{ title: 'Allegany County news. (Whitesville, Allegany County, N.Y.) 1913-1916, November 25, 1914, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn92061686/1914-11-25/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061686/1914-11-25/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061686/1914-11-25/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061686/1914-11-25/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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ALLEGANY COUNTY NEWS, WHITESVILLE, N. Y. ALLEGANY COUNTY NEWS Edited by HERBERT M. PEET Published every T h u P rinting C o m p a n y , of Owned by H e r b e r t M. B a s s e tt of W h itesville, N. Y. tered a s second-class m a il m a t t e r a t tostofiiceos' of W h itesville, N. Y. the p lay by th e Alleco Whitesville, N. Y. set and G lenn C. GLENN C. BASSETT, Business Manager. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. “ No Pas% No P a p e r .” One Y e a r .........................................................$1.2 S |x M o n ths .......................................................... 6 T h r e e M o n ths ....................................................3 Single Copy ............................................... 0 Always in Advance. ADVERTISING RATES O u r ad v e rtisin g rate s are based upon the cost system and the size of our cir culation. One inch, one insertion, 25c; ten or m o re inches, one insertion, 15c per inch; ad v e rtisin g done under contract ag reem e n t ranges trom 10c to 15c per per hundred ents per hun- u e n t insertion. C a rd of T h a n k s , $1.00. AA ddvertising, v e rtising, 75c w o rds, first insertion; 50 dred w o rds for each subset twdsf^fi lusiness readers, locals, classified ad- id obituary poetry 5 cents per Busine! vertising O u r term s a r e cash in ; in case of co n tr a c t ad' m o n thly settlem e n ts m a k e no discount. Lvance, except rtising, ■ w h en a r e allow ed. W e JOB PRINTING Our handle 1 CLUB LIFE FOR BOYS I ■ i Every one Temembers the idyllic pictures one used to sec of th e en tire family around the* eveninig lamp. There was father reading the new s paper. Mother, dear housewifely ;Soul, was knitting a pair of socks. The cat purred by the fiireside. The boys and girls read their Qlivei Optic or played jackstraw s. In those days a family th a t after 7 p. m., could .not cail the roil and have all the children answ '• p resent, was considered loose in family gov ernm ent. But where are the hoys now? -- As the w inter evenings come, the Boy .Scouts, K nights of King A rthur and many other organizations open up their doors. Many old fashion ed folks see with alarm the boys hein g drawn from their safe, quiet and peaceful homes. They m ay nominally he headed for the Boy Scout m eet ing, but actually for some undesirahlt hang-ou Some of the boys* h a re more engagercenls in the evening than the grown-ups, and they al most neied a private secretary to keep th e ir dates straightened out. For better or worse, the picture of the endre family gathered a- round the evening lamp is not so fam iliar today. It still exists on the farm. Even the cross-road dance may not tem p t the young folks to walk the several intervening miles. But wherever people gather in towns, the hoy becomes more and more a little socieiy man. W ise parents do well to insist on a good am ount of sleep, yet they can not check these tendencies of the age enl rely. A boy needs the ex perience’ of associating with his own kind. He must be trusted to take his little flights out from Mother's wing. If he can't be led out of sight at the age of 12, he never can be. If he can join som e good boy's organ ization undor com p etent supervision, he learns som e lessons of respons ibility, self reliance, and seif-govern'ment that his father never had. PROHIBITjOl;^ COLUMN W h at Prohibition has Accomplished It IS- of \astly greater iimportance to know w h a t prohibition lias act ually dene for a state that has tried the experiment for years than to. in dulge in a-vademic discussions as to w h a t it WOULD or WOULD NOT do At a m eeting of the W. C. T. U., held in Topeka, Kansas, September 4th last, the prinici'pal speaker was Mr A rthur Capper, editor of the. To peka Capi+al, .and the Republican candidate for Governor. In the course of his address he pre,sented these tei'ling facts: “It seems to me th a t the state which has tried prohibition for thirty years and demonstnated that it is a complete success; “That ha,s reduced the .an.nual ex penditure for liquor from ?21 per cap ita, the avpiage an the United States, to $1.25 pe.r capita in Kansas; “T h a t has reduced iRReracy to two per cent—the lowest in the United States; “That has forty eight counties which diid not send one prisoner to the penitentiary and 87 countieis that did not send an insane patient to the asylum last year; ^ “That has m o re than a dozen counties in which no. jury has; been, called in ten years' to try a criminal case; “That has 53 counties without pris oners in their jaiH-s; “T h a t has 28 counties without paup ers in their almshouseis. “That has the lowest death rate in the wo'^ld— 7% for each 1000 per sons; “That has more students in college J and universities in propoTtion to the popu'lati n than any other .state; “That has increa.sed its bank de posits in ten years' from $100,000,000 to more than $200,000,000; “It seems to me tliat such a state can well take the lead in the crusade for ,a salo' 0 ::il'ess 'nation and has a night to say—^Indeed th a t it is its duty to -say—to th© people of the United .States and to the w o rld; The public health, the public peace, ' the public m orals and the public welfare demand the absolute eradicatio-n of the saloon ’ I DANGER SIGNALS | i i Governor-elect W hitman has m ade no definite announcement of the policies he will attem p t to put into effect aiS the State’s chief executive N e vertbeless there is no reason to' think th a t these policies will swerve fro m th.© REACTIONARY LINES LAID DOWN .N HIS PARTY PLAT FORM and indicated in his own. campaign UtterancSS. It is. significant th a t the press,.in eluding certain influentiial newspapers that have been friendly to W hitm an throughliout his. official career, take it for grante th a t -the Republican, program includes the wholesale dem olition of the machinery of State in order that places mow held by.Dem- ocrats may be given to Republicanretalners. T h e ” impending peril extern ds even to the State Civil. S.ervice .department, whose subservience is esse ntial to th i wrecking program. W ith the physical power to do unlimited miischief in the nam e of “re form,” evidences of revolt within the Rep'Ub'toan party itself against the brute force pro;gram of tearing down w h a t the Demiocracy has build- ed wisely ?re of pointed interest. This ©speciaily is the case with ref erence to th a t section of th© party known a® “Hughes Rep.ibliicans,” who held t.ie key to the .situation ,at the recent .election. The N. Y. Tribune and the N. Y. Globe, practically the only Metro politan dailies that gave the Republican ticket a whole-hearted support at the late election have sounded the warning that the carrying out of a destructive policy Would prove a fatal blunder. The Evening Post tells Mr. W hitman pointedly that his own party will resent the intenttion attribute.d to him of TEARING DOWN THE STATE DEPARTMENTS IN ORDER TO MAKE PLACES FOR REPUBLICANS. Th© World, which is credited w ith being closer to th© Governor-elect than any otner newspaper, is .expre-ssing itself vigorously in the same way No Metropolita.n news'paper has been bold enough to set the seal of its approval on th© desitmctive policy which is attributed to .the party which will have ^jomplet© ^exe'cutive and legislative control of the state at least for the coming yea'r. Evidences multiply that tli-ei victorious party is not without troubles of its -own, amd tliat they will result disastrously for it unless ■ a sharp halt is called in the program that cannot fail wO m eet with condemnation of all good citizens, irrespective of party aff-iliations. OF THE STATE TO THE PEOPLE OF NEW YORK; To Norman Rogers, Eva S- -ger, Nel- ie Foster, Lida Slocum, John Rogers., M ira Roger -, Sarah Murray, Cena Updyke, Jan Updyke, Rena Updyke, Earl Roge-s, Fannie Kemp, Alice Young, M artha Young, Lottie Bab cock, Bryant ^Crain.e, Elizabeth Bur dick, One Crane, E tta Slack, Volney Dav.inport, Bert Davenport, Grace Pinckney, Nellie Lampkin, Celestia Howarth, Park Rogers, Clark Rogers, Ames Rogers, Sylvania W hitcomb, Ed mund Rogers, being all the heirs at law, next of kin and credi-tors of Levi F. Rogers late of the Town of And over, in Allegan.y C o u n ty, deceased, GREETING: You, iand each of you, are hereby cited and required personally to be and appear before our Surrogate -of Allegany county, a t his Office in Wells ville, N. Y., in said county, on the 10th day of December. 1914, a t ten o’clock in the forenoon of th a t day, then and ther© to attend the judic ial settlem e n t of the accounts of Cel estia J. Jones and Ernest Clark, as A d m inistrators w ith tl e Will annex ed of Levi P. Rogers, deceased. (And if any of the above '-named persons interested be under tlie age of twenty-one years, they are requir ed to appear by -their guardian if they ‘Imve one, or if they have none, to appear and : a p p ly for a special guardian to be appo.jn.ted, or in .'the event of their neglect o r failure to do so, a special guoa^dlau will be ap pointed by the Surrogate, to repre^ sent and a c t for them in th is pro ceeding). fi I IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we have caused the Seal of Office of Otir said Surrogaite ,'to M hereunto af fixed, i WITNESS. BON. JAMBS T. WARD Diist. A tty. and Acting Surrogate, of saidL; County, at Heimont, N. y. the . ith. day of November, in the year of NEED FOR A VARIED DIET PUBLIC HEALTH HINTS Prepared Each Week For the Readers of This Newspaper by the New York State Department of Health. s 0 far as the energy of living is concerned, almost any foods will serve if they are eaten in sufficient amount. The human body needs foods for another purpose, however—to build up the CON STANT \YASTE of tissue that must go on all the time while life con tinues. In this work of repairing the substance of the body DIFFER ENT FOODS play a very DIFFERENT PART, and either a very careful selection or a considerable variety of foods in the right propor tion is essential for good health. The native.^ of the Philippine Islands suffer severely from a disease known as BERIBERI as^a result of their habit of living almost exclu sively on polished rice (rice from which the outer coating containing substances important to nutrition has been removed). In America we do not find many people living on food so one sided as that of the poorer Filipinos, but it is doubtless true that many families live on a diet which is poorly selected and contains too much of some food^ elements and too little of others. The trouble is not, as some sensational writers would have us believe, that wicked manufacturers rob food of its valuable elements and thus starve the poor. Neither is it a question of expense. A New York city physiologist compared the actual food value of a thirty cent dinner on Third avenue and of a five course dinner which cost $3 on Fifth avenue. The first had a greater food value. The main thing is that people do not know ¥711 AT FOODS THE BODY NEEDS. Most animal foods, like meat, fish and eggs, produce acid decom position products in the body, and people generally eat too much food of this cla^s. Professor H. C. Sherman of Columbia Univer.sity, who has made a special study of this subject, suggests that the average family should spend as much money for MILK, VEGETABLES AND FRUITS, whtich supply the BASIC elements needed, as for MEAT, PISH AND EGGS. Since the foods of the first group are, on the whole, cheaper than those of the second group, there is a double gain, both in health and in poeketbook, by following this rule. One of the most important 'essentials in a healthful diet, e.specially for growing children, is calcium, and this element is present in large amount in milk and eggs. So a second good rule in feeding a family is that as much money should be spent for MILK AND EGGS as for IVIEAT AND FISH. By following these two suggestions the housekeeper may provide a better balanced .diet without increase in cost. oiir Lord, one thousand nine hundred and fourteen. | SEAL James T. Ward, Dist, Att’y, and Acting Snrrogat©. <Nufco,—This ■Citation is served to ^ve you legal notice of the ©rooeed- ing; but you are not obliged to ap- peair uul^SiS you desire,-to do so.). P. F. PREST, D. D. S. of Canisteo, w ill be in W h itesville every Thursday for the practice of dentistry. Having had several years experience he is able to do all Work in a satisfactory m anner. Office in Flpemen's Building. A Novelization of Eugene Walter*s Famous Drama by Webster Denison PRETTY, young wife wants fine clothes j r \ and a luxurious living; her husband cannot aflford to give them to her hon estly. He finally satisfies her desires at the cost of his honor and in the end he pays the price. You’ve seen this situation yourself many times probably. A big, gripping, realistic story that handles the theme without gloves—a startling picture of the extent to which the lust for wealth—the get- rich-quick idea—spreads its poison through the whole structure of character. ARE YOU reading this Late Story now running on Page 6? Don’t Experiment In Clothes Y o u C u n ^ t A f f o r d to experiment in buying clothes; a good suit or overcoat costs too - much for that, and is expected to last a long time. Many men, however, keep floundering around trying to find a good thing. You don’t need to ! There’s no experiment in buying Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes here because there’s no uncertainty in the way they’re made and sold. You get a definite return for your money in these goods, in style, in all- wool fabrics, in fit and service. Come in and let us show you, it doesn’t cost anything to look; it doesn’t cost much to buy such clothes. CLOTHES BOUGHT FROM US PRESSED AND KEPT IN REPAIR ONE YEAR FREE OF CHARGE STAR CLOTHING HOUSE HORNELL h o m e o f h a r t SCHAFFNER AND MARX CLOTHES. 134-I36 riain St. HORNELL, N- V. 4-6 Church St.