{ title: 'The Medina Daily Journal. (Medina, N.Y.) 1903-1932, November 14, 1903, 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/sn94057567/1903-11-14/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-11-14/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-11-14/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-11-14/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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• -Itnj .*.Jj.'»l •'••U.LA'UJU -J ^J\.*-* i k: t- \ • :• i *• ' : Si- , ,-& \-.j; , _ • • »• • 1 li^llia Daily journal •OjjitfWjKf R & BENSON, ;P«G>* \ Entered ffebrasry 4, 1808, at^edinsj N. *Xv, as sewnd-olass mate; trader Aetof Congress of March ft \\ m '\ 8UB0OBIPTION 3KR3COSS By mail or carrier s $3,QQ a year; $1 (tor six- months; CO cents* lor three months, Invariably i n advance* Advertising Bates on Application. *903 NOVEMBER 1903 Su. 1 8 15 22 29 Mo, 2 9 16 23 30 Tu. 3 10 17 24 We. i 11 18 25 Th. 5 12 19 26 Ff» ,6 13 20 27 Sa. 7 21 2_8 ©^ soon r -Third r1 MB <£guirt«r it p.m. MOON'S PHASES. kWew <f« 19 .\l 0 ML.\ 1 WMooa •V Vint nn Oi38 J Quarter bi a.m. COLORADO COAL MINERS. Strike Ended In Northern Field* on Conceiilon of Eight Hour Day. Louisvlllo, Col,, Nov, 14.—-As a fa suit o£ the concession of on elght-houi day by tho Operators, all of the strl'c- tag miners In the northern coal fields will return to work on Monday morn ing. This was practically decided nl « conference hero by the operator.' and a cotnmltteo representing all ol the unions in tho district The operators agreed to grant an eight-hour day pending tho settlement ot tho strike in tho Southern coal fields, on tho condition that tt tlu Jtrllto terminated without granting ap eight-hour day by tho Southorn opoi- iters tho roon should bo put back to work on a nine-hour basis In the Northern coal fields. Tho commltteo of tho men receive' this proposition with favor and will submit It for a referendum voto today •when i t Is bollovod it will bo accepted ty tho unions. Special Rata For Export 8tcel. Pittsburg, Nov. 14.—Railroad traffl: men have agreed to tho proposition of various steel manufacturers of tht country for a apodal freight rate foi all export stool that is to be shipped from tho Interior to tho seaboard, and tho now schedulo which Is shortly t>; go Into effect will further aid tho ox port of stool from tho Amorioan mills to foreign countries. Tho now sched- ule will bo an open ono for all of the atcel companies and all will bo treat- ed alike. Tho mills of tho Homestead steel works will practically bo work ing to their full capacity by noxt Mon day. Escaped Three Time* From Prison. Now York, Nov. 14.—James Colgan who In tho last flvo years has mndj throo sensational escapes from Now York prisons, whore ho has been con- fined for burglary and who was re- captured hero Wednesday night after a desporato fight with two policemen, was sent back to tho Eastern state re fonnatory at Napanoeh. to servo out the remainder of his last sentence, 31 Months. Colgan escaped from a cell K0 feet nbovo tho ground at tho East- ern reformatory on July 18, making a CO-foot rope of bedding and dropping from i t £0 feet further to the ground. Shot Wife and Killed Himself. Nashua. N. H„ Nov. 14.—Becauss his fqrmer wife, who a year ago S3- cured a divorce, persisted in her re- fusal to Consent to a remarriage. En Btno A. Edson, a barber, shot the Woman and then turned the weapon, a 32-calibre revolver, upon himself Ilo died two hours later. The woman, 11 Is thought, will recover. Court of Appeals Calendar. Albany, Nov. 14.—Court of appeals calendar for Saturday, Nov. 14: Nos SS, 88, 63, 60, 93, 43, 75, 115. Confessed to Glory Whalen Murder. Toronto, Nov. 14. — The nttorne> general's department received a ea blegram statin ~ thnt a man named Jo soph \William ^.larks, awaiting tria. In Manchester, England, for some of- fense, had co-'^sged to the murder ol Glory Whalen at Collingwood, Ont a few months a.sx Glory Whalen was S years old. She was on her way u school when she was -waylaid, stran gled and shot Patrons of Husbandry, Rochester, Nov. 14.—Over 700 can cMdates have taken the seventh de- cree at the National Grange session here. In the afternoon George W \Whlttaker of Boston, who staged that lie was present.at the request of Ma lor Alvord, chief of the. dairy division of the department of agriculture, spoke «n the cultivation of the dairy as an important branch of farm work. Arrested For Shooting Gamekeeper. Middletown, Nov. 14.—Dudley Han- . eaker of Black Like, Sullivan county, has been arrested oharged with shoot- ing Deputy Sheriff Shields at Chaphvs game preserve. He is now in the Montlcello jail. Walter Gattle was also locked up oharged with com- plicity, MURDERED BY NEGM Andre#if. Green Shot to Death ; at His Own House, FATHER OF GREATER NEW YORK- Shooting .the Outcome of an Insans ttefusipn <— Murderer Blamed MA Green For Befriending » Woman Who He Said Had Slandered Him. Stories of the Witnesses. New York, Nov. 14, — Andrew H Qrefln, the \Father of Greater New York\ and one of the city's oldest and most valued citizens, was shot and, in- stantly killed- on the steps of his home, 91 Park avenue, by Cornelius M. Williams, a negro, who is believed to.bo insane. The shooting was evidently the out- come of an Insane delusion on the part of tho negro that Mr. Green had slan- dered him, for, when he was asltad why he had committed the murder, he replied: \1 did it to save my charac- ter.\ There were throe witnesses of the tragedy, Mrs. Anna Bray, a domestic In Mr, Green's family! Eniil Michel sen, an errand .boy, and'Patrick l5yer, a cabman. According to those \wit- nesses tho negro must have^beon waiting for Mr. Green to como home from his office Ho generally reached home about 1:30 In the afternoon. At that horn ho alighted from a Fourth avenue car in the tunnel at Fortieth stroot, and ascending tho stops to tho street, walked slowly towards his residence, almost directly across the street. Negro Stood In the Vestibule. Dyor says ho saw the negro stand lug In tho vestibule of tho house and that ho saw Mr. Green start to ascend the two stops leading to the hall door At that moment Williams advanced toward him. There was a briof inter- change of words, which Dyer did not hear, and then tho negro Grow a ro reiver and fired flvo shots In rapid succession. Mr. Green sank to tho stono pave- ment, blood Streaming from his heail whllo WE murderer, returning tho ro-' volvox to his pocket, leaned against tho railing of tbo stoop as If awaiting arrest William H. Burns, carriage stnrtor for tho Murray Hill hotol, was one of tho first to reach the negro, whom ho E-Mzod as ho was about to walk away, and turnod him ovor to Patrolman Houghtallng and Dotectlvo Kelly, who rushed up a moment later. A physi- cian wnB on tho spot almost immedl ntely and pronouncod Mr. Green dead. Some of tho witnesses stated that as tho negro's aged victim fell, a young woman rushed out of tho house and took tho dead or dying man's hen) In her lap, at tho same timo calling upon him. In piteous tones, to spcal: to her. As sho tried (n vain to got u rnsporvBo Williams, It Is said, ox claimed, addressing Green: \Damn you, I told you I'd get oven with you.' Ono of tho negro's bullets cmbodlo-l itself In tho celling of tho vostlbnlo It Is believed that all of tho others took effect A cursory examination by a physician and the coroner revealed •ono wound in 4ho left side of the head, one In the left temple and an- other at the base of tho brain. AJIV one was sufficient to cause Instant death Mrs. Bray told tho police that sho tvas Just about to enter the house when sho saw Mr. Green accosted by Williams and heard the former say. In answer to some words addressed o him by tho negro: \Go away, I don't know you.\ Then Williams dr»w hla ravoivor and shot the old man. Tho boy Mlchelsen said he saw WttliaBls shoot Mr. Green fit the fBot of the steps, but heard no conversa- tion. As soon as the policemen grabbed tho colored man, they searched him and found the revolver, which was still warm. They hurried him to the sta- tion house, where he was subjected to n searching examination, tho result of which left little doubt of the negro'? insanity. Besides the revolvor, the police found In Williams' pockets n razor, a purse containing $10 and a dispossess notice, dated Aug. fl, show- ing that he had been put out of apart- ments In Fifty-seventh street, between Ninth and Tenth avenues. Williams appeared to be perfectly snlf-possessed and acted as though he felt he had performed a meritorious deed. He Is a well built man, ol average height and of pleasant feat- ures. .He said he was single, 43 years old and lived at 156 West Twenty- islxtli street, at.which place, however, he Is not known. Prisoner Told a Rambling Story. Tho prisoner told a rambling story about a colored woman, Mrs. Besslo Davis, who, until about four months Rgo, kept a lodging bouse for negroes in West Fifty-third street, who he said had circulated statements deroga- tory to his character and against Whom he had been trying to brine suit for $20,000 for slander, The trouble, he said, dated back to the year 1895, when he was one o/ her lodgers. Her stories reached the congregation of the Mount Olivet church, ot which he was an attendant and he was forced to give up his mem- bership there because his fellow wor- shippers pointed the finger of scorn a( him. Her slanders, continuing ovei eight years, cost him nearly all bis friends. \I would have been married now only for her,\ he added bitterly, 1- Qpntifttiing, he said ha had not be<*n able ft? \find the •vvoniajr, who had been, .spirited away iy powerful friends..: ' •/> He blamed; Sir, '.'©jrjjen for befriena- Jng the'womani ah.pl enabling Ber, he , ^pen'Port in Corea. / . Washington, Nov. 14,-4*6 United S/tatet government Is 'seeking to h>v>J the port ol W$ n - Coreaj op^nedi while Gr#t Britain and Japan i nave cp.mr hined in favor of opening the port.'of said, to. continue! her- slanderous stor-, tongampho. United States Minister les, • He said he had asked Mr. Green t m mi y,^ has been- stopping at Yoko- tc* \g$ after her,\ tout he bad failed jjama, is about to proceed from that to do so. ! port to Chemulpo, Corea, on an A-mej* \I'm not fiorry I shot him/' exclaim- j QJ j n -warship In pursuit of this, ania- efi the prisoner, \he get what he de-. g j 0n> ^ e purpose is to hnno> the, served. I may-not be justified by so- {j orea ns by the presence of an Anie^ ciety but I'm Justified In the eye? ol t C an vessel of modern type, and it Is GqcL I'm \willing to go to the electric statea^hat *BM» is absolutely no in- cliair, if necessary, to vindicate my tentloh to use. pressure, character.\ . • _—__ \Bo you peireve that Mr- Green had Ambulance Killed Aged Man. anything to do .with your being dls- '*_.,;.. M • -,,,_whn« resnond- SIX ^ aST^ -.SoTSir No^Dame BSfi ^o thT^dloraTdS\ was ^'\\\butawe struck and knooked down •No, the landlord did that, ?« tn <- Major p orteQU3 . The ambulanco IDld that have anything to do with stopped, plchert up its victim and re- Did that nave anyxnmg to oo witn ^^ hJm ^ ^ hosplta i_ where he the shooting?\ \Yes that as much as else.\ anything died an hour later. Major Porteoua was one of the oldest employes of tha The prisoner was removed to police f^ZTrt'Z* ^afo? wX headquarters, where he was que* g}.«f oer ot the Prlnc9 ° f WalM tloned by Inspector McCluskey, who ltlue3 said ho. was satisfied that the man was insane, Later Williams was placed in a cell at the Tombs. Close Season Abolished. Ottawa, Ont,, Nov. 14.—The Cana- Employes of the Murray Hill hotel' dlan government has abolished tha told the police that they bad seen the close season for pickerel in the-waters colored man walking up, and down the 0 f Lake Huron and the St. Clair River street In front of Mr, Green's house bordering on the county of Lambton. every day for the past week. Thoy similar action has been taken in re- had hoard him muttering to hlmsell ga r a to white flsb, In the waters of and waiving? his hands about hint, and i_au 0 Brie and St, Clair bordering on decided that ho was crazy. | the county of Kent. Mr, Green, who was a bachelor, lived with his nephew, Timothy R. Green, and hla three nieces, tho Misses Lucy M., Julia El and Mary It, Green. Miss Mary R. Green Is In Worcester, Mass., but tho otbor nieces wore ot home when the shooting occurred. Timothy K.' Green said that his un- MARKET REPORT. New York Provision Market. New York. Nov. 13. WHEAT—No. 2 red, 85%c f. o. o. afloat; No. 1 Duluth, 80%c. •wmowy «. «ru«a H .«IUW n» u«- COKN _ Na 2 corn, 50%c f. o. b. cle never before saw the man wH^. m 2 ye)]ow> ' 0%c OATS — No. 2 oats, 40c; No. a white. 42c; No. 3»whlto, 41^0. shot him. that he had never heard ol the colored woman, Bessie Davis, and that ho 'had never had any colored servants In his house. The story told by Williams was, said Mr. Greon, pur< fiction, * No trace of tho womnn Davis could be found at tho houos In West Fifty- third Btreet montloned by Williams not was tho man known at a houso 'n West Twenty-fourth street In wblcb ho said he lived. Tho police are dls posed to bGllovo that tho Davis worn- in was merely tho figment of an Insana Imagination. Dr. Fisher, for whom Williams had worked as a furnace tender for five years, unld ho had novbr shown anj evidonoo of Insanity, nor had he OV-M heard him mention Mr. Green's nam\ Train Robbers Get $50,000. Pretoria, South Afrloa, Nov. 14.- - Pwo men boarded a railway train as It was ascending a steep grade be- l-veen Petersburg and Nylstroom. iverpoworod tho guard, looted thj ln»asuro cox and made their oscap?. The robbers. It Is reported, secured lirO.OOO which was consigned to the Standard bank of Pretoria. Olive Uniform For National Guard. Albany, Nov, 14.—Adjutant General Henry of tho state National Guard said that he would probably Issue in n fow days an order prescribing the new olive drab uniform adopted by the United States army as the service uniform of the National Guard 6f thij Btate. Grant of $50,000 to General Gomez Havana, Nov. 14.—President Palnia has signed the bill unanimous! >• passed by the house and senate under which a grant of $50,000 was voted tc General Maximo Gomez for his ser vices as head of the revolutionary army. WE MUST GROW OR DIE. BUCKWHEAT FLOUR—?2.25©2.35. PORK—Mess, $ 13.00@13.75 ; family. $18.00. HAY—Shipping. 650750; good to choice, 85@95o. BUTTER—Creamery, extras, 22%c: factory. 15©16o: wostern imita- tion creamery, 17@lSo. CHEESE—Staw, full cream, good tn prime, 11 %c EGGS — State and Pennsylvania, fancy, selected, 38@40o. POTATOES—State and easfern, por bbl., $ 1.DO@2.00 . Buffalo Provision Market. Buffalo, Nov. 13. WHEAT — No. 1 northern, 83P. winter wheat, No. 2 red, 8SV4c. CORN—No. 3 yellow, 60*4 ©SO&c t o. b. afloat: No. 3 white, 50c. OATS—No. 2 white, 39%<3>39<$lc f. o. b. afloat; No. 3 white, 38%@38»ic. FLOUR- Soring wheat, beat patent per bbl.. $5.00^6.75; low grades, $8.25 ©100. BUTTER - Creamery western eT- tra tubs, 22&@23c; state and Pennsyl- vania creamery, 22@22&c; dairy, fair to good, 19@20c. CHEESE—Fancy full cream, I2&; good to choice, ny£®12c; common to fair. 8@10c, EGGS—State, fresh fancy. 30®32s. POTATOES—Per bu„ «0@62c. Constant Stttdy la r«<?cc»»nry- to Keep Pace With tlie Times. A passion for growth, a yearning for a larger life. Is characteristic of nil great souls. A man I s measured by his power to grow, to become larger, broader, nobler. The Intensity of his desire to reach out and up defines his capacity for devlopment Any one, young or old, possessed by i passion for growth i s coustftntly add- ing to his knowledge, always pusliing his horizon a little furthqr. Every day he gains additional wisdom, every night he Is a little larger than he wns in the morning. He keeps growing as long as he lives. Even In old age he is still stretching out for larger things, reach- ing up to greater heights. We often find plants and trees that are not fully developed, but have reached the limit of their growth. They cannot be made to respond to the woo- ing of enriched soil or copious water- ing. The power for the extension of cell life seems to have departed. There are many human plants of sim- ilar nature. Early In life they settle Into grooves, from which nothing can displaco them. They are dead to enter- prise, to advancement along any line. New movements, new systems of busi- ness, larger conceptions of life and sim- ilar things In the living, moving present do not appeal to them. Immovably hound to the past, they can step only just so-far this way, only so far that way. There is no further growth, no more progress for them. They have reached their goal. Employees often think that they are kept back designedly and that others less deserving are pushed ahead of them, when the real trouble is with themselves. They have ceased t o grow. They continue to move In a circle. They have not kept pace with the trend of the times. \Forwardl\ Is the bugle call of the twentieth century, The young man or woman or the old man or woman who has eeased t o grow Is t o be pitied. Life holds nothing more for either.—Sue* cess. East Buffalo Live Stock Market. CATTLE—Best steers on «ale, $5.35 @B,00; good to choice butcher Btec-rs, $4 10@-I.35 ; medium half fat steers $1U5@3J(L; common to fair heifer*, } 2.l.0@3.00 ; choice to extra fat heifer?, Jl l-0@4.25 ; good butcher bulls, $3.00 ©3.50; choice to extra veals. $8 00© 8 50; common to light, $5? 5@6.60 . SHEEP AND LAMBS — Choice lambs, $ 5.50@5.C5 ; culls to common, $4.00® 4.75; yearlings, handy weight $3.50® 4.00; wether sheep, $ 4.00@4.50 . HOGS—Mixed packers' grades, $5.0\> @5.10; medium hogs, $ 5.07@5.15 , pigs, light $ 5.05@5.1O . Buffalo Hay Market. KAY—Timothy, new, pnr ton, loose. 113.00® 15.00; hay. prime on track, lew, $ 14.00@15.00 ; No. 1 do do, $13.00 ©15.50; No. 2 do do, $ U.OO@12.0D . Trra Vi«rr« of the Same Queition. A notqd Dlshop In order to point a lesson in humility sometimes tells a story of a young clergyman whose first appointment was to be an ont of the way and poor parish. On his first Sunday In this new sta- tion the yonng man as he looked over his wretchedly clad and Ignorant con- gregation could not help saying to him- self, with a groan: \Dear me, what a dreadful thing It would be If I should have to stay btre any great length of time!\ At the end of the sermon a deacon made a prayer. To the young man's horror one part of the prayer was a benevolent hope that \this Ignorant, in- experienced, barren pastor that had lately come to the parish might Im- prove and grow learned and fruitful In good works, so that hit would come to merit being kept on there for awhile.\ Looked In wtth • Manlno. The writer was ouce closeted with a patient whom he had no suspicion of being mad until the latter got out of bed, turned the key .of the door and preferred a mild request to the writer to have his throat cut, handing him at the same time an open pocketknife, which he produced from underneath his pillow. I objected to the knife as being too small for the purpose and begged to be allowed to go for my case of amputating knives, with which, 1 explained, the operation could be per- formed with greater neatness and dis- patch. He unlocked the door at once, binding me over to secrecy and urging me to lose no time In returning. I drove home, reported the ca$e to the authori- ties and came back with assistance. He was secured with great difficulty and sent to the asylum.-^-Lonuaon Tit- , Utti Jtov|n#-lB«r»*<ti»..- :. .Mimicry •-«tnow^ftttwNl!^SI•^yJW*»• and other insects would te« CMBle'.frece fin? mo^B^haf* *itJM»-*te<!w,««!»: pi their wings a Maoit irMMjc..arid.tjro ; ot: more tails rea'emhliug,th> horhs»0f- theh • own beads, A veteran to'^arfar* noli seldom has these,ppftlons.mtssiMili i; proof Of the value In having.saved his life Thus the lizard's; -brittle! tall, which,- first -attracting ,th#_ .enffroy;,, comes oft at his touch,,, lets hla would, be prey escape;,. When 'at bay,..crabs distract .the enemy by .throwing ,off their claws, and lobsters do the trie* more neatly by seizing the eftemy^wifh, a claw aud then throwing/ 5 off Htjjh.aUd enemy. Thus the bushy tail of the squirrel is accounted^for. There is « chance of escaping the enemy minut only a mouthful of fur, ^ -*:.' The Ml«»»o«i{iry Apple Tree.\ In the rectory garden of Fysford, neea Woking, England, there stands what li familiarly known as the missionary applotree. The tree is a large one and of a good met and has been so named for the reason that.for many years past It has been the custom of the rec- tor of the parish to collect the fruit, sell It In the best market and devot* the proceeds to v tha mlssiojwry socle* ties of the Chufchof England. Quite a Urge sum of money has been raised In this way, and th« apples, which ore of the Blenheim orange variety, always find a ready sale at excellent prices among the gentry and farmer* ot tha district ^ African XM«IT«* »u»d 8»M. To obtain salt the Bakalulua and otfc •r African natives bum banana leayet and certain grosses and, colle'Hlus the ashes, place them In'a large- funnel in genlously made- from large banana leaves. Through this they percolate water and then evaporate tile filtered water by lolling, obtaining a fairly white salt composed of a vory small amount of chloride of sodium aud a very largo amount of chlorate of potash and other salts. Prior to the advent of tho tradors and the missionaries- this was the only salt thoy had to satisfy the natural craving of a r«<«tabl« ««t lag pnopln. JUDGED BY HER BOOK\ * The War Glrla In the BIR Depart- mant Stores Are Watched. Tho glrla in a large department store, »ays Frank Leslie's, are, ns a rule, care- fully watched not only In the store, but out of It. The buyer of each depart- ment knows pretty well tho habits of h|s sales ladles; knows bow much it costs them to live and how they spend their evenings. It la easy for him to get tho Information not merely through fio atoro detective, but In many other ways. Tho buyer Is, as a role, a tolerant person, who cares only for two things— namely, that the girls \deliver tha goods\—1. e., that thoy - mako big \books\—and that thoy appear respect- able. If they stay out so late at night that'they do not reach tho store prompt' ly In tho morning they may be dta» chnrged, transferred from one dopart-- ment to another or merely not r!*a in the way of salary, depending on the de- gree of their misdemeanor. If the girl's book is unsatisfactory she Is simply discharged or transferred, and no rea- son Is given, bnt if she Is wise aba knows the reason why. If, on the other band, the girl it a good seller the buyer will excuse a great deal in tho way of Irregularity of habits. As long »s a girl sticky, closely to business she ts allowed a great deal of freedom, bnt when her \book\ be- gins to suffer It Is time for her to \look out** FiJKeflH , Mr. Arjliur (Jhapniart; writing from Durban; Natal, youfcii Jtiri,. a .says: \As agroof Jihat Lljiiunber- jlaiu^BsGough'RemedyjiaVtiresuita- ijila for old and young; j jjeji y ou :tho faMOwiagr Aiiui^ibqr •*;-£•' mine h$d a child, just, oyei'- tvvQ months oJdV It had 4 yei'y bail\ eeugli and ;tW parents djd uqt ittpw* ^i mt tQ i^ive iti. J suggested- tlmfc -if they vvpuld get ft bottle ot tlltatiiheHain's Oojtgu i&nredy nnd'jjiit&Mnie upon the dummy Wat \he ijaliy \yas suck- ing i t w<fuld liodoubtcin-ti felie child. TMatJiey did ami bought ibout a qniuki, ireiief and cttretl tlie baby.\ TJu&xemed^kfor aahvjby Chas. A. \Aia'ufe\, Druggist, ffiQ lain St., Me-- diua, JN, X, .-.'-. . ~t / Tn,e. wiaoTrer. \A widower,\ remarked the elderly female, \always reminds me of a haby.\ \How's thatt\ queried the young girl. \During tb* first ahc mouths he cries • good deal, themext six months he be- gins to take notice, and; the odds are •gainst his getting safely through hla second snmmer.\-^C a 'ca86 News, For Sale By F. i. ZIMMERMAN Doctor dl«k Pomsroy A Solid Gold Watch i 14 Earat. Open Face. New Model. Elgin or Waltham Movements $22.50 The Holidays are coming and now is the best time to make your selection. A LITTLE INTRODUCTORY FLYER Out of the ordinary, but indicative of our manner of doing business and the unprecedented Values to be had a t our store always. We have been looking forward to the'floiidays for a long time, aud we have some novelties in our immense stock which will he exclusive to this store. J. There are so many beautiful -tbingC ''we won't attempt to mention them. Bnt we cordially invite yon to come and see them,, displayed in one of Rochester's handsomest and most inviting stores. We carry one of the largest stocks of finger Rings in Western New York. Diamond and Pearl Pendants, Brooches, Solid Gold Pins, Lockets and Sleeve Buttons. An illustrated catalogue jree on appliiation, KLEE & GItOH GOLD AND SILVERSMITHS^ The Reliable and Progressive Store, 2i4 Haiti St., East / Rochester,:N. Y. » CLAraVOYANT. Know Thyiulfl D O you knowthereasonwhy Doctor EUa Pumeroy will looato the cause for yon, Free \ \\hn are tronhled with headache*, constipation, chills and losaof appetite, \Son become irritable and \ont of sorts\—generally yon have no real disease* bnt a breaking down of tho whole system. Medicines that are prepared for the thousands your system may not retraire. A per- feot-disgnoaia Is the most essential of oli Doctor*E3lA Pomeroy i s a graduate of two medical colleges and with her Clairvoyant Sight is doubly qualified to locate the cause whero others fail, as hundreds of your cithens will testify. Illustrated Health Talks to mothers And danghera every Wednesday from 8 to 4 p. in. Subject: \ Health, Beauty ana Haiipinea*\ . Permanently located «t 128LJDak Or- chard streefc. Hours: 1 to 4, 7 to 0. i