{ title: 'The freeman's journal. (Cooperstown, Otsego County, N.Y.) 1819-1922, January 04, 1922, Page 8, Image 8', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1922-01-04/ed-1/seq-8/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1922-01-04/ed-1/seq-8.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1922-01-04/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031222/1922-01-04/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: New York State Historical Association
! t l l r i*i{- p B '.' p a g e M O W T H E P 'R B E M A M ’ S J i U B N A X Publlahei t>y T H E : p B B B M A S r ’ S J O E i a a N A E f O M P A S T Y ( I m o 6 n » » r * t e | ) ' Pu:1)Uoatl6ti,.’B(Sit6r!al- and^ Business 6 # o l s 88-40 Pioneer St.. Goopo.EStoarn, N; J, '(’Pfaone 894;) ... ’. ir„ Secrettary; . 1 ' i m JO U R N A L W e d tun taa wry d s y , J 4 , 1 9 2 2 with Mps.‘ Geo; HP, .Carley-, President; P. C. Carpenter. :i resident: Hai;ry H. Willsi eore Eowan T 0 . Spraltec, Itered a t tire j pscription Bai Postoffloe Copy for advertii News items inay be te The Journal ;is nt ‘ lUerao- oripoeticaj _ ____ Cooperstown, Ui; T„ s $2.00 per year, in advance. j sliould readli' the. pn-blicatlpH ings/ ate., whtfn a accompany each voluntary contribution, iltord.' Tidings absorbed in 1920; the olH.ee up retarn:'of imsolloited naani stajoped and; addi:es3ed c : | t x Mdnda:^s. ly a t 4'3P. in-,, scripts,! CULLEN Leo Gorhov spent i9atui*d : Scotty sister of Peark. A. Zoller, wRo has bee ; , s e r i 4 l y . f t f o r m a n y ^ ^ ^ I few mo] o f V c S e ia ' l lt a S ^ i“ : weed’s Yaca|r\ ...; “ r a r r i i s s S£SS-3S-='e spent GhristinAs Day in Dtica. alt- ' ■ Presideiit Harding celeas.ed the no- .prious rious radicai - leader, Eugeiie. V. Debs, from the Atlanta Eederal prisr i-n “experidjent Deb's, has •mecl very niiicli 'is' eviefejiGed by' the Rand iSchool in ' © f t s R W TRJJIE fo r m rn t Harding i t radical - leadt ed, that the action iff his messaj sehlh-this teleg 'Jferre Haute, Indiana: “The Eand Sehoc persecuted as rnyse'ja anu otnt have been perseGuted for telh and teaching the truth. The ; tempt to ruin it financially by Lusk and other political tools of capitalism -will not be any more .successful than was the attempt to suppress my Yoice by placing me in the prison at Atlanta. in ' psychology.” That ssage T;h:o New. York, where a bust of Debs was unveiled oil New Year's Eve. Debs fi'seiiLtbis telegram from his home in te, Indiana: - ^ , me in the prison a1 !•. Every one who low 1 . should rally to the suppx ,1 the Eand School, Courage, Com- ■'yr rades, on with the fight. 'We liberty iport of “The most that the capitalist class wi<-_ „ control of the education of th.e _ working idass-. - History teaches us that in all 'ages the truthtel- lers of the world have stopd the brunt o f the persecutions of the master class. Control of the thoughts of the masses spells slavery for the workers. Knowl edge is po-wer. May the Eand School flourish to spread knowl edge to an over-increasing num ber of the people, and from the bottom of my h e a rth wish the school ’the most useful year in 1922 that it has ever had.” iei's, adequ- ate a!i(l- for veterans, reducfcio.n of tax-- es to C-onipensate for tlie ditioiis” now obtainiHg and a rem?- edy for the situation resalting from the .flood o f tax-^exempt, securities were, among the issues outlined by the now ehairnaan for the Dernocratie.' “DenQ!OcratS”hare the loyal and-con sistent, frien-ds of the ex-seivice men.” he declared. Turning: to tiie, farmers’ condition, he- added' that ‘kver- so'-, licitons of has welfare, the Dennocratic Pai’ty, -when in pOwer, did m o re to ad vance the interest of the farm er than' had been dbne an all the previous his tory of the Nation,'and had planned to do much morej ‘if it had remained “Urgent and deserved r-^lief as to farm eontrp.],” he continued, ''‘[better ■and clieapei’ warehousing and market ing fadlities—these an^ like measur es of aid should have been given him to avoid and relieve his present un- indo, Florida',. wer« here a t Christmas tim,e i friends'. j^They report a very *'*^lex Imito^n k spen-ding some time with his. daughter,' Mrs. Ernest Wright, mear iSpringfield Center. tended thi last week. Edward Snyder is suffering from a severe cold. Max Gorney has been doing plas- terijig- for a family up above Richfield parrile^ dkll-ess. “The burden of .oulil he adjuste Edward Gorney returned to his school duties in the Richfield. Springs High Echool Tuesday after a vacation of several weeks. Charles Bloomfield 'waS a caller in toW-h one day during- his school vaca- The Christinas exercises held'dn fie school house Friday evening • attended frier ' !man’-s*^ Jourhdl,^ Go o ^ ^ to w n, N. -y. 'twt'> la ,11-eeci, bfJuSuciass hotel aooom- p s . a s i s | | : fvirANTED—At once farms. Alter a suo- W .oessful season and belngi nearly sold out,. T hAvo many calls for good .farms with .,tt)clc and tools on. itlso buyers that will buy oh. Hall of milk cheolts. Also huyers that have from -SBOO up to ?160Q t^ pay iS’ V f . o S * paiblic debt as not to be p a S ? B v e S a uniform pol evil of local ti )uld be urged to ---- _ . policy with thte growing ;al ta x exempt securities.” ;ults of the last National “\-P ifif A t ot »ho> sale nbuse, falsehood and detractior long to dim the glory of the eight -\'ars' unpa*'ulled achieveinent of the T-'lin' \nomriox'atic H i t ! . (H'KNS L-I-'ICHT DEMOCR--VT.S I with II Tceo-i'd of undying fame Declaring that the time has corae'v'ith cheerful hope for the future jhen “patriotic citizens and Demo-| __ leaci o soomii crats should indulge in plain talkinj when “patriotic citizens and Demo- SI 1,10 Midnl^h. pcr-liiiman onl,« ;i! with fliig unlarn- ’ ^ Hi.) «r pamdiso” W - r F Judge Cordell Hull, Chairman of the Hull said, \^ovei 7 renctioiiary Ropuh- Democratic National Committee, in lican leader would be in the custody Ms fi^rst public address since electiou;°f..«'j,; farmier-^now to that position reviewed the Repub-Leads tho account of his industrial lican Administration since March,'ruin by the light o f his biurning corn. 1921, and contrasted this with th e ; Millions of laborers are Ereqnenting \m p av.M .,1 .cUeyoments” of th S l l S f Denioerat-s in the previous eight ^'^The .Jpolfii slavery. Business has^discovered t it was eracified on tEie m-oss of Hull and attended by paity ,U\J .i, ihe h r l.v l twGic m om hs” and .-in-t'.mo ,,f hi« snt.-r, Mr^:. Arthur H.-ir- ^ The address was'delivered at\a din-.P° ner'given ‘•k..— e x . . . ■« --------- I Bxp'*nf’vc Chairm.-i;-. Hull and attended by paityd-'H .i, t l.vl twc.-i\c m leaders from evei 7 part of Tennessee. vertical slfiinp ~Tt was aceepFeirgendralfv as the open- ’ the Co SALT SPRINGVILLE E, p . \Ward of Cooperstown called at William Harvoy\^ one day^ last t t e ' :hool.onened n,-am Tuesday after hoUday vacation rinntl Tolopbono Coopcrsmtvn 4I2F3 I O.St—.H nvo tloUfir bin. nearly now. In tlw Viriariv rtf Uw Postofflrp tUirlnc tho hol- iiltiv w-.'rtk UMvar-l offrtrPil. Wrs.^ ill prices in ing of the Congressional pre-eli campaign. The. new Chairman went!low into the public questions which he'Mai IN FILMLAND Thursday -and Friday, January 5th. pd 6th, Vfm. De Mille’s production Midsummer Madiness” adapted fromi he novel “.His Friend and His Wife\ by Cosmo Hamilton -with Loih Wilson, , Lilia Lee, Ja'cfc Holt and Conrad Nagel. A moment of midsummer madness,--- - fluttering --^reckless — and then. 'When the last stirring scene ended you’ll kno-w far more of model love and marriage. You will also see a laughter special, Harold Lloyd in “No-w or Never.” Human, .wholesome, hilarious Harold Lloyd in a choice, clever comedy of laughter, tears, fears ars~ presented the fountain pen. Pop-con tiandy was passed to the Emma Hinds is visiting her brother, Clias. Sprague, a t Schuyler Alias. Carol 'WaiiHorn spe^nt the past :eek a t her grandparents in Tlerki-, ind cheers.'*'*^ .muBiiici , ivdia, leius yjj., iyrs_ Frank ^umif returned Saturday,.-January 7th, Wallace Monday from a several idmys’ stay at Love Special,'' adapted Ayres, Theodore Roberts-, Julia Faye, Clarence Burton,, and Sylvia Ashton. action fro the- scenes- are , the picture ex odor of cypress id snow-line blossoms. ' Monday and Tuesday, January 9th and 10th Rupert Hughes’ “Dangerous Curve Ahead,” -with Helene Chadwick and Richard Dix. This is Gold-wynk latest special-' Poweifful in i t ’s very Iplicity, it depicts with •delicious: and natural pathos the -wind- the familiar joys, life. ity. 11th, Wanda L’he Snob,” adapted from story hy 'WiHiam J. Neidig. Have your sides insured before y o u see this comedy drama. Noti( - — ■ - 7 'an<i every day there al inee will-run as usual at dance a t the G r a n ^ Hall Fri day Eve. -was weU atteniied and all report an enjoyable time, Prank Wiltse and son, Theron,- spent New. Year’s at tliie.honte of Howard 'Wiltste. Mr. and. Mrs. Hem-y. Chapin ai ’ daughter, Hazel, were Rew Teal -guests at Claudi d e h L r that ah: accident Or are ears coming back grgdually.\^LeMgh Bu-- A paper sack is a handy receptacle for egg shells, and trimmings from' vegetables while one is prepaWng a meal, or- baking. I t -will save you “The Parmer’s Worst Enemy— Rats. The Farmerts^Best Friend— house. N® vot fails. Used about $S.OO .y,. H. L. jiRAZEE, r^egt- I was ren sents fron baHs_ and many visitors Thei-e were no' cluu-ch services Sun day. Our minister failed to put in appearance. No douSt his Poi-d got itailed in a snow bank. ■ Momds Hufnail is still at the Am- .sterdam hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Harvey and Clarence Ripple spent a few 'days last -iweek k t the honne of their aunt. Miss Nellie Ripple, at Lyker’s CToi'- Wellers last ,113. ---------- enough snow no-w for fairly obd sleighing. The Red and Blue Contest is ended. The Blues winning; now for that tor which the presents from ^ ‘ , were distributed, The schol-| are having pretty jcold weather ented the teacher -ivith a fine the present time; 19 degrees belo-w • - * ?ero -Monday morning- * Mr, and -Mrs. Arthur Harvey cpllec on Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ripple Mon- The scTcial at H Thursday night netted $R There is enough snow nov ____ Rev __ Claude Ohapin’s a t Ely 1 Nrs. John KonfeOfske were ;d at tea at Howard Wil- sd .at Ply Creek. EXETER Philip !D. Allen i-eturried to Al- Sunday^^to |;o resttin'e his studies id^y resttin'e his sjudi . „ . . days -with her pi -its,M r. and Mrs- Sanford Smith.* Seliool reopened Tuesday after a ireek's -vacation. Mi'S. Arietta Highie, wlio has. heei taying some time a t .Cnrl Wing’s peat a few dt There was a surprise party held at the home of Mr. a'Hd Airs. Joseph Flints Saturday night ih honor of May Eva Wiles’ birthday. She was pl'esemted with a ring. Airs- Ira S'hermau is at the home of hei- mother. Airs. Jacob Edick. R. _H. Smitdi has started cutting ice on his -dain. There will be n,o Ladies Aid naeet- ing this month. Irs-. Lloyd Farquharson and daugh- Blanche, called bn Airs. Prank ’ ’ ': Fridt HENDERSON Hall takes. 1 the Doctor Sv J ohn and Ray mas a t their her I Mrs. R. F ■ nr a farm dong the lake, atnam’s place 'ift farm. lalman spent Christ- indei-went an operation at the' Her inner- hospital last Saturday and ii kinner- hospital last Saturday and is doing as .well as can be expected. It is hoped he will fully recover. Clayton Casler of the County Horne, sp-ent a few days* last week with hfs brother, Frank, and family. Mr. and .Mrs. Leo Higby of Exeter, Ml-, and Mrs. Miltoii Aney of Rich field Springs, spent Christmas with P. Loucks and family. Mr. and Mrs. Roilin Zoller of Deck, Mr. lyid Mfs.. C. P, Miller and grand son .of; New Hartford and Mrs. G. Davis of Mohawk wei-e Christmas- guestS of 0. Shoemaker and family. Eobei-t, are spending some time wiflv her^|arents, Mr. and Mrs. Cola Roof,. The Christmas tree and exercises held a t the, school-building las^ Fri day evening was a success in \6very Way. We feel very thankful to our teacher. Miss Acker -a,nd her pupils', fi^th^plcasant^ftm e they gave ■qs. H. '-Loi •and P.. ( new team purchase parties-. MSGELLWOUS WANTS >! n e ' c e n t a . w ord — inson, RiolU--^- y mlUd le most of thD nay. Ezra Fay, Sclnwlor TED—To rent or buy. lestaurant In ^\'T Flr=t rlasi fnrntonofl nuarr- -.2 Hii-ionflionM.'i ,\v. n i. •PS,' p o R RFNT ' « I'.h •, A ssnras\ f'T aurtmioOui s pO K SAr,15—Farm 201 riFRROTGH'S ADDING 'jrAClITNYS—Will .TourfmL . The Peacock Tea Room Tea Room and j Parlor Avail- ' able for Parties’ and S^o c i a I ' Gatherings by Special Reser- . Afternoon Tea, Luncheon Served 2:30 to 5:30 o’clock. French Pastry. Telephoire 207 JANUARY CUMR/meU ' i m E E T i N m ANEW When 1922 picks out the best it has to offer you, for us, it will be that we are again setting our store in order for another year of still better satisfaction based on the ' 'best service we are capable of at the least prices to cover a fair, profit. . , And in clearing our shelves we have even thrown prof- >^it out Of the prices we are asking^a our JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE which will open n Wednesday, January 4th ,+ and Continue for Ten Days Closing Saturday, January 14 t h Watch for Bill of Prices Which Will Be In Your Hands About SATURDAY, DECEMBERSst 1 ELLSWORTH & SILL F in e J o b P r i n t i n g Printed Right and On Time The Freeman’s Journal Co. 38-40 Pioneer St. Cooperstown, N. Y. 1 r 111 11 iM-H-i-H-i 11 1 1 1 1 11 fu i I i 1 1 1 1 1 III n 111 III I i I 111 1 iii-i mm h jii n i 11 in m The New Fenimore ^ ___ - - . .>4: UEAD COLDS :|\ I Melt vieks in a spo ahd inhale the medic ed vapors. Apply fre- - • quently up the nostrils. , Use fteely before going ^ Vicks W V apo R ub Ooif ij'm m o n jah Visdtcmlg S i ’s a S acred thin^ to be the guardian o f a famdj/ If your investments are sound and your future secured by thrift and foresight you dofl’t have to spend sleepless nights. Your banker should be your confidential adviser. It is his business to know about se curities and investments. ^ Conference invited without obligation. Consult y o u r banker before making the Investment COMPOUND INTEREST DEPARTMENT ' „ , before the. 16th of any month draw 4 per cent interest from the 1st of that month compounded quarter- , Send for booklet of information-on “Banking by Mail” • The Second National Bank COOPERSTOP, N. t Capital, $150,000.00 Charlea T. Brewer^ Ppesidenit Fried L. F. W. SpVaker, Cashier Lynn Resourdes $2,900,(K)0,PO • ' «nd Tfust OfHper Har^ H. Vyillaey, Asst. Cashier Chas. T. Brewer Edw. S. Birockham OIRBCTORB' Quaif, Vice-President T. Pier, Asst. CMhidr Owen-Q. dlark, Teller 4* ^‘^^'^^^’^'‘‘f*’’^’*'^****’^***''***’**^**''*^'**^**^^^^ i ll!11IIi 1 I HI111IIII1111111.|»i11IIIII I i r I 1 I n i i | 1 n I I I I ,■ S . . - A