4
Vol. 37. f! w~- Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43 Grand Gorge. Burr Spring of Hobart was a gue st Sunday of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Spiing. Miss Agnes Sloan of New York is visiting friends in town. M iss Josephine Dolan of Platt Cove is visiting Miss Sophia Wood. Mrs. Ray Weed of Prattsville has been spending a fewdaysatHowaid Conrow’s. Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Booth of Rox bury were guests of friendsjn town Tuesday. Thelmas Moore was a Sunday vis itor at Stamford. Miss Emily Spi ing is visiting fri ends in Kingston. Mrs* Abram Long and Mrs. Har riet Gray lord of Gilboa were callers in town Saturday. Alfred Moore of Roxbury was a Sunday guest at William Oakley's. Mr. and M rs. George Patterson are spending the week with friends in Hunter. Miss Alice Scutt of Hobart visit ed at Mrs. Lillie Ostrom’s Friday and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clum and Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Jackson of Harpersfield were guests Sunday at Walter Dtx’s. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tompkins, Mrs. 0. A. Maynard, Mrs. C. Cham- plin and Mrs. W. H. Draffe 11 at tended church at Hobart Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Conrow visit ed friends at South Gilboa Sunday. Mrs. Dewitt Chase and sons Geo rge and Dewitt jr., are spending the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Proper. Mr. and Mrs. John Vroman of Stamford were guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Dibble Sunday. Howard Pindar was in New York the past week. James Henderson and daughter, Frances, of East Meredith were vis itors in town Tuesday. Miss Isabelle Kendall 'of Dublin, Ireland, is visiting her sister, Mrs. D. P. Doyle. Leonard Sloan of New York, vsp an over Sunday guest afc W, "H. Draffen’s. David Borst of Stamford is visit ing friends in town. Mrs. Cora Misner is in Stamford caring for Mrs. John VanDyke who has been sick for some time. Miss Gladys Dixon of Roxbury is spending some time with her grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cronk. Mrs. Eli Champlin of Stamford was a guest of friends in town the past week. Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Hendry and Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Pierson of New York called on Mr. ana Mrs. Ford Bartholomew Monday. Miss McDermott of Kingston is a guest at the home of her brother Joseph McDermott. Miss Anna Powell is spending a few days at Oneonta. Mr. and Mrs. Merton Maynard, Mrs. Helen Powell of Stamford and Kenneth Mackey of New York eall- ed ou friends in town Saturday. Luman Simonson and Miss Flor ence Pindar visited friends in Bo- .vina Friday and Saturday. Over 210 tickets were sold at the station Saturday for the Sunday school excursion. Brewster B. More, who has been spending the winter in New York, returned to his home in this place for the summer Saturday night. Eugene Mackey and J. C. Porn are in Hunter this week doing ma son work. To Sleep Well in Summer. Slight inflammation of the bron chial tubes causes a distressing co ugh and makes sleep impossible. Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound stops that annoying tickling and re lieves the racking, tiring cough. Good for all coughs, colds, croup and bronchial affections. L. A. Wyckoff. Dr. Stevens of Windham will be at Gilboa on Wednesday, June 16. to do all den- alwork except gold filling. Dr. J. Mann of Middleburgh will be at the Gil boa House June 28, 29, 30, July and 2, Msnday, Tuesday, Wednes day, Thursdaay and Friday, pre pared to do all branches of dental work. Make your appointments early. FOR SALE—Second hand bicycle has two new tires. Inquire at th( Monitor office. FOR SALE—High grade 2-year old .Jersey bull. George Rickard, Gilboa, N. Y., R. D. No. 2 . MILLIONS T TO THE GREAT PANAMA PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION Now Is the Time to Visit America’s Huge Panama Canal Celebration at San Francisco; Be There When the Liberty Bell Arrives, July 16th; Marvelous Exhibits From All Corners of the Globe on Display. MINIATURE BATTLESHIP BLOWN UP AND MINE EXPLOSION INTERESTING FEATURES IN TWO EXHIBITION PALACES J* Amazing Voice Amplifier and Other Wonders of the World’s Progress at the Great Panama-Pacific Canal Celebra tion—This Year the Year of All Years to Take Marvel Journey to the Pacific Coast. ALL AMERICA ON EXHIBITION THIS YEAR: RAILROADS GRANT LOW ROUND TRIP RATES TO SEE UNIVERSE’S MARVELS Privilege* of Routing Never Before Offered—Hotel Rates Average Less Than Those of“Other Great Cities and 125,- 000 Room* Available In Hotels and Apartment Houses In San Francisco. F IROM every part of the world visitors are thronging to the great Exposition at San Fran- cisco. The Exposition there is the most comprehensive and interest ing of all universal expositions, and it will probably be the last to be hekl within the present generation. Now is the time to see it. The Panama-Pacific International Ex position, which opened on Feb. 20 last, has charmed the millions who have al ready beheld the magic city by the Goldten Gate. The marvels of the universe are dis played in the vast exhibit palaces, af fording the most comprehensive sum mary of the world’s progress ever dis closed. Many of the exhibits are as revolutionary in their character and mean as much to future generations as did the locomotive or telegraph when It was first introduced. The Audion amplifier, for example, makes It possible for a man in New York city to deliver an address through the tele phone to a large audience in San Fran- pers. This performance begins in the Palace of Liberal 'Arts each day at 3 o’clock. The* amazing voice amplifier is but one of many revolutionary scientific advances demonstrated at the Exposi tion. The invention has made possible the transcontinental telephone, and the principle wlii< h is applied has not been developed, to its fullest extent. It is said that with the probable develop ment of the long distance wireless tele phone this new invention will make It possible to project the human voice halfway around the globe without the use of a telephone wire. Contrast the able to see Mme. Montessori, the cele brated Italian teacher, instructing classes of children. A great purpose of the Exposition is to show not only results and finished products, but the methods, processes and principles by which results are achieved. In the ex hibit palaces and state buildings mo tion pictures are flreely employed with this object in view. There are forty- three free cinematograph shows upon the Exposition, grounds, ’ and, by the way, there is no charge to enter the exhibit palaces. Once you have enter ed the Exposition grounds all the dis plays of the states and nations are T neer required months to cross the plains, with that of today, when the orator in New York may address his audience in San Francisco. And there are many other develop ments as wonderful and as revolution ary, all revealing the trend of the world's progress in the arts, sciences and industries. If you are interested in mining, for example, beneath the cisco, 3,000 miles away. Through the; floor of the vr^t Palace of Mines you may find a mb* in operation, with its use of heat waves the intensity of the voice vibrations is increased to such an extent that, although the orator may deliver his address in a low voice into the telephone in New York, Id San Francisco it is possible to increase the sound in volume sufficient to fill a large hall. On the other hand, the New York speaker’s address may be distributed through telephonic receiving disks at tached to each chair in the ball in San Francisco. In one of the exhibit pal aces visitors may, without charge, hear a man In New York read from the headlines of the New York newspa-' their^studles. and perhaps you may be era sixty-five years ago, when the pio- spread before you. In the great Aus tralian Pavilion and in the Palace of Manufactures gem cutters are to be seen at work, while exhibitions of a model postoffice in jtull operation, of a model laundry, of a paint manufactur ing machine, of a broom manufactory in operation, of an automobile manu factory, with an al&ost endles§ succes sion of other operating machines, illus trate the advance in industrial proc esses. Man is becoming more and more a master of the machine, with the electrical current-as the intermedi ary to lighten the. burden of personal supervision. If you are interested in wbat the for eign nations have accomplished you have only to visit the marvelous dis plays of the European countries or of those of the Orient or South America. Canada or Australia. Among the French displays you jnay, if you wish, behold priceless ’Worts of art never be fore exhibited in- America and which at the Exposition’ fittd sanctuary from the ravages of stopes and tunnels and shafts and com pressed' air drills. Wait a moment and you may witness an explosion In the ‘mine. A gong rings; an ambulance dashes with a corps of rescuers pro vided with respiratory apparatus, and effects a rescue. In the Palace of Machinery you may see a miniature battleship blown up by a miniature mine patterned after one of the latest types of the submarine mine. In the Palace of Education you will see classes of students engaged In HERE is something helpful and inspiring for every one at the Exposition. Said Vice Presi dent Marshall recently: “Who ever can, even at a sacrifice of some thing which for the moment appears necessary, should come to see a real work of art never equaled, even by a mirage. If there be any one in Amer ica with a thirst for knowledge and for beauty and a longing for a liberal edu cation,. such a one Can obtain it here. “This is the university of the world: It has a chair fully endowed to meet the wants and needs of each. The eye, the ear, the mind, the heart, the soul, each may have its horizon here enlarg ed. I came to bear a message. I re main to become a student. I leave the feet of this Gamaliel of all expositions with regret.” And Miss Helen Keller, who, as all know, is both blind and deaf, having acquired the faculty of speech, although she has never hear<| any one speak, said of her visit to the Exposition that it was the most inspir ing period of her life. Said Dr. Fred erick J. V. Skiff: “Here the world Is shown in epjtome. The visitor from whatever realm here enters into his na tive land.” Apart from its costly and compre hensive displays, the great Exposition is an inspiration in Itself. In its archi tectural beauty the Panama-Pacific In " ternational Exposition surpasses any of its predecessors. J At night the great Tower of Jewels • stands out satin- white. sparkling with a thousand ' changing colors, as batteries of search lights play upon tliis pyramidal monu- ty-flve story city block. The coloring ; a group of cities with a population of of the Exposition, the decorative light-j almost 1,000,000 persons. Hotel rates ing at night, the sculpture and the j in San Francisco are no more than landscaping are all the work of fore-; they are in any other great city in the most men in their respective fields. At this writing the great Exposition is under full swing, Stod if you have not already made plans to see it oarl.v you should do so at once. Now is the time to visit the Exposition and the great Pacific coast region and, in so United States. As a help to visitors the Exposition maintains tin* Exposi tion Hotel Bureau, an official activity uhi-.li is conducted with the co-opera tion and assistance of a committee of roprcsentative^hotol men of Sail Fran cisco. Oakland and Berkeley. Tliis Hotel Bureau has no purpose oilier than doing, to take advantage of the oppor tunity to make the- most wonderful; to serve the p::h:ic. it is not a profit journey in the world in the most won-; making institution If you want full derful country on earth, the United j particulars as to ucrouiinodations mi litates Of America, under more favora- j dress the Official Exposition flotei Bu- ble Conditions of routing ahd travel than have ever prevailed before. The railroads are reducing rates from ev ery part of America, and the low round trip rates will enable the visitor to come by one route and return by an other. Thus you see the same parts of the country but once, and both your going and returning journeys are new and distinct travel trips. Hot weather is unknown in San Fran cisco. Although flowers bloom the rcau, Flanncn buiMing. .Market tnd Kearny street San Francisco !n writing, it would be web u, ^tate bow many there arc 1:1 your iiiriy uml how long you desire in s: There are aecommo : :n>i> r<u nil m the great city by the Em ' m i Gam. ami olio need • only gl.-iic e !h:-mr,:!i tbe classified columns of the 6 . 1 a IV.m papers to find how great N th,- v r m r v of tbe accommodation'! ofm .-ii u ,r ■ a ride through the rebuilt in -mil year round, if is as cool ih summer as j show hundreds and hundred- of Interior ofWlbperb Siamese Falace at thePafia- HIGHER THAN X, : it ' ma-P&cific International Exposition, 1 San Francisco ment^the loftiest structure at the Ex position and as taU hs tho average thir- f ..... Safeguards Visitors Against High Prices and Petty Extortion The Official Exposition Hotel Bureau will without charge give all information as to hotels, apartment houses and living charges. Secure accommodations in advance or provide them on arrival for par ties of any number at any price desired from $1 a day upward in good, modern hotels with every known convenience. The Exposition Hotel Bureau is an official activity of the Panama- Pacific International Exposition, but is conducted with the co-operation and assistance of a committee of representative hotel men of San Fran cisco, Oakland and Berkeley. The bureau can be of more direct assistance to you and others who intend visiting the Exposition if you will indicate: First.—Whether you desire hotel or apartment house accommodations. Second.—If hotel, whether European or American plan. Third.—When you will arrive. Fourth.—Probable length of stay. Fifth.—The number in your party. Sixth.—The maximum rate vou will in "Winter, tbe average temperature be ing about GO degrees. When you reach San Francisco you will, of course, wish to find accommodations without unnec essary.-delay, and, while you will find some accommodations necessarily much more expensive than others, you will be able to secure a room at a dollar a day and up. Indeed, one can find all sorts of rooms In the, great city of San Francisco, which in '(-reality is a much gr-eater Center than 'the census would indicate, since, with its neighboring cit ies around Sgn Francisco bay. It forms vi-J and apartment houses, all oustn- within the past eight years So do not fail to see the Expose i<>n early. The journey there is a jou n.-v through the most interesting co-i1-:,, in the world, and when you b m reached the Exposition you will i mi the whole world spread out befotv \ .u, The greatest geniuses of the age and the greatest nations of the world have contributed the earth’s supreme-: achievements, and a visit to the Exp . sition is not only an education, but an inspiration. WHEEL >ay. With this information the bureau will fund--’> t ’’o ber of hotels, rooming or apartment bon e- • and from this list you can make u better -e . Address the Official Exposition Hotel San Francisco, Cal. rimes of a num- niir requirements. ..can. Flannery Building, Toy]and Grown Up Wonderful Feature at tli Panama-Pacific International Exposition Marvelous Aeroscope at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Raises Amazed Visitors 2 6 4 Feet T HIS photograph shows the interior of the palace erected by the king of faraway Siam at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition In San Francisco. In this palace priceless Oriental treasures are shown. The palace is an exact duplicate of the palace in the Royal Gardens in Siam and was carved out of ebony, set up in Siam and then taken apart and brought to San Francisco in knocked down shape. i Famous Statehouse Reproduced at the Panama- Pacific International Exposition s CENES in famous Toyland concession on the Zone at the Panama-Pa cific International Exposition, San Francisco. In this great amusement device, which covers, fourteen acres, toys are reproduced upon a gigantic scale, the figures here shown being eighty feet in height. F T HIS photograph; shows the great Massachusetts building, Panama-Pa cific International Exposition,- San . Francisco. The building repro duces the famous statehouse in Boston. Thousands of visitors crowd to this structure so Intimately associated with the pearly history ot the United States. » OR the seeker of amusement there is opportunity a-plenty in the great mechanical aej^vement, the aeroscope, on the Zone, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco. The aeroscope is built on th® order of tt giant crane of a novel and intricate design, with a seating capacity of 100 and standing room for twenty more. The car is perfectly bal anced,* and perfect safety and a jariess ride of ten minutes are assured to pas sengers who enjoy this trip of 264 feet into the clouds. This is four feet higher than the Ferris wheel. Two motors control the ascent and descent in conjunction with the counterbalance of this huge car, and when it reaches itS- extreme height it begins to swing slowly around on the series of wheels at its bhse. giving the passenger a view of the surrounding country from every point.

f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN Grand Gorge ......Vol. 37. f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43Grand Gorge. Burr Spring of Hobart was a gue

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Page 1: f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN Grand Gorge ......Vol. 37. f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43Grand Gorge. Burr Spring of Hobart was a gue

Vol. 37.f!w ~ -

Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43

Grand Gorge.

B u rr S p r in g o f H o b a rt w as a g u e ­s t S u n d a y o f h is p a ren ts, M r. andM rs. W illa r d S p iin g .

M iss A g n e s S lo a n o f N e w Y ork is v is i t in g fr ie n d s in tow n .

M iss J o se p h in e D o la n of P la tt C ove is v is i t in g M iss S o p h ia W o o d .

M rs. R a y W eed o f P r a t ts v ille has been sp e n d in g a f e w d a y s a t H o w a id C o n ro w ’s.

M r. an d M rs. D . S . B o o th of R o x ­b u r y w ere g u e s ts o f f r ie n d s jn tow n T u e sd a y .

T helm as M oore w a s a S u n d a y v is ­itor a t S ta m fo rd .

M iss E m ily Spi in g is v is i t in g fr i­en d s in K in g sto n .

Mrs* A b ram L o n g and M rs. H a r­r i e t G r a y l o r d o f G i l b o a w e r e c a l l e r s

in tow n S a tu r d a y .A lfred M oore o f R o x b u r y w a s a

S u nd ay gu est a t W illiam O ak ley 's.M r . a n d M r s . G e o r g e P a t t e r s o n

are sp e n d in g th e w e e k w ith fr ie n d s in H u n ter .

M iss A lice S c u tt o f H o b a r t v i s i t ­ed a t M rs. L i l l ie O stro m ’s F r id a y a n d S a tu r d a y .

M r. an d M rs. H e n r y C lum and M r. and M rs. W a lla c e J a c k s o n of H a rp er sfie ld w ere g u e s ts S u n d a y at W a lte r D t x ’s.

Mr. and M rs. C h a rles T o m p k in s , M rs. 0 . A . M ayn ard , M rs. C. C h am - plin and M rs. W . H . D ra ffe 11 a t­te n d e d ch u rch a t H o b a r t S u n d a yevening.

M r. a n d M rs. E . M. C onrow v is i t ­ed fr ie n d s a t S o u th G ilb o a S u n d a y .

M rs. D e w it t C h ase an d so n s G eo­rge an d D e w it t jr ., are sp e n d in g th e w eek w ith h er p a r e n ts , M r. and M rs. G eorge P rop er.

M r. an d M rs. J o h n V rom an of S ta m fo r d w ere g u e s ts o f M r. and M rs. T . N . D ib b le S u n d a y .

H o w a r d P in d a r w a s in N e w Y ork th e p a st w eek .

J a m e s H en d e rso n a n d d a u g h ter , F r a n c e s , o f E a s t M ered ith w ere v is ­ito rs in tow n T u esd a y .

M iss I s a b e lle K e n d a ll 'of D u b lin ,Ir e la n d , is v is i t in g h er s is te r , M rs.D . P . D o y le .

L e o n a r d S lo a n o f N e w Y o r k , v s pan over Sunday guest afc W, "H. Draffen’s.

D a v id B o r s t o f S ta m fo rd is v i s i t ­in g fr ie n d s in tow n .

M rs. C ora M isn er is in S ta m fo rd c a r in g for M rs. J o h n V a n D y k e w h o h a s b een s ic k fo r so m e t im e .

M iss G la d y s D ix o n o f R o x b u r y is sp e n d in g so m e t im e w ith h er grand p a ren ts , M r. a n d M rs. J . M . C ronk .

M rs. E l i C h a m p lin o f S ta m fo rd w a s a g u e s t o f fr ie n d s in tow n th e p a s t w eek .

D r . and M rs. W . E . H e n d r y and M r. and M rs. J . G. P ierso n o f N e w Y ork c a lle d on Mr. a n a M rs. Ford B a r th o lo m e w M o n d a y .

M iss M cD e r m o tt o f K in g s to n is a g u e s t a t th e h om e of h er b r o th e r J o se p h M cD erm o tt.

M iss A n n a P o w e ll is sp e n d in g a fe w d a y s a t O n eo n ta .

M r. an d M rs. M erton M ayn ard , M rs. H e le n P o w e ll o f S ta m fo r d and K e n n e th M a ck ey o f N e w Y ork e a ll- ed ou fr ie n d s in tow n S a tu r d a y .

L u m a n S im o n so n an d M iss F lo r ­e n c e P in d a r v is ite d fr ie n d s in B o - .v ina F r id a y and S a tu r d a y .

O ver 210 t ic k e ts w ere so ld a t th e s ta t io n S a tu r d a y for th e S u n d a y s c h o o l e x c u r s io n .

B r e w ste r B . M ore, w h o h a s been sp e n d in g th e w in te r in N e w Y ork , re tu rn ed to h is h om e in th is p lace for th e su m m e r S a tu r d a y n ig h t.

E u g e n e M a ck ey an d J . C. Porn are in H u n te r th is w e e k d o in g m a ­son w o rk .

To S leep W ell in Summer.S lig h t in fla m m a tio n o f th e b ron ­

c h ia l tu b e s c a u se s a d is tr e s s in g co ­u gh a n d m a k e s s le e p im p o ss ib le . F o le y ’s H o n e y and T ar C om poun d s to p s th a t a n n o y in g t ic k lin g a n d re­l ie v e s th e r a c k in g , t ir in g c o u g h . G ood for a l l c o u g h s , c o ld s , croup a n d b r o n c h ia l a ffe c tio n s . L . A . W y c k o ff .

Dr. Stevensof W in d h a m w il l be a t G ilb o a on W e d n e s d a y , J u n e 16. to do a l l d en -

a lw o r k e x c e p t g o ld f illin g .

Dr. J. Manno f M id d le b u rg h w i l l be a t th e G il­b o a H o u se J u n e 28, 29, 30, J u ly a n d 2, M sn d ay , T u e s d a y , W e d n e s ­d a y , T h u r sd a a y an d F r id a y , p re pared to do all branches of dentalw ork . M ake y o u r a p p o in tm e n ts e a r ly .

F O R S A L E —S e c o n d h a n d b ic y c le h a s tw o n ew tire s . In q u ir e a t th( M on itor office.

F O R S A L E —H ig h g ra d e 2-y e a r o ld .J ersey bu ll. G eorge R ic k a r d , G ilb o a , N . Y ., R . D . N o . 2.

MILLIONS T TO THE GREAT PANAMAPACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION

Now Is the Time to Visit America’s Huge Panama Canal Celebration at San Francisco; Be There When the LibertyBell Arrives, July 16th; Marvelous Exhibits From All Corners of the Globe on Display.

MINIATURE BATTLESHIP BLOWN UP AND MINE EXPLOSIONINTERESTING FEATURES IN TWO EXHIBITION PALACESJ*

Amazing Voice Amplifier and Other W onders of the World’s Progress a t the Great Panam a-Pacific Canal Celebra­tion—This Year the Year of All Years to Take Marvel Journey to the Pacific Coast.

ALL AMERICA ON EXHIBITION THIS YEAR: RAILROADS GRANTLOW ROUND TRIP RATES TO SE E UNIVERSE’S MARVELS

Privilege* of Routing Never Before Offered—Hotel Rates Average Less Than Those of“Other G reat Cities and 125,-000 Room* Available In Hotels and A partm ent Houses In San Francisco.

FIROM every part of the world visitors are thronging to the great Exposition at San Fran- cisco. The Exposition there is

the m ost comprehensive and interest­ing of all universal expositions, and it will probably be the last to be hekl within the present generation. Now is the tim e to see it.

The Panam a-Pacific International E x­position, which opened on Feb. 20 last, has charmed the m illions who have al­ready beheld the magic city by the Goldten Gate.

The m arvels of the universe are dis­played in the vast exhibit palaces, a f­fording the m ost comprehensive sum­mary of the world’s progress ever dis­closed. Many of the exhibits are as revolutionary in their character and mean as much to future generations as did the locomotive or telegraphwhen It was first introduced. TheAudion amplifier, for example, makes It possible for a man in New York city to deliver an address through the tele­phone to a large audience in San Fran-

pers. This performance begins in the Palace of Liberal 'Arts each day at 3 o’clock.

The* amazing voice amplifier is butone of many revolutionary scientific advances demonstrated at the Exposi­tion. The invention has made possible the transcontinental telephone, and the principle wlii< h is applied has not been developed, to its fullest extent. It is said that with the probable develop­ment o f the long distance w ireless tele­phone this new invention will make It possible to project the human voice halfw ay around the globe without the use of a telephone wire. Contrast the

able to see Mme. Montessori, the cele­brated Italian teacher, instructing classes o f children. A great purpose of the Exposition is to show not onlyresults and finished products, but the methods, processes and principles bywhich results are achieved. In the ex ­hibit palaces and sta te buildings mo­tion pictures are flreely employed with this object in view . There are forty- three free cinematograph show s upon the Exposition, grounds, ’ and, by the way, there is no charge to enter the exhibit palaces. Once you have enter­ed the Exposition grounds all the dis­plays o f the states and nations are

T

neer required months to cross the plains, with that of today, when the orator in New York may address his audience in San Francisco.

And there are many other develop­ments as wonderful and as revolution­ary, all revealing the trend of the world's progress in the arts, sciences and industries. If you are interested in mining, for example, beneath the

cisco, 3,000 miles away. Through th e ; floor of the vr^t Palace o f Mines youmay find a m b* in operation, w ith itsuse of heat w aves the intensity of the

voice vibrations is increased to such an extent that, although the orator may deliver his address in a low voice into the telephone in New York, Id San Francisco it is possible to increase the sound in volume sufficient to fill a large hall. On the other hand, the New York speaker’s address may be distributed through telephonic receiving disks at­tached to each chair in the ball in San Francisco. In one of the exhibit pal­aces visitors may, w ithout charge, hear a man In N ew York read from theheadlines o f the N ew York n ew sp a-' their^studles. and perhaps you may be

era sixty-five years ago, when the pio- spread before you. In the great Aus­tralian Pavilion and in the Palace of M anufactures gem cutters are to be seen at work, w hile exhibitions of a model postoffice in jtull operation, of a m odel laundry, o f a paint m anufactur­ing machine, of a broom m anufactoryin operation, o f an automobile manu­factory, w ith an al& ost endles§ succes­sion of other operating m achines, illus­trate the advance in industrial proc­esses. Man is becom ing more and more a m aster o f the machine, with the electrical current-as the interm edi­ary to lighten the. burden of personal supervision.

I f you are interested in w bat the for­eign nations have accomplished you have only to v is it the m arvelous dis­p lays o f the European countries or of those o f the Orient or South America. Canada or Australia. Am ong the French displays you jnay, i f you wish, behold priceless ’Worts o f art never be­fore exhibited in- Am erica and which at the Exposition’ fittd sanctuary from the ravages o f

stopes and tunnels and shafts and com­pressed' air drills. W ait a moment and you may w itness an explosion In the ‘mine. A gong rings; an ambulance dashes w ith a corps of rescuers pro­v ided w ith respiratory apparatus, and effects a rescue.

In the Palace of Machinery you m ay see a miniature battleship blown up by a miniature mine patterned after one of the latest types of the submarine mine. In the Palace of Education you will see classes of students engaged In

H E R E is som ething helpful and inspiring for every one at theExposition. Said Vice Presi­dent M arshall recently: “W ho­

ever can, even a t a sacrifice of som e­thing w hich for the m om ent appears necessary, should come to see a real work o f art never equaled, even by a mirage. I f there be any one in Amer­ica with a thirst for knowledge and for beauty and a longing for a liberal edu­cation,. such a one Can obtain it here.

“This is the university of the world: It has a chair fully endowed to m eet the w ants and needs o f each. The eye, the ear, the mind, the heart, the soul, each may have its horizon here enlarg­ed. I came to bear a m essage. I re­main to become a student. I leave the feet of this Gamaliel of all expositions with regret.” And M iss H elen Keller, who, as all know, is both blind and deaf, having acquired the faculty of speech, although she has never hear<| any one speak, said of her v isit to the Exposition that it w as the m ost inspir­ing period of her life. Said Dr. Fred­erick J. V. Skiff: “H ere the world Is shown in epjtome. The visitor from whatever realm here enters into his na­tive land.”

Apart from its costly and compre­hensive displays, the great Exposition is an inspiration in Itself. In its archi­tectural beauty the Panam a-Pacific In

" ternational Exposition surpasses any of its predecessors. J At night the great Tower of Jew els • stands out satin- white. sparkling with a thousand

' changing colors, as batteries of search­lights play upon tliis pyramidal monu-

ty-flve story city block. The coloring ; a group of cities with a population of of the Exposition, the decorative l i g h t - j almost 1 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 persons. Hotel ratesing at night, the s c u l p t u r e a n d t h e j in S a n F r a n c i s c o a r e n o m o r e t h a nlandscaping are all the work of fore-; they are in any other great city in them ost men in their respective fields.

At this writing the great Exposition is under full swing, Stod if you have not already made plans to see it oarl.v you should do so a t once. Now is the tim e to v isit the Exposition and the great Pacific coast region and, in so

U n i t e d S t a t e s . A s a h e l p to v i s i t o r s t h e E x p o s i t i o n m a i n t a i n s tin* E x p o s i ­t i o n H o t e l B u r e a u , a n o f f ic ia l a c t i v i t y u h i - . l i is c o n d u c t e d w i t h t h e c o - o p e r a ­t i o n a n d a s s i s t a n c e o f a c o m m i t t e e o f r o p r c s e n t a t i v e ^ h o t o l m e n o f S a i l F r a n ­c i s c o . O a k l a n d a n d B e r k e l e y . T l i i s H o t e l B u r e a u h a s n o p u r p o s e o i l i e r t h a ndoing, to take advantage of the oppor

tunity to make the- most wonderful; to serve the p::h:ic. it is not a profit journey in the world in the most w on -; m a k i n g i n s t i t u t i o n I f y o u want f u l l derful country on earth, the United j p a r t i c u l a r s a s to u c r o u i i n o d a t i o n s mi­

lita te s Of America, under more favora- j d r e s s t h e O f f i c ia l E x p o s i t i o n f l o t e i B u- ble Conditions o f routing ahd travel than have ever prevailed before. The railroads are reducing rates from ev­ery part of America, and the low round trip rates will enable the visitor to come by one route and return by another. Thus you see the same parts ofthe country but once, and both your going and returning journeys are new and distinct travel trips.

Hot w eather is unknown in San Fran­cisco. Although flowers bloom the

r c a u , F l a n n c n b u i M i n g . .M a r k e t t n d Kearny street San F r a n c i s c o !n w r i t i n g , i t w o u l d b e w e b u , ^ t a t e b o w m a n y t h e r e a r c 1 : 1 y o u r i i i r i y u m l h o w l o n g y o u d e s i r e in s:

T h e r e a r e a e c o m m o : :n>i> r<u nil mthe great city by the Em ' mi Gam. amio l io n e e d • o n l y gl.-iic e !h:-mr,:!i t b e c l a s s i f i e d c o l u m n s o f t h e 6 .1 a IV .m papers to f i n d h o w g r e a t N th,- vrm rv o f t b e a c c o m m o d a t i o n ' ! o f m .-ii u , r ■ a ride through the r e b u i l t in -mil

year round, i f i s a s cool ih s u m m e r a s j s h o w h u n d r e d s a n d h u n d r e d - of

Interior ofWlbperb Siamese Falace at thePafia- HIGHER THANX, : ■ i t '

m a -P & c if ic In te rn a t io n a l E x p o s it io n , —1 S a n F ra n c is c o

m ent^the loftiest structure at the E x­position and as taU hs tho average thir-

f.....

Sa fe gu a rd s V i s i t o r s A g a in s t H ig h P r ic e s and P e t t y E x t o r t io n

T h e O f f i c i a l E x p o s i t i o n H o t e l B u r e a u w i l l w i t h o u t c h a r g egive all inform ation as to hotels, apartm ent houses and living charges. Secure accomm odations in advance or provide them on arrival for par­ties o f any number at any price desired from $1 a day upward in good, modern hotels w ith every known convenience.

The Exposition Hotel Bureau is an official activ ity of the Panama- Pacific International Exposition, but is conducted with the co-operation and assistance of a com m ittee of representative hotel men of San Fran­cisco, Oakland and Berkeley.

The bureau can be of more direct assistance to you and others whointend visiting t h e E x p o s i t i o n if y o u w i l l i n d i c a t e :

First.—W hether you desire hotel or apartment house accommodations. Second.—If hotel, whether European or American plan.Third.—W hen you will arrive.Fourth.—Probable length of stay.F ifth .—The number in your party.Sixth.—The m axim um rate vou w il l

in "Winter, tbe average temperature be ing about GO degrees. When you reach San Francisco you will, of course, wish to find accommodations without unnec­essary.-delay, and, while you will find some accommodations necessarily much more expensive than others, you will be able to secure a room at a dollar a day and up. Indeed, one can find all sorts of rooms In the, great city of San Francisco, which in '(-reality is a much gr-eater Center than 'the census would indicate, since, w ith its neighboring cit­ies around Sgn Francisco bay. It form s

vi-J

and apartment houses, all oustn- within the past eight years

So do not fail to see the Expose i<>n early. The journey there is a jou n.-v through the most interesting co-i1-:,, in the world, and when you b m • reached the Exposition you will i mi the whole world spread out befotv \ .u, The greatest geniuses of the age and the greatest nations o f the world have contributed the earth’s supreme-: achievem ents, and a v isit to the Exp . sition is not only an education, but aninspiration.

W HEEL

>ay.With th is inform ation the b u r e a u w i l l f u n d - - ’> t ’’o

ber o f hotels, rooming or apartment b o n e - • and from this list you can make u b e t t e r - e .

Address the Official Exposition H o t e l San Francisco, Cal.

rimes o f a num- niir requirements.

..can. Flannery Building,

T o y ]a n d G ro w n U p W o n d e rfu l F e a tu re at tli P a n a m a -P a c if ic In te rn a t io n a l E x p o s it io n

M a r v e lo u s A e ro sc o p e at th e P a n a m a -P a c if ic

In te rn a t io n a l E x p o s it io n , S a n F ra n c isc o ,

R a ise s A m a ze d V i s i t o r s 2 6 4 F e e t

T H IS photograph show s the interior of the palace erected by the king of faraw ay Siam at the Panam a-Pacific International Exposition In San Francisco. In th is palace priceless Oriental treasures are shown. The palace is an exact duplicate o f the palace in the Royal Gardens in

Siam and w as carved out o f ebony, set up in Siam and then taken apart and brought to San Francisco in knocked down shape.

i

F a m o u s S ta te h o u se R e p ro d u c e d at th e P a n a m a - P a c if ic In te rn a t io n a l E x p o s it io n

s CENES in fam ous Toyland concession on the Zone a t the Panam a-Pa­cific International Exposition, San Francisco. In th is great am usem ent device, which covers, fourteen acres, toys are reproduced upon a gigantic scale, the figures here shown being eighty feet in height.

F

T H IS photograph; show s the great M assachusetts building, Panam a-Pa­cific International Exposition,- San . Francisco. T he building repro­duces the fam ous statehouse in Boston. Thousands o f visitors crowd to th is structure so Intim ately associated w ith th e pearly history ot

the U nited States. »

OR the seeker o f am usem ent there is opportunity a-plenty in the great m echanical aej^ vem en t, the aeroscope, on the Zone, Panam a-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco. The aeroscope is built on th® order of tt giant crane of a novel and intricate design, w ith a seating

capacity o f 100 and standing room for tw enty more. T he car is perfectly bal­anced,* and perfect sa fety and a jariess ride o f ten m inutes are assured to pas­sengers who enjoy this trip o f 264 feet into the clouds. This is four fe e t higher than the Ferris wheel. T w o motors control th e ascent and descent in conjunction with the counterbalance o f th is huge car, and w hen i t reaches itS- extrem e height it begins to sw ing slow ly around on the series o f w heels a t its bhse. g iving the passenger a view of the surrounding country from every point.

Page 2: f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN Grand Gorge ......Vol. 37. f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43Grand Gorge. Burr Spring of Hobart was a gue

RHUBARB AT ITS BESTi-RECIPES TH A T HAVE BEEN TRIED

AND FOUND WORTHY.

P lan t J u s t Now Is a t Its Best andShould Have a Place on Every

Table— Dumplings T hat Ap­peal to the Children.

Rhubarb is at its best just now, as well- as cheap, so it is a good tim e to serve i t often a t the table. But in or­der to have i t appreciated it should be prepared in a variety of ways.

Very delicious preserves can be m ade w ith rhubarb either alone or combined w ith another fruit.

Rhubarb and Fig Jam . — To five pounds o f rhubarb cut short lengths allow one pound of cooking figs, the grated rind and juice of one lemon, and four pounds of sugar. This should stand over night, and in the njorningbe cooked very slow ly for ah bour. Then put into g lasses and seal.

Rhubarb Jam .—To each pound of rhubarb allow one pound of sugar andone lemon. Peel the yellow rind thinand slice the pulp. Put away over

.night with the cut rhubarb as before 'described, and boil for three-quarters of an hour slow ly. Pour into jars and seal.

Rhubarb and Orange Jam .—Putthree pounds of oranges into a pre­serving kettle w ith plenty of cold wa­ter and sim m er for three hours. Drain and cut up the oranges, rejecting the seeds. Put six pounds of granulated sugar into the kettle with just a little water and stir frequently until it boils. Then put in the oranges with , three pounds of rhubarb cut into short lengths. Stir again until the mixture boils and then let the whole sim m er for another tw enty m inutes. ,

Rhubarb Dumplings.— Children ? will enjoy th ese for lunch or supper, even though they do not like rhubarb. The rhubarb is stew ed in half its w eight of sugar and a little water. W hile it is

j cooking mix a biscuit batter, using a . pint of flour, one-half teaspoonful 'salt, two teaspoonfuls of m aking pow- ;der and a cupful of milk. Drop th is in the rhubarb by spoonfuls and cook for 'from eight to ten m inutes. A pinch of .ground ginger or a few raisins can be added if the flavor is liked.

Rhubarb Jelly.—This m akes a nice Sunday dessert, because it can be pre­pared the day before. Soak one-half box of gelatin in half a cupful of cold w ater for an hour. Cook tw o pounds of rhubarb in a very little w ater and when reduced to a pulp sw eeten to taste. Set aside and cook one cupful of sugar w ith one of w ater for tw enty m inutes. Stir th e soaked gelatin into the boiling sirup and stir until dis­solved. R em ove from the fire, add the rhubarb and se t away in a mold to cool.

Rhubarb sponge is m ade as for jelly, but w hen i t begins to th icken th e beat­en w h ites o f th ree e g g s are whipped in until th e je lly is quite stiff. Serve with whipped cream or a th in custard m ade from th e yolks o f th e eggs.

Rhubarb Compote.—A com pote is very little m ore trouble than stew ing, but Infinitely m ore attractive w hen served. Boil one cupful o f sugar w ith a wine- glassfu l -of w ater for five m inutes. Then drop in short lengths o f rhubarb, a few at a tim e, so they retain their shape. Take them out w ith a skim m er as they becom e tender and lay in a dish. Pour the sirup over and serve w hen cold.

M E A N S O F W A S H IN G T H E E Y EW inking Is a Process Which Dame

N ature H as Instituted for O ptic 's Preservation.

W ashing Shawls.T o w ash knitted or crocheted shawls,

fold them as flat as possib le and lay carefully in a pillow case, run through/ at intervals w ith hasting thread to keep flat. Then they should be han­dled like other flannel or woolen goods, says the Dallas N ew s. If washed separately, observe the usual precautions for w oolen goods, gently squeezing through th e hands and keep­ing th e suds and rinsing w ater of the sam e lukewarm tem perature. Take out of pillow case, but Mo not hang knitted goods up to dry. Put in the oven on a big platter, shaking and turning occasionally, or lay on a clean cloth in the sunshine.

Drop G ingerbread.B eat to a cream one-half cupful of

brown sugar and one-half cupful of butter or lard that has been softened. Add two w ell beaten eggs, one cupful of m olasses, two teaspoonfuls o f cinna­mon, a tahlespoonful of ginger, half a cupful of sour m ilk w ith a teaspoon­ful of soda beaten in, and, lastly , three cupfuls o f flour. Cover the bot­tom of a dripping pan w ith buttered paper, drop the dough on in spoonfuls, giving the cakes am ple room to r ise and bake a rich brown in a m oderate oven.

To Clean a Copper K ettle.To bring a copper kettle back to

its first brightness, wash w ith soap and water, then m ake a paste of a knife powder and paraffin and scour well. Two or three cleanings may be necessary to bring it back to its orig­inal brilliance.

Chateaubriand Steak.W ipe a nice tejiderloin steak with a

damp cloth, put on a buttered broiler and broil over a fire until done, but not dried. Transfer to a hot platter, butter thickly and cover w ith broiled mushrooms, laid close together.

B utter Gravy.One tablespoonful of butter, one

heaping tahlespoonful of flour, shake or two of pepper, little salt. W ork but­ter into flour and gradually stir in hotwater until m ixture is correct thick­ness.

M ontreal’s Dig Flour Mill.y.ontrecl has the largest flour mill

in the British empire; it turns cut 5,000 barrels a day.

. W orth W hile Quotation.“Love is the best thing in the world

and the thing that lives the longest.” —H enry Van Dyke.

T he unconscious act of w inking bears a quite im portant relation to the w elfare of the eye. T his being the m ost delicate and sen sitive organ of the body exposed to the air, it is in constant need of the protection given by the eyelids, which not only c lose quickly at the approach o f danger, but are employed in w ashing the surface of the eye. M oistening is required to offset the drying effect of the air, and cleaning to prevent the injurious ef­fect of dirt.

Every tim e you wink, the eye is washed. Inside the eye is the little tear gland, which, as its nam e im­plies, is busy storing up1 the supply of tears. This gland keeps the inside of the lid m oist, and you wink autom at­ically w henever the surface of the eye becom es dry or a particle of dust or anything e lse strikes it. This work is done as often as necessary, and to realize how often it is necessary try how long you can keep your eyeso p e n w i t h o u t w i n k i n g .

New Discoveries in Pompeii.M ost interesting ruins of Pom peii

have been unearthed during the exca­vations which are being carried out by the Italian governm ent. A m ag­nificent hom e has been discovered, and all the frescoes and vaulting are in a perfect state. • A staircase w as found intact leading from the lower to the upper floor of the house. The surroundings of the house have also been explored, and several sm aller houses have been brought to light finely adorned w ith pictures of ex­quisite coloring. A few of th e houses have m osaic floors w ith pictures of scenes taken chiefly from th e Trojan war. In addition to these , the bodies of several persons who m ust have been surprised in their houses by the disaster which destroyed the city have been found, and in several ca ses their garm ents are in a very good sta te of preservation.

A ncient C arriers of Messages.It was the custom of the couriers

of the middle ages to carry silver beads in their m ouths to lessen thirst. In certain districts of India which are not traversed by railw ays th e ancient couriers still survive and carry m ails from village to village. In the jungle districts they carry bells about their necks to frighten away tigers. The Am erican Indians had their sw ift run­ners, who carried m essages in tim es of war betw een allied tribes or from the warriors in hostile territory to thigir native v illages, and: extraordi­nary ta les are told o f their sw iftness and endurance.

The running m essenger in Europe w as succeeded by the m ounted m es­senger, and as civ ilization progressed system s of couriers w ere established, w hich slow ly evolved into th e mod­ern system of posts.

O rnaments N ecessary.T he sm all furnishings of a room are

the things that realiy furnish it. The w all covering may be in the m ost ap­proved of neutral tones, the floors m ay be fau ltlessly finished, the rugs m ay be. exquisite and in im peccable ta ste and the furniture may be tbe product o f careful workm anship and careful choosing. E ven the pictures on the wall and the ligh ts may be fau ltless and yet the room in ques­tion w ill lack a certain air o f com ­pleteness unless a few objects, vague­ly term ed “ornam ents,” be included in its furnishings.

W hat It Cost Him.“My darling,” sh e murmured, “you

w ere so grand, so noble, w hen you proposed to m e that day in the taxi! Shall I ever forget how touchingly you spoke of your future, of the sacrifices you would make for m e? It m ust have cost you som ething to speak those words.” “It did, M abel,” replied the young man, a shadow creeping over his face. “It cost m e about two w eeks’ salary for the hire of that taxi.”

Got Name From French Town.Tbe bayonet derived its nam e from

the town of Bayonne, in Prance, whereit is said to have been invented, in1650. Som e authorities claim that the weapon is sim ply the M alay kris in­troduced by Dutch sold iers from the E ast Indies, though m anufactured at Bayonne. The Malay weapon consist­ed m erely of a native dagger thrust into th e mufczle o f a m usket.

Correcting Childish Defect.M ost children at som e tim e or oth­

er w ill contort their faces or cross their eyes. If th is habit is allowed, frow ns becom e perm anent and eyes glide. It is a good thing to le t a child se e h im self w hen pulling h is face he w ill not be proud of b is looks. It is a good plan to appeal to a child’s pride, as proper pride is an excellent, quality.

One Thing He W as Sure Of.“As a m atter o f fact,” said the law­

yer for the defendant, trying to be sarcastic, “you w ere scared half to death, and don’t know w hether it was a motor-car or som ething resem bling a motor-car that h it you.” “It re­sem bled one all right,” the plaintiff made answer. “I w as forcibly struck by the resem blance.”

A rgum ent of th e Brute.N ot long ago a gentlem an w as in­

veigh ing against the fair sex as th e authors of nearly all th e m ischief in the world. H e could not understand, he said, the purpose of wom an’s cre­ation, unless intended as a torm ent to mankind. A lady present good-hu- m oredly attem pted a justification of her sex, and trium phantly demanded how it was, if woman was really so heartless, that sh e is alw ays to be found w atching at the sick man’s bed­side.

“Madam,” replied the m ale dispu­tant, “your remark is a confirmation of m y argum ent She is there for th e pleasure of seeing man suffer.”

The Men Who Get Credit.In the w ritings of Leonardo da Vinci

one w ill find suggestions qf m any mod­ern inventions, including the flying m achine, the subm arine boat, and oth­er devices. Hero of Alexandria actu­a lly built a steam engine, and yet the first idea did not originate w ith him. S cien tists and writers on scientific subjects m ake it a rule to g ive credit to the man who first patents an idea or who first publishes a discovery in som e journal.

Celtic S train Somewhere.Sm alt Jem im a (colored), her pudgy

cheeks puffed out, lips pursed, and her dim inutive outstanding braids bobbing excited ly as she addresses cork of m ucilage bottle, w ith which she is struggling: "Well, Ah’s gwinq git you out if Ah has to push you in !”—W om an’s Hom e Companion.

H orseshoes as B r in g e rs r f Luck.Sailors cherish horseshoes a s luck-

bringers, and before th e days o f dread-/ naughts it w as Jack ’s practice to nail a horseshoe upside down bn th# m ast of h is ship. N elson nailed a horse­shoe w ith th e points upwards on the m ast of the V ictory before h e took the ship into action a t Trafalgar.

Daily ThoughtI seek no thorns, and I catch the

small joys. If the door is low I stoop down. If I can' rem ove the stone out of m y w ay I do so. If It be too heavy, { go around it. And thus every day I find/som ething which gladdens me.— Goethe,

A dvantage in Being Poor.The poor are often overworked; but

they suffer less than m any am ong the rich, who have no work to do, no in­teresting object to fill up life,, to sat­isfy the infinite cravings of m an for action.—W illiam >EUery Channing.

“California Diamonds."“California' diam onds” are made

from crysta ls o f quartz, the m ost abundant of all m inerals. Som etim es they are cu t and sold as “w hite to­paz,” but m ore often a s California diamonds.

D r . A . M a r k sT h e E m in e n t E y e s ig h t

S p e c ia l i s t , w i l l b e a t t h e

GILBOAHOUSE

G ilb o a , N . Y , , fo r o n e

w e e k , b e g in n in g S a t u r ­

day, J u n e 1 2 , 1 9 1 5 .

Home and Vicinity

D r. M arks is not a s tr a n g e r in th is v ic in ity . H e h a s h u n d r ed s o f p a ­

t ie n ts w h o h a v e b een b en e fite d an d cu red b y h is m e th o d o f tr e a t in g th e

e y e . T h e D o c to r w il l h a v e a l l o f h is up to d a te e le c tr ic a l in s tu m e n ts

a n d s c ie n t if ic a p p a ra tu s w ith h im th e sa m e th a t is u se d by th e fo re m o st

o c u lis t s o f th e c o u n tr y in e x a m in in g th e e y e . A ll p e rso n s w h o h a v e a n yLe y e tro u b le or are su ffe r in g from h e a d a c h e s , can g e t r e lie f b y c a ll in g on

D r. M ark s w h ile h e r e . C o n su lta tio n free .

B u tter in e , 22 cen ts per pound, a tA . H a g a d o r n ’s.

D r. M ark s h a s a lu l l l in e o f up to d a te e y e g la s s m o u n tin g s and a l l th e m od ern le n se s . S e e h im a t th e G il- boa H o u s e th e w e e k o f J u n e 12.

T h e U ls te r arid D e la w a r e ra ilroad w ill run sp e c ia l e x c u r s io u tr a in s to K in g s to n on T h u r sd a y , J u n e 17. T h e tra in w ill le a v e G ran d G orge a t 7:09 o ’c lo c k a. in , an d th e fa r e for th e rou n d tr ip is $1.50.

J o h n C onro, th e a g ed b ro th er o f M rs. M iran d a B lu m b erg , w h o h a s b een p oorly for a lo n g t im e , d ied a t th e h o m e o f M r. an d M rs. A lv in B lu m b e r g la s t F r id a y . T h e fu n e r a l w a s h e ld from th e h o u se M o n d a y an„d b u r ia l w a s m a d e a t G rand G’orge .

M iss E r n e s t in e B i l l in g s , w h o w a soperated upon at her home la s t W e d ­n e s d a y e v e n in g fo r a p p e n d ic it is , is im p io v in g n ic e ly an d e v e r y th in g isin her favor f. r n- <-dy m 1 com­

p le te r e co v e r y . Her m a n y fr ie n d s w il l be d e lig h te d to h e a r th is .

M essrs. J . E . S cu d d er , G u y B a r ­rett, C h a rle s , C rosb y , E a r l S lo v e r ,’ H o w a r d M aj es a n d H a rr y F r a n c e o f F le isc lim u n u s , w h o w ere on th e ir w a y to L a k e G eorge for a w e e k ’s outiD g, w ere d e ta in e d for a s h o i t t im e in th is v i l la g e S u n d a y b y som e l i t t le th in g g o in g w ron g w ith th e ir a u to m o b ile h u t th e d iff ic u lty w as soon a d ju s te d a t th e G ilb oa g a ra g e .

T h e su b je c ts fo r th e R e g e n ts e x ­a m in a tio n s w h ic h are to be h e ld in th e sc h o o l h o u se n e x tM o n d a y , T u e s ­d a y and W e d n e s d a y are as fo llo w s: M on d ay foren oon , g e o g r a p h y ; a fte r ­noon , sp e ll in g ; T u e sd a y foren oon , a r ith m e tic ; a fte r n o o n , E l . E n g lis h : W e d n e s d a y a ftern o o n , E l. U . S. h is to r y w ith c iv ic s .

P a u l S tr y k e r w a s ra ised to th e su b lim e d eg ree o f M a ster M ason a t th e r e g u la r c o m m u n ic a tio n o f G il­boa L o d g e on S a tu r d a y n ig h t . A f t ­er w o r k in g th e d eg ree a b a n q u et w as h e ld a t th e G ilb o a H o u se . S e v ­era l m em b ers from th e J e fferso n an d P r a ttsv ille L o d g es w ere p res­en t.

S h e r iff B o y n to n h a s a p p o in ted G eorge M a ttic e o f th is v i l la g e d ep ­u ty sh e r if f for th is en d o f th e c o u n ­ty . T h is v illa g e w a s w ith o u t an o f­ficer , n o t ev en a c o n sta b le , and i t c e r ta in ly n eed ed su ch an officer. M r. B o y n to n m a d e a good c h o ice au d M r. M a ttice w il l d isc h a r g e th e d u tie s o f h is office in a m a n n e r th a t w ill b e s a t is fa c to r y to a ll.

T h e p ro m ise o f sh o w e r s w h ic h h a s b een m a d e b y th e w e a th e r b u reau fo r s e v e r a l d a y s do n o t m ateria lized•A ff,« g a r ito t li .'m e a d o w s £ n d p a s tu r e s are b e g in ­n in g to f e e l th e e ffe c ts , th o u g h th e re is s t i l l w a ter” e n o u g h tor u su a l pur-i p o ses in sp r in g s an d s tr e a m s. M ay an d th e e a r ly d a y s o f J u n e h a v e b een a s e a so n o f u n u su a l co ld an d d ry n e ss .

L e ia n d L e w is w a s on e o f th e m a ­n y w h o w e n t from th is p la c e S a t ­u r d a y on th e e x c u r s io n to K in g s ­ton . On h is a r r iv a l a t th e G ran d G orge s ta t io n in th e e v e n in g h e , w ith o th e r s , took th e a u to b u s from th e d e p o t to th e v i l la g e w h er e h e h ad a h orse in w a it in g . A s he a lig h te d from th e car , a fte r p a y in g th e d r iv er , h e s ta r te d to c r o ss th e s tr e e t to g e t h is h o rse , b u t before h e r e a ch ed th e o th e r s id e h e w a s s tr u c k by an a p p r o a c h in g a u to m o b ile th a t w as b e in g d r iv en b y a m a n in G ran d G orge v i l la g e . W h e n t h e ca r h it M r. L e w is h e w a s k n o c k e d b a c k ­w a r d s b u t in fa l l in g h ad th e p r e s ­e n c e o f m in d to c a tc h h o ld o f th e n u m b er p la te to w h ic h h e c lu n g a n d p r e v e n te d h im from g o in g w h o lly u n d er th e car. H e w a s d ra g g ed se v e r a l f e e t in th is w a y b e fo re th e car c o u ld be s to p p e d and, su s ta in e d a c u t o v e r o n e e y e , s e v e r a l b r u ise s a b o u t th e 'b o d y a n d a bad sh o c k to h is n e r v o u s s y s te m . A f te r r e c o v ­e r in g fro m th e sh o c k h e d ro v e to D r. B i l l in g s ’ o ffice in t h is v i l la g e w h er e h is in ju r ie s w ere trea ted -a n d th e n d ro v e to h is h o m e w h ic h is so m e d is ta n c e fro m to w n . I t w a s a n a r r o w e sca p e fro m d e a th w h ic h w a s o n ly avterted b y h is p r e se n c e o f m in d .

A trou p -o f m o tio n p ic tu r e a c to r s from th e F o x F ilm c o m p a n y o f N e w Y o r k w a s in th is v i l la g e S a tu r d a y g e t t in g a m in in g sc e n e fro m th e s to r y o f “ L a d y A u d r e y ’s S e c r e t ,” a n o v e l o y M . E . B r a n d o n , t h a t is n o w b e in g s e t to m o v in g p ic tu r e s . T h e s c e n e s ta r te d in b y th e r u g g ed s te e p c lif f b y th e c r e a m e r y w h e r e , a fte r c o n s id e r a b le d ig g in g a n d m a ­n y d isc o u r a g e m e n ts , a m a m m o th n u g g e t w a s u n e a r th e d . F r o m h e r e th e s c e n e . w a s tra n sfe r re d to th e M a n o r k ill F a l ls w h e r e th e d ir t wias p a n n ed a n d th e su p p o se d g o ld se p ­a ra ted fro m th e g r a v e l. A fte r m a k ­in g h is g r e a t s tr ik e , a s th e p la y g o e s , th e m in e r w a s so o v e r co m e w ith jo y th a t h e fa in te d a n d f e l l h e a d lo n g in to th e s tr e a m w h e r e h e la id fo r s e v e r a l m in u te s . I t w a s v e r y in to renting to w a tc h th e m a n d th e v i la g efis ,tu rn ed o u t e n m a s s e to se e h o w m o tio n p ic tu r e s w e r e m a d e . T h e c o m p a q y w a s m ore th a n p le a s ­ed w ith th e v a r ie d sc e n e r y ou r to w n h a s lo r th is 'w o r k a n d to ld se v e r a l t h a t G ilboiL w o u ld b e c o m e fa m o u s for m a k in g r n o v in g p ic tu r e s .

C h ild ren CryFOR FLETCHER'S

C A

H e a d a c h e s are o ften ca u se d b y ey e stra in . A ll w h o are su bject toh e a d a c h e c a n g e t r e lie f . C a ll on D r. M a rk s a t th e G ilb o a H o u se .

B u y y o u r s o ft d r in k s , c ig a r s , p e a ­n u ts , b a n a n a s , o ra n g es an d le m o n s a t O ’B r ie n ’s 5 a n d 10 c e n t s to re .

M iss M ae C ro sw ell c lo se d a v e r y s u c c e s s fu l a n d s a t is fa c to r y n in e m o n th s term o f s c h o o l in th is v i l l ­a g e T u e sd a y . I n th e a fte r n o o n sh e g a v e h e r p u p ils an a u to m o b ile r id e to P r a t ts v i lle a f te r w h ic h sh e tr e a t­ed th e m to ic e c r ea m a t S ie b e l ’s p a r ­lors . T h e sc h o la r s e n jo y e d th e tr e a t im m e n s e ly .

H ir a m V a n S te e n b u r g a n d son , W a r d , o f W e s t H u r le y , a c c o m p a n ­ied b y M r. H o y t an d M r. A v e r y , m o to red to W e s t C o n e sv ille , S u n ­d a y , an d to o k d in n e r w ith th e ir c o u s in s , M r. an d M rs. H a r r y D . S tr y k e r .

M rs. F r a n k P e e ts o f A lb a n y is a g u e s t fo r a fe w w e e k s o f h er s is te r ,Mrs. Page Croswell. '

F e r r is S w a rto u t, M rs. G riffin C aseand Mr. and M rs. V ernon W b itfordo f W e s te ilo w e r e g u e s ts ovei) th e w eek en d of M r. and M rs. J i M. C ase.

J . C. M attice is sp en d in g a fe w d a y s a t D a v e n p o r t w ith h is s is te r , M rs. T yler.

L um an H ild re th is sp en d in g th e w eek in N e w Y o rk . H e h a s g o n e t o m a k e arrangem ents for a p a ssa g e to th e P acific In tern a tio n a l E x p o si­tion .

M r. and M rs.'F en n D u n h a m w ere g u e s ts o v er th e w eek en d o f r e la ­tiv e s in T an n ersv ille .

M iss M arie G aym an of N e w Y o rk is sp e n d in g h er v a c a tio n o f a co u p le of m o n th s w ith fr ie n d s in th is v i l l ­a g e .

C. E . N ic h o ls e sq ., o f J e ffe r so n , an d C la ren ce H o lm e s e sq ,, o f O ne­on ta , h ad b u s in e ss in th is v i l la g e F r id a y .

M r. a n d M rs. C h a r le s C lark an d M r. an d M rs. G . M . W y c k o ff m o ­tored to M id d le b u rg S u n d a y w h er e th e y sp e n t th e d a y w ith M r. an d M rs. J o h n W o o d and fa m ily .

F r a n k M a ttice h a s tr a d ed h is n e w F ord a u to m o b ile w ith I . C . W y c k o ff for a. n e w fiv e p a sse n g e r O ver lan d . L . A . W y c k o ff n o w o w n s th e M at­t ic e car .

M r. a n d M rs. N e lso n R ic h tm y e r a n d so il an d w ife , M r. a n d M rs. F r a n k ’ R ic h tm y e r a n d c h ild r e n o f C o x sa c k ie m otored , to th is p la ce on S u n d a y an d sp e n t th e d a y w ith th e ir r e la t iv e s h ere .

L a w y e r J a c k s o n w a s a t S c h o h a r ie on M o n d a y w h e r e h e tr a n sa c te d le ­g a l m a tte r s b e fo ie J u d g e B eek m a q v

M r. an d M rs. L . A . W y c k o ff w e r e S u n d a y g u e s ts .of M rs. W y c k o f f ’s p a r e n ts , M n a n d M rs. H . J . P e r so n s o f L a u re n s , m a k in g th e tr ip b y w a y o f a u to m o b ile .

T h e S u n d a y sc h o o l e x c u r s io n to K in g sto n S a tu r d a y w a s w e l l p a tr o n ­iz e d b y ’th e p eo p le o f G ilb o a a n d v i­c in ity . O ver tw o h u n d r ed t ic k e ts w ere so ld a t th e G ran d G orge s ta ­t io n . S o m e th in g l ik e 1500 p eo p le to o k a d v a n ta g e o f th e e x c e p t io n a lly lo w ra te .

M r. a n d M rs. A d d is o n H a g a d o r n w ere g u e s ts F r id a y o f th e ir jd a u g h - ter , M rs, J . E . S a ffo rd , o f S ta m ­ford .

Our lo c a l e le c tr ic ia n E . W . B ro w n , a s s is t e d by A lb e r t C h r is tm a n , is w ir in g R . O. L e w is ’ h o u s e fo r e le c ­tr ic l ig h ts .

H o w a r d M itc h e ll o f E a s t M e r e ­d ith , a s tu d e n t o f th e R o x b u r y H ig h sc h o o l, a c c o m p a n ie d C e c il M a c k e y h o m e for th e w e e k en d .

T h e J e ffe r s o n .p e o p le c a m e d ow n to G ilb o a T u e sd a y n ig h t and e n ter ta in e d u s v e r y p le a sa n t ly in th e ir r e n d it io n o f “ T h e O ld N e w H a m p ­s h ir e H o m e .” I t w a s v e r y c le v e r ly s ta g e d , th e c a s te w e l l s e le c te d for th e ro le e a ch a s su m e d a n d i t is on e o f th e n ic e th in g s th a t w e a l l l ik e to r e m em b er . C om e a g a in , fr ie n d s , w h e n e v e r y o u h a v e a n y su n s h in e to p a ss a lo n g .

» ♦ »M r. F i*anklin C la p p er o f M a c k e y

h a s ju s t r e c e iv e d a s to c k o f th e c e l ­e b r a te d C e a lc o te R o o fin g . T h is ro o fin g is v e r y to u g h , e la s t ic , ru b ­b e r -lik e c o a tin g , w h ic h is g u a r a n ­te e d to la s t an d w e a r , for m a n y y e a r s . I t i s c h e a p e r th a n s h in g le s , s te e l or t in , an d is m u c h m o re d u r­a b le . A l i t t l e b o o k le t, fr e e , te l ls a b o u t i t .

LADIES SUMMER WAISTSF in e w h ite la w n , fa u c y d im it ie s , d a in ty w h ite s i lk , fa n c y s tr ip e s , e tc . P r ic e s , 50c, 75c, $1 50, $2 00, $2 50.

Separate Summer SkirtsN e w G ood s, la te s t s ty le s , in P a lm B e a c h C lo th , C rash , P iq u e , e tc . P r ic e s , $1 00, $1 50, 1 76

Misses Summer Blouses all white,Stylish, $1.00

Men’s Straw H ats, correct styles for Dress, $1 50, 2 00

Outing, Dress and W ork ShirtsDandy line dress aud negligee shirts in plain and fancies for all outing or semi-dress occasions and athletics. ‘Cluett make, $1 00

Douglas Shoes For MenJ u s t r e c e iv e d n e w l in e o f th is fa m o u s m a k e o f sh o e s—$3 50, $4 00

Carpet Sized RugsW e s t i l l h a v e a fe w d es ir a b le la rg e ru gs le f t a t $19 25 an d up.

Open Stock CrockeryL e t us h a v e y o u r ord er for p la in w h ite an d w h ite

and g o ld w a re w h ile s to c k is co m p lete .

Sam uel Harley, Grand Gorge

W O M E N ’ S C A P E S .

Cape of Good Hope—S w eet sixteen .

Cape F lattery— Twenty.

Cape lo o k o u t—Twenty-five.

Cape Fear-—T hirty.

Cape Farew ell—Forty. — L adles’ H om e Journal.

FASHIONABLE FASHION HINTSSpats are still popular in certain

fam ilies.

H oleless worn o u t

socks should never be

The popular colors prevailing am ong prize fighters ajre black and blue.

T hose w ho w e&r Prince A lbert coats should sm oke a certain brand of to­bacco.

A T B U T T S ’Mower Sections, Guards, Rake Teeth, Castings for farm machinery in general Eagle Dump W agons, a few Mowers and rakes a t bargain prices, cultivators walking and riding plows, steel hillers of all kinds, genuine Eclipse Corn plan­ters, $18, Eureka Corn planters, $15, used Eclipse planter, $12, used two-’ row planter, $20 Q uantity of used motor cars a t bargain prices.

A R T H U B M B U T T S240-246 Main Street, Oneonta.

T o u r i n g C a r

R u n a b o u t$ 4 9 0

4 4 0

I* C. W Y C K O F FG I L B O A , IN . TT

Page 3: f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN Grand Gorge ......Vol. 37. f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43Grand Gorge. Burr Spring of Hobart was a gue

J* ±

L i f e I n s u r a n c e .f r.q»;esent th e C o n n e c t ic u t L ife

I i.-u i ii tice C o m p a n y for th is v ic in ity iiiul c;i 11 w r ite y o u th e b e st k in d of p o l.c y a t a v e r y lo w ra te . L ife I n ­su r a n c e is s o m e th in g th a t e v e r y o n e sh o u ld ca rry . I t p r o tec ts th e h o m e, y ie ld s a b etter in v e s tm e n t th a n th e s a v in g s b a n k s and a g r e a t h e lp in th e dark d a y s o f a d v e r s ity . L e t m e e x p la in its m a n y b en efits .

Harry I. W yckoff, G ilboa, N.*Y.

W EST CONESVILLE.

. B l a c k s m i t h i n g .o f a ll k in d s an d H o r se sh o e in g d o n e t in a w o r k m a n lik e m a n n er an d a t r e a so n a b le p r ices . I am h ere to se rv e th e p u b lic and e a r n e st ly a sk for a sh a re o f th e w ork. S h op o p e n fo r b u s in e ss e v e ry w o rk in g d a y .

B U R L S C U T T ,

G IL B O A , N E W Y O R K

Fire InsuranceP ro tect your property against fire by keep ing it insuaed. I represent reliable com­panies and will write your insurance at the lowest passible rates.

W H . Long, G i t aD . & H .

C O A L

Mrs. Lew is T uttle has been quite ill for a few days but is convalescing at th is writing.

Ray Scherm erhorn recently spent a few days w ith h is grandm other, Mrs. Susan Buel.

W illiam W ilkerson and w ife and H arter Brandow, w ife and son Ray­mond, w ere guests Monday o f Henry Bartley and w ife.

John C. M attice of Gilboa has rented his tenant house on Locust S treet to Floyd Roe. P ossession July first.

Mrs. Charles M attice and son, Ray­mond, spent last W ednesday at Thos. Becker’s.

E. W. Brown of Gilboa and H enry Blodgett and H enry Bartley o f th is village made an auto trip la st Satur­day to P rattsville and Lexington.

G eorge F. Case of Durham w as a guest last Sunday of h is brother, W. H. Case.

Paul Stryker and w ife of Gilboa spent la st Sunday w ith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Stryker.

John Van Steenbergh of W alton w as a guest the first of the w eek o f h is cousin, W. H. Case, returning hom e Wednesday.

M iss Mabel R ichtm yer o f th e One­onta Norm al v isited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Coral Richtm yer, of Cones­v ille over the w eek end. last Saturday m aking the trip in Mr. T u ttle’s new touring car.

Mrs. M elissa Morse has re-roofed her dw elling house w ith galvanized stee l roofing. David W ilkins, the Gil­boa plumber and m en did the work the first of the week.

Mrs. Im ogene Shaver and son N el­son, spent Sunday at Wm. Lafferty’s at Gilboa.

Bruce M iller and son, Ray, o f Al­bany, are spending a few days w ith rela tives in town.

Mr. and Mrs. H enry Bartley enter­tained Tuesday even in g at cards and also to a very elaborate supper, the follow ing: Mr. and Mrs. H enry Blod­gett and Mr. and airs. W. H. Case and cousin, John Van Steenbergh.

Mr. and Mrs. Ezra M orse w ere guests la st Friday of Cyril Thorington and w ife and m other, ■ Mrs. E llen Co- nine of Hunterfield.

Pratt Selleck m oved to H unter, Mon­day and w e b elieve has a position at H aines F a lls for the summer.

Mrs. Southw ell has been very ill but is som ew hat better at th is w riting.

Mrs. George H urley of Y onkers w as a w eek end guest of relatives in this place.

R ene Brow nell and fam ily entertain­ed la st Friday Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Patrie, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. B uel and fam ily, Mr. and Mrs. W m. W ilkerson and. M iss Arm inda K ingsley.

C TATE « COTT

OF NEW GOUNTY, SS ‘YO RK—SC H O H A R IE

Schoharie County Courts: Pursuant to Section 192 of the Judiciary Law, and Sec­tion 45 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, I hereby appoint the several terms of the County Court to he held at the Court House in the Village of Schoharie, in and for the County of Schoharie in the year 1911 and each year thereafter, until otherwise order­ed, and to commence on the several days hereinafter mentioned, as follows:

For the trial of issues by Jury, hearing of Motions and other proceedings, and the trial of Original Cases, for which a trial Jury will be drawn and required to attend:

The third Monday of April.The first Monday of December.For the trial issues of Law, hearing of Mo­

tions argument of Appeals and other pro­ceedings at which no Ju ry will be required to attend:

On the second Monday In February.On the third Monday in June,On the third Monday in September.After the disposition of Ju ry cases trials of

Issues of Law, Argument of Appeals and other proceedings will be heard by the con­sent of the Attorneys on botn sides at each Court at which a Ju ry is required to attend.

Dated Schoharie, New York, December 18 910.

DOW BEEKMAN,Counuy Judge of Schoharie County

Notice to Creditors—By orderof Dow B e e k m a n , S u rroga te o f S ch o h a r ie county. Notice is hereby given, a c ­c o rd in g to law , to a ll p erson s h a v in g c la im s or dem ands a g a in s t R o m ie E . M a y h a n la te o f th e tow n of G ilb oa , Schoharie county, New York, de­c e a se d , th a t th e y are req u ired to e x ­h ib it th e sa m e , w ith th e v o u c h e r s in su p p o rt th ereo f, to th e su b scr ib er , th e e x e c u to r o f sa id R o m ie E . M a y ­h an a t th e r e s id e n c e o f d e c e a se d in th e tow n o f G ilb oa , S c h o h a r ie co u n ­ty , N . Y ., on or b e fo r e th e 15th d a y o f A u g u s t n e x t .

D a te d G ilb oa , N . Y ., th is 3rd d a y o f F eb ru a ry , 1915.

R a y S. M a y h a n , E x e c u to r .O ’C dhnor & O’C onnor, A tto r n e y s

for E x e c u to r , H o b a rt, N . Y .

caused

L e w i s B r o t h e r sH. N. BROWN,UNDERTAKING AND] [EMBALMING

A fin e se le c tio n o f C a sk e ts an d F u n er a l S u p p lie s . T erm s r e a so n ­a b le . G iv e m e a c a ll before p u r­c h a s in g e lse w h er e .F L A T C R E E K . N . Y .

Sidney Rivenburgh,I N S U R A N C E

Gilboa, N ew York

m erator for th is tow n, com m enced h is duties Tuesday, June 1st.

L ew is T uttle and w ife and H arter Brandow and fam ily w ere a t W indham

P ain t of G reat Value.A paint' is m ade from the oil o f

beans which grow in great quantities [ in Manchuria w hich is said to be fire and waterproof.

A Cinch.“How did you find the roads down

East, Mrs. Nurich?” “Oh, it w as very simple. W e had a guide book.’’

rr iH E P E O P L E O F T H E S T A T E O F N E W Y O R K , by th e G race

of G od F ree and In d ep en d en t. T o H o n . E g b e r t E . W ood b u ry , a s A t­to rn ey G en era l of th e S ta te o f N e w Y ork , A lb a n y , N . Y . ; D nvid W in n ie , a s C ou n ty T reasurer of rue C ou n ty of S ch o h a r ie , C ob lesk ill, N . Y . ; to the s is te r s and brothers c f M am ie L a h e y , d ecea sed , if l iv in g , w h ose n am es, re s ­id e n c es and p o st office a d d r e sses are uniknown, if d ead , to th e ch ild ren an d d e sc e n d a n ts , if l iv in g , w h ose n am es, r e s id e n c e s and p ost office a d d r e sses a r e unk now n , and to a ll th e h e irs -a t- la w an d n e x t of k in o f th e sa id M a­m ie L a h e y , d ecea sed , i f an y , w h ose n a m e s, r e s id en ces and p o st office ad ­d r e sse s are u n k n o w n ; S en d G re e tin g :

U p o n th e p e titio n o f W illiam S h u tts , a r e s id e n t o f H u n ter , C ou n ty of G reen e , y o u are h ereb y c ited to sh ow c a u se before th e S u rro g a te ’s C ourt of th e C ou nty o f S ch o h a r ie a t th e Surro g a te ’s O ffice in th e v illa g e o f S c h o ­h arie in sa id co u n ty , on th e 7th day o f J u n e , 1915, &£ ten o ’c lock in th e foren oon o f th a t day , w h y a decree sh o u ld not be m ade aw ard in g L e tters o f A d m in istra tio n upon th e go o d s, c h a tte ls an d cred its w h ich w ere o f M a m ie L a h ey , la te a resid en t o f the to w n o f G ilboa, Colunty o f Sch oh arie , d e c e a se d , in te sta te , to D a v i d W i n ­n ie , th e C ounty T reasu rer o f th e C ou n ty o f S ch oh arie .

In T estim on y- W h e r e o f, we h a v e he seal of the Surro

TEAM WORK4.

Team work is the test. Double har­n ess is the w%y to go. B ut it is som e 'art to hitch up m an apd woman with­out one or th e other fiiqking over the Punishments They Underwent intraces

— , England In,Olden Days.M other Nature decreed that woman - ,

keep one step ahead o f man, and pull 51 per cent of the lqjid- It is woman who carries the big end o f things.

Man and woman w ent out o f the Garden hand in hand. They wandered far by their “lonesom e.” They are com ing back, w ing to wing.

Man and wom an m ust each h it their own trail. N either w ill go far astray— if she keeps the needle o f her wom­an’s soul pointing true north.

Talking- a t a man doesn’t change him. But being a wom an does.

W hen wom en stand big and fine and strong and self-contained, m en'cannot be sm all.

A s man and wom an can build a bet­ter borne together, man ahd woman can build a better civilization together.

.V.Y esterday both man and^w om an

agreed that h is world waa not h er’ world. Today they haye awakened to find them indissolubly one—and that she w as furnishing the ch ief m unition of h is world—life.

The world is turned upside down and inside out because jpromen as a sex have been trailers instead o f motor cars.

Two heads are better than one. The only hope o f righting the world, solv­ing the mix-up called fnodern society, is to get the two heads together.

Man’s Peace P a lacelfia s proved in­hospitable, a cold bachelor hall. It had no hostess.— Mabel Tow ers in New York Press.

BRUTALITY WAS THE RULE.i i

REPLATED PLATITUDESThe least thing in its place

is th e greatest th ing for that place.

Yes, dress m akes, the man, if there isn ’t m uch toTJje m ade of the man.

Slang? That’s jjijst language in the weed stagej and m ostly used by those in ithe sap-head age. , V

D oing w hat you fa n , a s w ell as you can, is doingta w hole lot better than trying ?|o do any­thing better than can.—‘Juliuq Doerns w ich Village.

rbody e lse -in Green-

f ix e d . - ,Witness, Dow Beekman, Surro rogate of the said County of

(Seal) Schoharie, at the village of Sohoharie, N. Y., this 26tn day of April, 1915.

D o w B eek m a u , S u rroga te .C lyd e H . Proper,

Attorney for Petitioner,S ch o h a r ie , N . Y .

T he Real W inner.The man who really w ins in a law ­

suit is the lawyer.— A tchison Globe.

$100 Reward, $100The readers of this paper will be

pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutionaldisease, requires a constitutional treat­ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in­ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, there­by destroying the foundation of the dis­ease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative pow­ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials.

Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O.Sold by all Druggists, 75c.Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.

F r e e L i t e r a t u r e D e s c r i b i n g t h e G r e a t C a l i f o r n i a

E x p o s i t i o n s

W rite at once to this Bureau for literature descriptive of the great Pan am a-Pacific In ternational Exposition, which opened in San Francisco on February 20, and on the great Panama-California Exposition now open at Sau Diegd.

This Bureau is prepared to supply complete information in regard to railroad rates, ho tel accommodations, interesting side trips and reliable, authentid, unbiased information about any section of the’great Pacific Coast'country.

Send us 20 cents in stamps and we will send you book describing the Panama-Paqifc I n ­ternational Exposition, book describing the Panama-California Exposition, a map of California and a sample copy of Sunset Magazine, the great Pacific Coast natiodal m ag­azine, containing beautiful pictureslof the Exposition. The regular price of the m aga­zine is 20 cents per copy. Address

S U N S E T M A G A Z IN E S E R V IC E 'iB U R E A U , S A N FRAN CISCO , C A L IF O R N IA

S U M M E R H O T E L S & B O A R D I N G H O U S E S

L IS T E D F R E E IN T H E R ESO R T IN FO R M ATIO N B U R E A U OF T H E BROOKLYN D A IL Y E A G L E

Name of Town or P. 0_ State.

Name of House.

No. Guests Accom. Rate per week.

C h ild ren CryFOR FLETC H ER'S

C A S I O R I A— ~ r * —

Realization.“Did you realize anything on your

gold-m ine investm ents?” “Y es; I real­ized that som ebody w as playing m e. for a sucker.”—Buffalo Express.

Satisfaction.Drive a nail home and clinch it so

fa ith fu lly that you can. wake up at night and think of your work w ith sat­isfa c tio n - -Thoreau.

The Real Truth.“De man dat says he’s discouraged,”

said U ncle Eben, “is m ighty liable to find out dat he’s hankerin’ to quit work an’ go fishin’.”

Height He Must Reach.A public speaker never reaches the

pinnacle of fam e until som e newspa­per dubs him the “prince of orators.”

Jobs.T here may be a few easy jobs in

th e world, but it requires hard work to get them .— Toledo Blade.

Seldom Idle.T he housew ife is never am ong the

unem ployed.—Baltim ore Am erican.

T rue Living.Only those live who do good.—Toh

stoy.

Som etim es a Difficulty.“Love m akes the world go round,”

quoted the W ise Guy. “Yes, but it doesn’t alw ays seeni able to make both ends m eet,” added the Sim ple Mug.

For T a r S tains.Tar stains may be removed Iron*

cotton fah rics b y covering th e spotswith butter and allowing it to remainfor a few hours before washing.

Distance from Depots

House Opens_______From Golf Links.

House Closes.

Name of Proprietor or Manager_______________ __________________________________All of the above information will be listed in our Information Bureau files and also

will be printed FR .E E In the Brooklyn E agle’s Summer Resort Directory if received be­fore May-1st.

General References in Brooklyn or vicinity__________ _____________________

R ESO R T IN FO RM AT k k n 1 1 i v . : i i 1 1 ( ( k n k p a : 1 1 1 a g i e BROO K L Y N , N. Y . C IT Y .

Uncle Eben.“Some men,” said Uncle Eben, “does

everything deir w ives te ll 'em -to, £oh de sake of handin’ ’em de blam e foh whatever goes wrong.”

C h ild ren CryFQR FLETCHER’S

CASTORIA

INSHftOTS

One of the Mildest of the InflictionsW as Drumming the Culprit Out ofCamp and This W as Attended W ithBranding and Humiliation.In tim es happily gone by discipline

in the British army w as m aintained by methods the, m ajority of which can only be described as vindictive, tyran­nical and even brutal in severity. It is doubtful i f the savages of tbe dark ages could have conceived more re­volting penalties than some which were inflicted by courts martial, and even by commanding officers on their own responsibility, in former times.

The voluntary sufferings of the saints, th e tortures o f tbe religious or­ders of olden days, pale before the cruelty involved in tbe various forms of death penalty, the riding of the wooden horse, picketing, running the gantlet, branding and flogging. It is com forting that these punishm ents have gradually succumbed to the force of public opinion aud the progress of civilization.

Drumming out o f tbe army—or trum­peting, as it w as called in the cavalry and artillery—was of a different char­acter. It w as vindictive, unnecessarily so, but not brutal or even painful. It w as quaint and at the present day m ight alm ost have been considered theatrical. The prisoner, handcuffed, w as brought from the guardroom to the parade ground under escort The crime of which he had been found guilty and the sentence o f the court martial, were read aloud by the ad­jutant, he w as to be degraded, brand­ed as a bad character, discharged from the service w ith ignominy and to su f­fer a term of imprisonment w ith hard labor.

In the process of degradation the but­tons. braid, badges, facings and even the medal which he had earned were stripped from his tunic. Then came the branding. There is nothing neces­sarily degrading in branding. All re­cruits in the Roman army, for instance: were branded on final approval, but its infliction as a punishm ent is another matter altogether, and not so easily de­fended. I t w as apparently a custom peculiar to the British army. Drn-ing the reign o f George I. deserters were “stigm atized ou the forehead.” At a later period in history they w ere brand­ed on the le ft side tw o inches below the armpit, and later generally on the arm.

Tbe. tattooing w as applied w ith a brass instrum ent containing a series of needle points, the punctures m ade by which we^e.rubbed w ith a composition

. #&> V '-" ' '

nf ptjlvtl t$r. i It!inn

the? at

Glory that is plentiful enough to go around i t seldom appreciated.

T he real hero who parts h is hair in th e middle never looks the part.

Of course it’s alw ays easy for us to forgive the other fellow ’s enem ies.

T he truthful diplom at a s a rule has a hard tim e keeping up w ith the job.

B e orderly. E very genius m ay be :a slouch, but every slou ch is not a genius.

It takes a lo t o f courage to acknow l­edge our m istakes in th e presence o f an. inferior.

A little know ledge t$ a l io a danger­ous th ing w hen in th e head o f a cal­liope-voiced preacher.

It is better to go i t bilnd than to w ait forever to he sure that yon are right before going ahead.

Som e persons object to revivals evi­dently from the fear th at heaven w ill not be exclusive enough in future.

W hen a fellow becom es so religious that h e cannot enjoy a- circus street

.parade piety is indeed a burden.

SNAP SHOTSA m an hopes to be com plim ented. A

wom an expects to he.

It i s th e m an w ho spends th e m ost for h is fun who h as th e lea st o f it.

G ive a boy opportunity to annoy el- .derly people and h e w ill ask no othe^ boon.

The average m an's personal objec­tion to M ormonism is that it is ex­pensive.

MarriELge is th e only co-partnership w h ich cannot he lega lly d issolved by ; m utual consent.

T he larger and m ore im posing tbe .building, th e greater the probability that there is a m ortgage on it.

A bride qnoteB h er husband. A worn- j an who h as been m arried a while [quotes h er preacher or her doctor.

A blooded dog dips despite th e car« ihnd attention o f th e Veterinary sur jgeop called in to a ite n d jt . A cur get* [well desp ite th e fa c t th a t i t receive*no attention o f any kihd. *

P o r I n fa n ts a n d C hiidren.

Hie Kied Yes H*n Alwaj*B«gMB ears th e

S ig n a n m e o f i

indigo. India Ink and wa- ^ administered by the drum

th e supervision o f th o

It m ustnbe adm itted th a t'it w ^ s accomplished w ith as little pain 'as possible.

Further than that there is little that can be urged in its justification. Brand­ing w as a relic of bad tim es and car­ried som ething revolting to humanity along w ith it. Any indelible stigm a or brand o f infam y is a fearful punish­ment. For one thing, the infliction w as com pletely irremissible. It could be re­moved neither by repentance nor by any subsequent period o f good conduct. To brand a soldier and then discharge him from the service, as in this case, was to turn him adrift in tbe world with greatly impaired m eans of earn­ing an honest livelihood.

Hunger frequently urges its victim s to follow dishonest courses, and what else could be expected from a branded and discharged soldier, precluded from all honest m eans o f future support? It w as a cowardly and vindictive form of punishm ent, since its infliction could neither promote the am endm ent of the offender nor render him more subordi­nate.

T he last scene in the drama of drum­m ing ou t'o f tbe army w as perhaps the q u a in test The regim ent being formed ill line, w ith a sufficient interval be­tween the front and rear ranks, the prisoner w as escorted down the ranks, followed by the ban d ' playing what w as known as the “Rogue’s March.” In this manner he w as practically turned out o f barracks, the escort finally marching him to the m ilitary prison to undergo his sentence o f hard labor. In cases where a, man was dis­charged w ith ignom iny without impris­onment, his ex it from the barracks was not infrequently accompanied by a kick from the youngest drummer. Formerly he was conducted by fke drummers of the regiment through the streets of the camp or garrison, with ii halter round his rieck and a written label containing the particu­lars o f his crime.—Chambers’ Journal.

W hat W as It, Then?“I don’t see w hy you call your place

a bungalow.” said Smith to his neigh­bor. -

“W ell, i f it ifn ’t a bungalow, w hat is tt?” said the neighbor. “The job was a bungle and I still ow e for i t ”— Ladies’ H om e Journal.

He W anted to Know.“Ma, w hat’s that big round thing on

w heels ?”“The w ater wagon, m y dear.”“Is that the one Uncle Tom said pa

fell Off o f?”—Boston T ra n scrip t

Many of us who have courageenough fo r fighting lack the braveryto wait.

Truth and Duty.Truth w aits on duty. If we do not

l iv e up to w hat w e already know, of w hat u se to give us m ore truth? “E very duty w e om it,” says Ruskin, “obscures som e truth w e m ight have known.” T h is is just, and w e can-, n o t resen t it. T o do th e duty th at U ea n ex t u s i s th e duly w ay to take •a s te p toward la rg er vision.

:£V II IfW S iS to flJ i

;f§!f lf f

Aperfect Remedy for Constipa­tion , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms ,Convu{sions.Feverisli- itess&’JLossCFSLEEP.,

Facsimile Signature of

NEW YORK.

U v e

T h i r t y Y e a r s

Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.

C. L. ANDRUS, President. c. W. KENDALL, CashierTHE NATIONAL BANK OF STAMFORD

Capital, $75,000

• : 7- i

i

y-

Surplus, $125,000

T H A T S P R I N G M A YB E G O O D TO Y O U ,

M r M e rc h a n t, is ou r b e s t w is h ; a l­so th a t y o u w i l l r e c ip r o c a te an d be good to u s A s ou r b a n k in g f a c i l i ­t ie s are se c o n d to n o n e an d sh o u ld y o u jo in ou r la rg e c ir c le o f d e p o s it ­ors r e st a ssu r ed th a t th a t N a t io n a l B a n k of S ta m fo r d w il l u se e v e ry e n d e a v o r to p la ce i t s b e s t s e r v ic e s a t y o u r d is p o s a l a n d ta k e th e m o st fr ie n d ly in te r e s t in y o u r w e lfa r e .

THE NATIONAL BANK OF STAMFORD, N. Y.

I n t e r e s t i n g N e w S t y l e s i n f l e n ’ s a n d Y o u t h ’ s S u i t s

M e n w h o w is h t h e d is t in c t io n o f b e in g c o m fo r t -<1a b ly a n d a c c u r a t e ly d re s s e d w i l l w e lc o m e o u r im m e e n s e s h o w in g o f S p r in g S u i t s .

To p u t on on e o f our,’s u it s is a real sa tis fa c t io n . F a b r ics th e fin ­e s t, th e f it y o u see b efo re y o u b u y , n o .regrets' n o w or la ter , th e p r ic e s h a p p ily a b o u t h a lf w h a t ta ilo r s ’ch a r g e a n d w ith th is d e ­m and as a b a s is , w e h a v e gon e on ou r p r o g r e ss iv e w a y s e ll in g th e b e s t c lo th e s jfo r th e m oney" to jb e fo u n d in th is part o f th e s ta te .

Miller Brothers, W indham, N. Y.(Clothiers to the'.Whole Family From Head to Foot

Samuel Harley, President. E. B. Deyce, Vice-President. 0. D.Wccd, Cashier.

A C e r t i f i c a t e o f D e p o s i tin s im p le ter m s is an in te r e s tjb e a r in g l re ce ip t for a d ep o s it issu e d by th e b a n k a c c e p t in g a su m o f m o n e y to rem ain on d e p o s it a sta ted t im e , u s u a lly s ix m o n t h s or a y ea r . ,

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANKp a y s 3 p e r c en t in te r e s t on s u c h t im e d e p o s its in a n y a m o u n t. T h e e n ­tir e a s s e ts o f t h is o ld an d s tr o n g in s t itu t io n p r o tec t tb e d ep o sit. I f you h a v e a n y fu n d s te m p o r a r ily id le , it w ill p a y y o u to look in to th is m e th o d o f e m p lo y in g y o u r su rp lu s.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, GRAND GORGE

S P R I N G I S H E R EW a k e u p , M r. F a r m e r a fte r a lo n g W in te r ’s s le e p an d lo o k o v e r y o u

F a r m M a c h in e r y , fo r i t w i l l so o n be t im e to t i l l th e la n d . I f y o u are in need of anything call on m e and look over m y line of

F A R M I M P L E M E N T SHarrows, both wood and iron frame, John Deere, Oliver and LeRoy w a lk in g and riding p lo w s , American and Kentucky G rain D r il ls w ith grass s e e d e r s a n d fe r t il iz e r a t ta c h m e n ts w h ic h I . w i l l s e l l for $70, L a n dRollers, Lime Sowers, Corn Planters, Cultivators, Disc Harrows, Shov­el Plows, Osborne and Walter A. Wood Harvesting Machinery.

J U S T R E C E I V E DA shipment of one and two-seated Buckboards and Top Carriages. I a lso h a v e a fu ll l in e o U M ilk W ag o n s,> F a rm T r u ck s a n d 3 -in c h L u m b er Wagons. Can supply/your wants in Fertilizer.

H . M - C R O N K . G R A N D G O R G E

Page 4: f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN Grand Gorge ......Vol. 37. f!w ~ - Oilfc>oa, Schoharie County, IN V., Thursday, June 10, 1915 No 43Grand Gorge. Burr Spring of Hobart was a gue

T H E M O N ITOR.

G E O R G E L . P U L L E R , P U B L IS H E R

$1.00 P E R Y E A R IN A D V A N C E .

THURSDAY, J U N E 10 1915

E n tered a t th e P o s t O ffice a t G ilboa, N. Y., a s secon d -c la ss m ail m atter. C orrespondence so lic ited . A d vertis-n g ra tes b y th e in ch or co lu m n g iv enon ap p licatio n .

W est C onesville .

M rs. F lo y d S h a v e r a n d M rs. C ly d e R ic h tm y e r w ere g u e s ts la s t W e d ­n e s d a y o f M rs . J e s s e B a i l e y o f G il ­

boa.

G eorge C ase an d w ife sp e n t la s t S u n d a y w ith th e ir son , Ir a , an d fa m ily .

M iss D e lla M ille r w as a g u e s t la s t S a tu r d a y o f h er s is te r , M rs. E m m a JStevens, o f G ilboa.

R alph S tev en s of C onesv ille has p u rch a sed an a u to and w e are a lso pleased to sta te th a t M rs. S teven s has so far recovered from her i l l ­n e ss as to be a b le to ta k e sh o r t a u to tr ip s.

A lb e r t C lark and W in . S n y d er m ad e a b u s in e ss trip t o C a t ik i l l l a s t M on d ay and w h ile th ere p u rch a sed tw o h orses o f H orton B ro th ers .

M rs. C o rn e liu s C ain sp e n t la s t T h u r sd a y w ith h er m o th er , M rs. Im o g e n e S h a v e r .

M rs. E m e lin e S tr y k e r is p a y in g a v is i t to r e la t iv e s an d fr ie n d s in M an ­o r k ill.

M rs. S u sa n B u e l, w h o h a s b een s p e n d in g th e p a s t w eek w ith ,her d a u g h te r , M rs. G rant S ch e r m e r - h orn , o f M a n o rk ill re tu rn ed h o m e la s t S a tu r d a y .

H e n r y B lo d g e tt d id so m e co n crete w ork fo r A lb e r t C lark la s t w e e k .

A m o n g th o se from th is p la c e w h o took a d v a n ta g e o f th e lo w ra te e x ­cu rs io n ove^ th e U . & D . to K in g s ­to n la s t S a tu r d a y w e n o te C h ester C h itte n d en , O tis B lo d g e tt, B e n n ie a n d R a y D e n n iso n . M ilton an d E v ­e r e tt P a n g m a n an d J a y V a n L o a n .

M iss M ary W ood o f C en tra l B r i­d g e w a s a g u e s t th e first o f th e w e e k o f M rs. L e w is T u tt le . S h e is h o ld ­in g gra d e e x a m in a t io n s a t C o n es­v i l le .

M rs. E l le n M ead e o f R o x b u r y is s p e n d in g a 'fe w d a y s w ith h er m o ­th er , M rs. E z r a M orse.

M rs. C ly d e R ic h tm y e r is sp e n d ­in g th e w e e k w ith h e r s is te r , M rs. C h este r P la tn e r , o f P r a t ts v i lle .

M r. a n d M rs. H e n r y B lo d g e tt , M r. a n d M rs. H e n r y B a r t le y an d M rs. W ill ia m B r ig g s m a d e a n a u to tr ip to K in g s to n P o in t la s t S a tu r d a y L e w is T u tt le c o n v e y in g tk e m th e re in h is la r g e to u r in g car. T h e p ar­t ie s in fo r m u s th a t th e y h a d a y e r y p le a sa n t d a y .

C ly d e R ic h tm y e r is a d d in g a n ew v e r a n d a to h is r e s id e n c e on L o c u s t s tr e e t .

E z r a M orse an d w ife w ere P r a t ts ­v i l le v is ito r s la s t S u n d a y .

M a u rice S a n fo rd , m o th er , u n c le , a u n t a n d c o u s in of M a r g a r e tv ille m o to red to th is v i l la g e la s t S u n d a y a n d took d in n e r w ith M r. and M rs. M a u rice F a u lk n e r an d fa m ily .

M . P . M a ttic e w a s ; a g u e s t la s t S a t­u r d a y o f h is d a u g h te r , M rs. H a tt ie C a se .

M r. an d M rs. E zra M orse an d d a u g h te r , M rs. E lle n M ead e , o f R o x b u r y , w ere a t M a n o r k ill T u e s ­d a y w h er e th e y s p e n t th e d a y w ith M r. an d M rs. J . M. M yers.

M iss P a u lin e C h itte n d e n is sp e n ­d in g a fe w w e e k s w ith h e r a u n t, M rs. B en j. M erw in , o f P r a t ts v i l le .

M rs. W . H . C ase a n d M rs. H e n r y B a r t le y w ere G ilb oa sh o p p er s la s t F rid a y .

W ill ia m M a tt ic e and w ife an d tw o so n s , L e w is a n d W ill ia m jr ., w ere e n te r ta in e d a t th e h o m e o f M r. and M rs. C. K . P a tr ie la s t F r id a y .

To P reserve Your H ealth.T h e k id n e y s are th e g r e a t h e a lth

p r e serv ers . R h e u m a tism , b a ck a ch e h e a d a c h e , sore m u s c le s , s tif f jo in ts com e w h en th e k id n e y s are o u t o f ord er and fa il to p ro p er ly f ilter th e b lood . F o le y ’s K id n e y P i l ls tone up t ired and d is e a s e d k id n e y s , b a n ish b a c k a c h e a n d .stop s le e p d is tu r b in g b la d d er tro u b le . L . A . W y c k o ff.

TO THE PEOPLE OF GILBOA AND V|CINITY

T a k e n o t ic e th a t I h a v e p u t in a good lin e c f S h ir ts an d O v er a lls— a lso a s m a ll s to c k o f G ro cer ies— w h ic h w ill be so ld a t a v e r y r e a so n ­a b le p r ice . G iv e m e a c a ll .

A. HAGADORN.

F O R S A L E —H a n d m a d e lu m b er w a g o n , w ith b o lster , sp r in g s , an d b rake, a s good a s n e w ; a p r a c t ic a lly n e w m ed iu m w e ig h t d o u b le h arn ess a n d a good* road cart. N o rea so n ­a b le o ffer re fu sed . W illa r d S p rin g , G ran d G orge, N . Y .

W A N T E D :—G irl or w om an to w ork in p r iv a te fa m ily . K n o w le d g e o f p la in c o o k in g n e c e ssa r y . G ood w a g e s . A d d r e ss L o ck B o x N o . 504, Stamford, N . Y.

The Squaw Man.S to ry o f th e b ig s ix -r e e l m o tio n

p ic tu r e fea tu re to be sh o w n a t th e H ip p o d ro m e th e a te r on S a tu r d a y e v e n in g o f th is w eek .

J a m e s W y n n e g a te , a h a n d so m e , d a sh in g y o u n g E n g lis h arm y o fficer is m a d e th e g u a r d ia n o f a tr u st fu n d ra ised b y th e m em b ers o f h is r e g i­m en t for th e r e lie f o f th e w id o w s ot th o se w h o w h o d ie in b a ttle . T h e E a r l o f K e r h ill , in lo v e w ith andfavored Dy the gir l W y n n eg a te ad­m ires, is a m em ber of W yn n eg a te’s re g im en t. B y m e a n s o f a forged c h e c k , K e r h ill e m b ez z le s th e fu n d .

M uch to do is m a d e o v e r the. d is ­a p p ea ra n ce o f th e p e n s io n fu n d an d to s a v e th e h o n o r o f th e fa m ily , Wynnegate agrees with the Earl’sm o th er , to d isa p p e a r a n d le t it be u n d ersto o d th a t h e is th e e m b e z ­z ler . H e le a v e s E n g la n d in a tra d ­in g sc h o o n e r . T h e sc h o o n e r , in m id -o c e a n , c a tc h e s fire a n d b u rn s to th e w a te r ’s e d g e . A m o n g th o se sa v e d is W y n n e g a te . T h e l ife b o a t c o n ta in in g W y n n e g a te is rescu ed by a s te a m e r bound for A m e r ic a , an d in th e garb o f an E n g lis h to u r is t an d u n d er th e n am e o f J im C arstou , h e is n e x t se en on th e G rea t W h ite W a y .

Car.ston is in s tr u m e n ta l in s a v in g a w e ster n e r from se v er a l “ c o n fi­d e n c e ” m en and h e au d th e w e s t ­ern er b eco m e w a rm fr ie n d s . A t th e la t te r ’s s u g g e s tio n , C arston a c c o m ­p a n ie s h im w e st , w h er e th e form er E n g lis h a rm y officer b u ys a ranch an d s e t t le s dow n to th e m od e o f l ife of th e th en g r o w in g co u n try . H is g en era l good fe llo w sh ip , p e r so n a lity a n d u p r ig h t d e a lin g s , soon earn s C arston a h o st o f fr ie n d s , b u t in c u r s for h im , th e jea lo u sy o f a n o ted bad m a h , “ C ash H a w k in s .” H a w k in s a n d C arston h a v e m a n y v e r b a l ar­g u m e n ts a n d H a w k in s m a k e s s e v ­era l a tte m p ts on C a r s to n ’s l if e w h ic h h o w ev e r , are u n su c c e ss fu l. H a w ­k in s , a t th e th ir d a tte m p t on C ars­ton , n e a r ly s u c c e e d s , b u t is sh o t d ow n from b e h in d by a b e a u t ifu l In d ia n g ir l—N a t-U -R ic h .

N a t -U -R ic h s e c r e te ly lo v e s C ars­to u . T h e In d ia n g irl la te r sa v e s C arston from d e a th in a m o u n ta in c r e v ic e and a g a in from jan a tta c k by m o u n ta in w o lv e s an d y e t a g a in r es­c u e s h im d u r in g a terriffic m o u n ­ta in storm a n d a v a la n c h e . O ut o f g r a titu d e , C arston m a rr ies N a t -U - R ic h , an d a l i t t le b o y b le sse s th e u n io n . B y rea so n o f h is m a rr ia g e to N a t -U -R ic h , C arston is n o w k n o­w n as th e “ S q u a w M a n ” and jg' a s u c c e s s fu l r a n c h e io .

Broome Centeer.

Eire on Mt. Utsayantha.

A fire w a s d isc o v e r e d a t a b o u t 11 o ’c lo c k F r id a y m o r n in g o n th e so u th s id e o f M t. U ts a y a n th a a n d i t w a s w ith m u c h d iff ic u lty an d a f te r th e fire f ig h ters h ad w ork ed p e r s is te n t ly fo r a b o u t s ix h o u rs th a t th e b la ze w a s g o tte n u n d er c o n tro l. A s i t w a s , h o w e v e r , a b o u t 50 a c res w ere b u rn ed ov er a n d for so m e t im e i t w a s fea r e d th a t th e tow er an d lo d g e m ig h t be r e a ch ed . F o r tu n a te ly th e fire b r ig a d e w ork ed w ith su c h e n ­erg y th a t th e b la ze w a s a t la s t in h a n d .

Fairchild Withdraws Suit.

T h e in ju n c tio n w h ic h C o n g ress­m an G. W . F a ir c h ild o f O n eon ta secu red , h o ld in g up th e c o n s tr u c t­ion o f sh e O n e o n ta -D a v e n p o r t C e n ­ter s ta te r o a d s a c r o ss th e f la ts ov er th e S u sq u e h a n n a , h a s b een w ith ­d raw n an d h e h a s r e le a se d th e n e c ­e s sa r y r ig h ts o f w a y .

Builds a Large Reservoir.

A t P h o e n ic ia a w e a lth y c ity w o m ­an is b u ild in g a c o lo n y o f c o tta g e s . To su p p ly th e m w ith w a te r sh e b o u g h t a la rg e sp r in g on a w o r th ­le s s p ie c e o f m o u n ta in la n d for $3,- 000 an d c o n s tr u c te d a r e se r v o ir o f 4,000 g a llo n s c a p a c ity an d la id 1 1-4 m ile s o f p ip e . T h e o v erflo w is con ­d u cted to a s w im m in g pool.

Best PaintW h a t is it?D e v o e .H o w D ev o e?I t ’s 160 y e a r s o ld ; b u t th a t i s n ’t

h o w . *I t h a s b een d e v e lo p ed b y use aud

s tu d y , b y s tu d y and" u se ; th a t is h o w ; an d a p p ro v ed b y e x p e r ie n c e , m a n y y e a r s ; t h a t ’s h o ^ .

I t c o m m e n d s i t s e l f b y lo n g la s t in g an d s m a ll p a in t-c o s t; n o t ch ea p by th e g a llo n , but c h e a p by th e job an d c h e a p by th e y e a r an d ten y e a r s , ch ea p b y th e l ife t im e .

T h a t’s h o w .'

D E V O E C h a rles A . C lark se lls it.

Not For Men Only.W o m e n su ffer as m u c h as m en do

from in d ig e s t io n a n d c o n stip a tio n a n d req u ire th e sa m e s c ie n t if ic rem ­e d y to k eep t lie s to m a c h sw e e t, th e l iv e r a c t iv e and th e b o w els reg u la r . F o le y ’s C a th a r t ic T a b le ts are w h o le so m e an d c le a n s in g ; do n o t g r ip e or ca u se n a u se a . S to u t p eo p le s a y th is is th e on e c a t t a r tic th a t ta k e s a w a y th a t o v e r -fu ll an d c lo g g e d -u p f e e l ­in g . L . A . W y c k o ff.

M iss P h o e b e C ook c lo se d h er sc h o o l in th e R eed d is tr ic t la s t T h u r sd a y . S h e trea ted h e r s c h o l­ars to ice cream an d ca k e .

M rs. M a rth a A k e ly v is it e d h er broth er, H o b a r t M ace, an d fa m ily a few d a y s la s t w e e k .

F r a n c e s T h orp e o f F r a n k lin to nhas been d oin g som e d ressm ak in gfor h er a u n t, M rs. W . H B e v in s .

A lb e r t Reed purchased aFlandersa u to m o b ile o f I . C. W y c k o ff o f G il­boa la s t T u e sd a y .

A . A . C h ic h e s te r is ta k in g th e c e n ­su s in th is e le c t io n d is tr ic t .

M rs. S m ith C ook c lo se d h er term of s c h o o l in th e R o e d is tr ic t la s t T h u r sd a y .

J. L. Wood has been losing some chickens.. Last week he caught alarge o w l in a trap .

S e lle c k M ace w a s a g u e s t o f h is co u sin , H a r o ld C a in , o f L iv in g s to n - v i l le la s t T u e sd a y .

M artha S cu tt is a ssistin g M rs. F. J . S m ith w ith h er h o u se c le a n in g .

A n u m b er from h ere w e n t on th e e x c u r sio n to K in g s to n la s t S a tu r ­d a y .

T. S . W a tso n and w ife an d m o th ­er, M rs. S e lle c k , o f M id d le b u rg h , m otored to L . H . C h ic h e s te r ’s la s t S u n d a y an d a lso to H o b a r t M a c e ’s. M rs. S e lle c k r e m a in e d for a sh o r t v is i t w ith her d a u g h te r s , M rs. C h i­c h e s te r and M rs. M ace-

T h e su rp r ise p a r ty a t t lie h om e of E . P . C ook la s t T u esd a y e v e n in g for S m ith C ook an d w ife tu rn ed o u t to be a m is c e lla n e o u s sh o w er . S ix ty - ou e th e ir fr ien d s aud n e ig h b o r s g a th e re d th ere a n d sh o w e r e d th em w ith ta b le c lo th s , to w e ls , a lam p , sad irons; p ie p la te s , a s ilv e r c h e e se d ish , co ffee pot, v a s e s , d ish pan , etc . M rs. A . V a n V a lk e n b e r g g o t th e p r ize on th e n e a r e st g u e ss on a b u n ch o f to o th p ic k s . N e x t w a s a fine lu n c h e o n —sa n d w ic h e s , c a k e , te a an d co ffee , a lso ic e cr ea m , th en a c h a se r . E a c h on e w a s g iv e n a p ie c e o f ca rd b o a rd , a to o th p ic k and c h e w o f g u m . T h e g u m w a s to be c h e w e d and p la c e d on th e ca rd ­b oard an d m o u ld ed in to so m e a n i­m a l or w h a te v e r on e c h o se to m a k e , th e o b jec t to be m a d e w ith th e to,oth p ic k . T h e c o m p a n y m a d e a ll k in d s of a p im a ls an d b ird s. T h e p r ize for th a t fa n c y wnfrk w a s w on by L . H . C h ic h e s te r —a n ic e l i t t ,e te d d y bear. A ll h a d a good t im e an d w ish S m ith an d w ife a b r ig h t fu tu re .

SOUTH MOUNTAIN.

W e f e e l v e r y g r a te ft il fo r th e be­a u t ifu l sh o w e r o f T u e sd a y m ornirjg. A g o o d c o p io u s ra in ' w o u ld b e m u c h a p p r e c ia te d . " ' -

M rs. G . H . B a te s , nep G liv e B a i l ­e y o f B a te s , v is i t e d w ith h e r g r a n d ­m o th e r , M rs. P h o e b e S m ith , a t th e H u b b a r d B r o th e r s la s t W e d n e s d a y

M essrs . C a r tw r ig h t o f R o x b u r y a n d S tr y k e r o f G ilb o a , c a tt le b u y ­ers, were noticed in this place last W e d n e sd a y .

F e r n a n d o S tr y k e r an d d a u g h te r M au d e, w ere b u s in e s s c a lle r s a t

-W est D u r h a m on e d a y la s t w eek .M iss J u lia S tr y k e r b eg a n h e r s e a ­

so n ’s w ork a t O m er R ic k a r d ’s on M o n d a y .

N ic h o la s W e s t o f P o tte r H o llo w is b e in g e n te r ta in e d a t th e h o m e o f th e H u b b a r d B r o th e r s .

M r. an d M rs. N e ls o n Oj’B r ie n v i s ­ited a t R o b er t L o v e l l ’s on S u n d a y . M iss M arion re tu r n e d h om e w ith th em .

M rs. R o se B e llo w s o f .D en v er , D e l­a w a re c o u n ty , is th e g u e s t o t h er n ie c e , M rs. E u g e n e O rm sb ee.

E lm e r A lb e r t i o f W in d h a m is a s ­s is t in g F . S lr v k e r w ith h is farm w o rk .

M rs. F ra n k S m ith a n d m o th er , M rs. P h o e b e S m ith , sp e n t T u e sd a y w ith h er d a u g h te r , M rs. S h ir le y R ic h m o n d .

M r. and M rs. E . J . M orse o f W e s t C o n e sv ille a n d h e r d a u g h te r , M rs. I r v in g M ead e , o f R o x b u r y w ere g u e s ts a t J . M . M y e r s ’ on T u esd a y .

W O TICE TO CR ED ITO R S—B y order of Dow Beekman, Surrogate of Schoharie

county Notice is hereby given, according to law, to all persons having claims or de­mands against Mamie Lahey, late of thP town of Gilboa, Schoharie County, New York, deceased, that they are reauired t« exhibit the same, with the vouchers in sui> port thereof, to the subscriber, as Countv Treasurer of the County of Schoharie N v Administrator of the goods, chattel’s and credits of said deceased, at his place transacting business .as such County Trea« urer and Administrator, at his office in the Farmers and Merchants Bank, in Cobles-S K e m b e r i S r ” ° r *»« '* '. <lay

J b X A - a S f 11- N- Y" “ ls 7111 °>David Winnie as Treasurer of the Countv

of Schoharie, N. Y., Adm inistrator;etcWm. H. Golding, Attorney for Adminis­

trator, Cobleskill, N. Y. mln,s

A M istake Made By Many.W h en y o u su ffe r p a in s an d a c h e s b y d a y a n d s le e p d is tu r b in g b la d d er w e a k n e s s b y n ig h t , f e e l t ired , n e r v ­o u s a n d ru n d o w n , th e k id n e y s an d b la d d e r sh o u ld be resto r e d to h e a l­th y , s tr o n g an d r e g u la r a c tio n . I t is a m is ta k e to p o stp o n e tre a tm e n t. F o le y ’s K id n e y P i l l s p u t th e k id ­n e y s in so u n d , h e a lth y c o n d itio n and W 8 k f f 1 a c t iv e an d stro n g . L . A .

F O R S A L E —I o ffer m y f a im o f 74 acr^is in th e to w n o f C o n esv ille fo r s a le . B u ild in g s in a good s ta te o f rep a ir , la rg e lie n h o u se , p le n ty o f fr u it an d an a b u n d a n c e o f good w a te r . F o r te r m s , e tc ., a p p ly to M rs. M in n ie S ta ffo rd , C o n e sv ille . N. Y.

yo u r or

about his

CREAM SEPARATORIF YO U E X P E C T TO B U Y A

separator i t w ill be worth your w hile to find out w hat som e o f your neighbors who use De L avals th ink o f theirm achines.

A B O U T T H E B E S T T H IN G w e can sa y fo r th e D e Laval is th a t a il th e farm ers around here who u se i t are boosters.

IT D O ES GOOD W O RK FO R them and p leases them , andwe know it will please you.

!T H E R E A R E O V ER A MIL-1 lion and three-quarters satis-: fied De L aval users through­out th e world. More D e Laval Separators are in use

than a ll other m akes com­bined. I t isn ’t the cheapest,

, but the m ajority o f separator - users throughout the world

have found out from experi­ence th a t i t ’s .th e best and byfar the most economical cream separator to own.

COME IN A N D S E E U S T ffE - • first tim e you have a chance and talk it over.

W E W A N T TO T E L L YO Uabout an arrangem ent w e have whereby you- can m akea partia l paym ent a t tim e o f purchase and p ay th e balance on such liberal term s th a t the D e Laval w ill save its cost w hile you are pay ing for it.

H. C. MAKELYMANORKILL, NEW YORK

D R . R A L P H K I P P ,

D e n t is t .

O ffiice O ver H o a g la n d ’s S tore,

S ta m fo r d , N e w Y o r k .

T h e best eq u ip p ed a n d m o st m o d ­ern office in C e n tra l N e w Y o rk . A l l in s tr u m e n ts are th o r o u g h ly steril­ized a fte r u s in g . S p e c ia l a tte n tio n g iv e n to th e ca re o f c h ild r e n ’s te e th . A ll w ork f u l ly g u a r o n te ed .

NEW STORE

NEW GOODS.

I h ave o p en ed a s to re in - th e G ran ge b lo c k iu th e room a d ­jo in in g V a n L o a n ’s m e a t m a r k e t a n d h a v e s to c k e d it. w ith a fresh n e w liltte G fb c o n e s , th e lb e st th a t c a n be b o u g h t, to g e th e r w ith a c h o ic e l in e o f T ob a cco , C igars a n d C a n d y . I do n o t e x p e c t nor do I w a n t a ll th e b u s in e ss , b u t I e a r n e s t ly a sk f< r a sh a re o f y o u r p a tr o n a g e . I w, 11 s e l l y o u good s a t a sm a ll m a rg in o f p ro fit ’an d g u a r a n te e y o u sa t is fa c t io n w ith e v e r y p u r c h a se . G ive m e a c a ll an d spe w h a t j l h a v e to offer y o u

Seym our Case,G IL B O A , N E W Y O R K

FATHER TIMEw a s a p r o d u c t o f th e im a g in a t io n o f th e G reek s or R o m a n s or so m e o th ­er a n c ie n t p e o p le . H is s to c k in trad e c o n s is te d o f an h o u r g la s s and a s c y th e . H e w a s su p p o se d to s y m ­b o liz e th e p a s s a g e o f t im e .

The present day Father Time is a product of the Elgin Watch Fac­tory. It is not a symbol but a.cer-, tainty. It’s a fine watch -for any th ah and, is used by many railroad mhn. 21 jewels, fully adjusted. In 25 year case.Hunting Model Open Face Model

$35 00 $32 00O th er E ig in s $100 00 to $5 50

F V S . C L A P P E R ,

Watchmaker and Jeweler

Brown’s Furniture Store, Gilboa

F01EY KIDNEY PIUSFOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADDER

FOLEY CMHARHC TABLETSKeen Stomach Sweet -liver Active -Bowels Regular

The Ulster & Delaware Railroadw il l run s p e c ia l e x c u r s io n tr a in s a n d s e l l t ic k e ts a t

r e d u c e d fa r e s a c c o u n t o f

F I R E M E N ’ S C O N V E N T I O Nat

Kingston, Thursday, June 17,1915F o r t im e of tr a in s an d fa re s , se e p o ster s or c a ll on n e a r e st

s ta t io n a g e n t.

V A N L O A N ’ S M A R K E T C a s h P r i c e s F o r S a t u r d a y

S / l i o n a n d P o r t e r h o u s e s t e a k

R o u n d s t e a k

G o o d B e e f R o a s t

S t e w e d B e e f

C o r n e d B e e f

P o r k s t e a k a n d P o r k l o i n V •

P o r k s a u s a g e

S a l t p o r k

H a n j s , s l i c e d , 1 8 c , w h o l e

B o i l e d p r e s s e d h a m

F r a n k f u r t e r s a n d b o l o g n a

O r a n g e s a n d l e m o n s , d o z e n

B a n a n n a s , p e r d o z e n

L a r d c o m p o u n d

22c18c1 6 c

12c12c1 6 c

16c12e1 7 c

2 8162 222c11

A T D A V I S & P A L M E R ’ SWHERE A DOLLAR BUYS THE MOST.

A R R I V I N G D A I L Y

N e w s h o e s f o r m e n , w o m e n a n d c h i l d r e n

Call in and look over the new Oxfords, Pumps, e t c . T h e y c e r t a i n l y a r e s u r e t o p l e a s e y o u .

D A V I S & P A L M E R .

Tailored ClothesI f y o u a r e i n n e e d o f a n e w s p r i n g o r s u m ­

m e r s u i t c o m e i n a n d l o o k o v e r o u r s a m p l e s .

W e w i l l g i v e s p e c i a l p r i c e s r u b b e r g o o d s ,

g e n t ’ s d r e s s a n d w o r k s h i r t s , g e n t ’s s h o e s

a n d c a p s , l a d i e s ’ a n d g e n t ’ s u n d e r w e a r .

G e n u i n e O l d E n g l i s h p r i z e s g i v e n w i t h b a k ­

i n g p o w d e r . C o d , M a c k r e l a n d S a l m o n

T r o u t b y t h e p d u n d o r k i t , T r y o u r c o f f e e

i f y o u e n j o y a c u p t h a t w i l l s a t i s f y y o u

£ •

P a u l S t r y k e r

TH E QUALITY STOREJ u s t rece iv ed a co m p lete line^of L ad ies P u m p s an d O xfords.

All the latest models.

OOUGXuAS SHOES ..We have a cbmplete, line of Men’s Douglas Shoes and Oxfords. When you want Style, Comfort and above all Service, Buy the Douglas. They have all three of these much looked for qualities.

EOR TH E LADIESWe have a very nice assortment of Ladies’House Dresses and Summer Underwear which we would be pleased to show you. „ Also Ladies White skirts and a few fine Crepe and Muslin Nightdresses.W h e n e v e r y o u w an t L a d ie s ’ or G en tle m e n ’s S ilk h o se com e to a s w e a lw a y s try to h a v e th em in s to ck . C om e in and a sk to se e our^D aintie, W in d so r an d M ig n o n ette C repes, a lso our P la ses D a v o n sh ir e C loth S u it in g s , P erca le s , etc.

A F E W R E M I N D E R S}

M en ’s up to th e m in u te S traw an d fC ru sh lh ats, M en ’s S ilk h a lf h o se , G roceries of Q u ality , S u n sh in e B isc u its , S a ltin e s , P ilo tin es , T a k h o m a s, C heeseJW afers, e tc . F a n c y H er k im er c o u n ty ch e e se , W in d so r and W y ck o ff’s S p e c ia l C offee, G arden S eed s both in b u lk and p ack age .

L. A. WYCKOFF

A Few Specialties Kept in Stock By A. T. H argest, D ruggist, rand Qor«eM ercks C h em ica ls, M ultord’s P h a r m a c eu tica ls , P arke D avis & Com­

pany Drugs, D an ie ls V eterinary S u p p lies, C olgate’s T o ile t A rtic les

Schrafft’s C h ocolates, S ta tion ery C igars.

The B est G oods O btainable a t th e C h eap est R ates. Come nnd S e e

Cream SeparatorsI h a v e o n d i s p l a y a n d s a l e i n m y s t o r e a n

i m p r o v e d U n i t e d s t a t e s c r e a m s e p a r a t o r t h a t

w i l l h a n d l e t h e m i l k f r o m a n y d a i r y i n a s a t ­

i s f a c t o r y m a n n e r . I f y o u a r e i n t h e m a r k e t

f o r a s e p a r a t o r c a l l a n d l o o k t h i s o n e o v e r

a n d g e t o u r p r i c e

CHARLES A. CLARK.