{ title: 'The Pokeepsie evening enterprise. (Pokeepsie [i.e. Poughkeepsie], N.Y.) 1892-1918, August 05, 1895, Page 4, Image 4', 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/sn90066261/1895-08-05/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066261/1895-08-05/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066261/1895-08-05/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066261/1895-08-05/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: New York State Library
f n e PO^Ii.££PSlji: EVDBIIIIV m T E R P R l S E , MOSTOAT, A IJ«U 8 P 5. i m s Now for the Pants. Today you’ll find Two ot Three Thousand Pairs of our Men^s and Boys’ Separat*^ Pants Out Loos® from Worth r rices If jou’re going to need a pair or so mo e before snow flies,ihis is your chance For they're all of the Finest Fabrics in choicest patterns, ail made by us, and are the best fitting pants you can fini ready made or custom mads eithei'— senument'l must be wrung out of business, • I>'s busin *ss we should plan np^- to sell ^em quickly—and have. MEN’S PAMTS. Choice of Hundreds of Stales—all Sizes. Those i hat were $3. do and S3.00 ^ $1.78 Those that were $3.50 and 4.00 2.48 Those that were 4.50 and d,00 2.98 Those that 5.50 and 6.00 8.35 BOYS PANTS Two lots, 5,000 and5,001, regu lar pric^ $2, and cheap at that Those that were $4.50 and $5.00 Those that weie 2.50 and 800 Those that were 3.50 and 4 00 Those that wer-^ 5.50 and 6.00 $ 1.00 2.98 1.73 2 42 3 35 t BOYS' KNEE PANTS- Ail sizes, 4 to 15 years. Those that were S1.50, now 98 cents. Those that were $1.25 now §9 cents. Those that were $1.00, now 78 ceot^. Those that were 75 cfcs ,now50 cents. Those that were 50 cts.,now 35 centSe r And there are no Pants like Bampson’s Pants. SAMPSON BROTHERS. S O S &>ia.€L S O - ^ l% 4 S ia < ii:x S t . Evening Bnterpri 0 e. T r u n k s , B u g s . \ Telescope and JDress Suit 0 a s e £ OVMOPR BROS.’, a i l MAIN STREET, G r e a t H e d u c t i o n |H ig h Class Novelties Lawn \ 1 White J all new at a Great Reduction, Dates & Burroughs, 3I0-3I2 iV8A!N STREET. ■ ftanK fsa Elesok. | SIE iililS . ForMen'/i^oysaMOiildrei. WigOi UiBUliUS. iOLE AfiENT'FOR DUiLlF & ■’ : GO ’S F ATS 259 Main Street,. EDDIE BALD Has demonstrated that OOLUMBIAS are fast by winning every im portant Class B event of the season. BALD and his COLUMBIA are the stars of the Cycling World. I Nothing bnt a big start will finish ahead of the COLUMBIA i on track or road. ! H. von der Linden, 02 Market Street 'Xd '■ :'J There Isn’t a WomaB in- - ■Who w o u ldn’t have a nice dinner set if •they could afford it, who dosen’t intend to have one as soon as she can, who wouldn’t like a nice Banquet Lamp,that will give a big light to read or play by, just as little light as you need for “eparking”. We have an entire new line of Lamps and Dinner Sets, gBEAT REQUGTION ! ATKINS! I j 5 pieces Light StrpieDuck Suiting. I We will close them out for i 7 CENTS PER YARD, AT THE NEW UP-TOWN STORE ATKINS, 439 Main St. MOST PEOPLE Know how hard it is to find a stocking, to stand the boys, but we have them, and this week are going to place on sale 100 dozen at PRIOES. i 286 MftIM STREET, iilRlGTOH, Will. R.| i 7 Cents a Pair or Three Pairs for 60 Cents. i i l l s JDST EECEITED A HEW LIME! ---- OF ---- SPBSN 6 AHDISUUMER iFOOTWEAR ; All ih© Latest Styles. One must see ; them to appreciate them. lUSTOM WORK A SfECIALTY. j WnjJAK WETZEL; I 6 WaBbinstton Street T1 i €S3 gcods are extra heavy, double heels and toes, Fast Bkch and usually sold at 25 cents a pair. J. PARKER HEATH’S SON, 8 8 6 M a i n S t i f e e t , Price, 2 cents p er copy, or delivered hy carrier for 10 cents p er week. ISntered a t the Post Office a t Poke'c;.;sie, N. Y., as Second Class Matter.'\ Office: 283 Main Street, Pokeepsie,N.I, ^gather Indications, 1 6 ’elctck F, 5f SpeeialtotheSfnterprise.} W ashington , August 5 For eagtern New York generally fair, southerly winds. HEW3Y H0TES INTEREST. ’Tis the same old picnic sorrow That comes as the seasons fly; The man with the whitest pantaloons Sits down in the pinkest pie. This is fruit year. Base ball Wednesday. Dog days are here, the muggiest of the yeapi Another circus is promised next month. K. of P. picnic at Washington Hollow on Wednesday. The Phoenix Horseshoe w orks are now booming- again. Rhode Island clambake at Upton Lake park on Wednesday. There was a cloudburst at Nyack on Sunday which did great damage. The choir of the Baptist church are' enjoying a well earned vacation. Lawn parties and moonlight excur sions received a chill last week. The Rev. W. E. Webster preached two very practical, convincing sermons at the Baptist church on Sunday. The rowboat “Julia’' has been stolen from the boathouse of Mrs. J. F. Wins* The Je La’i Troove bread is making a great hit in this city. It is a fine article. Hunting’s circus was well attended on Saturday night and the performance was very satisfactory. Hunting’s circus band proved con clusively that It does not take many pieces to make a great deal of noise. The Epworfcfa League of the Hedding church will participate in an e&cursion to Grovevilie park on Tuesday evening. The alarm of fire at a late hour Satur day afternoon was caused by a slight hbze in the reAr pf Adam Gaire’s pot tery. The friends of Amarr Wood and wife will extend sympathy to them in the bss of their only child. It passed away today, The day boat New York carried a big crowd on her down trip today. A good many people hie already going home from the Mo^intains. The sympathy of a host of friends of Rev. G, H. Gregory D, D,, will be ex tended to that popular divine who hag lost his beloved sister Mary. The members of the Wallace, Elliot & Co., Mutual Aid society to the number of about sixty enjoyed a clambake at Schmaerkase park on Sunday. The opera house amusement season is near at hand, the opening being on August 28 with Froh man’s strong com pany in “The Girl I Left Behind Me.” Professor Baldwin, who is finishing his trip from Troy to San Francisco and return, spent last night at Columbia Springs. He expects to reach Troy to day. He passed through here la&t week. The cranks are on the tiptoe of great expectations over the ball game on Wednesday. The first of the series be tween Newburg and Pokeepsie for the Hudson River championship will be played in this city on that day. There was only one case before Recorder Odell this morning. A lad named George Styles was charged with assaulting his mother. He will have a hearing at 4 o’clock this afternoon and was released in $100 bail until that time. T. lY.C. A. The Bicycle club of the Young Women’s Christian Association will meet on Mansion square park at 6:30 this evening. The Brownson’s Exenrsion. The Brownson club took a big crowd on its excursion to Ipna Island today. Two commodious barges were required to carry the excursionists. The Twenty- first Regiment band furnished music. German Bay. The business houses of the city, will confer a favor on the local societies if they will decorate their places of busi ness on “German Da>” this week. Thursday is to be the great field day for the Harugari societies. To Try Examinations. A uniform examination for teachers’ certificates will be held in the high school building in this city on Thursday and Friday of this week. For first and and second grade certificates on both days; for third grade on Friday only. Boath of George h. Brown. George L. Brown, the well known druggist, died at hia home, 40 Harrison street, on Saturday night from a co|i- plication of diseases of long standing, Mr. Brown leaves a wife’ and three children. He had not been in business for some time on account of ill health and was under treatment at Vaaear hospital for several months this year. The funeral was held from hw late resi* dene© this afternoon. A F£W SOCIAL OLEANINGS 0atL,ered Here and Tiiere for Enterprise Readers TATTLEfi’S TEU-TALg TOHGUe, Brief Mesitioa oi Our Folks and Others —Matters of a Personal Lharacter Tersely Treated—Coadensed Para graphs Interesting to Many Readers. W. P. Heath is at Rainbow, N. Y. Dr. Sheedy is registered at Clarendon, SarPetoga. 0: W ; Rhynus and fam ily are a t HibefhM; Mrs, A. V. V. Haight is at Warrens- burg, H. Y. W, L, Dean ahd family are ruetioating near Noxou. E. B. Taylor is at “Ocean View,” Block Island. C. S. King, of New York, is the guest of L. C. Burt. Mr. S, E . D a rrow is again a t his post of duty at the post office, Mrs. George Forster is at Asbury Park with her daughter Grace. Miss Josie Dougan has been stopping at New Paltz for several weeks. Charles Seeholzer and bride are at the LaPierre House, Ocean Grove. W. R. Farrington is registered at the Hubbard House, Clayton, N. Y. Misses Dora Decker and Mamie Hors fall are spending two weeks at New Brunswick, N. J. Isaac Pialit has returned from his European trip with the Cornell Glee club. Joseph T. Tower has leased a hand some cottage at Newport for the rest of the season. Mrs. Vespasian Briggs and daughter, Mrs, Wm. Germond and son are at Schultzville. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Baldwin will spend two weeks at Canandaigua Lake for an outing. Miss Eva Hopper of Fishkill Landing is visiting her uncle, Conductor Charles Hopper in this city. Dr. Lamb of the Matteawan asylum was a visitor at the Hudson River State hospital on Sunday. Miss Lowery, of Delafield street, is entertaining Miss Mamie Ryan, of Joliet, lU., and Hattie Ryan, of Syracuse. Frank Matterfi haS returned to Po keepsie after an extended absence in New Orleans and other places south. Mr. John Kearney, sr., has recovered from a trying operation performed by Drs. Bayley and Tuthiil at Vassar hospital. Mrs. D. 0. MalthbvVs, Mrs. J. M. Mat* thews, Miss Janet Robson and Mrs. C. W. D&yo and children are stopping at Salt Point. James Kerr, the down-town stationer and newsdealer, has purchased the busi ness of Mrs. McKenna at No. 4 Wash ington street, Mr. “Bessie” Simmons the popular clerk at Donald, Converse & Maynard’s has gone to visit his Uncle Hiram at Washington Hollow. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Dayton expect to start this week on their European trip, The best wishes of a large circle of friends go with them, “Little Trilby,” very well known around town left y^terday for a well earned vacation of two weeks. He will visit Tivoli and Bed Hook before turning. Mr. Timothy L. Woodruff and wife, Mrs, Cora Eastman Woodruff, are at Hollywood, N. J., where Mr, Woodruff has entered some prize animals a t the horse show. Oscar Way, Alvin Griner, W. H. Holliday and Frank Sherman are camp ing out on Esopus island. A party of Crockett’s members will visit them tomorrow night. Rev. F.B. VVheeier,wife and daughters. Misses Harriett© and Julia, together with Mrs. J. F. Winslow and family are having a delightful time at their White Mountain retreat, Theodore Taylor, superintendent of the Middletown district of the Pruden tial Insurance company, is in Pokeepsie for a few days undergoing treatment for his nerves at the hands of Dr.'H, R. Po well. Hon, John I, Platt urged a large audience in St. Peter’s hall on Sunday evening to join the cold water army. Patrick Kelly, and Wm. A. Kerr of New York rendered excellent vocal numbers. Mr. Frank Van Kleeck is wearing an exceedingly broad smile and he recog nizes readily the sound of “papa.” A bright, baby boy has arrived at his home, and hearty congratiifations are being extended. ^ Rev, Wayland Spaulding is stopping at Rockville, Conn, He will take up his residence at 13 Ludlow street^ Yonkers, on Sept. 1, having been engaged «s pastor of the newly organized Congre- Kational society in that city. Miss Lora Mullen, formerly organist of the Baptist church in this city, played the wedding march in St. Mary’s church, Ellenville, Tuesday, on the occasion of the marriage of Mias Mary MoMullen and Timothy F. Murray of New York. Mr. F. F. Calyer, office secretary of the International Y. M. O. A., 40 East Twenty-third street, New York city,wa& in the city today. He is spending a two weeks’ vacation riding through the country on his wheel. He left fOT?^ Hudson this afternoon. The marriage of our well-kn Own down-town merchant Mr. Charles Ki uiy, and Mrs, Hannah Dunn, of Syracuse^ will be solemnized about the middle of August. They will take up their resi dence in the Blankenhorn house in Balding avenue, about Sept. I. Pokeepsie is called on to supply the talent for the ball clubs in this vicinity. Rogers and Daley are members of the- Newburgs, Schlude and Theysohn form ; the battery for the Hudsons, Hogan and ' Coleman, as the battery, brought victory, to Pleasant Valley on Satuiday. Coi. Jacob j^upperfc, gon of the owner of the Hudson River Driving park near this city, has. purchased the famous road team Gray light aud Golddusl. The. price paid is in excess of auything paid^ for the same amount of horseflesh for some time. It is believed to he the finest cross-match team in the world. Mr. A. A. Yates,a well know n teacher- in this county, has accepted a position.’ as principal in a large graded school at Mariners’ Harboi*, Staten Island, and he will assume charge about Sept. 1. Mri- Yates has been a successful teacher in Duchess county for a number of years. He is enthusiastic and progressive, and. has held some of the most important positions in the field of education in this- section. He has always been a firm- friend of every plan proposed or adopted for the advancement of both teacher and pupil in the work of his. profession, and his experience and; teaching ability are such as warrants us in congratulating the people of Mariners’ Harbor on the fact that their edu cational interests are to be intrusted to safe and competent hands. A Bicycle Thief CanghL Andrew Mabie, a young man of Rhine^ cliff secured a second-handed Credenda bicycle from Julius von der Linden at Rhinebeck Saturday nighc on pretense that he wanted to buy it. He did not return, however, and on Sunday Mr. von der Linden traced him to this city where he found that Mabie had com© here and sold the wheel to Jacob Becker of 18 Jefferson street for $11, Officer Martin arrested Mabie and recovered the wheel and Officer Quick of Rhinebeck took the thief to that place for trial. Miss Bisseli S a U s for Europe. M iss Bissell, daughter of George E. • Bissell, the sculptor, sails for Europe the’ first of this month to join her father,- She intend a to remain abroad a year or two for violin study. Miss Bissell is a graduate of the Vaesar school of musiCj a member of the Girls’ Mandolin club^ of Pokeepsie, and is considered one of the finest lady violinists in the state. The Bissell house on Balding avenue has been rented furnished,by Professor Gon, the new director of music at Vassar college. Seeks to Recover by Civil Actfbar,. Last week, George Sherowv Tberon Sherow and two other men were tried before Justice Olivet at East Pokeepsie on a charge of exploding dynamite in, the Wappingers creek to kill fish. They were acquitted by a jury. Now Fish* and Game Protector Kennedy of Hud son has commenced a civil action against the men in the supreme court to- recover the penalty imposed by law.. The Spralt Piitirmacy, We are sorry for you if you have to buy drugs and medicines. Not a cheer ful thing to be doing, we admit, but if you must have them come to us. Our reputation is behind all we sell. T he S fbatt P hakmacy , tf 269 Main street,. Very Warm Weather. And there is nothing so refreshing ae a nice cool drink of Root Beer, We have all the different extracts from 10c. up. If you cannot buy fine Granulated Sugar anywhere for 34c, for 7 lbs. just call on us. V andewatbr & iRWilf’S, tf 188 Main street. BASE BALL. Wednesday, August 7th. Newburgs vs, Pokeepsies. First great game for the Championship- of the Hudson River. Admission - - - - 25 cts. Ladies, - - - Game called 3:30 p. m. 2ta5 For Today. The main attraction at Thing & Co.’s big sale is over 300 pairs of ladies black Oxfords, also tan color, at 50c, 60c and 75c, any pair worth 75c to $1.50. All a mixed lot at S. B. Thing & Co.’s big shoe sale. It House For Hale. House and lot No. 10 Bain avenue will be sold at a sacrifice to a quick buyer, on account of the owner leaving the city in a few days. Cali and inspect the property. tf Ladies. Y o u r s h irt w a is t laundred in finest style. Leave yo u r nam e , f o r u s to call, PoUGHHKEEPSIE L a XINDR-S- CO., m w f tf 329 Main'streefc. Great Sport. The Newburgs with Daley in the box will be here Wednesday, Aug. 7, Game at3:80p«m . MaS