{ title: 'The Cherry Valley gazette. volume (Cherry Valley, N.Y.) 1871-19??, July 23, 1925, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn85026235/1925-07-23/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85026235/1925-07-23/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85026235/1925-07-23/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85026235/1925-07-23/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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,'““Unirted States Department of Com- here of press at Japan and | Th Molal. July crop report for, the 'State Of, forecasts, produc- tion -<ghent and 28,483,000~buehels of spring wheat. ° - Net incothe. of the Maftland Oil Com- pany &nd subsidiaries for the, six months ended, June, 80. as' di to 88270371 The Haily averagegroduction -ot|. crude 'ofl: in »California. In! Jane was 643, i988 (barrels, 'according to 'the American Petroleum Institute. It watt 607,109 barrels -In May. .° Employment decreased 1.1 per cent in manuf ring industries of 'the United Stites in June 'as compared J udth: May, according, to reports to the Department of Labor. , Faifly 'active current business,. with an 'optinilatic outlook for fall, is Indi- ceted in the leading weekly trade re- tstCorporatlon is tunning 100% int ahead .of 1924 It] was an-. - | orders ~recélved by the 'Western | \Hlectrie Company for the first six - months: of 1925 amounted to $147, \870 - The American. 'people are now buy», . Mng four times as much life Insurance . ms they“ did ten years ago, the Asso- ¢warded to the epor In figures 17 « Vermont and a Civil War veteran, \| qitftes. |_ >. t 10,003,000 \bushels of winter f personal pro : tax schedules, it 'was revéale when tax lists for 1925 \were made public by the county assessor. Busineas dn general- throughout the Middle West is moving steadily. for- ward. C , Guizon Borglum proposes to carve . - ederate memorial 'on; 1,800- toot cliff in North ' Carolina. : . Josleh Grout, formen- Governor of died at his home. at Newport recently a COL, was 'killed: when ile crashed «Into a trolley in New York, [ zone play. Harvey .B. Snedanz buls 'by. defeating wiliam 'and A. L. Wigner, of Vincent (Pepper) 'Martih, one of 'best the contenders T r the \Teather 'and (junior lightweight boxing 'erbwns,-dled recently=of pneu\ monts in St~Jolin's Hospitil, 110118\ Island City ‘ . The' determination of Miss Cecit Leltch. second best golfer in. Gréat. Britain, to.comipste in the women's national champlonships at St. Loils in. September will lend an interaction al touch to the tournament. Boxing in New Jersey returned the state r net profit of $90,44437 duri | the fiscal year ended. June 30.\ Walter Johnson, the Washington. Benators' great pitcher, bas staked out an sight and one-halt dere claim near Battery Park, Md.. where he in- taznds raising chickens. - £ Jack Kearns; manager for Jack Dempsey, predicted that. if Harry 'wWills ever climbs faoto the ring with the champion the big negro fighter will be knocked out in two rounds.. The Califorgla: Athletic Commission has decided to amend the Margiils of Queensherry to the exten allowing a boxer knocked out at the meme furmshmvs stolen ~ 'Some ' time #86, - 'Mr. Buf filed a petltlon in bankruptcy and -since that time his store has been closed. An inventory was tiken at .that time Mr. Buff stated hat he had | not entered the store sirice. <The structure in which the Buff store ig located is called t Sal-, ration Armyhmldmg The round ' ing Ahe-same: The standp'lpe will T VFORT PLAIN mz At pend manger peclal Vlllage, electlon, Thurs- The vote was very hght and 5.4.2. | The Fort Plam Water Board will Stionce purchase site for the stand 'pipé and start work bulld- b # Reet wide and 'rise 110 feet: from the ground The pipe will) § . 2 # CaR # At 't Butt 0's internal revenue receipts |- snow drop of $4,000,000 for the fiscal - year closed on June 30. <u ~ Jamestown taxpayers have voted, $125,000 for the constriction of a sewage purification works. > J. Crosby Chapman, teacher 'of psy- |- chology at. 'Yale= University, was drowned\ in' Chautauqua lake, near Ch tauqua recently Hayden Smith, 17, of Schenectady, -,contessed to the murder of Zlba til gh-sho tumbaled three stories brick pavement, Mrs): livo of Jamestown, has: Sho has- &. bruised scalp. part of the Main Street entrance hall there is, a' door which leads to the cellarway. Thig was also found open. In the cellarway .is another door which leads info the ‘Bulf store. This door had‘ 'been 4:11 CLUB GIRLS . ~ ~ ‘wflAR'N TO. CAN About cighty girls in rural.dist- n ncts’throughout Otsego County are doing fanning work this sum- er,for 'canning time is vacation time and canning is good vacation work because it is both pleasant {and: profitable. - These gxrle are learning that canmng is an exact science and |- must be done by rule. They are. jpravided with bulletins and helps on food preservatlon from Cornell Umvcrmty Each girl is asked to certain number of. quarts of greens, tamatoes and-at Teast two varieties 'of. other friits or vege- fables, for they. learn that- these fgods are éspecially healthful for use during the months when al Truits and venetables are not avali able, ' - Alan}; members are encourags Main Street entrance hall| yaluable in case of fire on the hill through an'open door, In the back 'laceording to a decision rendered \Iwas hit by a ball thrown by Davis, |I sections of the village. The money for the erection of the pipe is al- ready in the surplus fund of the Water-Board. | « (--- ILIONITE TAKES - GABBOLIG AOID : éarbohc aclé taken With smold- al intent, ceused the death of 'Chas. Rowland, Tlion, at the Tlion Hos- . pital; shortly after 7; Friday night, by Dr. H. J. Sheffield, coroner. |, | When his son, Ernest Rowland returned home from work at about (4:80, he found his father in an un- conscious condition lying on the floor. Nearby was an enipty bottle which had contained the poison, and a note which was undec1pher— able. t a Dr. Halliwell was summoned and the dying man was taken to the hospital in an ambuldnce. Reé- Itoratives were of no avail, as the poison had already sapped his life. ~ It was reported that on arising, Fridgy morning, he seemed quiet and morose. ' , lm-----0 PLAYER. STRUGK Nose in Game, Friday - Marlow Gilbert. East Berklmer, fleft fielder of the \Town Klock Kigb team, was senonsly Anjured in Friday mght s: game, when he catcheLfeL—‘thefltandarfl. Elm]. tureG‘empany ning;~ . 'Gilbert was batting left handed and ; when's a on first. at- (tempted: to steal. geofifiM threw the ball underhs f'in the country, with the exception of «| varies in. temperature from 33 «de- grees to 35 degrees.~ ganizatlo 'were 47 permits issued and the cost ared in Buffalo jumped $160,000, 000 from to 1923, the United States chamber ommerce reported loss in 1994 than -any other- large- city | Boston, according to-figures made pub- lic by the safety buremi of the Cham- ber of Commerce.2000 Hammondeport hag a well 22 test deep and - water pumped from it No explanation has been offered for the reason of its low temperature. Decision\ to effect a permanent or- of the New York , State hed a} tion alT'TJtlca._ Representatives of ten | cities and towns of 'the state were in 'attendance.~ < An increase of 15.9 per cent in the total value of products manufactured in Rochester in a period of two years is reported fn'a special table prepared by the United Stites bureau of cen» Bus and made public by the Rochester chamber of commerce; |_ Building: Inspector Ralph Smith of Lockport reported a total of 45 per- mits issued.lgst month for new build- ings and alterations at an estimated cost of $120,185. In June, 1924, there of the work was-estimated at $63,113. A merger of nine upstate New York and one Pennsylvania ico cream com- panies has been virtually completed, it became known at Buffalo, The new company- will be- known as the Consolidated 'Ice Cream Company with headquarters in Sghenectady. The-merger involves properties valued at - $10,000,000. The Rochester farm loan assdcln- tlon, a branch of the Federal Land | Bank of Springfield, Mass., last mionth passéd the $1,000,000,000 mark in to- ' tal logng on farm property. This as- ociation, which takes loans in Mon- rao\ and. Orleans county is the first Farm Loan Assbclatlon in o loan more than a mil Value of industrial products manu- to-the Buffalo Chamber of Commerce. A recent_survey of the raspberry crop at Churchville brought out the fact that 'the yield in most localities | will be a falr one. However, the late frosts in the spring did some damage 4 s the Tack of moisture early . ' Report was made othepo‘ncaat : hyacltfimwégathe ESTABMSHDD 1818 g,“ F g, ER k mh B Ab gm mg; Kellogg and: Canadlan Minister Exchange Ratifications: of Hughes-Lapomte Compact DRY CHIEFS ARE HOPEFUL Predict End :of Bootleggeri’ Supplies ln Dominion—Check on Narcotics Is Expecteddenaton Hold Conference. Washington—The Hughes Lapelnte and Ganada to a -reciprocal arr-ante- ment to prevent the. smuggling of liq- retary\ Kellogg and Ernest ' Lapoints, = - minister of. jusutlce of Canada, of. four - € quentflmkletter‘agreemenimleom Mx provides for extradition by. either country on account of crimes or of- fenses committed against the laws for the suppression of traffic in narcotics ' The two other treaties on which ° ratifications were exchanged relate to the demarcation of. the international boundary on the northern border and - the regulation of the levels of the | Lake of the Woods. Prediction is made: by. prohibition enforcement officers that the treaty will eventually result in drying up .. \ eggers on 'this Following the ceremony at the state department, General. Lincoln -C. An- drewe, assistant secretary of the treasury: and chief director, leff fog Rouse's Point and St. Albans, whera he is to start his policy of- co-opera: tion between customs officials and 'prohibition officers in an endeavor to blockade the border against smug- glers of all sorts. % Evidence hag been obtained by tha dominion and the United Stites that men enghged in the business of run- ming rum across the border from Canada into this country smuggle ° back into Canada on their return trips commodities that should pay duty, as well as articles that are denied admis- sion at Canadian customs houses. Suppression of this illicit commerce Is expected to be accomplished through more effective regulation of traffic be- tween the.two countries. t Under the Hughes-Lapointe treaty, which was negotiated during the In- cumbency of Charles: F. Hughes a% secretary. of state and was ratified by \ the Senate last Winter, each of the contracting parties agrees to furnisi to the other, upon request, informa- tlon concerning clearances of yessels ¥ 'to dry ports when there is ground to suspect that such craft are engaged in smuggling. .' 'The treaty also provides that clear’ ance shall ba refused by either govern- ment in the case of any vessel sus pected of carrying cargo consisting of articles prohibited by the United States or Canada. It 4s agreed further that the cus > toms and other administrative off- clals of the two governments shall upon request be directed to attend as 'withééses in the trial of any civil or criminal cases affected by the treaty originating on either side of the bor- der. The treaty is to remain in force. for & p mmnemr—A rer Before Genéral Androws started for ~ {| the Canadian border he had an hour's | conference with Senator George Whar | [tort Pepper of Pennsylvania. Sefiator Papper urged that G. Murdock, of Pittsburgh. a Stite director, be named . as administrator in the new prohibi- tion organization, © Through the Andrews program, the ® scheme of enforcement f 1mm in HEW Bounty\? Fears) 2° h-lago. bus the greater part of His . Kie bad been sport In the womrty of Schuyler Lake. ._.._._5.'__:__ Wart Ads time agate