{ title: 'The Johnstown daily Republican. volume (Johnstown, N.Y.) 1890-1912, November 08, 1911, 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/sn85042216/1911-11-08/ed-1/seq-8/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1911-11-08/ed-1/seq-8.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1911-11-08/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85042216/1911-11-08/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Johnstown Public Library
WEDNESDAY, fOHNSTOWN DAELY REPUBLICAN NOV 8B, 19n- lilson's Frecide com Warranted to riemove freckles. sunburn and tan and fireserves the skin. Beautlfies 50c a box. We are sole agents in the city for fins %ellable cream. Try it now. I Vain Voast & Thyne We‘eatry in stock 300 styles of new Postal Cards of Thanksgiv- . mag‘ b*; 1 The: fullness of life's great Store (Newton's), 9 W Main St., Is moré than enough to be thamkful for. E. C. NEWTON, . 0 West Main St reet, Johnstown Qlld Comfort! i; -———4—IN—~~— N ght Reading I u only possflale with a good pure, strong unfailing a thrown down from \ GAS DOME: \_ An iéwitation is extended to Men and their Wives, and Mothers, and Sisters to visit the Gas Company's . 131:hW Room and to inspect our Gas Dome Fixtures, ? full 'of | | artistic. ibeauty and color. C self helfimg atyachment - PRICES 512 00 UP We iwxll dehver and connect them without extra chit-go? FULTflN COUNTY GAS 8a ELEGTRIG C0. M I All equipped with - m - Rulliches 1 Made in Aour own plant out of nice wetter]! beet, cooked and sea- med with ,pure spBides,' packed in tripe and pickled in pure white wire ~ vinegar, Mikes a fanty dish gliced | eola or'tfieéi in butter. 5a { f Sanerkrau Nice homeI made. Sauerkraut puro, 4 flout and ap‘petizmg The kind that gates like more \x 'a Lan + l P. O’Nfll & SON Wholesale and 119ml! Butcher- co F 4 144 M. Main $t. rag: I T; 1415013ng THE CITY Antone Wéild has opened 'a shoe re- pairing shopjupstairs over A. M. Put- nam's. mot-keg: on Bast Main street. . James P. sAa-genrmngem. James A. 1868-mm’1l31113‘z DRUG STORE THEN . Fufll Set of Teeth... . Gold Crowns DOES YOUR DIAMOND NEED RESETTING\ - Ten Eyck | can do it right. No diamonds isent away. We do the work ‘fnourselves. rman . $10 to $12.50 $5.00 each Bridge Work ........$5.00 a tooth Satisfaction Guaranteed. TRY HIM DR. SHEDD 121 N. Market St. === = Northrup and John W. Argersinger have returned from spending several days at Princeton university. District Deputy Alvin C. Bullock of Canajoharie will pay 'his official visit to St. Patrick's lodge, No. 4, | F. & A. M., on the evening of Thurs- Committees have been } day, Nov. 16. appointed to give the distinguished visi't-ofr a suitable reception, and a emoker with refreshments will fol- low the lodge session. allar Pure As the Heeirrf of Nature COMPOUNDED-- \Of Spices Pure From Tropic Dale and Wholesome Sparkhné Ballard Vale.\ 10e Per Bottle l ‘ $1.20 Per Dozen w VAN VIET S DRUG STORE CONYNE & IDVEYS Props. _. r 11 | (k lSIln—THB: DRUG STORE NOW i tain. i ably have the necessary information | tomorrow and if the appropriation Van Voast & Thyne ....... | A Friend { which it is hard to recover. i Mass. . strict confidence. \ PoPULAR FOXY STARTED FOR BAND CONCERTS Among the questions submitted to the electorate of the city of Johns- §, town yesterday was the proposition - to raise $800 for band concerts by the Citizens band on summer even- ings next year. For this amount the | band was also to provide music for the veterans on Memorial day, The I proposition is thought to have been lost, but this is not absolutely cer- City Clerk Yerdon will prob- ras been carried the | subscription { will be called off. In discussing the matter last even- ing a number of young men who be- long to the Johnstown Progressives found that the opinion among them- selves was general that the proposi- tion had failed, not because of its | lack of merit or because the citizens | A of the city did not want to make the appropriation, but rather because the voters in pulling down the lever against the other propositions and - amendments did: not see the band proposition and voted against it un- intentionally. \Why wouldn't this' be thing for the Johnstown Progressives to take up?\ queried one. \Why I'll head a subscription. list with five dollars just to start the thing.\ \Al- right, I'll give five myself,\ said an- other. \Me too,\ interrupted a third. 'The suggestion was taken up with the president and some of the officers of the Johnstown Progres- i sives this morning with the result that it was thought advisable to un- deftake to raise the amount by pop- ular subscription. The attention of The Republican was called to voluntary subscriptiews so far offer- ed. All who are willing to con- tribute should send their contribu- tion in to this office. Any amount, the burden of paying for the pleas ure of the many. Pollowing are the subscriptions so far received: Arthur F. Kibbe .......... $ 5.00 Johnstown Republican ..... John Argersinger ..... « a kes W. H. Rowles .. Conyne & Loveys ......... 5.00 5.00 5.00 . 25 «25 A Friend A Friend # - e Louis Berger ............. 1.00 Abram Harrison . 5.0 A Friend . .25 Wesley Wolford 1.00 PILES CURED IX 6 TO 14 DAYS Your druggist will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case df Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days. 50c AUTHOR RUSSELL DEAD. London, Nov. 8$..-William Clark Russell, also known under the pen name of Clark Russell, died as he slept this morning. i—Ie 'had been bedridden since April last. Mr. Rus- sell was born in New York in 1844 The experience of Motherhood is a trying one to most women and marks distinctly an epoch in their lives. .Not cone woman in a hun- dred is prepared or understands how to properly care for her. self. Of coursenear- ly every woman now. adays has medical treatment at the time of child-birth, but many approach the expenence with an orgamsm unfitted for the trial of strength, and when the strain is over her system has received a shock from Follow. ing right upon this comes the nervous strain of caring for the child,. and a distinct change in the mother results. There is nothing more charming than a happy and healthy mother of chil. dren, and indeed child-birth under right . conditions need be no hnzard to health or beauty. The unexplainable thing is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from an unprepared condition, women will persist in going blindly to the trial. It isn't as though the experience same upon them unawares. They have ample time in which to prepm e, but they, for the most part, trust to chance and pay the ponalty. In many homes once ichildless there | are now children because of the fact that Lydia E. Pinkhaum's Vegetable Compound makes women normal, healthy, and strong. Any. who would like special advice in regard to this mailter is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Her letter W111 be held in a good | the | . matter and so we have appended the 5.00 : 5.0\ . LBD ' placed in bins, so YEAR OLD oy SUES & Probably the tw» most youthful litigants ever to appear in Fulton - county as plaintiff and defendant in the same case are Ladislaw Pollak and Joseph Gage, two fourteen-year- old boys'of Johnstown. The action has been brought in the city court before Recorder Monahan. Issue was joined this morning and the case set down for frial on Wednes- day, November 15. It \will be remembered that on the evening of September 13 Joseph Gage and two other boys were coast- | ® ing down the Wost State street hill on bicycles, when the former col- lidded with a dump wagon which | Messrs. Flood & Van Wirt had left | alongside the road, unprotected by lights it is claimed. Gage was ren- dered unconscious and lad to be | taken to a physician to have his in- | juries dressed. The wheel on which he was riding is claimed to have been the property Of the Pollak boy, | and this suit is brought to redover $22, the value the owner sets on the wheel, damaged. Pollak claims that he did not give Gage permission to use the wheel, and that his excursion that evening was in the nature of a joy ride. On the other hand Gage in- sists that he bowrowed the wheel of the owner and that whatever dam- ago it suffered is chargeable against | Messrs. Flood & Van Wirt, negligence, he says, whose contributed to his own injuries and the smashing | of the wheel. Messrs. Dudley & Dennison ap- pear for the plaintiff, while Donald McMartin, Esgq., is looking after the defendant's interests, Bach boy's | father hasbeen appointed bis guard- ian ad litem, and the case will pro- ceed in that way. Attorney Donald McMartin this afternoon that his client intend- ed to bring an action to recover for bodily injuries sustained against Messrs. Flood & Van Wirt, the con- no matter how small, will be accept- | ed. Dor't leave it to a few to bear | 18 NOW EREDTMG A MODERN COAL POCKET The Cayadutta Coal company has commenced the erection of its new pocket and office on the property it recently acquired at the corner of North Market and Grove streets. The pocket is the most modern idea in be handling of coal, and something entirely new in this vicinity. It is so arranged that the coal is elevat- ad when taken from the cars and arranged that when a load of a certain kind is wanted, a wagon is driven under- neath the bin,. a slide is pulled and- the coal tumbles into the wagon box to any desired amount. This pre-- vents the necessity of shoveling and is a great Saving in time and labor. Marvin Currie is now laying the - concrete abutments for the pocket, and Jonkh Hess has the contractfor erecting the superstructure and the office building. The Cayadutta Coal company will continue to do business 'at its present location, corner Wash- ington avenue and Mill street, until this plant is completed, which it ex- pects will be some time during the winter. \ RESS | THE LEADERSHIP | London, Nov. 8.-A. J. Balfour has resigned the leadership of the opposition. Throughout the day there had been rumors in the lobby of the bouse of commons that Mr. Balfour had decided to retire from his posi- tion as chief of the Unionist party | in consequence of the divergency of views regarding the efficacy of his leadership. This afternoon his pur- pose was definitely and officially con- firmed. The news of Mr. Balfour's resigna- tion caused the utmost surprise, and in some quarters, consternation. The Unionists do not attempt to disguise the seriousness of the loss of one who is admittedlythe greatest asset of the party. It is understood thai Mr. Balfour's decision is unalterable. He advances the state of I's health as the osten- siblereason forhis withdrawal from lea dlership, hut there is no don'bt that the bickerings in the party ranks wa sthe primary cause. He will re main in pafilament represet ing the city of London. T The choivs Of a successor to Mr. Ba'ifour seems to be between J. Aus- | . ten Chamberlain and Walter Hume Long. The former the unionist member for Rast MWorces- torshire and for some time has been ment'f'oned by the opponents of Bai- four as his possible successor; Long represents the Strand. > is which he insists was. badly said | MEN QGALENSKY’S’MW Rough Fuzzy Hats | FOR BOYS You'll like the looks of these new comers thaft we've Just received. Most of them are \The Galinsky: Specml”—-§$2 Hats and anusually good looking Hats. Grey, Brown, Tan. , 2 %, | Others at $2.50, $8.00, $3.50. i ; U eo nre 1 (opine Actin en SAB giooersvilie ; BENEFIT FOR POLLOCK FAMILY The members of the GloversviNe police department will give a bene- fit entertainment for the benefit of the family of the late Officer John- Pollock at the Darling theatre to- morrow evening. Manager Gaut has donated the house with the full or- chestra for the occasion and gross receipts will go toward the fund. The entertainment will con- sist of eleven numbers by local tal- the { ent and will be well worth the price of admission. Tickets may be se- \cured_ of any member of the police department or at the box office. HEARING IN TYRELL CASE. A hearing in the case of Oscar Tyrell of Mayfield against Mrs. Lil- lian Carpenter of this city to de- terming the ownership of a dump wagon said to have been stolen from the farm of Mr. Tyrell about a year | ago and now in the possession of Mrs. Carpenter was held before a number of witnesses in city court today. ed, the court ruled that the property belonged to Mr. Tyrell. Further de- | velopments in the case are expected { in a fow days. ARRESTED ON SERIOUS CHARGE Tony Novell, a young Italian, aged 25 years, was arrested at Mills Bros.' mill this morning by Officer Engell upon the complaint of Rosie Frescagore, a fourteen year old Italian girl residing.at No. 16 Bey street. The charge upon which young Novell was arrested was rape. He was arraigned before Recorder Cas- sedy and an adjournment was taken until 4 o'clock this afternoon. Upon the testimony present- | ane ®®®m f BARNEY CALINSKY ® sows ~> asmflflfiitw he Greatly Improved. Attractive Designs. & Always give satisfaction. FOR SALE BY - HILL, VAN NEST & sow JOHNSTOWN N. Y. AYOR RARRISO EXPRESSES GRATITUDE j ® - Hon. Abram Harrison, who for the second time has been elected mayor of Johnstown, states that he is very grateful to the residents of the city fer their support, and regards very highly the confidence which has been evidenced by his election. He wants to assure the public that he intends to do all in his power to advance. 1 two years, aind will d the city's interests during the coming y'ote himself even more earnestly to dutios of his office than He has in the past. The Bridge-Its will hold their first mesting of the season at the home of Miss Grace Mason this evening, k 20 s too mm: FOR CLASSIHICATIOX FOR SALE—Forty H. E 1911 Overland Runabout, fully enuipped' run only 3,000 miles. “The 'prettiest car that ever came into Fulton coun- ty.\ .Bargain if sold at oncé. J. R. Walratk. 11-8t2 WW” mm was mum regular $1. gquahh fine damask at 95¢ per yard. This cloth is all pure linen and 72 inches wide. R T UR $2.50 TO $3.50 NAPKINS $2.25 DOZ. We have about 25 dozen of Napkms which we have no cloths or damask to match. | They, are #P0x20 and 22x22 in. in size. $2.50 to $3.50 doz. & Our annual sale of high grade Linens includes all Householt; and Fancy Linens. Table . Sets---Lunch Sets---Separate . Cloths-\Lunch Cloths---Napkms---Damask---Towels---Towel- 1ngs---Bed Mucus-“Etc. ) What this sale means to you in Dollars and Cents can best be judged by a visit to the LINEN DEPARTMENT and see the reduchons from our already reasonable prices. ‘ f SPECIALS FOR: $1.25 Damask 95C Yard For Thursday only we pfi'er 12 pieces of our DAY Marked to sell at Thursday only . $2.20 doz. Special Lot of Sonlod Linens 1-3 Off A é é é . f ia BROW N, quality at lysell readily for Suits, etc. 29 to 30 i in. Corduroy Toc yd We have now in stock in the desirable colorings: BLACK and NAVY BLUE 29 to 30 inch Corduroy Velvet in xerx handsome ......... Toc yd. These are eatra good value and will undoubted- «ok n e e e s e e e wis soe tos aos Reversmie Cloakmgs Double faced or reversible cloakings are vory much 1n\\evmence for Fall and Winter wear, as a consequence they are scare; today ~a are prepar- ed to show Gray and Blue, Gray and Coronation, and Black and Gray. 4 inches wide. Prices range from $1.50 to $2.50 y rd ® Lepuofnal bargain. They come value. Thursday . $1.00 Flannel nght thrts 85SCc For Thursiay's selling we offer a number of IDEAL FLANNEL Night Shirts '¥or men at an ox- plain or trimmed with silk frogs, etc. $1.00 80C All sizes and cut full, 3 § i