes- from Chautauqua County.
.;
Present indications are that more women were at Uri Rhoades' Thursday.
day.
-Mr.
Karl
Hartshorn
and
family,
are enrolled than men in Madison.county.
-Adelbert Babco*ck and Osro Tuttle
-Robert H. Green and family motored Mrs. Fred Geere were in Norwich Monday.
Within a few days the exact figures will be were in Norwich Saturday.
known.
-Mr. Frank Race was in Syracuse
-Ensign O'Brien of U. S. N. enjoyed to Utica, Friday.
-Mrs. William James spent a few Monday.
-The Ameridan Woolen company is a short furlough with his wife at the home
days recently in Utica.
to spend $100,00 in enlarging the Globe of her mother, Mrs. Keefe.
-Mrs. Camp of New Berlin is the guest
Woolen Mills in West Utica. The work
-Mr. and Mrs. Henry Roemer visited of Mrs. Emma Ockwell.
-Mrs. Carl Fuess of Madison spent
will begin at once and will result in prac- Saturday with her sister, Mrs. Eugene the latter's brother in New Hartford
-Mrs. Wayne Seeley of Sherburne
tically doubling the concern's capacity.
was a week end gueet ol her parents, Mr.
Pr~ton. Their sister, Mrs. Edgar Tracy, Tuesday.
-A new pension law has just gone who has typhoid fever, remains in a very
and Mrs. David Morris. 1
into effect where!, y the "boys in blue" critical condition. There are two trained
are benefited quite a bit. The following nurses caring for her.
will explain how much: Those who served
-Mrs. Algene Palmer attended the
ninety days will receive $30 a month; one Jacquay reunion held at James Brown's
year, $35; two years, $38; and all over two
-The following persons from this neighin Hubbardsville Wednesday.
years, $40.
borhood attended the Westcott reunion
-Charles Humphrey had the first peas
-Mrs. Clyde Oatman and Miss Bertha
-Shortly before 5 o'clock last week Cook are visiting friends in Jefferson at Mrs. Flora We·s tcott's in N irwich last picked in this vicinity last Tuesday,
Thursday: Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Westcott, June 25th.
Tuesday momin~ fire completely ruined County.
·
and daughters, Clara and Frances; Mr.
e stock c:lf goods n the variety store
-The
Red
Cross
Auxiliary
were enter-Mrs. Blanche Hughes of Earlville has and Mrs. I. J. Tayntor and children, Marand conducted by Mi$$ J. A. Holtained
by
Mrs.
Fred
Loomis
and Mrs.
jorie and Ernest; Mr. and Mrs. Leon
den at Earlville, and badly damaged the spent a day with Mrs. Cornelia Mor~e.
Chaee last Thursday.
-Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joseph
Durrant
of
Tayntor
and
son,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
H.
P.
Cushman block in which the store was
-Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alderman atEarlvillehavebeenguestsat IsaacMarsh's. Smith and son, and Harry Smith and
located.
tended
the wedding of Arthur Throop and
-Mrs. Harriet Willey of Earlville has family, Mr. W. W. Westcott is president
-Four hundred women have respondMiss Ruth Whiter at Boonvill~ Saturday.
visited
her
children
here.
for
the
coming
year
and
the
next
reunion
ed to the first call for volunteers for
-The Red Cross of Hamilton Center
-Fred B. Tuttle and family have will be held at his home neat; the Lake.
the women's police reserves of New
will
hold a picnic on Mrs. Harold Dunham's
-Miss Frances Lewis is home from her
York city. Two hundred of these, be- visited at Rev. Maynard Beach's in Verona.
lawn one week from Thursday, July 11th.
tween the ages of 18 and 35, have en-Dr:C. D. Oatman has been promoted school at New Hartford for the summer
-Nina May Burton from Morrisville
rolled for active training.
Legislation to Captain of Medical Reserve Corps.
vacation.
Station spent last week with her aunt, Mrs.
soon will be enacted authorizing their ap-Corporal Howard Babco*ck, son of
-Mrs. D. J. Ebert is visiting her son,
Aaron House.
pointment to the regular police force.
Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Babco*ck is on his who has a position in the ship yards near
--George Peckham was in Norwich
-New York State's military training, way to France having left Camp Merritt Philadelphia.
Sunday
visiting his brother, Adelbert.
in its organization of boys 16, 17 and 18 N. J., some time last week.
-Dr. A. R. Thomas spent part of last
-Miss
Sarah Kiley of Ossining, Miss
years old for military training, has just
-At the annual meeting of W. H. M . s. week in Albany.
Mary Kiley of Pawling, N. Y., and Tom
discovered tha.t out of 250,000 boysof held at Mrs. Alice Tuttle's last Thursday
-Mrs. Harry Rickard and daughter of
these ages in the State only 24,000 are the following officers were elected: Presi- Smyrna are guests of the former's parents, Kiley of Utica are home for their summer
vacation, Miss Grace Kiley of Utica joined
attending school. The 226,000 are eithe1 dent, Mrs. Charles Dean, Vice-President, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Faulkner.
them over Sunday.
,engaged in some occupation or idle. The Mrs. F. H. Lewis; Secretary, Mrs. Mary D.
- About 150 persons gathered for the
small percentage attending school is a B. Tuttle ; Treasurer, Mrs. Eugene Pres- Jones-Hughes reunion- at E. E. Jones's
-Mr. and Mrs. George Shores was in
startling fact to the education authorities ton;Secretary of Mite Boxes, Mrs. Clyde west of this village last Saturday. The Verona Sunday.
in the State, although it is said to be prob- Oatman ; Secretary Literature, Mrs. Eu- company enjoyed the day with singing
-Mr. and Mrs. Aaron House spent Sunably not much different from the condition gene Preston. Until further notice sewing , speaking, and the usual feast of good day at Mott Jones' in Hamilton .
.of affairs in other parts of the country. for tne Red Cross will be done during the I things. Guests were present from Whites- The Misses Kem of Sy1 acuse are
social hour. .
boro, Oneida, Lockport, Fenner and home for their summer vacation.
-On Wednesday the blacksmith shop Nelson.
-Mr. and Mrs. John L. Woodman and
The American brand of courage has a
and hen house of Ha~s Neilson was des-1 - The Baptist ladies are to serve their son, Charles Edward, of Lowville spent one
strong infusion of gayety. Witness our troyed by fire. Owmg to the activity usual chicken-pie dinner in the church day last week at their farm on the hill .
boys who advanced to battle at Veuilly of neighbo1s the house of James Williams I parlors on Thursday, July 4th.
Mrs. Woodman also called at George
with their helmets bedecked with poppies.
which "".as only a~ut 100 feet from the i -Miss Grace Karling is home from her Sho1es's.
blacksmith shop, did not catch fire, the studies in a Rochester business college for
-Mr. and Mrs. Lucian Throop and
Between the requirements of more
wind was in a favorable quarter to help a few weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Throop ot Sherburne
wheat 10r the allies and more money to avert this calamity. Mr. Neilson saved I
. visitors
..
.
k h" h
-Automobile
were numerous were at the Center Sunday.
support the a.my Uncle Sam must con- near y
t he wagon repair wor w 1c .
S
1. allh o f -LL
ff fina .
h
m town unday. Among them were the
tinue to tighten this belt and loosen the
15 .
was m t e. snup.
nci~1 1oss as following parties: a company of fourteen
straps of his pocketbook.
not been estimated, there 1s sorne insurance. , a t Sa mue 1 Bard"m,s. me
· 1u d"mg Be rt Ba1The German generals have oftt n set
com
and
family
and
Andrew
Balcom and dates when they will dine in Paris. But it
If you cannot get your favorite brand of
family of Redfield and Grant Balcom and is not·reported that the Paris restaurants
tobac;co, ju5t thin1' how those war-worn
The woman who can can and will can is family of Norwich; at E. D. Throop's, are laying in any supplies ol sal.l83ges or
boys in ~·trendies aie enjoying its
helping to win the war.
Mr. and Mrs, Griffith and daughter, , sauerkraut. +

flavor.

ash

K

and
arry

l
t
I

GROCERY·

· A. J. Newton, The Grow-Sir

I

-mm~•~~•

Dr. William A. Colledge ·

LEBANON

POOLVILLE

COUNTY AND NEIGHBORING

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I

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!

BONNEY HILL

WEST EATON

I

"AMILTON CENTER

Although Dr. Colledge will probably
talk about the Red Cross aoft its work,
he has gained a very enviable reputation as a buslness man's speaker. · He
has for years been a very succ~ssful
teacher In a great technical ichool of
this country and 110 has come ln contact with hundreds of youn1 men, and

bis lectures are a result of experl~oce
and observation of a man of, affairs.
He does away with the confusion ao
generally In the minds In regard to
what 111 commonly meant by 11ucceu
and the .d.evelopment of thoae powel'I
and the condition£ which brought It
about. Business men will want to
hear him.

ADDITIONAL . BREVITIES ' ~
CGNTINUED FROM PAGE

5

-Miss LeMoyne Orvis is home for
the summer.
-Miss Gertrude Beebe is vieiting
friends in Buffalo.
-Mr. Paul Atkyns is spending a few
days in Washington.
I

-Mr. and Mrs. Robert Craine and
daughter Helen are in Ilion.
-The 0. E. S. Guild will meet with
Mrs. Bartlett en Friday evening, July
5th to do Red Cross sewing.
-William Root Jr .. of Freeport, Long
Island, is visiting his grandmother, Mrs.
~- E. Root on Payne Street.
-Miss lnafred Hoeck~r of Potsdam, N.
Y., spent the week end with Mrs. J. N.
Bacon.
-Dr. and Mrs. Burnham left Tuesday
night for the farmer's boyhood home in
Newburyport, Massachusetts.
-Mrs. Carlos Bardwell and little
daughter, Barbara, from Salt Lake City
and Marie Simmons, spent last week with
their allJlt, Mrs. H. W. Mann.

-Mr .. ar>d Mrs. W. S. Vischer of Dolgeville came to visit their son, Mr. H. Vischer
on Saturday last: The following day the
entire party motored to Syracuse, and
brought back with them, Mrs. M. Bacher
who will remain for a brief visit.
-Mr. and Mrs. H. L. La.1desman and
family spent a day or two with friends in
town this week. Mr. Landesman whi is
inspector of underwear for the army has
been ortiered from Wisconsin to Piqua,
Iowa, and will have the oversight of a
number of mills in that section.
-A letter has just come from Albert
Karpp, written while on his way overseas.
He speaks enthusiastically of his trip
across, and assures his mother that the
convoy is formidable enough io appearance
tp keep the submarines at a respootable
distance. Tne letter was mailed"from the
other 1side after Albert had arrived.
-The college men often sing, "It's
always fair weather when good fellows get
together". True enough· not long ago
when the three Huntington's l}let in
France. Father and sons had a 'reunioP
that will not be readily forgotten. If this
item should catch their attention we wish
to assure them that"a word would be appreciated at this office.
·
Thomas Jefferson said: "Cultivators
of the earth are the most valuable citizens. They are the most vigorous, the
most independent, the most virtuous; and
they are tied to their country and wedded
to its liberty and interests by the most
lasting bonds."
Nbthing will ca~ indigestion and
general disorder in chickens quicker than
food which is musty or moldy. ·Look out
for beef scrap particularly. It can be
quickly tested by pouring a little boiling
water on a small amount. Your nose will
tell you if the scrap is not good.

-Commencement exercises were held at
McCabe's Hall last Tuesday evening. A
fine program was given by the High
School. After the• exercises, a reception
was held in honor of the graduates who
were: Mary Kling, Helen Birdsall, Ruth
Clark, and Claude Kenyon.
-Ralph Mason was in Utica Saturday.
-Roland Sweet, Henry Bailey, Lucille
Sweet and Ma\-r.Kling motored to Utica
Saturday.
-Mary Kling has been spending a few
days with Lucille Sweet on the west ·side.
-Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hibbard of Utica
have ~ spending a few days with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Edwards. ,
They returned Sunday evening.
-Mrs. Patterson's funeral was held last
Monday at 2:00 o'clock. All are sorry to
know of her death.
-Mary L. A. Gorton is on the sick list.
All wish to see her out soon.
- The Standard Bearers will meet at the
home of Mary Kling July 12th. All the
young people are invited.
· -The 4th of July will be celebrated in
full on the. school grounds. All invited
to come-and so help the Red Cross.
-Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Gray a
daughter, named Anna Marion Gray.
Congratulations are extended to them.
-Lysle Avery who had a,1 accident with
his motorcycle and was hurt quite badly,
is not quite so well. All hope to hear that
he is b)tter soon.
'
-Harry Williams and family spent Sunday with !Vir. and Mrs. Blakeman.
-tv..r. Milton Sprague has been spending a week with her mother, Mrs. Jay
Snow.
-Mr. and lV,rs. Rislry, !'.1r. and Mn.
C' rvis, and N.'.r3. Beebe were g'.lests of
l\.~r. and r-!rs. Os:ar Gorton.
- Dwane Marsh and wife are spe:iding
a few days with their son, Earl Marsh of
Canastota.

-Agnes McCabe spent last week in
Utica with her sister, Mrs. Charl~s Barnes.

EAST HAMILTON ·
-Burt Bacon and family of Brookfield
Floyd Bacon and family of South Hamilton were at C. W; Bacon's Sunday to celebrate the 40th anniversary of their marriage.
-Mrs. Allen Risley of Schenectady is
spending some time with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. H. M. Stebbin:,.
-Mr. Dunn of Syracuse visited F. M.
Saunders the first of the week.
- Saul Excell and family with several
coupfes from Poolville and vicinity picniked at Lake Moraine Sunday.
- Raymond Brown is visiting his aunt,
Mrs. Al bro, near Syracuse.
- George Alderman, with Mr. and Mrs.
H. E. Throop, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Alderman motored to Boonville Saturday
to attend the Throop-Whiter wedding.

- Rev. F. H. Lewis officiated at th ?
. The clock shelf, the cupboard, the
funeral of Mrs. A. J . Patterson Monday
calendar are all right in their place but arc
afternoon.
poor substitutes for necessary files and
- Mr. and Mrs. T . H. Craine and family
rooks for l~eeping records on the farm.
of Brookfield spent Saturday with Rev.
Businc:s methods pay in farming.
and Mrs. F. K. Lewis to help them observe their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. It ras Mr. and Mrs. Craine's
nineteenth anniversary.

NORTH BROOKFIELD

- Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Page of Brookr. and Mrs: Glade Avery spent fi~ld spent Sunday with thei~ .fQrmer pa,.
• unday with their mother, Mrs. Eugene tor and wife.at the M. E. parBOl\age anj
attended service here and at Poo !ville.
f~v~rr.
-r

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