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< VOL. XXV II. NO. 40. ' HONEOYE FALLS, N.Y., THURS_:IYAY, DEC. 8, 1910 The Cliff Dwellers of the Puye. Wonderful Homes of a People and Civ- ilization in Our Country Before Our History Commenced. (ByM.l•Brown, Editor Little Valley Hub) In· the ·evening of ~hie ~olden Nov· ember day I sit at the foot of the cliiie and watch the sun bid ·good night to a deserted city-sit here and see its Ia~ I rays .iall athwart the city or the dead, tbe Home of Great Silcqce, and iu speechless awe I wonder what I can write tbut will convey to you what I feel. Here is where time (orgets and node, and where.the milk bottles are not put out. Here.in the. unknown centuriee be· fore the landing of Colmnbus n great, city thrh·ed; here thousands of pe•Jplo lived and wore out, arJLiqnity before a white man's foot ever touched America. And I sit here and look up at. the crumbling IVnlle, look up nt tho deserted bee hives, and uek, \Whence came you, und whiUiel' went you'/\ llut no nns wer comes back from this city unpeopled aml itill. And like a pygmy I look up, wonder and try to cntch the time of what I see. 1 try to ~et back to daye when civiliza· tion wore swaddling clothes Ill these cliff cities of the Santa Clam, nml I try to eee tbcse men as they were before they turned buck to duet-to eco these men who lived hew cou'n I lees gencmtions ago and thou disappeored from tlw face of the earlb, without hal'ing see01 a white IllUII 1 B face. And while I look and wonder, the sun• set changes from red and gold to dark, ness, and this myst~rious old country is hid for the night, uud I t!Jink and thin11, of the steps of tlw;e fnr dim days of tlw pust to the present time-tbinl< of the Btone, the spear, the bow, the s•vord and the gnn. AJJd therf~ comes· into memory t~eee liuea- u A fire miet and a p!aoet, A crystal and n cell; . A jelly fi'h nncl a sanram Aud caves where the cave men dwell ; 'l'hen n sense of law and duty, And a !aee turned !l'Om tho clod tlome cnll It Evoluti•lll And others call it-God,\ I met a maguziue man in Santa Fe who was just bnck from the grand can· yon. He· went there to describe if., but he told me there wns no such thing. And I feel as this mnn dirl-that these Cliff Dwe!lsrs of the Santa Clara are not of this wvrld-not for an Eal(le lead pencil No.2. But to get back to it all. I will try to start you at the beginning, lend you to i;-and then you guess. I went to Espanola 1\Ionday-a little mountain town up the Rio Grande from Santa Fe-a toivn which now bas two stores and two near·botels, and which lives In the reputation of former great· ness, of once havin~: bad thlrtAen saloons, a company of lorPst rangers and a lot of historic trouble. The town was full of people and ex· oitoment and I couldn't make it out. As a part of the trPatment I had cnt out the morning newspap9rS since Ieav· ing Las Vegas, and the last I knew of current events was thai the honse was Democratic and Itoosovelt a Jim Jef· leriea. I went to the livery barn null told them I wimted a team, a guide and a camp outfit for tho Oliff Dw>llers. But there wna nothing doing nl<mg tlw!!ll lines, nod no ont fits to bu had. 'fhero woo an Indian up rial ng-n gnnnine old reb!!llion against tho wllite Ulan's way of jnHtice. Yon who read tho prees diepatchcH on nnd uHL~r November 13 sn w t,Jae nteagre dduils of too troubl\B hett•; )'Oil who meeting would sanction, and we \drag: ged it.\ Water Commission Adopt Plans for Portage Res- A half dozen miles out we were held up-held up by a lone mountain Indian police-:-but he had a Winchester, and.he' Roehester Herald, looked game, Mapa and Pinna for the improvement ervoir. lie went through our baggage and of the Geneeee Hil'er by .the construction searciled Ollt clothes. I don't know of a storage re•ervoir at Portngo above where he got his authority to do custom J,etcbwortb r ..... hav~ been adopted by dilLY, but I didn't question, and I have the State Water Supply Commiesion, been unable to learn since. I had a suit and the order made to iilo the same in CaEe, He look it out oi the rig, opened the offices of the County Cierlts of Mon. it, ehook out the troUsPra and .the under- roe, \Vyoming aud Li\'ingeton Couutie~, w~ar, a11d wont through the corners ol in which property 11 ill be benrlited. t.he grip. Tbeu he tnrn~d np the buggy The co!:lt of t.h~ impr 0 vt•nwut of we· eeats and shook our robe~. Aller which river will ue j;J,5SB,OOO, nnd a tentl<· he el'idently thought we were eligible Io tive app. 11 tionment made by the com· visit an Indian reservation thac has mlttee in accordance with tl.>e law 30,0UO acres and about thirty people. will divide the e>:peu 5 es, which will llut Lo lost out in the discard-as lie be boru.e)'Y.';,.the co:mties, towu•. the alwasloses wlien he goes up against the city oLU,)~!iSeier, .the l'illng<•s and the whit.e mau's game. inUivid .. · •I n ''ll,rs of propt:>rty in the When we stopped lor lunch at noon, impro · rit•.t in proportion to tf1e mnchmnu uutied the ba~ of oats the bel will receive. and brought out a quart bottle of The p 1 n•eervoir will create a 'Cedar Brook bourbon, brewed in Ken· lake flfteen milee Ion~. extending from lucky, by gosh\-al leust 1 took hie. Portage up to t!te blld of the rivllr, so nH word lor it. to CO\'er portions of Wyoming, Li\•iug· lleurned afterward that the smuggle eton and Allegany Counties. The res· was dangerouo, rwd tt.~t had a Lo tie ervoir will etore lo,OOO,OUO,OOO cubic or gun been found we would have beeu feet of wr,ter, auJ. ite nrtm when fillmt waiters until a next ledt•ral court-aud will be thirteen and a half square miles. they collie about once a year. Its avemge width will be one mile and There'e as much tape connected with ite shore line approximately iort.l' milee. getting through to the Puye Cliff flulna The length of the dum at the top will bo as t!Jere is eeeing your home congrees· SOO ft•ct and it will·be 152 teet big h. It mnn at Washington during tho sePeion, Will be 115 feet. thick at the bottom and Next came the station of the Indian will coutain 184,000 cubic yard~ or farmer, the man who pas,es something musouary. that sonods like a civil service., nnd who -.-. ---.-. -. -. -.~- .. -~- lives out iu this desolation and a tent. He gets $GO per, a horoe aUt! a tent and is supposed to teach the untutored red Hian to muke bricks without scraw- tl'nch him to !rum n me~sa where frijole bf!ans wither up and die like geraniums would in U10 Snharn d•••ert. And there aro 'no Indians to teach. Hundreds of yeurs ngo the Indians learue<lwhat the powers at Washington Uave noL yet learned, that crops cau't \The Fourth Estate.\ Direct from a record breaking run of six months iu NI:!W York :uul Ee\'flU months iu Cbicago, ·'The Follrth Es· tate\ th~ great play of Nowopapor life by Joseph .~lodill Patterson aud Miss Harriet Ford will bo seen for the tirst time in.Hochester l\t the Shubert 'l'lica· Ire next. 'l'hnrsdny, Friday nod Saturday, December 8, !I and JO, with Saturd.Jy Ut~ raised witllont Uillieture, anU 0 tlwee matinee. thousauJe of acres of rceen·atiun are no '!'he piny is written by a newspaper ruore to them than bunting grounds, and man wuo knows the game. Not only is when they farm they gl' back to their the play beautifully acted, but its me· pueblo grants along the streams, and chnnicnl effects and situations are of n leave the reservation messas lor white nature which not only thrill with their men to make political jobs of. power and startle wHb their un••xrected· I started this letter with the cliff uese but the themA of the ploy is eo big, dwellers, but I have not written a word. its great qnes!lons eo easily n part of tlw Bul I will. Of all the wonderful and every dny life und problems of every interesting spots I ever visited this dead muu and woman who sees it, that it and forgotten city of the pust, theee makes an irresistible uppeal, not only to honoy·combed ruins of the Puye are -the eemee but to the mentality. Tho the most wonderful, and I can hardly play has been etuged with n breadth nnd wait until morning shall comA, that maasivoneHa which could only make for I muy climb tho cliils into these hun· popularity. Nothing greater than the drede of rooms, and see the ruins of a big linotype·macbine composing room people and a past that we know nothing ecene has BVer been given to tbe stage. of-a great city that simply has passed The cast of players is the same which away and left no history of its passing. gave the play liS great vogue in Chica~o The driver says the supper is ready, and New York. This engagement ol and thon we will ·roll up and wait lor \The Fourth Estate\ which has been morning and if I sleep alall-whh the.ae called the great American drama will be the only pre entation of the play in great wllite cliffs staring down a_t me In tbri beautiful moonllgbt-1 Will prob· Western New York. ably dream of some midget of a man No better advice to tbeatre~oers ran I bo given than tt,at of tho editor of a who, probdblv thousands o yearn ago, ., stood where I am, looked up at the Chicagopaper who snid \Go see it. banging lights on the cliffs, and lhen equmel·footed it up to hie own little home bole. __ ,_,....____, ___ = 'l'he quicker a cold is gotten rid. of the lrss the dun~er from pnoumomn and other e 1 •rious diseases. ~lr ,B· ~V. L. Hall of Wnverly, Vu., eay.: ·I fmuly bulie,ve Cluuuberlain's Uou~h H_umedy to bn ab,olntely tlw best pn•pnrutwn on tim mnr~et for coldH. I have recom· nmuded it to my frillnds nnd tho] all U~I\U~! wi~h llH.~.'' [i'Or Sl\IO by nil deal· t!l\i3 Birthday Party. On Tuesdav evening, November 22, the home of Mr. nnrl Mrs. Jncob Scott on the West llloomfiuld road, was tho acuno of n vorv merry gathering of friends, the occas;iou being the birthday of Miss Lola Scutt., &heir sit~tcr. .Mies Scott 8punt tho day in l!ocheHter and rctnrucd to her home to Hud about thirty of ht•r frieuds had tfllien posRr.~Hion. UtH'!:itB · weru prt•flullt fro111 E:u:lt UJoumfiBilll. \Vebt ----------- llloomfit•ld alltl Jionunye F'allH. Uanwe . E w were play(•tl auLI. mn~·!ic enjoyl~d. a[Wr Cattle D1e from atlng' which bounteous rdreHitrlllJllts w'\\ Shelled Corn. \'\vt•d. 'l'IHJ Genial hmpitalitv ur. ~Jr. I' , ncorgo M. T.~·h!r, prnpril!lOr of thn !lid not 1111\Y call thh~ anotlwr of 'ro\VU 8 f and ~Jre. Hcott, addr•d to tho good wrll ol nil prt~!'mlt, mudu t.tw evl~nin~ a lll~cid<!d· ly l'l>joyahlo Oltr\, Mi.EB ~colt wus the nlcipitHil of many nir1• ~-:iiiH Honunyu Fulls milk routP luF!t seveu o lmuuidoa und fnrgt~t it.. ll.l\ \tlirl\\bln luml of cnttlo tho paot we_ PI\ .Just 1~lnlt llw leHUI'H \\'it. is dillicult I~> ' • I rr ntu OVllf l'Ulillg slu~llt•d corn. Dnrw~ l(l'l the stml~ht of, urn [)H 1 grr.<tl it l Ill I thll obenncn or tho fnudly nt d nll!'t on s r,,ovennnt•ut at Wr\hiu~tou \'''\''\ r.lllgu 1 1 1 tl , Got'nrl Out of the tove TllnnkH\iving dny the call \ pnH \\ \ n to tho Mtlxicanfl, nud the fuw whito men i'i d 1 1 u • who lun·u rmu!Ons n£ tiiPir 0\'1-'11 for livlug- hi~ doortl to tlw bnru upnrt nn II: Jm Business. till'·'''\· to thn slwlled coru on l_hn 1 , iwre. But wntm· iH Uti scarcu UB BOOitlty \ o 1 1 1 lmvo .!Hl\'eral tJtetd nJHJ Cf\Bt \l\ll~es l) ',lrll 'i<lOt. Ei,ht or thu hl'rd Inc ll~ Ill~ k aud cuttlu muHt drink Sn tlw cattlu 1 h d am) l\ flm'lll'ntiug Htrn'uBol vnrionstnn ·ea. WUrt! drivun onto thu ll'tmrvntion for thu bull gorged thmllEulvcs, nn ~oru Wu oro mnkiug pricl~S ou tlwm tllnt I l'lk[.,, •iclt nnd dropJled of{ ono nt n tune I ·' . t Wntel' and the l'nobloa hnd it fi~un•t nut • . d will clmn~u tiH•m from our Hlnua Ill o 0 nntil only uno cow of tho lot re.rnlmw_ • thnt t~uy wonldn'tlongur mnkc II nnoy 'I 'I J uoura. It wn• n HrJV!Ifll loAB to \ l'. Y or \' J lalnnd of tho Snntn Olnm river, nnd llH I r :J8w2 \vll .,ch ho is n~suruu of tho ayru[Hlt •Y o fnst llfi thu cntt/o uew clriv•~n on, tlwy Fmw W hJ,FSI!lUIUJm. round!Ju thorn up. Tht• consi'<Jnuncu \'\\ nil. ~ _ The Rev. Irl R Hicks 1911 Almanac. thu cowboy nnd thn gun. 'l'he lndirmH 'flu• !\!IV. Jrl [( IIIOits ·\lnnumo for Wt~ru nrmuU with \Vinclwatort:ll\llll civil· STATil orJ~~~::~~~g~i~~~~.'l'oLt.uu, }mJ.. , [ HHl, ,tlmt ~ 11 nrdiun Augul in n lluudrmJ b.ation uml till a witli JIOHHt!e!iinn mndo a Frnnlc.J. Cht·IH'Y 111 ·r''I:~''J' 1 ~ 11 :.!!~; l~oc:,~. ~~~~!? 1 ~ thnuHnnd IJOmeH, Ia now rNHly. Not '· . IV II th lrB rmrlrll'rorthn firm\ • •, C t I Htntc a. ltl t 't ulld glllllu to go up og~unat. n ' t Juw111CH~ in tho City o('i'uletlo,l!!\ Hill Y •l'nt u;mof muny nru nnw will ill~ to uo w lOll 1 d dis r II ntul thnt /t!llcl flrm w lillY ' 10 I II' l 'I . WI\B n (uw Utlyt:l or Ul!fVOllBIHJBfJ nn .. n or~·untu' 'Nilltl'lJ J)OJ,J,i\HS rnr t•nch unci every und thu Htlv. lrl It 10 'H ~' ngnzuw, d tl tl ONI-.1 ~ tl . 11 ,.lhythotwuo( , I PatOIH!H to Wnahlngton nn lOll 10 t·nn•• ur Cntnrrh pmtcnnuf.. 1 eAr!u[J. eJII'~NgY, I Word and Works. 'I hu two nru 011 Y d ld l Ito 1\ llull'n Cnlnrrh Cure. '1'1 'I I \fiG rivllron<llthunuhL. \VU won n I 1 1 t ,,,,tJnncl nuh·tcrlhoc.J lnmYI'rcn·, OneDoiJarnyt•nr. Ut n. mnrmo a,,, r. Sworn o Jl' ort A J) lW\0 f 1 clmnco. t•nrc 1 ,,thlnfithtlayorDct\c'me'A. W. 'ca • ..:AHON, prt•JIIUU. No homn or oflicu t!hnnl1l n1 Wt•drwad!ly mornlnt! wo Htnrturl. Onn (Sl.AI .. ) NurArlY l'nnt.ll', In Hl'tlll fnr thmn, to WorJ nnJ Works II Y Ilull'n Cnlnrrh Guro 1•1 tnlwn lnhmllllrly, .. ~mt} M 37tf of thn mun lu thn murount n oornpnn nctn dlrc·ctly ml tho hloocl uutl mut mut uur nee 1 o Publishing Co., St. Louis, a. in B\pnnnln who I hnd Htruolc up n tt\11' tho uynlew. H 1 ~.~~1.r(';tj.;t,:J'J.~~ 11 & 11 ~~:, ~f~l~; lo, o. ·Deaths GKOIW& GARFIELD HOUGE, George Garfield Dogue died, after a brief illness, at his home on Cass A l'e, Detroit, · ~Iioh., l\ol'ember 29th, l!llO. Hu wns born in Chitteuden, Ytumnnt, Februnrv 2Gth, 1854, and waa the elder •on r..f Bielwp llligno and Cordelia Gar· lield. Ju 1857, hb father having died, be camo into the home of ~Jr. and ~Ire, Ama•a ll. ~!,utin of Lima,~. Y., ~Ire. ~Iartin being his mother'!:! eister; t.here he livecl for eixteen yearB, and wns to them alwaya a ton, and to their ehildren i\ brut!wr. lin was educated at Clinton l.ibnrnl Institute at Cliuton, ::-<. Y. In H'li:; t1e wtwt. to ;~aw PJw, :\lich,, wht-.ro bu wmn.ilwd for three years; he then rmnO\'t·d to Detroit, wliem hH hHH HillCB reeided, and IJt-1111 act.i\•ely en~aged fu the \\'hole·8ale II'.Hdware bnsiness of lbat ('ity, nn<l was, at the time of bie death, nu t'Sttwnwtl member of tbe firm of ~t11n· dart i.~rothere. lie was t.wico mal\l'it•d. l1is ftrr.t wife being Clara f.lartin of I\Hv l\lw, ~Iicll., who died in wo:; .. lle is snn•i\•ed Ly bis wiftJ, :\Iartha lfttrri!:~ HognP, two step·sOnP, his mother, Corda· lia 1l11gne Crane o( Albion, i\Iich., and a brothel', Charles B. Bogne rJl Chica~o, Ill. In business he was widely known. and enjoyed tt.o sr1cces\ which came from a thorough ltnoli·lcdge of !lie work, aml an nnt.idng devotion to it: iu private life ho was loved and l'espected, and his ~oing menns a great pereonal lo:!s to his relatives and frifmd~. ';ro ·Address Farmers and Village People. Prof. Charles H. Tuck, hPad 1 nf the J~xtem~ion D1~partment of Cornell Uni- ver~ity hils nccrpted an iln·itation from Honeoye Full~ Grange to gil•e nn addres~ i\u ~Honeoye Falls on Friday evening, u,,cember lOth. The Grunge has been planning n eeries of addresses for the winter along euucational linea nnd it is expected that farmers nod villngors will OQme out. and fill the hull. l'rof. Tuck; has taken for his subj<'ct \The Welfare of the Community-their Agriculture,\ and surely thli peoplo will wnnt lo he~r what he hna to sny. '!'here will bo no 0dmis.3ion. ______ _,.. I~ubHc Service Commission Approve Local Service. According to an ,\fbany dispatch the Livingston·l\iagnru Power Co. has been granted the ri~ht to exercise its !ann· chises in the towns of Avon, Cnledo~ln, Guno•eo, Lima aud Yorlt iu Livingston county and it) the towns of Ruah, Men· dori and Whentlnnd in the county of Monroe. The company has secured the rights in all or the towns mentioned to distribute electric power. It is expected thnt the Lima· Honeoye trolley company which bas changed hands again, will come under the control of tbo new com· pany. It would be well, however, be tore a higuer voltage is sent over the preseut line lor the company to put thsi! system in anfe condition or there willlJe tr~mblo ahead. ----,..-,...,=\\-. Monroe Co. Pomona. Monroe County i\lomoua Grange mmlts next Snturclny at Hocheetm in C(mtml Preebylerian church. AI Lllis tinw thu election of oUicers for two yt•ars will be hold and nloo thirtt•.:u •l<•i<'~at<•a will he ehmmn to attrmd t.he NI!W York Htatu Uran~o nH~l'tin~ to ho lwld next FolJrtl· ary at TroJ.'. 'J'Iw mom in~ hutJillf\fl!J fH'.e· sionH \\\ill optlll at 10 o'clock. A }JI\Ilgnuu will lm ~ivrm iu tllll nsl!'rnnon, and the lifth dt·~re\ will tu eouierrurl iu full lorru. Look at the Label. \Vhilo it, ia 1warin~ tho closu of t.ho yonr \\'11 nn~ obli~eU to r~~luiiHl on1· tHJb· scrilwrs thnt many of tlwm nm iu al\fl':\fH nud lhnt we would a[Jill\t•cint.n n Tl'lllit· tancu m•v(•rin!{ tin! nmunuL lmcl' nn<l for tile yt•nr h1 ndv:uwe ... WHam gh·in_~ thiu gnntJr,\lnotiee, for tlw l'H:ItltHI thnt It ~I'· ttlliroH n 1c1t nf timn nnd tJOHtngn to wnte to tmch OIH! punmrmlly. Hull!lorilJur6 Can nlwr 1 ya tell wla•tlll<l' tlwir \\h>cription I1 ns expirl!d by rl!ndiug tllll lalwl on the papl'r bunl'lng their unml!, For illus· tmtlon: .John 'l'hompaou, Jnn, 10 would indicnto tbnt till! t.imu pnill to uxplws on thu dull! d••HI~nuted. Will . von plnn\u look ut thll labul nnd do UR tho ldndlW>B tn ermrl till! cunh. Team Hamess. I nm ug!llu muidng m.v old rullablo hand mudu '1'11ruu H !ltnuse. 'l'twy will I ooat vnry Ill till more thuu Halo hnrnu•a bnl will I nat twloo nH long. Mnx !,. l~oy lrlnndHhlJl with, BLilJlJll'd our rig, uml II b 11 1J \''\ln!n 7»•· ~~·\ul'to IY!I~JJ'nl~tunlly l;lllu 'ior conulhmtlon. Wnruud ne uol to tutu n gnu or 011rry hnnzo '!'hero woro Lht11n of uu In tho EHlii'I' dny clooka nt Lelghtou:a for IIunwHa ur11l \l'runlt Store. 3Uw2 $3.0tl I 1l• vou wout \'' alurm clock got II at rlu-myenlf, thu drlvr•r, nud rw old mnn · Horse Blankets. Whn cllllrnud to bu rnnuuger of n grarJt, i 'l'hn Jnrgust neBnrLnurnt In town at low· which l'unnavlvunln polhlolnna hnd t Lei us t1how ynu Mnx L, h oot pr OHA· clahnto, We nsHurr•d hlt•l I uru wu~ No , 8 l:lurncss and Trunk BLoro. 8Dw2 Dolhlng In our oullll but whoiB mothura Y BKAN plokera muko gootl monry this Lt•IKtllou's, your, 10 more wanLod by F. I'. ,Jo~oe. DAnN&Y ;~ il&nnv'a skates, lbc finest A NJCB Iol of scarf plus at Lclflhlou'a, mhd•, ut Olarko'e. 40w2 'l'ERMS-$1.25 Per Year in Ad\ance Celebrate Golden Wed- ding Anniversary. On Monday, November 28th, at their home in Rush, where they began house· keeping tlfty years ago, Mr. and ~Irs. lieorge Price celebrated their ~:olden weddin~. Thoy uoth wore their wedding olothes of fifty years ngo. They enlerlained nhouL 1ilty gue9ts from Hocheeter, Scotte· l'ille, FP;rport, )lumford, Honeoye Falls Hush aud other plocee. The tables weru decorated with c~hryeanthemum:i nnd ft~rns. The m:>lltl con!:!ii:!ted of tnr· la~y and oyfltcrR nnd all tliP thiuga suit .. nble for the hoi iday SPa\on. They re· cei\\ed a number or remombrJnces such m: g·old 11iece8, c11L glas~. china, etc. The principal corJgmtn!atory speech was made by \V. S. Price of Hochester who said in closing: '''V'e arL· gatherNi llert.' upon this nno occasiou to pay a trilmte oi respect ond nfiection to these dHJ.r relutivee wbo have jnet passed tha half century milo stone or marriud life. \\'e art~ hem to congrat· nlate them upon the j·•1·e nnd blessings that havt• come to tliem in llfty yeare. \Ve are here to congratulate them that the vicissitudes of hulf a century hn ve been so ljt,tle. Thnl the j•JY\ nod hlees· ings hnvo been so ~rent. \We are here to congratulate them upon the four stalwart sons thut have come to them to be a proJl and stuff of their d~clining yenrc. We are llere to congrntulnte them upon having been enabled t•' pnes fifty years o[ IUUI'I'ietl life under the sam\ roof. 1 'h is not given to every onu to live three-quartera of a century under the eanw roor. Nor is it ~h·eu to every one to liye trlong life ou the samo cpot. For more than three·qnnrlets of a cehtury· this old hOllll'~tead has been tlw abiding pluce of one of theeo whorn we aru !Jure to honor. JIPre his e!Jildren mude the old IV!lils ring with joyous laughter; here hiR grand children come to bring renew· e<llift' nnd joy; lwfe he first opened hi3 el'es to the light of da.v, and hom he !;opes to close them npou the I nat Light of Light. Let us hope that this lnat may be long delayed; thtlt there mny be nwn ,, jovous years in etore for him and hi\ good wife. ''Finally-LEt us assure them tha( from those who ore gathered here to do them honor on this their li!tleth :mni· verE!ar.}' tbe moat ferven~ and nrdeut wiohos goes olJt from earnest hearts and willing lips that their doclining yenrs he more fully Hlloll with nil that rnultes life worth living. =---=-'=\\-,---, Men's Supper. On Wednesday evening, DPcember 14 at 8 o'clock, there will be .a supper for men at the Presbyterian church. After supper tho men will be addressed Church Matters M. E. CHURCH, REV. r, II. VANKEUREN. PASTOR. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Preaching by the pastor. i:inbject, \Jesua nnd Pilate.\ Sunday l:ichool and ClaEs meeting at J2 o'clock. Epworl~ League at tl::)O. Subject, ''Tho mesEen~er nn~l tbe Sa.viour. ') .Mal. :l:J.~; ,\latt. 3:1·3. J.eader, In;: Hitten.- house. E·•ening eenice :n 7:00. Prt::acbing I by the pastor. \ubject \Onr Debt to Cbl'i~t.'' Hegular pmy~r nh:~t:ting: on TharB 1 Juy eveniug \t \i :~;o, I'RESBYTEJ:IAN ·CHURCH. nr.\\ W. A. HALLOCK. PASTOn. Sunday morning at. 10:30. Preaching by the paotor. Suuject, \'!'he Spirit That Has Lifted Humanity.\ J\Ir. E. H. 1\'hito will tell of plans for a Layman'e meeting. Sunday Ech )O( at 12 o'clock. 0:00 p. m., Y. P. S. C. E. l'opjc, • 'How mu't n Christian be diilerent from otbet!?\ ~Cor. G:H·IS. Leadere, Eliz· abeth Hunter. Evening s&nice nt 7:00. PrP.acbing by the pastor. Snuject, ·•Power.'' Prayer meeting ou Thursday eveDinc at 7:30. AxJ~ helves, nil twiz~~e, mog-iog in pric:o from JO to 35 cente at Clarl:e'B Hnrdwaro store. 3f!ll'~ Methodist Sunday School to Observe Christmas. .\t a nwt:tillg of thl~ Snnday School board ol the }lethodift S•IUd.:y echool held last Sunday aft'=r the :::cllool eeEsiou it wa:: d~,~~ided to hold a OhristuH!.f::! oL .. set \':tllCl'. for tile £cho(t\, nnd a committee cnmpoeed of )Jr. Van Keureo, )lis.:s Ken~ rno, ~~r~. Tifi.wy, ~·li~l\! I!ltenhouae, Ethel Chapman :111d )Jr. and ~Ire. Whit· uey, was nppointed. Tho committee met on )londay eyen· ing flt the parsonage an,1 vutt>d to have a ChristUJas tree, believing that thl\t would bo of the IUOE!t interest to tbo children an~ ~Ir. ,-au K<Juren nnu 1\llou Kenyon '\\e appointed to look alte.c so· cnring tho tree. A pro;;tam :::ommittoo wne :~leo nppointed und it wns decided to have si11ging by the echool, a oelectlon by the choir and rt>cita.tione, f:lJllge anll exercises by the primary department. A new plan wns adopted in regard to tho distribution ol presents which will bo explained next Eundny. It is urgently rlesired that every :nembor of the school be preeent next Sunday and help lho committee got ready lor Chriatmas. by Hon. Charles E O.:den, secretary to County and Vicinity Itemw the Mayor of Rochester, and Rev. H. F. LaFlamme, who has had charge of, and Nine game protectors of thia state havo made the grant Layman's Missionary been requested to hand iu their reeignn• convention of Roch .. sler so ~rently suc· tiona lor non·enforcement of the Sundny cessful. llotb nro most excellent spunk· hunting law. era und como lo intHWBt the men in the Accordin~ to the census report~ tho great movement among Laymen all over populntion of New York State is 9,113,• the United S~utes for the ~vuugelization I ~7U. Greater New York' holds the mn .. of the world Ill our gonerntwn. joril v of tho people. Charta Bholling thn present \Votk or A Fredoni:~ chicken farmer incubater! tho local church will be made fol' the ~0.000 chiclrens laet year. This seur hu information of those \:ho nn~ _Prt'Hnnt and wi,ll hatch 50,000, mo~t of wlli~h will bn plana for thll frlluru will be d~ecUEM<·d. shipplld to u,,DI'tlr the day. they break 'l'ick11ta for till! \\PP\'' Will \\o~old by tho &hell. ll11Hllb~ra of tlw cnuJmittl't-1 for .. a <'P.ntH. S. Perc}' lloo~wr of Lt1f!oy, cbairman No lllJlWUlfor lllOIWY Will bu made M the or tho ~tatn higl!way col'nmiesion han nwetiugo. \\'l'ltteu anarticiB for the Club Journal, DEAN-CLEANER TO llE MADE IN TOWN. E\·Nyonfl. intun·~tt•d iu tho \\'l~lrarn of lltHH!II)'!l Fall~ iullnBtrieH will bo glnd to Ju;nr that tllllrn ia a po:!sibl!ity of n nwi \'1~1 ot work. at Llw Woodwrnldn~ plnut Frtltl WnlftJln•q.~t·l' liaH h1lll!-:ht of Mr •• J. o. Belli:HJil or 'rruy, o .• tlw right in On· wrio COUilL)' for the eale or tho Benr,on Ht•Nl (~lt!:uwr,·whlch hn~ lwPn mdtibitml lwm ror 1-:\l!\'l'rnl Wl'l'ICfl, l\fr. \VoHsbPr~er \\it h a thcJIIj!l.\! to llout•nyB Ji'a, 1!,' WJ.:f, I',~HI: ul. oueu t'llll•rt•d intn w·..:ntiations witt! Wm. ~l.t\'o of tl11~ \V•HH1wurkiug Cn, (tJr tlw uumur,.etu'\e flf IOO muchiner, nnd the lirst OJH'H nrB being pnt out this 1\'0ilk. Otlwr cnnnty ril{ ht11 lun·o bt'tm · snld na folio we: M uurn11 couuty to llru-ry IV. I.ongfulfow, !tush, f,lvlug~t.oll county to ,, von pnrtlua. Orllmn~:~, Ut!ll_llseu nmJ Wyumiug conutit•H linvu aleo lwnn H1>ld, rmd nn .,(fort will hu m:11le tu aupply eumu of thiu trnrlt• with millH . VHilt1NO 0Anu~-\Vhl•n you1uwd moru cnrda priuttHI tll'llll t1tl your plntu tuHl wu will hr~vu thum \\~rUVIHI for you for 00 coulo for fi() eruuH. No butter gtndu of work oru1 bn !ouuu l'latu 1\lld OlltUH to• tunwd to you I\\\ (Hlid nt r,5 cunta. If you wnut u Jll'W plntll S<•••ll for enmplu sheet. Ar.r. klmiH of ~as, oll and ooal sLovoe organ of the flntomobiliste of.·Amerioa, on ''Oiling of III~hwav•,\ in wliich ho speaka of diflerNlt probl·nns in ;on<l build In~. Silver Lake outlet \T:\~l madtJ .1 verit£~.·· tJ(e Sltentu Of booze OliO dny rec~ntly when 02 cnees of lag~r beor, eHizl!d by tho ~tllto Exciee dt\partmnn:. were dump· cd into it. It ul'lorrgurl In th<' ~H. ~lor· riH J3ottlinj:! Co. au\l 1\\118 fom1tl in n no· llc.,nao town. 'rllfl Cluunher or COIIIIIIOren of GNlOVU hog atlnptl'd Cor itrl H!ngau \:\ (:narll•r of a Million JJoll.uH fQr :-;ll\\' I wlu~trica. 1 ' 'l'hu plan is for thn busiueEd men to loutl thuir credit in an nmouut n~~n·catiug that sum to lwlp on tltlW inUUfltriodl tho credit thus oxtended to be securo<l by mort~llg:N30n the plants aitled. Janwa W.Wadeworth, \\'ho retires frorn U.w Lt~~ielatnro thia time, goca to Europo with hi~ wifo, I) apt•tHI some limo. l'olltical prophets\'\ of tho opiulon thnt you11g .I im is too clenn, bright nnd nhlo n st!ltuHrunn to b~ dropped dowu nud out, nnd that he will cornu to tlw !rout n~nin. .John C. Wlntl!rrr, who euccel!dou him, ullrl!nterl hiH oppolHHll by only J!l votou. 'l'lll'rols no toll in~; wimt might hnvo bnp• poncd had ~It. Wadsworth run, DAIRY MEN ATIENT!ON. Qur~knr Oats IJr~lry Food nlao S··~d Meul nl Wolfabr•rgor'a. prlcou on cnr Iota. Oolton Spoolnl 40w2 and combluallon utnvoe and rangt•a al ilEAN plokcra wanted a~ Olarko'e. aowa 'I bouao. Joboa' Waro• 1·-