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f A G E TWO THE 1PULASKI DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1914
The Pulaski Democrat (Established in 1860)
hvreu G. Seamans ..Editor
OSWEGO CO COMMITTEE MEETS
fWUished every Wednesday by t h i Pulaski Democrat Publishing Co.
Women Present and Are Allowed Address the Committee.
to
For probably the first time in the history of .the Republican party in Oswego county women were present at the session of the county committee last week.
t A delegation of active suffrage advo-
iTsarlv. in advance, $1.50; « Months, 75c' « * • » ****** *>/ M i » Florence Roberts, EntereaaVthe
-R&* L. Seamans President JTma Jht Sesmans Vice-President at O. Seamans. .Secretary and Treasurer
itereo. aT£He Pulaski PostoSce as Second-class Mail Matter.
eVrvertwing Rates are based upon Actual not padded, Circulation. The Dempcrat
v lends other weeklies in Oswego^oounty.
- PULASKI, N. Y., JULY 22, 1914
\ T
state organiser, and including Mrs. R. I O. Post, Miss Anna Harmon, Mrs W.
R. Fisher, Mrs James Dunlap, *«d Mrs A.-S. Breckett of Connecticut, filed into the room, the privilege of the floor having been given them by the committee at Chairulan Richards' request.
j~—-_:_:—---^^_ L ^ i 8 8 Roberts was introdm-^i p'tZq WHAT PAIRS COSTS THE COUNTRY made s brief address, citing the progress
•— already rasde in equal suffrage through-One of the items in the sundry civil out the nation snd calling attention to
.** Wis is $730,000 for the, Panama-Pacific. * n e recent indorsement of the movement ^«tepo»ition.= Presumably it will pas* »t .by . f c^ree * f ? * * n * * » W organisations,
* «*t W « . ,w m to be«,-*; - - f t . £ * £ - *£»*£ Ban FrancLse© next year, and this ap* .in Illinois and other states and'**id
NO MORE RUBBERING • ON TELEPHONE LINE
A SCHOOLBOY'S INTERVIEW WITH ABRAHAM LINCOLN
Western Man Invents Trouble Annimil-ator and Nosey Folk Will Be
Revealed in Future,
Noting my hesitation, Mr Lincoln
PARISH Mrs Polly Minckler-te^spending a few
days with her daughter, Mrs Johnson,
The good old evening entertainment
very gently said, "Come in, my son." j a t Hastings The BiToi...
.. . . _•-*.. **MI °* Parish and Hastings n< as it were, from the eheir, advanced to^y^ 8eMfc>8 mt th«^*rish
Then he arose, disentangling himae l f I The Bi Town Sunday School Associa-' tins of Parish and Hasting* held a moat
of listening on the t e S ^ e ^ r - r u T s t * * * * •**• tM ^ « e w d - 4 ° ™ that I'church o* Saturday, July Is. had never beheld so tall a man, so dig- J taining and instructive addresses were party telephones is soon to be a thing
on- nified and and '. a**®111 DJ R e v - E- - L o v*' Ce"*1*1 Square,
Eater. | made in area burned and property losti Frederick C Witt by forest fires. In 1903 464,189 acres AttMn„ mmA - J7******
J l u i . . . n .J*™**** *»d Counatflor-at-law. of the past. "No more rubbering on- nified and impressive a personage, ana • • " w *v -"-*• — ~-—-- , ,-~- , the lines," says A. G. Howard of Te- 'certainly I had never felt so small, sol ***• G r a c * *- <*****>*> «*»*.* Sunday kamah, Neb., who was trouble shooter insignificant, "so unpardonably young." I • c *° o 1 •upenntendent, Oswego, and Rev. and manager for so many years that l As we met, the President gave me his he decided he would invent an indicator hand, smiled down upon me, and, play-that would point out to the whole line ing upon the similarity in the sound of just who was the fellow who butted in. my name with that of the person to
"I'll invent that indicator if i r takes whom he was about to refer, lightly me all the rest of my life," said Howard asked, "Are you Bailey Peyton, the,
for the rural tele- rebel .guerrilla we captured the other P o u m * , u ' Central Square; superintend many phone bad."
years ago "service needs it and needs it That was after be had endless*
already set aside for the same eater- N e w *£**'.,*»• *h« *«** ot honor. No* frise. There are always those who que.- £ r f ! ! ! ^ ~ t h e **** ****-
' It *u J • wii-* # ' J * . *d, but that the women might have tloo the advisability of expending large that weapon which alone would be effec-
-»ums of public money in such under- tive in gaining needed reforms, such as ^faking* It is undoubtedly true that P° r e f o o d »*», the protection and care these expositions can be held t?o fre- o f ]*^orJ porkers and the proper care g e n t l y for their own good and for the " * ~ a t V ^ ^ ' Z™* * *
- . ' , . m e i 1 w e r e a t t f l 9 I r business, the women food of the people. A considerable time would be watchful of the health and Jhould intervene, and, when iScy a. e moral -interests of the community and laid too ckwe together, the later always state. Miss Roberts cited what had jpnffer in point of patronage. For *>x-
.?. sample, the St. Louis exposition was uc Xfcing like in receipts what was expeci-
' jtd, or what would have been had it jnot- followed so soon after its predeces-jaors. The Chicago exposition «as in
-^aveiy sense a great success. Then came
been done by women in Illinois since] they secured the ballot.
Concluding, she said that Oswego county was interested in and strongly j in support of woman suffrage. She said that many men had told her that women should have the vote. Mies Rob-
^positions at San Francisco, Buffalo erts asked that a resolution be adopted Jamestown, and as weH several smaller by the county committe requesting the #nes which had government assistance, state committee of the party at the . That benefit is derived from a reason- Saratoga meeting to instruct the dele-Able number of world's expositions U gates to use all honm^ht* »,«.», tff c c
undoubtedly true, because it aftords the cure a plank in the state constitution on opportunity to become familiar with th* woman suffrage in order that the peo-latest inventions,* devices and accom- pie might vote on the question in 1915 jlishments along all lines of activity j Miss Roberts was applauded when And progress, but in this as in every-j she took her seat and Sheriff Strana thing else it is quite possible to hare too h»n advanced and offered the following ^rach of a good thing. In the last 52 resolution, P. W. CuRinan gallantly -years this government has voted money seconding it: o / Ao 38 different international expositions, j "Resolved, That the Republican countr «f which 16 have been held in the United committee of Oswego county New
.States. The World's Fair at Chicago in, York, calls' upon the legislature of IMS JB»Z received $6340,000 from the Federal ( to give early passage to the bill ere
Sverpjnent. It will be recalled that ] viding for the submission of the woman o and one-half million was voted for suffrage amendment to the constitution
•he coinage of the Columbian half del-. to the voters of the sttfte 1^' T h a t W M 0 t t e o{ t h e beBt * n d mxyst I "Besomed, That we call upon tan ^|irceasful affairs of its kind since the { constitutional convention of l f t t to --itennial held at Philadelphia, and that ratify the same measures and embodv
was bigger and better was because it as an article in the proposed coonti-were more things to show and tution, to be voted upon stmrateri- in
people to look at them. The" gov- order that the will of the people on thia » t invested altogther $11,217,000 subject may be correctly determined,
the St. Louis exposition ,which fell "Resolved, That copies of thsse re of being a phenomenal succe**. 44 solutions be sent to all candidates for
by no means, all things considered, member of assembly from Oaweoo eoun-aatiafactory as the centennial in t ty and senator and dnkaateato the
which the government investeJ only constitutional convention from this sen j b o u t two and one-naif millions. Other atonal district in. the eomJur Reimh-
ats of Federal assistance were lican primaries." r^^ leatown $2,457,000, New Orleans $1.-1 But Charles Stewart of Fukon wm.
1,000, and Buffalo $1^15,000. Of these' of a different mind. He ^TZt T ! ! that at Buffalo was altogether the ' Iwre in woman suffrage and said so suceesafuL There have been in' very emphaticaUy. He went so far as
^^^—^__ 1 stammered an incoherent disclaimer^
trouble with, the lines because .people of any relationship with the famous Con-listened la, brought on trouble in the federate free-lance, of whose exploits neighborhood and ruined thousands of and recent capture the newspapers had batteries^ - • . ' h a d much tetany. '.„ *
And he did invent it. i t did not take , Mr. Lincoln asked me if my uncle- waa him the rest of his Ufct It did take well, and charged me to deliver a kind
message to my kinsman w h e a l return-
superi N. E. Miller, Central Square. Dinner was served in the session' room:
Officers elected for the ensuing year are as follows: President. Rev.-Dr. F. M. Harvey, Parish; vice president, Mr*. R. J. Dimon, Hastings; treasurer, H. A.
jent of* teacher ^training, Miss Jessii
jropriation is in addition (to the $5Otp>,0OO that .the suffragists were anxious toTddl 1 ^"' 1 1 **^ 7**Tf o f **** W 0 l k ' -^w" *r— «.._».._ ^_ .. . . . -- lever, to complete the instrument. Now ed home to New York. Then, laying hie
it is perfect and the patent is applied band upon my head, he said: (how well for. I 1 remember his words!) "You are come How does this indicator teir who is butting in?
Why, by means of musical notes. Every telephone is to be equipped with an indicator. Every indicator is equipped with a disc with teeth. This is set in motion the minute the receiver is taken off the hook. The teeth on the disc pick musical notes from keynote
of good people, you will soon he a grown man. Be a good man. Be a good American. Our country may have need of your services some day."
I had thought up a little speech to deliver when 1 met the President whom I had been taught to love and revere, but when I stood before him, felt his hand on my head, heard his voice, look-
tongues in the instrument. The high ' «* up into his wonderfully expressive, and low notes correapond to the short' kindly eyes, my emotions were so deeply and long notes peculiar to the tele- \ stirred that I could but smile through phone that is being tampered with.' t e* r 9 . • ^ ***** ^^J to take his hand, Thna, if Bill Jones's ring is a short and , w * « * *ad dropped from my head, and two longs, and you are talking business P***8 »*. and suddenly hear a high and two low j I looked down, abashed, not knowing notes over the wire vouVill know that **»* * *ay or do. Mr. Lincoln, evi-Bill Jones is rubbering in your business. *^^7 noting my confusion, placed his
"Bill Jones, you get off that Rne," band on my shoulder and drew me to you can shout to him. It is then op- { *im, saying, "What can I do for you, tional with BUI whether he will get off , spaay?" J — the line or fight you a French duel the ' Encouraged and "heartened by his next time you meet him. But you have, kindly manner, his sympathetic tone of the dope on him. - vo"*» mJ «y«* sought his again, and I
But the indicator does even more!«*«*g«d to blurt out, "Mr. Lincoln, all
Rider; superintendent of elementary division, Mrs D. P. Rogers, parish; super-
| intendent of adult, division, Mrs William Schradcr, of Mattory; superintendent of cradle roll, Mrs G. JE^ Mount, Central Square. .'"."". ' * ' . . "
Mr and Mrs Harley Ruth? and son Roger and Misses Caisie and Olive1
Schumacher of' New York arrived in town Sunday morning and with (heir parents, Mr and Mrs J. W. Schumacher and daughter Verna and son Jay left imediately for Mexico Point where they will occupy the cottage Ontario for three weeks.
At the close of the lecture on woman suffrage given by Miss Florence Roberts of Oftwego in front of I. 0. 0. F. temple Saturday evening July 11, a political equality dub was organised and officers elected as follows: President^Miss Marianne David, vice president, l£rs" Ida Edick; secretary, Mrs Ella Talkott; treasurer, Miss Anna Richards. Miss Maud Richards and Miss Anna Richards were appointed a committee to prepare a list of the voters of the town.
Miss Margaret Sixer of Brooklyn is spending several weeks with her aunt, Miss Jessie Rider, in this viHage,
Mrs Stella Osborne and children of Pulaski visited her parents, Mr and Mi e uitner rumon:
the boys in my school are for you. His smile broadened; he seemed much
amused. Them I remembered very dis-
wonderful things than this. In the first place when you call Sam
Smith with Smith's two short and two long rings Smith takes down his re- 1 tinctly the troubled, weary, care-worn ceiver and immediately you hear two expression that passed over his face as high and two low musical notes in your ** replied, "I wish everybody, Congress, receiver. You know at once it is Smith »" the people, we** like you hoya." I and not Butinskv Jones who is at the c o » w «*7 aothiag, could ornty gane into other end. You "go ahead to talk busi-;1"* benevolent eyes that seamed to look
into my heart. Presently he asked me how old I
waa, where I went to sehooL and a Jew other questions of like familiar sort. And then again, giving me his hand; he said, "Now you must exeuse me; I have
the end of four minute* it runs dow«4 important business with this gentle Then it automatically disconnects you. m**»" indicating the personage with That's a hint that you have talked long w k o i » be had been conversing when I enough for a mere visit. If it is busi- «"*«r«l *be room. nen, however, and you want to prolong | * *book hands with the President,
j the eemreraatic* all you have to do i*' turned and walked to the doer, faced I to press down the lever and the spring *b o u t» m*d« " J ™annerBf as he, re-
is wpind up for another fear minutes, | •***" « * « ? * » * * <***»» armdmir, Ag^i.. by this "r**n« one can tell just "aimed his mtemew with the minister
of France-
Then the indicator gauges the length of the conversation so that one may comply with the rules of the company. When the receiver comes off the hook it sets the indicator into operation. At
how long he is using the knag 'phone and does not need to watch the dock or ask central to call him down when he talks too. long.
The indicator will also register the
TO JOIM ST. LAWRRHCE AMD OTTAWA RIV1RS
dTBon, appropriations for 22T exposi-] to say that he had been a Republican m n n b c r < * ***** m tbe ***> the month | 8 t Catharines, Out., July 1$, held in foreign countries whexejhe[all his lifeJrat that if woman naffrage' ? r / W * „ ^ J ? h o , l ! _ j f l - , 1 f ? 1 ** * J ? * * ^ I W ' ^ a u H ' ff Cornwall, Out. v
investments.'
l&ited States was represented. It is a became effective he would never even jBbjeci for argument whether or no the cast a vote again. "The woman's olaee aation has had its money's worth from | is in the home, caring for the ehildrem
and the home," concluded ^fr Stewart. _ Captain Culkin said that this resoru-Jtion did not bind the committee or the
party to the support of woman suf frage but simply provided that the peo
HI SURROGATES COURT
**' A petition for letters of administra
home. The time when the removed and replaced is registered se ' that i t is possible to teH approximately how hag the average con* creation on a given 'phone has been. This ie-ef kim-mense advantage to the trouble man when the patrons deny they ever did
who is a receiver i s ' prominent ship owner and marine man,
was here yesterday afternoon as guest of Chief J. L. Weiler, head of the Wetland ship canal, who took a party of business men over the route of the new waterway. Mr. Young stated that a new scheme was being set on foot to
up-anything but obey ih* «Bes scrupu-1 overcome the difficulties TtteridanT ikm on the estate of Floyd £. Hartson,' pte be given a'chance to vote on 'and! lomif' He *«** »t the indicator and'on navigation of the upper St Lawrend
Tlte of Mexiee-.-was filed by John F. decide the matter. , reads the entire history of the w e and [ In the ru*" to deepen the St. Law" fcrtson. The estate is valued at $W0 — ^ * « „ i n ™ u i - . *« n « « « « . « « « ! . . »
. per.onaL j t n e r e w e r e nomerous "noes," but the ^ r o m ^ZT?^ persons compUin-,- A petition for the probate of the will ayes appeared to have it and Chairman . ^ J ^ ^ ^ L ^ V r H o M r H . - .
^tk Cyrus Stowell, mte of Orwefl, was J^bards ao anmiunoed. Mia. Robert.' f • " ^ r s j £ » M r Howard buflt 'tied by his. wife, Mary StowelL to thanked the committee and the ddega-' *J* " ^ ^ S ^ J T U J ! ^ .'SiFnom he bequeathed the^ entire estate tion departed. « w » y , fceb. There were 44 mOes of Valued at $$50 I A reaorution was adopted providing! l t ' * B d " ****** o n
Jt h e lm*T V? m'
* ^ A petition for letters of administra- 'for the unofficial primaries to be held. * ™ » * » * w™**±t? *J*» f a I ! * " -lion on the estate of George H. Stone'August « iM all toe district, of theJ ***?Jr_BL1 tTW*** f ° L f ^late of Serine, was filed V IHright D. «>«*y for the selection of seven dele- f * ^ S a S L * ! l H a f i i ^ J T S m e * o n ^ . The value is $50. * £ * " d a e m •**"»** to an un- ^^SL^SiT^S ^J5S'
The petition of Edna L. Terpen ing official state convention to be held at **« *****". b 6 e m m e "bausted r*9*V, % for ktter. of administration on the Saratoga, August 18, for the selection " * ^ 9 e r™!_W* t **W*I**°°r b e ° * M e
• ; t e t . f Laura A. Terpening, late_oi <>i delegates to the constitutional con- j ^ ^ L ^ S J ' . ^ T r i T t o
When the vote was taken viva voce,' >b<Me, o f ?**_ !p hJ? e•__Pf , "* taflcijrenee river, Mr Young" said that to get ,_._ ^^jjjj t k e f^pj^ jj -n proposed to is
build a canal connecting the St. Law rence and Ottawa rivers. The canal, which will only be sixty to eighty miles long, will leave the St. Lawrence below Prescott and meet the Ottawa river at Lake St. Louis, thirty miles from Montreal. Construction will be easy and only three or four locks will be required. " Mr Young said that surveys were
•9*io-*~'ix. The estate is vara* ist ttOOO ^wtion to be voted for at the Septem
being made quietly now and that T « J 4 MrTITc. 'cfcrtis.'
iTvd $2000 personal. transfer tax appraisal -of the
talk. her primaries. The polls wffl be open from 3 pjn. to 9 rxm. on the p r i m a l Howard was always oa the go flx-
soon a report would be submitted te the Dominion Government on the feaai-
[ bility of the scheme.
>'<gtato J[ Eiuat TaBer-BhoWi^the fgirm*^***' The foflo^wing were named uTThe ™* thmgs and shooting trouble. Dur valu- to have been $S^8$Ji, the ex-' resolution as a committee to meet at mi* t t i * t i m * ^ found some Strang*.
headquarters, August to, t» easrvam tk*. tactics resorhsd to by persons on rural fote east_ai J
fm^ea, $523.79, and the net estate headquarters, August 10, to canvass the 4w"3.90. j rote cast_at the unofficml primaries- b n e * wmo f e r e anxious to Listen m or
An order sign** ny Surrogate Miller James Buckley of Artmar, W. w / . e o n i B i t nnisantus on the line. iraa filed settrmg the account of Ann' Spencer of Oswego> Frank A. Sayer of' ^ f<raBd a bachelor holding a pH X. Dsvis, as executrix of Ear* Davis., °»w^?>. Chnrles Stew%rt of Porto*. J ptff to the transmitter when nerasms oa The receipts were the verdict of $3000 B Burt of Hannibal, Ansel W Brown t k e ^ w e r e talking busuvssa. The
mad interest against the New York Cen- \ <*? Biehland and A. P. Mferriam of b * d w M r pv^sd the pig's ear to make fral Railroad, and the chargeable dis- j Phoesux. Two weeks' notice of the '* *<P*e*J imU> the 'phone. Howard also
Primaries is to be girea m the Osweno' kmmd a toothlens grandmother dropprnr
HARDLIffG RAILROAD CARS
"ituscutents $1$20J0 to F. J. Davis, $141 llamieral expenses and $108 fees of the sjxecutrix.
tf ' CULUMAM FOR GOYERVOR ,'JHoa. Patrick W. Oaffinaa of Onwegp, jfrhoae name, is known tsroughnmt the 'fftaSe largely at must of his political ac--nrvrties. is being •or the ofiaee of
Timea.
the
fAomld Col end Bnosevek not want j Stranahan of Fulton and Fred M. Bmh-peaition htmaetf and as he has op- op of Otrwego.
Senator Harvey D. Hinmaa of The following were chosen as alter turn and District Attorney Che*. | ante delegates in a resohxtisn offered
f. Whrtsnaa of !5ew York, it argnes that by a W. Shmul of Sandy Creek J<
bcr sewing to hold the rseHrer to her Delegates DamgnateC |*ar to get the seig^horhood go*»p B>
K . r « o i o t » n offer* „, Mr P « » - f ! ~ J ^J°Z 1 ^ 7 J ^ L ^
TOtad for u deiefata to the Mate matt. . IVTV. . • V T J^?" ^ r ? °
PSwenix, P. w . Cnn«a» of 0 m « . ' tLJrL-7jIKJZ?ZZ^Jr * * • * •
yoaed
^ t r i e k Cullmaa "JiMd* reeefve
is the next man who
JftltTsT CAJTAX TCnmfATXS AT TOsTAWASDA <
AUbaay. X Y_ Jury 14,—Tosmwanda of
State
Buckley of Oswego, Dr D . D
80 Howard swore that he would invest an JmsSeatur and do iway with all this- He has tried Ike hmtroment out thoroughly en the hams m Burt essmty. It works parfeOly. Be says the ruh-
Denpite the stories of poor business that have emanated from corporations throughout the eountry, it may he of interest to people of this vicinity to know that the New York Central railroad company handled more ears of freight on the Ontario division of the
I road for the week ending July 14, than they -did the r or i f sending, week mat year.
This increase can not be attributed entirely to the advent of the fruit butanes*, tor a year ago it active as at present. The are that with the nwvemesrt of the fruit crops the tonrtnias win he hugely
over that at
Oreek,
thm •i
eruue, wiB be the we MK mew barge eauaL *>** A. Bensei •» the canal hoard today and a rei fhna iiiirting it was adopted. By this! Jnwte the eanal will her* iirect eonaec-
.ttoe with the Trlagar* rirer. Jforth To-'mwandn, I oekport **d Fxagnra TaC*f nitsnens ha-i arted t*>e creek as
John A n of M. J. Terry j>f Pmkaki,
Long of Oswego, H. Pmtoam AOen Dam A. Coto.^^ofjaady the'asvmw in nattery r s - . m p t i s , w.M
A — ~ » w *- - ~ - B»7»«a»- he «• per cent and the smfklaw service Sf»»P»t*T far f a i H n t v e e c w « he «0 per cent bettor £
Mr Ouilmaa enfied nttcnthia to the *tiuagu hnttriea of Sneaker Sweet, who was!**"* *a*«ainf
at Ahsnsry fee of ijmpslhy
SWAMTOTK WILMS Repoiu from QaHoo Island state
that resentiy two deer, a hock and doe," from Dock Inland to the GaUoo,
of some nine miles. The
Miss Constance Rogers is visiting her grandparents, Mr and Mrs E. L. Burr at Pulaski.
Mr and Mrs Joseph LaCroix, Mr Clyde LaCroix and Miss Tovey enjoyed a motor trip to Mexico, Pulaski, Richland, Orwell, Stillwater, and Salmon Rtfer Falls on Sunday.
Prof, and Mrs Charles Hartson visited Mr and Mrs E. D. Kdiek recently.
Mrs L. Scrrfaer is visiting #mnk Spicer and family of Mexico.
The recent rains have-greatly refreshed the eountry and gardens.
On Saturday afternoon, July 18, Wn, Estis had a rather Writing auto ride. He was sitting in Charles Hammeeker's machine in front of Mower's blacksmith shop on Railroad street, waiting for Mr Hammecker vtho was in the shop. • All' power was sbujLoJTIhe machine but just at that point there was enough grade to start it toward the railroad. William did not dare try to apply the brake for fear of striking the wrong lever, so could only ding to the wheel and endeavor to guide the machine amid frane-tically shouted directions from the bystanders. Mr. Hammecker ran after
£tfae machine and fortunately caught it before it had gained much headway. It is safe to conclude that "Billy" doesn't care to repeat the experience. While an expert on eondensory machinery he knows nothing about running an auto— or didnt until then.
Mr and Mrs Charles Hartson of Ma-pleview are spending a few days at E. D. Edict's.
Mrs F. L. Harter and daughter Retina of Syracuse are spending the week with Mr and Mrs W. B. Harter aid family. Mrs Herbert Dawley and three children
of Fulton spent over Sunday with Mr and Mrs Wistianw Sheeley, also Mr and Mrs C. E. Forxister of Watertown spent Sunday and Monday with their daughter Mrs William Sheeley and family. They went to Fulton Tuesday accompanied by theft daughter and two sons Carle and Fred, for a few days.
Mr and Mrs L. D. Pickens spent Fri-| day and Saturday at Port Ontario with
Mr and Mrs George Fleming. William B. Curtis of Dunkirk, N.Y„ is
spending two weeks with his mother,
About 5$ crates of raspberries are shipped from this depot every day.
Wightman is spending a Mrs A. C. few days with her daughter. Mrs Christ of Utica.
A copy of tbe official declaration of peace between England and the United Netherlands, of 1067, was recently sold in London, together with other proclamations, pamphlets, broadsides and news-sheets. The pamphlet brought $880. This was the treaty which gave New York to England.
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat speaks of "daddy*' as being new-fashioned. As s matter ©f fact, daddy was old-fash-
forty years ago. If he is beeosn-it must he a ease of
ueev were the flight
tbe
aaarattJd on Pnday La*t
hut
seen m the water by keeper and he watched
They were theromjhry Inter recovered and are
at nous* oa GaDoc. The ha^ngjare the ntnyutj of C C. Case of
* * " i s number of them hi a
TOTTER BILIOUS AMD COSTIVE!
Bsek Hsadache, Bad Breath, Sear Stomash, Furred Tongue and tion, Jfeaa Liver ami Bowels Ciena vp-to-night. Get a S*e bottle of Dr. Xing'* Kew Life POss today and empty the stoaanea and howiss of fer-• 1 si ing gassy fnodn smd wast*. A< full bowel mim—iel grant a sathmed, thankful Jsefsnf smrrs ywa fed m t RWectite, yet mthL Down gripe, f s t , at „
Salve far
Mr. -3rvaa, the gradual/ of a Kew Jersey ga-is thss ^uestjoa the other Any
tb* 3 does a red cow. who eats
CONSERVATION COMMISSION REPORT
ATTORNEYS Nathan R, Smith
Attorney- and Counsellor-at-law 0 and D, Qj9^ Pulaski National
We are in reeeipt of the annual report of the Conservation Commission of, ^m
the Stato of N"ew York and it carries . rtilaahj, N.Y. Prompt attention"given much valuable mformathm. OUA, f eaA- l^" '"« t l a»4'"tigation in all courts ure of especial interest is^talr \*nt*iit*M*r*,*^*m' -K
were burned and $846,082,00 was the OV6f ^ ^ ^ , ^ PulaakLV^ loss; in 1013 64,796 acres were burned; ^ { c e m c o u r t o T t i i i i S i : 1 ! : and $51,445.00 was the loss. This shows fj* i te48iate*. N o t i f y ^ l ! m * n
what systematic protection will do in _ . handling the devastating element; Ere. - Frealon J. Davis The country has become awakened to the j Attorney and Counsellor-at-law great loss we sustain when our forests in courts of thia State and United are destroyed by fire or the ax and it is the purpose of the commission to pro tee* the forests as far as they can from J _. T „ ' dmstatton by Arc. ~ — |4a*ytmXJURar
Often in' New Tollner block, over F ' Walton C o l o r e .
Canada's canal $104,122^77.
system has cost
GREAT WESTERN HEALS THE SORES
Be Not Afraid, l is* it far overy Case
Stated Below. .
Sore Necks, Sore Shoulders, Wire Qiita, Bruises, Chafing, Rope Burns, Quarter Csacks, Contracted Hoofs, Sore Feet oa Dogs—it leaves no scar or mark.
FOR COWS Sore or Cracked Teats, one application does the work, try it once and be con-vonced or any other sore or skin troub
l e s on animals—it leaves no sear or mark.
FOR MAN For Cuts, Burns, Chafing, Chilblains, Soft Corns, Rusty Nail Sores, cures any case of Barber's Itch 4>r any itch, it is the best Pile Remedy there is in the world, for Ringworm and sore feet, any old or new sore—it leaves no scar or mark.
One trial win convince. EYERY BOX GUARANTEED
wm*m Law offleos, Franklin block, PulaakL N.I
t 4 B. G. Seamans Justice of the Peace
I Office, Democrat Building, Pulaski, N.I
J. L. Mora, MJ>. Office hours: 1 to 4 and 7 to $ ai Offtoe over Pulaski National Bank.
C W. Betts, HJ>. I Both phones. Office hours: I to 5
7.30 to 9.00 pjn.
F. E. MacCallttm, MJ>. Ofttae -uaH residence, Jefferson avi Osnce hours: 8 to 9 I A , 1 to $ to 8 pan.
Pulaski
Far Sale By . a TJTXEY « SON
W. H. BROWN T. S. MEACHAM -
W. H. GOXEY New York
Id and 4th Fridays of each month. J is t and 3d Fridays by appointment
COUNTY AND DISTRICT OFFICIALS County * Judge—Louis C Rows, Oswego. Sheriff—Myron A -Stranahan, Fulton. Under Sheriff—John Dennis, Oswego. Surrogate—Clayton L Miner, Pulaski County Clerk —Zopher D. Stanton,
Pariah. District Attorney—Francis D. Culkin,
Oswego. Assistant District Attorney—D. A. Col
ony4 Lacona. County TTeasurer-^erman W. Kandt,
Oa«am>. Superintendent of Poor—C. Adalbert
Stone, Scribe. Coroners—C. J. Vowinkle, Oswego; ^Wil
lis G. Baheock, Constantia, E. J. Cus-asck, Fulton; Dr. L. F. HoRhi, Lacona.
School Superintendents—First District-Sandy Greek, Orwell, Boymton and RndnVeki, Mildred G. PraU„ Lacona, Second District — Richland, Albion, Williamatown and Pariah, J. ML Bonner, Pulaski Third district—Amboy, Constantia, Hastings, West Monroe and Sehreeppel, Miss Queemie Rose
Fourth __ district -—Mexico, Seriba, Palermo and New Harem, C L
Kingsbury. Fifth dirtrict—Volney, Oswego Town, Hanrrfhal and Granby,
Warren 8. Gardner. Member of Assembly Thaddwis C.
Sweet, Phoenix. State Senator—-Son R. Brown, Water-
town.
NEW YORE CENTRAL TIMS TABLE
in effect June 28, 1914
From Syracuse (except Sunday) to Watertown and the North.
•; - •• : " -t.40 U«5
f.55
7.40 l t .13
1.40 t.30 ^ . - ^ r_
To Syracuae (except Sunday^ 8.04
10.58
iO^§
From Oswego 7.*4>
10.00
To Onanjgu R15
1L08
10^« To Utica
10.00
3.15 % 0 . t l
T t l ^ $
$r.i« ; 1130 Sunday)
t.30 T30
7.30 *an*ay)
3-33 0-31
s U t Suaday)
i.30 C30
«
, BtXHTOHt Charles E. Bcifgn
a r i l Engineer and Surveror. l t $ F t l Pulaski, NtY. ^
KXDICAL H. W. Caldwell, MJ). and
Cancer a specialty. Resldene Ksw York.
Surgeaa,
R. L. CROCKETT, RLD. —Sandy Oreek On**
JTBATEElflTISS FmlaaU Lodge No. OtO F. ft A. M.
oa the tost and third Wedneadaj of every month at the Masons T« Broad street, Pulaalri, N. Y.
J. B. BntinT Paat Na. f11 , 0. A. R Regular Sxcnmpment 04 and 4th
urday of saeh month at their rooms, Tollner Block, Pulaski, N. Y. Last month at 0.00 p-m.
• A. S. Warner Cass & af T. Sow of Veterans No, tOtt, nsanta at tat gamp ground, Tollner Block, Id and If FrWayn of
Flra Censpnmy Meetings let Monday tventnf
"- mt 7 3 0 hi the -
Chief.
Pulaski Grange Me. 70% P. af ft MsetobxGraagn hnlL Gasmen block, . Od and 4th Tuesdays of each month 730 p a , excepting the months af toner, November," Daeaejbet, Jai Fehrwur ami March, when the last lag is the month M at 130 nj
. J- W. Butler WJLC Ntv t*7 ftagntar sw^rtnja irntand third
*kt G. A. R. roocaa, Toltnsr biock. p * .
^ a * * i Ledge N* d«t LO.O*. Meete every Tuesday evening in rak**' kail, Parthurrt block. N. Arthur Deeator; VjQ^ A . Oifford; Wm. Hollenbeck; FA, Harvey Pril ^•••a^ar, George Oooper.
I H S U R A K 0 K S S f ^ ^ 1 " * » »arge aumher of the Jwfagaat Compaaies writing Fire "auranoe today. I am in poertioa to hwadle aQ kinds of risks on real and peraonal property. Your busi. ••*» »es*ertod.
& •aTT.T.sYft
MAOY AGTsTGY
at the
L J. RUCT,
Otwe|o City - Savings B;
BWEGO COHUTY SAVINGS BANK
•tjrta, mO Jnfy
t, sfxe* at the rate ef 4
A smarter of beef thai e^d s ornev ~f«r eighteea j^nrtMt :a Iceman. "Ai hag frayed aromad the edm ts jook exactly Luke arssnari »»y. w» eaa Wbe^» she*
a if Ji 4*4
u* Pk.iec >-.
{ ghre white mA that yieids yefiow hus> •er*" H# dMa*t-nv^-ti^a the coin of
j the cb^r*
Otwega, N. T.
Soficftod Basking hours: iO-*-nt--to 4 wlft>—» auys except Saturday. enye, from 10 a-m. to 12 m. Uc
frum 7 to 8 o'clock.
Chmriea TRUSTEES
H. Bond Jean D. Roggms Denton Edgar D. Johnsoa;
^rnnlc P. FarmD Karl KcOogg Jaans B. Farweg EUiott B. Mot: Thomas F. Otoason Eliaha B. P^we^ Blal Gray, Jr. John Smith Arthur C. Hal] Frank El Sayer
Bsbott B. Mett, F. Ohm eon, 1st r>e*-?rs*.|
B. FarweJL 00 vlee-Frea. Mairhi a Cxmmbto, Ckariea a Wright,
B, PowwTl Attorney
WIT D9 WUBK wmsn then tottk FOSTER IffOSE HELP and
TBOCBLE O08T? Latent fsxor: sd. » — R^er. De-1
asryw^er*
or so H. F. FAsrrSR. rnhisti N T
CASTOR IA BiflslTsinui