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u25a0* s lA WEEKLY JOURNAL OF LOCAL EVENTS ' i. ~?:?\u25a0* 1J? ijl?\u25a0- v Vol. XV. No. 46. l TM E INQUIRER, N. Y.. WEDNESDAY, NO ifEMBER 15, 1916 s: ' PRICE FIVE CENTS. FIRST MEETING

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Page 1: u25a0* s lA WEEKLY JOURNAL OF LOCAL EVENTS ' i. ~?:?\u25a0* 1J? ijl?\u25a0- v Vol. XV. No. 46. l TM E INQUIRER, N. Y.. WEDNESDAY, NO ifEMBER 15, 1916 s: ' PRICE FIVE CENTS. FIRST MEETING

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A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF LOCAL EVENTS '.i ~ ?:?\u25a0* 1 -? ?-J? ijl?\u25a0-

v Vol. XV. No. 46. l T M E INQUIRER, N. Y.. . WEDNESDAY, NO ifEMBER 15, 1916s : ' PRICE FIVE CENTS.

FIRST MEETING OF PARENTTEACHER ASSOCIATION

i, r ;The first meeting of [the year )f die.

Par.ent-T Association was heldlast Wednesday afternoon at- the HighSchool. Mr. L. W. Van Schaick, prin-

ts cipal of the Scarsdaie Schools, sp< ke onschool problems, greatly -interesti ig hisauditors. The January meeting >f the

. Association 3s already being pannedfor, and a|t attractiveijirbgram is be-ing arranged. It is intended to hojd thismeeting ki the evening invite notonly 'the mothers, but the fath :rs ofthe school children. | ~v: i

Principal Van Schaick told . of theaims of the school/regarding the child-ren. These aims extend beyond iimplybook-training, toward§_their jbette \u25a0 con-dition physically and morally. He: gavestatistics, too, showing the ?. steadygrowth of the' school, * which has been'remarkable. The lower "sthdol 4 nowfilled, each class its full < nrolj-ment. He -mentioned the new pi ysical

\u25a0 traming the , Stalji f H.w.Setting up drills must be taken ii i' eachclass fqr 2 minutes before every reci-tation. - ' I*.*- '

Mrs. Charles P. Bogart spoke brief-ly. She declared the wish of th i As-

' sociation .to co-operate with re jewedenergy vift the in the W»fkfor/the children, in tfhe new ichoolyear. " > ;

The reports of committee* wei e re-ceived. Th* flower and library com-mittees have been the only active com-mittees -this year, sinee the e'pidemiccurtailed many activities. Many 'Sow-ers have been" sent into New York

? to the National Flower and Frtfit jfcitld.Books have been repaired and uthers ,

| missing, have been repriced. The talks' !\u25a0 with children during the sdtamei, a»d j

f the children's gardens tad to-be ibatl- iJ doned- ? ? ? i

CURRENT EVENTS CLASS: \u25a0: - I

The Friday Morning Current flvenjsClass «ili meat Friday,at 10:30'a. "tri,, at Heathcote Hall/ TlteGhfb is fortunate in having secured asthe speaker for this meeting Bt itriceForbes-Robertson Hale, who has chos-en for her subject; "What is F :min-:ism." Mrs. Hale, the author of "rtfhatWomen Want"?considered by raanythe best took on feminism ?is a fetn-

Kffnist of the front rank, and her Pointpof view is one that commends its toI the great majority of men and| w imen.

Quest tickets?one dollar?ma: feeobtained the morning of the lecti re at

Heathc&e Hall or ff4® Hrs. Mex-andtr Crane, Scarsdale.,.. ./ T

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GETTING READY FORCHRISTMAS

Red Cross Seals (will spon make tfieirannual appearance. Nothing meansmore to the; life, Health and (happinessof the.community than the fight against*übeiculosis. Eighty per cent .of themoney secured from the sale! of sealsgoes direct ,to thej Scarsdaie NursingAsso:iation. By purchasing seals inScarsdaie- njfttead cf elsewhere you willprovide funds needed by- tHe Nurting ,Association, to qairy on this part ofits work. Vyiil ertry one remember thisand purchase as fiiany seals as possi-ble at one cent each. Thej aim"this yearis 5 "seals for each inhabitant. Wherethe seals inay hie secured will be an-noun:ed later. Tpe State Charities AidAssociation .has ii .sued the followingnotioi: .

j New. York, November 13th.-r-Twenty- 'five million littler crimson SantaClauses leave the shipping of theState Charities Aid Association today,t6 carry theiV*anmtal message of healtha!nd hope to the rertiotest corners ofNew York State. That they will bringteck in their Red Cross bags' l,S()bf j&00njtore pennies for ahti-tuberctflosis workthan last year,. is confidently predictedby the organizers of the 1910 Christ-lias Seal Campaigh.-

j The sale will tyegin on Novemberlsth. Buffalo has started a whirlwindcampaign with an order of j 4,500,000 <seals. Syracuse and Elmira are book- ]ek for 1,000,000 eaich; Albany is plan- intng to sell 800,090) and Troy has made 1requisition for half a million." The size ;oif these ordfers is indicative off the ex- itensive ugji that will be madp of jhe <sale-bv-mail; This jmethod of sale con- j?sjsts im sending 100 Red Cross Christ- imas Seals to prospective purchasers, 1with ja courteously phrased letter en- (closing an in which a dollarmay jbe remitted in payment for the jSfealsj tor in which the s«Sals may;be (returned, h,

. Lagt year New York State won first >place!in the national competitipn among |states for the higjiest per capita sale ofseals,; the ratio beifrg l.? seals !-per in- {habitant, four citie?, Rochester, Trt>y, 'rElmira and Ithaca were yrinflers in jtheir respective classes in the hatioaai ]inter-city jcompetition; and Buffalo, jCorning, BronxvHle, Lawrence and jGarden Ciry took second place-jin their jrespective classes, j N I

MEN'S CHAPTER MEETING{.The a?nn|ial meeting for the election

of officers of the Aden's Chapter of theChurch of St James the Less, will beheld i tomorrow at the church.Mr. A. Boniface is itsii:) \u25a0 - \u25a0

WESTCHESTER SUFFRAGISTSTO GO TO ALBANY

i* .., ' ins About fifty Westchester women willss SP to the Annual Suffrage Conventionst at AJbany next week. The officers ofie the ijtate Suffrage Party 'consider thisIs coyntjy one of the banner districts forig suffrage work and it claims some ofin the jrfiost brilliant suffrage leaders ofill the country. Thje names of five West-,g , suffragists appeal; on the officialr>f Jprogikm of the; Convention, Mrs. Ar-i£ thur JL. Livermore of Yonkers, head oii_ the Literature Committee of s the Nat-lr ional; Suffrage Association, is chairmanre oi thie Committee and Mrs.

C.. AJ Diurtlevy of jYonkers will be oneid. of the speakers on Organization andlg Citj I Canvassing. Mrs. Willard Wins-

low Of- Scarsdale, -chairman of the Fi-nance" Committee of jthe 9th District,

ta will (speak on Finances, Mrs. H. W.Ie Wilsjon of WhHte Plains, lately ap-y> pointjed. to the Educational Board ofrh the Association, will have3f Suffrage Schools as her fopic and Mrs.lg Qgd<p Mills Reid 4 of White Plains,X) wife; of the of the New Yorkk Tribune and daughter-in-law of Hon.:d Whifelaw Reid, Ambassador to -Eng-t- landj who is Treasurer of the State Suf-

frage Party, will give the-Treasurer's;r report. | . r 'td Mrs. Carl 06tjerheld of YOnkers, the)0 chairman pf this Suffrage District, isc- prevented by serious illness from at-i- tending the convention, the first ofle thes< suffrage convention? from whichre she has been absent in seven years,c- MrsJ Frank A. Vanderlip of Scarbor- 1ie ough i wife of the president of the Nat- ?»- iona City Bank and acting chairman of'|t- the ?th district, will take Mrs. Oster-s, held s plaice in. tie? deliberations of thei- | Convention.ir The Votes-forT,Women army is pre-e parihg for the final dfive beforp thee goes ta the Voters next No-

vember and at Wis convention allit will! be laid[for speeding up the cam-f wis-..

Ainong the de egates, alternates and!~ gueits. whd will start for Albany nextr > Tuesday are: Mrs. W. H. Ives, Mrs.n Leoj Baekeland, Mrs.: E. M. Mrs.

Mrs. H. A. Robinson,Mrs. Davis and Mjrs. Thomas

" LayHer of YonJc|rs; MrsT A- V. A. Mcr Hartg and Mrs. G. 0. Cannon of New

Rorihdle;MTss v\ngelica Doubleday andMiss Slade of Mamaropeck; Mrs. Au-

- gtksi Rosenberg and Mrs. J. L. Shilladya Of Mount Vernon; Mrs. William Bel-e knap ; Mrs. Ceotge Nay-e lor,[jr., Mrs. Herbert McCoy and Mrs.u W.H. H. McKellar of.Peekskill; Mrs.

Maitland Clriggs ; and' Mrs. Roiwell P.- Skeel,. Jr., of irfington;' * Mrs. James\ McNaught, Mrs. fQeorge Ely, Mrs. Ed-

ward Harden, Mrs. M. -L. Bacon; MissE. V. © lß*ren and Miss K. F. Wal-

. ker; of Tarrytown; Mrs: J. A. Canfield,'an<} Miss Elliot of Fleasantville;_ Mrs.Nin.a Biuere. Philipse Manor; Mrs.J. |A. Stijlman, poeantjco Hills; MissN'o;rman ißarnesby. Scarborough; Mrs.Henry Viltard attid Mrs. Joseph Walk- ;er. Dobbs Ferry;; Mrs.-; Harold Mack,Hawthorne; Mrs. F! Hi Bethell. Mrs. ?E. J. Hanford, Mrs. Thomas Burgess,Mrs. George Just, Mrs* W,. J. Henry,Mijs.. Alfred Van; Horn.land Mrs. /Wil-larid Winslow of Scarsdale; Mrs. H- W.Wilson MissjM. L. fkpssPlains; Mrs, W, L.S. jS<&irenkeisen (jsister of-ex-Coing^ess-man Benjamin I. Taylor) of Harrisofr;Miss Mat-tie E. Tharp of Bedford Hillsanfd "Mrs. John H. Watkins" of MountK&cO. '

This week's activities of the Scars-. dale Suffrage Club includes a suffrage

. meeting in (Mrs.; F._ H.; BetHelPs gar-age; for the; tranSajrtron |of geheral bus-irjes'sr of thei'Club | and alteration of theconstitution.! .j- \u25a0] ,SPOKE AT WHITE PLAINS

NURSING ASSN. MEETING

The bi-monthly meeting of the WhitePlains Nursing Association was held atthe rooms of th|e/Asso&ation at 53fcamilton avenue,/! White Plains, Wed-nesday afternoon at 3 o'clock. MissBeatrice Sands of Church lane, andNtns. Thomas F. Burgesp addressed then embers. t ...

' '? L '? \u25a0I: : -'. 1DRAWN FOR JURY DUTY

. .\u25a0. j '| Richard E. Forrest, George W.

Dobbs,. Bauf Mausolf, . Philip- Fasser,Leonard Schultz and Adolphus Wellshave, been drawn' fromj Scarsdale toserve, as trjal jurors during the No-

t v ember term of the iupreme court,part 2, which opened at White Plainscu November, 13 before Ju§ticeJ£s*HSgTJohn Appell, 'Jr.. and Arthtlif'bitewart.have been drawn for part 3 for thesame terra before Justice Piatt.

AT POLICE HEADQUARTERS?I\u25a0 . f jlohn Casey anjd John Rotinson were ind lying on the Post road, north of

1 , the sawmill Friday atM &vIS: by Captaii Benjamin | Ruggiero.

' They could not explain their presence' there with satisfaction tp tie Captain? of Police, and they were an auto

ride to the Town Hall. Theij he calledup Mr. Cowe of Heatheote Hall, who

: |,the day before had; stepped into Head-quarters about dusk with a- report oftwo suspicious characters tl|at he hadobserved in Fox Meadow, vhile walk- 'ing through that lonely seclion of the [Village. He came to the Hall at 'Captain Ruggfero'y request' ifriday, but 'could not identify the two ' men who 'were tried for vagrancy that 'morning by Judge Merfcer, ;ihd receiv* 1ed suspended sentences. j

That afternoon, at 4-35, tte Captain. also arrested E. Gluck for driving anauto at 35 miles- hour, judge Mer- j.cer decided the offense justified, a' $5 |fine, which was paid. 1 .'

'' j" Officer John Harrison is t pvv du- ti ty, oi vacation. *" ,??- tI i ' - f ?

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MITCHELL CAR TIPS OVERON POST ROAD IN FOG

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. 1Sefgeant Stephen Smith ivas patrol-

ling |iis beat onj the* Post road earlyM|bn<fay motning at 1 o'rlock whenhe cime upon a Mitchell car, topsidedc*HfV lying at the roadside. He took

i doWttVthe license,! 122-528, ? !*T. Y., and' looked for signs of an ac cent. Butthefe- weren't any; neither was thereany sign of chauffeur of ovner. Whenthey iboked UP the license a tjie TownHaU, it was found that -the owner wasJames W. Byron' of New City.When the police c^p*e-nrou: d in day-light %o have a look at the :ar, it wasgont The iqfcri aatic-n was tel-ephoncd in cjir l ad tijgped over,and (Kie "of the bccupa its caught be-neath it, though ;he wis not harmed.The auto was lifjted an l hi; crawledfrom |pser. Jt'.yjfs a night, andthe iMpfer had probably turned too f?ira«4 abrjiptly to the side to avoid§a auto/ thus destroy-e^th.e*equilibriutn, of th« tar.

INDEPENDENT VOTING7 i 1 1\u25a0;r The officers jpf the Scarsdale Suf-

frage organization believe to be worthyof note the independence exhibited bythe women of th 4 country irj voting in jthe first election ; at whiich any large _number of them had the opportunity

5 of voting for a President. The way theballoting went in 'Illinois and elsewhere -j j

. showed that the Women usedtheir own L. heads, and not those of their husbands, j j

. in; exercising the ifranchise.- | =. » Last week Mrsj F. HJ Bethell, pres- <. ident of the Scjarsdaler organization, ,i wrote a letter, off which! several hund-

red copies were made by members of: the club, and sent to the voters of theTown. It called (attention to the factthat no Scarsdalej women would serveat the polls this year.' Instead the let-ter asked the voters to keep in mindthe Suffrage amendment of 1917, antf *vote for it when jit is Submitted. Un- )til then, the letter said, the women| *here Will keep up their; stfong campaign' ?for that amendment, though it would *be quiet on. the sjurface.

SUFFRAGE CLUB MEETS?t ? T - V-' ' ? iThe Scarsdale j Suffrage Club met i

in Mrs. F. H. Beth-ell's garage. Minajr changes were madein the constitution, and several newsubcommittees appointed Mrl Wins-low, Mrs. Hanford and Mrs. Burgesswere made vlce-{jresidenjts, Mrs. Beth-ell retaining her ''leadership, "he workof the Club has jbeen more generallydistributed among; its rpe^nbers

The meeting of. the West SideBranch, which wfis ; *o haye teen heldnext. Tjuesday, the 20th, has b:en post-poned tP the weetc following, Tuesday,November 27th, oh account pf the con-t -ventiori to be held a't Albany on MonJ 1day. The West Side Branch meeting 'ivill be held at the home of Mrs. W. D.McQuire, Central avenue. . , ,

AUTO GETS BANGED UP

The delivery} auto of Miller andGrady, avenue, grocers, gotrather banged i|p Saturday oh Popham

. road, near Judge.David Welch's resi-dence, At leastj, it had . to be broughthome in sections.. In sonte manner thesteering jgear got peculiar, suddenlyat^LoJniuiNiMßl'l ''\u25a0jHWM'ITed' ovcl lu lull Ift V.IVJE Bof the road, where there is .a hard stonebank. The front wheels and. axles ca«edf the body o£ the truck ap« ttje front©f the car was badly battered. .

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VILLAGE TO ERECT SHELTERHOUSE FOR THE POLICE

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f I The Village Board met at the Townt Hall jast Friday, (thei* meeting havingbeen postponed fromj the Wednesday

; previous owing to the sudden, callingl out of town of President Bethell. Trus-

tee W tlson was unable! tp be present onI account of s'ickness. '

, The .annual report of thev North EndWatei District received and filed/

\u25a0 Two letters were received from George[ A. Hj rwood !of the School Board, one

of 'thj m relative to & series of pub-, lie lectures to beheld at the new HighScffoo during the coming winter, and! urging .the. support of the Village. The

lectun s promise to be most interesting,and ii formative, since it- is planned tohave 1 nen of note in their various pro-fessioi is make addresses touching uponthe si&jects in which they are experts.Mr. second letter offered

| varioifc suggestions regardting the pro-posed I-booster" ' station for the water-suppljl system, at Pojj>ham and Postf°adsiTrustee Orr, as- Police' Commit-tee, filed his; report. J3e advised thattwo aielter houses for the policemeinbe built before the winter comes, oneat thei junction of Heatheote and Postroads,l the other at the intersection ofGrceiJicres and Walworth avenues. Thesuggestion was favorably received, andthe bioths will be up a fewweekJ Mr. Orr, who « the Committeeon recommended that one lightbej placed on Fcrncliff road, ahd threeon Carman avenue. The usual weeklypayrols bf the Highway Departmentwere fO. K.'d, and when other billswere irt'dered paid,-requisitions author-ized, ajp4 some tax matters got-ten thrfeugh,with, the ineeting adjourn-<*-,f -i j

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SCARSDALE CLUB THINKING

ABOUT A BASKETBALL TEAM3 -

The fjScarsdale* Young Men's Club-is roee every Saturday evening atthe B|f>nx Parkway Engineers' build-ing jie -̂ the Post.Officfe. The formationof tbasketball team is a matter that

! ocettpi*' mucfe of their thought,, butpltms be hlocjced by the lackof a suitable place kii which to play.TChe Hfgh School auditorium would bejust room ta hold the games, butthe Ypjung Men would; want t$ chargeadmission in order to pay expenses, andthe Siate ruling «5 that no SLdmissionfee m£y be charged in the- public

by any organization outside theschool! unless the receipts are -for ed-ucational purposes. The activities of' acommi inity club, athletic or otherwise,are n< t looked upon as educational,'evidently, for permissiojn to play m thehigh school has beeff refused. But hope

I has n< t yet been abandoned, and! regard ing this, and other features ofclub-v ork are unddr consideration, andwill b [ fully announced! in a short time, i

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RED CROSS BALL

i\u25a0 \u25a0 1r L -t- ? lThe I'Red Cross Ball;, be held s

Friday November 17thj at "the Gedney 1Inarms Hotel. The proceeds to be used 3

i for th s general working fund ?of the;\u25a0 Scarst ale, i Ha.ftjidale land® Greenville e

Chapti r of the American Red Gross. -4

The patronesses are.: *-Mrs ? Francis Asjpitiwall, Mrs. s

JamesH Briggs, Mrs. James Buttolph, :

Mrs. jbhn Carstt nsen, Mrs. RutledgeDavis]: Mrs. Lewjis Fisft, Mrs. William PGalloyihur, Mrs. Ernest Hanford, Mrs. t

Rolling Kirby, -Mrs John Muhlfield,Mrs. Srank Naitne, M£s. Albert Page, vMrs. Reynolds, W[rs. Philip Rus- bsell, Davi«s Tai^ter,- Mrs.- Rob-erts Walker. j /_' s

The f Committed in Charge compris-ed; V | iMrs]." Frank Ajres, Mi's. ' FrederickColling Miss Ajj.ne Fisjljj, Mrs. ThomajsFisher| Mrs. George Huntington. Mrs.Norman .Peck, Sirs. Herbert Shpnk,chairmfen. * ' »d

Tickets at 'two dollars each itiay be yobt&ined from any of the patronesses nor ait the Gedney Farms Hotel. t.

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HARTSDALE AVENUE REPAIRED\u25a0 \u25a0 i

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Hartsdale av«iue, near the Harts-dafe' station, has at last been repaired.The' original intention !of the Green-burgh thijfhway department was to usecrusheH stone, trii.p rock and asphalt inthis Wrk., But ithe desired materialsdid best had to be

eaB6ffe>fith what was What was- on ha|id, was coal oil So

the twjb were spread'a'rid thaitemporary provision for the comfort ,

arid other tr'afficsters.I ;i -'r .

SECOND TRAGEDYSTIRS VILLAGE

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y1 - Muriel Sloatman, 10 Years, Killed,s By Aofo at hartsdale. Weekn After Greeavtiie Fatality. Busyd Corner Unguarded.i.V ?

e Running with child-like suddennesse out into Central avenue at the corner

of Hartsdale .avenue, Hartsdale, justh when the unguarded square was most «

j crowded with Sunday afternoon autoe traffip, Muriel Sloatman, ten years old,g, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G B. Sloat--0 man, was struck by an auto coming-

east on Central avenue,, driven by Ar- _

n thur H. Kirkpatrick of 9090 Woody-5. crest avenue, Highbridge, N. Y. Theti[ impact with" the fender threw her to_ the pavement, unconscious, with her-. skull fractured and all the ribs of hert right side broken, as \he later ex-_ agination showed.t The fatality occurred at about 4:15.ti The girl was with two others, twins,e ab the side of Central avenue, on thet embankment. The three started to crossf the street *he*e was no police-e man to regulate traffic, though one was1 kept there last year. Someone saw thei danger the three little girls were run-e nifig into, and called out. The twot twins stopped, but Muriel kept ahead,» An auto had just passed, westSbund. Shef stepped from behind h, in front of thet Kirkpatrick auto, coming in the oggo--5 site direction. An instant later her un-. coQsciotis body was lying at the road-

. side ; . -A*

M*.. Kirkpatrick stopped his car with-|in 30 feet, some witnesses say, .though; others say i& was twice that length. He[went to her immediately. Dr. W. C. Til-r den was called from his residence neatby, examined her, pronouncing hercondition hopeless. She' was lifted into

>' the car and carried to her home on1 Columbia avenue at once.- Her fa-

\u25a0 ther, in"New York, was sent for; and1 Dr. Tilden sent Nicholas Meyers of

Hartsdale to Deputy Sheriff ToilSf#-?f end's residence to take Mr. Kirkpjntffefc

: into custody. The girl had died by the? titae the sheriff, who Jives but » short? distance away, arrived. He put lir.

[ Kirkpatrick under' arrest. He was pfcic-~

: ed in $3,000 bail by Coroner Ehg|e ofI Yonkers. Bail was furnished by his

1 wife, who, with a woman friend, was: witfy him in the auto..

: V Mr. Kirkpatrick was completelyoroken up by the tragedy, According to

1 jvitnesses. He stayed by the girl for? two or three hours,, and then absolute-

ly refused to go near his car again, de-: daring he would < never drive an auto

: again in his life. Hej would not evendrive it to his home, and it wasnecessary to telephone back to NewYork to get a man to come out and : P ?drive the two women home One reportstated that only several mbnths agoa small daughter of his was killedwhile in the street, by an auto.

; The inquest will be held Wednesday,November 29. It isi uncertain! the exactspeed; at which Mr. Kirkpatrick wastraveling. He says it was at 14420 Snlesa hour. Witnesses say it was 35 rhrles.Considerable comment has been arous-ed by the lack of proper police regula-tion of traffic at this busy cornar on'

Sunday afternoons. There is a constantstream of fast moving autos in both

. directions at this junction, which is? "dangerous. J Last year there was somepolice! protection afforded; but none-this 3jear. It'is said that if an officerhad been present Sunday, the accidentwould not have happened. Oljly a weekbefore Edward Schnuck, 9 years old. otGreetjville, was killed in front of thjschool there,-by an auto.

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ON DUTY AT THE POLLS

On! Election "Day the suffragists inthe 16th election district of Greenburghhad representatives at the polls all day.

? distributing suffrage literature to thevoters. When the polls closed the wo-men on duty were invited by the elec-tion hoard to see the votes counted Theworriea gladly availed themselves ifthe oj tportunity to add this bit of know-ledge to their political education. | '

SMALL BRUSH FIRES ENGAGEATTENTION OF FIREMEN

The late season of fine weather wasencouraging to fires here and there inthe brush about the Village. Qtee ofthem started on Saturday at 3:25Greenacres avenue. It was put out inshort order, as was a fire in the woodsalong Old Mamaroneck road, near the

».residence of Mr. A. R. Loveridge oaRoad. Engine No. 2 responded.

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DOLLARLOOKS

BIG ito some of us these days. T1 e dollari you put.into this season's White's 1Shoes keeps on looking bigg' r and bigger, because of what you get? j

j Satisfaction PLUS-is a yeaT ound feature of ours. ,NEW FALL STYLES re isonably priced are ready. ]

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WHITE'S SHOES ;White Plains, N. Y.

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\u25a0 1v 1 - \u25a0' ??H* ??? irH 1'Ks f ai .' ;

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Scarsdale Hardware Company -

GENERA. HARDWARESCARSDALE. AVE. Telephone 382 j j .

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< :|-J :>-? H a- \u25a0 ? -}. % ? \u25a0.; ? . i!j. ; j

JOSEPH G. WyMANCertified Public 4|count^nt. { j

1 1 - '--'i-V: ?? '?» ?< ii . <60 Wall Street, New p

'. j V - ?? \ IJ RESipj» CE AT SCARSD/ JJE <' ' 1 >" \u25a0 I- \u25a0 \u25a0ij I'lUfU 'l'i ' - £

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