OCR | Digital Collections (2024)

epublica·

I

VOL. 90

No.39

HAMILTON, N. Y., THURSDAY~ MARCH, 6, 1919

,,

OBITUARY
group of young girls who were approached
and advised to go out into the Nevsky The
c:nc:s season's
Prosi:e..:t and 'do as tl)e prostitutes are
Mrs. W. S. Hudson
--course ~kes place this evening in the New
doin__g."'
Tuesday morning at her home between
.
Evicted Oneida Indians To Have Tribal Chapel on the Hill at 8:15 o'clock. The Testimony of An Eye Wltneu to Many
"Do the Red Gua·ds," Senator King
asked, "rape, ravish and despail women at Hamilton and Randallsville occurred
Terrible Things
fOm
Holdlngs Returned
University cordially invites the people of
will?"
the death of Mrs. W. S. Hudson, from
~e village and Comm~it~ to be present .
"They certainly do."
1
pneumonia. · Mrs. Hudson was well
Hdlding that the treatte:3 between the without charge for ad"?JSSJon. The proDr. George A. Simons, who returned
ITS AMERICAN DEFENDERS
known in this community. She was born
United States and the Iroquois Indians gram folfQws:
from Ru&fila last October, after many years
"Do you know the extent of their ap- in Killbum, Wis., in 1861 and was the
by which the great federation of the six
When the Boys Come Home Oley Speaks of residence in Pei~ograd: as super:in~en- propriation for propaganda in other
nations became wards of the u ·ted Stat
,
Q
dent .of.the Me~hod1st ~p1scopal M1SS10!1, countries?" asked Senator Overman.
daughter of David and Harriet Hatch.
ru
es I
uartet
was m the capital dunng the Bolshevik
"I do not know the total, but we know She was united in marriage to William
"were
and
are
not
mere
scraps
of
waste
Songsrevolution.
He
understands
the
language
NEWI HATS and CAPS.
that millions of rubles were appropriated
pape1," United States District Judge
The Pilot
Protheroe · ~d enjoys.-:-if that i~ the pr<?per word-a for that work, a great deal of 1t for the S. Hudson, who survives her and who has
W. Ray has handed down an
Lassie With the Lipe So Rosy
F·sher wtde acquam~~ with ~uSS1a~s of every werk in India and China. They are also the sympathy of the entire community
NEW! ·SHIRTS' COLt.ARS ' George
· ·
h. h
On ·
·
~
class and opm1on. His testimony, as
in his bereavement.
and TIES.
o~mon w ic restores. to
e!da Indians
Falstaff's Song
Fisher given before the committee of the United very active in England."
"Then is it not true that any American
Mrs. Hudson was liked by all who knew
evicted from reservation property near
Mr. Sarto
States Senate, in Washington, Februman or woman who gets up m a public her and was devoted to her home and
NEWI SUITS TOPCOATS Oneida in 1909, land taken from them Duetary 1~. is t~e.unprejudiced ~ta~eme~t !Jf an place and speaks for Bolshevism is urging
'
through civil procedure as the result of the
The Crucifix
Faure AmmctU_l citizen and .a Chnst1an m1ms~er, the overthrow of our government and the family. She leaves besides her hus~
and Extra PANTS. Red Man's improvidence·
M H .
d M GI
who testified conc~rnmg m~tters of which instituaion of the horrors you have referred her aged father and mother, two sisters
r. arnaon an
r. enn
he had first-hand information
in this country?"
and two brothers. The funeral will be
NEW! S OE S d OX
The. op_inion, filed in the office of the Songs·
In reply to questions Dr. Simons said: to "Yes,
sir, that is right."
held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock, at the
·an
- clerk of the United States Court in Utica a-I Did Not Know
Vanderpool , "Within two. months after t~e March
"And, therefore, its apologists here are house. Whe was a member of the Baptiat
FORDS-Black or I is one of the most
intt'resting docu~Under a Blazing Star
Burleigh (1917) revolut10n pr<?·German1sm was. the enemies of the United States?"
.
found to be at work m every phase of
"If they are not they are either mush- Church of Hamilton.
Dark Brown.
I ments to be .fou.nd ID ~he records of ~e
c-:-Serenade
Oley Speaks Russian life, The agitators came from all

or muddle-headed."
I Northern Distnrt, going back for its d-Christ in Flanders Ward Stephens parts, hundrt!ds of them, and these latter headed
In answer to a question regarding the
Apportionment of School Monies
NEW! RUBBERS for the I fundamentals to the original treaties of
Mr. Harrison
mclud.ed many of the most active from the status of women in Russia now, Dr.
1794, and establishing finally and con- Quartetseast SJde of "!'Je~ Yo~k.
The apportionment of school monies
stated that the Bolsheviki had
Whole famil )'.
.
.
"These Y1dd1sh agitators from the New Simons
started a definite . program relative to for the various school districts of the town
cl.uSJvely. the fact that the I ndia11 ~d
a-Ring Out, Sweet Bells of Peace
York
east
side
followed
in
the
trail
of
1
women. He told of a decree in which of Hamilton has been made for the coming
NEW I RUBBER BOOTS his affairs may not be bartered with
Caro Toma i Trotsky, who was himself on the east side women
between the ages of eighteen and
unless under the sanctions and super~Lass o'Mine Florence Turner-Maley at the time of the Czar's overthro!'· I forty-five years were ordered before the year, and are as follows :
High or low, black visions prescribed by the statutes.
c-Swing Along . Will Marion Cook , have met hundreds of these east Siders. commissaire, "to be assigned a man with
TOWN OF HAMILTON
I have seen them on the Nevsky Prospect
or red ~
The pro~rtY which is to be restored
Quartet
and 10me of them called on me at my home whom they are to live." ~hen the Dist. No. 1. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 16o8.40
Bolsheviki marry, one of the questions
to the descendants of the great tribr Duetin Petrograd.
2 . ....... ........
804 .58
asked is, "How long do you propose to be
which held dominion in the fore.9ts of
The Hunting Song
Bullard
"Let me make it plain _that tJiese men are married?"
3 ..........• . ....
29 1.49
,
.
apostate Jews. I don't hke this unpleasant
OFFICIAL ATHEISM
C e.'ltral New
5 ..... . ..... . ..
177 .56
York before the cornmg
Mr. JamesandMr. Sarto
feature of the case but it happens to be
145 ·30
Dr. Simons testified that a catechism of
6 . ...•.•.
of the white ma,1, is some 32 acres lo- Airthe truth, and muit therefore come out.
atheism had been added to the curriculum
at
cated on the West road, between Oreiila
Flower Song from "Carmen"
Bizet
7 . .......... .. . ..
188 .47
GERMAN INFUENCE STRONG
of the Russian public schools.
8 ... . .... . •.•....
181 . 84
I
and Munnsville, and t?e story goes· b~ck
Mr. James
"And so the revolution was but a few
''The Bolsl}evik," said the witness, "is
9 ..... .. ........ .
152.04
to 1842, when a Portion of the Oneida Songweeks old before some of us became im- not only an atheist, but he also seeks to

tribe, mi~rating westward, deeded to the I I'm a Roamer
Mendelssohn pre_ssed with the ,.fac.t that there was a make all religions impossible. They asJO . .... • ...... • .. .
178 .72
state a portion of the reservation. A
Mr. Glenn
~trong apostat_e 'i: 1dd1s~ e!~ment at work sert that all misery is due to the superII . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
26o .9:r
stition that there is a God. One of their
.
f th t ·be · I d.
h
Quarte•m Senator
the Bolshevist machme.
12 ,. .. ........... .
150 .13
po rtmn
e n , me u mg t e owners
....Wolcott remarked :
Main Street
officials told me: 'We now propase to en14 ...... ..........
175 ,64
of lot 17, remained, and the particular I Medley of Southern Songs
"You said that but for the suppart the lighten our children, and with this purlot was n6t deeded to the state. These
Introducing-Swanee River-Carry Me Bolshevist movement got in New York it pose in view, we are issuing _a catechism
15 .. .... ..........
158 .89
owners included Aaron Cooper, HanBack to Old Virginny-0 Suzaonah- y;ould '1ave failed . :Now, if that be true on atheism for use in all the schools.'

.. •
1t would appear that we have a problem The man who told me this was the comTotal . ..... . ..J..... . .. .. $ 44739 .98
BOSIIESS& PROFESSIOUL DIRECTORY t nah Cooper, Dolly Cooper, margaret
Old ~~tucky Home-Old Black J~ right here at home."
mis.'!aire for enlightenment and education."
TOWN OF BROOKFIELD
Cooper, Betsey Cooper, Jenny Cooper,
- Dine.
Dr. Simons here told of his viEits, dis"Can yo u tell us anything of the treatMoses Charles, Caty Charles, Margaret
______
guised as a workman, to the meeting places lid accorded the so-called bourgeoise or Dist. No. 2 .. .............. $
16lJ . 56
DR. H. P. WELLS
Charles, Susan Charles, Mary Charles
of ~he Bo!sheviki. . He said that in conver- middle classes?" Senator Nelson asked.
3 .... ........... .
184 . 13
"Thousands upon thousands of them
.
·
·
• '
SHEEP GROWERS FEDERATE
sat10n with the ignorant masses of the
DENTIST
5 . . . . ......... . . .
445.93
Ehzabeth Comehus, Daniel Comehus,
movement he found that few of them had have been starved to death. l ' Dr. SimWltlcebo11n :
7 .......... ...... .
163 .60
Rodene Cornelius, Jenney Cornelius, Job
any idea what Bolshevism really was.
mons answered. "I have seen the walking
o:oo ro I a,~ A. t.f., , :3q to s:oo P . M .
alias Anthony Antone, Cornelius Antone, New Orgilfllzallon of County Associations
He .told of the haranguing of these ~~le shadows of these dying human beings in
9 . .............. .
744 .52
Thomas Antone, Mary Antone and SuIs Resulf of SuccessfuJ Coby agitators who traveled a?Out the aty m the streets of Petrograd. Thousands have
IO .. .••.• .. . . . . • . .
179 .08
trucks. Many of these a~tators, he add· drQpped dead in [their tracks. I have seen
OR. HOMER E . SMITH, F. C . S.
12 ...... , .... , ... ,
538 .82
san Antone.
operative Wool Sale Drive
ed, he recognized as east s1ders he had met them myself. I have, seen some of the
uevolff hie e1dusive profeuional aitention
13 .. .. . .. ·... .....• • 186 .67
Mary ich~nandoah, or Skcnandoah, a
As a result of the success of the farm in Petrograd or who had been painted out finest men of the old days stancting
IO tile medical and aur~kal treatment of the
starving in the streets and with out14 . . ............. .
159. 25
waeaeet1 of tl>e eye, ear, n01e ;wd throat and the daughter of Margaret Charles and a bureau federation in aiding the sheep to him.
..:ientilic lilting of gla_., X-ray laboratory grand-daughter of Moses and Catf
· :"ro what was due more than to .~Y· stretched hands begging a few kopecks.
15 ..... .......... .
179. 26
lar picture, and lreatrnenlll. Office boun 9
.
.
growers
of
the
state
in
selling
their
1918
thmg
else
the
success
of
these
Bolshevik1?"·
I have been in the home$ of the best people
1u u and 1 to 4, week da,, only.
th
16
...............
.
186.
57
f
harles,
occupied,
wi
Margaret
Honwool
clip
cooperatively,
representatives
of
asked
Senator
King.
of Petrograd, in which there has been no
Turn11r Building, Norwich, N . Y.
17 ............... .
164. 50
yost and Isaac Honyost, descenpants of :28 of the county wool growers associations
''To the cleverly work-out program of bread for weeks. When I say the better
18 .. ............. .
183 .45
some or the other original holders, the got together at Ithaca , recently and de- terroris-n and to the advocacy of tt e class I mean the people who believe in a
~
property in question until November 30
sl- <.'.;rl.cer of what they c:1111he capitalist d ean handkerchief and a white shirt."
184.jf\
19 .. .....•... . ...
.
' cided to form the New York State Feder- class. The whole question might be sum"What of the Red Anny ; what is it?"
20 .......... , ... .
156 .51
r909, when t~ey were evicted . by _ th e ation of County Sheep Growers Asso ..ia- med up in their slogan : 'The urity of the "It is a mass of Letts, Chinese, Germans,
182 . 21
21 .......... ... ,. ,
sheriff of Madison County on a wnt of tions.
proletarian cause lies in putting a gun in
Austrians,
Hungarians
and
unfortunate
assistance.
the hands of the workmen'"
190 .5r,
22 ...... . ... ..... .
Russians, who have been forced to serve.
Since five of the delegates present at the
23 ... .. .. .
205 .34
But fdr these outi;iders there never would
MURDERS NUMBE R THOUSANDS
This action was rnad e Possible by th e initial meeting were not legally author~ed
24 ... . . .......... .
179 .35
mortgaging of the 32 acres by Isaac to represent their county associations and
Dr. Simons told of ;witnessing the murder have been a n ucleus for a Red Army."
16() .30
1
8
25 .. . ... ...-...... .
of
two young men in front of his office in
• HonyoEt, in April, 8 5, to Philander three others were absent when the vote
27 . ........... ... .
185.35
A Hea-vy Death Rate
~paulding, who tr~nsferred it t~ Pa.t- was taken, the vott! favoring the adoption Petrograd, the killing taking place a few
minut~ before Ambassador Francis, who
28 ............... .
145.68
rick Boyl~. Patnck Boylan died in of a constitution and by-laws represented was his dinner guest that night, arrived
The recent eptdemic of influenza has
2o6.30
29 .. ...... .. ..... .
1897, leavmg Joseph Beal as executor . . only the following twenty c;ounties: at his home.
brought to this country a disaster of great
In July, 1905,. hthe property
cayuga, chemung, Cortland, Delaware, Asked to estimate the number of per- magnitude. · The crest of the wave of the
B k · fwas pur-1
'd
sons who had ~n murdered by the
Total. ....... .. . . ..... .. $ 5289 . 72
c h a sed b y M 1c ae 1 ur e o One1 a, D t h
E
G
o
G
hO Id 1·t t0 J r Bo I
u c ess,
ssex,
enes.e.
reene, Bolsheviki Dr. Simons replied that it was epidemic has passed, but the reappearance
TOWN OF LEBANON
w
~
u ta
Y ~n.
Livingston, Monroe, Wayne, Ontario, in the thousands, but that no man could of influenza in somewhat less severe form
In ' J_uly of 1906 J~h~ Boylan began Orleans, Otsego, Schuyler, Geneva, Steu- at this time even approximate the number in many localities throughout the country Dist. No. 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ .357 · O(j•
~ act10n for the ev1ct1on of ~argaret ben, Tompkins, Washin ton, Rensse- of the victims.
indicates quite clearly the fact that we
2 . . . . . . • . . . . . . . - ..
174 .86
"The Bolsheviki never investigate. shall have this disease to deal with for at
1George, N01ah George an~ the members laer, and Yates.
g
J . . ... .. . ..•.....
174 .55
They
kill
on
the
spot,
as
a
rule,
"
he
added.
4 . .....•... ·..... .
FOSTER
of th e Skenandoah family. Chapman·
The three CO'.lnties with accredited
234 .63
Dr. Simons cited the case of two least many months to come.
Ske~andoah, _a seaman on_ th e gunboat delegates absent when the vote was taken brothers. One was wanted by the
In the last great epidemic; in 1890, 1891,
5 .. ... ... .. .. ... .
i84 .2:r
GENKRAL AGENT
~anet~a ~unng the Spamsh war, was, were Albl ny, Chenango, and Orange. It Bolsheviki to answer a certain charge. and 1892, the greatest mortality occurred
6 ....•.. ........ .
406. 46
" N D ADJUSTER
WJ~ his wife, later made a part y to the is ex pected· that several more county asso- They were unable to find the brother in 1891, the second year, although all
7 ..... . .. ....... .
183 .76•
so they killed the one against
.__.AMILTON
N
Y
action.
. .
. to Jom
. . t he sought,
three of these years showed a higher death
8 .. . .... •... .....
152.59'
"
, · ·
I
. d be'
R ,
_. C
c1at10ns
w1·11 ma k·e app1·1catton
whom
there
was
no
charge
or
suspicion.
t was tne
,ore e,eree 0 . H. o. .
Bl~ kmail and graft were everywhere rate from the acute respiratory diseases
+++ ·11
hO
ed h
. ·~
Id federation m the near future.
recogr!ized, said Dr. Simons. If a person in New York ity than had been exvi e bew
r;port. h t at P?rtdi.ti rt couth
The following are the oflicers elected :
Total. .................. $ 2168 . 16
n.ot
ma e w1~ out preJu 1~e as
e
President, Fred L. Porter, Crown could get the money, he said, it was gener- perienced before for many years. It is not
TOWN OF GEORGETOWN
ally
passible
to
buy
even
one's
life
from
I p . t E .
rights of the vanous
persons interested
,
.
om , ssex Coun t y ., v·ice- p ..-·d
•=I en t • F . L. the present regime. However, few had as yet po ible to assess even approximate- Dist. No. 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . f. 715 .22
represented
one-for tieth,
~-loocl Y, R u~··hv1·11e, on t ano
·
c oun t y ,. the money and the killings went on. He ly the extent of the loss which influenza
, · three-,ourths,
d
h.
.
,v
2 . . . . . . . . • . . . ....
+01 .06
• one ,ortteth an
T .trty-one-fortteths, T reasurer,
·
E . s. H 1.ll , p eruv1·11e, T omp k.
·ms said that twelve men entered his home and has brought and will b ring to the country
J . ............ .. .
205 .84
tried
to
blackmail
hi
sister.
I
t h e a,~t nBamled . s hare be mg that accorded Coun ty ; Direc to ~~. A. W. North, Walton,
4 .............. . .
179 .43
" What about the criminal element in before the sickness and death rates are
to Ju ta oy an.
Delaware County ; John A. Curry, Hart- the present regime?" Senator King asked. freed from its malign influence. The
6 . .............. .
145 . 15
Sale was made by judgment, but nei- wic k, Otsego County.
"There is a la rge criminal element in the presen t indications, however, would seem
7 , . ............. .
183 .44
Bolshevist
regime,"
was
the
answer.
"The
ther the United States, the state of New
'T he directors have chosen Mark Smith,
to show quite clearly tha,t the immediate '
8 . .. .. . ......... .
162 .2,3
fac t tha t the criminal has a big part in the deaths resu lting from influenza and its
York nor the commissiorier of Indian af- extension sheep spc.-'Cialist, of, {he New movement
9 ............ .. . .
174 .31
is p1 oved by the destruction in
fairs was made a part y to it. Justice York ~ ate College.of agriculture, as a,ct ing a public bonfire of court records, the des- complications in the United States during
dest ruction of piisons and the liberation of the present year will probably exceed
We don't mean to say that we Lyon refured to grant a final judgment secretary during the coming year.
Total. ......... .... ..... $ 2166 .68
all criminals, who are sympathetic with the 300,000.-From "The Rerent Epidemic of
but the matter was taken to the Appelcarry more Wallpaper than Sears late Division which reversed Justice
cause. We know it to be a fact that some Influenza," be Hermann M . Biggs, in the
Millinery Openin,i
of the worst criminal characters in all
Smyrna, N. Y., Mch. 5th. 1918.
and Roebuck or Montgomery Lyon on the legal aspect of the matter,
Russia hold pasitions under the Bolshe- American Review of Reviews for January, W. H . Newton,
Mrs.
Charles
T
ripp
will
open
her
store
vist govemment, while others are helping 1!)1 9,
Ward & Co. or that we can supply though not passing on ite merits.
Earlville, N . Y.
wi th an entire new stock of Millinery,
.
Final judgment was made in August, which she ·has purchased in New York as agitators, while under the damnable
My dear Mr. Newton :system
they
call
nationalization
the
everything that may be asked for . 1909, and when the money was divided
- While Charles Shaver of Cazenovia
! wish to thank you for the prompt,
City, on Friday and Saturday, March crimi11al is actively co-operating.'i
was wiping up the engine in an Oak- courteou·s and satisfactory' manner in
but we do say that we ·have a under the order, the plaintiff's attorney 7th and 8th. Her store is now located in
GIRL VICTIMS OF ATROCITIES
land runabout inside his show room
good supply at reasonable prices received $303.78, including an _ex~ra al- the Sperry Block, formerly occupied by
" What of the treatment of women and on Albany street, the wiring short- which the insurance on my furn iture and

-.
lowance of $36.25. The plamttff re- the Western Union Telegraph Co.
undertaking establishment, which was
girls?" Senator King asked.
lll() give us a call.
We think we cehed .on her costs on 1appeal, $89.15 ;
"Tha t is a terrible question to answer. I circuited, the spark setting fire to the destroyed by fire on•Jan. 4th., was settled.
can satisfy you.
the whole sum to which the defendants
might cite case after case in answer to it. wiping cloth he was using. Instantly
Sincerely yours,
the oil about t he engine caught fire.
were entitled and the balance to the sertion of its prerogative as guardian Let me cite one of the worst.
Walter G. Willcox .
"
A
few
days
before
l
left
Petrograd,
in
The car was pushed out into the street,
plaintiff amounted to $307.07, while $6.05 of its red wards, saying: " I fail to find
BOOKS
October
last,
a
woman
of
the
highest
culwent to the plaintiff for difference in any evidence that the Uni ted Sta tes has ture, a woman more than fifty years of and the fire extinguished with blankets
costs. Then the title of the Indians was ever surrendered such guardianship."
STATIONERY
age, and a teacher for years in a famous but not till a fter M r. Shaver had been
h ~ld to be extinguished and still owing
J udge Ray holds that since the proper imperia l instit ute for the education of burned about the face and hands. The car
Friendsh ip.
money, the descendanCs of the Oneidas i authorities were not consulted in the young girls, called on me. She was in was not seriously damaged except tha t
Friendship Is a vase wh!c-h, when lt
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
hYsterics. 'Why have I lived to see all
Is flaw ed by beat, or vlolf'nce, or acciwere evicted in the fall of 1909.
mortgaging of t he property that the par- tnis?' she sobbed.
the wiring was badly burned.
dent, ma y well be broken n1 once; It
"Then
she
told
the
story.
The
institute
TYPEWRITER PAPER AND fo it went along until the long arm tition, action ~ d . jud~ent and de~ree
can never be trusted ofter. The more
which she taught is one of the finest
of the Great Whi te Father at Washing- I of sale are void rn~far as t he Umted in
buildings in Pet rograd . She said t hat the
- The Board of Supervi~ors in quarterly graceful nnd ornamental It wns, thl!
RIBBONS.
ton reached out and began to move in States and t he In_dians are concerned Bolshevist au thorities had barracked hun- session at Wampsville Monday discarded more clearly do we dlsef' rn the hope1
1
dreds of the Red Guard in one wing of the the old official seal of Madison county, lessness of restoring It to Its former
_.............- .... ·-··-.. - ....................... ·----·----·-- the interests of the N ation's wards. The :re~t::~n~u~:m~:~:~!o:e~~e
building and in doing so issued orders which has been in the County Clerk's state. Coarse stones, if they nr fracstatutes of the state. and the statutes of
.
"'
that all girls of and between the ages of
the Nation were explicit as to just how I scnb.ed. He holds that .the stale of N~w ~ix.teen
and eighteen years were to remain o~ce sin.ce 1806, a.nd adopted a new seal, hlred, may be ementPd again; precious
{
.
l an Indian could sell or mortgage his 1York has never obtained and extrn- m \ he building.
mcular m form with a dark background, stones-never.
Diamonds, Pearls, and all , property, and neither the tatc nor na- , guis· hed t he ng
· ,1lt O f occ.:upancy
·
. d ..,,as
tl
an
'I ~sh', the poor woman exclaimed! as showing the sw1 rising with a shield of
other Precious Stones. .
tional representatives have been parties ! ne~er co~ferred the, abso~ute and unre- she trJ~cl to tell the. rest of the ~om~le ) liberty placed between an American InMOVIE C,.ORNER
story,
that I had died before this thmg d.ian (s t a,f"" m
• 11and ) and a white man c·m
The best modern settings i to any of the actions, nor had the con- I stncted 11~ht on the l~d~ans to co?vey ha
pened."
furnished to order.
'sent of the superintendent of the Oneida . t?cse 1~nd s. ~he res~~lt'tlon~ on ahenaP.And that," said Senator Wolcott, "'was Colonial dress and sword in hand).
Tonight.- Kitty Gordon-"Adcle" .
Special designs drawn if
reservation been secured. Moreover, the I.ions, says th e c_o urt, .11 ere vahd 11nd have the result not of the act of irrespansible Underneath are the Roman characters
Friday.- Douglas Fairbanks.
Ja,1d was t ribal land, not owPed scv~rally. -flOt been complte~ with,
.
guards, but of the Bolshevist authorities?" MDCCCCVI with an inscription around
Saturday.- Clara Kimball Young m
desired.
A decree will 1s ·ue d clanng the con"Yes."
· Ie rea d'.mg: "c--1
fM a di son Coun- "Shirley Kaye".
"In
other words," said Senator King, t he circ
u<:<1 0
.
JOHN A. LANE
The affairs of state mo~ed slowly bu t . vcyances of the lands and the judgment
"these
poor
little
girls
were
the
victims
of
ty,
N.
Y.''
_
__
_
__
Tuesday, Marchll- Margucrile Clark.
(
, t he hand of the Great White l· ather went · of sale in the partition action null and
th~. lust of these_ ui:spea~able creatures?"
Wednesday, March 12.- Romance of
l
9 Maiden Lane
on working. And t h~n it was taken into void and directing the restoration of the
Yes, of tSo
he d~
l iest pigsd th e wodreld ~beas
It is certain that the country has gone Tarzan, benefit of the Hamilton Band.
the District Cou rt.
ejected Indians to the possession t here· ever seen.
v1 c no wor s can sen
.
. .
dry, but how is ord inary homemade cider , This 1s a sequel to Tarzan of th1• Apes. and
N w York
I In a masterly opinion Justice Ray of. The court adds that under all the them.
"ln another instance I was told of 8 tu be kept from breaking the law?
will be equally llS good.
---- - ----- .holds with the United States in the as- drc*mstaJ1ces 1*> coats will be ~mpoeed.

N .E W
f
· F00t
·
e
a
to
H d

RESIORES INDIAN LAND

1
'

.

.

1'

WH.AT IS BOLSHEVISM 1

Seco~:~'::!rt

l

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

ff

I

All at New Prl•ces ,

I

I

T SIradling &SOn S

I

'

I

°

.

: ......•..... ............
INSU·RANCE

I.

THE
MOST
PROMPT
AND
RELIABLE

s
.
ec

============.==

·1D. H.

I
I

••••• •• •••••••••••+••• •

F. 0. CHURCH
The Bookman

I

I

~:~1t~~

.,.._,___... ------------'f, !
l
l

il

L

lI
l!
l
l
ll ,
l;
l,
l

I

.

.

,

I

l

I

!

I

. . . . . . . . ._.._____~-.. . . ~_..,.~l,IINM~,
.
GO-DEVILS

What are

?•

We do not know who ~ave them the name, but never
111111d the name, the farmers know what they are but they
dn't know where they can aet them. LYON'S MILLS
keep them In ,tock.

We have on hand a large stock of well dried WHITS
PINE 111 thkknessea from 1 In. to 2 1-4 Inches. White
Plae Sldlni la lengths rrom 10 to 16 ft. White Pine
Slteathlng In leqtbs froa 10 t•..l 6 ft.. we are aeUla, al
· $40.00 M. ft.

Wanted

LOGS

SAW

alftred to oar 111111. wOI pay apot cull and t11e:.111saaeat
aarhl price for all klDcla of limber.
lrlal Ile .... , - wllla uwed for , . . . . . ad talre a..

la.._d&Mbad. Noatratrlpl.

LYON'S MILLS
NEW YORll

mr·EATON

GEORGETOWN

THE HAMILTON REPU

I

.

P00LVILLE

ALlf ETIME. OF
. SUFFERING

- Mr. and Mrs. H~mer Church and son
Raymond, were in Utica Tuesday .
- James Mahaney is assisting Mr.
Church in the blacksmith business.
- Mrs. Henry Berry entertained a party
of small children with their mothers in
Help the Nation win the war!
honor of the fourth birthday of her son,
Savo wheat-our soldier boys and our
George William Berry.
allies must have it. Use mt>re rye flour,
1
- Mrs. Olin Thornton is now 'at- her
com
meal, gra}i:im or o/ui/Q fDlzeatflour in
63 M.usonmvu Sr., Hvu..
home after an absence of six weeks on ac7ourbaking. Yoacincutthecostofliv"In my opinion, no other medicine
count of illness. She spent five weeks at
lQII aad ~p win the war by grindi.ag J'OUl OWQ Bour with a
ls so rood u 'Fruit-a-tivea' for
the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Indigestion and Constipation.
Adelbert Babco*ck, and one week in FaxFor yea.rs, I autrered with tbeN
ton Hospital. She is much improved in
dreaded diseases, trying all kinda of
h ealth.
·
treatments until I WU told I WU
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Loren
Wilson are spendIncurable,
ing
some
time
with
their
mother, Mrs.
'nil mill will
the finest kind of doar-at ona g,hJlae.
One day a 1'rlend told me to try
9creming or ~ is not necess:iry. You have yoor own
'Fruit-a-tives• (or F,11# Lir,w J Leon.ard Spaulding.
grain or can buy it c:heap-'li'.. By doin3 your own ~
-Miss Fern Bronson is teaching in the
Ta/Jlels). ·To my surprise, I found
jou g_et the finest kind of Bour at a 1:,ig savinB, _Use a
thill mecllclne rave immediate relief, Commerical department of Binghamton
Leu Mill f o r ~ whoL, wheat dou.r--rye-bactwheat
High
School.
.
and in a abort time I wna all rlrh,
--ciornmeal-nce-any kind oI ~
apin".
DONAT LALONDE
- Mrs. Julia Smith has left town after
Letz silent.nmnina, eelf-eharpt;ning platca grmd f.lst
l!Oc. a box, 8 lor $2.50, trial 1lse 2lle. spending a week with relatives in Washingand cJea.n-ui..nd anr-tind of grain, w~ chj or oily.
.U dealen or from FRUIT-A~TIVD ton Mills and Chadwicks. She will enter
They 1/#ar tho 8fRU1. They make no DDise-mid
UmlW. OGDEHSBUBG, N. Y.
~ ~ beDa them sharp. Ask us moro aioout
the Old i.adies' Home in One:da. Mrs.
the ~ C.ome 1n and get a free sample ol Oour
S:nith ~l be greatly missed. She was a
pound in the Loa.
regular attendant at church, was , memThoae who aow owa a Lett Mill can, at
ber of the Sunday School, Epworth
n
a i l ~ ... • ll*,lal act of plates fur
0
- The Baptist Church held their annual lea_gue and Woman's
me Mi~onary
piadiDa 8ou.r.
meeting and dinner last Tuesday. They , Society. Many good wishes go with her
report all acdunts paid and' a balance of ,· to her new home.
·
1140.00 to commence with. There were
.- Miss Libbie Tuttle is at her home h~e
about 70 present and all had a good time. after an absence of several weeks spent with
-Mr. Arthur Kemp has purchased the her siSt er in Sherburne.
·
Clark Smith farm on the state road one
- The71stbirthdayofHenryThompson
mile from here and the report is that he was observed by a•party given by his
will take a help-mate and soon move in daughter, Mrs. Francis Holman.
the same. May all good luck attend him.
- Mrs. Mary Ferris is now at her home
- Mr. Edward Benstead, who has been here after spending several weeks assisting
sick for the past three weeks is now on the in the care of Mrs. George Collins.
gain and will soon be out.
- Mrs. Belle Willey has discontinued
- News was received here last Wed nes- E
her work
Price.
Clothing Likely to, Drop.- Hcadline.
C as clerk in the ~tore otMr.
,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
to aa order of Joer. . D . S -. S.rday of t he death of Mrs. Hattie Bingham, m est _lose h~s ~ en her p!ace and ~as Well let 's stick around We might pick
10,rate of the Conaty of MadiM11,
wife of Charles E. Bingham, which occu rred moved his farruly into rooms m the Keith up something.
Notice ie Hereby Give11, -dine IO t.y. ie
au prraone llavin1 c:laime apl•t t"4
at t heir home in Northfield, Vt. , on Mon- Block.
Geor11e .R. Smith, late of the town el MIIIC
1
in uid county, deceaaed, to pre11rnt the ume,
day, February 17, 1919. Rev. C. E.
- Mr s. Fred B. Tuttle has spent several
the vouchen therfff, te tlie undeni.....,
1
Bingham was the pastor of the Universal days with her sister, Mrs. M aynard THE PEOPLE OF THE STATlt OJ' NEW Admioien,,tria of tlae eatate of tlae laid ~ .
at
the office of C. J. Cole.,an. het' au....,., II
ToY~K: McCormick, MarJ AA Sealniry Hamilton,
Church here for a number of years. By Beach in Verona.
In aid c:oonty, oo • befen Illa ....
Katherine~- Lynch. A•nie ll Welch. Mil!}' day of Joly 1,19the death of his wife he looses a lovely
- Mrs. Lawrence Coleman has spent Timmona,
1
Marian . Alice ·Welch and Mary G .
D-1 tb•
nd day of Jan....,,, A. D .• , _
d h I
A
d
Welch, all ef Hamilton. N. Y .; Patrick Mc•
lC•te &. fillritll.
woman an e p-mate.
true an great a few days at her home here.
Cormick,_ 414c W. 37tla .St., New Tork, N . Y..
church worker. She leaves besides her
.:...Lucius Tibbitts has moved · to New Michael McCormick, Park Roa, Kinnra. Gal· C arlcla J. Collllmea. Sole Adaialievalris .
.:..
way Co., lrel•nd ; Tb•- G. Fennell, Jamee C .
Attorney f« Adminilltratris .
husband, two children a daughter who has tserlin. Lee Chesebro will work the farm Fennell, Catherine FenDnell, all of Sarlltep Sl>rinp, N . Y. ; Mary J .
th
th
t
th
- - -- - - -- -=--been wi her mo er cooS antly for e vacated by Mr. Tibbits.
E1an, Cbatham, N. Y. ; }tleva Toll, 134 W. Jamea
St., Rome, N . Y .;widow 1 beira at law. and aut of
paS t th ree Y ~ in her ~ailing heal th , a nd
- News from Edwin Tracy states he is !Lin
of Peter McCormic&,,_ late a resident ol the
town of Madieon, in the l.Allnty of MadiMm. and
one son, DuBOJSC, who is overseas. They in Iowa where he has a brother living.
1
State of New Yock, deceued.
SEND GREETING:
: 11 have the sympath Yof their many frie nd s 1 -George' Holmes of New Orleans has
Wllereaa, Pettt McCormick, Jr., reaidi•1. at
Hamilton, N . Y ., R. D ., the Esecator named•• a
ere.Mrs. Peter Butler died in Utica, visited his brother Clark Holmes. ,
Sow Our -Wond...,_.
certain inatnament in writin1, p,,rportin1 to be the
.ALBE RTA CLUSTER O.d!I.
March 3, 19 19. She had been there for
- GeorgeClarkofChadwicks has visited Lut Will and Tntament of 111Ud Peter :t.'kCoraick
a very hardy sort from deceased, dated June II, 1910, which relatca to
Canadian Northwest, ,teN.
i 7 years. Her funeral was Thur&iay his sister, Mrs. Claude Fost er.
real and pereonal property ha lately made a
76 to 90 bu.. wt . 45 Ill!.
petition
to
the
Surrogate'•
Coort
of
the
Coan
ty
from the home here and interment was in
..:....Leonard Spaulding has visited his of Madiaon, t b ha..-e •id 11181.rument proved aad
See catalog pages a allll 4.
.American .AJ.-F'ALFA, tetlllBII
recocded
aa
a
will
of
real
and
pe.-nal

ta
te
;
the family plot here.
son Alvin in Binghamton.
and letter-a teotament.ary thereon iaeued to the
·
in Washington, 99.St . . .J
petitioner.
You,
and
each
of
you,
are
hereb
y
- Mr. George Forward is having his
- Mrs. Will Beach and Madeline Tanner
Our Seed Corn t ests -~ cited to ehow cauoe, if any you have, hefon the,
SWEEPSTAKES or EAJ.IILY
hQuse wired for elect ricit y. Hirth and of Utica are guests at Ben Bliven's.
Surro«ate'1 Court of the County of Madioon. at WONDER. large yielder, e a.r s 1ll tn. loeK,.
the C hamber• of the S urroga te in t he vtlla1e of GENUINE EUREKA, IOWA GO l , »
Holmes are doing the work.
,
- Leman Ford of Bouckville has been Hamilton in oaid, Coenty, on the a 5th day o f VINE. LEAMINMarci\. 19 19, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of tut YELLOW, RED AND WHITE Fl.r.llf'l,
- Mr. Risley has moved on to the entertained at Adelbert Babco*ck's.
day why a decree of thia Court !lhqµld aot be .EAR LY WONDE R VETCH, 'l'Ul'O'ffl Y
1
made
admittin1 1aid Will to probate a nd record CLOVER,
ALSTKE,
SPRING
ltT fC,
Dunster farm· and will work it the coming
- Miss Bertha Pratt of Lebanon has and arantio1
let~e!" thereon accordin1 te lbe WHEAT, BARLE
Y, PE.Ail, C A.BBA.O a
prayer of the pet1hoa.
year.
been the guest of Miss Doris Beach.
SEED, IRISH COBLER AND LA1'a

Prmnted by "Fruit-a-tins"
The Wonderful Fruit Medici•

Jl=.J,
T[rz-FEED .,MSilent-=,
Self-5=4

llftD4

l

MADISON

J:I

w. o. ems

Bamlt,a, N. Y.

-Mr. Lloyd Warner has purchased the
Wolcott house and has taken possession.
- Lionel Kinney has moved into the
Franklin house.
- Pearle Eldridge and family have
moved into Bina Hunt's tenant house.
- Mrs. John Church is in Syracuse help·
ing care for her sister, Mrs. Bert Goodsell.
- Mrs. C. M. Grif&th and Mrs. Delia
Andrus were in Syracuse two days last
week.
-Mrs. George Brown returned home
Sunday after spending two weeks at the
home of her daughter, Mrs. Floyd Burns
~ and will live ·in the house owned Of Amsterdam.
111d formerly occupied by his father,
- Mr. Dwight Stone died last night
Cerorae Bardin.
after an illness of several years. For two
~ r g e Isbell, who baa been working months he has been cared for at the ~me
at· the elevator in Eaton, has hired out to of his son Alton. He leaves two daught~rs
George Finen of Lebanon for the season. Ella and Ada of this place, and three sons
lie is mo,.,i"_ his family and goods from Harry of Camilus, and Alton and Lynn of
in~..
Arthur Howe house in this Georgetown.
'f'U)qe.
- Ed Hart is very ill.
- Leon Westcott, until very recently
-Clyde Reynolds, U. S. N., who has
with the American expeditionary forces, in been on a fifteen day furlough returned to
I
Wnmce, gave his people il delightful sur- , his work Monday.
)Ilise last week Wednesday by coming 1 - Dewey Stewart of Syracuse visited
in upon them some days before he was ' at N. V. Reynolds' over Sunday.
upected. Leon is looking fine af~r his
- Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Andrus and son,
the Rupert, who have been visiting in New
year in war, but isl glad to be back m
~tea and in range of good home cookery York and Washington returned home Sunence more.
d
· h
ay '";lg t.
- Miss Bertha Jones has gone to Munns- David Utter is home from Colgate
Yille to do nursing.
University.
---C;laude Mallard, who has been visiting
Ilia wffe and children at the home of her
lather, Charles Westcott, returned to his
position in Waahingtoo, D . C ., last Satur- Mrs. John McDonald has been enter- LaVeme Butler has returned to his
lily.
home here after spending a couple of taining her sister and husband from Bing- The Friday Club met with Mrs. weeks with relatives in Ohio.
hamton.
llaJTy Smith last week. A goodly num- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kind and chi!- Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Woodman are
• were present, including four visitors. visiting their son, John L . Woodman of dren of Pine Woods spent the first of the
Hot billCUits and syrup were aervd, a treat Lowville.
week with Mrs. King's sister, Mrs.
Seward Fisher.
sreatly enjoyed by all. The next meeting
- Mr. and Mrs. Horton Fountain and
a with Mn. Frank EY1lllL
- Mrs. Harriett Green of Hamilton
daughter, Ida, visited relatives in Syracspent the week-end at R.H. Green's.
- The morning subject in the Methodist cuae last week.
- Mrs. Seward Fisher was called to
CJrurch next Sunday ii '"Two Kinds of
- Miss Ella Moore has gone to Albany
Binghamton last week to see her brother
Leaven", a theme appropriate for the to spend some time with her brother:
James Givens, who was serij>usly ill.
lll)e!ling of the Lenten aeaaon.
-Cossette Brothers have moved to His death occurred Saturday, March 1.
- The Friendship Circle met with Mrs. the "Bluebird Farm. "
- Mrs. ~obert Green and daughter,
C . L. Smith for sewing last Thursday after- L . L. Lamb has moved to the Risley Gertrude, called on Mrs. E. D. Abbott in
aoon. Two visiton were preeent. The farm.
Hubbardsville one day last week.
"°8te88 regaled her guests with an appe- M r. Thompson has moved . to his
- T here will be a social this week Friday
tizing "spread" of sandwiches, cake and
~ght in the chapel.
llot ooooa. The meeting on March 13th place recently purchased of E . C. Butler.
I
- Thise in District No. 6, who were
will be with M rs. Throop.
perfect in attendance during the month of
History is driving ahead under th~power
- The Red Cross met with Mrs. Lewis February are as follows : Allen Albee, Jr.,
1111st week Wednesday. The following Eugene Butler, Walter, Kenneth, and of freed peoples-all that the peace conwere present : Mesdames Bulkley, Galla- Mina Rutherford, Ruby fa*gan, Mildred ferees can do is to hold the helm stead¥.
lher, Lewis. E . Tayntor, Wells and Wood- Moore, Dorothy Sigsbee, Helen Skinner,
aock and Misses Marian Tayntor and E . V. Elsie Smith, and Matilda Kunesh.
Darrow. It is now expected that instruc- D . P. Sweeney and son called at the
tions for the new work will reach us in a
week or two, notice of whic~ will be circu- " Pillars" Sunday.
lated as promptly as poasible.

-Mrs. Fred Lewie, who has been quit~
• with a bilious attack is greatly I improved.
1ler daughter, Mrs. Neil Smith.of Sherrill
.-me home to care for her, but has now
IIIDeback.
-Mrs. Lucy lsbelll is spending some
*1ie in Hamilton.
- Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Benson and ron,
el Erieville, spent last Friday with· Mr.
hson's father, Charles Benson, who has
1ieen ill with pleurisy, but is now somewhat better, thanks to the excellent care
lie baa received.
- William Bardin ia moving here from

.

CAN, HAMILTON, N. Y., MARCH 6th, i9i9

.......,.t

I

._ton

the

LAKE MORAINE

- Mrs. Owen Roberts and Ion, who have
If France expects to keep the sympathy
Ille.en spending some weeks with her parenta and admiration of the world it must not
~ - and Mrs. A. L. Howe, in Morrisville, hesitate to 6Uppress its reactionaries
who are tryifl& to revive secret diplomacy.
UTC returned bome.

Prices on Car, not expected to be lower but
a shortage before the season is over. You are
taking no chances in buying now . Call and see
our NewModelsor dropusalinefor..ademonstration
A complete line of sizes in Goodrich, United States
and Kokomo Tires. We repair Storage batteries
and have new ones in stock to fit almost any car,
also a complete line of Accessories at

STILL'S G_4RAGE
Opposite Catholic Church - Hamilton, N. Y.
Ageab for Overland and Cbevrolet Cars.

BONNEY H[L

I n T ..t imony Wlln-eef, we ban camed the
oeal of Mid Sarropu:'a Court k> be

llereuto alhed.

I

Cant.on. Ohio.-" I auffered from A
female trouble which caused me much
11uffering, and two
~~~l'l'fflll'ffl=mn doctou decided
that I would have
to go throui?h an
operation belore I
could get welL
"My mother, wbo
had been helped bl
LydiaE. Pin!illam 1
Vegetable Com·
pound, advi1ed me
to~ it before aub~mittingtoanopera•
Jf , '•
tion. ltrelievedme
,. •
from my trouble•
so I can do my houae work without any
difficulty. I adviae any woman who ia
afflicted with female troubles to. give
Lydia E. Pinkham'• Veg etabll! Compound a trial and it will do as much f or
them."-Hrs. MARIEl BoYD, 1421 6th
St. N. E ., Cant.on, Ohio.
Sometimes there are s erious condi·
tlone where a hospital operation is the
only alternative, but on the other hand
1 0 many women have been cured by this
famous rootand herb r emedy, Lydia E . .
Pinkham' • Vegetable Compound, after
doctors have aaid that an oper ation waa
nece1&ary-every woman who wanta
to avoid an operation should give i t a
fair trial before submittini to 11ucb a
trying ordeal
l f complications exist, write to Lydia
E. Plnkhaml4edicine Co. , Lynn, Maaa.,
for advice. The Tt>!;ult cf w.an7 yean
aplrim11 I• at :,oa- Bd"rice.

E~EBS

- Miss Sarah Baker, who has been absent nearly all winter is now at her home
here.
- The AJpha Study Club meets with
Mrs. Oatman March 5th.
- Kay Youngs of North Brookfield, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Alderman of East Hamilton have been guests at Luther Loomis'.
- Mrs. Westover of Norwich visited
Mrs. Louisa Cook Sunday.

HOW MRS. BOYD
AVOIDED AN
OPERATION

--1

[L . S.J

Witne., Joeepll D. Sena. Req.,
Surogate of •id Co,aaty of Madi1011, at Ilia office In Wampnille,
in eaid C-nty, tbe 5th day of
Febnaary, in the year of_. L«d
one t.bouud lline 111-ir.d - i
aineteen.

B. F. Tom--.
Clerk of tM Sawpi.'e Cnrt

RUSSET POTA!l'OES, MANO ElL Bl!M'l'tl.
SEED BEANS, TELEPHONE PIUS,
GARDEN SEEDS. CYPHERS INOO BATOBS, BROODEES. POULTRY flOPPLIES. Stalls, Stanchions and Oarrteiril,
IneecUtadM. Lime and SuJpliur for .....,

......

apraytnc. ~Everyt~ln
for tlHt F - . •
Ask fOI" Special
ht Paid Prllat.

Estallllahed 11

rra.

cata... ......

F. B. EBELING ,

...,..

M . J.Wlllte.
AtlOnle!y for Pett~.
JlaalJtaa,W.Y.

'
How's Thlsl
We a«.r One Hundred Dollan Reward
w llll7 ot Catarrh that cannot be
~ bF BaU'a Catarrh Medicine.
Rall'a Catarrh Medicine bu been taken
~ •tanh auffet"ers fo r the paat thlrtl'•
h• ~-ra. and has b ecome known u the
moat reliable remed y tor C atarrh. Halra
CataJTb Medicine a.e t a t h r u the Blood on
.._ ltl-ua eurtac es . .,:,pr lll n g the Pol•n from the Blood and lleallns the dt.
euedportJooa.
J.ttel' J'OU baTe taken Hall', Catarrh
lledlcllle for a abort time y ou w111 a
anal Improvement In your general
laea1dl. lltart taklnc H a ll"s Catarrh Jledletne at once and ge t ri d ot catarrh. Sac1
for teetlmoalal9. fr-M.
P. I. CHBN1ilY & CO., Toledo, Ollte.
lleW w all I>Nlniata, 'lk.
,

Paint is a necessity
-not a luxury
After your house needs paintinti. ~ , , _
you wait it will require more painc _.
more labor to put it in Kooci-=onditica
And every year you wait your ba.e is
worth Je11. Good-paint money is · eo-1
paint insurance. And it's pretty Rood iniaaance on the value of your property, l!Oe .

Life's Great Leuon .
fte leNOa tllat life dine lute u
wltll ncb ceflaeln1 lterntloo that It
aeea1 lmponlble tbat any of H coal•
.,.r fall to bear It 11: To mike llHM
18 h k1D4.-Jlbeda Browgbtoa.

Tlae Guarant..d

DEVOE Lead and Zinc Painl

Find the Right Ha11dte.
IIYft'Jtbla1, 11 Jlplctet111 wee •I.,
u1 two baudlea. T1klor bold of It
oae, we tlnd It 11nbearable; aklnr
bold bJ tbe other, we dllCO't'W' It •
._ eeatlJ alMI pleaaantlJ borae.

•1

, _ CoMan..-w-.. ,.....,.

If your house needs painting, coac
in and let us tell you what it wil
cost you to use Devoe.

We say '' Devoe,' becauac it',
absolutely pure.

HEAVE N:s

1

That's why Devoe takes fewer
gallons, wears longer-and ooltl
less by the job or by the yeax.
And that's why we guarantee
Devoe without reserve.

first law is order.

You will enjoy the
01derly arrangement of news and advertising as you find it in the met ropolitan make-up of

~Qr lllttra ®bsrrutr,
"The paper that goe, home"

I
I

1oc. a week.
$1 .25 three roon-. ;
R . D. Edition, $1 .oo three month11.
Try it for a while.
p;;w;

I

Zit#

Ask us for helpful illustrated booklet-0 Keep Appearances Up aatl
Expenses Down."

BELL HARDWARE STORE
H AMILT ON. N . Y .

EARLVILLE HARDWARE CO.
EARLVILLE, N. Y.

PAINT DEVOE PAI~ T

,,,,..

SOLSVILLE

I

/.LEXAN DErl C. KIN3

-Mr. John Dahn died very suddenly
in Utica Saturday night. The body eas
brought home Sunday afternoon. The
• funeral was held Wednesday at the home,
I burial at Madison.
' '. -Mr. George Cole, who injured his foot
j while packing ice is able to be out again
It's the man behind the gun who makes it forand can walk with the use Qf a cane.
1
midable; and It'• the men behind a Bank who
-Mrs. B. P. Curtis spent several days at
make It. cooaervatlve. In alt eur buslne,s
~uckville last week, her daughter being
transaction, this Bank seeks not popularit>· for
ill.
Itself, but wety for its depotdtors. We en· -Mrs. Colton and Mrs. McCartney
were at Hamilton last Saturday.
deavor to be accommodating and courteous, but
,. -Mr. and Mrs: Andrew Ford, who have
the maintenance of our stanaards ot conservabeen
on George Cole's farm for several
Uam are ever and .always with us the ir&t conyears, have moved back on his own fann
sidttatiu.
on the Strip.
-Mr'. Henry Cole, WQO has been on the
I
Truman Cole farm for the last three years I
has bought a farm at Earlville and moved
there with his family March first.
..&.Mr. C. F. Van Vechten spent Sunday
with his lamily returning to Utica Sunday
evening. •
.,.
-Mr. and Mrs. B. McCale spent the
Il..,e:,ander C. King cl lluu•- ,
week end with his sistef- at Munnsville. has been named to succeed John w.
-Miss Jessie Brown, who has been Davis as United Stat es solicitor genspending the winter with her aunt in eral.
Brooklyn, has returned home.
-Mr. and Mrs. Burdette Bishop have
moved into the vacant rooms of A. L.
N. y. Health Officer Makea Statement
Loomis' house.
Regarding Prohibition.
- Misses Alice and Margaret O'Toole,
Prohibition will add to the more
who have been ill for the past three weeks,
are able to be out again.
• than 2'00,000 drugs addicts in New
Yo1·Jc. according to Dr. Copeland,• clty
-Mrs. Floyd Welch and daughter spent health commissioner, speakiag at a
several days with her brothers at Bouck- mcetiug of the state commJttee on
ville recently.
na rcotic drug control in New York
- Mr. and Mrs. Earl Butterfield were city .
' [ believe there are over ll00,000
called to Syracuse last Saturday on ac(
d;· ug addicts iu this city today," said
count of the serious ilness of her sister.
J Monday afternoon. Mrs. Waters visiting
- Mr. Brown of Gloversville has moved Dr. Copeland. "They will increase
with prohibition . I have a report
her brother, Dan Shelley in the hospital
onto the Cole farm.
from one of the largest drug manu· there.
-The members of the Red Cross met factu rers which states that he dis-Mts. A ~ Reynolds ~ t ~ j -Professor and Mrs. Leslie Newton of
ot last week with her daughter m Norwich. Ilion are visiting the fomer's parents, with Mrs. Colton last Tuesday, eight posed of more cocaine In the month
1
workers being present.
o( January than in the whole previ-Dan Shelley is at ,roui;e-Irving Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Newton.
.
- Mr. Albert Dewey of Cazenovia was a ous year. Th e d~mand in February
Hospital i_n Syracu~, where :he underwe~t ; -It seems good to hear the Cornell
became so great that to make etocks
Sunday guest at Guy Randt's.
~ ope!'3tion ~ Fnday. _Mrs. Shelley 18 Table Works whistle blow once more.
go round a limited amount had to be
-Mr. S. R. Brownell of Madison is allowed customers.
with him helping care for him.
- Earlv1.11e needs a shoe ma· ker.
papering and painting at M. E. Sprinkle's
- Roy Tefft and family have moved ,._
.

"I am going to do something to
from ,tbe Palmer house to the Newton 1 -1'1t_ere y.as a Library Benefit dance tenant house.
!':top this drug business and nothing
farm on East Street, that Mr. A. Tefft just W~nesday evening.
-Mrs. F . D. Plodge and daughter, wlll prevent me. I don't care who
recently purchased.
: - Mother's Chili met at Mrs. Harold Mabel. .spent Tuesday at Hamilton .
takes the step, bnt I believe eTery ad·
diet should register •himself at oltlclal
- Mrs. Homer Collins is visiting her Sbapley's Thuniday afternoon.
stations which wquld not be fingeruughter, Elsie, in Schenectady, for a few ' -Ladies Aid of Baptist Church met at
printing him . Preparations are being
ays.
·
I Mrs. J. D . ~ires' Wednes:lay afternoon.
made by the health authorities so that
- L. W. Collier was in Norwich Friday I - The Philathea B Class of the, Bap- We will not make any unkind re- when a drug addict le discharged phyen business.
tist Church met at the home of Mrs. D.
marks or even give the name of the young ~ica lly and morally strong he will be
- Harry Roberts of Syracuse spent Sun- ' Lamb Friday afternoo~ ~rom 3 to 5, to
man who met with an accident with -his registered at one of these stations."
day with his sister, Mrs. Harry Chase.
~elcome Mrs. R. H. W1lhamson, who h~s
1
on Pine Woods hill one day last week
G
d Wh t
••

• JUSt returned from a· four months stay tn auto
f
·
Say Belgium ot 8 a
ea .
- ~rs. Martha Ross vi 51ted relatives u1. New London, Conn., back to the class as or the reason ~hat he has promised to
n
vestlga
tion
or
the
cb.arge
that the
I
Uarmlton Saturday.
their former S.S. teacher.
take us for a nde_as soon . as we get a JJelglan relief commission shi pped
- W. 0 . Bedell was in Ithaca last week. ;
renewal of our accident policy.
• , la rge quantities of bad wheat l.1.1to
-All have secured their ice for the ' .LJelglum ~r food purposes, cau:stug
Mark Hoadley of Utica was in wwn' A HAMD..TON MA~'S EXPERIENCE
coming season. A.t one time it looked a ' the deaths or more than 1;000 war sur,,ver Sunday.
Can you doubt the evidence of this little dubious. The ice house at the rerere, was demanded in a resoluti~n
- Mrs. W. 0. Bedell and daughter,
Hamilton citizen ?
Bordens was the last to be filled which introduced by Senator Calder In the
f'.annie were in Hamilton Saturday.
You
can
verify
Hamilton
endorsem*nt.
was accompl;shed last Saturday.
I United States &enate. 'l'he reijolutlou
- Mr. and Mrs. J. Holey and Mr. and
R~d thh:
- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schwab of pro~ides for n.n Inquiry by the seuatc
Mrs. C. Ferris visited in Symrna Sunday.
.
.
1 agnculturaJ ·committee. A preambl e
Herbert F . Squires, Kendrick Ave., Utica, we1e the guests at the residence I set forth. that the resolution was In·
- Mr. and Mrs. fobn Hyland spent the
week-end in Eaton visiting relatives. . says: "About twQ years ago my kidneys of ,Cha~le_. Marshall Sunday, as w~ll as I t roduced as a result of t estimony takwere out of shape, being irregular and thefam1lyofGeorgeMarshallof Hamilton. , en before Chief City Magi strate Mc- Mrs. 0. M . Avery is quite sick.
weak in action. I believe the trouble was
- James.Livermore -seems to be quite Adoo on F'eb. 13 last. Senator Calder
Milton Dunlap of Snacuse is visiting brought on by the strain of heavy lifting. busy selling_ the Pine Tree milker, he has ' said he did not meiin to reflect upon
llis grandparents/ Mr. and Mrs. Frank My back waa sore and lame and sharp, two machines to install at present.
I mem bers of the commission.
Hubbard.
· ,
l cutting pains would catch me over my
- Mr. and Mrs. Guy Arity, having sold '
Gifts for House Leaders.
- Mrs. J . Burton is spending the week I kidneys, when . I least expected them. their farming interest to Mr. E. Elder of j
m Syracuse.
, The kidr .e:v secretions were scanty and Morrisville have rented rooms in the
Parting gifts to congressional lead- Movies were shown in the Opera highly colored and showed my kidneys Oliver Blo~k. Mrs. Mary Arity and son I ers this year by their coll~agues a re
I started D .d
.
h h
f M " 1 more magnificent .than ever beCore.
1 House_Monday evening, "The Poor Rich needed immediate attention.
aVJ , wi11 occupy t e ouse O
iss The retired speaker of the house,
Little Girl" for the benefit of the Public to use Doan's Kidney Pills, which I got H 1 w hb
e en as um.
Cham p Clark, who return s to the
th
to
Library.
at Gates Co.'a Drug S re, and less an
- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Martin of Herki- flo or with the advent or a Republican
- Mrs. Lottie Houser and granddaugh- one box entirely cured me of th e trouble mer, were guests of their parents, P . J. J maijority, received a great s!llver tu·
ter, Leona, visited relatives in Syracuse and fixed nte up in firSt -class shape again." Martin and wife over Sunday.
i rE' en, with cover and a beautifully
- ·e·r Sunday.
Price 6oc, at all dealers. Don't simply
I
d ii
..
.
Ch 1
••
-Qur school seems to be getting along , c 11ase . s ver co,.ee service.
a r- Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Foster_and Mr. ~~!~ P:i!~':sa::~~~:. ~~~ nicely under the supervision of Mrs. E . I man K1tcheu of the ways and means
aod Mrs L w Waters of Sherburne
B
·
c-ommlttee of tile house received a
· ·
·
.
had.
Foster-Milburn
Co.,
Mfgrs., rennon.
_____
s ilver service with Ivory trimmings
motored to Syracuse Sunday, returning ! Buffalo, N. Y.
Adv. ro.
' and pollRhed tray to match, while
1

A box of oranges
Andrew Carnegie

!

I

one or the world's richest me~ was
the son of a poor Scotch weaver. He
early learned the advantages of econ--omy. At 'the age of ten he saved a
few shillings-enough to buy a box of
oranges - which he promptly ped~ed
at a profit of 100 rer cent.
At twelve he was brought to
America and put to work in a mill
His earnings were 20 cents a day.
While still a young- man he m~
aged through thrift to accumulate $500,
which t:e invested. Rm first dividend
seJ1Ved ~ the inspiration for Im remarkable achievements and financial
power in later years.
But the seed of his prospet tty wa
first IOW1l when he invested the few
shillings he had saved-in a box m

I

THE NATIONAL HAMILTON BANK
Resources Over $1,000,000.00.
INTEREST 3 1-2 Per Cent.

MAY USE MORE DRUGS

We are Preparing for the FIFTH
LIBERTY LOAN.

EARLVILLE .

Are YOU?

!

I

BOUCKVILLE

oranges.

,

There are boxes of oranges
all about us today-only they go
under a different name. Wise
men see them--invest, and reap
the profits in success.
There are men--and women
too--who sens-: the possibilities
of small beginnings, even as Carnegie.

Get your box of oranges

TODAY

BUY W. S.S.
and keep on buying them

I

I

I

I

' RANDALLSVJLLE

s~::~~~

HUBBARDSVILLE

~:s~ri~f
Mann was given a
- Miss Edna Sweet of Syracuse is ,
------. M " L'lli
H
h
th
t t spending a few days with her parents, I
Denied American Citizenship.
1~ 1 an
o1mes as
e 1a es Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Sweet.
America n citizenship was denied to
The Many Mysterl• of
new Edison phonograph.
.
:\l rris Houltln, a resident
ot the
- Morris Hanco*ck has moved on a farm · -Mrs. Chhon Charles aud son, John, ll roux district, by Justice John M.
Nature
. M d'
and daughter, Ruth, returned home Thurs· Tierney or New York, because Simon
m a ison.
d
f
d"
k . hh
BY L. W. BOWER, IL D•
- Mr. Jacob Carpenter who has been ill . ay a _ter spen mg a wee wit er parents , o. Pollack, a lawyer and one or Boul~-•. __ .., d 11
I 1·s ga1·nm· g also Will1·am Sterling 1·s able to m Utica.
j tins' witnesses, Had expressed sympay auand
canplant
- e an
ODlOn
""""
nnrunr ·
~
·
·
th Y wIth. th e anarc hi s t
1!l!ed,
them
side
byan
aide futile
· be out. '
- The auction
at A. V. Purcell •s Wednesmovemen t .
-me
apo~
of
ground
In
o'ne
,..._
you
j
F
k
Oak
·
w
day
was
well
attended
Pollack,
in
the
course
of
his
examlna,_
:
. --,
- ran
e,<, was m
ampsv1 11 e on
·
..
d · ..
get an onion with its peculiarly st.rang b .
.
M. Eth 1 p
.d 19
.
. .
d. _on, eal : I am not exactly In symnd
odor and in the other you get a Bower of
usmess on F ay.
iss
_e artn ge gammg an is patby with the movement here, but It
rarl' L;;ut1. You can plant a P!)PPY ~ I - Helen Leary was a guest of her aunt, now able to nd e out.
.
has some foundation as It is applied
:m•i ~et opium (a dangeroua, habit-fonmn~ Mrs. Frank Oakes over Sunday.
-Mrs. P earl AQbert remams about the to European conditions, although I do
~~nt~f;,ub!'~:r:t:i.1 - Mr. and Mrs. Albert Randt have ; same.
not believe it should be ex.tended all
gi,
. t· t g_ .
d.;..,:i
,.. .,,a·
t S
·
t Ii
--One, of the tenant houses on Mrs. I. oTer the world."
)fo scum 111 1 liVUl{I; or .,..._., cnn c. , m , gone o yracuse o vc.
th•!Se mysteries or Nature. Behind the
.
. .
~- Allens farm burned early last Wednes------invisible lifo germ in each eeed is hidden
- Miss Lillian . Holmes ~as r~tumed day morning. It was occupied by Harry I
Poles Seeking Shipping Line.
the deep_ secret Ll¥l-t nobody understands. ' ~ome after spe nd mg some time wt th her Sargeant.
The attitude of the United States
E v e ~ growmg out 0 ! the ~~d sister, ~rs. Fred Morgan of Lebanon.
-Herald Hendry, who has sold his regarding Pol'a.nd's buslne9S problems
lll8IJl8 mtendcd for some use m establiahing ,
· k· w1·tt1 th e "fl u " , house and lot to Mrs. I. S. Allen, has le a question of deep concern fn Warll&turaloonditiona.
Dr.Plerce,ofBuffalo, 1 - J ames Close _1· s .sic
I. Y long since found out what ia also Mr. Isaac Smiths people.
moved into the house owned by C. G. saw. "The key to PollshrAmerlcan
1
~ I f bait for women's _diseases. He I - Mrs. w. Hudson passed away at her ' Green, formerly o: cupied by E. H. bnslness Is a steamship line from
learned d, all through treJ!,tmg i~ousands home on Tuesday morning Mrs Hudson Vannis.
New York to Danzig," said S.tanlslaw
a CME8. The result of his studies was a ·
·
·
.
.
, K I
kl
di
t
I
f th
medicine called Dr: . Pierce's Favorit :: had been ill only a short time.
- E . L. Hunt who has rented his farm
ar ows . , a
rec or n one O
e
medicine is mo.~e . ' · j - Albe rt H ancoc
. k 1.s wor ki ng for H . to Harry Dart has moved in to Will prominent baulcsti or Warsaw,
to ta
Preacrl-~tion• ...._,_
.u.u.-.
hll
-.egeta le growths that nature lffiRllY m.
.·.
press represents ve. w e cowmen ·
1Squires' house
tended for backache headache weakenin" ' Flemmg. Leonard Plulbp for Merton
·

ing on the falh1re or any American
·
·
'
· · ' · di 1 · ~ w ·ll
, - James Marsh has moved from F .D.
liraina, bearing-down p!l.lna, J?0flO ca
1 cox.
.
R. 1 . h . . t Ell
hD , h
co mm ercia l missions to visit Poland.
regubuities,_pelvic inftammat1ona, and r~r
- Mrs. Grant Carpenter was in Utica
1p ey ~ ouse mo sw~rt . arts _oust!.
the many C1JSOrdera common to women m
,
- Jultus Fulm r of Utica 1s spendmg a
,
aD ages of life. Dr. Pierce's Favorite last week.
few days with his daughter. Mrs: Cliffton
Demand s Rurleaon • Resignation.
Pr~ription is made of ~y's slipper root,
- Mrs. Rodman and daughter were Charles.
1 A res olution asking President Wt.I·
black cohoeh root, unicorn root, blue Sunday guests of Mrs. M . Briggs.
.•

son t o demanrl the resignation or
1
coboeh root and Oregon grape root. i
- Michael Wholahan \\o ho has worked Postmas t er General Burleson was
Women v~ take ~is stanrlard _remedy ! - Mr. Bur~on Brown passed away at fo~ Harry Candee the past year has rented . H!oJ)ted ot a meeting In New York or
kn~w _that m Dr. Pie!-'ce's Favorite Pr~- the home of his daughter. Mrs. C. Babco*ck his far m for the coming year.
:lls trlct council No. 16 of the Comscr1ption thoodey arhe gedtting .a tsafc womhan s on Fliday at , o'clock. Funeral was held
1ner~lal
T e legraphers' union repretomo so g
t at rugg1s s ovoryw ere
d
d
d b R
M Sh I
· 1
·.
·
'
llOll it.
Mon ay, con ucte Y ev. r. ep er. ····---·----------···-----------·-- 1 1 •nt 1111-( operators In New York city.
F3vorite Prescription should have the Burial in Woodlawn .
fEIFECT HEALTH Will BE YOURS.
full confidence of every woman in Americn I - Mrs. Ira Stanton is quite ill at the
when u1ln1r the old-fashioned and reliable
Wh e:i t MM sure Passes Senate. .
been~ it contains no alcohol and no ' home of her parents, Mr. A. Miller.
h~rbalcompound u.. dloearlyaetderday1
T~e a1lmin istratlClo bill approprtatna.rcotic. Dr. Pierce knew, when he first I
I ag $1,000.0 0.C}l}ll to fulflll the governmacle thisstandard medicine, that whiskey ! -Mrs. N. W. Campbell who has been c
:nent's guarant eed ,vheat price to the
L •

• •

d
he
has ·11 ·
· ·
I 1
lean1e1 1tomach, liver, kldneya, bowela:
l
ruu morpume BIO lDJUMOUS; O.~ IIO

I IS gammg sow y.
purlfiea blood, Thousands pral1e1t. Send for tanner fnr tl-in 1'1Hl crop was passed
11.hmys kept them out 01 his remedie11.
,ample and book. 80 tablets 50 cents. Aeent
Slln d 10c to Dr. Pierce's lnTalida' Hotel,
- Mrs. Rettie Fisk is in New Berlin wanted, write for term,. _E. c. TOTTEN, Y1 the senutP w1tho~ t mat.,rtal amendBuffalo, N. Y . Cor kialpkg. Tabl.e'8.
helping care for htr sister.
..,.,nt . ani1 now ~'W'I tn c ~feNmce.

Weekly Health Talks

I
I

I

d~g~:J~

I

I

I

I
I

I

ir- ,
!

::".'.:::===========::=~:::::-

i

I

Pioneer Health Herbs

~!!.!~:;::.'!,~::-;::;::!_'::;:!'!~·!~i~ie--w1 ,

COVBRNMBNT WAN . OROANIZA TION
Sea•ad Federal Re,erYe Diatriet
War Sniap Committee, 130 B'weJ, New York

blaei K11aila cilC" ~ - -

HOW TO WORK WITH VELVET

beet and a lone toe, attn.~

stitched and perforated---Gou~ . . . .
tll)I and extra 11traP1>1111B ot leallla
are omitted to consene matertaL
Running Up.
!'onnal footwear ls sllllatl7 . . . .
dainty ln type, with thinner Nie . . .
With the great vogue for velvets blgher beet. and such bootll . . _
and velveteens still r11glng there are usually a top of buck:811:la or daa la
sure to be women who are not famil- pale graJ or ta wn color.
iar with the sewing-room knowledge
of these materials. For Instance, a
good drei!sl!18ker knows that all goods
Natural NutrlL
with a pile should be made with the
Natural nutria lB mudl oaed •
smooth way of the nap running up, so childish costumes this season. It la a
that when the made-up velvet hangs ~rett1 fur, something llke nahnll
from the figure, the pile will fall out beaver, but not nearlJ aa expeDl!dYe. •
and give a richer etrect. For tb18 rea• ta made up into fetching little craftbl.
son it 18 always necessary when buy- i collars and caps-with roo.od cllD«n*
lnl' nlvet or velveteen to buy more muffs to match. of course. A mmf •
than for a plain material, aa the pat- , 1ust tbe indispensable complettllS
tem can be laid on it only one way.
touch to an, w~ maid's winter _ .
Velvet aeame are never preesed, but i •·ume. Uttle caps in the ralrtllh ,._.
always steamed. This le best done by I ur..d-aft Bhape of the oveneu . , . .
turning a hot Iron on its side, covering ! !len"lce cap are made of nutria aJM1 .,.
it with several thicknesses of damp matched b7 collars and muffil.
cloth and pulling the flattened-out '
18am rent11 over the steaming cloth. 'i
Facings are more apt to gtve a bet• .
Would Stop Trains Automatically.
ter appearance to velvet edges than I Nearly 200 types ot devtcea to wt-.
hems, which in heavier m11terlal1 are , trains automatically In caae stg-ula
Inclined to be bulkp- and awkward. 1 are set for danger or tracks are ._._
Thia ls particularly true for tbe hema I were considered by the railroad M ·
of the new narrow sklrbl. The up- mlnlstratlon'B committee appointed· •
turned velvet hem bu a tenden«:7 to Investigate these inventions. A ccatch on the stockings and Impede the wtll be chosen tor teBts to· be COD.BIii·
progresa of the wearer. Tr, Instead ered and conducted under ·dlrectloa ..
to face It with a aoft eatio. IO that lt the railroad admlalstratlon.
will elide eull7 over tbe stocldnp or
·
lhoetopa.
Connectlcuts Weta RuteThe Joint resolution to ratify CM
ABOUT MODERATE SHOE H£E1. tederal prohibition ameadment, ,._
Jected by the eonn.ctlcut aenate ~
Louie Quin• Type R...rded M OM week and adopted by the hoU8e, ,,_,
In efflec( . ftnal.ly killed b1 the .__..
of the Conaplcuoue FnvolltlN
when it ..-ated, 2f to 7, to adhere to ._
of Feminine D,_,
former rejection.
One of the conaplcuou frtTOllt:See
of feminine dress ls the extreme Louis Twenty Mllllons for Sunday 8ctloela.
Qulnze heel. These tall, curved beela
Plans for raising $20,000,000 tor OPare worn on ellppe"- and on formal ; ganized Sunday schoQl work ia Nora
footwear of a daint1, dreswp char- America during the next f ~ yeaa
acter ; but street 8hoe1 have almost haTe been apprond by the exeeutt•
lrwarlably sturdy, sensible beet. In ' committee of the International e-..
the military or so-called college style. 1 day School association, It waa . .
The college heel 11 very low and nounoed i:a Toronto, Can.
flat-like the mannish heel--ilnd
when the rest of the ehoe la smart the
fiat heel ls very smart; bot a flat heel
Natural Lightning Conductor.
on a poorly shaped 1hoe makes the , The nstrooomlcal obeernt«J' •
toot clumsy. Moat women prefer the lfount ICt.oo dON not need at an7 Umllltary heel, which la BOmethlnr the protN:tlon et a lightning rod. TM
like the old style Cuban heel except observatory la near the nmmlt ot 11111
that It la not quite as heaVJ, lD out- volcano, and tile stream of npor ~ line or 1n actual weight.
staoflJ riwtnc from tlle cram am •
The proper 11hoe tor •tnet wear a Dfttuntl conductor, dralnla1 t111e et..
with tailored costumes, notee a tallb.lon trtt'1t, oat ot the ctoudtl. • that . .
eorreap~t. is _of_,BLaqaDl. tu or lialltDIDI • _ . _ wa tMN.
Material With Pile Should Be Made
With the Smooth Way of Nap

I

1'

I
I

I

THE HAMILTON REPUBLJCAl\', ·HAMtLTON, N. Y., MAJffiB.6th; rc,1~

4

The Bamibon Republican

I

Published Every Thunday
at Hamilton, N. Y., by
H. H. HAWKINS, Proprietor.
I.ONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE No. 2-J.
THE REPUBLICAN has bttn published at
Hamilton, N. Y .• continuously Coe 80 years. It
a la rge and increasing circulation and offers
Uae beat medium lor advert iaers to bring their
...ineu to the attention or Hamilt.oo people and
Yic:inity.
Entered at the Poat Office at Hamilton. N. Y..
• second class mail matter.

•aa

AdverLising rates given on application.
Cards or Thanks will be inaerted on payment
lilly cents.
Reaolutions will be charged loc al the rate or
,oc. to Jt.oo according to leoctb,
ef

Terms In Advance

President Wilson at the Peaqe Conference

I

were like the nations of today, merely
.38 victorious allies blindly struggling to be-75 come a League of Nations. The problems
$1 so they had to solve were similar in scope but ,
hardly less diverse than the present day '
problems.
The question of representation almost
THURSDAY, MARCH. 6, 1919
wrecked the Constitutional Convention
and it was solved only by a compromise
which established equal representation in
the Senate and representation on the basis
of populatio11 in the House of Representatives.

Posters for the coming "Victory Loan"

to be lallllched next April, are the most
elaborate in color and design of any used
during previous loan · campaigns. They
are all completed and are being shipped to
all sections, so that w.hen word is given by
the Treasury Department they can be released simultaneously throughout the
land. Treasury Officials say that the
coming loan will be the most effectively
advertised of all.

80ml'

time

tTie

Amerlc:,n111 have

I

Three months
Six months
One year
Single Copies live cents.

Pleas and petitions by the score reach
the Internal Revenue Bureau daily asking
that the- time for filing Personal Income
Blanks be extended beyond March 15th.
Pacific Coast and Middle West States lead
in the number of requests. No decision
bas been made, but it is likely that an
extension of forty-five days may be made
beyond March 15th.

For

President Wilson is the author of "Con- tnkeo hut o mlld lntert>Rt In whntP\'er
~ressional Government, A Study in Amer- activities of Count ,·on Bern11torlf hnve
ican Politics'', "The State-Elements of oppt>11rt>!1 on the Rurfnce of thf:' nPWR
Historical and Practical Politics··, "Di- In the Oermnn p111wrs. but tht>y wlll
vision and Reunion 1829-1889", "George ' hove but n scor-:r1:1 smile ~of the
Washington," " A History of the American · Frankfurter Zeltung's nnnoun~mt>nt
People ", and "Constitutional Govern- thnt the ex-plotter ot Wnshlngton hos
ment in the United States". As an J been recoiled from Constnntlnople beAmerican historiam he has had a special I cnuse Berlin needs someone with "no
contribution to make at the Peace Con- adequnte knowledge of Amerlco" ·JuRt
ference.
now.
BernstorlT's "knowledge of
The present conditions among the 48 Amerlcl\" has never nmounte!1 to more
nations of the world are fairly comparable than lcsolent Ignorance or malicious
with the condit\ons in 1783 in ttre 13 mlsJurlgment. ms ndvlce to the knlRer,
framed to suit the kaiser's ear. helper!
original states.
Hamilton said in 1783: "A nation with- much to bring dlsnster upon Germany,
out national government is an awful snys Phllndelphln Record. Th11t dlso11spectacle." It is as true today that a ter Is et hond. nod of nll men thnt
world without world government is an might mitigate the blow Bernstortl' Is
awful spectacle. The 13 states in 1783 the lenst competent to nld.
The exciting stories tdld by the r eturning . wounucd men wlll IQ!ep the
home ft resides bright for mo ny o long
yeor. In some of our perambulators
no doubt we hove hlstorlnns who will
see what the s moke of battle and nenrness to even ts hos kept from us.
"When I get hom e I'll bnye a twolegg"d time," said one hero minus n
leg. If he doesn't continue to hove It
we are fnlllng short of our responslbllltles.

~IIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIUHIIHiHn11111111111111111111n111111111nn11111111111111111uu11nmw101•m•

a

.

I= MEAT- s -GASH MARKET.,PROVISIONS
. .
•I
I S P E C I A L S for Friday and Satllrday I
5

____________;...__

==

Bavorlo hos broken away from Berlln ond now Boden ts following suit.
There ts evidently e disposition to
moke Berlin bear the brunt of punish·
ment, If possible, but ell the Germon
states were In It too deep to escope
their due share of responsibility and
repnrntlon. Pleading the bnby net, "It
wnsn't my fault." wlll avnll none of
them.

I

·1

i

§§

I
§§

---

Ia

34c lb.
22c lb.
32c lb.
25c lb.
30c lb;
189

Shoulder cuts B01hng Beef
Native Pork Chops Roast and Steak
Home Made SAUSAGE at
Home-Rendered Lard
Our Telephone Number is

§

.

s ··

I ·Round, P?rterho~~e and Sirloin Steak

--------------

I
I

I:

--I

i= RoTu·BLOCK W. H. BETTS -MADISON sT. =I

==
.§HIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIUllfi
==

The Germon~ call their returning
troops "vnnqulshed victors." ond detllare they nre unbeaten. but the cltl·
zens of Germon towns are humhl y
tnl
PLAIN and FANCY SEWING ·

St
Evelyu Wt s much concerned about
her red hnlr, whlci1 she Insisted waa
golden. One day she came to her
mother and sold: "I don't see wb:,
I have red hnlr. You haven't red holr
and pnpa ,hasn't red hulr. The 11tort
must 've mnde 11 mls~ke."

,

Don't Uie Poles. Ruthentane, Czechs,
Slovent>s, Croats, Mugyors Rnd Bulgnrs
know that If they grab off territory
th11t belongs to their neighbors they
are trabblng orr trouble for themi:;elves? Why oon't they study the life
history of one Bill Hohenzollern?

SPECIALS
--

.

'""

••

Evening Gowns a Specialty

1·Hamilton
. Mrs.N YG. B. H~COCL

L ·

'

1

FOR SALE-Semi-bungalow on Bluff Street.
In Its n·atural state' the alligator eot11
8
cfmce~aS~~a~~l,;.,. ~~tess, A. -3~1:i. Care nothing from September to Moy. The
.onl)' woy to f}eet the high cost df livFOR SALE-Potatoes. G. D. Whitford.
Phone 1so-F1 3 .
JJWt
ing Is to be on alllgato,r.
TO RENT- Pasture or about 40 acres. Well
Watered. Inquire of G. M. Bronnson, Poolville.
No d,oubt ffllhelm Is right In saying
39
_ _w_x_.- - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - that he h11s friends In America ; but•
FOR SALE-20 bushels or good Cooking
Beans, 10c per lb. Delivered by the pound, most of tbefn ore now where their
peck
or bushel.
frlend!.hlp cannot du him much good.
_38tl.
Floyd Currier.

~::~rd

-

!

- Mr. and Mrs. Theodore A. Beach and
Miss Iva Thompson have returned from a
Obviously any league of nations worthy visit with their son and family in Utica
of the name must embrace Russia or build and daughter and family, P rofessor •and
a fence around it.
Mrs. Cone in Binghamton.
• •

should make the silkworm turn .

j

I

- Mr. T. A. Beach will soon have a carThere ha not been enough snow thus far load of western horses for sale.
to show how the woman snow shovelers
would fun tion.
-Mrs. Fred Morgan is now much 1
__ _
better, all her friends are glad of the im- ,
A member of Congress no longer re- provement.
gards an extra session as a cruel and un- Mr. and Mrs. Percy D . Campbell 1
usual form of punishment.
returned to Syracuse Saturday evening. :
1

Chicagoans may still refer to Ma yor
-Mr. and Mrs_. _F red Bosworth ha e
William Hale Thompson as "01' Bill " returned from M11lm, N ebra,,ka, whe n:
but Seattle proudly points to May~r ! they were called by the illnesi of :\1rs.
Ole Hansen as "The Better Ole".
, Boswortb's mother.
l

l

l
l
'l
·l
l
l

.Three Houses For Sale.

l'ENTIST ,

Hamilton, N. Y.
Office Hours : 8 :00 to 12
..
1.:30 to 5
Office Nichols & Beal Block
· Phone 193

.--............................

Acddent Insurance

F,i e

Jru;urance
Automobile Insurance
.
Live Stock (d\lath from any camet .

Jnsurance.
All Wrltttn In Strong ~ l e a.
. Get Our Rate&.

0. & W. Scranton or D. & H. Lackawanna Coal
Superior Products
We have soft coal of all kinds.
Sole Agents
Yard on Main St.

,

J.· THEO. KNO.X.

Phone No. 30

i'

Ins. Agency
MAURICE G. FUESS,
Agent, Successor,
Madison, N. Y.
FUESS BROTHERS CO.
Real Estate
.
Jacob Fuess, Bouckville.

, \

.

---- -

'

in open stock.
I

Buy wtiat you want, . is a good way.
Old Engtlsh Willow and some pink patterns and full Dinner Sets.

Toilet Set-Parlor Lamps
Glass Lamps,
all siz,es.

Chimnies and

Lemons 30c doz.

Large Oranges 50 and 60c doz.
Grape Fruit 10c.

"

burners

Large Prunes 20c lb.

..

Fine Dessert assorted 10c

R. W. HULBURb'S,
t

Department Store

*. . . . . . . . . ,._
......

14 •t I • • • • • • • • • • • •

*

SAP BUCKETS
Medium Weight --- ~edium Price

SAP SPOUTS
Eureka and Vermont

Syrup Cans and
Tapping Bits
Evaporator Pans
Made to Order
THOS. B. BELL,

Leland Coal Company
Office, On is Store, Broad St

JOHN J. TAYLOR,

Gold Band Dinne·r Ware

LELAND COAL COMPANY

Because we sell the

l
l
l
l
l

.

........................_...

...._..

us. You have heard well of The

There's a Reason- Every Real Service Rendered The Public Receives its Reward.
The Leland Coal Co. has for 21 years been
conservatively snpplying the patrons with the BEST
COAL that money can buy.

Il

DR. W. H. HIXON

OWN YOUR
OWN HOME

v-

her sister,·Mrs. Claude Westcott on the
Upon getting our blue serge suit out of Price Farm.
the attic we find that the moths had a
- Misses Elizabeth Seymour of Syrahappy and prosperous 1918.
cuse and Blanche Seymour of Fulton were
That rule of the University of Kansas guests of their sister. Mrs. W . J. Fiske
forbidding fair co-eds to wear silk hosiery Saturday, March 1.

1----..._.- ------..

Life Insurance

I

I

----

A quick sale means
a low price and
easy terms. .
A. W. SMITH

I

~

I

NOTICE TO CREDITORS
!
Pursuant to an order of Joseph D. St:nn. Surro- '.
gate ol the County ol Madison,
I
Notice is Hereby Given, according to law, to all
persons having claims against the estate of Irving j
J . Bronson. late ol the town ol Hamilton, in said
county. deceased, to present the same, wit~the
vouchers thereof. to the undersigned, thelJAd- J
- - - - - - - - --- --· --miniatrator with the will annexed ol the estate ol
WANTED. FOR SALE OR ro RENT
the aaid deceased, al the office ol Carloo J. Cole-·- -··
Peopl e who jeer at the early loeffl· rran, his attorney. at Hamilton, io said county,
on
or belor~ the 10th day of September. 1010.
FOR SALE-The Benedict House and lot 0 1
Dated this 3d day of March. A. D., 1910.
Madison Street. Will be sold cheap lo qu1·

&
Gilbert M. Bronson,
buyer. Inquire Wm. R. Benedict on I rnmiscs.
SC'em to .forget thot there ,wns o.:lme .
Sole Administrator with the Will Ann_excd .
J9tl.
,
's
11
Carlos
J.
Coleman,
"
wI1en th e pony expre Ss· " 8 more re ·
Attorney lor Administrator,
~
ANTED-Two
or
tlr,'.;e:r~::Oi~r~~~~~nbll' thnn the steam-propelled train.
Hamilton, New York .
39

I

LEBANON ,

.

• to work'"\,n !arm.
WANTED-A man and wile
d b
fl ·
bill!
Man should be a good milker and woman do
Germuny•i, war f:l t IF Hy
on
Germany is enthusiastic for the "14 housework. Inquire Republican Office. J7tl
dollar!<. and thnt doe,;n 1t count IndemThe attack on the life of Premier points." What it fears is that a fifteenth
1 WANTED-Springers or new milkers. Apply nities. Now if she coulrl mnke on asClemenceau of France· has caused the may be added by the trial jury.
C. Charles, Hubbardsvillc. N . Y. ·
37wrn
sclgnment 1
United States Secret Service to double its
efforts in safeguarding the life of President
I
FOR SALE OR RENT- Hous/ 32 Payne St .,
Frenchwomen are asking for the ballot,
The American army may have had to
bargain to a quick buyi,r.
C. L. Cliff~.
Wilson, both while h~ is at home and but they have not yet thought of burning a35tl.
Kenwood, N. Y.
get ome of It~ ordnance and airplanes
abroad. It will not be an easy task, es- President Poincare's speeches as a method
from the nllles but It hod Its own ade·
WAN'4o-AII kinds of poultry.
pecially at home, as the President does not of obtaining it.
Jot(.
W. E. Applelord .
quate ;iupply of morale.
care to be restrained in his movements.
WANTED-Young and Cat calves. Young
This has been shown time and again in his
.
.
.
.
calves from $J to $7 e:ich. We are also buying
travels about Washington, when he has
~olshev1sm. 1s said t? have invaded all kinds or stock, hides and poultry.
John Newman,
left the White House unobserved by his Chm~, and this ma~ be 1~s ~nd. Men of
Tel. 175-F-15. 26tf.
bodyguards and walked along the city experience agree with K1plmg as to the
thoroughfares going where his fancy has fate of the "fool • * *
who tried
FOR SAL&-Six lligh Grade Holstein Cows,
·
'
to hustle the east "
five three years old. due to frcsh en soon.
:led him. The present guard consists of
·
38w1.
·
Jessi~ Wilcox Jon ....
six men assigned to one large automobile
----________ _ _west Eaton. "'· Y .
which always follows the ci::r o ccupied by
the President or who remain near the
i sk~:.NTEDviJ:~ Je1wr;,:,-;;:"°"'\-1i~fito':.~'kct~
President when he is out walking; also
WANTED-Highest pric" paid for Fowb and
two men on motorcycles who precede the I - A "Yictory Thanksgiving" program l ~;~l_1crs.
v. G. Newlon. Phon/so-R.
President·s conveyance. At social func- will be given in the Baptist Church - - - - -- -- .- - - - -- -.
t th C ·t 1 h
dd
·
TO RENT-Offices III the S11erry block. lnt t0ns,
a
e
apt o w en a ressmg Sunday morning, March 9.
quire or .J-1. H . Hawkins. Republican Offia,. 4Jll.
Congress, when the President
attends
the
,
-The lecture given by Miss Tillotson
FOR SALE OR TO RENT-The Brownell
theatre and at public meetings, the guard on "The Hawaiian Islands" Saturday Houee on Broad Street. Inquire or John Harmon
is increased in number, but steps are now evening in the Congregational Church was _•o_t_r._ _ _ _ _ _ _;___ _ _ _ __
being taken to provide even a larger force greeted wi·th an apprec·iati've atidt'ence.
WANTED- I pay highest market price for
t ·
bsol
~
lat calves or young calves. S~e me before you ·
l'O as O msure a
ute
ety.
The speaker appeared in the beautiful sell.
E. T. Dunn.
23tl.
Hamilton.
lace Hawaiian dress with the customary
"
d
WANTED-All kinds or beef cal tie. cow hides
"Rose Lays woven in that country an
and calf akjne. Highest market pri<:e always. I
Editorial Notes
"head gear" and was a fluent speaker.
E. T Dunn
Jot!.
Weather forecast: Still dryer.
Miss Hazel Blair gave the beautiful "Rose
Song" at the opening of the lecture.
The attitude of. the average German is
- Dr. Minch, a specialist of Syracuse,
that the war was a mistake, but a pardonwas in consultation with Dr. Thomas
able one.
Saturday, February 22 , for Mrs. 0. M.
If the war is renewed it may be a Wilcox, who is suiering with jaundice.
triangular affair between Germany,
- !-.frs. Harriet Miller is confined to the
the allies and the bolsheviki.
house by a fall from a chair, and is in
quite a serious condition.
The average man wastes a lot of tim
- Hobart Pratt was home from Syratelling other people things they don't
cuse
for the week end.
care to hear.
wmdnwYOllt,eek~dlM
-The "Doers" Class of the Congreyou .... ....
will ......... ...
Although the former crown prince of gational Bible School were entertained at
if 1'CMI will ..... ~ - - - ...........
Germany is said to be having a dull time the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Dunin Holland, he doubtless prefers such ham Friday, February 28, to a tureen
dullness to the sort of exci~ment he dinner.
would find in Berlin.
-Mrs. Pettit of Buffalo is the guest of

I

ia

I

At the end of the' Revolutionary War the
various states then as now faced economic
e .haustion. The piling up of enormous
war debts, and an inflated currency, the
threat of Inter-State armament competition, the confusion caused by embargoes,
the retaliatory tariff acts, and the depreciation of the currency, due to the issuance of
paper money in each state, res:.iltcd in a
revolution in Rhode Island, Shay's Rebellion in Massachustets, the rising of
mobs of poor people in New Hampshire
and Vermont. This drift tow<1fd anarchy
showed the need of a strong central government to regulat~ inter-state trade and
to create a stable currency.
The question of colonies and undeveloped territories was a greater menace to
peace than it is now. Four of the states
each claimed the whole of the great unorganized Northwest Territory. Maryland
saved the situation by insisting that all
claims of individual states to this undeveloped territory should be· renounced
and the Northw~st Territory should be
owned in common by the federation.
This gave the new central government the
loyalty of groups of people from every
state, pioneers, investors, and others interested in the Northwest. It strengthened the central government by providing
revenue, and it ended the danger of future
inter-state colonial conflicts.

I

.

r

The Hamilton Hardware

*·······················•••++++++++++++++++++ ¥
Next to the Post-Office

THE HAMIL'(ON REPUBLICAN, H~iILTON, N. Y., MARCH.6th, 1919

&~ ~~ ~~4E~~~ 4e4e ~ j'

GOOD SHOES!

~

If you 1_re coming nearer the ~
earth with the bottoms of y.:>Ur feet ""
and the old Shoes are past repairs,
better see before you renew your
111pply, the justly celebrated Menz
#'Ease" product on sale at

GEO. E. SPERRY .
Hamilton, N. Y.
They are the only Shoes which do
not harden by being wet and dried
over and over, then the wear is
about double and often treble
•what you get out of other makes of
Working Shoes.
Shapes are made to let your feet
breathe while you are working,
broad at the toe and across the ball
of the foot, with comfort every
minute of wearing from start to
finish. From $4.00 to f,6.oo.
It is High Time for "Bannon
Electric Dresses~· and ours is the
only store for miles around here
where the "Electric" brand can be
found.
We have thfm in sizes from 3-t~mall to 56 large so there'll be no
drawback to finding your exact fit
and prices are much less than you
might expect from cost of materials
at this time.
Electric Dresses combine more
Jittle patented extra touchE*: than
YQU will find in any other brand of
House and Porch Dresses which is
well to look into when buying an
everyday Frock.
.
Pull a thread and · you have
several inches more length. Adjustable at the waist by extra
Buttons, making it larger or smaller,
Pieces attached to mend with.
Taped seams to prevent sagging and
other adva11tages over other wash
Dresses.
Again On our Rear Counter. We
have eelected some 25 Pairs of Mens
English Shape Shoes in Sizes 6 1-2,
7, 7 1-2, 8, 8 1-2, and 9 and left
the pre-war prices on them for tbe
purpose of clearing them out.
Some with Rubber Soles but mostly
with leather bottoms. It might be
well to come around and look the
counter over and save on yow
sprin~s buying.

.

Pf.~RY'S
PECIALTY
TORE

- --·

tt

·
LOCAL
ITEMS
.
~,
••
.
•,•

Baptist Church
At the close of the Vesper Service, Mr.

·I

The Orvis Store

Saunders will play the following selections
~ for the organ.
~ Marche Nocturne
Geo~g ! MacMaster
~ Echoes (with Chimes) John Hyatt Brewer
In· Moonlight (with Chimes)

ABOUT OUR OWN PEOPLE

·
~~~4e ~
~

~

,
4e~4e·~~ ~ ~

1

The Ladies Ready-To-Wear Sliop

The George G. Saund:: Pte~~~=~
I Chi~es w.ill be dedicated at the Vesper
Service' on Sunday..

.

St. Thomas' Church
Saturdays in Lent:
Evening prayer, 4:30 P. M .
1st Sunday in Lent.
Holy Communion, 8 a. 'V·
Morning Service with sermoQ, 10:30
A.M.
Sunday School, 11 :45 A. M.
Lantern Lecture, 7:30 P. M.
"Bible Scenes from Great Painters."
Wednesday, March 12th.
Mission Study Class meets at Mr.
and Mrs. John J. Taylor's. 7:30
P.M.

-Mrs. Charles Tripp and daughter,
, - Mr. E. C. Kingsbury was in Cortland
last Friday. ·
• Jennie, returned from New York Saturday.
.-Mr. William Kelloway is visiting at
- Mrs. ·Ed. Smith is very sick at her
the ' home of Mr. Streeter in Madison
home on Madison Street.
village.
- Mrs. James Barnes of Kirkland is the
guest of Miss Harriet Hubbard.
- Mrs. D. F. Gilmartin spent the week
, - Miss Marion . MacQueen is visiting end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles T .
in Albany and New York City.
Lanigan of R<_>me.
- Miss Waldron ,and Miss Roberts
- Judge and Mrs. Hazzard of Utica
spent a part of last week in New York spent Sunday with their daughter, Mrs.
city.
R. G. Ingraham, of this village.

Our New Stock is being received by
Express nearly every ·day. Ladies'
Coats, Suits, Dresses, Waists, Separate
Dress Skirts, Millinery, etc.
New Arrivals of
Spring Wearing
Apparel. Street
and Evening
Gowns. Ca 11
and see the
Wonderful
Gowns
we are showing

Milbnery

-;-Mrs. F . C. French returned Monday
-Mr. an~ .Mrs .. Georg~ L. Barden of
night from a visit in Buffalo. Elmira and Penn Yan V1s1ted m Hamilton last week
Course of Lantern Lectures
Homer, N. Y.
• at the home of Dr. L. C. Beebe.
I
Beginning
next Sunday night, March
- M r. and Mrs. W. B. Hammond have
-Mrs. A. W. Smith and Miss Gardiner
moved into the residence on Hamilton 9th, the Rector of St. Thomas' Church will
attended the Frieda Hempel concert 'in
give a series oflectures on religiour subjects
Street owned by Professor C. D. Child.
Utica Monday evening.
illustrated with the balopticon. These lec- Mr. John Larsen has purchased of tur'l!s are open to all anc.f will begin
- Mrs. George Waite attended the
Salisbury & Leland a new Ford truck. for at 7:45 P. M. preceded by organ selections
funeral of her brother, Mr. Geo:ge Dahn
use in his growing hardware business. at 7:30. The subject of next Sunday
at Solsville on Wednesday.
- Hamilton Lodge, No. 120 F. and A· night's lecture will be "Bible Scenes from
-Miss Sarah Baker whJ has spent three
M., will confer the Iii st degree on a class of the Paintings of Flemish, Spanish and
weeks with Mrs. A. W. Smith, has recandidates, Monday, evening, March 10. Italian Masters" The ~rgan selections
turned to her home in Poolville.
will be Vesper Prelude, Lynes; Sunset,
-Captain C. W. Underhill left this
- Mrs. E. W. Cushman is spending some
Lemare.
moming for New York City to spend two
time with the Kingsfords of Osweg() at
or mor<'! weeks with bis daughter, Mrs.
Hotel Belmont in New York City.
Congregational Church
Lucas.
-Professor and Mrs. A. A. ~foore of
The servLe nex t Sunday will be a conWampsville, were Sunday guests at the
- Mrs. LeRoy A. Gulbran, who has tinuation of the spirit of the successful

MacQueen home on Madison Street.
b~ei:i visiting frie nd s in Schenectady, Troy "Go to Church Sunday" of last week.
and Albany returned to her home here on Th e sennon su b Jee
" t w1·tt be, "The T as k I
-Mr. W. A. St. John is laid up with a Monday.
, before the Christian Church." The special f'
hard cold, so that he was unable to make
-Dr. and Mrs. George Crowell and son, Pre-Easter services will begin at this time,
the usual 1"4ral mail delivery on Thursday.
Lewis, of Utica, were the guests of Dr. and spe:ial interest is desired to be taken
-The George G. Saunders M Emorial Crowell"s parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. in all the services of Sunday, viz: Sunday
Chimes · will be dedicated at the Vesper Crowell Sunday.
School and Christian Endeavor meetings
service at the Baptist Church on Sunday.
- Mrs. Ellery c. Huntington left for as well as the morning worship. This is
- Mr. Ferguson is reported to have pur- New York Monday where she expects to urged by the Tercentenary Committee
chased the Otis Campbell place on Payne meet her husband and son Ellery, who are and the Officers of the Association.
Street. Mr. Ferguson is a son-in-law of returning from France.
The Christian Endeavor meeting at 6:45
Mr. James Kelloway.
will have the "Temperance Victory" as
-The members of the Congregational the topic.
Always ask for the Orvis' Trading·StamP,s with Cash
-Mrs. James Feeley entertained a num- S. P. S. C. E. enjoyed a strawride t and
ber of ladi~s at tea Saturday in honor of social at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. D.
Purchases. 500 Stamps returned to us are worth $1.50
FOLKS WE ALL KNOW
Mrs. Thomas Manley of Saskatchawan, Thayer of Randallsville.
in
Cash or $2.00 in Merchandise of your own selection.
who is spending some time here.
-Mr: Cll\yton Risley is ill with tum- Mr. Charles C. Mayall of Stony bago. His father and mother from Utica
Point. N. Y., is in town called here by t)le are looking after the Plant House during
~rious illness of his father, Mr. Richard 'his illness.
Mayall, who is ill with pneqmonia.
'
· -Dr. Eugene Sisson left Hamilton Mon-Mr. Burton Brown of Randallsville day for the west where he will open an
died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. C. office in Lawrence, Kansas, for the general
C. Babco*ck. The funeral was held Mon:. practice of medicine and surgery.
day and burial in Woodlawn Cemetery.
,
- The Earlville High School team of
- Robert Gavin has returned to his ship basketball players will meet the Hamilton
"Rowan·· at Brooklyn Navy· Yard, after ,High School team in the Colgate gymspending a four day furlou gh here. nasium Friday evening of this week.
The statement that he had received his discharge was a mistake.
-Mrs. George F. Barford and Mrs.
Charles S. Orvis went to New Hartford
-Professor John Lahey has returned Wednesday to attend the installation of a
to Hamilton and resumed work . on the Chapter of the Eastern Star at that place.
f{ill. Mrs. Lahey and' the children have
Three million Dollars was what it cost to •
- It is rumored that the express Comalso returned. M~. Lahey has been en Perfect the New Edison.
(I.
pany is contemplating opening an exgaged as a chemist in war work for several
press office uptown. The Gazlay blo _k
But Ute Three Million Dollars was the (I
months.
on the corner of Maple Avenue and Main
Smallest Part of It.

-Mrs. H nry Peet has sold her house Street has· been mentioned as the probable
9)
Any
Group
of
Capitalists
Might
Devote
(I
on Payne '. lreet to Mr. W. S. Wi:tcox of place.
9)
This Sum to the Perfection of a PhonSpringfield, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Willcox
- The regular meeting of Hamilton
9)
graph. and Fall as Many Have.
• .
have arrived in Hamilton and are awaiting Grange No. 648 P. of H. will be held
the arrival of their household goods. Mrs. Thursday evening, March 1~. Several
9)
II
Required
.the
Combination,
the
Three
(I
The Fusser ls out Mowing 'em Down
Willcox is a sister of Mess:s. John, George, candidates will be received at this time . with bis Luminous Eyes, assisted by
Million Dollars Plus the Brain of the
and William Gavin of this village.
World's Greatest Inventor To Achieve. (I
that
Horseblanket
Sutt
and
that
Hunk
Refreshments· to be served after lodge is
of 'l'lffnny Ice. Like Clarence Marsh- 9)
THE NEW EDISON
(I'
- The employees of the Knitting Mill closed .
mallow of tlie Movies, whom be ReCall
at
our
Store
the
Next
Time
You
are
(I.
presented their Superintendent Mr.
- The body of Mrs." Emily ·smith sembles, the Fusser Is a reg'lar Social
Kessler with a handsome travelling bag Barber, wife of Geo. W. Barber was Gangster with the Ladles and has an 9)
Down Town, Hear Your Favorite Songs
on Saturday, as a token of their regard brought to Hamilton from her home in Amblsh to Go with every Girl lD Town.
Re created Then Decide Whether or Not (I·
and appreciation: Mr. Kessler is about Utica on Wednesday and buried in Madi9)
You Want This Three MIiiion
(I
to be transferred to a mill in Utica. The son Street Cemetery. Mrs. Barber was
9)
Instrument
in
Your
Home.
(I
Assemblyman Mllier ot Erle county
employees in the mill here now number born in this place 67 years ago.
has Introduced a bill amending the
about 4h.
lit1uor tax law relative to sale, dellY·
- The engagement of Charles F. Bates,
-Mr. an~_Mrs. P. L. Powell, of Hamil- ery and possession at liquors under
Colgate, '15, to Miss Olga F. Schrieder t~n, wer.e .visitors on February_ 28 t ~ at th e _local option vote by providing that
has been recently announced. Mr. Bates big cxhi~tt ~f Sou th ern Cahfo~ia. pro- the provisions of this sub-division
The House of Reliable Home Furnishings
(I
was formeriy of Oriskany Falls but is now ' ducts mamtamed free to th e pubhc m the shall not be deemed to prohibit In any
an employee at the Halcomb Steel Plant Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. They town or city the possession by a duly
Main St.
Phone 47.J
Hamilton. N. Y.
Syracuse. Miss Schroeder's home is ~~ a(so attended the lectures and moving licensed pharmacist or by a manufacNorth Tonawanda, N. Y., where the . pictures that ar? ~ ~art of the daily pr?- turlng pharmacist of either alcohol or
marriage will be solemnized in the early , gram. The exh1b1t 1s the largest of any m wine to be used a!" a preaenatlve or.
S ·
/ the country maintained by a cqmmercial solvent In the manufacture and compnng.
: organization. Before returning home. pounding of drugs and medicines.
- There is a great deal of sickness in ' Mr. and Mrs. Powell expect to visit
town at the present time, the most of it I veral of the many other places of in - , than manicurists. 'I'l\11:1 fact ls ostabbeing colds, or throat and bronchial terest in the Southland.
lished beyond dout- by the annual re-troubles. There are two mild cases of

.
·
.
, port on criminology which Secretary
diphtheria under quarantine one being
- 1 he funeral. of Alma Helen, httle of State Hugo transmitted to the legthe Anderson child and th~ other the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruckert, who ! lslsture Only two chorus girls fell
Beh boy. Harold Pratt, son of Mrs. passed away Wednesda, of last week, was I rrom grace In this state last year as
H
p tt ·
d
t' f
held at the house Saturday March first , compared with three who make their
GOLD BRAND COCOA-is of the highest grade
arrly f ra •. is a1S?ldunf er quaran me or at ' two o'clock Many fr~nds gathered ! living by the burrer and scissors Sixscar et ever, ma· m1 orm.
·
together to sympathize
with the stricken I t eeu s t euograp h era so m Ia beh. aved la.st
and
of great nubitive value. It is manufactured
- Rev. Bernard Clausen has written parents. Many beautiful flowers, the : i•ear Ml to be caught In th e tolls of
by a special process by which the. tannin Ingredhis acceptance of the pastorate of the gift of friends, adorned the room and \ Jua t fce. F'lrst hononi come to edl·
. t B t' t Ch h · th' ·ti
M
k t D W
M La
k , tor;;. chee·s~ makers, undertakers,
ients
of the cocoa bean are neutralized.
F 1rs ap 1s
urc m 1s VI age.
r. cas e .
r.
m.
.
wrence spo e leather w·c,rkers , piano movers, wash·
Clausen is a Chaplain in the U. S. Navy words of comfort and hope to the fond worn~n au,t law clerka, for only one
This Stollwerck method makes the cocoa
and is now on his way to.Fran~ on board parcqts as they were about to lay her
, " "'""~t<>il
the U. S. Battleship North Carolina, and away. She was buried in Woodlawn
easily digestible and more palatable and agreeable
while he has not yet been dist"harged from Cemetery. The only relative of the
to the taste. Try a package of the Milk Cocoa, it
the Navy he expects to gel his discharge family in this vicinity, an uncle, Mr. James
will surprise you.
soon. Hamilton people will be glad to McAllister, of Syracuse, was present at
know that Mr. Clausen is to become pastor the funeral.
'
of one of our village churchc.~.

STOLLWERCK-Gold Brand Premium ChocWe know that ·you want

Ladies'. Misses'
and Children's
Ready -to -wear
Bats. The New
Spring Styles

ue here.

Ladies' New Spring Coats and Capes,
the late styles· are here for your inspection. Make your Spring purchases here ~nd save money.

C. S.. ORVIS.

-

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
Forless ThanThree Hundred •

New Suitings

IM

Dollars Yoo Can Buy Wllat • ,
£ost Three Million,

I

M
M
M

M

We have received all of our new

9J

ma~rfals for Men's

Suits and Overcoats
and are prepared to offer well
tailored Garments made from dependable cloths at $35.00 and upwards for Sult or Overcoat.'

9J
M

•I

M

Dollar

Beal-Williamson Co.

M

I

New Neckwear
The latest creations in Men's
Cravats, just arrived in a wide
range of stripes, figures and solid
colqrs, priced at 65c and $1.00.

.,

Dutchess Trousers
1Oc a button$1.00 a rip.

Carl Baulll. & Son
Tailors and . Furnishers

i

I
I

!

-STO·LLWERCK-

Coal! Coal! Coal!

- A. J . Newton, the Grow-Sir, who has
been conducting two cash groceries in this
village, has ~ented the big Daylight Store
on the Comer, in the Sperry Block and
will, on or before April first, combine the
two stores into one central big one.
Mr. Newton v.ill have a fine, large, light
store in a very prominent and convenient
location and with his wtll-known reputation as a Grow-Sir, may be depended
upon to furnish the best in his line for the
1~~~~/f Hamilton and the surrounding

The open weather during the pres·
ent season has tempted the {armers
and truit growers of Orleans county
to anticipate spring and many are
ca.sting about tor workers. It Is ooUeved that when the active work begina the farmers wUI need even more
than whp.t Is termed experlenoed la·
\lor and that the returned soldier,
whether experienced or not, wm easily ftnd farm work because of his out·
door training and easy adaptablllty to
bard fklld work.

·1•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

I

Phone 118

,

the best COAL to burn and
we have got it to SELL to
you, the best that Money can
buy. So come on with your
orders.
Phone No. 1 and 227-W.

M.

J. CLARK,

The Coal Man.

olates moulded in one ounce cubes, each cube
separate(}'.. wrapped in wax paper, making the
most sanitary and convenient cooking or baking
Chocolate. Try It.

The John Gates Co.
.. On The Comer'

Hamilton. N. Y.

-

RED CROSS GIFTS

$400,000,000

War Council on Retirement An- l
· C h
·
nounces as and Supplies
Contributed.

WORKERS" WILL "CARRY OfJ."
Ftve Big Societies In Worid Wide Plan.
H . P. Davieon Heads lntof'natlonal

American Red Crosa Comm lS&ion.
Dr. Llvingst011 Farrand Pennanent
Leader of Poace Organization.

Waehlo~.- (Specta1.)- HcorJ P.
Duvlson as chnlnnan issuos the followIng s ta tement on bohalf of the War
Clouocll ot tbe Amertean Red Oroa :
-ro the Amerlca.o People :
..The War Council of the A.roerlCl'\n
~ Cross apa,olntcd by President WU BOD on May 10. l~lT, to carry oo the
work of the American llNI Croes durlnc the war, nt thei r r-equeet and by
-vote o! the (',evtral Con11ni t1ee. ceawed
at midnight, Febnuuy Z8
.. lmmedla Lel:r U1e anuisrfce "u
aigned the Wttr (l(ltHH.:1 1 Instituted
atucllee to determin e when the strictly wur work' ot t1le orgun iv,:1t.1011 would
ltave been aufflcleott7 matu red to enable the dJrectloo or affaln to be r-elAlmed b:r the penoaoent 1tatr. Hen r,
P. Dnvlsoo, belo.g ln PariJI when the
lll'IDIBtlce was illglMNI. 1ummooed a
eonfel't!{lce there of the heads of all
the Red Cl"08& Oommil9Wll9 In Europe!
to canvass tbe situation. Alter coolltderlng aU the faeton lt wu coo eluded to make the tnuul Uoo on
March l. The rery fortunate choice
•f Dr. Llvlng11tou F11,rrand a.s the new
chairman of tt.e Oeotral Committee,
IIDd theNlb1 die permanent chief exentlve of tbe Red ere., makea poaalltle the coosummatloa of t:1111 plan • ._, the most favorable roodltlona.
Aooounta Audited bJ War Departrn.tt.
•Detailed rep()rtii to Congreu aDd a
eomplete audlt .r lta &C!C'Ollllts bf the
War Department wlll coa1tltute the
bal record of Red Oroaa actlYlt, durMI the WU'. AJtJlougb lt bu been
tlle rule to make r1ab1Jc: all MJ)e0dl. .ret1 when authori-1 and to rtve de•lled Information relaUve to all work
•dertakea. tbe War Oouocll In turnIng over Its respous ll,lllt1ea to Dr. Farnnd and . bll uaodntes ~Ire tn ,we
a brief ref!ume of lted Oroee war time
Mtlvltles to ~ .American people, to
whom the Red Croea betoog, and wboae
generoua cootrlbutlona have made po•
llible ell lbat has been accompll11hed.
"During the past oeart.y twenty-one
mouths the American people have
1tven in Cftah and 11upplles to the
.American Red 0!'088 more U1au $400,900,000. No value can be placed upou
tbe contrtbut1011s of 1Jervlce which
llave been g1v011 without atlnt aud oftentlme.s at greet 11&crUlce by millions
of our people.
"The etrort ot die Amencto Red
OroN In this war lau oonstltuted by
far the largeat YOlantary glftl of
money, at hand and beftrt, ever contributed purely for the relief ot human sufferf°"'. Througti the Red Oro•
tile heart and aplrlt of ttle whole
Amerlca.11 people have been mobilized
to take care of our owu, to relie ve the
ml9ery Incident to the war, and also
to reve11.I ti> the wortd the 1upreme
llleals of ow national Jlte.
"Everyone who ha1 had any part 111
tt,19 war effort of tho Red Cross Ill enUtled to oon~nttulate himself. No
tbanks. fl'ODI an7011e could be eqlllll lo
-Yalue to the &elf aatlsfactloo everyene should feet tor the part taken.
J'ully 8,000,000 A111erlc11n wome n have
exerted them.eelvee In Red Crou 1&rYke.
HII• Over 17,000,ooa Adttlt Member&.
"Whoo we eritered the war the
Amerlt'IUI Red Oroll8 had about 500,000
aembers. TGda,, u the reMJlt of the
recent Christmas me1nberahip Roll
Call, there are 11pw11rd8 ot 17.000,000
t.H peld lllembers outside of the mem bers of the Jun ior Red Cl'Olls, numberlag perhBfNI 9,000,000 school children
addltlNal.
·'The dllet effort of the Red Cro•
hrlng tllle war has been to care for
. . r meo la llerVlce and to aid our
army and nav7 wbereTer the Red
~ may be called •
to HBllt. All
t. tllla ,tiue et tlte work !urceea Oeoenl Ireland of tlle IJ. 8 . Army recenti, •Id : TM lted Croes bu been aa
aterprlae u ftat u the war Itself.
..-Om the. be«l••la« It u1 tloae th<>11e
1111l•P wtaktl the Affl'IJ lledlcal Oorpll
wanted deae. but cOllld not do ltaelf.'
"Tbe o.id Ol'OSI endeavor 111 France
M9 aaturat11 beeo •poa au exception ally larae l!R"aJe wllere ee"lce 1111 11
lheea renderM te dte .lmerlnn .lrmy
and to thr Freact1 Army 1tnd tb e
J",-di people . u well, the latter par~ularty during the tr7lng period
when tbe AUled Wertd was waltln~
tor the American Army t.D 11rfse In
force and power. llospltol emergency
eervlc-e for our army In Frnn<'e has
greti tly diminished, but the Rt>d Cross
Ill still helog C'lllled upon for servlCfo
wpon n large scale In the great hose
hoc!lpl tnl11. where th ousands of Amer!
tan &l<'k noel wounded arp 1!1111 l"C<'ell'
Ing II I ten ti on
At thPRP ho~pitll I!' the
Red Cros.ci supplle hu ts anfl tuC'llltles
ler the amusem*nt and rec reation of
the men as they become convalescent.
~r Army ot Occupation lo Germany
was follow ed with Medical units prer,ared to render the 11ame emPrgenc)•
aid nnl'I ,rnr,plv sen·lce whl<'h wa1,1 the
• rlmary bu,ilnes of the Red C'lro!l!I
ltnrlng ho tllllles. The Army OontN'fl
•rvlrt> 11long tht> llnec of tra v!'I has

GOY[ RNMf ~T IS W[AK;

_._:___

___

actuall7 locn,aNd .inee the analatl.~
"Aa for work amon1 the French people, now that hostllltlee hove ceuecl.
the French themaelvea naturally prefer 01 far aa poulble to provide tor
Revolt In Germany Is Feared'
their O\VD. It ha• accordingly been dete rmined thnt the guiding principle of
Spartacans Gaining Ground.
Red Oroa policy In Fronce henceforth
1ball be to have punctllloua regnrd to
its ever, respons1b111ty, but to ,urect
Partial Recognition of Soviet• by
Its etTort1 prlmarlly to nul1tlng
Government Not Satl1factory to
French relier societies. The liberated
Workers, Who Want Nationalization
and devnstated regions of France hav1t
of Industries-General Strike May
been dlvlde-1mull districts, each oftlclully assigned
Become a Revolution.
to u doalgnnteLife or death of the present oer"The American Red Cross work tu n.an government ls expected to be deFrnnce wos lnltloted by a co mmission termined this week on the ques tion or
of eighteen men who lnndeLI on l!'rench
shores June 13, 1917. Since t hen politica l r ecognition of the soviets, acsome 0,000 persons hnve been upon U1e cording to als patches r eceiveu from
rolls In io'rnu ce, of whom 7,000 were i:lerlin at Copenbugen.
actively engaged when the nrm lstlce
Th9 Sparta.cans we re said to oe
was signed. An lodlcntlon or the pres- gaining ground among the majority
ent scnle ot the work wlll be ob tnined
Socialis ts.
Great
d emonstral!ons
from the fuct thnt the services of 6,000 wer,e planuP.d tor Berlin and a g eneral
personl!I are 1tlll reQulred.
strike ma y be proclaimed. Colonel I
"Our American Expedltlouary Force Reinhardt, military commanda nt, d~
havin g lnrgely evacuated Eni;lond, the clar ed the strike would be sup presserJ I
activiti es of the Red Cross Commisby all possible means.
sio n there are naturally upoo a diminThe Berlin Vorwaerts bas demandishing scale period. Active operations
ed that th e ca binet resign unless tbe
are still lo r1rogresa lo Archangel and
na tional assembly grants the workers·
Siberia.
"The work In Italy hu been almoet jus tlfled demands.
T he gove rnment bas Issued a proc·
enti rely on behalf of the ctvlttnn poplamation
stating Jt wlll not support
ulation of that co1mtr1. Io the critical
hours of Itnly's struggle> t he American the demands for nationalization of au
people, through their Red Crose. sent Industries.
Another Uerlin dispatch says that
a practical message or sympathy and
relief, for which the government ancl the German government bas partially
people of Italy have never ceased to recognized the soviet. In a rraotlc
effort to prevent the general strike
expresa their gratitude.
Supplies and Personnel to Near Eaat. from becoming a nation-wide revoluThis is a Maaee feature
"The occa11loo for such concentra- tion, the cabinet Issued a proclama
tion of elfort In Ital:r, Englnnd, Bel- tlon , admitting social and economic j
heats evenly-every part of the
glum aod even In Fra11ce h·nvln1 natur- control of industries by the workmen's
ally and nonnally dlmlnlshed, It bas co uncils, but promising stringent pun,
wonderful
been l)Oftllble to divert supplies n.nd lshment tor further disorders.
personnel In large meuure to, the alt)
Tbe workers, dissatisfied with this
Heating on five sides of the
or those people In the Nenr East who halt-way measure, and insisting on '
have hitherto been Inaccessible to out- full political recognition , threatened
oven requires lea fuel
side assistance, but whose 1utrerlngs an -uprising within a week tha,t will
have been upon an appnlllng scale. I be of sufficient power to overthrow
The needs of theee peoples ore so va1t the government.
that government alone can meet them,
A general strike appears Imminent. j
but the American Red Croas l1 making The bourgolse connclls threat ened a ,
an e1Tort to rellevt> Immediately the retaliation strike. Patrols In Berlin
Our Simple Damper placa tlae lire
more acute dlstren.
' have been doubled,
under
perfect control at all
"An extewllve group of American
Riots are reported to be continuing
workere 11 lieeo dl111>atcbed to carr,
In · Leipzig and Halle. In Munich a
vitally nectled 1uppllea, and to work
thiJI winter In the various Bnlkan coun- number of casualties resulted when
tries. In order to co-ordinate their ac- troops ousted Spartacans from lndu1tlvltlee, a Balkan commission has been trall plants.
established, with headquarten at
Rome, 'Italy, from which point alone
GILLETT NAMED SPEAKER
all ·the Balkan centers cna be reacbepromptly.
Republican, of Hou1e Give Manachu"A commlUloo hna Just reached Po,
setts Man Big Majority.
·land with doctors and nurse,, n1edlcnl
Representative Frea erick IL Gillett,
WILL RETAIN PAll CONTROL
11upplles. and food tor sick chlh1ren Maesacbusetts, was nominated on the
and Invalids. An American Red Cro8.!l
first ballot by the Republican conferWill
Have
to
Look
Their
Prettiest
If
Director General H lnea Makee A•
Commi88ion has also l.ieen appointed
ence in Washington as the party can-1
They Expect to Find Favor With
to aid In relieving the suffering of RU!!·
Won:ian
Voters.
nouncement After Meeting Wil1011.
1lan prison ers stlll conffned In Gf!rman dldate for speake r tu the n ex t house
.
i
I
Uncertainty over the status of ra.U1
of
representatives.
prison camps.
1
It
Is
uot
n
ece;:Rury
to
go
ow
uy
frorn
roads
in the immediate futu:re W&JI
After
a
brief
address
by
the
suc"An Lmportant commission ts stlll
! borne to flnd e ll h r the 111 test or best. la rge ly removed by Direct.or G enera.l
working In Palestin e. Through the cessful candidate, the conference proregardl eAs of what Is wnnted. ConsldPr Hines' announ cement after conferrtq
war St)0Clal co-operation has been ceeded with the nomination of other
. eye brow urclllng. ror Instance. A fo<'al with President Wilson tha.t the govgiven to the Ar:menlao and Syrlfln Re- candidates for office In the house. W .
, beuuty su loa ann ounces to the public e rnment would not turn th-e roads
lief CommlHlon, which was the only Tyler Page, Mnryla nd, was nomin atthat It does eyeb row n rchlng, and e -- back to private management unttl
agency able to carry re lief . In the In· ed clerk by a cclamation and Joseph
1 plulns that this operntlon "gives the congress bad mor e cpportunfty to coaRodgers , Philade lphia, now a house I
terlor of Turkish dominions.
eyes !l deep, soulful expression with sider a perma nent program of leglsla·
I e ruploye, was nominated sergeant-atRed Croa WIii Continue.
Herbert Hoover has hec n appointed , everlnsttng cha rm." Ey~brow arching tiou..
.
"Red Cross errort ls thus tar ftung. arms over William J. Carey of WisThts wn8 Jl'flnhrall y m l.t> rpr!'t,,,1 as
It will continue to be eo. But the consin, whose term expire d on March by President ·wilson as director gen- advice tor woman e le<'tors Is more or
era! of the Ameri can re lief ad rui nls· less superfluous. rt Is to the men, and meaning that the rallroad'!I would N
movement represented by tbl1 work 4th.
'
llas llkewl1e assumed an Intimate place
The official vote is as follows: Gil- tratlon, created under th e n ew $lOO,· more especln lly to the meo who aspire und e r gove rnment management for at
In the dally life of our people nt home. Jett, 138 ; Mann, 69; Campbell, 13.
-0·00,0 !>0 g urop a n famine relief bill to public office, thnt this beauty hin t Is leaRt another ye11r. a nd proba bly lo•The army of workers which hal! bee11
Scattering, five; tour for Re pre- wit h fu ll autbority to direc t th-e furn - dlr,e<'ted.
f!Precruited and trained during _the war sentative John .J. Esch or Wisconsin , lsbi ng of foodsturrs an d othe r urge nt
Throughout th e country women a re
If a special session of congresa la
mµst not be demobilized. All our ex- a nd one for Rel)I'esentattve F'rauk ,v. supplies purchased out of t be relief getting the ballot on equal terms with ca ll ed early in th e summer, railrOIMI
perience In the war show• clearly that l\fond-ell of Wyoming.
fo1,d and to a rrange for th e ir tra us por- men. Women cannot vote lo lndlona, legisla tion might be ta.ken np, bat
there Is 1111 unlimi ted fleld for service
tution, disti·ibutlon {lnd admlnls tra- but they are going to have thnt prlvl- nv·st r,ffi rial s belie ve thi 1t cannot be
of the kind which <'an be performed 1
tl on .
lege before long. So many women comp leted within four or five monthli.
Big Sum for Overseas Army.
with peculiar el'fectlveness by t he Red
Mr. Hoover, who already had been have been enfrunchised that they now lf th e re iH no special session , c.ongrees
Congress is asked by S ecretary BaCross. What Its future tnsk!l may be
rrJad e director general of allied re llet hold the · ba lance of power In this nn- conld not start on leglsliitlon much
It Ill yet impossible to forecast. We lter for a deficiency appropriation or . und er the commission slttio'g a t Paris, tlon. So the woman vote wlll be more within a )'ea r .
~829,327
,200
to
pay
for
th
e
subsis
tknow that so long O!l there Is no Amerand more a rea l po li t ical nr~blem to
Wi th th e tern
. nr.rary status deter...
vv
ican army In the field the Red Cross ldent to determine to which or th e
e candld nte.
mined. the railroad aclm inistr a tlOft
remainde
r
of
the
present
tl
scal
year.
will have a special function to perform.
poimlations na mPd in til e r elief blll
Some e lecto rs ca r e little for the per- , w ill g,., nhead vigorouslv with th e pre"Nothing could be of greater Impor- Tile law recently passed by congress
tlie
su
pplies
s hall be furnl s lle d and in
onal
nppenrance of cnnrepealing
,$Hi,lHlO,OO
O,OOO
or
war
ap-1
ta nce to the American Red Cross than
the pinna Just set In motion by the flve proprlation , calce!I Pct $2,996.4·00 .000 or what qu antities. He also Is to ar- most of them prefer a man of cha r- t>x tensions both for the RURP or tbe
great Red Cross socletlee of the world th e $5,4. 1,000,000 appropriation car- range for reimbursem*nt, 90 far as a cter, one who nt least Is presentable. r:t il pr npP rti r• r;. a nd to stlmnlntt> the
to develop a program of extended ac- ried for th e quartermaste r co11>11 an d posslblP, as provided In th e r elief act. Canclldntes In th e future will hnve to dn nrnnd fnr rn11tl.'ria.ls and labor durln mak ing public the president's ex- benr tbls In mind. It will be well, In in!!; the rPadj11'4tmPnt period . l\nother
tlvltlee In the lntere1t of humanity. the secretary ex pl ai ned th at this la r ge
ecutlve orde r , th e food . administration order to mntch rival ca ndidates, for <' ffec t will be the lncrrn. d u11e of waThe conception Involve, not alone et- · reduction caused the deficit.
announ ced tbat. Edgar Rlcharcl and each to ha ve o ""OOd t nllor end an nd· t<·r \~"avs· i n acc r•r d a nce w Ith n.·
, ,1rec t M
forts to relieve human &u1Terlng, but
Tl1eodore
F.
White
marsh,
wbo
have
vlsory
comm
ittee
on
the
proper
shade
Gen
er
al
Hin
es'
express(!rl
pollcy.
lt
to prevent It; not alone a movement Steel King's Daughter Weds Gulde
by the people of an Individual nation,
M"
Ell b ti L d
d ' ht
· r been directhi the arratrs of th food of crnvnts. Immaculate linen w ill hnve was said at the railroad a,dmlntstra·
g
-e
, to be In eve ry ca ndidate's pl a tform. tlon offi cm1 that t:10 decision not i.
but an attempt to nrouae all people to , iss
za e l au er, aug er o
during Mr. Hoove r s The high arched eyebrow wil l be eveo relin quis h tb.e railroads at t his ttaae
a eeose of their re11ponslblllty for the C,eorge Lauder , a wealthy Pl~tsburg administration
t
I E urope, h a d b een appo Int- ' more essential to candidates thnn to
welfare of their fellow belnge through- s t eel manufacturer , was married on a •s ence n
ed a,w'hts joint directors In the United the average womun. Doubtless those Is not a r evers~! of r,ollcy.
out the world It la a program both Jan. 15 to Medford R . Kellum, a Mi·
Ideal and pra~tlcal, Ideal lo that lta am!, 1''1a., fishing guide and pilot, It States or the newly created relief ad· , who have political aspirations will begin eorly, because eyebrow training llapgood Named Mlnl1t~r to, Denmark..
supreme aim 11 nothlnc lea than ver- '18B learned, after the couple had left m~tstra;lon.
N,irman Ha11good of New York wu
!table "Peace 00 earth iood wlll to on a sixty-days' yachting cruls~
DRY LEADERS UNDECIDED t11kes tlme.-Indlnnapolis News.
-. minated by President Wilson l'Jllr
men," aDd practical In that It aeeka to a mong the lower Fiorlda keys. The
·s in is ter to Denmark, succeeding Dr.
take mean• and meesurea which are ceremony was performed by a notary
i
'·f aurlce F.ga11, who recelJ1 •·,,
~llbl for the Doctor.
actually available and make them et- public and Mr. Lauder did not learn i.Jay Not Attempt to Get Action to EnA Mexican by the name of Branllc
teethe la meeting without delay the ot the wedding untll Feb. 27.
force Law at Thie 8e11lon.
Prohibition leaders still were unde- Bermnndez, nged twenty-three yeare.
erl1l1 whleb !.; t'ally recurrent In the
llvea of alt peoples.
May Repeal Semi-Luxury Law.
cided wheth e r to urge action before died lo n little curhouse down by the
"For acroinpll1blnr Its minion In
Repeal of the 11eml-luxury tax adjournme nt of congreRs on pending depot. The mao never hathe yeare of peace which must lie clause In the war revenue bill signed legls latJon or enactment of war tim e anrl 110 no one knows what killed him.
ahead of 01 the Rell Croes will require last week by the president was pro- p11 hibltlon, which becomes errectlve -San Miguel (Cal.} Examiner.
tile abl•t po~lble lendershlp, and pc:>'led th a r esolution a pproved by the on July 10. •r11ey said no decision
mU11t eoJoy the continued 1upport, 1ym- ltun&e ways and means committee and
would be ' made until they could conThe Touch That Helpa.
pathy, and participation In It!! work tater Introduced by Chairman K itchin.
fr.r with congressional leaders on th e
Kind looks, klocl words, kind acts,
of the whole American people. It l1 T he clause provides tor a tax of 10 goneral legislati ve situation .
particularly fortunate that such a man per cent after May 1 on wearing apSome prohibition advocates insls1 and warm handshakes-these are the
a1 Dr. Llvlngatoo Farrand should have pare! and ma uy oth er articles costing
that no additional legis lation ts neces- secondary menus of grace when men
been selected as the permanent head a bove specified s um·s .
1mr} to make war time prohibition ef- are In trouble and are fighting their
unseen bottles.
of the orgnnlzatlon. The unstlnted
fe ctlv", but many members of confashion In which all our people gave
gress say such legislation is n e<--esGen. Crowder Will Visit Cuba.
of themseh·es throughout the war 11
s ary. because th e original act does not
Comforting Thought.
Maj
.
Gen.
Crowder
,
judge
ad
vocate
the beat assurance that our Red Cross
d elegrite autho rity to any govern ment
You rn11y fall to shine lo the opinion
will conti nue to receive that co-opera- general a nd provost marshal general agency t o enorce it.
of ot hers, botll In your conversotloo
'doa, •thlch wtll mnke Its work a sou rce c- f th e army, wll1 leave soon fo r Cuba
end action s, from being im perlor as
tt :,,idc sod Ins piration to every Amer- w accep t an Invitation to advise wltb
Don ati o ns Deductab le from Income.
well ns Inferior to them.
·1te 'uban president and congress on
ican,"
MAY NQT NEED
Contributions to war chest fundA
Mr. Davison, as chairman of th e tn- :he revis ion or election laws. Secrecem11ttonal Commlseloo of the Ameri- :a1-y Raker an nounced Presiden t W1l - war campaign commun ity fun d!! and
C.LASSES
'B UT IF You
The Dentist'• Showcase.
i; imilnr enterprises, sup port of war r ecan Red Cross, bas undertak en to rep- rnn's a pproved of the trip .
"Oh, look ut grandma '· bite, Aunt
lief work, may be deducted in tlgur
J)o ~LET US_Sur.~E~.1'
resent the AmerlC'on Red Cross lo the
Ing net In co me for taxation purposei1 Emll y," ~vhlspered ' the baby, eyes flud
preparation of the proKf'am for extendPa lmer Named Attorn ey Gene ral.
the lnter11 al rtivenue bureau aonounc on the arruy of fal se teeth In the gl81!11
ed Red Cro8ll acti vities, and will 1peod
Mitchell Paim P.r wa;; 11omln11tPrl by
ed.
Gifts or donation ' to <;hur ch es 01 case.
the next several months lo Europe In l'resld ent Wilson to h 11tt rn c- v ~en
to fun ds for chu rch activities, slmi
c0Dsultat1on with other Red Crose IIOel- :ral. Mr. P:i lmP.r t ,1 k nt:lre March 4
larly, ar tl ductuble. "l.'hls Is a n In·
"tle11 for that purpo!'le.
•• P. ·•-i t 1,-n t :J tl,·elr fl ·eu by Attorn"'
Thinking First.
i'HIC WAR COUNCTL OF THlll AMER· ' ,,, · ,1 r.re~ · rv r~1· ,ts r tlrem r• 1 terpretatlrm of the legal division perlf tbon rhinkest t\vlce berore thou
mitting
drduetl
()n!I
tor
donations
to
IOAN REfl CRORS.
e · lf'!l h (l rr, , f ,n •1
° • • r; 1 !Tl01Jlll I • .•
Incorporate<\ charttleR or religlous In· spenlrest once, thou "llt speak twice
Reor, P . 06vlson, Ohalnaaa.
I \
I''
the better f~r lt.-WJlllaru Penn.
Rtltutlonfi.
232 Geneeee St.
Utla, N. Y.

I

Buy a Magee Range ~ for the

W ond~i:ful Magee Oven

I

Don't you want an Oven
that is heated on 'f ive
sides including the back of
the oven instead of three
or four sides?
whicJi

I

Magee Oven ·

.

!

tuna

HOOVER DIRECTOR
;
CLIEf ,
OF FAMINE R

I

WIii Handlework In Connection
With $100,000,000 Fund.
- ---

I
I

!

I

l

I
I

I

I

I

You

THE HAMILTON REPUBLICAN, HAMILTON, N. Y., MARCH 6th, 1919

7

------=----·-- --- - - ---

PLANT NOWl

ADBsh-,

ofC/Joco/8te

Nose ·
Knows"

AH foods are flavored to make them

ralatable. All smoking tobaccoa are trealed
wit some flavoring for the same reason.
B:~t th~~f~ r3 a big d f ference in the Quality
a n,- ?. __: . · ,: f tobacc-.: - r avoringa. Tuxedo,
the L.: -.- . ·::. f p:ropc:.:·'y ~:.ged burley tobacco,
uses t ~-_(, t,t11rest, most wholesome and
delicious of all flavorings..:...
chocolate! That ia wb:, ''Your
Nose Know8" Tuxedo from all
other tobaccos-by ita delicioua
pure fragance.

Satisfaction tor the
sweet tooth.
Aid to IPPetlte and .
dlaestlon - benefit
and enJoyment ID
LP.STING form.

GLASS ASSURES

And only 5 cen11
a Packaae.

1

lapanese Forecast Direful
Race Trouble for t:.e World
-Fear an Armed Collision

LOAN .CAMPAIGN I

-··

.Belief that th:-:ext war wtll be

Try Thio Test: RubalittleTuxedo
briskly in the palm of your hand to
bring out it:, full aroma. Then smell it
deep-its delicious, pure fra!Jrance
will convince you. Try this test with
~ :i y other tobacco and we will l et
Tuxedo st and or fall on your judgment.

I the outcome of rnce prejudices le ex-

,

Secr~ry of Treasury Declares
Drive Positively Will Open on
April 21 Regardless of
Terms of Issue.
There will b'e a Liberty Loan caml)lllgn · U1ls aprlng. 'l'hl1 was announced definitely and offlclally by the
Secretary of , tlwt Treasury, Cuter
Ola8a, 00 Feb. t~.
Wnshin'gtou dlllJ)atches a few days
before that, In --poaars now before the Ways aud
.
Means Commltte, gave the lmpre111lon
90me other way of financing the Gove.rnme nt might be adopted.
The Secretary 10ld flatly In his
,
11laternent:
,
"The V lctory Liberty Loan camI cept nomination tor a tlilrd term, It vallln will beglu not Inter tl1an April
I was stated at the White House that 2,1. The i:cqulrements of the '.frensury
I the subject of President Wllson are imperf1tlve uud cunDOt be tlnanced
1 again beinir a candidate was not men- 'without such n romvaign.
I tloned.
"'l'he forms and terms of the securl1 [t was ex.vlained that the president ties to be Issued remain to be deterltx Great Lake Sailors Placed ' merely remarked to his guests that mined. Whetber they are bonda or
be yearned to get back to _writing and notes, it Is absolutely eseentlal that
Under Arrest.
that he had in contemplation the com- tJie widest possible measure of dlatrlplUng bf a history.
butiou be reullzcd.
Some of those, who attended the) '~l'hls will necessltute a carupal'1} of
. Alleged That Men Received Money for luncboon, said they gained the Im· the same character u that conducted
Prof-.ed A~lllty to Got Release- presslon that the president meant ne In the past through the exlstlnai Libe.e Sailor Jumped from ElghU1- would retire to private life at the end erty Lonn ori:aulzatlooa. They have
etory Window After Confeaaing to of hie term.
pledged agalo tli~ir united aupport ID
lt also was 11tated that the president order that the Victory Loan Bonda or
Naval Authorit.lN.
eTldenced deep feeling against oppon· notes mny be distributed 01 widely 811
alx lt&iilon of the Great. Lakes naval ents ot the league of nations. He wal' poaslble among the American people."
This 18 the first time the word "DOte•·
tinmtng ataUon are Ill custody and 1a1d to haTe expressed the vtew that
10 the league should be an American and baa been used as an alternative for
*- ltody of aoother, a aulclde, Is
not a partiB&D Issue, but that It tbe wbond" in official discussions of the
I). aorgue, WI l'esult ot alleged grafUng
Republlcan state committees should forthcoming loan. It Is @tated author!•
la oonnecUon with tb.e discharge ot reject a propoeal to indurse the league tutlvely in Washington that a majority
trom the staUon, it was learned. the Democratic state committees then of the ruembers of the Way11 and
Uenten&11t Commander C. 8. Roberts, would be free to act independently.
'Means Committee tavora the WMI of
short term notes in pince of loug term
u.eoutl"e
officer
Yid
uad at
b the t station,
d t said
P- Daylight Saving Law Halts Accidenta. bonds. It is suggest ed t h at t h elile no t ai
uo e cha
ence th een
o tsu l
h
..,_,,lctlon of labor leaders that a b e ma d e t o mn t ure l n ! ro m tw o to
- nve
d 'h houn
.-t a
rge
at .... c ....rges ac ua ·
c ,..,.,
d f
t
e .
1
1
17 ha4 been eold, nd
but tbat a number
~:l!r:avt;a;,l:::t
~~="~n~~te~o -ow;~~;1 lt;ht;veio~e~u~~:;_
ut -USted men a
a few petty ottt- .
Id mlnJmize industrial accidents. hns borrowed pu_rt of its wnr t1nunces.
oera had appareutly ~r-.wtlced a fraud wou
.
Some members of the committee faen some of their mates by professing . ~as bonrn o~t In the past year, said 1 ~-or IS8ulng these notes lu three clnss~
'-'t have lnftuence In obtaiulng re- j l• rook Morrison, Si!cretary of
the unde,· the following conditions:
i.aee..
·
, American Federation of Labor, ln a , 1. Notes ut II low rate or 1ntere11t,
The existence ot the ln•estlgatlon ' statement urging the la!it b; no~t~e- : vrobably 3 ½ per <>erir. ii;sued entirely
ltecame known following the suicide , pc,aled. Mr. Morrison 7' e
s
S· I rnx tree.
et Samuel Moscowitz, Qetrolt, a sec- 1 tks on indns trlal accidents In Penn- 1 2. Auother clustS with a slightly hlgb-•~ss seaman, who plunged from I syl'vanla, showing thait bin 1918 un der er rate or interest. the Income on $1,1
1
1
Ila eighth-story window of the Chicago oJ)eration o1 the day g t sav ng aw 000,000 of wtilt'11 wlll be free from ta.xuT&l tntelllgence office after making the number of accidents was 43,SaG atlon.
a oonfesslon, acco.rdlng to L.kmtenant ; re·.,.·er than in 1917.
S. A third clt111s . I.Kl· sll!ly with u high
llchri.n L. Reed, chlet or the office.
rate of Interest, probably 4% per cent,
"I am not Inclined to- be~ve this
Ships Turned Back to Trade.
free of tnxutlon In uruouDtl! up to 16,·
aatter waa anythlq more serious
Shipe or t~ Merchimts and Miners· 000.
t.laaa a fraud practiced by Moscowitz Trausportn.tlon company, engaged In
Thes., plans are all . the lll&'ieatlon•
lllld , po sibly others, tor no otllcers ' Atlantic coaatwise traffic, have been of t11e Ways and Meana CommlttH.
'-"' yet beeu. lnTolTed," aald Lieu- turned back to private management So far there has been no official aa*'8.Dt Commander Roberts. "We by the railroad administration. om- nouocement from the 'Trea1ury u w
lla'Ye six men In custody In conneo- clals of the company accepted the r&- what wlll be done, other than tbe Seo'6pa. with the Investigation. None or llnqulsbment, which heretofore they retary's lltutement that th ere wlll be
Mlem ha.a made any admis1ton11. Bo have protested. rt Is understood 10 a Liberty Lonn cumpnJgo to ra!N
far as I have learned the highest Washington that the company wm whatever Is necessary.
amount obtained by M:oscowtta was continue operRtlon ot the ships, alThe Liberty Lonn Committee ot the
·
Seco1)d F<-'aaeea ta which he wll.8 ln'folTed. Early concerning t.>i.e rutnre policy would M . camr,nli:n. When Lhe time com .. tlM
Ill
.
December .-e lee.med or roar young rorthcomlng from the compa ny's bead- loon authoriti es - . me-re boys, W'ho hAd swindled : quartet'I! In Baltimore soon .
whatever securltlet- nre otTered.
f..r others, obtaining an a"erage or
uout UO each.
Because of their I
Higher Postofflce Ex,1ensea.
Be Wise.
,-th they were merely ai"f'en dlahon- . lo response to a resolution Posten-able discharges. In the preeent ; master Genernl Burleson advised tbe
oa,,e, th11 report of the anTat lntelll- senate that th e expenditures of the
av 1ur,N1 WAR s 11v 111 " ITAMPI
y011 • ~[ PVTTIH, ¥0 IIR CI\PITI\I.
g-1111ce officer ts yet to be received b:, "Ostofflce department have Increased
r
WM\'~f THf VfllOT J UDGfl OP'
Ute commanda nt who, If It is reprded ipproxlmately $62,736 ,000 because or
111 vnrMrNT VAluts IN TIit 1'ArIot1
11 •, PUTTING rtKiRs
a1 suffl ciently serious ma.,. order a th e wnr

,
J


,___d or 1-n vestlgR.tlon to consider It
~
f
-------wtth proba ble courts martial of the Indt'f1.d11ols to fonow."
I
Japanese Idea of Music.
llosco,vltz wns !6 ye&rs old and h.a.d
Among the Japanese pir;peclnlly, a dibee!! In train in g a ltttle o•er ilx rectly divine origin Is att ributed to
m ,181.. The m\.. thl<'nl legend run1 that
- t h a.
' "'
,:,
tht> art wu Invented by the gods to
apnaese the nnger o! the sun god· 1
""
dess ind to lml uce her to !!hlne once I
.... upon the nnrtb and upon the ,
----'"""-'<-.J-,
mo
Preeident Denies Mentioning Third
•..
,..
other
-lnltt- r ,The melodlell which 1
-r;:;::;;;;;::;;;;:~~
dl
Nomination at Luncheon.
1

-.
k
were potent to prevail lll)OD I
..,_.._,:........,.
' LB retard to pu1'Uahed reports that re11ulted
h-, aad t"-11 11111 -a• light .....,tored te the
1'Tetl1dent Wililoa told Democratic

"
• --,
A
_ _ .... _
and dope!•• • "orld
-~

-:ailtt.E:eu,ell wllo lallehed wita lU&l ..... W u MIi .......
t.
Ill Wusblngtue t.la!t Ille '!oat• aot ••

T e-

fl
.vorLasts"============================::.=-=-=-=-=-=
CHARGED WITH GRAfl

=~tl~~:~~~

m:~:;

!

I

_______

I

I
I

I

____

r".;:::========:::::::----,

I

NO TRUTH IN REPORT

.D

pressed by Yuklo Ozaki, formerly
minister ot justtce and a 1end1n1r
I member ot the coost1tut1onu1 party.
Mr. Ozaki said thut In bis opinion th~
colored .races, which ste ndUy were deYelop[og th eir clvll!zntloo, would deI mnnd finally the same treatment
i the white rnces, and that the result
! would be 'an armed col1!slon.
i Hr. Ozaki recommenlled that ;fnpan.
acting on behnlt of all Asiatic ra<.-el,
should Introduce the racial and popolation questions for consideration and,
If possible, ~ecure a aolutlon. In a
country 11.ke Japan, where the l)Opolatlon is Increasing' with alarming
rapidity, be said It was but natural
that the surplus population . should
. try to obtain an outlet even by resort1
Ing to arms. From Japan's standpoint, said Mr. Oznkt, the racial or
: population qneetlons were more Important
than
President Wilson'•
"fourteen points," as laid down for a
basis for Germany's surrender. These
racial questions, he snld, concerned
I the future of millions of 1:1ouls In A81u.
I Mr. Ozaki warned the Japanese not
to develop the German system of state
organlzntlon, which In the war had
proved to be a mere machine tor de11 troylog clvlllrmt!on and tor tramp1
ling under foot the rights of othe_r na•
tlone and peoples. On the quelltlod
of Japan's occupation Qt the German
South Sea Islands, Mr. Ozaki declared that the United States should
dismantle her torts In the Pblllppln01
and Hawaii and that this would be
more Important tor Japan than tbe
taklq o"er of t_h e South Sea lslaDd&.
--------

.
I

a•

Chinese Children Sold as
Low as Twenty-Five Cents
-Markets Found jn Cities

.:.ry(l]lur Nose Knows"

-

-==============='-

Pr1"de and Roses
81 JACK LAWl'ON

Ii===============CO.p1rtallt. 1111, W•tera -"•••pa,-, 'UalM.)

Mory Louise was going to marry
the gardener; and being uoncquolnte<1
with the family of Mary Louise, It
would be hnpoSl!lble tor you to con·
cel•e the consternation this news occnl!lioned. In their eyes the queen bad
abdicated her throne, the proud old
-uthem name for the ftrflt time was
.....
belnc unequally yoked wltb that of II

.(I

first;

ffii

,

bfood~ tlie IJnille,a

within her rebelled at the lntereat
her father's senant had awakened.
Then love's magle jo7fully brushe4
aside the barrier.
It was II soft scented moonlll nigh•
when Henry confeBSed bis love fO/r
Mar, Louise. She stood by th e white '
sun dial, and the old light of dreams
shone In her eyes.
"You wUl marry we, sweet?" asked
the "olee of be.r prince, and unbelltatlngly llhe bad given her promise.
In the lmpre881ve old library, wltb
these frowning taeea about her, that
promlae 11eemed to be a more serlOUII
thing; ' but 1lrml1 Kary Louise -..
peated:
·
"I will marry l!arry. though you d
tum
Th against t me.
.. fath r bmted
en • 11 a o~~ ... er
e
bill old ·face In bll'I arms.
"Ob Kary Lonlse," he moaned • .,.
i it not enough that 1 n\ust lose tbilll
; belo"ed old pince of our family, with·
out also losing you? Long have I eD
deavered to keep up family customs.
That ls now no longer possible. our ·
money I?." gon~noor
specnlatlon or ·
~ .,
dltu
h w I do not
i:::~b:;~:: mo::; i~ gone.
"It you would hut follow the wo--,
men of your kind in sultnble marriage,
nnd sn rely yoo have about you eager
cavallere-the pride of the old name·
mlgltt still be saved. If not the finari~
clal stnndlng;'
"The prtne of the name .. cried MatT 1
1
~ f~~~: ::::~ :~et::
0
0
clever-or
noble
or fine, as my Hury."

II

commoner.
.&. nd wi th all her new a nd startllng
vlewe Kary Louise 11eemed to retnln
but. one characteristic of th e old Li nd ·
China's appalling po"f'erty 18 tradl- kly tr-thtlr Immovable stubbornness.
tlonal. The average man and woman ,', "I will merry my f Barry," she snld,
I t
goes through llfe with only an ocea- though every one o you torn airs ns
,@lonnl relief from the pangs of hun• me."
ger, says Fre<1erick Moore Ill World'•
Harry hllS been engaged ns gardener
Work. Tens of thousands of people by the father of Mury Louise, while
die annunlly from starvation. Moth- that gentleman played golf near the
ers ln the poorer sections of eveey elub house. The young man, whistling
town and village destroy female cheel'lly, ' bud been busying himself
babies because they are unable to with a trowel among the rare plants
feed them. Sometimes the parentll borderlnir the club house vernnda
sell them Into slavery or dishonor. ID when Lindley senior approached.
times of drought and famine a regnBeing ln nrgent need of a gardener,
-lar traffic ls conducted In children be besought the busy one for lotormagenerally by bout along the canall , tlou and perhaps assistance.
and rfyers. The price goes at tlmet!
"Did he know where a capable and
88 Jow aa 25 eenta tor a beaJtbv ehlld, experienced roan could be toundr'
J
a
Her lo'fer, appearing just then la
; nothing betng paid tor a sickly one.
The club hou1e gardener, after
the ~oorway, gazed back adorlnct,
Under ordinary cooditlou a 111:rons few abrupt questions, most Surpris· over the heads of the family council.
young glrl will bring anywhere from lngly ol'l'ered hie own senlcea.
"It wlll make no difference wl~
t~n to a hundred dol1an or more. ID
Mr. Lindley, reallztor the ravage Mary Louise," 8ftid Hnrry fpfloud!J.
Grdlnary tlmea a reau)ar pnctlce cd aeglect wae making amour hi• co1tly, "but It may alter conmtlons with
lllteallDC chllclftll pnvallB ID aome ~ 11ncared for plant1, wae onl7 t~ rtad yoontelf, Mr. Lindley, to Jearn that
gtona. 'l'be7 are eonve7ed, ,enerallJ to arree, "but," he added uneasily, hnve been employing your fertile ga,..1
1D boata, to the larp dtles ua4 IIOl4 "what wlll theJ sa1 to me here for den u a means of tortherlng certalo
Prlvately,
taklnr away their help?"
0oral experiments which J bnve fOlf'
Henry had laughed away his com- some time been carrying toward sueBI1 Apiary.
punctlon, '"I waa rolng to leave In a cesshll completion.
An lnterestJn1 picture ot • 1a- few da:,-1 anyway," he said, ,','more
"It wos a club house trlend who tlrat
·•- work here thanb I bargained
tor
apiary on a precipitous mountain side
f
f:l
suggested my trial there. New dl&-waa shown In Popular Mechanic• MasTdhe tgar~en a: b~n • a;cIe
t~ coverlee lo growth 11nd color ls IDT
1an
Iame• I' hobb• ·, more thnn that. my life purazlne. The 11lon..
ba1
been
''"t
Into
ter,
.'.!_ e tary
le, oafnbe r 1nd ree
..."u
yeen ...
oun d ,on
many
.,
nll'ea twelYe to Gfteen feet bl&h OD lltlll lingering there.
pose. Tomorrow, with your permlkwhich more than SOO swarms of bees
Very un rmcel he had looked when slon, I wlll show to you the MPryare housed, each hiYe being placed on 11.1
Lo P
YI
b f
de
Louise roae, t'or which I hnve on offer
1 pau11 ng e ore a won r-ary
use,
,. H
d ..
a concrete foundation. The land put fnl folded rose noticed him for the ofnrry pnui:;e , we 11 - a great
to this profitable use would be worth first time kneeling In the dirt almost denl or money; anti It Is 11 ;,ntlsfncl*ttle tor nny other purpose.
n1e
t h
f
tlon to know tb11t all my study and
er fire
eet. a ne- gardener, ar• you rescnrc h h n~e no t tl<'l'n 11a
" stnd
blvea, belog.hlirh up. are fanned .by the a "You
" ."
"
~
WI t b a JlttJ e Jaugh -.,
summer breezes and are w11rmed by oot?" asked Mary
Louise. "What
Is
mnry I ,on Ise ran
the aun In winter.
Into h er lover's 11 1,ni-.
your Dtlme?"
.. Yon never to! d me, " s h t' triumphed.
-------He had 11nnced up at the sound ot
her voice, as though realizing for the "You just kept plo,J<'ling along out

Frlend1hlp.b
h
ftrst time her presence, then the gar- there with your . runny trowels. Bot.
0
•• one ls so poor ae t e pcrl'l on w O dener sm iled.
ob I I knew nll thP tlnw that you were
Is golni; through life without friends.
"Henry," be answered her, and rls· clever us well ns I knew- that :vou-None or us needs to be In this sad
were yon."
h f
h
h
lng with M bow, presented the wonderP11 g 1• or all urou nd us are t Ol.le w O fnl rose.
need love and sympathy-those for
h
_ _ __ __ _ _
whom we can make life less dlfffcolL
So thnt wn s the coming of t e
prince! Mary Louise did not know at
Sponges Strangely Colored.
And that Is wllat friendship means:
h
Fl'fe scarlet .spo ng<>s llnvt• bt>en
rpendlng oneself for those one lo•eti the Ume, she only knew thnt t e gaze
of his dark eyes, bud a strange 1y
and asking nothing In return. 1t ...1• -eet power to stir her heart. But picked np In Lokf' Bl wo, .lopon. The
nuthorllle11 of tl1e lnke lnboratory tit
"only he who Is unwilling to Ion witmat being loved" wbo la llltel7 te f M I later, llnry Louise learned the truth, Otsu, nttor·b 'd to tho Kr(•to lni!Jt' riol
as ahe ome agalu and ugaln to the university, nre qnotf'tl n;, f.11 .vlm: thut
t 1IOt tbere 111 IUI a.cit u,1., M .___
-..... d lillp.
gm-den, . J.lngnlng nnoecel!8tlrlly, while llimllar ~){1nµ t\'- h:ivP u,•vpr h• ' t'l1 dl s~
~ia_!Y_ ~ ~
to'fuwd •• w •1·e la t.lle werld.

~!8;· ~·w::

I
I

--======-==

d

T

OCR | Digital Collections (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dong Thiel

Last Updated:

Views: 6296

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (79 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dong Thiel

Birthday: 2001-07-14

Address: 2865 Kasha Unions, West Corrinne, AK 05708-1071

Phone: +3512198379449

Job: Design Planner

Hobby: Graffiti, Foreign language learning, Gambling, Metalworking, Rowing, Sculling, Sewing

Introduction: My name is Dong Thiel, I am a brainy, happy, tasty, lively, splendid, talented, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.