{ title: 'Allegany County news. (Whitesville, Allegany County, N.Y.) 1913-1916, July 08, 1915, 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/sn92061686/1915-07-08/ed-1/seq-8/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061686/1915-07-08/ed-1/seq-8.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061686/1915-07-08/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061686/1915-07-08/ed-1/seq-8/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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1 N O T IC E E Will 5hip Stock Wednesday July 14 Calves 9c Ib. Hogs 7 c Ib. Bulls, looo lbs. or over, 5c Ib. Lambs, 6c lb* W illiam T eatef, ¥ l ^ ' h i t e s ¥ 3 i i e 1^- Y . i t B o liv a r N e w s - L e t t e r I ;• iS ALLEGANY C O J im ^ NEW^, WHITESVILLE, N. Y, ge^ted, who fought toard to Imve th e ' convention, if it wa^ to spend money 'fo.r drinking water, spend it with the state and its great reservation at Saratoga. j iBut th e final outcome was, after two hours’ debate, th a t a corporaitoni in the hailiAvick of P a trick W. Culld- nan, the veteran Republican Avar horse of Oswego, was aAvarded a fat ! iittle contract. i It costs at least $r<00 an hour to run the Con,stitutional Convention. ?inon w r S f f M a r c h , 1864, he enlisted a s a | f l ' l private in Company I, 5Gth Regiment | ang a $300 favor to a little oorpora- ^ ^ ° tion. StraAvs show how th e wind blows. Pap. Pap. Pap. C h a r les P o w e l! Charles Powell, a veteran of the Civil w a r , died of dropsy a t th e home of his daughter, M-rs. J. H. W asson, on Olive street, Sunday morning, Ju ly 4th, a t 8 o’clock. Mr. PoAveli was born on June 26, 1846. The Bane of Pros.oerity H oav the Stravys are Blowing The foi' Tter of drinking w a ter took gestion \\and constipation. About the tim e the average family merges into prosperity the older men hers -begin to be troubled Avith indi- J. W. tw o hourc- of th e tim e of the Consti-; Spencer, Chittenango, N. Y., AvriteSj tution^i 'J'onvention of the State o f ; “When I get bilious, have headache Haw York one day recently. There and feel out of sorts, I take two o-r w ere t'hc're Avho suggested th a t the three of iChamberlain’s Tablets and w a ter that all the people of Albany they fix me tip all right.” Fo<r .sale drink ro’>.-ht be good enough for the by E. S. Batterson, W hitesville, and ■dedegatre. There Avere those av I io sug H. O. W allen, Genesee. COMINC O F O L Y a S E S 'John- Hogau of L ittle Ireland, a r rived in toAvn Sunday for a visit Avith Bolivar’s prettiest telephone op erator. The 'little daughter of M. J. Haely was' slightly burned aboutt tiie face On the 30th. w hile shooting firecrackers Sunday a I evening. O. R. Langworthy and W. E, Mc- o f N oav York V-olunteer Infantry for Murdy attended the (Bulfalo-.St. Louis a period of three years or until th e Federal League games a t Buffalo on end of the Avar. He was honorably j T h ursday last. discharged from the service of the iMrs. Clyde Cady of Wellsville, is United States at Charleston, S. C .,'very ill at the home of her parents, on the 17th day of October, 186h. Mr. I Mr. and Mrs. Trum an Rams-ell on Powell Avas in poor health for nine \ upper Main street, m onths previous to his death and at | A car of slag on the P. S. & N. tim-es suifered greatly. He leaves to j w ay-freiglit Avas derailed in the lo- mourn his death three daughters, cal yards Friday night, and decayed Mrs. Flora Kendall of South Seaville, ^ traiffic for a .short time.. _ N. J., Mrs. Frank B u rrs of Myi'Ue, | Mrs. Emma Spencer is quite ill Pa., and two .sons, W P P o A v e ll ol ' a t her home on Liberty street. She DuBois, Pa., and John PoAvell of W est is being cared fc-r by her daughter- Clarksville, besides ten grandchildren in-laAV, Mrs. Claude Spencer, of Brad- and two great grandchildren. The fu- ford. nerai was held at the W asson hom e ' T h e sidewalk on lower Main St. on- Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 p.m., has-for many days been half cover- A\’itli the Rev. J. B. Harry, officiating, ed with d ir t and bricks, a condition The interm.ent was at the Bolivar Avhich seems to us uneccesary and cemetery, a detail from the Sons of undesirable. Veter,ars acting as pall-bearers. I K. B. Moore and family and Miss K a therine Moore motored to Wells- Unprofessional Conduct^ Iville Sunday to see Miss Loretta We were surprised and pained at Moore who .is receiving treatm e n t at the janprofessdonal condt-ct of one of the sanitarium. the members of the ‘Bolivar Gun 1 Ernest Bell, who has been emp-Ioy- Cmb !3t. 'the “pigeon” shoot held o n 'e d as a team ster by the Greenfield Monday last. -At the right edge of Construction Company, has resigned the shooting field stands a good-sized htg, position and moved his family to tree into which “pigeons” from tho- Pontvill'e, his former home, traps Avould occasion-ally alight. The j Sam Betro and' Vincent Clirispo, m ember of whom Ave speak, Avlien ■ residents of Bolivar and subjects- ot his turn cani.e to .shoot, Avould Ava.it ■he t Italian government, were in Eel- for a pigeon to go to roost In th e 'm o n t Saturday on business connect- tr.se aud he Avould then put the “ki- ed Avith their applications for natural- bosh” on it. Kenelm Crandall was ization papers. heard to rem ark, after a critical ex-j oien Curtis has gone to Avon, N. am ination of the .scoreboard, that he y., to take charge of the hotel re- helieved he would try a fe-AV “pot” ; cently .purchased at th a t place by shots a t the next meeting if the tree_F. T. Allen of Little Genesee. Mrs. Curtis Av.ill remain in EoliAar for the still' remained. W h itney o f t h e F a g n o u s W h i t n e y B r o s , Q u a r t e t Yaeger—Freeman present. Mrs. Prank Hitchcock and daugh- II Miss Jessie Freem an of Rochester ter, Mrs. Norman Knapp of SartAveU, daughter of Mr. and M rs. J. S. Free- arrlvde in Bolivar, Saturday, to n-an of .Bolivar, avss united in mar- spend the 4th with Mrs, Hitchcock’s rlage to George Yaeger, also of sisters, the Misses Helen and Eva Rochester, a t the resiidenee of Rev. -Blinn of Liberty street. Leavens at 7 o’clock Sunday evening, i c. B. Montgomery, AA’hile driving June 29th. They were attended by his automobile Monday evening, coi- Miss Ruth Freem an, sister of the lided Avitli Charles Frost of Jordan bride, and Michael Yaeger, b ro th e r , H ill, av I io was riding a bicycle, a t the of th e .bridegroom. They Avill reside -corner of Main and Friendship Sts. for the pressnt a t 552 St. Paul St., The rear ' wheel of the bicycle was where Mrs. Yaeger owns and con- smashed but the rider escaped unin ducts a hotel. Mrs. Yaeger has man„ -jured. friends in Bolivar who Avish her muc' happiness.. the Hudsooi County C-ourt in Jersey City which la s t montli allowed $2,000 damages' for a baby boy killed in an accident and $1,000 for i.t& twin s'ister. ' * ♦ # Seven hundred years ago. King John signed -the Magna Char-ta ai^a gave th e freemen- of England a “look in” on their govern.m'ent. Since- then all sorts and condii-tions of m e n have been given >tlie right to vote. Wom en have stood in line waiting their turn for seven hundred years. The men -of New York, M assachu setts, New Jersey, and Pennsylva nia on the anniversa-ry of popular governme'Ut have the opportunity to -include Avomen as people in the -gov- em m e n t which controls- their lives, their children aand their property, by voting “yes” on woman -suffrage this fall. Woman cannot be accused of undue haste if, .after s-ev-en cen turies, they mainta'in that the tim e is ripe. Again Cardinal Gibbons has taken his-penin hand and publicly declared his fear that the ballot would “drag woman from her dome-stic duti-e.S’ and rob her of much of her charm, good ness, and true Intluence.” Again we would remind him that Cardinal .Mo-ran of Australia av I io knew all about woman suffrage for h-e liA'-ed in, the m idst of it, pronoun ced it a success and branded the avo - man who did .not want to vote as a “silly creature.” B-etween- the guess of one great man. and the knowledge of anothe.r we m u st tru s t the opin ion of the man 'who knows. W hen GoV'er-nor Fielder of New Jersey signed the h'ill w-hich took away the dower right from woman he put into the m o u ths .of -suffrage orators an argumie-nt hard to refute. The hill m eans -that a man can leave destitute in her old age the Avoman who- gave up the chance to earn, a living i-n order to- h e his liom-emaker. As a sop the Legi-s-lature 'is -said to have passed a law giving m arried AVOim.an the right to acquire .and dis pose of real estate. The fact -that it has taken 108 years for the hien of New Jersey to concede this right, w-hat is that but a-nother .suffrage ar- gum-ent. In New York state women are told that they don’t need lite vote because they 'have the dow.er right. In Wyoming women have voted for forty-five years and th e y have not only the 'dower right but a homestead exemption of $2500. But, 'as a pass ing comm-ent, woman ar-e not asking for the vote- 'for financial reasons but miainly -for the protection of children. PACKING THE HALL. ' ^ntis Call Twenty-two a Great Crowd. Not Hudson W om an’s Idea of a M u ltitude. It was left for a suffragist to call by oame the “great crowd” which, so the Hudson Republican said, packed Guild hall at Philmont recently. Her letter to the Hudson Register, reprinted be low, details the lively challenge: I read the Hudson Republican this morning, which gave large headlines to a meeting held in Philmont last night at' Gruild hall, at which Miss Lucy Price was' the speaker. In the headlines it stated, “A n ti-suffragists evoke enthusiasm; m eet ings in Chatham and Philmont last night; were live ones.” The article w^ent on toj say: “T-wo more anti-suffrage m eetings- were held in this countj' j'esterday andf;' both drew crowded houses and evoked' great enthusiasm. In the afternoon Misa ■ Price spoke in Chatham; a great crowd greeted her. “In the eATning the meeting at Phil mont duplicated the scene at Chatham, making a glorious windup to the week’s work ■* * * The Philm ont meeting w a s held in Guild hall, w-hich w a s packed, and former Assemblyman Crandell made an able presiding officer.” I was one of the persons who helped “pack” Guild hall last night. The other people who helped “pack” the place wero as follows: Mr. Crandell, John W. Gil lette of Hudson and Edw^ard Harder of Philmont, IMrs. Gillette and Miss McMas- ter of Hudson and Miss Price and fifteen Philmont women, about thirteen of w'hom are knowm suffragists and, I believe, two of the others are suffragists or undecided. Thus in this “packed” hall there were tAV’enty-t’.vo people—three men and eight een women—four of whom came with the speaker, although I think the hall can comfortably seat or 200 people. It seems to me that the people of this county are entitled to know of this whole sale misrepresentation wdiich is used as an adjunct by those who are attemptin to block woman suffrage. They feel that the facts are horribly against them when misrepresentation to this ex tent is indulged in. VerA' trulA' A’ours, MAT E. HOTALIXG. THE TROUBLE vViTH BETTY. S T A N A R D S New Champion We are iiiform-ecl that -Charles How STANARDS, July 6.— W a lter Cole tm sMire stasiwbarri ersp @f I. ¥. inffniaii srs fiisw prepsrsai ts giwg p i fer esjiKfcg. Is siiisisrriss m i pioeappias I f§r B;r© tiiers f IcirdfJcciso Avithin five hours ■one day this sum- f .e a 4. mer. We are pleased to hear th i s ’ , .®-A],lentoAvn, visited and -suggest that the laurels worn daughter, Mrs. Yrlton- W right Avith becoming modesty for so many t -o ■, n ..4, years by the late lamented “Pap” I . t T’ preached a 4th 'Myers be adjusted to the classic hro’ Sunday. It Ava.& very Of Mr. Howard and that lie be p re-, , - sented AA'ith three yards of blue rib - ' Banbani of Pittsbburgh, .is ’r-on and a quart can of Heinz’s Dill giandparents, Kev. and Pickles. __ 'Mrs. Lucius Ackerman Avas vis- .V A,. .. r. Ring at the home of Mrs. Vina Kru- To Visit Panama | g0j^ one dav last Aveek Miss K lizabetliM u rpliyot Bolivar, I Hornfcurg Gardner and f f i ’ Katherine Mur- Howard, weie guests at the hom ! * - -’cUoid, Pa,, sailed from N ti qj . Schrader’s Sundav ,1“ steam er and Fred Norton, of Allen- It omus witli the object of viewing town, were vis.itiiig Sunday at the tile Panai..a and San Biego exposi- nome of their sister, Mrs. Wilton ticibs and, visiting their sister, Mrs. W right W. O. vvarren or LosAugeles, Cal-. Capt.' George H. IJMckman, an at- loriiia On their return trip they in- toriuy of Wellsville, had lunsiness in tend sleeping at the ^t!low.stone Na- ,,ur village reeent.v and incideinclv t.onal Para. ^ j-g„ friendly ceils. J. A. Howard was in Portville p.?/ . '. V ,'4* . cl i Tuesday on official business w! ■ “ 4 -’. . t \ ' ' n S\'’' visiia.g. W i ? n . i i n k : k ^ | p S I | “art,s a c . n . a n i , l i K, o b eu WiU inson of South Bolivsr, ? ; 4 , 4 4 “ , ! Tills Spas§ !§ f@r Safi aS very rea- •tollable rates Why not use ^ ii to advertise ^ you r.v /ares ® By ROSE YOUNG. In a little story with the pink mark on it (pink being this year’s anti- suffrage color) Betty goes ta Billy with this naive question: “N oav , Billy, you always say I can have anything I want. Do I Avmnt the vote?” Nobody can blame Billy for making the most of ffie minute. Any woman who has to go to a man to find out whether she wants to vote not only shouldn’t have political libert.y; she shouldn’t have personal liberty. Sbe should be kept indoors, preferably in a quiet, dark room. The whole trouble with Betty is the old time anti-suffra.ge insistence on inertia of the brain for women. Bill.y’s efforts to form Betty’s mind and mold her opinions on the suffrage are in teresting as showing the dear old mas culine ingenuity in obscuring the issue for BettA4 but they are not Avorth one dime as an ausAver to Betty’s question. When Betty really wants the ansAver to the question, “Do I w ant to v<9te?” she doesn’t trouble Billy. Sbe begins to di.g it out for herself. And once she i begins dig.giiig it doesn’t take her A’ery ' long to dig through to— / Yes! CA^J STOP THE BULLET. I f you Jiavenh a Klaxon cn your automobile— make this test: I'i •'A ------ w. “l i , ; ..r-'s'XU '■■ ' ^*4-4: \-r- - '/ \ *4! \ I I I Tile M isses Dsis-ie and t em G-ove;, ; and G raet G rastorf. Leu Sav.Tei' t-:.ok i them in his new car. i M iss lo r a F e ller and Edilli ! G a rdner accoincan ed i.y .lol:.' Beb-1 m a n and E lm e r S c h r a d e r AA'ere e n t e r - 1 Bo i’var on M o iifl-v licm e Of Mr. aii'-l M rs -bo-iv.ai on MonocfA ^ T r a s k , J u ly 4th. | F o r e - t Gee, Mr. and M rs. W a i t e r ' visitm g his fath e r, b. V. Maxf .011 rn a ! C h a rles Cailicun oi A n d e v e r, Avere 1 Avas a biisiiit.ss visilor in toAvn l\ion- .^drs. D. M, EdAvards cf Clean is a l gUv^st 01 her sister, Mrs. J. S. Free man. iixi'an; Cerbin of Eelrncnt, Avas vis iting friends in last. W alter Maxson ot Salamanca, ! fain 'Iy. I . visiting M o n day afterno o n a t the I Mr. and M rs. F7e sou Holcom b w ere i'-,\ -. tv „ 1 nr -r-. 1 • /-. • 1 g u e s ts cf .Jir. and llr= . A. B. M a r d c s “ “ ' 4 “ M rs. A p h ram i Guin- ° » . ® a m f M . r s . C. II. Van Curen a r h i k e s k a - f 4 ^ 4 ^ ' spenaing- a few w e e k s at P o r t H u r - ■ . „ . V. ^ PS_ssion .or cai 1 , I a O l L \ • %' V 1 1 1 'i- It’s cheaper in the end to buy the best of each. Higb- grade cem ent is indispensable f-er ail kinds of construction. Long-Avearing, repair-prooiy rooiing is just as necessary'. W e have strong Portland cem ent a n d llre-resisting, durable A v h e e ls .” Lavern Trask of HalLsport ! M i ^F d . V .’Mc'Carthy is a guest of 1 her sister. M rs. W m . T. M o o n e y I Cleveland, Ohio. *?ed o n ^ s ) ^ ! Ek-ck-and-ten is hom e from an ex-j i '“ iiriorro“ ® i-S’m t z y z ■ Miss Genevieve Vance ana Kenelm ~ Crandall wei-e calling -on Jordan Hill j trien d s on the 4' , Pronounced -Rmas in RUBY., M — ■ COSTS HdRe:-WEARS LONSER. is the best roofing you can b u y . It sto p s reg u l a r repair troubles which take time end cost you money. It is a p e r - -.rkanent protection. Cheap _ p re pared roofings—whose good looks a”.d v/aterproofing are only o n the rmface—soon crack, rust, or rot. cf S^SJ-SCR-OIII are b u ilt-in , the direction of expert chemists, and have not varied in 23 years. We have ^Ifi-BER-OlO in slate gray, or in colors—^Tile R ed and Copper Green. The U. S. Court of Appeals has enjoined imitators from using the word “Rubberoid or any similar name as d ie trade name or b rand ’ of their roofing. W e sell the genuine, which has the “ Ru-ber-oid Mam” (showm above) on every roil. Before you start to b uild or make repairs, let us quote prices on roofing and cement. Mr. Schrader has “pressing business” Fred Watkiins is spending a few knfoV days witli Ills mother, Mrs, Anna Wa Interested friends are kirns of Plum strec-t. f . e S s gentleman ulti- Miss Mabel Urban of Bradford was , a Sunday g m s ts at the home of Mr. J® Z\® our esteemed and Mrs Allan Cochran i P p 'd r and wife for instituting a Clarence W es?ngliouse of Buffalo, i ^ ^ t i r i n a t / w h e r r ? spent the « h in EoUvar as a g u e s t; o n e inter. Of Mi^<^ Dnrnthv Ycun^ ested feels free to participate in the Mrs.^ J a m e s ® . Wakeman died Sun-' day morning at her home a t Kossuth guch a plaVgrcnnd I s 'a McGinnis & Reed, Genesee, ^ Avitli cancer of the stomach. J. E. Howard of Little Genesee picked 10 quarts of fine straw b erries j from his garden on J u ly 4th. j Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fay of Okla- i homa, formerly of Salamauca, are visit’’ng relatives in this place. Earl Sage loft Tuesday for Malone I as a delegate to the meeting of the county L e tter C a rrier’s association. Miss Loretta Moore is taking med ical treatm e n t from a 'Wellsville spe cialist at the sanatarium in that place. benefit to any village. May the good work go on. According to the president of the Vincent Sullivan of Buffalo, spent {Texas Fa^^meirs’ Union, “a w-oman’s Sunday and Monday a t the home o f ’smile is w orth mor© than an act of Mr. land Mrs. (J. L. Nelson on Plnm Congress.” street. , -«H© c a n ’t prove i t hy the jury in On a country road w ith a big hay Y/agon ahead, try to make the driver hear the horn yon have. Then come to ns. Let us p u t on a Klaxon. Try it under the same circumstances. See what happens. But Women Murt:vt Bo Permitted to Use the Baiiot. “Tlie Avomeii of all iintior.s will be prove;! ‘fit for liio fir.joiiise' as a re sult of the pro.'=oiit Furopern war,” I said Mrs. Krua von U. (>\xvn iu .a : speech reecnliy m.'i Iv a I Am-sterdam, j N. Y. I “WoiiK^ii i;i Ser'ula are te hting side i by si(I-‘ Avitii the ineu,” Mi's. Owan I weiit oil to sa.v. “Kuall.-liUMnieu are j steppiii.g into tile mdustrk-s wldeii mei) j have alvra.Vd s.dd women con’,] n >t fill.' j Tlu*y are doing so in order iliat U m I men may .u-/ to tvar, ami ile-y are fili- I in.g tile po^:iiinlJ,s snei es.sufiJ.v. Tl:e,/ I are running tramoar.-. oniifi'.uso.s. actin.g j as ek-rk,-', eii'niiiii”: sire. ts. and so on. j “German woiuen. it is reifn'lcd, are helpin.g to run the raiir-.-ad train.s. Tb:> I trcnelies are tlie only j,la.< es Avhere I Avoineii liav(' not yet gone to help the ; men of those eonnirie.-.. But from Rus- i si:i eonie stnri<-s of women Avho are j fightiiig side Ity side AA’ith their hus- ; bamls and hi-iUin.M’s. Ami all the while ’ all the wom en are nursing the sick and 1 wounded, makieg '•lothinu- for the sol diers and e.'it'ing for the orpiians. Vot ing se-f'ujs to be the oul.v dangerous thing we Avomen must stay at home to After you have dene these things, if you would drive without a Klaxon bring it back: we will refund your money. I W om en V o ters Favor W o rkers, ^ The only amendment AA’hich passed j in Wyoming at the last election v/aa I one to make provision for workmen’s ! compensation. It carried by a vote of j 24,258 to 8,915, and because of this ' vote the legislature was able to pass j the workingmen’s compensation act at ! its la.st session. Wyoming vras the first j state to give women the vote. Six oth er suffrage states, Washington, Oregon, I California, Nevada, Arizona and Kan sas, have compensation law's. - Klaxon .... Klaxonet . . . Klaxet ............. Hand Klaxon . . $20 . $15 . $9- $7.50 W oman Garbage Contractor. Garbage in Hastings-on-Hudson, N, Y., is to be rem o v ed by a Avoman. Mrs. Mary Eliot ha,s been awarded the contract for collecting the. ashes and garbage, her bid, $2,400, having been lower than that made by any of her j male competitors. She has announced j that she expects to supei^tend her I men and teams personally. This is the Electrical Supply Store ed for such work. Hand Klaxonet. . . $4 F. D. Muckey & Son W hitesville, N. Y. Why? \Why should New York women be taxed to pay for the expenses of elec tions, a t which oi?ly men a re allowed to vote? ■ a*'\ 1 A %