{ title: 'The Medina Daily Journal. (Medina, N.Y.) 1903-1932, May 26, 1903, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn94057567/1903-05-26/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-05-26/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-05-26/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-05-26/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
' /••' • •atftmii* P BED'©. SEI6ronBB. Attorney and • jSouiweltO* •#(; .Law..- Jp!dwn'4 .&' } gea^efrhuilorhigf Medina JT, $.' Pronipi p'ewftijia|4iteijfe$Bi^ir^!itfii : : : gen* :eralpraot3K%; ,•\-.\,.-v '• •\. «-f 0S!PB#MEHIG PETCSICIAJNa igaldredge AjM'tejeiitSi tv\esfc Ayenue.; Sours;—Qtcri&a. MI., 1 to. 5,7<to8p.. in. P Awama&m> B^EBR. HANGING SatJsf^tion.guaranteiid,. iea-ve or- ders at George FiaUetfei JjeYan Broth ei^ or at residence, 2$ Teaacl street, »,j3 saonioNs, W ANTED—Your. Lawn Mower to piic in order for spring use, Call or dronus a postal . . MEDINA CtOm WORKS, 609 Main St. KSIKE 1ST. \WARNBR 1 3? yonrjawn mower needs repairing drop ns a postal; •w&'ll call, for it, put it in the pest of ordor and deliver it promptly a* a moderate coat, EDWIN 6 BARRETT, tm Main at., Medina N. Y. F OR the Best BREAD use \ Niagara Fancy Flour.\ I\or Bale only by S. P. BLOOD {COMPANY • ORLEANS JHULS * Grass ^Gatciers That -will fit any lawn mow- er made. Heavy canvas body. The Catcher is attached to the handle only and is entire- ly independent of t h e mower proper, Can be attached or taken of! i n an instant. Guaranteed to give satisfaction in every case. tHANLDNBHOS.i rvfladlriaa, N.V. The Pan-Am: t CDNPECTIONCRY Homemade Cattdy. DOMESTIC PRUITS Wholesale and Retail. ice CRCSTI SODS Jlce Creani, wholesale and retail] 404 Main St. HomoPEoneSL BeUt^otioSUS. Branch, 533 Main. 84tJnn8 S. J. PLUMMER BAQQAGE and CARTING Leave orders early to avoid mistakes. Baggage deliv ered to all parts of thi village. Leave Orders at Gallaghan & Sutter's or Telephone 119M Bell or 177 Home 'Phones W\\W!B!W?* • /.\- WjfMtKer indlptHpn*, . litShit. wfeW-OT Tuesday;- Wedaes,: d*?j..i,ftl« fresh southeast -winds, be- «»rnihg southwest Tie Victors yesterday defeated the Black, Diamonds In a- game of baseball by a score of 3 to $, QnjTlmrsday and Friday -those delicious .marshinallows will be s °ld at IGo per pound at Cummings^ Coffee will be served in the Pres- byterian Chuych. parlors tbis evening fron* 7: 30 to 10; 00 o'clock \by a nnrnher of the young ladies of -the church, Ypu are invited to come, Br, Mosley of Santiago, jvill give a lecture in. the Baptist Church tliiB evening, commencing a t eight o'clock on the subject: \ (3uba and Her People;' 1 Dr. Mosley is a fine orator and thoroughly understands liis sub-, ject. A eordial invitation is extend- ed to all, Admission free., The free health, talks to mothers and daughters will be recommenced next Wednesday at 3 p. m. sharp by Mrs. Doctor Ella Pouieroy, clair- voyant, life reader and greatest in- spired medical and business medium we have ever had in this country. Every lady should take advantage of this opportunity of learning some- thing of her physical constitution absolutely^ free. Parlors, 128 Oak Orchard street. Door and window screens made to order at C. A. Fassett's Planing Mill, 335 Oak Orchard St. Both phones. 88tf The best results aro obtained by dvertiBing in the JomiKja. Fred Pelkington will assiat you to house clean. Leave orders at Cum- rainga' store. Lawn mowing a spec- ialty. 88ml First class carpenter worli, Leave orders or address 531 Church streat, Medina. Home 'Phone 153. 84ml HEiinenT GIBSOX. Hammocks for \the good old sum- mer time,*' at Krompart'sr 89lf East Shelby News. Morris Tinkhnm died at his late home in Akron on Sunday morning after an illness of several months. The deceased was until this spring a resident of this place. Ho leaves a widow and several children. In- terment in Millvillo cemetery. Tho East Sholbv base ball team was badly defeated by U10 Darre Centers last Saturday, but aceini ug- ly thoy are not discouraged, Arthur Truax of Rochester is visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Prud- den and son. [!,'.. il>.il\»>7'ClllU«UJjJ'lVji.t!t*<'»^ Miss Bertha. Mead ia Visiting rel- atives in Buffalo. * : ' $rs, G s F. Sorter and Miss &Xayjo|ii Bennett, are spending;'\ the -w^ek jtt '\ Dclcport. • / Mr; Charles S, Swett' left last^in-' day evening on; a basinoss teip to New York. ' Mis. A. Stoughton of Bidgetyay is seriously ill as the insult of a at'ro)ce of paralysis, Mr. Hugh F. MoElwee has accept- ed a position -with the Eolley Water- works Co,,, of Brockport. Miss Annabel Hobbs, teacher in the Central School, is coufined to her home in Kent hy'illness. Her place is being supplied by her sister.. Miss Gertrude HohBs. Kev.' and Mrs. Jara.es M. Baker and two children arrived homo last evening from Qngohf, India, where, for the past eightjears, he has been engaged as teacher in'colleges. Mr.F. J. Bidwell, who has been in Uie employ of M. Casjsy for the past twq years, has accepted a position with C. J. Hamlin of Buffalo and will take a string of sixteen horses through the grand circuit races. Base Ball News. sslssS Lost. A one dollar bill and one dollar in Bilver. Return to this office and get reward. Rooms for Rent. Suite of rooms with all conven- iences. LEVAN linos. St. John's Church. The \Visitation of the Right Revd. Bishop Walker will ta&e plare on Tuesday evening, June 2d,nt 7:30. The service will consist of Even- ing Prayer, Sermon and Confirma- tion. C. TUUNEB, Rector. Jack—Did her father favor your so it? Dick—No; bat her brother favored my overcoat and bor- rowed it. Time to leave that coat off anyhow. A new lightweight fancy Cheviot suit $10, ^ (Doubt if anywhere els\e you can get as good for £15.) True blue Serges for red hot days £10 and 812. Our guarantee goes with them that their color does not go. Hot weather Furnishings at cold weather prices W. I. MASTEN & CO., Wholesalers, \Manufacturers arid Retailers, 437 Main Street, Medina, N. Y. • J.!**.''.>J' The game of base ball on 1 Satur- day afternoon botween the Ideal team and the All Polish Buffalo club was largely attended. The local nine proved too much for tho visi- tors, and tho gamo was a one sided affair. Next Saturday afternoon (Decor- ation Day) the game will be a hum- mer, when the local team faces the crack \Arions\ of Buffalo, on the diamond at Oak Orchard Park: This is one of tho best amateur teavras in tho city of Buffalo and were defeat- ed by the local nino last season by tho bare margin of one score. The local base ball fans are sure of got- ting their money's worth as the locals must put in their best \licks\ if they do not wish to have thoir first defeat credited against them. Admission to this gamo will be 25c, ladies 15c, grand stand 10c Gamo will bo called promptly at .four o'clock. BASE BALir Our Young Sporting Editor The lino up of tho Ltttlo Star base- ball club is as follows: Ralph Ann- stmng, c; Anson Corey, p. and 1. f.; Willie O'Brien, p. and 1. f.; Dean Hinkloy, f. b.; Everett Lacy, 0. f.; Georgo Newell, r. f.; Tunis Barhite, s. s.; Howard Olds, s. b.; Raymond Sinclair, t. b. Willie O'Brien and Ansou Corey change of pitching through the game. The Little Stars play the Glon- nroods Saturday morning. NOTICET Next Saturday being Decoration Day our patrons are requested to bring in their work as early as Thursday noon, as we shall observe the; holiday by closing. MEDINA STEAM LAUNDRY. Bookkeeper Wanted. At once a young lady of some ex- perience, and a good penwoman. Make application in own handwrit- ing to Po. Box 514. For Sale Home-made ice box cheap ; -also 4x5 camera and complete outfit, for half price. 711 Gwinn street. 97t4 WANTED. Blacksmith's helper who can nail. Apply at Camp Swett. 82tf BRAVER & ALBADGH. A CARLOAD OF BUGGIES. I have just received a carload of new buggies. Call and see them I can give you a bargain. 85tf A. H. MILEHAM. Lost. Either on Main street or on Park avenue an amethyst ring with the initials M. E. 0. marked on inside. Return to this office and receive reward ' T«ere:i^ : ba,sei)^lt \vrit#¥ \0 theLoeJ;port 15nfon-Suft-w3iO is Sot ^adm%r : 0f;the.way in, winch \the- SpWing!lSditQr 6f tho MEBJIS A, Jap- KM, urnpifes a hall game* • There are'a jniuiiiber of people qf the/saine opinion, 3s the .youth who • imposes himself -upon the spo'rtlng fraternity of the Look City, and the most amus- ing feature hi the mattef is that the miter of this -article doosnot believe himself that, he can. umpire a. base ball game, . \With this acknowledgment of In- competency cornea also, to me the thought, that there are some reasons why the Verdant sporting writer of the Union-Sun is not qualified to judge as to the ability of an arbi- trator. I find that the doors of the Lockport High School were closed\ behind a certain student away back in 1893,. when the family bible said he had •weathered only fourteen win- ters, and at the early age of fifteen we find him confronting the prob- lems of life at six hundred cents* per week on one of the Lockport dailies, and spending his sleepless nights in a box which looked suspiciously like the former home of a Steinway, with naught for a bed fellow but the dusty remnants of a diminishing ton of coal. Tho history of the great men of Niagara county, in which is chroni- cled the doings of the foremost citi- zens of those parts, tells me that he was admitted by the rear door to tho different printing offices of the progressive city to the west of us, up to 190O, when some philanthropic friends of his conceived the idea his talents were being suffocated in tho coal box and that he was destin. ed to he a respected member of tho vast army of tho ovangolistic faith, with the result that the unsuspect- ing natives were starded to learn 0110 morning that die young man whoso nnmo sounds much liko tliat of tho late Govornor of tho Bluo Grass Stato, was a student at Dr, Moody's aoliool over in New England. Tho term at this institution is seven years, yet the young man again dem- onstrated his ability by being \graduated\ from the school in a little over five months and again took up his residence in his former contracted and uncommodious quar ters, which he still occupies. After tho citizens and his philan- thropic friends had recovered from tho shock of his unexpected \grad nation\ he begun his newspaper work again, and since that time has given conclusive evidenco that six years and seven months additional at the Now England Institution would have been of great servico to him and diose who are subjected to his peculiar journalistic offerings I have no desire to enlarge f urther, at present, on the young man's ability as a sporting writer, only to add that I am conscious that his scare head efforts, looking to the release of Lockport's present um- pire, are inspired by a desire to bo of service to a Lockport product of the umpiring line whose name sug- gests to me **a favor\ of six years ago and a \renewal\ only this week; the details of which I shall be glad to disclose to inquiring friends. By way of conclusion, I desire to advise the genial, well-meaning, yet misdi- directed sporting writer (?) of the Union-Sun that there will be a famil- iar face behind the indicator on next Sunday, but not Saturday, as being a \dead one,\ it is but consistent that I remain inactive on that day, while charitably inclined friends are busily engaged in giving sympa- thetic and substantial evidence of their regard for \those who were, hut who now are not.\ It is respectfully suggested that the JOURNAL'S readers await with a charitable suspense the offering of the Union-Sun's talented > sporting writer (?) all of which we gladly admit, not only with reference to the above article, but also his irrational comments on the umpiring of THE SPOUTING EDITOR. All subscribers not receiving their paper regularly are requested to call at? this office or notify Bickle Bros., as they have the contract for deliver- ing tlfe DAILY JODBNAL. :Editojfs lferoia|&1S# Jowtwi;.; •„ .Will you, jsh>ase ajlovjnSe;space in this issue of'yourr pajser io make^, few porxectionB in • Regard, to the, article whioh^ppear-ed, in,yester4ay*s. iss^e, in which it states thftt, adog belonging to 2me jinnped upon the child of fes. Bjckle, knocking, him down, Iterating his face etc, which wag not trueaspurinfornianicould have iscgrtahied' hadhe talcenfi. little pains to get all the tun thin .the matter. The retd fact s : are these; The.chiid said he was going to play down at the tenant house where James Hay den livesand where the dog was atthethne ghaw*- ing n hone, Although warned, by other children not to do so, and Trnt for the encouragement 0 f Miss Elsie Storlfc, the little fellow (as he had done before perhaps when tho other children were with hiin) took hold of the dog by the neck and commenc- ed pulling at his ears,which? the dog resented by raising his paw to push the child away; is so doing the injury occurred. Tho child was taken care of by the other cldldren, who were near at hand, and not out- siders as your article of yesterday stated. I have not kept this dog for the purpose of attacking children (or anybody else) on the pubHc highvyay and had I been at the place at tbo t time I cortainly should have tried to prevent what has, I regret, occurred. Respectfully, % _ \WM ICEAUSBY. P. S. — Any further information on the vioioueness of tlus dog can ho furnished by dozens of children who havo playod and romped on the place with him for tho last five years, 3 W. K. ^prlngfleid,;' Mass.,,' May-'i§5«.Toe-, flrm. ot Smith <aM We^PP, aojakeri'6i '-- the. celsiWatea; revolver,-ciosed..'itr|«e> toy? *O.S- an inietfrute? period. ; \Pais: steft is. taken* presu^blf' on account of the Jaljor *rwSle$* ita mea-aaving , .si.gniflie4 their intention pi iopjoing a Union despite thei opposition or the •Awn, Imposing pubtTo Buiiglijat* Kingston,: Way 36,^-Qefnewtohe 0 t. the Cfarnegie library in this city was Jiild today, 1!&e!HBraiy .will: Tcsofit 180> 000. Xt,tormsf oust 4f an lowing • Srroup ot public b»iia,ing? of wlhioh. the ottynaills thCcenter. .'•'••\ Assetriblyrtfan Fowled Withdraw*. . Jamcestown, >iay 26.—•AssemblsSnan J* Samuel Fowler has withdrew froia the contest for .the Republican nomina- tjon in. the Mxni Ohautawaua dUtrlct. This assures the .nomination of Arthur 0. \Wade '••'., : « 3 nB» cmoi rratey oying. New York. May 36. -*• Mrs. ,Agnee Ethel Trafcey, who as Agnes. 'jSthel, was known to Now York theater goera ot three decades ago saa the most PHHUA Islng exponent ot emotional rojeti, and who left the stage at the height ot her success for quiet domesticity, lies dy- ing at. her home in this cjty, Ar^a$t0Qv tton of the heart which developed Into a serious phase a year ago, has reap- peared and it was tearM Bho would not survive Ions. PAY YOUR WATER RENTALS. All water rentals must be paid on or before May 28th. Water will be turned off on aE consumers whose bills remain unpaid after that date. F. W. DtffGLEDINE, Supt, COKE FOR SALE. Inquire at Medina Gas Company's office. 93t0 Killed by Falling Building, Chicago, May 28.—One man was killed and another seriously injured by tho collapso of a building under coMtractlon at West 48th avonuo and North iwemjio lato yesterday. Both woro labours employed npon tho •trocturo^ Tho causo ot the disaster Is not known. It occurroa in the height of a sovore thunderstorm. Mrs. Roojevelt at Groton. Oroton, Mass., May 20.—Mrs. Roosp- volt will come to Oroton to attend the annu&l prtzo d«y esorclsoa nt Oroton school. In which her two som aro pu- pils, next Friday. It la expected thai Bho will arrlvo Thursday evenlnjj 01 Friday morning and will remain only long enough to attend tho exorcises. He Realty Wanted to Work. Gritty Georgo—Lady. I hoar dnt yei cuckoo clock Is out of order. Tho Lady-What of that? Gritty Georgo—Well, I just want to nay dat I'll sit nround an' do do cuekoo- In' every hour for mo bonrd nn' lodgin' I'm nlwiiys Ivlllln' to work.—Pnllndel phla Kccord. fits G001I E}eart«d GU«RB. \Jlmsley thiuksbis wife Is nn a gel.\ '\That so? 'Why, I didn't know Jlms- ley was married.\ \He la a widower.\—Kansas Cits Journal. Youinre busy fooling others; others are busy fooling you. It's all n wnsti of time. A straightforward course would be better for everybody.—At- chison Glaoo. That is what people are saying about the suits made by BRUST, the artist tailor Let us show you some of these goods. Swell Priface Albert Suits, made of bltck unfinished worsteds and Vi- cunas, all silk lined, white silk sleeve lining at $35 and $38. We have all the nobby pafc* terns in stripes and over plaids for Fine Sack Suits in worsted goods at $20, $22 and $23 Dunn's black unfinished worsteds for nice Sack Suits, made up with fine black satin finished liuings; all trimmings Ai at $23. Finest line of Trousers made to your measure $5, $6 and $7 N. B — Have you seen those swell fitting suits Brast has niado ? PHILIP I. BRUST ARTIST TAILOR, 501 Main St., Cor. Center Guess on the Game The tnanufacturers of Certified Check Cigars will give^ Fifty Cigars free to the one guessing the nearest to the score of i the ball game to be played Saturday, May 30, between Medina and The Arions. Nearest Guess Gets 50 Certified Check Cigars! Next Nearest. Guess Gets 25 \ You get a coupon with the purchase of each Certified' Check Cigar, which entitles you to one guess. They are soldj in Medina by BICKLE BROS., OALL.AGHAN & SUTTER, - - O. C. ANCREWS, H. B. KEAJINEY, COOPER BEOS., H. T. KROMPART, B. J. CCJMMINGS, W. J. COLLINS, JOHN COMERFOBD, „ MAMIE LIVINGSTONE, * MBS. W. R. CUBBY.