{ title: 'South New Berlin bee. (South New Berlin, Chenango County, N.Y.) 1897-1965, October 18, 1919, 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/sn92061740/1919-10-18/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061740/1919-10-18/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061740/1919-10-18/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061740/1919-10-18/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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%m gfriii fp«. piXBr.ismEi> isvKitT saxhewat -. ____ A ,J. PAYNE, Editor and Proprietor. JSftiere^ a t the Postoifflce at Isouth New B e r lin a s Second-class M a il Matter. The suhscriptioix rates a re— One Year <in advamce) .................................... $1.26 48ix Months (in a d v ance). . ...................................65 ^hree Months (in advance)..........................35 ■^8 Month (in advance) ....... . ....... 10 Single Copies .......... . .............. .03 The publisher of. T he Bee kindly requests all gabscrihers to look a t the d a te following their ^giatnes to asoertain when their subscription -expires a n d favor u s w ith a p rom p t rem ittance M e r ^ a n te who desire a change in their ad ■verKsements w ill c o n fer a favor by sending in th e aew copy b e fore TUESDAY of each week. A oolnmn is 19^ inches. D ittle w a n t advs. not-exceeding four lines *5c for two weeks. Advert .sing payable at the expiration ■every three months, o r on presentation of bill. Address all communications o The Bee S o u th New Berlin, Chenango Co., N. Y. Our job departm e n t i s complete. Poster w o rk, oonunercial p rinting, etc., a specialty. We cannot aooept anonymous or return re jected communications.unless accompanied by eufS.cient poeisge. In a ll'cases the name of the w r iter w ill be required, n o t f o r p u b lication, bat as a guarantee ’of good faith. Display Advertising 10c per Inch SATURDAY, OCT. 18. 1919 Clocks Will be Turned Back Oct 26. General uncertainty, as to when the •clocks of the nation .may be turned hack and daylight saving abolished ^seems to have ^ resulted from the xecent action of Congress in repealing ^he daylight saving act. In answer to numerous inquiries »officials have pointed out that clocks may not be turned back until the last Sunday of October, or Oct. 26, at 1 a., m- jProhibltion Covers Homo Made Wine. There is nothing in the prohibition law that permits any one to mak^ wine in his home, officers of the Internal Revenue Department of this d istrict declare, in refusing scores of ^applications daily for permits. Wine for medicinal purposes must foe obtained through a physician, tde revenue men hold, and tais does not give any one the right to manufac- ■ Matty householders in Central New York, it is said, have followed their usual custom and made wine this year as usual. J^hether investigation of these cases will follow is problemati cal, but the law, as the officials in- terpret it, seems to be plain.—Otsego T’armer. Heavy Damage Suits. It is remembered, the horrible ac cident near Duanesburg July 18th of last year, when Horatio Ball and 1. JL. Richer of New Berlin and E. D. White of Norwich were instantly killed when their automobile went •lOver a bridge down thirty feet to the railroad track. Suits have been ir^- stituted against the town of Duanes burg and the railroad by the estates -Of the men killed. The first, by the •executors of Horatio Ball’s estate, was tried in Supreme Court at Sche- -aiectady last Friday and Saturday. The combined actions growing out •of this accident ask for damages of more than $150,000. The jury last Saturday failed to .agree and the case will be retried. Afton Man Killed. I Afton. Oct. 13.—Jesse Bailey, a section hand on the D. & H. railroad, was struck by a freight train while a t work about two miles north of Afton Thursday morning at 11 o’clock -and died at 2 o’clock in the. after noon. With a crew of men he was -engaged in guaging the rails. When they saw the freight train approach ing they stepped back from the track and Mr.Bailey noticed that the gauge had been h f t on the track* and stop,- ■ ped to remove it. He was struck on the side of the head by the engine. Mr, Bailey lived in,Afton until a few ■months ago when he moved his fam- . ily to Baiabridge. He was 30 years . ^ge. He leaves a wife and a baby * -about a year old. ★ ■ . ★ ★ A R E Y O U C I V I L I Z E D ? ★ ' ★ ANDREW CARNEGIE SAID: ★ ★ “Keep expenditures always be- ★ ^ lowincome ; save something. The ★ ■ -k fundamental difference between' k k the civilized man and the savage ★ k is thrift.” ■ ■ ★ ★ How far are you civilized? ★ k Are you civilized to the point k k where you are independent? ★ k Are you civilized to the point ★ ★ where you are •free? Fre4 to own ★ ★ your own home, to, travel, to ★ k change your position? Free from k k th^ worry of what will become ★ • ★ of you in your old age? Free to ★ k assure your children ample op-^- ★ . ★ portunlty and proper weapons ★ ★ to battle with the world? ★ ★ Civilize yourself. ★ . ★ Join the great movement for a ★ . ★ Thrift America. ★ . ★ Your government offers you ★ ★ W ar Savings Stamps, an ideal ★ security, as a means of safely ★ k investing even your smallest ★ ★ savings. (Make a start wdtii k . . k your odd quarters. Thrift ★ k Stamps ijost but 25 cents each.) ★ . ★ ★ kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk MOLMESVILLE Holmesville, Oct. 15.—Mr. and Mrs. Harris Daniels, who recently sold their place here to Charles North have been here from Delhi a few days. They have ranted Mrs. Rena Shara- pang’s house on South street and moved their goods in there for this winter, while they will visit their children in Delhi, Milford and Sidney. , Mrs. Hattie Klopstock was able to walk across the road to Mrs. John Brownson’s on Monday; with the aid of her sister, Janie Miller and Mrs. B., assisting her. Miss Hilda May is on the sick list. Burton Sage was 'OUt of town on business, Tuesday. Mrs. Merton Morse was -in South New Berlin Tuesday. Mrs. George Mead spent Monday evening with Mrs Fred Shampang. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Adams were in New Berlin Tuesday. Julian Bresee spent a few days at his home recently. Miss Hattie Dexter is,, sewing for Mrs. LaVerne Pearsall. Henry B. Shampang, of White Store, has a new horse. A large company of friends and some relatives assembled a t the home of Alfred Anderson and wife Sunday; it being Iier birthday on Monday. Claude Harrington had a very sick horse Tuesday. Mrs. George Harrington spent Sunday at Everett May’s. Harvey Sage, wife and. daughter, of Norwich, visited her parents E. May and wife, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Swackham- mer. of Mt. Upton, spent Sunday with George Mead and wife Mrs. Ida Kellogg is visiting her daughter in New Berlin. Charles North is helping at the electric power plant this week. Mrs. Wm. Hickling visited in Binghamton, recently. Charles Hunt and wife are enter taining, company a few days. Grace Sweet was a business caller at South New Berlin, Saturday. Mr and Mrs. C. H. North were in South New Berlin, Wednesday. Mrs. H, Littlefair is visiting her daughter in Greene, Mrs. Charles Hunt was a caller at Emory Manwaring’s, South New Berlin, Wednesday. The concrete mixer is set up ready for use at the Berholme power plant. They intend -to use it for the first today Wednesday. i i = - ■ - ....... Small Investment In Sunday'School Would Have Saved Millions. “If th e raising of this money meant noth ing for Amer ica there is enough in th e world pull to makt me willing to giv^ all I have to meet ■ the *c h a 1- lenge from the w q r 11 d fi e 1 d,” de clared W. C. Pearce, field super intendent of the International Sunday School association who is acting as director of field piro- mction of the New York State Interdenomina aonal Sunday school campaign, Oct. 6 to 12, in discussing the campaign. “The field is ready. The pro gram is ready. But We need the capital to carry it out and put it out and and put it into effect in the field. Nothing better il lustrates The effect of Sunday school work than the Mexican sit uation. If a few hundred dollars had been invested in a Sunday school near the home of Villa when he was a boy, he would not today be the world’s greatest bandit. ^ “Yet see what his depreda tions cost us. I am told that the expense of the punitive ex pedition into Mexico to capture Villa wQiUd have planted a Y. M. C. A., a church and a hos pital in 104 centers and there nv/ould have been ?10,a00,QO0 left over for public school work. “Mexico, our next door neigh bor, is the darkest nation in the world. It is full of little Villas now. Are we later going to pay millions in taxes to subjugate them, or will we give little mow and develop their characters along Christian lines? 'The New York State Interdenominational Sunday school campaign will give the people of this state the chance to give for a four-year program which includes provis ion for help that will enable Mex ico to find herself.” I Japanese Leaders See I I Necessity of Sunday | School in Education t ^ “Tlie spiritual foundation Is S vital to every nation today. We 4< ■f! should like to see such a fund- \f* ’if amental education evolved in 4* Japan as exists in America, Tha | | ^ Sunday school is really the foundation work of an^ nation. ^ * W ithout such education 'to young 4* ^ men of Japan, their education ^ along other lines will not be com- 4* pleted. Without education we, ^ || or any nation, would \go the road ^ Russia has gone.” ||| These statem ents were made T *4* in an address which Baron 4 % Gosuk^ Imai, a member of the !| ^ Japanese house of peers and a 4| ti. member of_one of the largest H raw silk houses in Japan, deliv- ered at a luncheon given recent- % J ly by John Wanamaker to a ^ group of members of the Nation- It al Association of Raw Silk In- |I »§• dustry of Japan. It The 8th convention of the, k World’s Sunday School assocla- | | % tion will be held in Japan next « || year, and .it will give a tremen- ^ * dous impetus to Christian work 4< ^ throughout the Orient. The im- l|J •i* diate need, however, is to fur- 4* % nish workers to take advantage J H of the unparalleled opportun- * U ities to teach the children and ^ * youth of the Bast in Sunday § schools. If the New York State Interdenominational S u n d a y * School campaign goes over the 4« workers j[! top, some additional . to help meet the world opportun- . % ity can be sent to the points ^ ^ where they are most needed. \f* Vicfory Rebekah Lodge, No. 426 . X. O . O . tP'.y S o n t l i N e w B e r l l i i , N . Y Meets Second and Fourth Friday Evenings I of Each Month. Mrs. J . P McGuire Noble Grand. I\[rs. L. E. Dixson, Recording Sec’y VICTOR LODCE, NO. lU. SO ^ T H NEW B E R IilN , N. 1 . 3le*<tings a r e h e ld on T u e s d a y e e r in g , 1 Ou i F e llo w s h u ll in th e ISineader flo c li b r e th r e n a r e alway.<5 w e le o n ie A. J . PAVN\ NE. A rthur W. Morse, Atforneji aad \Counsellor at Law.\ atteht'on ' r a c t'ft * r. -N y JFL. X T V IILiX jX ^ T V r^S Mew B erlin, N. Y. ^ Manufacturer of and Dealer in G r a n ite and Marble M em orials a.iitililp Gnai I S p e c i a l i t y . We Are Prepared to Trame Your W ar Pictures. A Large Stock of Picture Framing On Hand. Andrew S. Gtishman, New Beriir SIDNEY NATIONAL BANK S I D N E Y , N . Y . C a p ital,.—. .............................. $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 S u r p lu s , .............................. 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 D e p o s its, ............ .............. 1 , 2 5 0 , 0 0 0 Issue your checks on the Sidney Nationa' Bank and get a receipt for every bill paid. rHE BANK W ITH A e0^4E TO IHF YELQW SHO! T o G e t Y o u r t'laning, Matching and Othei Machine Work Done Promptly and to Order. A FULL STOCK OF Best Bed Cedar Shing^les. Farm Drain Tile. Sewer Pipe Cement Blocks, md Other Building Materialsconstautl' on hand V ff.L.CBAIX, HT.FPTOlf, H.Y ^atxanou^^Pi^jred^ Pauiine Frederick' •“Federa” This Saturday Night Vivian Martin | \Viviette” ’ W ednesday, O ct. 2 2 n d DAK^N OPERA HOUSE ® New Berlin Help South New Berlin over the top in the Sunday School Campaign next week. You have cooperated in the improvement of Pub lic Schools. Bemember the Sunday School as a character builder. T. B. PARKER & CO. Normal E y es Are Abused By too constant appliation to near work, and eye strain results. Glasses will correct it. DEFECTIVE EYES ARE ABUSED By failure to correct the errors in the same way. Both these faults are inexcusable, because both these conditions are promptly and per manently relieved by special made lenses. Always at your command. K eep your cows in flesh and get the greatest production of milk by feeding, a well balanced ration. WE SELL THE BEST DAIRY FEEDS ON tH E MAR KET TODAY and are willing and ready to back up that statement.' An inspec tion of these feeds will be money in your pocket. Also a good stoek^jof Wheat and Stock Feeds. Always prompt and efficient service cheerfully rendered. My Specialty Better and More Comfortable Vision D . H . D A R L I N G , Professloiml Optometrist, Office Kext to Smith’s Bakery, Main St., Sidney, N. Y. G lasses Ground IVhile You W a it. New Era Cash Grain & Feed Company Inc. ^O T IO E TO CREDITORS-^Pv^suant Couni^^of Chenango, Is^ Y., Hon. Janies P. Hill, Surrogate, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against the estate of C Y R U S H . G R A V E S , late of the town of Guilford, in said County, deceased, th a t they aie reauired to p resent the same, and exhibit ' lerefor, to the undersigned, _ office of Harry J. Mosher,in the v i llag e ^ Ne-w <Iny ofNovemToer, 1 9 1 9 . Dated March Z 4 th, Harry J. M^’sher. i ttoraey for Executor, Kew Berlin, K.Y. ^CQUN t V CQUKl\ Coimty of Clienango Frahk VanValkenhtmg, horn, Nancy M. Montrose, James Gilchrist, Nes Peterson, c a r l A. Rex, Edith M. Rex, at Jaw of Isaac Schermerhom, deceased, 'ho may l e olIu*rwi.‘'C int^iested in th e lises covered by th e m O itgage, to foreclose brouglit, such other ni-r- to the plaintiff, premises covered hy which this action i s ------ „ .. sons being unknown to tbe plaintiff, ^ wer the amended complaint ip this aet’on and lo serve a copy of > o ur answer upon the plam- tiff’.s a ttorney within t^\'ent■y days a fter the service of this amended summons, exclusive of ilie dav of service, and in ca-^e of y our failu: rer Ji to appear . _ i- „ against y o n by d efault for the relief demandec in the amended complaint. Trial to be held in tlie County o f Chenango. s'lT judgm ent will be taken LUlt fo r th e relief demanded Trial to be held Dateu July 28th ^^^Arihur W. Moi Plaintiff’s Attoi e a nd Post-office. Bradley Block, New Berlin, N. Y. fiay, Alta M. c^harpe ierson,/^idow, devis N e w B e r lin , N . Y . To Carl A. Rex, Edith M Rex. Blanche Rex Clay, Alta^M. t^harpe a n d each is b rought, such other persons being unknown to the plaintiff. The forc'-'-'— led summons is s amended complaint in the e^_ action in the office of the clerk of Chenango in the No^w h ,^ ititled HOLMESVILLE, N. Y. Ealph Sage, Mgr. HAVE IT MADE TO MEASURE •M • m You’ll Find it a Source of Constant Pleasure to wear a suit that’? j made to measure. IsnH it worth something to wear a suit that fits you perfectly and one of your own choosing. There is a constant pleasure in the knowledge ehat the suit you are wearing was made specially for yciurseif and not one of a thousand made for Tom,'Dick and Harry. . PXpk your own fabric, get the design and color.-that you really want and have the Suit made up to your own liking. We have 400 of the newest fabrics to show you. Al Pure Wool, and every model thaFs now in vogue. F. VANVALKENBURG, SOUTH NEW BEELIN. ^ VOEK rMW-tti' 'r- n-ifSiUs.W iii