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DEVOTED TO THE TEDE INTEEESTS OF THE PEOPLE OP SENECA COUNTY. THE COURIEK Est'd 1837, Von 66. ] ^ ^ THE JOURNAL. Esfd 1884, I' d /. 79.} ^ SENECA FALLS, N. Y., THXJESDAY, JULY 30, 1903. No. 15 Base Ball Games. P enn Y an ' 6 S eneca P ales , 0 . At Perm Yan last- Thursday after noon the Seneca Palls team was de featecl by Penn Yan in a game which was well played except the first in ning in which the Penn Yan’s got five runs owing to Chappell’s wildness in connection with errors by his support. Except for the first inning Chappell pitched a fine game and struck out twelve of the opposing batsmen. The Seneca Palls players were only able to make six hits off Durkee who ofii- c|,ted in the box for Penn Yan and /ailed to get in a run. Quite a dele gation^ of rooters accompanied t|ie^ .Ipcal team to Penn Yan and witnessed the game. PENN YAN AB R IB PO A E Curvin, ss .................... 2 1 1 5 1 0 Boyd, If.......................... 3 1 0 0 0 0 Buckstahler cf __ ^___ 4 0 0 2 0 0 McCauley, lb_ .............. 4 1 2,13 0 0 Kilmer, c...................... 3 1 O* 4; 1 0 Wagner, rf and 3b. ___ 4- 0 l! 3 1 Garbus,‘2b ................... 4 1 0. 1 7 0 House, 3b. ............... :.... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Durkee, p...................... 3 0 0 1 0 4 0 Plint, rf ....................... 3 1 2 ' 1 0 1 T o tal .......................... 31 6 6 27 16 1 S eneca P alls ab r 1 b po a e Farrell, cf...................... 4 0 1 1 0 0 Quinn, 2^___________4 0 1 0 2 0 McGraw, ss .............. 4 0 0 1 2 2 Flanagan, rf................ 4 p 0 1 0 0 Crawford, c................. 3 0 1 13 0 2 Smith, lb ..................... 3 0 0 9 0 0 Woods 3b __________ 3 0 1 0 1 1 Easton, If ..................... 3 0 0 0 0 0 Chappell, p. .................. 3 0 1 0 3 0 Total ...................... 31 0 5 24 8 6 SCORE BY INNINGS. Penn Yan ........ . 50010000 *-6 Seneca Palls. 00000000 0-0 SUMMARY. Two base hit, Chappell; sacrifice hit, Durkee; stolen bases, Curvin 2, Boyd; double play, Garbus to Me Cauley; first base on balls, o£F Chap pell 3 (Curvin 2, Boyd); hit by pitched ball by Chappell l(Killmer); struck out by Chappell 12 (Curvin, Boyd 2, Buckstahler 3, McCauley, Eillmer 2, Wagner, Garbus, House); by Durkee 3 (McGraw, Flanagan, Smith); wild pitches, by Chappell 2; passed balls, by Crawford 3; time, 1:15; umpire, Gibbons; attendance, 350. OSBORNE'S, 3; SENECA PALLS, 2. Over fifteen hundred people saw the Osbornes of Auburn defeat the Seneca Falls baseball team at Cayuga Lake Park Saturday afternoon in an exciting game which was not decided until the last man was out in the ninth inning. Arnold and Flanagan both did fine work in the box giving the opposing players four and five hits respectively. Not a run was scored until the fifth inning when Seneca Falls made one. In the sixth the Osborne’s made two and Seneca Falls tied the score in the seventh. What proved to be the winning run WBS made by the Osborne’s in the eighth. John Esmack was the um pix’e. The score follows; O sbornes . ab r 1 b po a e Baird, 3b .................... 4 1 2 0 5 0 McElroy, ss ................. 2 3 0 0 1 0 Smith, cf ...................... 3 0 1 1 0 0 Fanning, If .................. 4 0 0 2 0 0 Stout, 2b._ .................... 4 0 0 3 3 0 Knox, rf.„..................... 4 0 1 2 0 0 Eiger, c.. ....... . ............. .' 4 0 0 7 0 0 Coughlin, lb _______ 3 0 1 lO 2 1 Arnold, p......... . .......... -2 0 0 2 1 1 Totals ....................... 30 3 5 27 12 2 SENECA FALLS. AB R 1B PO A E Farrell, cf ..................... 4 0 0 2 0 0 Quinn, 2b..._ .... 4 1 1 1 2 0 McGraw, ss ................. 3 0 0 0 4 1 Flanagan, p _______ 3 0 1 1 4 0 Crawford, c ................. 3 1 1 6 2 0 L. Smith, lb _______ 3 0 0 14 0 0 Woods, 3 b . .......... 3 0 0 t) 2 0 E-ston, If ..... . ........... 3 0 1 2 0 1 Chappell, rt ............... 2 0 0 1 0 0 Total .......... ........... 28 2 4 27 14 2 SCORE BY IXNINGS. O.-^bornes............0 0 O 0 0 2 0 1 0- 3 Seneca Falls ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 - 2 SUMMARY Stolen ’nasfcS. McElroy 2, Quinn 1; 2 base hits, Coughlin, Smuh; double play. Stout to Eiger; struck out, by Arnold 6, by Flanagan 5; bases on balls, off Arn- Jd 1, off Flanagan 1; hit by pitched ball. Smith; time of game, 1 Lu ur and 20 minutes. SENEC.V FALLS, 3. SCIENCE 0. The ball game at Cayuga Lake Park diamond Wednesday afternoon between the Natural Science of Can andaigua and the Seneca Falls teams was pronounced the finest played thus far this season by those who saw it. The Science team was made up of college students in camp on Canan daigua lake, and a more wiry or better lot of ball players never went to bat. Every one of them understood and played the game for all it was worth, making two double plays in great style. The features of the game were Ide’s arid ^'Chappell’s pitching the visitors’ doulite plays and field- ingJ^Flana^n’s hot one-handed catch in left field^Lewis’ catch, and ,on the whole, the way the home bufich worjjed together. The lopals never put U;3 a game in finer fofm, and their advantage over the visitors lay in the fa^et/that tbey.^ave succ^ieded in ob- taiLiag cohtr$^vof every weak point in the team, while their guests, all rattling players, lacked in organiza- Rafferty-riuldoon. A charming wedding was solemn ized at St.jPatrick’s church Wednesday afternoon at half past two o’clock. The bride was Miss Katherine M. Rafferty, daughter of Mrs. Katherine Rafferty of Toledo street, who has been for the past three years employed as a J;eacher in' the public schools of this village. The groom was William E. Muldoon, also of this village. The bride was attended by her cousin, Miss Martha Rafferty of Ovid ^nd the best man was Edw a j^^uldoon, a brother of the groom. The ring bearer. w»s Master Leonard Reynolds, and the ushers John Doran and Hugh .Muldoon. The bride was becomingly played ball like a perfect machine,., well oiled and under a full head'of steam. About five hundred people witnessed the game, an excellent attendance for the middle of the week, and in justice to the Ic'^^l rooters, it was pleasant to see th^t manner in which they rooted for tbe visitors, who must have left town will pis4sed with their reception, and with the opinion that Seneca Falls: rooters, if noisy, are at least a mannerly and courteous lot and who know when a good play is made and do not hesitate to say so with full emphasis. SENECA FA L L S . AB R iB PO A E Farrell ,cf .... ..... Quinn, 2b_____ McGraw, ss ..... Flanagan, If..... Crawford, c. ..... Woods, 3b ........ L. Smith, lb__ Lewis, rf. ........... . Chappell, p ...... Total ............... S c i e n c e .2 1 0 2 0 0 .401 410 .411 010 .4 0 1 2 0 0 . 4 0 2 8 1 0 . 4 0 1 0 5 0 . 4 0 2 1 . 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 10 Oil 82 3 8 27 9 1 AB R I B PO -A E Hogan, 3b __________ 4 0 1 2 4 1 Taggart, 2b. ................. 4 0 0 3 3 2 Warren, If. ................. 4 0 0 2 0 1 Niem a n , cf ................... 4 0 1 1 0 0 Love, lb ...................... 4 0 0 6 1 0 Vosburg, ss _______ 3 0 l ' 3 0 0 .3 0 0 1 0 0 .3 0 0 6 1 0 tion and mechanism. Seneca Falls white silk mulle ovei taffeta and carried a sho^wer bouquet *of bride’s roses. The bridesmaid wore white silk mulle over pink taffeta and carried a shower bouquet of pink roses. The ceremony was pronounced by Rev. Father M. U. Dwyer, and was witnessed by a large party of guests. Miss Mary Cruise presided at the organ, rendering as a proces sional Mendelssohn’s wedding march and as a recessional, the bridal chorus from Lohengrin. A reception was held at the home of the bride’s mother after the ceremony, and a sumptuous wedding dinner was served to a large number of guests. The house decorations consisted of marguerites, pink and white roses and carnations. The tioral decora tions of the bride’s table were maiden hair ferns, pink roses and carnations. The display of costly and useful wedding gifts testified the esteem in which the bride is held, and tbe happy couple, both from old and re spected families, are receiving the best wishes and congratulations of all who know them, who' unite in pre dicting and hoping that they may enjoy many years of happy wedded life. After a brief wedding journey Mr. and Mrs. Muldoon will take up their residence in this village. Crusades and Pessimists. There is no village, hamlet or city in the United States, or for that mat ter in the world, inhabited by human beings, that is so pure, so virtuous, SO holy, so sinless, that there is no longer room for improvement. The crusade against the powers of dark ness and the alluring temptations that beset the wayfarer on the journey of life at every point has existed since since the dark ages, and its results are to be seen in all directions in a con • templation of the varied structure of society of to day. One need but to compare present social conditions with those of a half century ago, to dis cern how great the improvements, to what a breadth and depth and length of intellectual attainment the twen tieth century has opened. Ennobling literature has m u ltiplied u n t il the finest productions of the orators, the writers and the poets of all ages are within the reach of the man of the most modest finances; gradually the evil in literature has been suppressed, and the fountain of life purified. Yet the pessimist, looking through the wrong end of the telescope, sees objects reversed, society retrograding, corruption breeding corruption, the moral barometer of the world rapidly tailing below tbe zero point, and the odor of sulphur and brimstone in the air constantly and surely becoming more overpowering. But the pes simists are growing less in numbers every day. They are more and more isolated and their food for consolation as they inspect their lessening numbers and infiuence is doubtless the reflec tion that they belong to the elect, still building in accordance with their inverse theory. Yet with all bis faults tbe pessimist seems to be a necessary quantity in the social struc ture of the present, for as clouds cause men to have a greater apprecia tion and love for sunshine, so the theories of the pessimist teach man kind the importance of seeing men and things as they are, shorn of il lusions and delusions, and with a perspective properly adjusted to pres ent conditions. Bramley, r f ......... Huntington, c„ __ Ide, p............................ 3 0 1 0 0 3 T o tal ...... ............... . 32 0 4 24 9 4 SCORE BY INNINGS. Seneca Falls ...... 2 0000010 *-3 Science................ 00000000 0-0 SUMMARY. Stolen bases, Grawford 2, Lewis 1, Chappell 1; 2 base hits, Smith; double plays Hogan to Love to Hogan; Ho gan to Taggart to Lewis; hit by pitched ball, Chappell; base on balls off Ide 2; struck out by Chappell 8; by Ide 3; earned runs, Senecas 2, Science, 0; time of game 1 hour and 10 minutes; umpire, Esmack; attend ance 500. _ _______ A Dry Sunday at the Lake. One of the results of the law and order movement in this village, was that Sunday at the Cayuga lake re sorts was the first dry one in the memory of man. All the drinking places were closed and an air of tranquility and good order prevailed at all points along the lake shore. This was a little disappointing to the thirsty ones, who, finding all side doors in the village closed, sought solace and their favorite beverages at the lakeside but they were there like wise denied and were obliged to con tent themselves with the cooling draughts of water that bubble up from nature’s springs along the shore, OP with the less satisfying soft drinks vended at the unlicensed places of amusement. As a result there were clearer heads and a finer appreciation than usual of the natural beauties that nature has bestowed with a generous hand upon the beautiful Cayuga. Officer Patrick Haley, the deputy sheriff employed at Bull’s Grove, looked in upon the scrub game of baseball in progress at the Cayuga Lake Park diamond, and found it conducted in an orderly manner - with no admission fee charged, and the game proceeded until cut short by rain. During the afternoon a special detective in spected all the drinking resorts and found no violation of law. This is indeed a creditable condition, and even the patrons of bars must note and approve of the justice of en forcing the Sunday closing laws at the lake resorts, when all fhe drink ing places in the village from choice or respect for the law, obey the pro visions of the statute. An excursion party from Jordan, numbering several hundred, visited 'Cayuga Lake Park Tuesday. Personals. —A son was born Monday to Mr. and Mrs. John Lacey. —Isaac B. Race is visiting his son Clarence at Islip, N. Y. —Miss Mary Gilgan has returned to her home in Penn Yan. —Mr. and Mrs. John Cardwell spent Sunday in Syracuse, —Mrs. George Wamby and daugh ter are visiting in Rochester. N —Miss Emma Remsen is visiting at O. S. Hoods on Cayuga street. —Lansing S. Hoskins was at Sara- iiac Lake the first of the week. —Miss Mary Sanderson of Rochester visited in Seneca Falls last week. —Mr. and Mrs. W . B. Henion have returned from Sai’anac lake. —Mrs. B. B. Shaw and daughter are visiting her'parents in Corning. —Miss Florence Buck of Buffalo is visiting at E. W . Addison’s on State street. —Mrs. Albert Reigie, of Rochester, is visiting at the home of U. L. Seekell. —Miss Rachel Carmer of Lyons, is visiting at H. A. Carraer’s on John son street. —Robert Collings, of Anderson’s store, is spending his vacation in the Adirondack’s. —Mrs. Alexander Scott and child, of Hamilton, Canada, are visiting at James Beach’s. —Mrs. J. B. Hill of Prospect street has returned from a visit of several weeks, near Boston. —Miss Florence Parmalee of Roch ester, is the guest of relatives in Sen eca Falls this week. —Miss Ora Yandenbergh of Detroit. Mich., has been visiting the Misses Gale on State street. —Letter Carrier William 0. Sisson has finished his vacation and returned to duty Wednesday. —Miss Josephine Andrews of Ithaca has been spending a few days with ' Miss Cora R. Gould, —Mrs. Fred P, Eastman of South Bend, Ind., is spending a couple of days ia Seneca Falls. —Letter Carrier Patrick McGuire commenced his annual vacation of fifteen days yesterday. —Supervisor H. D. Knight and wife have returned from a visit to New York and other points, —F. A. Warner, chef at the Bath Soldiers home, is visiting with his family in Seneca Falls. —Mrs. Norman Judd of Chicago, 111., is visting at the home of S. S. Gould on Cayuga street. —•Mrs, Carrie Jackson of Wellsville, N, Y., is visiting at tbe home of Loring Dumont at the lake. —Angus F. Compson, manager of Rumsey & Co.’s New York house, has been in town this week. —Mrs. William Cross is entertain ing Mrs. Adelbert Cross and little daughter Hazel of Syracuse. —Rev. H. Grant Person left Mon day for Schuylerville, Saratoga county for his annual vacation. —Walter Hayt, of Glassboro, N. J., is a guest at the home of Mrs. Julia E. Eastman on Mynderse street. —Mrs. James J. Young and child ren of Syracuse are visiting her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gott. —Mrs. John D. Toll and son of Philadelphia are visiting at the home of H. M. Glen on West Fall street. —Mrs. Imogene L. Guion is spend ing a couple of days in Binghamton on Woman’s Relief Corps business. —Mrs. Charles F. Wright, of St. Louis, Mo., is the guest of Mrs. Charles W. Combs on Miller street. —Mrs. Ira Christian and children of Gloversville are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harlow Smith on Bridge street. —Mrs. Cheesboro of Buffalo and two children, are visiting her daugh ter, Mrs. J. B. Hill on Prospect street. —Joseph Casey, of Canandaigua, spent Sunday and Monday among relatives and friends in this village. —Miss Katherine Corcoran returned Monday from a pleasant visit among friends in Sayannah, Wayne county. —Miss Ruth Parker of Oramel, Alleghany County, is visiting at the home of A. W. Brim on Mynderse —Mrs. F. L, ArmitageofNew York city is visiting at the home of her father, George W. Smith on Elm —Mr. and Mrs. R. W . Nobles of East Orange, N. J., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. John H. W inters on Oak street. —Mrs. F. W. DeMott and daugh ter, Miss Lilah, have returned from a two weeks’ visit among friends in Geneva. —Mrs. Jacob Van Deusen and daughter Katherine of Schenectady are visiting Mrs. Robert S. Gott on Walnut street. —Miss Florence Hackelt of Rich mond Hill, Long Island, is a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Hood on Cayuga street. —Frank Hughes, a former resident of Seneca Falls, now connected with the Cleveland, Ohio, fire department, is visiting in Seneca Falls. —Thomas Casey and Robert J. Dobson are attending the annual re union of the 3rd New York Artillery, being held at Auburn to-day. —The Misses Helen and Evelyn Whitman, of St. Louis, are guests at the home of their grandmother, Mrs, J. A. Rumsey, in the Terrace. —Miss Mary Ellen McGinnis and Miss Katherine McGraw,of Savannah, were guests of Miss Katherine Cor coran Friday and Saturday last. —Miss Aileen VanBenschoten, who has been visiting friends in this vil lage, returned to her home in New Haven, Conn., Tuesday morning. —Mr. and Mrs. Charles Viegars and child, of Albany, are visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Somers on Garden street. —Mrs. Charles Hudson, Misses Loretta and Marie Hudson, Miss Mary Eaker and Miss Mary Tryon, all of W eedsport, called on friends in town Tuesday. —Stuart Page, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Page of Green street, who has been dangerously ill with bron chial pneum onia, is out of danger and rapidly recovering, —Mrs. F. A. Norcott leaves to day ■for a visit in New York and at Asbury Park, N. J. At the latter place she will be the guest of Hon. and Mrs, Fred S. Gibbs. — W illiam W o o d and fam ily, who have occupied a house on Johnston street for- the past fifteen years or more, moved last week to the Demp sey house on the corner of Bayard and Washington streets. —The many friends of Charles L. Hoskins will regret the news of his serious illness at Saranac Lake in the Adirondacks, where he has been staying for some time. All hope for him a speedy recovery. Reports this morning indicate that his condition is improving. —Albert Mildenberg, of New York city, is a guest of Charles Meehan of this village, during the summer vaca tion. Mr. Mildenberg is the author of the new opera, “The Wood W itch,” which is to be produced at Chicago during the coming season, under his personal direction. The opera will be produced later in the season at Geneva, ard the principal male role will be taken by Charles Meehan, of Seneca Falls, who at tained wide fame as a boy soprano. Obituary. PATRICK MCNANEY, a respected citizen of this village, died Wednesday morning at an early hour at his home on East Bayard street of cancer of the throat, with which he had suffered for a long time. Deceased was a native of Ireland, but had spent the greater part of his life in this village, where his industrious habits and integrity of character won for him tbe esteem of a large circle of friends. He leaves a widow, one daughter, Mrs. Edward Burns, of this village, and five sons, Edward and Albert, of Corning, James, of Rochester and Philip and Thomas of this place. Deceased was seventy years of age. The funeral ■ service will be held at St. Patrick’s church Friday m orning at nine o’c lc c k . __________ It is strange that a movement for the simple enforcement of existing laivs should arouse so much opposition and even abuse of those concerned in it. Even if the movement is ^spasmodic, as such movements usually are, some good may and probably will be accom plished. In The Churches. PRESBYTERIAN. The pastor, Rev. H. Grant Person left Monday on his annual vacation which will continue through the month of August. During his ab sence the pulpit supply will be as fol lows: Sunday, August 2nd, Rev. F. W. Palmer, D. D., Auburn, N. Y . ; August 9th, Rev. Edwin H. Dickin son, D. D., Buffalo, N. Y.;' August 16th and 23rd, Rev. W. G. White, Youngstown. Ohio; August 30th, Rev. Henry W. Maier, Schenectady, N. Y. Preserving and Raw Canning, TUTTI FRUTTI PRESERVES. “Put one quart of white preserving, fine Batavia or other good brandy into a two gallon stone jar that has a tightly fitting top. Then for every pound of fruit in fine condition and perfectly dry, which you put into the brandy, use three quarters of a pound of granulated sugar. Stir every day so that the sugar will be dissolved, using a clean wooden spoon kept for the purpose. Every sort of fruit may be used, beginning with berries and ending with plums. Ber ries, black and red, currants, apricots, cherries, peachqs, plums and grapes are all used. Plums and grapes should be peeled and seeded, apricots and peaches peeled and cut in quarter- inch dice. The jar must be kept in a cool, dry place, and the daily stirring must never be forgotten, for that is the secret of success. You may use as much of one sort of fruit as you like and it may be put in from day to day, just as you happen to have it. The preserves will be ready for use within a week after the last fruit is put in and will' keep for rnontbs.” Quinces, grapes and crab apples will receive our attention in due season. F. A . V a r n e r . Review of Fayette Assessment Roll. The assessors of the town of Fay ette have completed their roll for . that town and on Tuesday, August^ 18th, will meet at the town clerk’s office in South Waterloo, to review their assessment. They will meet at Oanoga on Thursday, August 20th, and at Fayette on Saturday, August 22nd, for the .same purpose. Steamer Hohawk. For a delightful sail on Sunday take steamer leaving Cayuga Lake Park 9:40 a . m . for all points on lake to Ithaca. Returning at 8 P. M. Just the thing. Ninety miles for 50 cents. Bring your baskets and enjoy your self. Connects with trains at Cayuga. Auction. Dr. Harvey E. Brown of Fayette, will sell at public auction at his resi dence in the village of Fayette on Friday, August 7th, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, a large amount of per sonal property. The sale will include eight blooded horses,three top buggies, one open buggy, one Penn Yan road cart, cutters and sleighs, several fine double and single harnesses, blankets and farm tools of all kinds, also household goods. Auction. On Saturday August 8th, at 1:30 P. M., at No. 52 Cayuga street in this village, William H. H arpt as auc tioneer, will sell at public auction, household furniture consisting of bed room suits, mattresses and springs, book case, cabinet organ and music holder, eight foot dining table, rock ing chair, kitchen utensils and many other articles too.num erous to men- Automobile for Sale, nearly new, steam touring car, in first class running order. Address, . J.- H . S hale , ■241 N, Water St., Rochester, N. Y, Vacation Rates. Nickel Plate road now selling daily, special excursion tickets to Salt Lake City, Denver, Hot Springs, S. D., Elpaso, St. Paul, etc., including the principal tourist resorts in thfe we§t, at exceeding low rales, good return ing to Oct. 31st. See local agents, or write R. B. Payne, Genl.- Agt, Buff alo, N. Y.